Traditional breeding and genetic modification methods have struggled to keep pace with the rapid evolution of plant viruses.
A new study by investigators at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School is providing one of the most detailed ...
There’s 99.9% similarity across human genomes, with the remaining 0.1% variation being what makes each person unique.1 In ...
For many people, the rise of artificial intelligence–generated images has sparked anxiety—about misinformation, deepfakes and ...
The story of when, how and why wellness influencers have gained the ability to spread health misinformation on social media.
CNET on MSNOpinion
Same Snake, Different Oil: How Wellness Influencers Benefit From Health Misinformation
From quick fixes to miracle cures, wellness influencers promise a lot. How can we discern fact from fiction in a world ...
Research shows impaired brain waste clearance and cardiovascular risks may increase dementia risk, highlighting new paths for ...
CERES TAG’s technology helps ranchers to boost their profits with their cattle operation, Dave Bergmeier writes.
Dongfeng Gu and colleagues review community based cohort studies in China, finding strategies to improve the quality and scale of these studies in China and beyond Community based cohort studies ...
The Thursday Next series by Jasper Fforde contains a rather wonderful concept — the textual sea. Within this sea lie billions ...
Opinion
The National Interest on MSNOpinion
Humanity’s Best Hope: Love, Virtue, and Survival in the Age of AI
Humanity’s embrace of AI companions—once imagined in Her—reveals a crossroads: whether technology will deepen our capacity for love or quietly replace it, eroding what makes us human.
Journalist Robert Fulford, speaking of the CBC’s first era, has said that the CBC was then “very close to the centre of ...
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