A new study reveals a shocking jump in "biological age" among Gen-X, Millennials, and Gen-Z—and it might explain the rise in early-onset cancers.
Our genetic heritage is not a blueprint or an algorithm, as many biologists have imagined, but something else entirely.
The concept of biological age, distinct from chronological age, is gaining public traction, though often misinterpreted.
A risk model that combines a mammographic artificial intelligence (AI) risk score with polygenic and clinical risk scores ...
Cancer is one of the leading causes of death and disability, affecting millions of working-age adults and their families each ...
PS, designed entirely by artificial intelligence, passed its first human safety trial at Cambridge — triggering ...
We look at power, speed, calories, recovery, fuelling and more to compare a Tour de France rider's efforts to those of an ...
A quantum-inspired AI approach can analyze millions of molecular features from small datasets, improving predictions, ...
For a child diagnosed with neuroblastoma—the most common infant cancer, occurring when early nerve cells grow out of ...
Ascendis Pharma A/S (Nasdaq: ASND) today announced that the latest data from its clinical development programs for the treatment of children with achondroplasia will be shared in an oral presentation ...
Your school-aged pop superfan may have already raved to you about Birdland. Oscar, Francis and Conrad Cvitan, the 18-year-old ...
The link between biological aging and early-onset cancer risk offers crucial insights into generational health trends and ...