A New York Times health reporter explains what makes a good study, and how she knows which papers merit an article.
Politicians who use populist language that emphasizes the will of “the people” and criticizes corrupt elites tend to be perceived as more aligned with certain policy positions—even when no explicit ...
Naked mole-rats are one of the rare examples of eusocial mammals. Eusocial animal species are those in which a single female within the group is tasked with reproduction, along with a select group of ...
Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer among women globally. In 2022 alone, around 2.3 million women were ...
What parents need to know about Tylenol, autism and the difference between finding a link and finding a cause in scientific ...
Longitudinal Study: A longitudinal study is an observational research design in which data are collected from the same individuals (or groups) repeatedly over a defined period of time. Unlike a ...
Errors in a gene known to cause a serious neurodevelopmental condition in infants are also linked to the development of ...
PagePeek revolutionizes paper assessment in molecular dynamics through AI-driven validation, ensuring reproducibility, ...
Recently, a team of Estonian scientists published a study that may revolutionize how we analyze fluorescence correlation ...
At the Santa Rita Experimental Range south of Tucson, scientists are taking things to a whole new level with state-of-the-art ...
Functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) is a promising non-invasive neuroimaging technique that works by detecting ...
CPfS researchers has provided experimental evidence of bulk altermagnetism in MnTe. Using resonant X-ray nanoimaging, they ...