News

While it has a $37.6 billion endowment, Stanford spends only about 5% annually — most of it restricted to specific purposes ...
Anil Menon, a flight engineer and NASA astronaut, is set for his first ISS mission in June 2026 with Roscosmos cosmonauts. He ...
Scientists show that the frequency of a set of words seems to have increased in published study abstracts since ChatGPT was ...
Skin grafts genetically engineered from a patient's own cells can heal persistent wounds in people with an extremely painful ...
Palo Alto City Manager Ed Shikada will likely remain barred from participating in any city decisions involving Stanford ...
Revascularization of all vessels with stenosis was linked to lower rates of death, another MI, and further revascularization ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN1d
Can a Medical Device Restore Your Balance?
Nearly two million people worldwide have lost the simple ability to feel steady. Now researchers have developed an ...
Credit: Oscar Abilez / Stanford Medicine For over a decade, scientists have been growing organoids—small clusters of cells that mimic a particular organ—to serve as miniature biological models.
Other high-profile athletes have suffered Achilles tendon injuries beyond the NBA, such as USMNT forward Haji Wright, whose ...
How one of the oldest components of the human immune system can trigger a mysterious and little-understood syndrome.
Huaxiao (Adam) Yang, a former instructor at the Stanford Cardiovascular Institute and now an assistant professor in biomedical engineering at the University of North Texas, co-led the study.