A New Weapon in the Fight Against Disease: Diagnosing Malaria with Magnets
An ingenious, easy-to-use diagnostic device developed by Vanderbilt professor Dr. Rick Haselton could be a game-changer in the fight against malaria.
An ingenious, easy-to-use diagnostic device developed by Vanderbilt professor Dr. Rick Haselton could be a game-changer in the fight against malaria.
Google and other technologies that provide ubiquitous and instant access to information are not only changing what we remember — they are changing how we remember. At some point we must ask ourselves, are these changes for the best?
People around the globe have been classifying galaxies, deciphering old weather records, and discovering exoplanets — all in their free time. The citizen science movement is revolutionizing the world of research, as crowdsourcing is becoming a valuable tool for scientists’ collaborations while allowing the public to try their hands at the scientific process.
Public health professor Kaveh Khoshnood investigates the complexities of syringe exchange programs, which have the potential to drastically decrease HIV infection rates among urban drug users.
The world’s human population, once relatively constant at 300 million people, is currently expanding at a rate of 1.4 percent per year. This rapid rate of growth has serious ramifications for the environment and the future of humankind.
The Earth is a dynamic system, covered with species constantly moving across its surface in time and space. Yale Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Walter Jetz has begun work on a new system for tracking the distributions of species through the integration of data from a diverse array of sources.
Led by Professor Katarzyna Chawarska, a team of scientists at the Yale School of Medicine have detected deficits in social attention in infants as young as six months — the earliest detection age for Autism Spectrum Disorders yet.
Carol Orlando was 65 when her family members noticed the first changes. Her social graces began giving way to a detached brusqueness; her eclectic interests,
Christian Tschudi from the Yale School of Public Health has replicated the infectious process of African sleeping sickness in a laboratory setting. Scientists acclaim it as the biggest discovery in the field in twenty years, which may answer questions regarding intervention methods.
Described by Professor Harlan Krumholz, the post-hospital syndrome is a 30-day time of vulnerability during which recently released patients experience a higher risk of an array of health issues.