It’s hard enough for most of us to predict what we’re having for dinner tonight, much less how the world will look in 2100.
10don MSN
Are university policies holding science back? Study shows how patenting boosts pure research
When UC Berkeley biochemist Jennifer Doudna first began studying how bacteria fight virus infections, she had no idea it ...
A new report from Springer Nature, in partnership with Overton, offers the most comprehensive picture yet of how academic research is influencing real-world policy tied to the Sustainable Development ...
An influential research article that claimed a popular weed-killer was safe has been retracted 25 years after it was ...
The identification of the remains was based on a contemporary osteological analysis, but they were subsequently lost and only ...
The tiny pantheon known as the Asgard archaea bear traits that hint at how plants, animals and fungi emerged on Earth.
We can't see dark matter directly, so studying it pushes the boundaries of our creativity as scientists. How exciting, says Chanda Prescod-Weinstein ...
Division on whether an OU student should have received a zero on her essay, but most agreed that her free speech rights had ...
An AI conference was bombarded with complaints about peer reviews sounding AI-generated. Now the reviews are being reviewed.
Agrawal explained that doing so was considered plagiarism — a serious violation of research integrity — but the student ...
Deadly and destructive, earthquakes remain unpredictable, but faster models that look beneath the ground, can help better ...
"I just can't make it tonight. You have fun without me." Across much of the animal kingdom, when infection strikes, social contact shuts down. A new study details how the immune and central nervous ...
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