UMass Medical School scientists Katherine A. Fitzgerald, Ph.D.; Fiachra Humphries, Ph.D.; and Liraz Galia, Ph.D., working with the British-based pharmaceutical
Normal breathing without mask can transport saliva droplets to more than 7 feet
The World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control recommend keeping a certain distance between people to prevent the
Research reveals new IgM antibodies to fight COVID-19 more potent than commonly used ones
A nasal therapy, built upon on the application of a new engineered IgM antibody therapy for COVID-19, was more effective
Childhood vaccination rates in Texas have dropped steeply during COVID-19 pandemic
A team of researchers from universities in California and Texas has found immunization rates for children in Texas for a
New material can enable a near-perfect merger between machines and the human body
Researchers at DTU Health Tech have developed a new material that can facilitate a near-perfect merger between machines and the
Research shows how people changed their behavior in response to COVID-19 guidance
When the United States issued national stay-at-home guidelines in March 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, mobility across the
Research team takes gene mutation detection in blood to the next level
Next-generation gene sequencing (NGS) technologies—in which millions of DNA molecules are simultaneously but individually analyzed—theoretically provides researchers and clinicians the
Researchers identify cognitive computations underlying the complex predictive behavior
Fast reactions to future events are crucial. A boxer, for example, needs to respond to her opponent in fractions of
Study evaluates stem cells' ability to prevent major cause of death in preterm infants
A phase 2 clinical trial whose results were released today in STEM CELLS Translational Medicine might point to a way
Protein-coding gene may worsen tau protein tangles associated with Alzheimer's
In a new paper published in Nature Communications, Mayo Clinic researchers and collaborators report the protein-coding gene SERPINA5 may worsen