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Life Technology™ Medical News
Study Shows Saliva Test & AI Predict Severe Chemo Side Effects
Study: Protein Source, Distribution, and Intake Impact on Muscle Gain
Breakthrough Technique Allows Seeing New Color
"Dutch Artist Piet Mondrian: Contrasting Styles Revealed"
Study: Brain Activity in Conversations
Study Reveals How Pride and Awe Boost Parental Well-Being
Passengers Hesitant: Trust in Autonomous Vehicle Tech
High Blood Pressure Affects 108 Million Americans
Australian Study Shows Cost Savings in Prison Needle Programs
Parental Action Plan for Child's Learning Challenges
Patient in Northampton Seeks Timely Care in Small City
Colorado's Leading Gender-Affirming Care Draws Medical Seekers
Impact of 50 Years of Economic Change on Less Educated Americans
Study Reveals Fatty, Sugary Diets Impair Brain Function
Chris Vogelsang's Long Battle with Cancer
Protein Inhibiting Cell Division: Potential Biomarker for Liver Disease
Medical Student Analyzes Colon Cancer Treatment Options
Virginia Department of Health Confirms State's First Measles Case
Listeria Outbreak Linked to Baltimore Ice Cream
Texas Health Officials Report 36 New Measles Cases
Michigan Reports First Measles Outbreak Since 2019
Act Fast: Chest Pain or Stroke? Drive to Hospital or Call 911
Global Trend: Impact of Being an Only Child
When to Start Puberty Talk: National Poll Insights
Study Finds Older Adults Respond Equally to Cancer Immunotherapy
Horses Impact Children Differently: Hyperactive Kids Quieter, Nonverbal Kids Communicate
Rise of Tusi: The Emerging Drug "Pink Cocaine"
French Indian Ocean Island Hospital Chief Urges Medical Aid for Chikungunya Outbreak
Parent's Alert: Child's Fall Raises Concerns of Brain Injury
The Power of Insight in Problem Solving
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Life Technology™ Science News
Trump Administration Alleges Anti-Christian Discrimination
Slavevoyages Tool for Data on History's Largest Slave Trades Gets New Home
Vatican Announces Death of Pope Francis
Astounding Proposals at 2025 Lunar Planetary Science Conference
Tesla Bumper Stickers: Pre-Elon Purchase Revelations
Mars: Ancient Warmth and Water Spark Hope for Life
"Milky Way's Irregular, Hot Cavity: A Million Kelvin Mystery"
Comparing Telescopes: The Key to Fair Assessment
Managing the Puppy Blues: Coping with Stress
Nasa's Moon to Mars Program: Advancing Crewed Missions
Canadian Political Leadership Stays Traditional Amid Global Instability
Astronomers Discover Unexpected Gas on Exoplanet
National Reckoning: U.S. Reflects on Crime Prevention
Physical Punishment Allowed in Many U.S. States for Misbehaving Students
Motion of Unlabeled Cells Reveals Cancerous Tendencies
Astronomers Discover Evidence of Ancient Cosmic Collision
Astronomers Discover Compact Dwarf Galaxy Evolution
Solar System in Local Bubble: Evidence of Ancient Supernova
Overcoming Workplace Powerlessness: Reframing as Opportunity
Rare Sighting: Mountain Lion Spotted in Uncharted Texas Area
Vacant Lot Near West Oakland BART Station
Black Bears Expanding Territory in Michigan's Lower Peninsula
Juvenile Minke Whale Euthanized in San Francisco Bay
Machine Learning Model Enhances AAV Capsid Fitness
New Coronagraph Reveals Distant Exoplanets
Pheasant Release Linked to Higher Lyme Disease Risk
Celebratory Cake and Gifts: A Low-Key 70th Birthday Celebration
Neutron Star Mergers: Generating Gravitational Waves
New Insights on Mars's Jezero Crater Geology
Mars Discovery: Ancient Carbon Cycle, Cat Origins, Magnetic Pole Shift
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"Tacoma Narrows Bridge Collapse: Fatal Engineering Assumption"
Las Vegas Spaceport Offers Military-Grade Personal Satellite
Google's Unlawful Online Monopoly Confirmed by Federal Judge
Trump Administration's Chip Export Restrictions Could Boost Chinese Innovation
Humanoid Robots Run Alongside Humans in Chinese Capital's Half-Marathon
Federal Judge Rules Google Held Illegal Monopoly in Advertising
Ford Adjusts Exports Amid US-China Trade Conflict
Humanoid Robots Join Beijing Half Marathon
NASA Calibrates Shock-Sensing Probe for X-59 Test Flights
NASA's C-130 Hercules Begins New Mission in California
AI Models' Spurious Correlations: Tracing and Overcoming Them
Racing to Reinvent: Sustainable Innovations in Construction
Llm Technology Speeds Up Code Generation
Nasa Engineers Utilize Ground Sensors for Air Taxi Safety
Perovskite Photovoltaics: Stability Challenges in Commercialization
Tiny Semiconductor Particles: Key to Photovoltaic Advancements
Chinese Scientists Enhance Adhesion for Efficient Tandem Solar Cells
Anxious Companies Seek Rare Earths Amid China Export Limits
Netflix Outperforms Analyst Expectations in Q1
Challenges of Radiation in Outer Space
Europe Shifts to Dominant Renewable Energy Future
Adaptable Robots Transforming Electronic Waste Recycling
New Method Speeds Up Quantum Measurements
Smart Insole System Monitors Walking for Posture Improvement
AI Creativity: ChatGPT and LLMs Redefine Co-Creation
Study Reveals Gamers Stressed by Manipulative Designs
