A new method has the potential to allow the editing and repair of genes to be accomplished reliably and stealthily
The wristbands, which absorb chemicals from air and skin, are an excellent screening tool for population exposures to organic chemicals
Researchers trained the tool, called FitRec, on a dataset of more than 250,000 workout records for more than 1,000 runners
A new study is the first to show how two types of sand can behave like liquids, shedding light on geological processes
DNA of 13th century Crusaders shows that there's more to learn about who the Crusaders were and their interactions with other populations
The EDU™ Series Ductless Demonstration Fume Hoods are designed to provide 360° visibility
Wild fish release chemicals called 'disturbance cues' to signal to other fish about nearby dangers
A closer look at seismic data from 2008–2017 expands Southern California's earthquake catalog by a factor of 10
Even after treatment, non-resistant bacteria could still become resistant by picking up intact genes left over from damaged antibiotic resistant bacteria
Findings reveal that restoration of marsh vegetation is key to overall recovery
A neural network can read scientific papers and render a plain-English summary
Compared with other biofluids such as blood, sweat has the potential to be obtained less invasively for diagnostic testing
CURRENT ISSUE - March/2026
How Lab Leaders Can Prepare for Safety Crises That Don’t Follow the Script