A new vaccine developed in China has been shown to activate an immunal response against both tuberculosis and the HIV virus.
By using an oil-in-water mixture, scientists at NYU have mimicked the process by which cells adhere to each other.
A community of bacteria under the Pacific seabed has been eating from the same "lunch box" since it was trapped there 86 million years ago.
A convoy of cars with only one human driver in the lead car has successfully completed a 125 mile trip on a Spanish motorway.
Scientists at Arizona State University and NASA have found a way to quickly detect bone loss.
Smiles can come about through frustration as well, and now a computer can recognize when it does.
Fish caught off the coast of California are showing elevated, but still safe-to-eat levels of radioactive contamination from their time in the waters off Japan.
A study found that irrigated agriculture might be putting too severe a strain on our nation's groundwater reserves.
A recent study found that rats whose diets were higher in high-fructose corn syrup were essentially "stupider" than their counterparts whose diets were higher in omega-3 fatty acids.
The skulls of adult birds show a remarkable similarity to the skulls of baby dinosaurs.
The gene might be useful in developing a new, non-hormonal male contraceptive.
A recent study shows us that sunlight and a plant's circadian clock help it know when to flower.