Humans

Sign up for our newsletter

We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.

  1. Humans

    Reviewers prefer positive findings

    Biomedical research journals may be less likely to publish equivocal studies.

    By
  2. Health & Medicine

    Journal bias: Novelty preferred (which can be bad)

    Negative findings in a drug trial may seem ho hum, but they're too important to ignore or leave unpublished.

    By
  3. Health & Medicine

    Ghost authors remain a chronic problem

    They’re not apparitions, just authors who want to fly below – way below – the radar screen of scientific journals and their readers.

    By
  4. Health & Medicine

    Swine flu vaccination should target children first

    A new analysis finds that, as long as it peaks this winter, the H1N1 flu outbreak could be curtailed with a vaccination program that targets children first.

    By
  5. Anthropology

    Stone Age twining unraveled

    Plant fibers excavated at a cave in western Asia suggest that people there made twine more than 30,000 years ago.

    By
  6. Health & Medicine

    Hearing bolsters case for U.S. moly-making

    Congress today addressed the need to wean America off of reliance on foreign sources of a feedstock of the most widely used isotope in medical imaging.

    By
  7. Health & Medicine

    The eyes remember

    Eye movements may reveal memories that the hippocampus recalls even when a person isn’t aware of them, a new study shows.

    By
  8. Chemistry

    50 million chemicals and counting

    BLOG: Chemists race to keep up with a mushrooming proliferation of novel molecules.

    By
  9. Health & Medicine

    Dopamine primes kidneys for a new host

    Giving dopamine infusions to brain-dead organ donors may make transplanted kidneys more resilient, a new study shows.

    By
  10. Animals

    Vultures get their day

    Hurray for avian garbage collectors.

    By
  11. Health & Medicine

    Tetris players are not block heads

    Playing the geometry-based computer game can boost the brain’s gray matter.

    By
  12. Chemistry

    New bond in the basement

    Scientists identify a sulfur-nitrogen link, never before seen in living things, critical to holding the body together.

    By