Researchers at City of Hope now understand why taking an investigational white button mushroom supplement shows promise in ...
Is there anything that a woman has that some man somewhere won’t lay claim to? In short, no. This applies even to the ...
When graduate workers strike, they give leverage to other working groups aiming to negotiate better contracts with the University, write a group of graduate student alumni.
Or why salad leaves can be so wrinkly ... Introducing EuroCurvoBioNet COST Action The EuroCurvoBioNet Network, which stands ...
Australian finches' bill colors come from small genetic variations affecting how they process dietary pigments.
Biologist Kathy Willis spoke to Live Science about how touching wood makes us calmer, why looking at a picture of a savanna is calming and how walking through a forest changes our gut microbes.
By Mike Lee For most of our evolutionary history, human activity has been linked to daylight. Technology has liberated us ...
It’s not just the cold and Christmas cookies. Here’s the biology of why winter makes people sleepier, hungrier, and even ...
Wilting flowers may not mean poor plant health; instead, they could be part of a smart resource-saving strategy. A study from ...
When Ruby Redlich graduated from SCS this past May, she left campus with more than her bachelor's degree in computational biology. She also had a first-author credit in a top journal for research that ...
Computational biology and bioinformatics is an interdisciplinary field that develops and applies computational methods to analyse large collections of biological data, such as genetic sequences ...
Though poets, intellectuals, and scientists have tried to define love in the best way possible, the concept of love is still ...