These 4 new techniques are spearheading future of fertility treatments

These 4 new techniques are spearheading future of fertility treatments

Hannah Devlin |
Here are four of the new reproductive treatments that scientists say could be just a few years away from the ...
mrna technology x

Q&A on the future of versatile mRNA-based vaccine development

Robert Langer |
Robert Langer, ScD, is the David H. Koch Institute professor at MIT and a co-founder of Moderna, the pharmaceutical company ...
pain when sleeping

Circadian rhythm: How do our sleeping cycles affect how we experience pain?

Allison Whitten |
In a recently published study, scientists led by Claude Gronfier at the Lyon Neuroscience Research Centre in France have finally shed ...
New reversible gene-editing technique may be safer and more reliable than standard CRISPR

New reversible gene-editing technique may be safer and more reliable than standard CRISPR

Echo Xie |
Chinese researchers say they have developed a new gene-editing tool that is more efficient and safer because it does not ...
cancer patient counseling

Physician responsibility: Why are many terminal cancer patients not told they are dying?

Monica Soni |
Unrealistic expectations fueled by direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising depicting happy cancer survivors and the pharma industry’s influence on oncologists hang over ...
leaf evolution

Patterns in the sand: We can sometimes predict how evolution will unfold

Jasna Hodžić |
In a new paper published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution, an international group of researchers demonstrated that a ...
Moonshot genomics: How CRISPR is opening the door to reshaping life itself

Moonshot genomics: How CRISPR is opening the door to reshaping life itself

Shelly Fan |
It’s a moonshot idea. If the genome is a book, gene editing is like copy editing—changing a typo here and ...
fever drean

Fever dreams are part of our shared human experience, but elude scientific explanation

Avery Hurt |
The COVID-19 pandemic had a documented effect on people’s dreams — even in those who didn’t contract the infection. But ...
mosquito attracted to carbon dioxide

Are you a mosquito magnet? Science explains why

Jonathan Day |
Mosquitoes are very sensitive to CO2 and can sense a CO2 source that is many meters away. Receptor cells on ...
Ancient DNA: Here’s how a thousand-year-old skeleton was diagnosed with a genetic disorder

Ancient DNA: Here’s how a thousand-year-old skeleton was diagnosed with a genetic disorder

Sahir Pandey |
The oldest clinical case of Klinefelter Syndrome has been detected in a 1,000-year-old Portuguese skeleton. Klinefelter Syndrome is a super ...
Novel gene therapy study offers hope for definitive colorblindness cure

Novel gene therapy study offers hope for definitive colorblindness cure

Mert Erdemir |
Researchers from the University College London (UCL) used gene therapy to partly restore the function of the retina's cone receptors ...
Do sex and romance drive our artistic and athletic abilities?

Do sex and romance drive our artistic and athletic abilities?

Iednewsdesk |
In his theorizing on the evolution of species, Darwin showed that, in addition to natural selection, animals have “ornaments” used ...
Martian space travel is moving from science fiction to fact. How will humans adjust when they set foot on the red planet?

Martian space travel is moving from science fiction to fact. How will humans adjust when they set foot on the red planet?

Matt Williams |
In the coming decade, in 2033, NASA and China intend to send astronauts to Mars for the first time in ...
Are you a mosquito magnet? Blame it on the insect's unique sense of smell — and your unique odor

Are you a mosquito magnet? Blame it on the insect’s unique sense of smell — and your unique odor

Jessica Colarossi |
If you’ve ever sprayed yourself head to toe in bug repellent, yet still felt like a mosquito magnet, it will ...
Beyond brain fog: COVID infection linked to variety of neurological diseases, including epilepsy, dementia, psychosis

Beyond brain fog: COVID infection linked to variety of neurological diseases, including epilepsy, dementia, psychosis

Ralph Ellis |
People who got COVID have a higher risk of developing brain disorders such as dementia, psychosis, and brain fog two ...
The tipping point for millions of heart attacks is one single gram of salt per day

The tipping point for millions of heart attacks is one single gram of salt per day

David Nield |
Looking at health data on adults in China, the study authors estimate that a reduction of just 1 gram in ...
‘Electronic skin’ wirelessly transmits data about a person’s blood pressure, heart rate, and activity levels

‘Electronic skin’ wirelessly transmits data about a person’s blood pressure, heart rate, and activity levels

Jennifer Chu |
Most wireless sensors today communicate via embedded Bluetooth chips that are themselves powered by small batteries. But these conventional chips ...
Investing in genomic research can boost poor countries’ access to rich science

Investing in genomic research can boost poor countries’ access to rich science

Busani Bafana |
Africa holds genetic diversity unrivaled for any population in the world but it is on the back foot in benefitting from ...
Can exercise reduce dementia risk?

Can exercise reduce dementia risk?

Rachel Fairbank |
Experts had long believed that exercise could help protect against developing dementia. However, though they had observed a general pattern ...
'Superspreader': New York Times documentary investigates natural products peddler and vaccine rejectionist Dr. Joseph Mercola

‘Superspreader’: New York Times documentary investigates natural products peddler and vaccine rejectionist Dr. Joseph Mercola

Jan Hoffman, Lora Moftah, Rachel Abrams |
Sarah Long credits the information she found on Mercola.com with potentially saving her life. For years, she had health issues ...
DNA solves medieval death mystery: 17 Ashkenazi Jewish people found in well after anti-Semitic crusade

DNA solves medieval death mystery: 17 Ashkenazi Jewish people found in well after anti-Semitic crusade

Katie Hunt |
The identity of the remains of the six adults and 11 children and why they ended up in the medieval ...
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD): Background on the first personalized CRISPR therapy approved for trial

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD): Background on the first personalized CRISPR therapy approved for trial

Kristin Houser |
The FDA has given the greenlight to test the first personalized CRISPR therapy, which was developed specifically to treat one ...
Ancient toys found in archaeological digs are changing perspectives on children in early civilizations

Ancient toys found in archaeological digs are changing perspectives on children in early civilizations

Amanda Ruggeri |
Over the two decades that archaeologist Gus Van Beek excavated Tell Jemmeh, an Assyrian settlement inhabited from around 3,800 to ...
Children of parents who live to be over 100 years old inherit survival advantages

Children of parents who live to be over 100 years old inherit survival advantages

Children of centenarians have a unique genetic profile that may account for why they are less frail than children of ...
How chewing may have shaped human evolution

How chewing may have shaped human evolution

Tibi Puiu |
About 10% of the calories consumed over the course of the day are expended on digesting, absorbing, metabolizing, and eliminating ...
Worm world: Are there more parasites now than ever?

Worm world: Are there more parasites now than ever?

Ross Pomeroy |
"Is the world wormier than it used to be?" Chelsea Wood, an Associate Professor in the School of Aquatic and ...
Viewpoint: 'Who gets to decide what causes harm?' Why Nature’s new editorial guidelines are problematic

Viewpoint: ‘Who gets to decide what causes harm?’ Why Nature’s new editorial guidelines are problematic

Jerry Coyne |
This new article in Nature Human Behavior Is well-intentioned, aiming to purge bigotry from science, but goes way over the ...