Maximizing Electronic Chip Efficiency with Advanced Cooling Technology
Thermoelectric Materials: Powering IoT Devices
New Wearable Sweat Sensor Helps Monitor Hydration Levels
Zhejiang University Develops Autonomous Quadcopter Navigation
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Life Technology™ Technology News
"Tacoma Narrows Bridge Collapse: Fatal Engineering Assumption"
Las Vegas Spaceport Offers Military-Grade Personal Satellite
Google's Unlawful Online Monopoly Confirmed by Federal Judge
Trump Administration's Chip Export Restrictions Could Boost Chinese Innovation
Humanoid Robots Run Alongside Humans in Chinese Capital's Half-Marathon
Federal Judge Rules Google Held Illegal Monopoly in Advertising
Ford Adjusts Exports Amid US-China Trade Conflict
Humanoid Robots Join Beijing Half Marathon
NASA Calibrates Shock-Sensing Probe for X-59 Test Flights
NASA's C-130 Hercules Begins New Mission in California
AI Models' Spurious Correlations: Tracing and Overcoming Them
Racing to Reinvent: Sustainable Innovations in Construction
Llm Technology Speeds Up Code Generation
Nasa Engineers Utilize Ground Sensors for Air Taxi Safety
Perovskite Photovoltaics: Stability Challenges in Commercialization
Tiny Semiconductor Particles: Key to Photovoltaic Advancements
Chinese Scientists Enhance Adhesion for Efficient Tandem Solar Cells
Anxious Companies Seek Rare Earths Amid China Export Limits
Netflix Outperforms Analyst Expectations in Q1
Challenges of Radiation in Outer Space
Europe Shifts to Dominant Renewable Energy Future
Adaptable Robots Transforming Electronic Waste Recycling
New Method Speeds Up Quantum Measurements
Smart Insole System Monitors Walking for Posture Improvement
AI Creativity: ChatGPT and LLMs Redefine Co-Creation
Study Reveals Gamers Stressed by Manipulative Designs
Maximizing Electronic Chip Efficiency with Advanced Cooling Technology
Thermoelectric Materials: Powering IoT Devices
New Wearable Sweat Sensor Helps Monitor Hydration Levels
Zhejiang University Develops Autonomous Quadcopter Navigation
Thursday, October 24, 2019
Heightened risk of adverse financial changes before Alzheimer's diagnosis
Prior to an Alzheimer's diagnosis, a person in the early stages of the disease faces a heightened risk of adverse financial outcomes—a likely consequence of compromised decision making when managing money, in addition to exploitation and fraud by others.
Study highlights power of family resilience to protect children from bullying
Studies show that children exposed to childhood trauma known as adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are at increased risk of being bullied or bullying others. New research being presented at the American American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) 2019 National Conference & Exhibition suggests that family resilience—the ability to work together to overcome problems, for example—reduces this risk.
Informal sharing of breast milk gains popularity among women, despite safety risks
Women who are unable to produce enough breast milk for their children are increasingly turning to "mother-to-mother" informal milk-sharing, a potentially unsafe practice that is discouraged by the pediatric medical community, according to new research being presented at the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) 2019 National Conference & Exhibition.
Study shows trampoline injuries have increased over the past decade
Between 2008 and 2017, the incidence of trampoline-related fractures increased by an average of 3.85% in the U.S., and the driver behind those increases are trampoline injuries outside of the home at places of recreation or sport , according to new research being presented at the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) 2019 National Conference & Exhibition.
Skiing, snowboarding injuries more serious—skull and face fractures—in younger children
Winter sports like skiing and snowboarding are a great way to keep kids active in the winter, but they are also linked to injuries and for younger children those injuries are more likely to involve fractures to the head or face, according to new research being presented at the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) 2019 National Conference & Exhibition.
Injuries related to lawn mowers affect young children in rural areas most severely
Each year, more than 9,000 children in the United States are treated in emergency departments for lawn mower-related injuries. New research being presented at the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) 2019 National Conference & Exhibition in New Orleans found that these injuries are more frequent and severe in rural areas, affecting younger children than in urban regions.
Children's race may play role in treatment for acute gastroenteritis in emergency departments
New research being presented at the American Academy of Pediatrics 2019 National Conference & Exhibition suggests that the treatment children receive in U.S. emergency departments for acute gastroenteritis with dehydration, a common childhood illness, may differ based on their race.
