ScienceDaily: Top News |
- Stink bugs have strong taste for ripe fruit
- Stuck on you: Research shows fingerprint accuracy stays the same over time
- Talk is cheap: New study finds words speak louder than actions
- Researchers define unique group of high-risk lymphoma patients
- Clot-removal devices now recommended for some stroke patients
- Blood test for lung cancer a step closer
- First-ever possible treatments for MERS; two promising candidates
- Children from high conflict homes process emotion differently, could face social challenges
- Sugary drinks linked to high death tolls worldwide
- Huge congregations view racial inequality differently than others do, study shows
- Largest freshwater lake on Earth was reduced to desert dunes in just a few hundred years
- Helium leakage from Earth's mantle in Los Angeles Basin
- Vaccine to protect global communities from malaria under development
- Atmospheric mysteries unraveling
- How petunias know when to smell good
- Humans around the world dance to the same beat
- Treatment with PI3K inhibitors may cause cancers to become more aggressive and metastatic
- New family of small RNAs boosts cell proliferation in cancer
- Genes responsible for increased activity during the summer
- Spiky monsters: New species of 'super-armored' worm
- How your brain knows it's summer
- Experts cover Korean MERS outbreak in new article
- Recommendations for left atrial appendage occlusion
- Key element of human language discovered in bird babble
- Discovery could lead to personalized colon cancer treatment approach
- Flatworms could replace mammals for some toxicology tests
- Upsetting a fragile alliance triggers a deadly childhood disease
- Using bacterial 'fight clubs' to find new drugs
- Specialized therapy can aid traumatized children in developing nations
- Recent mercury pollution on the rise, but quick to change, study shows
- Soil water, microbes influence carbon in world's coldest desert, study finds
- When times are tough, parents favor daughters over sons
- Microplastics entering ocean food web through zooplankton, researchers find
- New role for Twitter: Early warning system for bad drug interactions
- Physicists shatter stubborn mystery of how glass forms
- Scoring system can help trauma centers improve care during surges in trauma cases
- New knowledge on bone tissue, its role in bone strength or weakness
- Up, up and away, in the name of science education
- Aerodynamic effects can save tens of seconds in cycling time trials
- Scientists develop more accurate whole genome variant discovery, interpretation
- Wait times for health care services differ greatly throughout US
- Automatic computer bug repair
- Tamper-resistant opioids will not solve opioid addiction problem, study suggests
- New nanogenerator harvests power from rolling tires
- The fear you experience playing video games is real, and you enjoy it
- Predicting which glioblastoma patients may benefit from drug treatment
- Muscial classification system: Computers get with the beat
- Is Facebook the next frontier for online learning?
- Food for thought: Use more forages in livestock farming
- Freshwater and ocean acidification stunts growth of developing pink salmon
- More than a third of children were physically assault in the last year
- Neighborhood environments and risk for type 2 diabetes
- Indonesian mud volcano likely human-caused, study suggests
- Retreating sea ice linked to changes in ocean circulation, could affect European climate
- Rare gene variant associated with middle ear infections
- Feeling impulsive or frustrated? Take a nap
- Most plastic surgeons now use fat grafting as part of facelift surgery
- Two techniques of temporal migraine surgery are 'equally effective'
- Even stars older than 11 billion years have Earth-like planets
- Researchers map important enzyme in fight against cancer
Stink bugs have strong taste for ripe fruit Posted: 29 Jun 2015 03:01 PM PDT The brown marmorated stink bug has a bad reputation. Every summer, this pest attacks crops and invades homes, causing both sizable economic losses and a messy, smelly nuisance. A new study by entomologists shows that these pests, known simply as stink bugs, have a strong preference for ripe fruit. Moreover, stink bugs track their favorite fruits throughout the growing season in an effort to maximize their access to food. |
Stuck on you: Research shows fingerprint accuracy stays the same over time Posted: 29 Jun 2015 03:01 PM PDT Fingerprints have been used by law enforcement and forensics experts to successfully identify people for more than 100 years. Though fingerprints are assumed to be infallible personal identifiers, there has been little scientific research to prove this claim to be true. As such, there have been repeated challenges to the admissibility of fingerprint evidence in courts of law. |
