This important paper substantially advances our understanding of how Molidustat may work, beyond its canonical role, by identifying its therapeutic targets in cancer. This study presents a compelling ...
A study of more than 10 million siblings suggests that firstborns are more likely to be autistic and have allergies, while ...
The idea that modern humans inherited DNA from Neanderthal ancestors is one of the 21st century’s most celebrated discoveries ...
Objectives Artificial intelligence (AI)-driven chatbots have been rapidly adopted across research, education, business, ...
The dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) serotonergic (5-HT) system has been implicated in regulating sleep and motor control; however, its specific role remains controversial. In this study, we found that ...
AI reasoning does not necessarily require spending huge amounts on frontier models. Instead, smaller models can yield ...
Communities and servicemen have long argued they were harmed by fallout from above-ground nuclear weapons tests – but the UK ...
Kylie Lee Baker explains her latest horror novel, how Chuck Wendig helped inspire it, and her research into the lives of ...
Did residential segregation help or hurt European immigrant groups’ socioeconomic achievement in the early twentieth-century United States? The present study addresses this question with 1930 Census ...
“We genuinely cannot imagine it any other way,” Stephanie Buckman and Sammie Nowakowski tell PEOPLE ...
Twenty years after the introduction of the theory, we revisit what it does—and doesn’t—explain. by Clayton M. Christensen, Michael E. Raynor and Rory McDonald Please enjoy this HBR Classic. Clayton M.