Despite progress, the industry faces growing fragmentation across viewing platforms. “Smart TVs have further solidified their role as the primary content hub for viewers worldwide. However ...
An optogenetic method for controlling the movement of starfish oocytes has been developed, which could have applications for ...
But researchers found that a starfish's five-arm shape helps solve this problem. Inspired by how a starfish flips itself over -- shrinking one of its arms and using the others in a coordinated ...
Engineered starfish oocytes shape-shift in response to light, may enable the design of synthetic, light-activated cells for ...
WALTHAM, Mass., April 3, 2025 – Metadata-driven unstructured data management Starfish Storage today announced it has won the “Data Solution of the Year for Education” award in the 6 th annual Data ...
A tiny molecule called bombesin links starfish and humans in appetite control, revealing a surprising evolutionary connection.
Life takes shape with the motion of a single cell. In response to signals from certain proteins and enzymes, a cell can start ...
A team of biologists at Queen Mary University of London has discovered that a neurohormone controlling appetite in humans has an ancient evolutionary origin, dating back over half a billion years.
Scientists at the University of Missouri have developed a starfish-shaped wearable device that can measure heart rate in real-time. The device is inspired by the arm movements of a starfish and ...
By analysing the genomes of invertebrate animals, they discovered genes encoding bombesin-like neurohormones in the common starfish (Asterias rubens) and other echinoderms, such as sea urchins and ...