Stanford researchers and their collaborators have revealed a new device that could change the way scientists conduct gene-editing experiments. The device, CRISPR-GPT, is an artificial intelligence lab ...
Disney CEO Bob Iger is set to step down at the end of next year, but the Jimmy Kimmel drama has created one final challenge for me.
In a sprawling lab in Evanston, Michaël Elbaz watched a tiny mouse scamper across its cage. The Northwestern University postdoctoral researcher has spent hundreds of hours monitoring the animals — ...
Harvard leads the world in science and in philosophizing on how to make the world a better place. It’s time to make metascience a bigger part of the conversation.
The review of more than 60 scientific articles showed that microplastics, among other effects, can stimulate the formation of osteoclasts, cells specialized in degrading bone tissue.
Researchers from Florida International University used lab-created mice that were genetically modified to carry human gene mutations known to cause Alzheimer's disease.
The company showcased a series of artificial intelligence tools it says are all aimed at improving the relationships between doctors and patients, and billing departments and healthcare consumers.
Dr. Jason Berman looking at a zebrafish model on the computer screen. New research shows that pre-clinical zebrafish models are an effective tool to help guide clinical decision-making in real time ...
Experts fear that Donald Trump’s anti-painkiller tirade could lead to an increase in risk factors for autism, and don’t trust the administration to assess data as it continues to search for a cause.
Chaos in research funding across universities threatens to derail a generation of promising scientists. The fallout could impact medicine for years.
The Times of Israel on MSN
Eyes don’t lie: Groundbreaking study tracks eye movements to measure memory
Tel Aviv University and Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center's non-verbal memory-testing protocol allows assessment in infants, brain injury victims, severe Alzheimer's patients ...
IFLScience on MSN
Scientists Investigated Why People Invert Their Controls, And It's Not What They Think
None of the reasons people gave us had anything to do with whether they actually inverted,” the lead author explained.
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