A multi-year study of the reliability of published social & behavioral science research has found that only about half of published results are replicated by new studies.
A new study finds a steady drop since 1945 in disruptive feats as a share of the world’s booming enterprise in scientific and technological advancement. By William J. Broad Miracle vaccines.
The media reported that AI outperformed ER doctors at diagnosis. An emergency physician explains what the study actually ...
As opioids continue to drive overdose deaths, a new study suggests that making medical cannabis available and affordable can ...
For centuries, people have been obsessed with staying young and even living forever. We spend billions of dollars on anti-aging products. We're told to look younger. We question whether older people ...
From “experimental archaeology” to the mysterious appeal of exploration, the wide-ranging subjects detailed in these titles captivated Smithsonian magazine’s science contributors this year Joe Spring, ...
This study will update and extend How People Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience, and School (2000) by examining the research that has emerged across various disciplines that focus on the study of learning ...
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