Israeli researchers have examined how variants develop in our body. This is what they discovered.
Researchers at Tel Aviv University make paralyzed mice walk again using human spinal cord implants
Called GALI and made by researchers from the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, the experiment is one of 35 that are part of Israel’s Rakia mission.
The researchers said that low-arousal states such as sleep and anesthesia expose failures in a mechanism that regulates stability of brain activity in the pre-symptomatic stage of Alzheimer’s.
An Israeli study not only confirmed a disputed estimate that wildlife populations declined by over two-thirds in the past 50 years, but also showed that the true drop could be more severe.
A new method for mapping gene expression deep in the body could one day be used to track stem cells or cancer therapy
Team at Weizmann Institute publishes study on method it says could help detect cancers, aid in organ transplants and help monitor cell therapy
Most studies on the development of new coronavirus variants focus on the dynamics within the population. Researchers at the Technion present new findings on the development of the virus within the individual.
University of Haifa researchers studied over a dozen species of songbirds and were surprised to find female molting patterns are determined by coloring of the males
A Bar Ilan University scientist received a European Research Council Starting Grant for her groundbreaking work on sex reversal – a process where the development of an embryo’s sex changes to an alternate course.
If you stay in space for too long, it will impact your eyesight. Decreased vision, optic nerve and retina changes can all continue to affect an astronaut after their return from space.
A new method of characterizing immune cells shed in the stool could facilitate diagnosis and improve treatment of inflammatory bowel disease
A computational biochemist from Ben-Gurion University studied DNA replication from a linguistic perspective, publishing his team’s findings in the peer-reviewed journal Nucleic Acids Research in October.
Bar-Ilan University study shows that the larger an image, the better we remember it