Medicine & TechnologyResearchers have recently developed a brain training app featuring a junk food game that they claim, can help one eat less and lose weight even without dieting.
Researchers recently shared their goal of soon enabling clothes like pair of jeans and a jacket among others, to one day, charge a mobile phone and other electronic gadgets through clean energy.
Specialized ear tags and tracking software provide ranchers with information on their herd that, in turn, increases each animal's value when consumers of beef learn about the traceability of each and every cow.
A pair of Cambridge University professors took home 1 million euro ($1.22 million) from the Millennium Technology Prize, known as the Finnish Nobel science prize, for their pioneering work in a superfast DNA sequencing technology.
Researchers from the University of Alberta in Canada have devised a 3D bioprinting technique that allows the fabrication of custom-shaped cartilage, like nose cartilage, for use in surgical procedures.
New results from a Brigham Young University study showed that night mode on smartphones and blue light by itself is not what is causing an individual to lose shut-eye.
Researchers from the Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg, Sweden developed a novel thermometer seen to revolutionize quantum computing and thermodynamics.
A major study from advertising firm Dentsu predicts that the rise of the synthetic society of people will continue as humans increasingly incorporate the latest technology in their daily lives.
A recently-published study of electronic states' changing shape induced by such interactions, has potential application in using molecules as "individually addressable units."
The concept of growing meat for humans' consumption from scratch in the form of cell cultures is becoming popular, and some also see this method as a guilt-free way to generate pet food.