dream

How dreams may help us declutter our brains and solve problems

Ben Locwin | 
Do you remember your dreams from last night? In how much detail? Were they related to anything you experienced during ...
pseudoscience

How do you know ‘pseudoscience’ when you see it?

Jonathan Jarry | 
Ontario Correactology Health Care Centres offer 'natural' ways to manage pain, but they're not scientifically proven ...
sleep

Looking for a memory boost? Forget crossword puzzles and get more sleep

Ben Locwin | 
People try numerous methods to stave off the memory decline associated with old age, but how many of them actually ...
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Who should pay for million-dollar life-saving gene therapies?

Sterghios Moschos | 
While life-changing and life-saving gene therapies are going on the market, they have price tags that many cannot pay for ...
How Language Is Processed By Your Brain spillwords

Does language change the way our brains see the world?

Jyoti Madhusoodanan | 
Picture a sunlit Grecian sea or the deep hues of Santorini’s rooftops. They’re both called “blue” in English. But to ...
fruit bat

Can the Egyptian fruit bat’s unusual genome show us how to fight deadly Marburg virus?

Ricki Lewis | 
The Egyptian fruit bat's immune system enables it to peacefully co-exist with Marburg virus, which can cause a swiftly deadly ...
social

Genetics of socialization revealed through study of rare Williams Syndrome

Yewande Pearse | 
One of the things that makes us human is how we socialize with one another. What drives our social behavior ...
sherlock

Diagnosing infectious diseases like Zika or Dengue at home with a CRISPR kit

Julianna LeMieux | 
CRISPR-based home test can immediately detect disease DNA through blood or saliva ...
vaccine

Developing vaccines that train our innate immune system to be stronger

Josh Peters | 
It's possible to train our immune system to more accurately attack antigens ...
Electrical Stimulation x

Boosting memory by combining electrical brain stimulation and learning

Tessa Abagis | 
Low dose transcranial direct current stimulation have been the subject of much debate. Now, the technology is combined with cognitive ...
deep

‘Algorithmic death spiral’: The failing mental health of our machines

Thomas Hills | 
Is my car hallucinating? Is the algorithm that runs the police surveillance system in my city paranoid? Marvin the android ...
bacteria

Antibiotic resistance may be dangerous—but it’s hardly new

Andrew Porterfield | 
Despite media reports, antibiotics always faced microbe resistance. Can studying their genetics show us a path to new drugs ...
Being Pictures x

Who owns the DNA of ancient humans—and do they have rights?

Chip Colwell | 
The remains of a 6-inch long mummy from Chile are not those of a space alien, according to recently reported ...
gnee editing

Debating the need for genetic engineering of humans—there’s ‘nothing special’ about our DNA

Carol Lynn Curchoe | 
One day in early spring, I received a unique email. Would I accept an invitation from Oxford University’s student debate ...
SIDS

Sudden Infant Death Syndrome may be linked to genetic mutations

Kristen Hovet | 
It’s been called a parent’s worst nightmare, and one that very few of us have ever needed words to describe ...
space

Sex in space? An awkward talk we will need to have

David Warmflash | 
As the prospect of Mars colonization grows on the public radar screen, sex talk is not as much taboo that ...
stem

Making sense of crowdfunding for unapproved stem cell treatments

Ricki Lewis | 
When FDA approval for a technology or treatment lags behind demand, crowdfunding steps in. Desperate patients or their families launch ...
obesity

Does ‘brain stress’ play a key role in our obesity epidemic?

Laurel Mellin | 
Keeping off weight is harder than it seems, but it could be due to how our brains are wired ...
dreams

Delving into our dreams—and why they evolve as we age

Patrick McNamara | 
Although radically different in terms of their content and feel, the range of dream states are just as complex as ...
big o

The ‘Big O’: How and why evolution brought us the female orgasm

Meredith Knight | 
Female orgasms aren’t necessary for reproduction. A comparative evolution study suggests they once might have been ...
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Are you responsible for bad behavior caused by a brain implant?

Mr. B loves Johnny Cash, except when he doesn’t. Mr. X has watched his doctors morph into Italian chefs right ...
red

Are we in danger of losing blue-eyed redheads? Not likely

Nerissa Hannink | 
For every 100 people in the world, only one or two will have red hair. And when you meet a ...
synthetic biology

Synthetic biology’s ‘promise and potential’ capture investor attention

Steven Cerier | 
Synthetic biology has become the new frontier of genetic engineering, promising to radically change the way we make clothes, fragrances, ...
parkinsons

Mapping everything we know about Parkinson’s

Venkat Srinivasan | 
The possible causes of Parkinson's disease are incredibly varied. A new team of researchers is building a Parkinson's disease map ...
old

Why we find ourselves at the limits of human lifespan

Ross Pomeroy | 
The 20th century was a period of unprecedented biological growth for our species. The average human lifespan increased from 31 years in ...
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Earth’s weirdest and most exotic creatures: Research bonanza for genetics and science

Josh Peters | 
From the axolotl’s regenerating limbs to naked mole rat cancer resistance, new sequencing is uncovering new possibilities ...
jewish

Kevin MacDonald responds to criticism of his theory of Jewish ethnocentrism and influence

Kevin MacDonald | 
Nathan Cofnas’s GLP article summarizes some of his points from his previous two comments on my work, and, although he ...
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