Increasing workplace flexibility may lower employees’ risk of cardiovascular disease, according to a new study led by Harvard T.H. Chan
Month: November 2023
Artificial bladders shine light on bugs that cause urinary tract infections
The research, published today in Science Advances, is the first to use a sophisticated human tissue model to explore the
187 new genetic variants linked to prostate cancer found in largest, most diverse study of its kind
A globe-spanning scientific team has compiled the most comprehensive list of genetic variants associated with prostate cancer risk — 451
Drug screen points toward novel diabetes treatments
A drug currently in clinical trials as a cancer therapy can also stimulate pancreatic beta cells to secrete insulin, revealing
Ethical, environmental and political concerns about climate change affect reproductive choices
People are beginning to reconsider their reproductive decisions due to complex concerns about climate change, with many choosing to forego
Side-effect avoiding treatment shows early promise against breast cancer in mice
New experimental evidence suggests that substances known as narrow-spectrum Wnt signaling inhibitors — which could have fewer side effects than
New AI noise-canceling headphone technology lets wearers pick which sounds they hear
Most anyone who’s used noise-canceling headphones knows that hearing the right noise at the right time can be vital. Someone
Human brain takes stock of blame
The human mind does not like to make mistakes — and makes time to avoid repeating them. A new study
Left-handers aren’t better spatially, gaming research shows
Leonardo Da Vinci was one, so too Albert Einstein and Joan of Arc, while the footballer Diego Maradona was famous
Social-behavioral findings can be highly replicable, six-year study by four labs suggests
Roughly two decades ago, a community-wide reckoning emerged concerning the credibility of published literature in the social-behavioral sciences, especially psychology.