When It Comes to Communication Skills—Maybe We’re Born with It

Contrary to media reporting, lottery-based incentives do not increase COVID-19 vaccination rates

Study Reveals Recipe for Even More Powerful COVID-19 Vaccines

Study argues principles of Mario Kart can serve as a guide to create more equitable social and economic programs to better serve farmers in low-resource, rural regions

Study looks into subtle effects—beyond vocal pitch—that testosterone therapy has on voices of trans men

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) dramatically increased children’s preventive healthcare while reducing out-of-pocket costs, according to a new US study

Scientists determine how the SARS-CoV-2 virus hijacks and rapidly causes damage to human lung cells

Tunable Delete Aware LSM Engine

Mimir – A Near-Infrared Wide-Field Imager, Spectrometer and Polarimeter

The Examined Life: A Review of Howard Axelrod’s the Stars in Our Pockets

Education Without Truth in Postmodern Perspectivism

The American Frontier Continues to Shape Us (2018)

In a new paper published in "Learning and Memory", researchers from Boston University's Center for Systems Neuroscience reveal just how much power scents have in triggering the memory of past experiences—and the potential for odor to be used as a tool to treat memory-related mood disorders.

Yoga decreases depression and improves mood by increasing levels of GABA (a neurotransmitter in the central nervous system), according to a new study that sheds light on how yoga exerts its physiologic effect

Two million Americans lost health coverage/access in Trump's first year, new study shows

"Take-home" exposures — exposures to toxic contaminants inadvertently brought home from a family member’s work — as a public health hazard.

Images captured of the brain "washing itself" with waves of cerebral spinal fluid during sleep, which helps to flush out toxic, memory-impairing proteins.

For every year of absorbing hits and repeated head collisions that come with playing football, a person’s risk of developing chronic traumatic encephalopathy increases by 30%…

The FBI and CDC Datasets Agree: Who Has Guns—Not Which Guns—Linked to Murder Rates

Ocean Noise Pollution, Whale Ears, and a Humpback Beached on Cape Cod

Unikernels: The Next Stage of Linux’s Dominance

New research shows just how pliable memory is if you know which regions of the hippocampus to stimulate

Electrostimulation can improve the working memory of people in their 70s so that their performance on memory tasks is indistinguishable from that of 20-year-olds, according to new research.

Toward Diagnosing CTE in Living People - An experimental PET (positron emission tomography) scan on living people is able to detect abnormal brain tissue—called tau protein—in patterns similar to those found in the brains of deceased NFL players diagnosed with CTE after death.

Acoustic Metamaterial blocks sounds while allowing airflow

Safe Programming with Pointers through Stateful Views (2005)

Experiment finds under 1 in 10 people can tell sponsored content from articles

New study shows opioid marketing in the U.S. directly fuels prescription rates, fatal overdoses

Those who are killed by guns when they are young are much more often black, while their white counterparts are dying older, finds a new study

A new test can determine whether Ebola is causing a patient’s symptoms in less than half an hour and is portable enough to take into the field.

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