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<H3> Global Gene Editing Regulation Tracker </H3> |
<H3> Anti-GMO Advocacy Funding Tracker </H3> |
<H4> Beepocalypse Myth Handbook: Assessing claims of pollinator collapse </H4> |
<H4> Gattaca or life-saving? Can we—should we—use CRISPR to edit human embryos, sperm or eggs to cure diseases? </H4> |
<H4> Podcast: How do mRNA vaccines work and why were they developed so fast? </H4> |
<H4> Synthetic DNA barcodes on fruits and vegetables could open the door to food and agricultural transparency </H4> |
<H4> There is a lot of misinformation about COVID, the available vaccines and their effectiveness. These 7 insights will help clear that up. </H4> |
<H4> Podcast: GMOs = colonialism? CRISPR-edited eggs; sustainable shoes made from fungi </H4> |
<H4> What do ‘non-identical identical twins’ have to do with COVID-19? Mutations! </H4> |
<H4> Viewpoint: Promoting CRISPR crops at the expense of GMOs to appease activists undermines both technologies </H4> |
<H4> Can Biden’s USDA bring America’s animal gene-editing rules into the 21st century? </H4> |
<H4> Gattaca or life-saving? Can we—should we—use CRISPR to edit human embryos, sperm or eggs to cure diseases? </H4> |
<H4> Beepocalypse Myth Handbook: Assessing claims of pollinator collapse </H4> |
<H4> Podcast: How do mRNA vaccines work and why were they developed so fast? </H4> |
<H4> Synthetic DNA barcodes on fruits and vegetables could open the door to food and agricultural transparency </H4> |
<H4> There is a lot of misinformation about COVID, the available vaccines and their effectiveness. These 7 insights will help clear that up. </H4> |
<H4> Podcast: GMOs = colonialism? CRISPR-edited eggs; sustainable shoes made from fungi </H4> |
<H4> What do ‘non-identical identical twins’ have to do with COVID-19? Mutations! </H4> |
<H4> Viewpoint: Promoting CRISPR crops at the expense of GMOs to appease activists undermines both technologies </H4> |
<H4> Can Biden’s USDA bring America’s animal gene-editing rules into the 21st century? </H4> |
<H4> There is a lot of misinformation about COVID, the available vaccines and their effectiveness. These 7 insights will help clear that up. </H4> |
<H4> Viewpoint: COVID vaccine successes have made headway in rebutting facile arguments about the dangers of biotechnology </H4> |
<H4> How COVID deniers are taking pages out of the anti-vaccine movement’s playbook </H4> |
<H4> ‘Vaccine euphoria’: Why this may be the ‘end of the beginning’ not the ‘beginning of the end’ </H4> |
<H4> Over 60 years, vaccines have prevented 4.5 billion cases and saved 10 million lives. Now anti-vaxxers want to roll back the clock </H4> |
<H4> How the ‘Japan model’ – limited testing with robust contact tracing – kept the country from being initially overwhelmed by COVID-19 </H4> |
<H4> Podcast: How do mRNA vaccines work and why were they developed so fast? </H4> |
<H4> Podcast: GMOs = colonialism? CRISPR-edited eggs; sustainable shoes made from fungi </H4> |
<H4> Podcast: Beyond CRISPR and gene therapy—How ‘gene writing’ is poised to transform the treatment of even the rarest diseases </H4> |
<H4> Podcast: How do mRNA vaccines work and why were they developed so fast? </H4> |
<H4> There is a lot of misinformation about COVID, the available vaccines and their effectiveness. These 7 insights will help clear that up. </H4> |
<H4> Viewpoint: COVID vaccine successes have made headway in rebutting facile arguments about the dangers of biotechnology </H4> |
<H4> How COVID deniers are taking pages out of the anti-vaccine movement’s playbook </H4> |
<H4> ‘Vaccine euphoria’: Why this may be the ‘end of the beginning’ not the ‘beginning of the end’ </H4> |
<H4> Over 60 years, vaccines have prevented 4.5 billion cases and saved 10 million lives. Now anti-vaxxers want to roll back the clock </H4> |
<H4> How the ‘Japan model’ – limited testing with robust contact tracing – kept the country from being initially overwhelmed by COVID-19 </H4> |
<H4> Podcast: How do mRNA vaccines work and why were they developed so fast? </H4> |
<H4> Nuclear technology yields cotton ready to withstand withering heat waves brought on by global warming </H4> |
<H4> With neighboring countries battling crop-ravaging locusts, Zimbabwe readies itself for potential outbreak </H4> |
<H4> India’s scientists urge government to approve gene-edited crops to help battle yield losses </H4> |
<H4> Organic vs conventional: Which farming method is more sustainable? A case study from California </H4> |
<H4> New crop-destroying locust swarms hitting East Africa ‘nearly every day,’ UN warns in renewed call to fight major food security threat </H4> |
<H4> Success of CRISPR tomato may determine if gene-edited foods take root in Japan </H4> |
<H4> Why grandmothers might be a driving force behind human evolution </H4> |
<H4> How DNA and genetic genealogy helped catch one of the world’s most notorious murderers, the Golden State Killer </H4> |
<H4> Acting rash or unwise? Don’t blame your ‘lizard brain’, claims ‘Seven and a Half Lessons About the Brain’ book </H4> |
<H4> Video: Why mosquitoes choose you </H4> |
<H4> Book review: Who knew the world of paleoanthropology could be so cutthroat? </H4> |
