News



Life Technology™ Medical News

11 Million People Worldwide Suffer Life-Changing Burns: Global Research Priorities

AI Platform at NUS Medicine Transforms Health Care Dosage

Rising Cases: Over 35 Million US Adults with Chronic Kidney Disease

Importance of Building Muscle Strength for Longevity

Antitrust Experts Compare Big Tech to Health Care Platforms

Innovative Approaches Driving Progress on World Malaria Day

Study Reveals Exercise Benefits in Alzheimer's Fight

New AI Algorithm Automates Coronary Stent Analysis

Body's Defense System: Fighting Cancer Cells

Antiviral Baloxavir Reduces Influenza Transmission

Distinct Genetic Properties of Prostate Cancer in Men: Targeting for Improved Outcomes

Hard-to-Treat Conditions Linked to Excessive Immune Response

Ischemic Stroke and Carotid Artery Narrowing: New Findings

Immune System Dysfunction in Alzheimer's Disease

Ai Reveals Potential in Analyzing Medical Imaging for Child Glioma Care

Mit Researchers Develop Noninvasive Device for Continuous Cell Monitoring

Neutrophils Revealed: Diverse Types Linked to Autoimmune Diseases

New Head-Mounted Microscope for Neurovascular Coupling

Healthcare Advocates: Fixing Affordable Care Act Enrollment Issues

Georgia Researchers and Community Workers Oppose Cuts to Maternal and Infant Health Funding

Spring Pollen Blankets Streets and Cars

California's Medi-Cal: Health Insurance for 15M Residents

Icu Medical Alters Infusion Pump Designs Without Regulatory Approval

Mice Show Instinctive Rescue Behavior in New Study

Resilient People: Made, Not Born, Says Mayo Clinic Expert

Successful Clinical Trial: Desensitizing Peanut Allergy

Measles Epidemic Sparks Vaccine Safety Debate

US Births in 2024 Rise by 1%: CDC Report

Global Public Health Challenges: Rising Obesity Rates

Innovative Tuberculosis Screening Strategy by Queen Mary University



Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSS

Life Technology™ Science News

University of Waterloo Leads AI Training Revolution

State-Funded Childcare Reduces Care for Elderly Parents

Cybersecurity Professionals: Balancing Technical and Social Skills

Forests Overstating Carbon Absorption, Fueling Fossil Use

Energy Security Summit in London Sparks Opposition from Washington

China Sends Three Astronauts to Space Station

Max Born Institute Researchers Control Nanoscale Magnetic Bits

Unusual Hermaphroditic Crustacean Found in Familiar Location

Giant Crocodile Discovery Challenges Alligator Relation

University of Bristol Study Reveals Biodiversity Insights

Mixed Species Forests: UK's Climate Change Insurance

Seafloor Sediment Resuspension Boosts CO2 Release

"World's Most Powerful Solar Telescope Achieves First Light with Advanced Instrument"

Machine-Learning Tool Identifies Flowering Grasses

Filipino Scientists Develop Affordable Water-Based Lenses

Mystery Unveiled: Sun's Corona Hotter than Core

Challenges in 3D Bioprinting for Regenerative Medicine

Study on Populist Storytelling in Anti-Lockdown Protests

Detecting Stable Explosives for Safety Compliance

Climate Change Emerges as Top Threat to ESA-Listed Species

Revolutionizing Plant Breeding for Global Food Security

Challenges of Assessing Digital Learning in Education

Kobe University Team Edits DNA of Lactobacillus Strains

New Method Controls Starch Storage in Algae

University of Tsukuba Study: Mollusk Shell Formation Insights

Decoding Color Patterns in Corn Snakes

Link Found Between Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and Type 2 Diabetes

Monkey Behavior Database: Science Evolves with Open Collaboration

Quantum Communication Enhanced by Nonlinear Optical Processes

Astronomers Find 15 New Giant Radio Galaxies

Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSS

Life Technology™ Technology News

UK Regulator Imposes Fines on Tech Firms for Child Safety

Chinese AI App DeepSeek Transfers Data Without Consent

Nissan Faces Challenges Amid Tariffs

How Neurons Organize: Clustering for Function

Simple Technology: Blackberry Solar Cells for Energy Harvesting

University of Cincinnati Researchers Break Sound Barrier

Robot's Challenge: Processing Real-World Data Efficiently

Aerial Robotics in Construction: Safety and Sustainability

EU Trials of Driverless Cars in Public Transport: Urban Mobility Revolution

Challenges in Assessing Personality of Leading Language Models

New Study: In-Memory Ferroelectric Differentiator for Direct Calculations

AI Response Engines: Balancing Accuracy and Doubt

Alphabet Inc. Pays Samsung for Google AI App

Humans Outperform AI in Social Interaction Interpretation

YouTube Marks Milestone: 20 Billion Videos Uploaded

California State Bar Reveals AI-Generated Exam Questions

Benefits of OLED Technology for High-Resolution Displays

Automakers Unveil China-Centric Models at Shanghai Auto Show

Tech Giants' Dominance: Accountability for Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft

