Humans are biologically programmed for violence. Lorenz’s ethology reveals how imprinting, instincts, and group aggression ...
UT Tyler and TJC are celebrating the birthday of evolutionary biologist Charles Darwin this week with several events they’re ...
Trump’s executive order on “Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government,” intended as ...
CRISPR, short for Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats, is a groundbreaking gene-editing technology that ...
A study reveals DNA and RNA epigenetics work together as a complementary system for precise gene regulation, crucial for cell ...
Dr. Arendt began his career at the USDA Forest Service's International Institute of Tropical Forestry in San Juan, Puerto ...
Researchers created the first bi-paternal mouse by modifying imprinting genes, advancing reproductive science but facing ...
Students with a score of four or five on the AP Biology exam could bypass the department’s introductory courses and fulfill ...
New work offers insight into how early life adapted from a low-oxygen atmosphere to the one that exists today.
Stanford researchers introduced affordable gene-editing kits ready for the classroom, aiming to make the field more accessible for high school students.
Saskia van Wees studied biology at Utrecht University and eventually became a professor at the same university. What drew her back to Utrecht?
Scientists have collected troves of DNA and microscopic imaging data from human cells—and now they have a tool that might make sense of all that information.