In his new book, neuroscientist Steve Ramirez delves in the fast-growing field of memory manipulation, which is being explored as a treatment for depression and other mental health conditions.
A combination of the breakdown of the Hollywood studio system, the decline of censorship, and the rise of wildly — and ...
Find out why Riley Duren is on TIME's 2025 list of the 100 most influential leaders driving business climate action.
The symbiotic relationship between the federal government and our universities — one that has delivered so much for America, ...
More than a thousand years ago, astronomers from the Maya civilization developed one of the most sophisticated time-keeping ...
Sir Isaac Newton (1643—1727), whose laws of motion and gravity set the stage for a revolutionary change in the way humans viewed the universe and their place in it, was a man of many talents and ...
Scientist Kate Adamala doesn’t remember exactly when she realized her lab at the University of Minnesota was working on something potentially dangerous — so dangerous in fact that some researchers ...
In an era where headlines—not just hypotheses—shape science, visibility can elevate—or endanger. From de-extinction startups to CRISPR livestreams, scientists now navigate peer review, public scrutiny ...
Through years of research, AI-assisted photographic analysis, and archival images supplied by a distant relative, German historian Jürgen Matthäus was finally able to put a name to the gunman.
Legendary architect Sir Norman Foster sits down with Architectural Digest to reflect on his groundbreaking career, visionary design philosophy, and the future of architecture. As the founder of Foster ...
Science is full of brilliant discoveries—but also bitter rivalries. Rosalind Franklin’s critical DNA image was used without credit by Watson and Crick. In the 80s, the discovery of HIV sparked an ...