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Research

A billboard advertising medical marijuana on Route 66 in Oklahoma. (Photo: Susan Vineyard, Adobe Stock)

Medical Marijuana Laws Benefit Patients Without Harming Public Mental Health, Study Finds

A brook

Climate Change Shifts Terrorist Activity Patterns, Study Reveals

A brain dissolving

Scientists Uncover Potential Ways to Prevent Spread of Neurodegenerative Diseases

Researchers harvest more energy from waves by moving a liquid–solid nanogenerator’s electrode to the end of the tube where the water crashes.

A simple way to harvest more ‘blue energy’ from waves

Hussein Alawieh, a graduate student in José del R. Millán's lab, wears a cap packed with electrodes that is hooked up to a computer. The electrodes gather data by measuring electrical signals from the brain, and the decoder interprets that information and translates it into game action.

Universal brain-computer interface lets people play games with just their thoughts

Dry abandoned car with empty water container on roof

Australia on track for unprecedented, decades-long megadroughts

an illustration depicting a stylized cross-section of the human brain, highlighting the hippocampus region.

Brain’s Tagging System Determines Which Memories Become Permanent

A colorful scientific illustration. A balanced scale with sugar on one side and artificial and natural sweeteners on the other. The sweetener side outweighs the sugar side. Biscuits and a blood sugar meter with a smiley face are in the background.

Study Debunks Myth: Sweeteners Don’t Increase Appetite, Help Reduce Blood Sugar

Illustration of worm and kambucha bacteria

Kombucha Microbes Mimic Fasting Effects, Study Finds

sleepy young man waking up and looking older than his age

Sleepless Nights Aging You Faster than You Think

Ohio State logo

Bedtime or go time? Observing what animals do during a total solar eclipse

Heart illustration

Alternate Day Fasting May Worsen Atherosclerosis, Chinese Study Suggests

Pile of cigarettes

Smoking Leads to Unhealthy Belly Fat, New Study Finds

A molecule found in the keto diet plays a key role in preventing early memory decline in mice. The memory loss is comparable to mild cognitive impairment in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease in humans. (UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine)

Keto Diet Prevents Early Memory Decline in Mice

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