America’s next health emergency won’t wait for Washington, write W. Craig Vanderwagen and Jennifer B. Alton.
Vetenskapsnyheter
As the Human Cell Atlas project marks its 10th anniversary, a leader's ties to a major single-cell RNA sequencing company raise conflict-of-interest questions.
“Alzheimer’s is not primarily a disease of old age. It is a decades-long biological process,” writes Elizabeth Bevins.
Avancerade tekniker som ger arkeologer helt ny kunskap om det förflutna kan oavsiktligt påverka känsliga kulturarvsföremål. Det menar arkeologen och forskaren Mikael Fauvelle.
Män är överrepresenterade när det kommer till hjärtsjukdom, men det finns vissa tillstånd som främst drabbar kvinnor, som till exempel ”brustet hjärta”. Stress och ångest är vanligt förekommande i denna grupp. En ny studie som letts av forskare vid Uppsala universitet och Karolinska Institutet visar att internetbaserad KBT kan minska symtomen och hjälpa patienterna att bättre hantera sina känslor.
Naturlig värme från hav, sjöar och floder har potential att värma upp Europas hus – och samtidigt minska beroendet av klimatskadlig naturgas.
<p>The public health expert and former federal health official talks about the politicization of science</p>
<p>The well-known seismologist on the need for the U.S. to recalibrate its social commitment to science</p>
<p>The noted aging researcher talks about how scientists are like birds</p>
<p>The prolific mathematician discusses the role culture plays in understanding and appreciating science</p>
<p>The CRISPR expert on why immigration should be considered an economic and national security asset for science</p>
<p>The Stanford University artificial intelligence leader on why basic science needs more support</p>
<p>The Nobel laureate on scientists’ resilience in a time of uncertainty</p>
<p>The noted virologist talks about how to rebuild the U.S. scientific enterprise</p>
<p>The Nobel laureate shares how artificial intelligence will change the way science is done</p>
<p>The famed climatologist talks about how science in the U.S. is under attack</p>
<p>The renowned physicist on the lack of public support for political interference in science</p>
<p>The Pfizer executive talks about rekindling the public’s excitement over science</p>
<p>The noted robotics expert discusses the need for better communication to the public on the value of basic science</p>
<p>The university president shares thoughts on private funding and the future of science and innovation</p>
<p>The HBCU president on the role of academic institutions in American innovation</p>
<p>The Fermilab physicist on curiosity and doing what you love</p>
<p>The biotech executive talks about how we are currently at an inflection point in biomedical science and how frustration can be a good thing</p>
<p>The Google senior vice president talks about the need to reset the relationship between the government and academic and industrial science</p>
<p>The university leader on how dealing with mistrust in science will help the U.S. keep its competitive edge</p>