The Myth of Objective Data
When we view objectivity and subjectivity as opposites rather than complements, we distort the empirical realities of data collection. BeeLine Reader uses subtle color gradients … Read more
When we view objectivity and subjectivity as opposites rather than complements, we distort the empirical realities of data collection. BeeLine Reader uses subtle color gradients … Read more
The protein tubulin imaged using existing super-resolution and expansion microscopy methods (panels 1–3) and the ONE microscopy technique (panels 4 and 5).Credit: Ali Shaib et … Read more
Houston Methodist scientists successfully reversed infertility in sterile mice by reducing high cholesterol levels using a bacterial protein called serum opacity factor. This discovery strengthens … Read more
There’s a recipe to seeing farther back in time than ever before. The blank region of sky, shown in the yellow L-shaped box, was the … Read more
In people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), motor neurons, which help to send commands from the brain to muscle cells, become damaged, as depicted in … Read more
Europe’s glaciers and ice patches are a treasure-trove of ancient artifacts that show how civilizations and technology have changed over thousands of years. “The archaeological … Read more
Archaeologists in northwest France have unearthed what may have been a temple to the Roman war god Mars, dating to the first century B.C. The … Read more
This James Webb Space Telescope deep-field image shows some of the earliest and most distant galaxies ever seen. (Image credit: NASA, ESA, CSA and STScI) … Read more
A new investigation of the structure of galaxy clusters has found it agrees with predictions made by the standard model of cosmology, the best explanation … Read more
A mysterious 300-million-year-old sea creature, known as the ‘Tully monster’, definitely did not have a backbone, a new study has claimed. Scientists have been debating the … Read more