Talk is cheap: New study finds words speak louder than actions Posted: 29 Jun 2015 03:01 PM PDT When it comes to the art of persuasion, you can attract more followers if you turn conventional wisdom on its head and stress what you like, not what you do. The researchers found that people conform to others' preferences at last partially because they adopt others' judgments as their own. They further found that when people behave as if they are not conforming, their motivation could be to coordinate or complement their actions with others' actions. |
Researchers define unique group of high-risk lymphoma patients Posted: 29 Jun 2015 03:01 PM PDT About 20 percent of follicular lymphoma patients consistently experience their disease coming back within two years of being treated with the latest therapies. New research confirms that patients in this group have very poor survival outcomes; 50 percent die in five years. People who relapse early may have a disease with distinctly different biology and should not be approached the same at diagnosis nor at the time of relapse in terms of therapies, scientists report. |
Clot-removal devices now recommended for some stroke patients Posted: 29 Jun 2015 02:59 PM PDT Updated stroke treatment recommendations include using a stent retrieval device to remove blood clots from large arteries in select patients. Clot-busting medication -- tPA -- continues to be the gold standard for treating clot-caused stroke. Clot busters and/or clot-removal procedures must be administered within a few hours of stroke symptoms, so everyone needs to know to call 9-1-1 and seek immediate help if they occur. |
Blood test for lung cancer a step closer Posted: 29 Jun 2015 01:26 PM PDT |
First-ever possible treatments for MERS; two promising candidates Posted: 29 Jun 2015 01:26 PM PDT |
Children from high conflict homes process emotion differently, could face social challenges Posted: 29 Jun 2015 01:26 PM PDT |
Sugary drinks linked to high death tolls worldwide Posted: 29 Jun 2015 01:26 PM PDT Consumption of sugary drinks may lead to an estimated 184,000 adult deaths each year worldwide, according to research. In the first detailed global report on the impact of sugar-sweetened beverages, researchers estimated deaths and disabilities from diabetes, heart disease, and cancers in 2010. In this analysis, sugar sweetened beverages were defined as any sugar-sweetened sodas, fruit drinks, sports/energy drinks, sweetened iced teas, or homemade sugary drinks such as frescas, that contained at least 50 kcal per 8oz serving. 100 percent fruit juice was excluded. |
Huge congregations view racial inequality differently than others do, study shows Posted: 29 Jun 2015 01:26 PM PDT Congregation size has an impact on how people view the reasons for racial inequality in America, according to a new study. Those who attend very large congregations do not tend to attribute social divisions between blacks and whites to discrimination, but to something other than structural failings in society, the authors suggest. |
Largest freshwater lake on Earth was reduced to desert dunes in just a few hundred years Posted: 29 Jun 2015 01:25 PM PDT |
Helium leakage from Earth's mantle in Los Angeles Basin Posted: 29 Jun 2015 01:22 PM PDT Geologists have found evidence of helium leakage from Earth's mantle along a 30-mile stretch of the Newport-Inglewood Fault Zone in the Los Angeles Basin. Using samples of casing gas from two dozen oil wells ranging from LA's Westside to Newport Beach in Orange County, researchers discovered that more than one-third of the sites -- some of the deepest ones -- show evidence of high levels of helium-3 (3He). |
Vaccine to protect global communities from malaria under development Posted: 29 Jun 2015 01:22 PM PDT A professor studying malaria mosquito interaction has discovered a new mosquito protein for the development of a vaccine that is expected to stop the spread of the disease in areas where it is considered endemic. Malaria is transmitted by mosquitoes, and it infects millions of people in Africa, Asia and South America every year, causing a global health crisis. Local populations, US military personnel stationed in these areas and travelers to these malaria-prone areas are at risk of becoming infected. |
Atmospheric mysteries unraveling Posted: 29 Jun 2015 01:22 PM PDT It's been difficult to explain patterns of toxic mercury in some parts of the world, such as why there's so much of the toxin deposited into ecosystems from the air in the southeastern United States, even upwind of usual sources. Now, a new analysis shows that one key to understanding mercury's strange behavior may be the unexpected reactivity of naturally occurring halogen compounds from the ocean. |
How petunias know when to smell good Posted: 29 Jun 2015 01:22 PM PDT |
Humans around the world dance to the same beat Posted: 29 Jun 2015 01:22 PM PDT |
Treatment with PI3K inhibitors may cause cancers to become more aggressive and metastatic Posted: 29 Jun 2015 12:27 PM PDT The enzyme PI3K appears to be exploited in almost every type of human cancer, making it the focus of considerable interest as a therapeutic target. However, PI3K inhibitors have only shown modest clinical activity. Now, new research shows that treatment with PI3K inhibitors alone may actually make a patient's cancer even worse by promoting more aggressive tumor cell behavior and increasing the cancer's potential of spreading to other organs. |
