Twenty-five years later, the magazine is still hitting many of the same key discussion points of science.
Twenty-five years later, the magazine is still hitting many of the same key discussion points of science.
As neuroscientists look to the future of their field, they are beginning to delve into more complex factors that define our emotions and intentions.
Three gene jockeys share their thoughts on past and future tools of the trade.
The mother of disabled twins doggedly pursued the root of her children's illness and found it in their genome profiles.
Epigenetic perturbations could jump-start heritable variation.
Exploiting the unique properties of living systems makes synthetic biologists better engineers.
Designing genomes from scratch will be the next revolution in biology.
By extending its reach beyond science, the field of omics will change the way we live our lives.
An early advocate of the sequencing of the human genome reflects on his own predictions from 1986.
In an essay entitled "Nurture, Nature, and the Stress That is Life," neurobiologists Darlene Francis and Daniela Kaufer envision a future where science moves past the nature vs. nurture debate in considering differences in human behavioral responses to stress.