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Researchers have found a "reborn: gene in elephants that responds to damaged DNA by killing the cell.
University Research | The University of ChicagoCaltech researchers have developed two new illusions that reveal how the senses can influence each other—in particular, how sound can give rise to visual illusions.
University Research | California Institute of TechnologyA group of undergraduate students at the University of Chicago are members of the MAPSCorps Scientific Symposium, a group which spends six weeks in the community collecting data about resources in the South Side of Chicago and how they are utilized.
The University of Chicago | A new study of lamprey's regenerative abilities opens up a new path for identifying pro-regenerative molecules and potential therapeutic targets for human spinal cord injury.
University Research | The University of ChicagoCaltech chemists have figured out a new, more efficient way to create carbon-based fuels from carbon dioxide (CO2).
Energy Sources | Research to Secure Our Energy Future | University Research | California Institute of TechnologyCaltech researchers have developed a new microchip for use in "smart pills" that may one day move through the body to diagnose and treat disease.
University Research | California Institute of TechnologyA long-term study of nearly 3,000 adults found that those who could not identify at least four out of five common odors were more than twice as likely to develop dementia within five years.
University Research | The University of ChicagoNew research conducted at Caltech and UC San Francisco (UCSF) is suggesting that the key to curing multiple sclerosis (MS) could be hiding in an unlikely place—our excrement.
University Research | California Institute of TechnologyA new test that identifies antibiotic-resistant bacteria in as little as 30 minutes could change the way antibiotics are prescribed and help reduce the spread of superbug bacteria
University Research | California Institute of TechnologyA new University of Chicago study shows that the discoloration of birds in museum collections can be used to trace the amount of black carbon in the air over time and measure the effects of environmental policy on pollution.
University Research | The University of Chicago