While accepting the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine this year, molecular biologist Gary Ruvkun spent a few minutes lauding his experimental subject: a tiny worm named Caenorhabditis elegans.
A neuroscientist scanned her own brain 75 times over a year to study the effects of the menstrual cycle and oral contraceptives on the brain. Plus, we celebrate a hero of scientific research: C.
The bubonic plague is something we associate with the Dark Ages, when tens of millions were killed in the wake of the “Black Death,” which swept across Asia, Africa, and Europe in the 14th century.
If you've never played the Plague Tale games, then you've missed out on a pair of stealth-focused action-adventure games that follow the siblings Amicia and Hugo as they attempt to survive in a ...
Caenorhabditis elegans, one millimeter long, has just 959 cells. The worm’s simplicity has made it a mainstay of scientific research.Credit... Supported by By Teddy Rosenbluth When scientists ...
However, these attributes will also apply to Plague Inc, a four-player antidote to Pandemic – but without the Risk-associated family fallouts! This is a much more balanced affair where each player ...