A new study published in Neurology, led by Queen Mary University of London, has revealed that people of South Asian, African ...
A new study published in Science is challenging long-held assumptions about how we measure genetic risk in endangered species ...
Massive Swedish study of over two million people reveals that genetic risk for mental illness often points toward ...
A systematic review of 52 scientific papers submitted to a world-leading clinical genetics journal from multiple scientists ...
Koala populations with low genetic diversity are actually recovering by "reshuffling" their genes to remove harmful mutations ...
A landmark global study co‑led by Dalhousie researchers offers the clearest picture yet of anxiety’s biological roots, ...
Koalas’ population comeback may be doing more than boosting numbers—it could also be rebuilding their lost genetic diversity.
Thin stretches of the human X chromosome look oddly empty when you scan for Neanderthal DNA. Geneticists even have a name for the gaps: “Neanderthal deserts.
Some koalas may recover their genes after major population crashes. Growing koala populations may rebuild genetic strength over time.
The genus Avena, encompassing both wild and cultivated oat species, has long been a focus of genomic and cytogenetic research aimed at deciphering complex evolutionary histories and optimising ...
Some experts have suggested as many as 1 in 200 men in the world are related to Genghis Khan. But a new genomic study reveals ...
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