From the plains of the Pleistocene to the age of smartphones, the human brain has evolved but never forgotten its roots. Many of our instincts and quirks are echoes of our ancestors.
Medical leaders reflect on 2025’s breakthroughs in AI, early detection, preventive care, and wellness—and explain how these shifts will shape healthcare priorities in 2026.
Redd’s daily treatment reveals how orangutans with chronic respiratory diseases are adapting to use certain medical tools ...
From advancements in male birth control to the science of supplements, Scientific American highlights some of the most ...
Fossils can reveal far more than the shapes of ancient creatures. Molecules preserved inside old animal bones provide clues about past diseases, what those animals ate, and the climates they lived in.
Some people believe we know everything about such thing as our body, since we study biology at school, read books, and watch ...
Police in Jharkhand’s Hazaribag district have arrested a man accused of brutally assaulting a minor boy, an incident that drew the attention of Chief Minister Hemant Soren. The incident occurred in ...
Humans are still evolving! From skin color to lactose tolerance and disease resistance, discover how our bodies keep adapting ...
Genomics drives climate resilience by revealing microbial impacts on Portuguese crops and supporting Amazonian pirarucu ...
All-RNA, non-viral, LNP-based PRINT™ platform is designed to develop safer, durable, one-time therapies for a broad range of unmet needsAddition is advancing a robust pipeline of PRINTed therapeutics ...
Research on SARS-CoV-2 in zoo tigers, lions, and hyenas shows rapid viral evolution and adaptation, offering insights into cross-species transmission dynamics.
See related editorial at Key points In 2002, the G8 summit in Kananaskis, Alberta, launched the G8 Africa Action Plan,[1][2] which identified HIV/AIDS as a central threat to human development and ...