News
SINGAPORE - Stepping into Madam Nurhida Sapiie’s science lesson at Yew Tee Primary School, it is a flurry of activity.
A stem-cell-based "organ-on-a-chip" model of ALS mimics early biological changes seen in the degenerative disease.
FITBOOK magazine on MSN6d
Seemingly Harmless Sweetener Raises Risk of Stroke and Heart Attack
High sugar consumption is proven to be detrimental to health. To cut calories, many people turn to sweeteners and sugar substitutes. However, caution is advised here as well. A new study reveals that ...
An international team of scientists has decoded some of the most stubborn, overlooked regions of the human genome using ...
18h
Smithsonian Magazine on MSNOctopuses Fall for the Rubber Hand Illusion, Just Like Humans, Pointing to a Sense of Body Ownership
The trick that plays with awareness of one’s own limb appeared to fool all six of the cephalopods tested in a series of ...
Millions of people worldwide suffer from hydrocephalus, or a buildup of excess cerebrospinal fluid in the brain, and which ...
It wasn't just data from maps, machines and rainfall readings that led CSIRO scientists to build Australia's most ...
An international team led by Einstein Professor Cecilia Clementi in the Department of Physics at Freie Universität Berlin ...
“It feels lovely for [the] first 15 minutes, especially in winter,” Rykaczewski says. “After about two hours, it becomes [a] bit, well, sweaty.” ...
The gender gap in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) fields is still a crucial issue. According to ...
2d
MyChesCo on MSNScientists May Have Cracked the Code Behind How Human Tissues Stay Perfectly Organized
Researchers at ChristianaCare’s Helen F. Graham Cancer Center & Research Institute and the University of Delaware have uncovered what could be a biological “instruction manual” for how ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results