Thermal span in a layered compound promises applications in next-generation electrical switches and nonvolatile memory.
Among adults who vary in their knowledge of number words, the ability to reason about numbers is bound by the highest number they can count to.
Neutron scattering reveals coherent waves of ‘spin excitons’ in nickelate crystal
2D polymers likely candidates for large-scale multifunctional applications
Study is first to document reefwide dynamics of viruses that infect coral symbionts
A School of Public Health study shows exposure to ultrafine particles during pregnancy enhances the risk for respiratory viral infection.
Fetal alcohol syndrome-related craniofacial differences could be seen in offspring born to fathers who regularly consumed as little alcohol as the legal limit.
Faculty from Texas A&M’s School of Public Health teamed up with other institutions across the state to show how the herbicide paraquat caused a kidney disease epidemic in Central America.
The team discovered a groundbreaking increase in the storage capacity of water-based battery electrodes, an important step in the development of lithium-free batteries.
A new publication explains the novel science behind the first molecular therapeutic for the rare neurogenetic disorder to advance into clinical development.
State policies improving data protection are especially important for increasing adoption of health IT and health information exchanges.
A Texas A&M researcher explains the mosquito gene manipulation study and how it might help protect humans and animals.
The team’s findings suggest that even simple forms of physical activity like going on a walk may help reduce a person’s risk for the disease.
The act of holding information in mind is accompanied by coordination of rotating brain waves in the prefrontal cortex, a phenomenon that may convey specific advantages, a new study suggests.
New research project will help football players prevent injuries. Primarily, the focus will be on female elite football players, many of whom are plagued by career-threatening injuries.
Scientists including MIT’s Jacqueline Hewitt and Nicholas Kern share long-awaited results, getting closer to the universe’s first stars.
Single-cell gene expression analyses of human cerebrovascular cells can help reveal new drug targets for Huntington’s disease.
A recent study led by researchers from the University of Antwerp, the Institute of Vertebrate Biology (IVB) of the Czech Academy of Sciences and the Sokoine University of Agriculture in Morogoro screened 1225 rodents and shrews in Tanzania for mammarenavirus RNA, revealing mammarenaviruses might be even more specific than usually thought. The researchers associate taxa below the species level rather than rodent species with certain mammarenaviruses. Host genetic structure may thus be crucial to understand in which rodent reservoirs in which geographic regions we can expect to find them.
Researchers with the KATRIN experiment determine that neutrinos are lighter than 0.8 eV/c2.
A new deep-learning algorithm trained to optimize doses of propofol to maintain unconsciousness during general anesthesia could augment patient monitoring.