To get a good sense of a country’s level of development, you need to look at the items people have in their homes, according to economists Rutger Schilpzand and Jeroen Smits from Radboud University.
Tool use isn’t unique to humans. Chimpanzees use sticks as tools. Dolphins, crows, and elephants are known for their tool-use ...
UC Santa Cruz chemists have discovered a new way to produce biodiesel from waste oil that both simplifies the process and ...
In a paper published in Science Bulletin, multi-omics analyses comprising of lipidomics (439 lipids), sterolomics (22 ...
A total synthesis method developed by a collaboration led by Emory and Caltech opens the door to new ways of building natural ...
Cleveland Clinic researchers are presenting updated findings from their novel study of a vaccine aimed at preventing ...
Researchers at UC San Diego identify a key pathway leading to neurodegeneration in early stages of ALS, hinting at the ...
In a paper published in National Science Review, several international teams of scientists present a low latency carbon ...
This review discussed experimental mouse models used in the pre-clinical study of liver fibrosis regression, a pivotal ...
There’s no cure for a fungal disease that could potentially wipe out much of global banana production. Widespread adoption of ...
Scarlet macaws are a symbol of fidelity and virtue to many people because they are thought to mate for life — but it turns out that they also “play favorites” when feeding their young, making them ...
When people have an audience watching them, it can change their performance for better or worse. Now, researchers reporting ...