John Drazan discovered his passion for science on the basketball court, not the classroom. After getting pushed out of the ...
Once again, we urge lawmakers to deny the steep cuts proposed to federal R&D funding in the Administration’s Budget Request ...
In response to member feedback, AAAS has created a new benefit to equip STEMM professionals with skills to engage with local ...
For his work towards developing a novel cancer immunotherapy that turns tumors into their own vaccines, Fábio Rosa has ...
Courtney Schreiber has won the 2026 BioInnovation Institute & Science Translational Medicine Prize for Innovations in Women’s ...
Annie Jump Cannon was an astronomer, suffragist, and photographer. Nearly deaf for much of her life, Cannon is credited with the invention of the Harvard spectral classification system, which assigns ...
Welcome to the AAAS Federal R&D Budget Historical Dashboard, an interactive tool for exploring long-term federal funding trends within the context of the broader budget. The dashboard allows users to ...
Science journalism faces a crisis worldwide. From a precipitous drop in funding to the rise of disruptive technologies such as artificial intelligence, science writers find themselves wrestling with ...
The 2026 AAAS David and Betty Hamburg Award for Science Diplomacy recipients, Sir Martyn Poliakoff and Sir Richard Catlow, discussed their respective experiences as former Foreign Secretaries of the ...
AAAS announces its 2025 class of Honorary Fellows, includes 449 scientists, engineers and innovators across 24 AAAS ...
The modern U.S. research enterprise has some of its roots in World War II, through the U.S. government's Office of Scientific Research and Development or OSRD. Quickly authorized by President Franklin ...
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