What can beagles teach us about Alzheimer’s disease?
By Elizabeth Head, University of Kentucky
Every 67 seconds someone in the United States is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and new estimates suggest that it...
As the Arctic melts, the US needs to pay attention
By David Titley, Pennsylvania State University
In a few short months the United States assumes Chair of the Arctic Council (AC). This is a...
Science says: eat with your kids
By Anne Fishel, Harvard Medical School
As a family therapist, I often have the impulse to tell families to go home and have dinner...
Hong Kong on the Hudson?
By Donald L. Miller, Lafayette College
Good historians know that history rarely teaches clear lessons. When it does, we should heed them. In the...
Molecular genetics ready to launch a golden age of winegrape breeding
By Andrew Walker, University of California, Davis
Growing winegrapes may be the most backward form of horticulture that exists. The vast majority of the world’s...
Never mind the selfish gene – ribosomes are the missing link
By Robert Root-Bernstein, Michigan State University and Meredith Root-Bernstein, Aarhus University
Since the discovery that DNA encodes genetic information, research on the evolution of life...
Morning haze: why it’s time to stop hitting the snooze button
By Gemma Paech, Washington State University
It’s 6.30am and after a long holiday break, your alarm clock is insistently telling you it’s time to get...
Fond farewell to the ‘babies’ of Watergate
By Richard Arenberg, Brown University
An era has ended. The last of the “Watergate Babies” has left the Congress. The nickname was applied to the...






















