Is the push for science to save the still flailing economy a threat to scientific research?
Is the push for science to save the still flailing economy a threat to scientific research?
Successful conservation depends on an economy that doesn’t incentivize destruction of species and habitats.
Amgen’s incomplete report on an early major trial of epoetin misled the medical community about the anemia drug’s risks and benefits—and helped make Amgen rich.
By discouraging change, universities are stunting scientific innovation, leadership, and growth.
Human-specific duplications of a gene involved in brain development may have contributed to our species’ unique intelligence.
Human embryonic stem cells swiftly kill themselves in response to DNA damage.
A lack of methodological detail in the published literature threatens the foundation of scientific discourse.
More collaborators and more data are the key ingredients.
Genes that react to cellular sugar content are regulated by a long non-coding RNA via an unexpected mechanism
From accounts of deformed animals to scratch-and-sniff technology, Robert Boyle's early contributions to the Royal Society of London were prolific and wide ranging.