From coffee and green tea to bananas and pecans, new research on everyday ingredients revealed surprising connections between ...
Tech companies are claiming machines more intelligent than us and capable of having their own agendas are just around the ...
Biology has always been an unruly science. Cells divide when they want to. Genes switch on and off like temperamental lights.
You might feel like the days and weeks are slipping by. Here is how one psychologist says you can shift your experience of ...
Discover why surface chemistry matters and how XPS imaging modes enable deeper insight into materials performance.
The past year may go down as one of the most consequential in technology history — in Seattle and beyond. On this special ...
Kendra Pierre-Louis: For Scientific American’s Science Quickly, I’m Kendra Pierre-Louis, in for Rachel Feltman. As the year comes to an end, instead of catching up on the latest science stories you ...
The change is part of the new 2025-2030 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, the US government's roadmap to healthy drinking and ...
Researchers discovered that a poison frog species described decades ago was based on a mix-up involving the wrong museum ...
From global stages to grassroots change, these young Indians defined 2025 with courage, consistency and cultural force. This ...
They drew with crayons, possibly fed on maggots and maybe even kissed us: Forty millenniums later, our ancient human cousins ...
If you are a Class 12 science student, chances are you have come across this question more than once. Should you choose ...