Light-controlled hydrogel mimics real tissue mechanics, warming cells behave naturally, advancing drug testing and disease modeling.
This technical FAQ examines three modeling gaps identified in engineering literature and outlines algorithmic methods to address them.
This paper presents a nowcasting model for global trade that allows for regional dynamics and spillovers. World trade growth is driven by common global factors but also regional trends. While existing ...
In the study, researchers compared two such parameterizations: one developed by Fox-Kemper in 2011 and another developed in 2023 by co-author Abigail Bodner ScM’20 PhD’21, assistant professor of Earth ...
Published in Scientific Reports, new research provides evidence that minor compounds in psychedelic mushrooms work alongside psilocybin to interact with brain receptors. This chemical teamwork ...
For decades, lab-grown cells have been studied in materials that don't reflect the softness and flexibility of human tissue.Researchers at the ...
In this Q&A, lead author Dr. Nanfang Pan explains how researchers used structural MRI, normative brain modeling, and machine learning to identify three ADHD biotypes. Each subtype showed distinct ...
A new light-controlled hydrogel developed at CU Boulder mimics the movement and flexibility of real tissue, giving scientists a more realistic way to study ...
Scientists at the University of East Anglia (U.K.) have uncovered a hidden link between gut health and the immune system—all ...
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