Dangers of legal genetic discrimination in Canada

Shimon Koffler Fogel | 
Protecting members of our society from discrimination based on the colour of their skin, ethnicity, or ancestry is a fundamental ...

How did humans learn to speak? Ask the birds

Marissa Fessenden | 
Songbirds stutter, babble when young, become mute if parts of their brains are damaged, learn how to sing from their ...

What will the future of brain science bring?

Bahar Gholipour | 
The more scientists learn about the brain, the more questions arise and the more challenging the quest to understand human ...

Environmentalists fumble concerns over ‘racial mixing’ and biodiversity

Razib Khan | 
One of the often overlooked historical oddities in the development of the environmental movement in the United States was its ...

Can your dog really understand what you’re saying?

David Revy, Victoria Ratcliffe | 
Sometimes it may seem like your dog doesn’t want to listen. But in our study, however, we’ve found that he ...

Ebola survivors’ blood might hold key to a cure

Declan Butler | 
The first clinical trials are starting in West Africa to test whether transfusing patients with plasma or blood donated by ...

Antibiotic resistance may be bigger problem than previously thought

Maryn McKenna | 
A project commissioned by the British government has released estimates of the near-future global toll of antibiotic resistance that are ...

Who controls your actions: you or your brain?

Walter Sinnott-Armstrong | 
Imagine that Brian promises to drive you to the airport but never shows up, and you miss your flight. When ...

Why don’t indigenous Americans look like their pioneer ancestors?

Glenn Hodges | 
The first face of the first Americans belongs to an unlucky teenage girl who fell to her death in a ...

After a decade and a half, stem cells remain a controversial topic

Susannah Locke | 
A couple of things helped lessen the [stem cell] controversy. By the late 2000s, researchers discovered other ways to create cells ...

How accurate are non-invasive prenatal screening procedures?

Anna Merlan | 
In the past few years, "non-invasive" prenatal screening tests have flooded the market, which claim to be able to predict ...

DNA is tough enough to survive space travel

Adrian Mettauer | 
Could the blueprint for life have come from space? Yes, according to an experiment carried out by molecular biologist Cora ...
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Gene Therapy 3.0: Rise and fall and rise again of gene therapy–For real this time?

Arvind Suresh | 
Gene therapy is seeing a renaissance after a long period of skepticism about its failed potential. What are the new ...

Growing concern over athletes receiving unproven stem cell therapies

Antonio Regalado | 
Elite athletes do whatever it takes to win. Lately, that’s meant getting an injection of their own stem cells. The ...

Why evaluating risk factors might not always lead to the best medical advice

Jeff Wheelwright | 
Most health-conscious people are familiar with the concept of risk factors for disease. We’re too familiar, in fact. A risk ...

Does reporting on behavioral genetics misinform the public?

A study of 1,500 Americans found that media reports about behavioral genetics create unfounded beliefs about what genes can and ...
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Too much and too little: Delicate balance of knowing risk and treating disease

Meredith Knight | 
One woman seeks out her genetic risk for familial breast cancer and finds she has a potentially lethal mutation for ...
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Women’s colleges considering policy changes that redefine ‘gender’

John Leland | 
At an elite college for women, the question arises: What does it mean to be a woman? The president of ...

Are more men idiots? ‘Darwin Awards’ study examines gender differences in idiocy

Sex differences in mortality and admissions to hospital emergency departments have been well documented, and hypotheses put forward to account for ...

Human evolution isn’t all competition: it’s cooperation, too

Linda Geddes | 
People often have a grim view of what it means to be human. There’s this conception that inside each of ...
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In India, a form of eugenics that people might embrace

Razib Khan | 
The term “eugenics” has very negative connotations today. Nevertheless, in some ways society is moving in a direction which results ...

Drug-resistant malaria strains pose challenge to disease prevention

Gretchen Vogel | 
The region around the Mekong River delta is infamous for its malaria parasites. Twice already—in the 1950s and the 1960s—they ...

Organization misconstrues genetics to spread homophobic message

Billy Hallowell | 
A controversial billboard proclaiming that “nobody is born gay” has sparked a great deal of controversy in Richmond, Virginia, where ...

Tracking disease outbreaks through city’s sewer system

Patrick Welsh | 
Disease prevention and mapmaking have been inextricably intertwined since 1854, when an English physician named John Snow plotted a cholera ...

Immune system hoards iron supply to fight microbes

Ed Yong | 
Disease is an act of piracy. When microbes infect us, they steal our resources so they can thrive at our ...

How do stem cells work? Scientists aren’t sure

David Cyranoski | 
Eggs and sperm do it when they combine to make an embryo. John Gurdon did it in the 1960s, when ...

New type of stem cell challenges understanding of pluripotency

Anna Azvolinsky | 
Researchers from Canada’s Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute and their international colleagues have uncovered a new type of pluripotent mouse stem cell—the ...
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