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A Penn State research team has shown that it is possible to rapidly break down solid and liquid human waste to grow food with a series of microbial reactors.
University Research | The Pennsylvania State UniversityA new study from McGill University looks at the four most-commonly consumed types of milk beverages from plant sources around the world – almond milk, soy milk, rice milk and coconut milk - and compares their nutritional values with those of cow’s milk.
University Research | McGill UniversityResearchers are developing a male birth control pill based on ouabain, a plant extract that African warriors and hunters traditionally used as a heart-stopping poison on their arrows.
University Research | University of Minnesota, Twin Cities | The University of KansasResearchers from Texas A&M University report significant advances in their understanding and control of a chameleon-like material that could be the key to next-generation computers.
University Research | Texas A&M UniversityBrain-imaging software developed at Stanford may lead to a major change in how hospitals respond to some stroke patients.
University Research | Researching the Brain, Seeking Cures | Brain Injury | Stanford UniversityAt Michigan State University, researchers are making autonomous driving smarter and safer by perfecting computer vision and "superhuman" sensing.
University Research | Michigan State UniversityA new Michigan State University study is helping to answer a pressing question among scientists: just how close are mice to people when it comes to cancer?
University Research | Michigan State UniversityGeorgia Tech researchers analyzed the archived mission reports from the Apollo moonwalks to see how well moonwalkers were able to stick to their expected timelines.
University Research | Georgia Institute of TechnologyA positive attitude toward math boosts the brain’s memory center and predicts math performance independent of factors such as a child’s IQ, a Stanford study has found.
University Research | Stanford UniversityResearchers believe poorly developed blood vessels around the heart are the reason some babies are born with thin, spongy heart muscles.
University Research | Stanford University