Acoustic signals that reliably indicate body size, which usually determines competitive ability, are of particular interest for understanding how animals assess rivals and choose mates.
Many vascular diseases such as atherosclerosis and pulmonary hypertension are irreversible.
Researchers from the University of Michigan have made a significant breakthrough in tracking microplastics from space.
Two to three weeks after conception, an embryo faces a critical point in its development. In the stage known as gastrulation, the transformation of embryonic cells into specialized cells begins.
Researchers at Lund University in Sweden have investigated how the X and Y chromosomes evolve and adapt to each other within a population.
For 50 years, the research community has been hunting unsuccessfully for the so-called Odderon particle.
Alzheimer’s disease seems to progress faster in women than in men.
3D-mammography reduces the number of breast cancer cases diagnosed in the period between routine screenings, when compared with traditional mammography, according to a large study from Lund University in Sweden.
Bishop Peder Winstrup died in 1679, and is one of the most well-preserved human bodies from the 1600s
African American, Hispanic, and Native American Communities Experience Disparities in PAD Treatment
Study finds specific cells in the lungs, nasal passages, and intestines that are more susceptible to infection.
Semaglutide, also known by its brand names Ozempic and Wegovy, marks a new era in anti-obesity therapeutics.
For the past eight years, Dennis Moledina, MD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine (nephrology), has been searching for a new method to determine if a patient with acute kidney injury (AKI) has acute interstitial nephritis (AIN), a common cause of AKI.
Scientists at Yale have developed a new gene delivery and immune cell engineering technology with the potential to advance cell therapies for cancer and other diseases.
Breast milk is not simply sustenance. It also is rich in micronutrients that are critical for healthy brain development in infants.
Novel method, developed by McGovern Institute researchers, may lead to safer, more efficient gene therapies.
Children and mothers’ cortisol production in response to family psychosocial conditions, including parenting demands, family resource availability and parental conflict, has been extensively studied in the United States and Europe.
In 2007, Yale pediatric neurosurgeon Steven Schiff, MD, PhD, visited his friend, Benjamin Warf, MD, at the CURE Children’s Hospital of Uganda.
Areas in Sweden with early access to electricity at the start of the 1900s underwent rapid change.
People with type 2 diabetes tend to have poorer muscle function than others.