<H4> Are women superior to men? Research suggests most of us are more likely to believe that sex differences favor females </H4> |
<H4> Want to breed a horse that’s disease free and can run faster? CRISPR may offer that possibility </H4> |
<H4> Infographic: What are mRNA COVID-19 vaccines and how do they work? </H4> |
<H4> Environmental Working Group: EWG challenges safety of GMOs, food pesticide residues </H4> |
<H4> Michael Hansen: Architect of Consumers Union ongoing anti-GMO campaign </H4> |
<H4> Video: Why mosquitoes choose you </H4> |
<H4> Organic v conventional using GMOs: Which is the more sustainable farming? </H4> |
<H4> Are most GMO safety studies funded by industry? </H4> |
<H4> Disaster interrupted: Which farming system better preserves insect populations: Organic or conventional? </H4> |
<H4> Are we facing an ‘Insect Apocalypse’ caused by ‘intensive, industrial’ farming and agricultural chemicals? The media say yes; Science says ‘no’ </H4> |
<H4> There is a lot of misinformation about COVID, the available vaccines and their effectiveness. These 7 insights will help clear that up. </H4> |
<H4> Genetic engineering gave us COVID vaccines. Here’s how they work, and why you shouldn’t be frightened </H4> |
<H4> Podcast: GMOs = colonialism? CRISPR-edited eggs; sustainable shoes made from fungi </H4> |
<H4> Are women superior to men? Research suggests most of us are more likely to believe that sex differences favor females </H4> |
<H4> COVID-19 linked to early Alzheimer’s and other forms of cognitive decline </H4> |
<H4> How honest are you? When do you think it’s okay to deceive? It may be hard-wired </H4> |
<H4> New crop-destroying locust swarms hitting East Africa ‘nearly every day,’ UN warns in renewed call to fight major food security threat </H4> |
<H4> Nitrogen-efficient rice could preserve crop yields while cutting environmental impact of fertilizer </H4> |
<H4> Viewpoint: UK decision to rescind neonics pesticide restrictions a welcome win for science </H4> |
<H4> With neighboring countries battling crop-ravaging locusts, Zimbabwe readies itself for potential outbreak </H4> |
<H4> Organic vs conventional: Which farming method is more sustainable? A case study from California </H4> |
<H4> Beepocalypse Myth Handbook: Assessing claims of pollinator collapse </H4> |
<H4> Want to breed a horse that’s disease free and can run faster? CRISPR may offer that possibility </H4> |
<H4> 400 children worldwide are born each year with ‘fast-aging disease’ – Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome. Now CRISPR offers hope </H4> |
<H4> CRISPR, forests and climate change: Gene editing poised to engineer faster growing, carbon sucking trees—if activists don’t block it </H4> |
<H4> Gene therapy may be able to restore vision </H4> |
<H4> Resurgence of gene therapy has dramatically altered the the biomedicine revolution </H4> |
<H4> ‘Gigantic leaps forward’ What’s happened in the 21 years since a teenager died undergoing gene therapy, stalling emergence of this biomedical breakthrough? </H4> |
<H4> ‘Vaccine euphoria’: Why this may be the ‘end of the beginning’ not the ‘beginning of the end’ </H4> |
<H4> How the ‘Japan model’ – limited testing with robust contact tracing – kept the country from being initially overwhelmed by COVID-19 </H4> |
<H4> Podcast: How do mRNA vaccines work and why were they developed so fast? </H4> |
<H4> Success of CRISPR tomato may determine if gene-edited foods take root in Japan </H4> |
<H4> USDA, Health and Human Services reach agreement to bring US animal gene-editing rules ‘into the 21st century’ </H4> |
<H4> USDA approves GM petunias engineered to produce orange flowers </H4> |
<H4> Vegetarianism might be in your genes: Study suggests genetic predisposition to a meat-free diet </H4> |
<H4> What do ‘non-identical identical twins’ have to do with COVID-19? Mutations! </H4> |
<H4> Genetic genealogy launched 20 years ago with a whimper. Here’s where we are now </H4> |
<H4> CRISPR, forests and climate change: Gene editing poised to engineer faster growing, carbon sucking trees—if activists don’t block it </H4> |
<H4> We are inching towards direct brain control of computers. Here’s when they’ll be ready </H4> |
<H4> Impossible Foods is on a mission: ‘Eradicate the meat and fish industries by 2035’ </H4> |
<H4> With neighboring countries battling crop-ravaging locusts, Zimbabwe readies itself for potential outbreak </H4> |
<H4> Organic vs conventional: Which farming method is more sustainable? A case study from California </H4> |
<H4> Beepocalypse Myth Handbook: Assessing claims of pollinator collapse </H4> |
<H4> Help for future burn victims? Electronic ‘replacement skin’ can feel touch and temperature </H4> |
<H4> Video: Instead of paying with a credit card, what if you could simply touch a scanner with your finger? </H4> |
<H4> Socially responsible artificial skin: Skin-equivalent functions almost like the real thing and does not need to be tested on animals </H4> |
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Cost and overhead previously rendered this semi-public form of communication unfeasible.
But advances in social networking technology from 2004-2010 has made broader concepts of sharing possible.