A new study in the United States finds that the more a state's budget relied on sales tax revenue, the more likely it was to shorten stay-at-home orders during the early stages of the COVID pandemic.
Stop falling for misleading headlines. Understand the difference between correlation and causation, and learn how researchers prove real scientific facts.
New data supports GraftAssure commercialization efforts Multi-center study featured 249 biopsy-matched patients Proprietary “Combination Model” ...
A decade ago, Pennsylvania’s Department of Environmental Protection published a study on radioactivity in the oil and gas industry, motivated by fears that increasing volumes of toxic fracking waste ...
A new study finds that the more a state's budget relied on sales tax revenue, the more likely it was to shorten stay-at-home ...
A long-term cohort study links fear of aging to faster biological wear and tear, and finds that neither Botox nor diet ...
A new study led by researchers at UC San Diego shows a certain protein detected in the blood can provide decades of early ...
Researchers saw a clear pattern in the data: States without a sales tax tended to keep lockdown orders in place longer. Meanwhile, states that collected a larger share of their revenue from sales ...
A study tracks how the North American Free Trade Agreement and trade competition with Mexico led to earlier deaths for American factory workers.
Anthropic paper’s empirical core comes from a much narrower source than its title suggests. As result, it should not be read as a measure of AI’s labor-market impacts.