The ethical considerations of brain-computer interfaces are likely to be a hot topic in the coming decades.
The tech entrepreneur showcased footage of monkeys 'typing' using only their brains at an event earlier this week.
Ram and Shesh Narain Diwediamoo compelled many, including a prominent psychologist, with their unique reincarnation tale.
Last month Ukranian researchers claimed to have observed large numbers of UFOs in the skies over the country.
It might sound like an experiment worthy of Frankenstein, but we won't have to worry about 'rat men' anytime soon.
An ongoing research effort to observe and document UAPs over Ukraine has reportedly turned up quite a lot of sightings.
A man dubbed 'loneliest on Earth' has died after spending decades alone in the Brazilian rainforest.
It might not be alive, but this remarkable chemical compound seems to be able to remember things for several hours.
Embryo-like structures with a brain, intestines and a beating heart have been created by scientists in a lab.
Incredibly, many people have gone on to live healthy, normal lives even with sections of their brain absent.
Witness testimony can be unreliable, but what if we could analyze brainwaves directly and use them as evidence ?
Scientists are working on ways to combine human cells with computer chips - but is this something we should really be doing ?
75 years ago, pilot Kenneth Arnold sighted several strange objects in the sky near Washington's Mount Rainier.
Psychologist Vanessa LoBue explores the phenomenon of 'infantile amnesia' and why we can't remember our earliest years.
It has been a science fiction staple for years, but will we ever get the opportunity to do this for real and if so, when ?
Unlike other species, we can make vaccines, send probes to other worlds and build skyscrapers.
Two young brothers recently went missing in the dense rainforest and were miraculously found alive 27 days later.
According to reports, Margaret Thatcher's government once planned to use trained dolphins to hunt the Loch Ness Monster.
The groundbreaking study saw researchers record the brain activity of a patient dying of a heart attack.
Prof Don Arnold and colleagues have been attempting to solve the long-running mystery of where our memories are stored.