New biography of Alan R. Moritz traces how forensic science learned to define what it can — and cannot — know.
“Demonic intrusion,” a term coined in 1984, describes uncontrolled, often random disturbances by an entity, human or ...
If you think the life of a journalist is glamorous, take a look at Ann Hermes’ photograph of Tom Haley from a winter day in ...
Cancer researchers across the world are trying to develop treatments (ideally without side effects) for various forms of the ...
As he prepares to take the helm of one of the world’s largest corporations, Ternus’ former classmates, teammates, and mentors ...
An inherited form of blindness directly comparable to a common inherited optic nerve disease in humans has been discovered in ...
During an April 2 showcase event, Research Track students presented the work they developed over the two quarters. The 12 ...
A new study found that a pachyderm skeleton, dismissed for decades as unimportant, offers evidence of careful planning, ...
The recently published UCI Sports Nutrition Project paper on road cycling provides one of the most comprehensive overviews to ...
Failure is part and parcel of research, but discussing it sometimes seems to be taboo in science. It doesn’t need to be.
A new paper published in Frontiers in Marine Science presents lessons learned from and practical strategies for how small ...
Congressmembers pushed back on Trump’s proposal to slash NASA’s science budget as Democrats alleged some damage has already ...