bio

Why biodiversity might not always be such a good thing for our health

Christie Wilcox | 
While some think of the "dilution effect" as settled science, some ecologists argue that claiming conservation will broadly reduce disease ...
brain

With imaging advances, brain researchers no longer rely on cadavers and freak accidents

David Warmflash | 
The increased use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as a research tool could lead to better understanding of a wide ...
warrior

Chasing the ‘warrior gene’ and why it looks like a dud so far

Kristen Hovet | 
The year is 2025. The US has gone to war. Young Americans are being conscripted in droves, and those with ...
moonshot

Cancer quest: Moonshot initiative melds genetic data with supercomputers, but keep expectations in check

Rachel Lynch | 
It’s been two years since the Cancer Moonshot Initiative was unveiled during President Obama’s final State of the Union speech ...
brain

Piecing together the complex puzzle of the brain’s decision-making functions

Anne Churchland | 
A group of 21 neuroscientists are joining forces in an effort to better understand how different parts of the brain ...
cosmos

Extraterrestrial life may have different chemistry, but evolutionary forces will be Earth-like

David Warmflash | 
If the forces of natural selection have shaped the development of life on Earth, there's no reason to believe those ...
Brain Tumor

Do cell phones cause cancer? Unlikely, but activists are skeptical of journalists who present the facts

Michael Schulson | 
While it has been theorized that radiation from cellphone usage has the ability to cause cancer, there is no evidence ...
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Olympic gene doping: How WADA is managing new performance-enhancing technologies

Sean Hall | 
The start of the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang has once again brought questions of unethical athletic performance-enhancement, or doping, to ...
bigthink celiac on the rise

Viewpoint: Self-diagnosed celiac disease is just the latest diet obsession of wealthy white people

Hank Campbell | 
There are people who are allergic to gluten. But the recent surge in self-diagnosed Celiac sufferers is little more than ...
age

The quest for youth, and what our genes have to say about it

Andrew Porterfield | 
Why do some people seem to age faster than others? The answer may lie in our epigenetics ...
atcg lock

Viewpoint: Public enthusiasm for genetics tempered by distrust, privacy concerns

Jim Kozubek | 
Cheaper genome sequencing is expanding our ability to understand risks associated with genetic mutations. But not everyone embraces these advances, ...
Trends GenderBreakdown px x

Gene-editing advances put us at the dawn of a revolution in medicine

Steven Cerier | 
So much of the public's attention is focused on the use of genetic engineering in the crops that our farmers ...
knees

Incurable arthritic knees? Gene therapy offers new hope

Ricki Lewis | 
Imagine a single injection into the knee vanquishing painful arthritis — forever. Gene therapies aimed at two molecular targets could ...
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Viewpoint: We aren’t even close to being able to engineer superhumans

Jim Kozubek | 
We know there are genes that contribute to intelligence. But the relationship between those genes and our intelligence is so ...
artificial

State of mind: Will computers learn to act and think like we do?

Subhash Kak | 
The technology that drives artificial intelligence is constantly moving forward. But will machines every gain the human equivalent of a ...
brain

‘Brain banks’: Why these scientists want your brain

Rae Ellen Bichell | 
Researchers are striving to build collections of brains free of Alzheimer's and other forms of dementia. A stronger base of ...
engel

NBC News’ Richard Engel’s son diagnosed with Rett syndrome. Why that’s such a rarity

Ricki Lewis | 
The Today Show recently reported the sad story of Henry Engel—the toddler son of correspondent Richard Engel and his wife Mary Forrest who ...
spanish flu

Could modern influenza outbreaks escalate into devastating pandemics like the 1918 ‘Spanish Flu’?

David Warmflash | 
It is unlikely that we will ever experience anything like the 1918 outbreak, but researchers say we could see outbreaks ...
gene drive

Waging war against the mosquito: Split-gene drive could hinder spread of Zika

Caroline Seydel | 
The use of split-gene drives could alleviate the concerns of critics who worry about unexpected effects of releasing gene-edited mosquitos ...
Screen Shot at PM

Marrying close relatives offers genetic risks and benefits for offspring

Andrew Porterfield | 
Endogamy is a powerful but controversial cultural tool. It also can play surprising roles in health and disease ...
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