A study published in Personality and Individual Differences found that indecisive people tend to make really smart decisions.
This study provides important evidence that negative affect is associated with slower cognitive processing in daily life, with findings replicated across three independent samples and supported by ...
FDA expands labels for Roche's PATHWAY HER2 (4B5) test* and VENTANA HER2 Dual ISH DNA Probe Cocktail, which can now be used to identify HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer patients that could be ...
A research team uncovers how microalgal-bacterial granular sludge (MBGS) responds metabolically and structurally when exposed to different estriol ...
Science and institutions like AIIMS now validate meditation as a clinical tool. Studies show it reduces stress, improves ...
According to national surveys conducted in 2017 and 2020 by Kevin B. Smith, a professor of political science at the ...
The interconnection of the world’s knowledge was expected to democratize education. Instead, it has democratized ...
Routine reactor emissions pose no meaningful health risk to the US workers and population, a health physicist and a nuclear ...
Dr. Charis Kubrin and Dr. Mark Lipsey were awarded the Stockholm Prize for Criminology for their research showing that ...
Recent research suggests that the consumption of caffeinated beverages is linked to a measurable increase in positive feelings, particularly during the morning hours. While caffeine reliably lifts ...
Research shows that giving time, money or support to others is associated with benefits to well-being. But doing so isn’t always beneficial. Dr. Leana Wen explains.
As schools and universities take varying stances on AI, some teachers believe the tech can democratize tutoring. Here's how - and where the drawbacks lie.