To get a good sense of a country’s level of development, you need to look at the items people have in their homes, according to economists Rutger Schilpzand and Jeroen Smits from Radboud University.
When people have an audience watching them, it can change their performance for better or worse. Now, researchers reporting ...
New research reveals for the first time how a major Antarctic ice shelf has been subjected to increased melting by warming ...
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center today announced the launch of its Institute for Cell Therapy Discovery & ...
This review discussed experimental mouse models used in the pre-clinical study of liver fibrosis regression, a pivotal ...
Room-temperature (RT) gas sensors with high sensitivity are essential in low-power Internet-of-Things (IoT) applications, ...
Osaka, Japan – While we might picture a biologist as a researcher hunched over a light microscope, carefully scrutinizing a ...
A Branco Weiss Fellowship – Society in Science has been awarded to Dr Gergana Daskalova. The fellowship funds Daskalova’s ...
Teams of mountaineering mice are helping advance understanding into how evolutionary adaptation to localized conditions can ...
Only a few weeks ago, massive precipitation produced by the storm “Boris” led to chaos and flooding in Central and Eastern ...
Researchers at the University of Minnesota have achieved a new material that will be pivotal in making the next generation of ...
Utah State University geologist Carol Dehler samples the 500-million-year-old Bright Angel Formation in Grand Canyon. The ...