All images courtesy of Kate Mansfield
Read the full story.
Beauty salon technologies help researchers tag and follow young sea turtles like never before.

All images courtesy of Kate Mansfield
Read the full story.


Jef (an unusual nickname for Jennifer) got her master’s degree from Indiana University in April 2009 studying the mating behavior of seahorses. After four years of diving off the Gulf Coast of Tampa and performing behavioral experiments at the Tennessee Aquarium in Chattanooga, she left research to pursue a career in science writing. As The Scientist's managing editor, Jef edited features and oversaw the production of the TS Digest and quarterly print magazine. In 2022, her feature on uterus transplantation earned first place in the trade category of the Awards for Excellence in Health Care Journalism. She is a member of the National Association of Science Writers.
View Full Profile
These fluttering sensations are the brain’s reaction to certain emotions, which can be amplified or soothed by the gut’s own “bugs".
View this Issue
Proper pipetting can accelerate workflows, improve data reproducibility, and decrease user fatigue and injury risk.


Olga Anczukow and Ryan Englander discuss how transcriptome splicing affects immune system function in lung cancer.


In our next roundtable webinar, learn how scientists leverage spatial biology to map tissues, uncover cellular interactions, and advance disease research.

Discover how scientists use the latest gene editing tools to advance health research.


Ten-year Agreement to Provide a Secure, AI-enabled Forensic Laboratory Information Management System Supporting DHS Forensic, Scientific, and Testing Services

deliver robust, reproducible solutions for sample preparation enabling a new era of end-to-end standardization in proteomics

Enables higher-throughput, cost effective single-cell sequencing

Enables ultra-low variant detection across a range of key MRD targets in AML, including very large FLT3-ITDs