New studies are shedding light on one of the biggest mysteries of human reproduction and what can be done to combat it.
7hon MSN
AI’s memorization crisis
Several of the researchers I spoke with while reporting this article told me about memorization research that has been ...
The Nature Network on MSN
10 things plants do on their own that gardeners try to control
Plants have their own survival strategies that have worked for millions of years, but gardeners constantly interfere trying ...
Live Science on MSN
Homo erectus wasn't the first human species to leave Africa 1.8 million years ago, fossils suggest
A new analysis of enigmatic skulls from the Republic of Georgia suggest that Homo erectus wasn't the only human species to ...
Scientists have uncovered a new explanation for how swimming bacteria change direction, providing fresh insight into one of ...
Live Science on MSN
Tiny bump on 7 million-year-old fossil suggests ancient ape walked upright — and might even be a human ancestor
The way Sahaleanthropus tchadensis moved has long been debated. The discovery of a small bump on the front of the thigh bone ...
Why intersex well-being depends less on biology and more on stigma, autonomy, and connection, and what that means for ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Fish study reveals how ovulation triggers sexual receptivity in females
A research team led by Hiroshima University and Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology have proposed a neuroendocrine mechanism in bony fish that signals ovulation from the ovaries to the ...
Anthropocene Magazine on MSN
A new kind of green revolution could start with self-fertilizing crops
Early experiments in barley suggest that reprogramming plant immune receptors could one day slash the world’s dependence on ...
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