A celebration of the inspirational figures behind innovation and achievement in pathology and laboratory medicine
02/25/2016 | Elizabeth A. Krupinski
Color calibration paves the way to large-scale digital pathology rollout.
02/25/2016 | Michael Schubert
Mass spectrometry imaging can map cellular composition in unprecedented 3D resolution.
A new nanomaterial might be the key to portable devices for detecting cancer recurrence.
A new microfluidic device may offer rapid, inexpensive blood counts from tiny samples.
Diagnostic imaging may detect fungal lung infections faster and more accurately.
02/25/2016 | Fedra Pavlou
The UK has greenlit CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing in humans. Can and should it be controlled?
12/18/2015 | Roisin McGuigan
What does analysis of the last five years of the literature on ALS tell us about the priorities of the field, and the major contributors to it?
12/18/2015 | Kathryn Largue, Daniel M. Davis
New super-resolution microscopy techniques give us better insight into how our immune cells fight cancer, and how we can help
12/18/2015 | Shane Brown
Considering the impact of the consumer health revolution on pathology
Genetic testing could shed light on unexplained low blood counts
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