Daily Human Digest
Renowned marine biologist and oceanographer Eugenie Clark dies
Eugenie Clark, whose childhood rapture with fish in a New York City aquarium led to a life of scholarly adventure ...
Could some inherited diseases be treated more effectively before birth?
Rresearch in mice suggests that treatment for haemophilia – and maybe other inherited diseases – could start in the womb, ...
Nevada lawmaker calls cancer a ‘fungus’, says it can be cured by water and baking soda
Nevada Assemblywoman Michele Fiore said recently that she will propose a "Right to Try" bill in her state. But it's ...
How the AIDS epidemic came to be
The common narrative holds that the spread of HIV and AIDS among humans can be traced back to one flight ...
Dress drama: Blue and black or white and gold? What’s the science?
What color is the dress? A Tumblr user uploaded a picture of a dress, saying that they were having an ...
Software uses DNA to predict facial appearance
Mark D. Shriver, a professor of anthropology and genetics at Penn State University and his colleagues have studied the ways ...
Soybeans genetically engineered to produce anti-HIV drug
Dozens of experiments by companies and academic institutions all over the world are using techniques to insert genes in the ...
Why we crave sugar and why it’s so hard to stay away from it
In neuroscience, food is something we call a “natural reward.” In order for us to survive as a species, things ...
Wrong kind of gut microbes could cause malnutrition
Malnutrition seems like an intuitive problem: you don’t eat enough food, so your health suffers. But it’s not that simple ...
Why are scientists vilified when they profit from their innovations?
A critic of biotech has pointedly identified the number of companies a researcher has founded to underscore what he claims ...
Lab made antibody against HIV shows promise in non-human primate studies
For 30 years, researchers have struggled to determine which immune responses best foil HIV, information that has guided the design ...
Lesson from Ebola: Tobacco plant key to developing GMO drugs of the future
While any tobacco is harmful if smoked, there's a kind of tobacco that's being put to positive use—namely, the use ...
FTC takes aim at ‘cancer-detecting’ app featured on Dr.Oz show
It seemed too good to be true — a $4.99 cellphone app that could help you figure out if moles ...
A Facebook for sharing your genetic information?
Three years ago, biologist Bastian Greshake spit in a vial and sent it off to personal genomics company 23andMe for ...
Do people trust ‘hard’ neuroscience more than ‘soft’ psychology?
Imagine a politician from your party is in trouble for alleged misdemeanors. He’s been assessed by an expert who says ...
Mitochondrial donation regulation crosses final legal hurdle in the United Kingdom
The United Kingdom’s House of Lords has approved legislation to allow a new type of in vitro fertilization (IVF) that ...
Bionic reconstruction enables mind-controlled prosthetic hands
Bionic hands are go. Three men with serious nerve damage had their hands amputated and replaced by prosthetic ones that ...
After three-parent babies, are two-dad and two-mom babies next?
An international team of scientists have shown that it is possible to create human sperm and eggs from stem cells ...
You are what you don’t eat: Genetics of anorexia and bulimia
The latest research shows how eating disorders, and anorexia in particular, produce a cascade of physical and mental effects, including ...
Online game teaches synthetic biology
On its surface, it looks like just another science puzzle game. In reality, the game is part of a broader ...
FDA approval of 23andMe’s genetic test positive sign for the genomics industry
On February 19, the Food and Drug Administration approved a test made by 23andMe, the Mountain View, Calif.-based personal genetics company, ...
Airborne form of Ebola a realistic possibility?
Back in September, when the West African Ebola outbreak was getting worse with every passing week, a lot of people ...
Law and Order: Using DNA to generate suspects’ facial profiles
Police in Columbia, S.C., last month released a sketch of a possible suspect in a murder investigation. In what may ...
Debate ramps up on release of genetically engineered mosquitoes in Key West
In this bite-size community near Key West, like so many other mosquito-plagued spots up and down the Florida Keys, residents ...
Understanding the UCLA superbug problem
The UCLA Health System announced earlier this week that seven patients—two of whom died—became infected by highly drug-resistant bacteria that ...
Why do East Asians have 20% more Neanderthal DNA than Europeans?
In 2010, scientists made a startling discovery about our past: About 50,000 years ago, Neanderthals interbred with the ancestors of ...
First rapid Ebola test approved by WHO
The World Health Organization has approved the first rapid test for Ebola in a potential breakthrough for ending an epidemic ...