Refine Results
Type
Year
- 2015 (54) Apply 2015 filter
- 2014 (47) Apply 2014 filter
- 2013 (63) Apply 2013 filter
- 2012 (73) Apply 2012 filter
- 2011 (117) Apply 2011 filter
- 2010 (186) Apply 2010 filter
- 2009 (158) Apply 2009 filter
- 2008 (144) Apply 2008 filter
- 2007 (184) Apply 2007 filter
- 2006 (176) Apply 2006 filter
- 2005 (311) Apply 2005 filter
- 2004 (206) Apply 2004 filter
- 2003 (140) Apply 2003 filter
- 2002 (168) Apply 2002 filter
- 2001 (166) Apply 2001 filter
- 2000 (175) Apply 2000 filter
- 1999 (102) Apply 1999 filter
- 1998 (51) Apply 1998 filter
- 1997 (27) Apply 1997 filter
- 1996 (54) Apply 1996 filter
- 1995 (12) Apply 1995 filter
New research examines why some children born with heart defects also have developmental disabilities.
Researchers learn more details about how CRISPR works in cells.
Scientists show they can control whether mice perceive a taste as bitter or sweet by activating two small areas of the brain.
HHMI investigators Karl Deisseroth and Helen Hobbs are among five scientists honored for transformative advances toward understanding living systems and extending human life.
HHMI scientists have identified a set of proteins that plays a surprisingly broad role in guiding tissue formation in plant roots.
Within less than a second, the new IsoView microscope produces images of entire organisms, such as a zebrafish or fruit fly embryo, with enough resolution in all three dimensions that each cell appears as a distinct structure.
HHMI's Paul Modrich shares 2015 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Tomas Lindahl and Aziz Sancar for studies of DNA repair.
New research indicates individual human neurons may harbor up to 1,000 genetic mutations.
HHMI Investigator Stephen Elledge of Brigham and Women's Hospital shares the 2015 Albert Lasker Basic Medical Research Award with Evelyn Witkin of Rutgers University.
HHMI and the Zooniverse launch WildCam Gorongosa, a new citizen science project.
New imaging methods dramatically improve the spatial resolution provided by structured illumination microscopy, one of the best imaging techniques for seeing inside living cells.
HHMI scientists have discovered how the most common genetic defect in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis kills nerve cells.
Four HHMI scientists are among those honored by the prestigious Royal Society.
HHMI researchers solve a longstanding mystery about the origin of new cells in the liver.
HHMI President Robert Tjian will step down in late 2016.
On September 16, Matthew Scott, President of the Carnegie Institution for Science, will deliver a talk, “Exploring the Genes that Built You” at Janelia Research Campus.
HHMI selects 45 predoctoral students from 18 countries to receive fellowships that will help them complete their graduate degrees in the life sciences.
A lipid molecule called EET helps blood-forming stem cells replenish the immune system.
New research begins to explain how plants separate microbes they like from those they don't like.
The Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s newly expanded Gilliam Fellowships for Advanced Study Program has awarded 30 fellowships to outstanding students who are pursuing a PhD in the life sciences and who are committed to increasing diversity among scientists.
HHMI scientists have profiled key features of the genetic material inside three types of brain cells and found vast differences in the patterns of chemical modifications that affect how the genes in each type of neuron are regulated.
New studies provide the first genetic evidence that humans interbred with Neanderthals in Europe.
HHMI announces five-year, $2.3 million grant to support educational activities and infrastructure development at the E.O. Wilson Biodiversity Laboratory in Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique.
Nueva tecnología desarrollada por investigadores del HHMI hace que se pueda utilizar una gota de sangre de una persona para analizar infecciones presentes y pasadas con cualquier virus humano conocido.
New technology developed by HHMI researchers makes it possible to test for current and past infections with any known human virus by analyzing a single drop of blood.