The prominent researcher has been put on administrative leave pending an investigation into unspecified allegations.
Are leading researchers driven more by the quest for knowledge or the pursuit of fame?
Are leading researchers driven more by the quest for knowledge or the pursuit of fame?
From mouth pipetting to automated liquid handling, life-science labs have gotten much safer over the past three decades.
More papers correlate with top-cited research for more-established academics, but not newly minted professors, according to a study.
Nobel Laureate Eric Kandel talks about how our brains perceive and understand works of art.
In Chapter 13, “Why Is Reductionism Successful in Art?” author Eric Kandel explores what about abstract art challenges the human brain.
Reductionism may be the key to bridging the gap between the humanities and the sciences.
Sensory discoveries, open-access publishing, and candidates on climate changes
A commercially available glioblastoma cell line appears to be from a different source than its stated origins.
In Chapter 1, “The Old Man of La Chapelle: The Patriarch of Paleo,” author Lydia Pyne explains the public's evolving conception of the first complete Neanderthal skeleton found and described by scientists.
By ditching traditional agar-based media, two biochemists captured iconic images of Myxococcus in 1982.