The researchers experimented with musical pieces believed to increase dopamine, a chemical in the brain. When this process occurs, auditory signals carried to the brain increase sharply and reach a ...
BACKGROUND: Forecasts for the future prevalence of cardiovascular disease and stroke are crucial to guide efforts to improve health outcomes across the life course for women. METHODS: Using historical ...
For a long time, we’ve been sold the idea that Genghis Khan, the 13th-century founder of the Mongol Empire, was so phenomenally prolific that one in 200 men alive today carries his exact Y chromosome.
“It can hit you out of nowhere,” she tells TODAY.com.
Eddy Thompson from the Heritage Builders and Rufus Tolbert with donor connect, join hosts Surae and Deena to discuss the ...
A dozen fish pulled from a South African river sparked years of debate before being confirmed as a new species.
A study of burials at Heraclea Sintica reveals residents of mixed European and African ancestry, highlighting migration and social life.
Introduction Onchocerciasis, commonly known as river blindness, is a parasitic disease caused by Onchocerca volvulus affecting millions predominantly in sub-Saharan Africa. Robust epidemiological ...
Briefly on MSN
Genetic studies showed South Africa’s Khoisan people split from other humans 250,000 years ago
The Khoisan people of South Africa split from other humans 250,000 years ago and remain unique, with differences even within their own subgroups.
A groundbreaking study from Harvard University reveals that the ancient people of Carthage were genetically closer to Greeks than to their Phoenician founders, reshaping our understanding of ...
Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have received an $80 million grant to continue research into the mysteries of exceptional longevity.
Researchers are evaluating the P-CARE model, which integrates results from a blended genome-exome sequencing assay and family ...
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