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NYT > Science

  • Finding Alzheimer’s Before a Mind Fails
    Though Alzheimer’s disease seems to strike suddenly in old age, scientists think it begins long before symptoms occur.
  • Both Sides Cite Science to Address Altered Corn
    A proposal to ban the planting of a genetically modified corn strain sets up a bitter war within the European Union.
  • Conserving Cuba, After the Embargo
    Environmentalists are thinking ahead to the effect of tourists and investors on a landscape of crucial habitats.
  • Cancer Fight Goes Nuclear, With Heavy Price Tag
    A push by medical centers to turn nuclear particle accelerators into weapons against cancer reflects the best and worst of America’s health system, experts say.
  • Birds, Bugs Named as Steroid Users!
    Baseball players may not be the only animals looking to gain an advantage by using steroids.
  • A Question of Blame When Societies Fall
    Who or what is to blame when a once-powerful society collapses?
  • On the Ground and in the Water, Tracing a Giant Wave’s Path
    Dr. Harindra Joseph S. Fernando studies the human activities that make a natural disaster even more deadly.
  • The Lure of Treatments Science Has Dismissed
    Exploring the reasons people swear by treatments that have no scientific evidence backing them.
  • Brain Cells, Doing Their Job With Some Neighborly Help
    How does the brain process all of the information being taken in by our senses every second of every day?
  • Food Scarcity and H.I.V. Interwoven in Uganda
    Staying uninvolved while interviewing participants for a study about the effect of food shortages on H.I.V. treatment is often difficult, one researcher finds.
  • When the Senses Become Confused
    After a stroke, the brain tries to reorganize itself. However, sometimes this process goes awry, leaving one woman to feel sounds on her skin.
  • Birthing: Elective Caesareans Tied to Breathing Problems
    Babies delivered by elective Caesarean sections are significantly more likely to have respiratory problems than those delivered vaginally or by emergency surgery, a new study finds.
  • Hazards: More Transfusions Mean More Risk for Women
    Women are more likely than men to die after heart surgery, and one reason may be the use of a common medical procedure: blood transfusions.
  • Insights: Clinical Trials May Not Represent Population
    The randomized clinical trial, widely considered the most reliable biomedical research method, can have significant drawbacks, a new study suggests.
  • Treatments: Talking Out the Choices for Breast Cancer Surgery
    Most surgeons fail to mention the possibility of breast reconstruction before their patients choose between mastectomy and breast-conserving surgery, researchers have found.
  • Even Top Performers Have Flaws, and That Might Be a Good Thing
    A virtuoso musician may seem to nail every note, but actually there are tiny variations in even the most skilled performance.
  • Researchers Find Animal That Links Whales to Land
    Researchers think they have found the modern whale’s closest evolutionary ancestor.
  • Arecibo Radio Telescope Is Back in Business After 6-Month Spruce-Up
    After a fresh coat of paint, the most sensitive radio telescope on the planet should be good for 30 or 40 more years.
  • Pope Makes Appeal to Protect the Environment
    In the traditional midnight Christmas Mass, the pope bemoaned an “ill-treated world” in a homily given to thousands of pilgrims.
  • The Silent Scream
    Can your hearing be harmed by a loud, high-frequency noise you cannot hear?
  • The Claim: Calories From Alcohol Go to Your Midsection
    But do calories from alcohol congregate at the midsection at a greater rate than others?
  • On the Same Wavelength With the Doctor
    Feel like going to the doctor is a waste of time? With a little preparation, your next doctor’s visit can be a lot more productive.