Can cranberries conquer the world? A US industry depends on it
The history of food is full of tales where supply initially preceded demand, proving that necessity isn’t always the mother of invention. Sometimes it works the other way.
The history of food is full of tales where supply initially preceded demand, proving that necessity isn’t always the mother of invention. Sometimes it works the other way.
The emerging field of cyberbiosecurity explores the whole new category of risks that come with the increased use of computers in the life sciences.
Efforts to protect even remote sites can generate important outcomes for local residents that they may view as positive or negative.
Since the 1970s worker productivity has increased 74 percent, while average wages have risen only 12 percent. There is no reason to believe that tax cuts would all of a sudden generate greater corporate generosity for workers.
On Thanksgiving, turkeys will adorn close to 90 percent of U.S. dinner tables. But one part of the bird never makes it to the groaning board, or even to the giblet bag: the tail.
The history of dieting shows vanity outweighs common sense.
The economic model for academic journal publications is broken. As scholars are handicapped by limited access to research in their fields, scientific progress is restricted and slows, and society ultimately loses.
To date, 50 CSU authors have contributed 67 articles that have been read by more than 1.5 million people in countries across the globe.
What if one’s risk of getting breast cancer were influenced by one’s inherited capacity for fitness?
After years of research, I came to the conclusion that the sexual politics of Hefner and his magazine were much more complicated than most observers – for or against – have acknowledged.