A five-year study into the impacts of sea-level rise on the Hanauma Bay Nature Preserve (HBNP) predicts 88% of the preserve’s usable beach will be underwater by 2030.
BioAutoMATED, an open-source, automated machine-learning platform, aims to help democratize artificial intelligence for research labs.
UC San Diego scientists find protein associated with liver cancer may actually be key to protecting against it
A new study from a team including a Texas A&M archaeologist shows that the extinct species popularized by "Game of Thrones" was only a distant relative of today’s wolves.
A new technique produces perovskite nanocrystals right where they’re needed, so the exceedingly delicate materials can be integrated into nanoscale devices.
Columbia Engineering professor Henning Schulzrinne unpacks President Biden’s $1 trillion infrastructure bill and its promise to expand broadband access for people in rural and low-income areas.
Perceptions of safety procedure quality and utility are the best predictors of workers' likelihood to comply, Texas A&M researchers found.
The National Cancer Institute has revealed for the first time that young Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders (NHPI) are the race group that experiences the highest rates of cancer death among people their age in the U.S.
A team of researchers led by a Texas A&M professor found the genetic and evolutionary changes that led to rabbits' tolerance toward humans.
The North Pacific “Garbage Patch” aggregates an abundance of floating sea creatures, as well as the plastic waste it has become infamous for, according to a study published in PLOS Biology and co-authored by oceanographers in the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST).
A Texas A&M geography professor is part of a research team that found efficient ways to track the virus and pinpoint spreading clusters.
Discovery comes to light with evidence that vertebrates acquired a special protein from bacteria more than 500 million years ago
Texas A&M researchers have developed a deep-learning algorithm that can denoise images to reveal otherwise invisible details.
Sweat is more than just a sign of a good workout. It holds vital information about our health, providing clues to dehydration, fatigue, blood sugar levels and even serious conditions such as cystic fibrosis, diabetes and heart failure
A new computational method facilitates the dense placement of objects inside a rigid container.
As part of global ocean circulation, warm water in the upper layer flows from the Pacific Ocean to the Indian Ocean through the Indonesian Archipelago.
Co-authored by a Texas A&M scientist, a new study shows that wildfire smoke cools the climate more than current computer models assume.
Texas A&M researchers have shown that water treatment has the potential to remove nearly all viruses that have an "outer fortress" from drinking water.
A longtime beloved MIT faculty member, Thornton was an adventurer who advocated exploration in all aspects of life.
Living at the edge of darkness, the community of microbes and tiny animals in the ocean’s twilight zone upcycle nutrients to ensure their survival.