Long-lived Chilean rodents called degus are better models for studying Alzheimer's disease in humans than mice and rats.
Biases in studies concerning heart disease and metabolic disorder in midlife Black and Hispanic women may put their lives in jeopardy.
For the first time, tissue donors in a pilot program will be able to anonymously track how scientists use their samples.
New findings could make health surveys less stigmatizing and therefore more likely to gather accurate information about abortion.
To measure vegetation in the wild, researchers set up a Microsoft HoloLens as a mixed-reality sensor to feed their application called VegSense.
Women in science are 13% less likely to be named as authors in related scientific articles than male counterparts, and 59% less likely to have their name on patents.
The discovery of a new way that astrocytes and neurons communicate could lead to treatments for epilepsy, Alzheimer’s, and traumatic brain injury.
A new way to identify and analyze animal behavior could save researchers hours and hours of work, as well as improve conditions for the creatures.
New research uses data science to investigate how diversity in the field of history affects new knowledge and vice versa.
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