Study Identifies More Effective Messaging for Businesses to Increase Customers' Eco-Friendly Tactics
Findings explain how plants use RNA to defend against fungal invaders
Deregulated U.S. Government Oversight on Interstate Waters Leaves Murky Implications for States
Today’s humans share genes with oceanic creatures missing heads
No Bounce Back for Declines in Positive Emotion
Mistletoe sends treemail
The breakthrough combines excellent electromagnetic shielding with ease of manufacture and electrical isolation
UC Riverside-led study observed unexpected insulating phases by placing electrons on stacked monolayers of 2D semiconductors
Lower Still for Those with Low Incomes
New Artificial Neural Network Design Can Differentiate Between Healthy and Diseased Skin
Lack of communication between child and adult clinicians and between clinicians and those in education can lead to educational underperformance and unmet health needs for young people with ADHD, a new paper warns.
Cardiologist Demilade Adedinsewo is using her MIT Professional Education experience to advance cardiovascular care at the Mayo Clinic.
Male elephants are more aggressive when fewer older males are present, new research suggests.
Scientists have developed a pioneering new technique to barcode individual cells more accurately and efficiently - which could help pave the way for quicker disease diagnosis.
Dietary shifts towards eating more meat causes 75,000 premature deaths a year in China through air pollution, a study shows.
Middle Schoolers with Elevated Mental Health Problems Showed Reduction in Symptoms in Early Stages of Pandemic
The largest study of care homes in the UK, led by experts at the University of Nottingham and involving the University of Exeter, has found that a co-
Scientists have made a pivotal breakthrough in the quest to ease the global sustainable food crisis through pioneering stem cell research.
Bumblebees waste no time enjoying the beauty of flowers – instead learning the bare minimum about where to land and find food, new research shows.
Whoops, croaks, growls, raspberries and foghorns are among the sounds that demonstrate the success of a coral reef restoration project.