Colombia’s peatlands could be a crucial tool to fight climate change. But first we have to find them
Peer-Reviewed Publication
A new study from researchers in the at Washington University in St. Louis reveals the impact of what might may be precursors to harmful contaminants in drinking water, formed during water disinfection.
With the advent of artificial intelligence (AI), predictive medicine is becoming an important part of healthcare, especially in cancer treatment. Predictive medicine uses algorithms and data to help doctors understand how a cancer might continue to grow or react to specific drugs—making it easier to target precision treatment for individual patients. Now, researchers at the Institute for Genome Sciences at the University of Maryland School of Medicine set a foundation in two commentaries out this week for going beyond AI to find the best treatments for patients, as well as ethically data sharing to promote reproducible science.
Preterm birth might be predicted with high accuracy with new cheap, non-invasive test, based on cell-free DNA collected in standard early pregnancy testing
New bat cell lines and reagents help to study bat antiviral immune responses against hantaviruses and coronaviruses