For decades, biology textbooks taught that DNA’s story could be told with a single image: two elegant strands twisting in a ...
Artificial intelligence has just redrawn the map of our genome’s control room, revealing hundreds of thousands of tiny DNA ...
If you're out of time to get to the store for more wrapping paper, here's a fun tip. All you need is AI and a printer.
The new storage system could hold family photos, cultural artifacts and the master versions of digital artworks, movies, ...
An innovative three-color method for capturing images of mRNA inside live mammalian cells has been developed by UMass Amherst chemists. Because RNA is both incredibly important to human life and ...
TVs tend to be the focal point of a living room, but let's be honest — when they're off, they're basically big black rectangles taking up wall space. Not exactly as charming as a piece of art or a ...
You can get ChatGPT to help you build a nuclear bomb if you simply design the prompt in the form of a poem, according to a new study from researchers in Europe. The study, "Adversarial Poetry as a ...
Located in the middle of the South Pacific, thousands of miles from the nearest continent, Easter Island (Rapa Nui) is one of the most remote inhabited places on Earth. To visit it and marvel at the ...
The mail-in genetic tests used by millions to trace their ancestry could also help people live healthier lives. That’s the pitch from Bystro AI, a Boston startup that’s using artificial intelligence ...
James D. Watson, who died last week at 97, was the greatest biologist of his generation. He was also a cruelly treated target of cancel culture, shunned by the academic science community for which he ...
The blood on the sofa had dried to a rusty brown by the time American soldiers reached Hitler’s bunker in 1945. One officer cut out a square of fabric as a grim souvenir. Eighty years later, that ...
“The laws of inheritance are quite unknown,” Charles Darwin acknowledged in 1859. The discovery of DNA’s shape altered how we conceived of life itself. The X-ray crystallography by Rosalind Franklin ...