Aerodynamics involved in shooting hoops can make vehicles greener
Adding spinning cylinders with rough surfaces to cars or ships can boost fuel efficiency
As House prepares cuts for NIH, Rathmell urges Senate to protect funding in FY25
NCI Director Kimryn Rathmell joined the NIH director and four other institute directors in a May 23 Senate subcommittee hearing to craft the Labor-HHS spending bill for fiscal year 2025.
Bioelectronics research wins top award at 2024 Regeneron ISEF
The annual international competition gave out more than $9 million in prizes to teen scientists
RWE study pinpoints gaps in mental health care utilization among parents of children with cancer
Unquestionably, a child’s cancer diagnosis weighs heavily on the parents’ minds. But now, an analysis of nearly 30,000 U.S. families has quantified how often parents of children with cancer use mental health services.
Herbal medicine could help recovery after concussion
Combining a compound with a pain reliever helped fruit flies bounce back from a brain injury
Citing need for “more conversations” on menthol, White House scuttles move to ban the flavor favored by Black smokers
The Biden administration has—for the second time—delayed the decision on a proposed FDA rule that would ban menthol cigarettes and all flavors in cigars.
Black patients with multiple myeloma aren’t getting autoHCT as often as others—and the disparity has widened
Black patients are less likely than patients of other races and ethnicities to receive autologous hematopoietic cell transplants for multiple myeloma, according to a study published in the April issue of Clinical Lymphoma, Myeloma, and Leukemia.
Surviving lung cancer focused Morhaf Al Achkar’s career on addressing health disparities
Something felt wrong during one of Morhaf Al Achkar’s regular runs on the treadmill in late 2016. He started gasping for breath.
Obesity drugs aren’t always forever. What happens when you quit?
Many researchers think that Wegovy and Ozempic should be taken for life, but myriad factors can force people off them.
Satellite Events Connect Physicists Around the World to the March Meeting
Sites in seven countries expanded opportunities to participate and collaborate.
This fMRI technique promised to transform brain research — why can no one replicate it?
The DIANA technique sparked excitement from neuroscientists. But two new papers have cast doubt over the results.
Eavesdropping on fish could help us keep better tabs on underwater worlds
Scientists are on a quest to log all the sounds of fish communication. The result could lead to better monitoring of ecosystems and fish behavior.
Building a Quantum Workforce Doesn’t Just Mean Graduating More Ph.D.s
To bring millions of new technology workers into the fold, nations must cast a wide net.
Daddy longlegs look like they have two eyes. That doesn’t count the hidden ones
Two sets of vestigial eyes shed light on the arachnids’ evolutionary history
More than 1 billion people worldwide are now estimated to have obesity
The chronic disease affects roughly one-eighth of the global population
Is ChatGPT making scientists hyper-productive? The highs and lows of using AI
Large language models are transforming scientific writing and publishing. But the productivity boost that these tools bring could come with a downside.
How cancer hijacks the nervous system to grow and spread
A new wave of research is unpicking the relationship between cancer and neurons — and looking for ways to stop the crosstalk.
Parrots can move along thin branches using ‘beakiation’
The sidestep involves shuffling across the underside of a branch using both feet and the beak