Medicine & TechnologyA study recently revealed that people tended to choose snacks they spent more time looking at, at times, even over snacks that they are said to have rated more highly.
Originally, captioning technology was built into television sets, and the past 10 years have brought more fine-tuning of accessibility necessities to streaming services.
The US Centers for Disease Control and Protection updated its guidance, easing travel restrictions for fully vaccinated people due to the FDA-approved vaccines' high efficacy rate.
Scientists discovered that the heart of an astronaut who spent almost one year aboard the International Space Station or ISS shrank or is left smaller even with regular exercise.
The healthier option between artificial sweeteners and sugar has been argued for a long time now. While the first-mentioned have proven to be effective in weight loss than sugar consumption, experts say water remains the best option.
Mary Toft was a renaissance woman made famous for mysteriously birthing rabbits, cats, and random animal limbs for a few months that stunned medical experts in the day. She was later renowned for her infamous medical sham.
4 people returning to the US from the West African countries of the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Guinea are being monitored by public health officials in Oregon for suspected Ebola virus infection.
Study investigators at Nara Institute of Science Technology or NAIST recently reported in a new study, an approach by which cells may use fingers to communicate instructions for wound closure.