Researchers at the University of Arizona have received a nearly $3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to study the impact of phthalates on women’s fertility.
Mice have remained the focal point for life sciences research for the past several decades. Their universality in biomedicine ...
Small changes in body condition score – invisible to the human eye – can have a detrimental impact on fertility in the next ...
The white-handed gibbon comes closest to humans in the study, with a monogamy rate of 63.5%. It’s the only other top-ranked ...
Nature is astonishingly diverse. Across the planet’s oceans, forests, grasslands, and cities, living beings interact in ways ...
Stability AI faces a copyright lawsuit after a musician alleged his songs were used to train AI models despite opt-out ...
In recent months there has been a flurry of small robotaxi deployments announced in China, the United States, Europe and the ...
Oceans absorb about a quarter of the carbon dioxide released by human activity every year, slowing the pace of global warming ...
Recently, the United States released its 2025 to 2030 Dietary Guidelines, with senior officials describing the update as ...
Immunocore announces 2026 strategic priorities at 44th Annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference Reaching more metastatic uveal melanoma patients with KIMMTRAK (tebentafusp) in 2026 through US ...
Researchers in Japan built a miniature human brain circuit using fused stem-cell–derived organoids, allowing them to watch ...
A study based on Finnish twins shows that reproductive history is associated, at the population level, with women's lifespan ...