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ARDEM PATAPOUTIAN
How your brain know when to breathe? Nobel-winning neuroscientist to map human’s ‘hidden sixth sense’ linking brain and bodyA groundbreaking project will map the brain's hidden sixth sense. Scientists are creating an atlas of interoceptive neurons, the cells moni...
Trump freezes Nobel-winning scientist’s U.S. grant, China jumps in with open arms and unlimited funding offersNobel laureate Ardem Patapoutian, who found refuge in America, faced a dilemma when NIH funding cuts threatened his research. China offered...
Meet Svante Paabo, the Swedish scientist who won Nobel in medicine. His father got it in 1982Techniques that Paabo spearheaded allowed researchers to compare the genome of modern humans and that of other hominins - the Denisovans as...
Svante Pääbo wins Nobel Prize in MedicineLast year's recipients were David Julius and Ardem Patapoutian for their discoveries into how the human body perceives temperature and touc...
Nobel prize in medicine awarded for research on evolutionSwedish scientist Svante Paabo won this year's Nobel Prize in medicine Monday for his discoveries on human evolution that provided key insi...
Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine: Panel to announce winner today, check details hereThe Nobel panel will announce the winner or winners of the medicine or physiology Nobel Prize today in Sweden at the Karolinska Institute i...
- Duo wins Nobel Chemistry Prize for work on catalysts
The new technique, which relies on small organic molecules and which is called "asymmetric organocatalysis" is widely used in pharmaceutica...
Trio win physics Nobel for work that helps understand changing climateOne half of the prize, worth 10 million Swedish crowns ($1.15 million), goes in equal parts to Manabe, who is 90, and Hasselmann for modell...
An illusion that is touchingThe sense of touch that our brains register is actually electron repulsion and the electromagnetic field that permeates everything and ever...
U.S. scientists Julius and Patapoutian win 2021 Nobel Prize in MedicineThe more than century-old prize is awarded by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and is worth 10 million Swedish crowns ($1.15 million).
Human skin cells converted into pain sensing neuronsScientists have converted human skin cells into specialised neurons that detect pain, itch, touch and other bodily sensations.