Search Results - You searched for: Hair Loss

It turns out the human scalp has an olfactory receptor that seems to play a crucial role in regulating hair follicle growth and death.
a close up of a person with curly hair.
The curlier the hair, the cooler you are.
a colorful image of hair cells under a microscope
Baby mice can regenerate damaged hair cells — and now that we know how they do it, maybe we can, too.
While Y chromosome loss was first observed in 1963, it was not until 2014 that researchers found the link to a shorter life span.
The plant-like sea creatures contain a molecule that improves memory, learning, and even hair quality, according to a new study in mice.
The forgotten aspects of art history will always be the most intriguing. Digging up the dead storylines of art history, whether in the distant or the recent past, will never end, mostly thanks to forces that buried the facts, if not the bodies, for whatever agenda. Artists and Prophets: A Secret History of Modern Art 1872-1972 at the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt resurrects German visionaries and Jesus wannabes from the late 19th and early 20th centuries to look at how their exploits and artistic creations helped shape the course of German and European modern art. It also shines light on how the impact of those figures fell into obscurity as another casualty of the ideological war waged by that most unfortunately unforgettable of German messianic aspirants — Adolf Hitler.
While hundreds of flossing studies have been conducted, many are plagued by potential issues of researcher bias, as well as poor experimental design. In the past decade, three systematic reviews sought to navigate these muddy waters.
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will smith slap
The attitude we take to Will Smith's slap will mirror our attitudes to violence, masculinity, and protecting others more generally.
syphilis
The most feared sexually transmitted disease (STD) of the last half-millennium was usually named after foreigners, often the French.
The new treatment targets the underlying genetic cause of the disease.
A series of recent studies found that people with healthy levels of vitamin D were less likely to contract COVID-19 and suffer severe complications from it.
Despite Boseman's young age, this cancer is increasingly common in people under 50.
It can mean citizens drinking contaminated groundwater or being schooled in decaying buildings with asbestos problems.
The virus is unlike anything many people have ever experienced.
A group of at least 20 kids in Spain gets a rare illness with historical roots.
Two new studies might have identified whether or not patients will respond to chemotherapy.
As of October 1, the U.K. will make it illegal to sell puppies and kittens from third-party sources in a bid to end puppy mills and commercial breeding catteries, eliminate pet-shop sales, and rein in unscrupulous breeders.
A piece of legislation to address the problem is getting widespread support. Yet, it’s stalled.   
The cognitive boost of taking testosterone supplements has not been substantiated — but let’s face it, most men aren’t seeking a better memory when popping testosterone pills. 
Does baldness have an evolutionary purpose? It might rob men of their youthful look but it brings many gains.
They are calling him the Elon Musk of biology. But will we see an end to aging soon?   
One of the eminently amusing and frustrating things in life is how people suspend common sense when thinking about anything related to their bodies or their health. Most people understand […]
Two cancer patients are said to be doing better after their livers were "bathed" with drugs in an attempt to reach the tumors more directly and avoid common side effects.
Female bears at a zoo in Leipzig have baffled vets by getting collective alopecia.
A person holds an oval mirror in front of their face against a blue background, with their reflection appearing abstract and distorted, evoking the surreal influence of ai on self-perception.
If AI is modeled only on human intelligence, will it inherit only human ways of seeing the world?
A young girl with light brown hair sits with her knees drawn up, looking down, illustrated blue teardrops on her face—capturing a quiet moment that reflects why humans cry.
In this excerpt from "When Everyone Knows That Everyone Knows...," Steven Pinker examines how crying may have evolved as part of a suite of emotional expressions aimed at strengthening social bonds.
Close-up of a human eye with a digital interface overlay and a red laser beam targeting the pupil, illustrating the science of LASIK and advanced vision correction technology.
For many of us, our imperfect vision compels us to wear corrective lenses to see properly. Here's what everyone should know about LASIK.
Illustration of a person walking inside a brain silhouette, overlaid on a close-up of closed eyes.
Locked inside their minds, thousands await a cure. Neuroscientist Daniel Toker is racing to find it.
A retro computer displays a ghost on the screen as pixelated chains drift across the foreground, reminiscent of a scene from a Ken Liu short story. This digital haunt unfolds against a vivid orange background.
The first in a series of short stories by the Hugo- and Nebula-winning author that inspired the cult hit "Pantheon."