A new ‘pop-up’ device developed by Professor John Rogers lets scientists map and manipulate activity in human neural ...
As Australia moves toward more advanced and self‑reliant defence capabilities, the energy systems that power Defence ...
Marketing teams today are running at a pace that would have felt impossible just a few years ago. Campaign cycles are shorter. Video content is constant. Social platforms reward speed. Paid ads ...
U.S. schools spent $30 billion on educational technology in 2024, roughly 10 times the amount they spent on textbooks. By one estimate, this sum could double in six years. Yet as children spend more ...
A massive candy stop in Tucson, Arizona that feels like a childhood daydream, packed with colorful treats and nostalgic finds ...
7hon MSN
Turtles' brains shed light on evolutionary developments dating back hundreds of millions of years
A new study from the School of Neurobiology, Biochemistry, and Biophysics reveals a surprising insight into the operation of ...
When scientists want to study aging and how to slow it down, they often turn to microscopic worms or lab mice among other models. The former are too different from humans, while the latter are ...
Some say we’ve entered a new age of AI-enabled scientific discovery. But human insight and creativity still can’t be ...
Human intelligence wasn’t a cosmic evolutionary fluke, some scientists say. The case against cosmic loneliness is growing.
Humans develop sharp vision during early fetal development thanks to an interplay between a vitamin A derivative and thyroid hormones in the retina, Johns Hopkins University scientists have found.
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