Don’t Believe What They’re Telling You About Misinformation
People may fervently espouse symbolic beliefs, cognitive scientists say, but they don’t treat them the same as factual beliefs. It’s worth keeping track of the difference.
People may fervently espouse symbolic beliefs, cognitive scientists say, but they don’t treat them the same as factual beliefs. It’s worth keeping track of the difference.
Photojournalist Ilvy Njiokiktjien was granted rare access to document the lives of boarders and their foster families in Geel, which has a remarkable, centuries-old tradition…
Objective To evaluate whether a subgroup of men can be identified that would benefit more from screening than others. Materials and Methods This retrospective cohort…
National Institutes of Health and the US Department of Veterans Affairs.
Stewardship needs improving, experts say
Nature Medicine – A vision–language foundation model, trained on a dataset of more than 1 million echocardiogram video–text pairs, is able to assess various cardiac…
Subcutaneous atezolizumab is approved for the treatment of various solid tumors. Previous results from the IMscin001 study (NCT03735121) demonstrated that the pharmacokinetics, efficacy, immunogenicity, and…
Clinical Transplantation is an international transplantation journal publishing the latest research surrounding organ and tissue transplant surgery.
Canadian community pharmacies dispensed more than 758 million prescriptions in 2020, 1 supporting Canadians in treating, managing and preventing disease. Despite their many benefits, medications…
This nested case-control study examines the association between long-term use of medications to treat attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and the risk of cardiovascular disease.
COVID-19 vaccine misinformation, TTS risk, and benefits explained by Dr. Anurag Agrawal, urging informed vaccination decisions.