Years of education may impact drinking behavior and risk of alcohol dependence
Higher educational attainment—spending more years in education—may impact people's drinking behaviour and reduce their risk of alcohol dependence, according to a study published in Molecular Psychiatry.
Daimler profits nose ahead in third quarter
German carmaker Daimler reported Thursday a return to quarterly profits in July-September after its first three-month loss in ten years, but said more work was ahead as it confronts a slowing global market.
Sea urchin explosion off California, Oregon decimates kelp
Tens of millions of voracious purple sea urchins that have already chomped their way through towering underwater kelp forests in California are spreading north to Oregon, sending the delicate marine ecosystem off the shore into such disarray that other critical species are starving to death.
Finally, the answer to a 'burning' 40-year-old question
We've known for decades that catalysts speed up the reaction that reduces harmful industrial emissions. And now, we know exactly how they do it.
Fungi could reduce reliance on fertilizers
Introducing fungi to wheat boosted their uptake of key nutrients and could lead to new, 'climate smart' varieties of crops, according to a new study.
Magnets sustainably separate mixtures of rare earth metals
A new study describes a novel approach for purifying rare earth metals, crucial components of technology that require environmentally-damaging mining procedures. By relying on the metal's magnetic fields during the crystallization process, researchers were able to efficiently and selectively separate mixtures of rare earth metals.
Bio-inspired nano-catalyst guides chiral reactions
Many medicines are twisted molecules with two mirror image versions, but the body uses only one. Inspired by photosynthetic bacteria, a team at the University of Michigan built a catalyst that guides chemical reactions toward the right version of twisted molecules. It could lead to more efficient production of some medicines.
Eager to leave scandal, Nissan shows off smooth-driving tech
An electric car with smooth four-wheel drive and a virtual friend for the coming age of automated driving are among the technology in development from Nissan.
Zuckerberg defends Facebook's currency plans before Congress
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg endured hours of prickly questioning from lawmakers Wednesday as he defended the company's new globally ambitious project to create a digital currency while also dealing with widening scrutiny from U.S. regulators.
RIT researchers win first place in eye-tracking challenge by Facebook Research
A team of Rochester Institute of Technology researchers took the top prize in an international competition held by Facebook Research to develop more effective eye-tracking solutions. The team, led by three Ph.D. students from the Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Science, won first place in the OpenEDS Challenge focused on semantic segmentation.
Food markets near Ethiopia's poor provide fewer choices at high price, impacting child health
The rural poor in Ethiopia tend to live near lower-quality markets that sell fewer food groups at high prices, adversely impacting the health of children in these communities, a new study from researchers at the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) has found. The findings, drawn from data from rural Ethiopia, mark the first attempt to examine how rural markets vary in their diversity, competitiveness, frequency, and food affordability, and how these characteristics are associated with children's diets.
Gut instincts: Researchers discover first clues on how gut health influences brain health
New cellular and molecular processes underlying communication between gut microbes and brain cells have been described for the first time by scientists at Weill Cornell Medicine and Cornell's Ithaca campus.
Consensus report shows burnout prevalent in health care community
Clinician burnout is affecting between one-third and one-half of all of U.S. nurses and physicians, and 45 to 60% of medical students and residents, according to a National Academy of Medicine (NAM) report released today.
Chemicals in consumer products during early pregnancy related to lower IQ
Exposure during the first trimester of pregnancy to mixtures of suspected endocrine-disrupting chemicals found in consumer products is related to lower IQ in children by age 7, according to a study by researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and Karlstad University, Sweden, published in Environment International in October. This study is among the first to look at prenatal suspected endocrine-disrupting chemical mixtures in relation to neurodevelopment.
Ending HIV will require optimizing treatment and prevention tools, say NIH experts
Optimal implementation of existing HIV prevention and treatment tools and continued development of new interventions are essential to ending the HIV pandemic, National Institutes of Health experts write in a commentary Clinical Infectious Diseases.
Sentinel lymph node biopsy has no benefits for stage zero breast cancer
Older women with a very early, non-invasive breast cancer known as ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) gain no long-term benefit from undergoing a sentinel lymph node biopsy to see if the cancer has spread, new research by the Yale School of Public Health has found.
Researchers find risk factors for unemployment with multiple sclerosis vary by age
A recent study by Kessler Foundation researchers explored numerous factors that contribute to the high unemployment rate among individuals of different ages with multiple sclerosis (MS). This is the first investigation to consider age within the context of disease- and person-specific factors affecting employment in MS. The article, "Unemployment in multiple sclerosis across the ages: How factors of unemployment differ among the decades of life," was epublished on September 14, 2019 by the Journal of Health Psychology.
A tale of two cities: Impact of reducing teens' access to flavored tobacco products
Restricting youth access to flavored tobacco products holds the promise of reducing their overall tobacco use, according to a new study in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
Newly discovered protein is the permit to the powerhouse of cells
Aging, and the mechanics behind it, remains one of the most closely guarded secrets of life.
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