Health
- Journalism is changing. Print is struggling. Digital media is thriving. That’s changing how journalists make money and how the public trusts in the fourth estate.
- On this episode of the Brainwaves podcast, we look at how scientists and health professionals are thinking about concussions as the football season approaches.
- Tornadoes, floods, fires and more affect 160 million people per year worldwide. On this episode of the Brainwaves podcast, what science is doing to help people and their property survive.
- Could a computer, at a glance, tell the difference between a joyful image and a depressing one? According to new research, the answer is yes.
- On this episode of the Brainwaves podcast, we’re following news of a mobile app getting access to images of your face and more.
- Children whose mothers lack a college education are significantly more likely to die young, particularly from unintentional injuries, according to a sweeping new ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ study of more than 377,000 youth.
- What does it really mean to be a man or a woman? How that simple question has complicated consequences in sports, politics and language on this episode of the Brainwaves podcast.
- Chaco Canyon, a site that was once central to the lives of precolonial peoples called Anasazi, may not have been able to produce enough food to sustain its estimated population numbers.
- A new drug therapy for cancer treatment, spun out of research performed in a ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ biochemistry lab, may provide better results for patients with solid cancers and hematologic cancers, such as leukemia and lymphoma.
- This week on the Brainwaves podcast: Gardening. It’s good for your physical health and your food budget. We have an interview with Chris Lowry, an associate professor of integrative physiology at ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ, who wants to make a stress vaccine out of an unseen ingredient hidden deep in the soil.