Why some cancers are worse than others

Megan Sweet slices tumors. A normal day in the lab finds the Virginia Tech graduate student with hands deep inside a refrigerated metal box, pulling a mounted mouse-grown tumor incrementally closer to a razor-sharp blade. "It's all about fine tuning and making sure it's going to be an even slice," said Sweet, who studies biological sciences. Finally, the blade meets the pinkie nail-sized nub of tissue and slices through it with a rhythmic chunk, chunk, chunk, chunk. "This is the hardest and most time-consuming part," Sweet said. "But it's also kind of meditative."

Using vagus nerve stimulation to improve treatment for movement rehabilitation

The vagus nerve connects the brain to major organs throughout the body and plays important roles in many bodily functions. For people with mobility issues participating in physical therapy, stimulating the vagus nerve with a noninvasive technique—transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS)—is emerging as an additional treatment intervention. But researchers have not assessed how taVNS interacts with motor systems during movement, which could inform treatment strategies for those with mobility issues.