A Stanford Medicine-led effort to learn more about exercise’s molecular effects paints the broadest picture yet of why, in the health arena, sweat is king.

A leader in the biomedical revolution, Stanford Medicine has a long tradition of leadership in pioneering research, creative teaching protocols and effective clinical therapies.

Stanford Medicine research on Timothy syndrome — which predisposes newborns to autism and epilepsy — may extend well beyond the rare genetic disorder to schizophrenia and other conditions.

The new issue of Stanford Medicine magazine explores the challenges and promise of artificial intelligence for medical care, research and education.

Researchers find that a little-understood part of the brain appears to be involved in starting seizures and keeping them going.

When the brain has trouble filtering incoming information and predicting what’s likely to happen, psychosis can result, research shows.

A new artificial intelligence model helps physicians and nurses work together at Stanford Hospital to boost patient care