Surely one of the key lessons of the pandemic is the value of research and development, which in turn means the value of making the investments over time in education and equipment so that researchers are tooled up and ready to go as needed.
The development of a COVID-19 digital health passport is one of the hottest debates right now.
The introduction of new applications of digital technology such as the internet of things (IoT), artificial intelligence (AI) and blockchain promises to be the spark that triggers the mainstream adoption and propagation of precision medicine.
By leveraging the different applications of virtual reality (VR) in archaeology, researchers can recreate lost worlds and analyze them from a 360° view.
What would you call the following scenario: a nation of families spends a portion of their income on poor quality food that routinely makes them sick and kills them prematurely.
One of the first things I wanted to do after receiving my COVID-19 vaccination was to visit a museum (with masks and social distancing, of course), and my first such visit was to The Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, Texas.