NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Nancy Krieger, a social epidemiologist at Harvard University, about her efforts to preserve federal health data that recently disappeared from government websites.
Friends of Ramona Library is holding its “Fill a Bag” book sale on Saturday, Feb. 15 — the last event before the library closes for roof repairs. The sale is a chance for book ...
In his new book, Source Code, Gates recalls a unique childhood that led him to build a technology empire. We talk BASIC, old ...
In this second report on wellness trends for 2025, I look at the rise in high-tech solutions for optimising wellbeing and the ...
As he prepares to turn 70 later this year, Microsoft founder Bill Gates' new memoir explores how his childhood quirks, ...
Decision science has helped organizations make more informed choices by focusing on data and evidence. But there’s an ...
Robert F. Kennedy attempted Thursday to score a cheap political point against Senator Bernie Sanders by accusing the ...
Kennedy Jr., President Trump's pick for health secretary, has falsely linked vaccines to autism and argued people should have ...
"Long Island and the Legacy of Eugenics" tells how testimony from a Cold Spring Harbor-based facility once guided both the ...
AI tools are transforming libraries, digitizing collections, enhancing accessibility, and reshaping the role of librarians in ...
The library sorting problem is used across computer science for organizing far more than just books. A new solution is less ...
Yet despite decades of research, no treatment has been created that arrests Alzheimer’s cognitive deterioration, let alone reverses it. That dismal lack of progress is partly because of the infinite ...