New Out-of-Core Mechanism Capsule: 12.02× Faster GNN Training

Innovative High-Voltage CMOS Backplane for Bright OLED Microdisplays

How Interruptions Affect CPU Core Efficiency

Enhancing Realism: Importance of Touch in 3D Modeling

Nissan Unveils Two Models for Chinese Market

Porsche Targets Wealthy Chinese Market for Sales Boost

Institute of Science Tokyo Develops AI for Fragrance Creation

Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt to Replace LG Energy in Indonesia JV

French Media Groups Sue Meta Over Online Advertising

Quantum Computers: Optimizing Data Feeding for Speed

Ex-OpenAI Staff Urge CA & DE Officials to Halt AI Tech Shift

Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSS

ews&detail=-1&showtitle=false&type=js">

Life Technology™ Technology News

UK Regulator Imposes Fines on Tech Firms for Child Safety

Chinese AI App DeepSeek Transfers Data Without Consent

Nissan Faces Challenges Amid Tariffs

How Neurons Organize: Clustering for Function

Simple Technology: Blackberry Solar Cells for Energy Harvesting

University of Cincinnati Researchers Break Sound Barrier

Robot's Challenge: Processing Real-World Data Efficiently

Aerial Robotics in Construction: Safety and Sustainability

EU Trials of Driverless Cars in Public Transport: Urban Mobility Revolution

Challenges in Assessing Personality of Leading Language Models

New Study: In-Memory Ferroelectric Differentiator for Direct Calculations

AI Response Engines: Balancing Accuracy and Doubt

Alphabet Inc. Pays Samsung for Google AI App

Humans Outperform AI in Social Interaction Interpretation

YouTube Marks Milestone: 20 Billion Videos Uploaded

California State Bar Reveals AI-Generated Exam Questions

Benefits of OLED Technology for High-Resolution Displays

Automakers Unveil China-Centric Models at Shanghai Auto Show

Tech Giants' Dominance: Accountability for Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft

New Out-of-Core Mechanism Capsule: 12.02× Faster GNN Training

Innovative High-Voltage CMOS Backplane for Bright OLED Microdisplays

How Interruptions Affect CPU Core Efficiency

Enhancing Realism: Importance of Touch in 3D Modeling

Nissan Unveils Two Models for Chinese Market

Porsche Targets Wealthy Chinese Market for Sales Boost

Institute of Science Tokyo Develops AI for Fragrance Creation

Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt to Replace LG Energy in Indonesia JV

French Media Groups Sue Meta Over Online Advertising

Quantum Computers: Optimizing Data Feeding for Speed

Ex-OpenAI Staff Urge CA & DE Officials to Halt AI Tech Shift



Monday, December 14, 2020

African families in UK are 'parenting in fear'

Black African families in the UK are parenting in fear of being penalized by authorities due to cultural differences and institutional racial misconceptions, according to new research published today in The British Journal of Social Work.

source https://phys.org/news/2020-12-african-families-uk-parenting.html

New dinosaur showed descendants how to dress to impress

Scientists have found the most elaborately dressed-to-impress dinosaur ever described and say it sheds new light on how birds such as peacocks inherited their ability to show off.

source https://phys.org/news/2020-12-dinosaur-descendants.html

New dinosaur showed descendants how to dress to impress

Scientists have found the most elaborately dressed-to-impress dinosaur ever described and say it sheds new light on how birds such as peacocks inherited their ability to show off.

African families in UK are 'parenting in fear'

Black African families in the UK are parenting in fear of being penalized by authorities due to cultural differences and institutional racial misconceptions, according to new research published today in The British Journal of Social Work.

Apathy could predict onset of dementia years before other symptoms

Apathy—a lack of interest or motivation—could predict the onset of some forms of dementia many years before symptoms start, offering a 'window of opportunity' to treat the disease at an early stage, according to new research from a team of scientists led by Professor James Rowe at the University of Cambridge.

Type and abundance of mouth bacteria linked to lung cancer risk in non-smokers

The type and abundance of bacteria found in the mouth may be linked to lung cancer risk in non-smokers, finds the first study of its kind, published online in the journal Thorax.

Vastly differing opioid prescribing patterns in England even in similarly deprived areas

Opioid prescribing patterns vary hugely across England, even in similarly deprived areas, reveals an analysis of general practice data, published online in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.

Study reveals the devastating impact and hidden danger of type 2 diabetes diagnosis in younger adults

Type 2 diabetes and its complications are often associated with adults of middle or older age. However new research published in Diabetologia (the journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes [EASD]) shows that younger, rather than older, age at diabetes diagnosis are associated with a higher risk of mortality and cardiovascular disease.

