The "Golfer's Curse" is not really bad luck—just applied physics, according to the researchers behind a new study.
Judge Builder addresses what Pallavi Koppol, a Databricks research scientist who led the development, calls the "Ouroboros problem." An Ouroboros is an ancient symbol that depicts a snake eating its ...
Smith, a microbiologist whose discovery revolutionize the field of genetic engineering, was a Johns Hopkins School of Medicine alumnus and professor emeritus ...
Scientists led by a team from the University of Chicago recently released a study that mapped some of the largest known ...
Ribonucleic acid (RNA) is one of life's most versatile molecules, with roles going far beyond being a messenger of genetic ...
In these uncertain, volatile, and unprecedented times, the role of science is more important than ever. Scientific advances that benefit humanity and ensure planetary sustainability for current and ...
The new Cambridge-Meta study reveals that human eyes, when tested with modern screens, can exceed that old threshold by a ...
The region’s large number of universities has made it a hotbed for political polling. But which will come the closest to the ...
Tuberculosis is the world's deadliest infectious disease, but detecting it in remote and war-torn regions can be difficult. That's why some health clinics are now using AI to screen for the illness.
A community forum on mental health, addiction, and recovery, featuring local leaders and law enforcement, was held ahead of ...
There are many purposes that spots and stripes serve in nature, but how they form has been more of a mystery to scientists.
Meet Mark Grebner, the Michigan statistician who helped pioneer the science of predicting whether someone will vote Republican or Democratic.