A New York Times health reporter explains what makes a good study, and how she knows which papers merit an article.
Recently, CLE course "'Disciplines without Borders' and Multidisciplinarity in Literature, Art, and Sciences" read Fyodor ...
It’s midterm season at the University of Connecticut, meaning that many students are spending their time doing practice problems and memorizing facts before exams. But with so many people doing ...
AstraZeneca's Oxford COVID-19 vaccine accurately follows the genetic instructions programmed into it by its developers to successfully provoke a strong immune response, according to a detailed ...
Reap the benefits of challenging self-limiting self-perceptions and beliefs and instead enhancing self-esteem.
New research has found that a small and fairly constant number of malicious documents can poison an LLM and create a backdoor ...
Casey Means, the surgeon general nominee, has criticized the medical establishment. She could be put in position to change it.
KSU professor receives National Institutes of Health grant to study the origins of cancer ...
A large language model scans abstracts and titles for signs that an article was produced by a 'paper-mill' company.
Joanna Wardwell-Ozgo figures to work backward when determining the causes of cancer. The Kennesaw State University assistant ...
Our behavioural science columnist Richard Shotton shares an extract from his and MichaelAaron Flicker’s new book, Hacking the ...