Since 2014, a team led by researchers from the Blavatnik Institute at Harvard Medical School, the health care delivery ...
This year’s fair, held in September, also offered the chance to celebrate Countway’s 60th anniversary, including cookies ...
Researchers have developed an AI system called Dr. CaBot that spells out its reasoning as it works through challenging ...
Genetic changes that create ever-expanding numbers of identical sperm cells are more widespread than previously thought, ...
Correctly distinguishing between look-alike tumors found in the brain during surgery can guide critical decisions in real time while patient is still in the operating room. A new AI tool outperformed ...
Sleep is one of the most essential human activities — so essential, in fact, that if we don’t get enough sleep for even one night, we may struggle to think, react, and otherwise make it through the ...
Many people with autism spectrum disorders also experience unusual gastrointestinal inflammation, but thus far scientists have not established whether and how those conditions might be linked. Now, ...
This article is part of Harvard Medical School’s continuing coverage of COVID-19. Beyond causing a staggering number of infections and deaths, the COVID-19 pandemic has also led to significant social ...
Love has been the source of ceaseless fascination since antiquity. Artists have tried to capture its beauty and darkness in books, paintings, and songs. Behavioral scientists have explored love as a ...
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and other sexual and gender minority people (LGBTQ+), are at greater risk of dying by suicide, of cardiovascular disease, and of a cascading list of other ...
Three key players share the story of how fundamental discoveries in the laboratory became a first-of-its-kind therapy that promises to have a monumental impact on sickle cell disease patients around ...
This article is part of Harvard Medical School’s continuing coverage of COVID-19. A new study of more than 800,000 people has found that in the U.S., COVID “long haulers” were more likely to be older ...