NewsResearchers Edge Closer to Delivering Personalized Medicine to Cancer Patientsby Purdue UniversityMeasuring mechanical motions in living cancer tissues is a viable and promising approach for predicting chemoresistance
NewsFor the First Time, Controlling the Degree of Twist in Nanostructured Particlesby University of MichiganDeciding whether a micron-scale particle twists and by how much could open new avenues for machine vision and more
NewsNew Bioinformatics Tool Tests Methods for Finding Mutant Genes That 'Drive' Cancerby Phil Sneiderman-Johns Hopkins University News OfficeJohns Hopkins research could lead to more precise ways to target tumor growth
NewsNew Cholesterol Test May Allow Patients to Pass on Fasting, Study Suggestsby Vanessa McMains-Johns Hopkins University News OfficeAssessment developed at Johns Hopkins shown to be more accurate than traditional method of measuring cholesterol
NewsCloning Thousands of Genes for Massive Protein Librariesby Todd B. Bates-Rutgers University News OfficeScientists at Rutgers and other universities build technology that could lead to rapid discovery of new medicines and biomarkers hidden in genomes
NewsWearable Devices Offer Continuous Monitoring for COVID-19by Northwestern UniversitySticker-like medical wearables stream symptom data to physicians
NewsResearchers Develop Soft, Microfluidic 'Lab on the Skin' for Sweat Analysisby Megan Fellman-Northwestern University News OfficeLow-cost wearable electronic device collects and analyzes sweat for health monitoring
NewsStudy Finds Female Faculty Are Underrepresented in Genomicsby Megan Fellman-Northwestern University News Office“There is a lot of research money in this high-profile area, and women are not represented proportionally," researcher says
NewsScientists Use CRISPR for First Time to Correct Clotting in Newborn and Adult Miceby Perelman School of Medicine at the University of PennsylvaniaFindings presented at ASH meeting offer clues about use of gene editing for disease-causing mutations
NewsAntibodies Identified That Thwart Zika Virus Infectionby Tamara Bhandari-Washington University in St. Louis News OfficeCould lead to vaccines, diagnostic tests, and therapies