Sharpa's newly unveiled full-body humanoid robot North built a paper windmill, dealt cards, and clicked pictures with human-like dexterity.
Biology has always been an unruly science. Cells divide when they want to. Genes switch on and off like temperamental lights.
A durable, dogged, in-person, on-paper, public commitment to a local church is a necessary part of the Christian life.
This time I'll make a simple airplane, it's perfect for kids to enjoy at the park, there's nothing better than the feeling of ...
New US dietary guidelines released Wednesday echo past advice, but also include nods to US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s “Make America Healthy Again” movement — urging ...
Archaeologists have discovered Africa’s oldest known cremation pyre at the base of Mount Hora in Malawi. According to a paper ...
There may be good reasons to object to using animals as living organ factories, including welfare concerns. But the rationale ...
Researchers say the innovation, known as SmartEM, will speed scanning sevenfold and open the field of connectomics to a broader research community, boosting our understanding of brain function and ...
A simple light-based method is uncovering hidden fiber networks inside the brain and body, even in tissue slides over 100 years old.
Victoria Gray spent 34 years battling the debilitating pain of sickle cell disease. Then she volunteered to be the world's first "prototype" for a CRISPR therapy, based on technology invented at UC ...
An artist's interpretation of an early human ancestor striking flint on a piece of iron pyrite. Craig Williams, The Trustees of the British Museum Archaeologists were digging at a site in England when ...
He was calm, and he talked to everybody,” Doris Schaefer recalls. “All the young, little kids said, ‘I want to grow up to be ...