By discouraging change, universities are stunting scientific innovation, leadership, and growth.
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.
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.
A marine scientist ponders how academics could have handled the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill better.
A judge says that government and university labs have to share the patent rights to the successful cancer drug Velcade.
During development, the cells of an embryo change their pattern of gene expression, which allows them to detach from their original location and migrate to another part of the embryo, where the pattern changes again to allow formation of a new organ.
A flood of new discoveries has refined our definition of cancer stem cells. Now it’s up to human clinical trials to test if they can make a difference in patients.
Choosing to work in industry does not preclude a return to academe. But the move back takes some planning and finesse.