When we move, it's harder for existing wearable devices to accurately track our heart activity. But researchers found that a starfish's five-arm shape helps solve this problem. Inspired by how a ...
Inspired by how starfish flip themselves over, researchers have developed a unique wearable heart monitor with five flexible ...
(Web Desk) - Inspired by how starfish flip themselves over, researchers have developed a unique wearable heart monitor with ...
The Canadian Press on MSN18m
Critically endangered sunflower sea stars are seeking refuge in B.C. fiordsBut the ocean isn't as colourful now after a wasting disease tore through all varieties of sea stars along the North American ...
A human appetite hormone, bombesin, also controls feeding in starfish, showing it evolved over 500 million years ago. A team of biologists at Queen Mary University of London has discovered that a ...
An optogenetic method for controlling the movement of starfish oocytes has been developed, which could have applications for ...
Engineered starfish oocytes shape-shift in response to light, may enable the design of synthetic, light-activated cells for ...
Everyone's favorite pink starfish has misplaced his ID, and you'll earn the 'It's Not My Wallet' trophy for finding it ...
A tiny molecule called bombesin links starfish and humans in appetite control, revealing a surprising evolutionary connection.
MIT scientists used light to control how a starfish egg cell jiggles and moves during its earliest stage of development.
A team of biologists at Queen Mary University of London has discovered that a neurohormone controlling appetite in humans has ...
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