Study narrows James Webb Space Telescope targets
The tiny key to a major goal: maximizing crop growth
Supposedly drought-tolerant species hit their breaking points
Impacts of potent greenhouse gas: a bit lower than previously thought
UC Riverside mouse study shows how gene mutation leads to ovaries failing prematurely
Gene loss weakens antibacterial defense in inflammatory bowel disease in mouse study
Contamination disproportionately harming lower-income communities
UC Riverside and Yale University team sequences and mines genome of the pathogen Babesia duncani
Novel detection technique raises pollution policy questions
Only heart disease, cancer, and smoking were associated with a greater number of deaths, UCR study finds
Materials showed functionality at a wide range of temperatures and a greatly increased ability to store electricity
Mouse study shows how offspring brain and behavioral development is impacted by early life alcohol exposure
Bias is embedded in the very ways healthcare organizations operate, according to a study published recently in Clinical Psychological Science.
New research has revealed an association between the feeding of raw meat to pet dogs and the presence of bacteria resistant to critically important antibiotics.
Protection against severe COVID-19 by two doses of Pfizer-BioNTech and AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines remained high up to six months after second doses, finds new research which analysed NHS health record data on over seven million adults.
New research has discovered that Muslims’ so-called 'sociocultural attitudes' cannot explain their poor labour market outcomes in the British labour market.
New University of Bristol-led research has highlighted several potential welfare concerns relating to how snakes are kept in private homes including issues with enclosure size, temperature and humidity.
The discovery of 14 inherited genetic changes which significantly increase the risk of a person developing a symptomless blood disorder associated with the onset of some types of cancer and heart disease is published today [July 14] in Nature Genetics.
One solution to this frustratingly common scenario is to retrace your steps.
A project to help men aged 30-64 who are at risk of suicide has saved lives and reduced depression and suicidal thoughts, a study by National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) funded researchers at the University of Bristol has shown.