Pregnant women who do not get enough sleep may be at higher risk of having children with neurodevelopmental delays, according
Month: September 2024
Programming cells to target brain tumors
Glioblastoma is the most common and most aggressive primary brain tumour, with an average survival after diagnosis of less than
A method of ‘look twice, forgive once’ can sustain social cooperation
The theory of indirect reciprocity holds that people who earn a good reputation by helping others are more likely to
Light at the end of the tunnel for night shift workers
The use of circadian-informed lighting, where artificial lighting is synchronised to the natural biological rhythms or a person’s ‘body-clock’, significantly
Unexpected immune response may hold key to long-term cancer remission
Results from a preclinical study in mice, led by EPFL, and a collaborative clinical study in patients show that the
When a child hurts, validating their pain may be the best first aid
Whether it’s a sore arm or a fear of injections, how a child is treated when they present with pain
Study finds certain MS therapies may not slow disability progression
In people with primary progressive multiple sclerosis (MS), a new study has found no difference in the amount of time
Bodily awareness could curb scams and fraud against older adults, study suggests
You click on an email you weren’t expecting from your bank, and something seems off. Your pulse quickens. There’s a
Why children with Down syndrome have higher risk of leukemia
People with Down syndrome face a higher risk of developing Leukemia. Now researchers from the University of Copenhagen and Stanford
Managing stress could be the key to helping highly impulsive people act rashly when bored
Research at the University of Portsmouth has explored the relationship between high impulsivity and boredom, in an effort to find