Studying the consequences of behavior has shed light on a wide range of life-science phenomena, pathological as well as everyday.
Studying the consequences of behavior has shed light on a wide range of life-science phenomena, pathological as well as everyday.
A conference, started 10 years ago partly as a disease ecologist’s birthday party, has become one of the most valued meetings in the field.
Researcher salaries continue to buck the trend of the millennium’s first decade, remaining flat or even declining across most life science disciplines.
Check out the breakdown of this year's Salary Survey data, including how compensation differs between sex, sector, and state.
Preserved remains from the Andes yield clues about infectious diseases.
Comparing the protein profile of a 500-year-old Inca mummy to modern humans reveals an active lung infection prior to sacrifice.
Bees, sheep, and chimps are just a few of the animals known to self-medicate. Can they teach us about maintaining our own health?
From insects to mammals, the animal kingdom sometimes cures its own ills.
Biomedical researchers would benefit from emulating the logically rigorous reasoning of the late Alan Turing, British mathematician, computer scientist, and master cryptographer.
The blogosphere voices widespread condemnation for a sexist comment made by a researcher attending this week’s annual Society for Neuroscience conference.