It is very often said that the common law is one of Hong Kong’s greatest assets. It provides us with a corpus of law which ...
A new study suggests the answer may trace back to two major shifts in human evolution: walking upright and growing bigger ...
A new study of wrist bones suggests human ancestors may have shared a knuckle-walking past with chimpanzees and gorillas.
It's Miles Davis' centennial, and fellow musicians discuss how the shapeshifting innovator transformed music over and over ...
A staggering 90% of humanity, regardless of culture and location, is right-handed. New study looks at how this can be.
Humans are overwhelmingly right-handed, but scientists have long struggled to explain why no other primate species shows ...
When Richard Dawkins’s first blockbuster book was published half a century ago, few genes had ever been sequenced or studied ...
Even tiny muscles around the ears hint at our evolutionary past. In many mammals, tiny ear muscles allow the outer ear (pinna ...
Infrastructure is only half the battle. To unlock true enterprise value, we must cross the next threshold: moving beyond data ...
Nature woke up one morning and said, “Geometry.” Otherwise it would digest itself. Your body is basically a biological escape ...
The "prisoner's dilemma" is one of the most famous ideas in game theory. For decades, this game has been used to explain why selfishness often beats cooperation. In the prisoner's dilemma, two players ...
A new study uses neural networks to prove that memory and individual recognition allow cooperation to defeat selfishness in the prisoner's dilemma.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results