Covid, paper in Nature: immune errors in 25% of those vaccinated with mRNA
Cambridge study: 25-30% of mRNA vaccinated had an unexpected but harmless immune response.
Cambridge study: 25-30% of mRNA vaccinated had an unexpected but harmless immune response.
The claim of a 27.000-year-old pyramid in Indonesia sparks a global debate and investigation into its historical legitimacy.
A study published in Nature examines different scenarios and moments to describe the catastrophic consequences of an atomic war.
They sell them in quantities, and with very high concentrations of active ingredient: they are teeth whiteners, and a study says that they do very badly.
If researchers are right with this newfound missing link, the first neural building blocks for the evolution of language may have appeared much earlier than we thought.
The patients underwent an annual growth hormone cycle and two anti-diabetes drugs, which reversed their biological aging.
DNA as a building material for multifunctional synthetic cells, stable up to 50°C. Potential applications in regenerative medicine, drug delivery and diagnostics.
Breakthrough in the fight against cancer: a new AI test analyzes a drop of dried blood and diagnoses three types of cancer in minutes with up to 100% accuracy
Facial recognition, cameras, padlocked trolleys: supermarkets will be digital fortresses. But at what cost to consumer rights?
A team from the University of Queensland has developed a revolutionary nanogenerator that absorbs CO2 to produce electricity, demonstrating how we can turn it from a problem into a resource.
Just one hour, for four days: it is the dose of physical exercise that breaks down the fat molecule BMP, responsible for muscle aging.
Reducing emissions from a few dozen companies is easier than convincing 8 billion people. But without cuts to fossil fuels and more renewables, objectives are at risk.
For Andrew Scott it's time for a second longevity revolution: not just longer lives, but healthier ones. We need to rethink healthcare, work, pensions and cultural norms.
The team modified bacteria to produce a black pigment: the shoe of the future combines production and dyeing in a single process.
The new communication networks use microchips the size of a grain of salt, which can be implanted in the body or in wearable devices.
Researchers at the University of Oxford have cataloged more than 4.400 naturally preserved human brains, some dating back 12.000 years, challenging the idea that they are extremely rare.
New research suggests that Mars' gravitational influence on Earth could cause huge vortices in the deepest parts of the oceans, eroding the seabed.
Researchers from Goa University have discovered an innovative method to extract gold nanoparticles from Termitomyces mushrooms, opening up new prospects for India in the global market.
Women lose gray matter in childbirth, then regain it except in one circuit key to creating a “sense of self”
UCLA bioengineers have designed and tested a soft patch that, when applied to the neck, is capable of making the voiceless speak.
Drone technology that 3D prints in flight, inspired by the collaboration of insects, promises to build in previously inaccessible areas.