Duke researchers teach courting mice new mating songs
By Imani Moise | October 18, 2012Language has traditionally been accepted as an all or nothing trait.
Language has traditionally been accepted as an all or nothing trait.
Thomas Petes received the Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal .
Regulatory B cells could be used to combat severe autoimmune diseases.
The Duke University School of Medicine has received approval from the Food and Drug Administration to market DUCORD.
Botox isn’t just for tightening wrinkles.
Duke researchers have developed a light-controlled system for controlling gene expression within living cells in a population.
Antibiotics kill off most, but not all, of a target bacteria.
Researchers gathered at the Durham Convention Center Thursday to discuss treating the most common drug addiction
Although children under 18 make up nearly 25 percent of the overall population, clinical trials used children in only about 8 percent of the studies.
Duke geneticists have created a much coveted enzyme required for the production of eco-friendly and cheap nylon.
On the third floor of the Bryan Research Building, the caged birds do not sing for mating purposes alone.
Savarese is working on a project that investigates the relationship classically autistic individuals have with poetry.
Forest and oceans are not the only carbon sinks out there.
There is not a statistically significant association between taking omega-3 supplements and preventing cardiac-related deaths.
What Duke students know or think they know about crack cocaine is probably false.
Reddy has been involved in the ENCODE project since 2008.
Senior Nick Swartzwelder decided to study the effects of drugs and alcohol when he was sitting in the passenger seat of his father’s car.
A team of scientists has explored the limits of transforming light waves into smaller electrical ones.
Information exists in swaths of the human genome previously referred to as junk DNA.
Women with obstetric fistula are prone to depression and post-traumatic stress disorder.