NewsHeavy Cannabis Use Increases Risk of Developing Anxiety Disorder, Study Suggestsby Institute for Clinical Evaluative SciencesRegardless of causality, study authors caution against using cannabis to treat symptoms of anxiety
NewsGene Editing Precisely Repairs Immune Cellsby Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine in the Helmholtz AssociationNew therapeutic strategy uses CRISPR-Cas9 to repair T cells that are defective due to rare disease of the immune system
NewsA Carbon-Lite Atmosphere Could Be a Sign of Water and Life on Other Planetsby Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyA low carbon abundance in planetary atmospheres could be a signature of habitability
NewsOcean Temperatures Helped Make 2023 the Hottest Year Ever Recordedby Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of SciencesThe worlds oceans are heating up causing changes to salinity and rainfall, among others
NewsRice Breakthrough Could Make Automated Dosing Systems Universalby Rice UniversitySynthetic biologists hack blood-glucose reaction to create chemotherapy detector
NewsBalancing Training Data and Human Knowledge Makes AI Act More like a Scientistby Cell PressResearchers develop a framework that helps AI incorporate natural laws to better navigate complex scientific problems
NewsGPS Nanoparticle Platform Precisely Delivers Therapeutic Payload to Cancer Cellsby Penn StateEquipped with novel homing abilities, the platform activates in cancer environments to release gene-editing tools
NewsOldest Hunter-Gatherer Basketry in Southern Europe, 9,500 Years Old, Discoveredby Universitat Autonoma de BarcelonaThe treatment of the material demonstrates the ability of prehistoric communities to master this type of craftsmanship
NewsNew Study Finds Chemical Composition of US Air Pollution Changed Over Timeby University of North Carolina at Chapel HillResearchers found that while fine particulate matter concentrations have overall decreased, its composition has changed
NewsStudy Links PFAS Contamination with Teas, Processed Meats, and Food Packagingby Keck School of Medicine of USCResearchers assessed how dietary patterns relate to levels of so-called forever chemicals in the body over time