
This Cheap Device Could Expand the World’s Access to Vaccines
A new delivery method for certain vaccines could make the lifesaving treatments more effective and accessible

A new delivery method for certain vaccines could make the lifesaving treatments more effective and accessible

Ginsberg collaborates with synthetic biologists to create eau de Leucadendron and her latest: artwork for insects

This is a story of desperation, anger, poverty—and triumph over long odds to crack the code of a degenerative disease that had been stealing the lives of children since it was first discovered more than a century ago...

No spelling out of letters is needed for a paralyzed person to use the first-of-a-kind neuroprosthesis

Liquid biopsies show promise for early detection of deadly tumors

Researchers have begun to crack the code of protein structure, allowing them to remake, well, everything

It’s a new conservation framework that emphasizes innovation and boldness

And the benefits of two four-minute sessions persisted for hours

The first successful clinical test of optogenetics lets a person see for the first time in decades, with help from image-enhancing goggles

Club-goers in the island city-state take first bites of slaughter-free chicken nuggets grown in bioreactors

The system could someday provide fast results at a crime scene

Optogenetics could aid vision, blood glucose, and more

Hopes were high for drugs designed to lower levels of a mutant protein, but development has stalled

Next-generation COVID-19 vaccines will not only tackle different versions of the virus but will provide solutions across the world at a fraction of the cost

Organoids made of tear-producing cells offer chances to study, and possibly treat, eye disorders

Researchers are training algorithms to emulate trained dogs’ ability to detect cancer and other diseases, perhaps including COVID-19

Scientists make and treat a 3-D-printed model of a ballooning blood vessel

Scientific American and the World Economic Forum sifted through more than 75 nominations for the most innovative and potentially game-changing technologies in 2020. The final top 10 span the fields of medicine, engineering, environmental sciences and chemistry. And to win the nod, the technologies must have the potential to spur progress in societies and economies by outperforming established ways of doing things...

A radical procedure restores touch and grasping in former amputees

An experiment stimulates monkeys’ brain to generate shape perceptions
Support science journalism.

Thanks for reading Scientific American. Knowledge awaits.
Already a subscriber? Sign in.
Thanks for reading Scientific American. Create your free account or Sign in to continue.
Create Account