Storms help Australia contain UNESCO heritage island fire

Australian firefighters have managed to control a bushfire that burned more than half of the UNESCO world heritage-listed Fraser Island, around two months after a suspected illegal campfire sparked the blaze.

source https://phys.org/news/2020-12-storms-australia-unesco-heritage-island.html

Social media use increases belief in COVID-19 misinformation

The more people rely on social media as their main news source the more likely they are to believe misinformation about the pandemic, according to a recent survey analysis by Washington State University researcher Yan Su.

source https://phys.org/news/2020-12-social-media-belief-covid-misinformation.html

Research reveals unexpected insights into early dinosaur's brain, eating habits and agility

A pioneering reconstruction of the brain belonging to one of the earliest dinosaurs to roam the Earth has shed new light on its possible diet and ability to move fast.

source https://phys.org/news/2020-12-reveals-unexpected-insights-early-dinosaur.html

US agencies hacked in monthslong global cyberspying campaign

U.S. government agencies were ordered to scour their networks for malware and disconnect potentially compromised servers after authorities learned that the Treasury and Commerce departments were hacked in a monthslong global cyberespionage campaign discovered when a prominent cybersecurity firm learned it had been breached.

source https://techxplore.com/news/2020-12-agencies-hacked-monthslong-global-cyberspying.html

Endangered-species decision expected on beloved butterfly

Trump administration officials are expected to say this week whether the monarch butterfly, a colorful and familiar backyard visitor now caught in a global extinction crisis, should receive federal designation as a threatened species.

source https://phys.org/news/2020-12-endangered-species-decision-beloved-butterfly.html

Righting a wrong, nuclear physicists improve precision of neutrino studies

Led by the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, a new study clears up a discrepancy regarding the biggest contributor of unwanted background signals in specialized detectors of neutrinos. Better characterization of background could improve current and future experiments to detect real signals from these weakly interacting, electrically neutral subatomic particles and understand their role in the universe.

Workers riot at India iPhone factory over 'exploitation' claims

Authorities vowed to crack down on workers who went on a violent rampage at a Taiwanese-run iPhone factory in southern India over allegations of unpaid wages and exploitation, with 100 people arrested so far.

New Zealand aims to open to Australians in early 2021

New Zealand hopes to open a travel bubble with Australia by April next year and is working to finalise the necessary anti-coronavirus border measures, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said Monday.

Russia stages 'successful' second launch of new rocket

Russia on Monday conducted a second launch of its new heavy-class Angara rocket—the first developed after the fall of the Soviet Union—nearly six years after its maiden voyage.

Storms help Australia contain UNESCO heritage island fire

Australian firefighters have managed to control a bushfire that burned more than half of the UNESCO world heritage-listed Fraser Island, around two months after a suspected illegal campfire sparked the blaze.

Reddit snaps up TikTok rival Dubsmash

Reddit has acquired the Tik Tok-like app Dubsmash, both companies said Sunday, as big tech moves to carve out territory in the lucrative short-form video-sharing market.

US to start vaccinating as Germany returns to partial lockdown

The United States prepared to start its COVID-19 vaccination program on Monday as the nation's death toll edged towards 300,000, while Germany announced a partial lockdown over the holidays due to an explosion of cases.

Researchers reveal how our brains know when something's different

Imagine you are sitting on the couch in your living room reading. You do it almost every night. But then, suddenly, when you look up you notice this time something is different. Your favorite picture hanging on the wall is tilted ever so slightly. In a study involving epilepsy patients, National Institutes of Health scientists discovered how a set of high frequency brain waves may help us spot these kinds of differences between the past and the present.

Social media use increases belief in COVID-19 misinformation

The more people rely on social media as their main news source the more likely they are to believe misinformation about the pandemic, according to a recent survey analysis by Washington State University researcher Yan Su.

No association between COVID-19 and Guillain-Barré syndrome: study

Neuroscientists at UCL have found no significant association between COVID-19 and the potentially paralysing and sometimes fatal neurological condition Guillain-Barré syndrome.

Research reveals unexpected insights into early dinosaur's brain, eating habits and agility

A pioneering reconstruction of the brain belonging to one of the earliest dinosaurs to roam the Earth has shed new light on its possible diet and ability to move fast.

Molecule holds promise to reprogram white blood cells for better cancer treatment

Cancer immunotherapy using "designer" immune cells has revolutionized cancer treatment in recent years. In this type of therapy, T cells, a type of white blood cell, are collected from a patient's blood and subjected to genetic engineering to produce T cells carrying a synthetic molecule termed chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) that is designed to enable T cells to recognize and destroy cancer cells. Then these genetically modified CAR T cells are expanded to large quantity and infused back to the patient.

Everything you want to know about sunscreen

From safety and effectiveness to who should use sunscreen and how to apply it, Canadian dermatologists review the latest evidence and guidelines on use of sunscreen.

US agencies hacked in monthslong global cyberspying campaign

U.S. government agencies were ordered to scour their networks for malware and disconnect potentially compromised servers after authorities learned that the Treasury and Commerce departments were hacked in a monthslong global cyberespionage campaign discovered when a prominent cybersecurity firm learned it had been breached.

Endangered-species decision expected on beloved butterfly

Trump administration officials are expected to say this week whether the monarch butterfly, a colorful and familiar backyard visitor now caught in a global extinction crisis, should receive federal designation as a threatened species.

Scientists focus on bats for clues to prevent next pandemic

Night began to fall in Rio de Janeiro's Pedra Branca state park as four Brazilian scientists switched on their flashlights to traipse along a narrow trail of mud through dense rainforest. The researchers were on a mission: capture bats and help prevent the next global pandemic.