Should biological explanations for criminal behavior influence a judge’s or jury’s decision about how to handle a case? If so, how?
Should biological explanations for criminal behavior influence a judge’s or jury’s decision about how to handle a case? If so, how?
More stories surface about how last week’s super storm is affecting research up and down the coast—and how science is fighting back.
Recording brain activity as patients are anesthetized for surgery, researchers identify a pattern that may signal loss of consciousness.
In Chapter 2, "Consequences and Evolution: The Cause That Works Backwards," author Susan M. Schneider places evolutionary theory in terms of the science of consequences.
Spillover, Answers for Aristotle, Who’s in Charge? and Science Set Free
How neuroscience research can inform military counterintelligence tactics, and the moral responsibilities that accompany such research
On the bicentennial of his birth, Edward Lear is celebrated for his whimsical poetry and his stunningly accurate scientific illustrations.
Studying the consequences of behavior has shed light on a wide range of life-science phenomena, pathological as well as everyday.
Large RNA-protein packets use a novel mechanism to escape the cell nucleus.