Editor’s Choice in Immunology
In Chapter 5, "The Stable and the Laboratory," author Michael Willrich explores the burgeoning vaccine manufacture industry that ramped up to combat smallpox epidemics in turn-of-the-twentieth-century American cities.
Studying the earliest events in visual development, Carla Shatz has learned the importance of looking at one’s data with open eyes—and an open mind.
This animation illustrates optogenetics—a radical new technology for controlling brain activity with light. Ed Boyden, the co-inventor of this technology, is a professor at the MIT Media Lab and at the McGovern Institute for Brain Research, where he continues to develop new technologies for controlling brain activity.
The president of the University of the Ryukyus in Japan coauthored a paper containing a duplicated figure.
A confession and supportive letters convince a judge to go easy on a researcher who fabricated data in a federal grant proposal
Scientists invent a method to control the timing and duration of sleep in fruit flies and find that snoozing helps form long-term memories
A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in immunology and related areas, from Faculty of 1000
Researchers seeking a link between vision problems and the dangerous physiological effects of hypoxia in mountain climbers are taking their work to new heights.