December 06, 2024
Why people remember certain things and not others
Exactly why do people remember what they remember? A recently published review paper from researcher ...View More
Getting to the bottom of things: Latrine findings help researcher trace the movement of people and disease
A McMaster researcher has uncovered evidence of intestinal parasites in a 500-year-old latrine from ...View More
CAST mouse model: A crucial tool for future COVID-19 outbreaks
Researchers at The Jackson Laboratory and Trudeau Institute have identified the first mouse strain t ...View More
New shape-changing polymer developed
A team of scientists has created a new shape-changing polymer that could transform how future soft m ...View More
Magnetically controlled kirigami surfaces move objects: No grasping needed
Researchers have developed a novel device that couples magnetic fields and kirigami design principle ...View More
MRI could be key to understanding the impact a gluten free diet has on people with Celiac disease
Experts have used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to better understand the impact a gluten free die ...View More
Man Who Doesn’t Speak Spanish Wins Spanish-Language Scrabble World Championship
Nigel Richards, a 57-year-old New Zealand scrabble phenom, recently won the 2024 Spanish-Language Sc ...View More
Rock found by a 6-year-old on a beach is actually a 50,000-year-old Neanderthal ax
Three years ago, a then-6-year-old boy named Ben discovered a strange rock on a beach in Sussex ...View More
Jodie Foster thought her acting career would be over at 18: 'I never thought I'd be an actor when I grew up'
Jodie Foster wasn’t planning to be an actress into her 20s, let alone her 60s.“I never thought I'd b ...View More
Gut microbiome may have fueled the growth of humans' big brains, study suggests
The community of microbes that live in the gut, known as the gut microbiome, may have fueled th ...View More