New family of small RNAs boosts cell proliferation in cancer Posted: 29 Jun 2015 12:27 PM PDT |
Genes responsible for increased activity during the summer Posted: 29 Jun 2015 12:24 PM PDT A thermosensory gene changes behavior in warmer climates, new research reveals. Researchers have explored how the biological clock can be affected by the environment by examining the fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster, which shows 24 hour biological cycles and is used as a model organism for studies into human rhythms. |
Spiky monsters: New species of 'super-armored' worm Posted: 29 Jun 2015 12:24 PM PDT |
How your brain knows it's summer Posted: 29 Jun 2015 12:24 PM PDT |
Experts cover Korean MERS outbreak in new article Posted: 29 Jun 2015 12:22 PM PDT |
Recommendations for left atrial appendage occlusion Posted: 29 Jun 2015 12:22 PM PDT |
Key element of human language discovered in bird babble Posted: 29 Jun 2015 12:22 PM PDT |
Discovery could lead to personalized colon cancer treatment approach Posted: 29 Jun 2015 11:22 AM PDT |
Flatworms could replace mammals for some toxicology tests Posted: 29 Jun 2015 11:21 AM PDT |
Upsetting a fragile alliance triggers a deadly childhood disease Posted: 29 Jun 2015 11:21 AM PDT SMA is a devastating neuromuscular disorder that robs children of their ability to walk, eat, or breathe. Mostly caused by an inherited flaw in the Survival Motor Neuron (SMN) gene, SMA is presently without a cure. Scientists have shown that fruit flies and brewer's yeast can reveal clues about this disorder. |
Using bacterial 'fight clubs' to find new drugs Posted: 29 Jun 2015 11:21 AM PDT |
Specialized therapy can aid traumatized children in developing nations Posted: 29 Jun 2015 11:21 AM PDT |
Recent mercury pollution on the rise, but quick to change, study shows Posted: 29 Jun 2015 11:21 AM PDT |
Soil water, microbes influence carbon in world's coldest desert, study finds Posted: 29 Jun 2015 11:21 AM PDT |
When times are tough, parents favor daughters over sons Posted: 29 Jun 2015 11:21 AM PDT In tough economic times, parents financially favor daughters over sons, according to researchers. The study found participants preferred to enroll a daughter rather than a son in beneficial programs, preferred to give a U.S. Treasury bond to a daughter rather than a son, and bequeathed a greater share of their assets to female offspring in their will when they perceived economic conditions to be poor. |
Microplastics entering ocean food web through zooplankton, researchers find Posted: 29 Jun 2015 10:38 AM PDT |
New role for Twitter: Early warning system for bad drug interactions Posted: 29 Jun 2015 10:25 AM PDT |
Physicists shatter stubborn mystery of how glass forms Posted: 29 Jun 2015 10:25 AM PDT |
Scoring system can help trauma centers improve care during surges in trauma cases Posted: 29 Jun 2015 10:24 AM PDT A scoring system that can identify periods of high activity and increased trauma patient deaths in hospital emergency rooms may help hospitals better prepare for surges in trauma patient volume that come with catastrophic events like the Boston Marathon bombing (April 2013) or disasters like the Amtrak train crash (May 2015) in Philadelphia, according to a study. |
New knowledge on bone tissue, its role in bone strength or weakness Posted: 29 Jun 2015 10:24 AM PDT |
Up, up and away, in the name of science education Posted: 29 Jun 2015 10:24 AM PDT The virtues of high-altitude balloons for science education in a new research paper have been outlined in a new research paper. High altitude balloons are ripe for exploitation in science education and beyond, the author says, noting that there is a need for a formal design framework for high-altitude ballooning. There is also a need for a framework to make this technology more effective in undergraduate university courses, for instance, through a standard approach to improving payload design. |
Aerodynamic effects can save tens of seconds in cycling time trials Posted: 29 Jun 2015 10:24 AM PDT Will the Tour de France prologue in Utrecht get the winner it deserves? New aerodynamic research shows that riders in a time trial can save vital seconds by riding closer to the following team car. Over a short distance like the prologue of the Tour de France, that can save as much as 6 seconds: enough to make the difference between winning and losing. |
Scientists develop more accurate whole genome variant discovery, interpretation Posted: 29 Jun 2015 10:24 AM PDT Conventional next-generation sequencing (NGS) techniques are able to accurately detect certain types of variation, such as single nucleotide variants and small insertions or deletions, but miss many large or complex forms of genomic variation that are associated with human disease. Now, a new approach to build nearly complete genomes by combining high-throughput DNA sequencing with genome mapping has been developed by researchers. |
Wait times for health care services differ greatly throughout US Posted: 29 Jun 2015 10:24 AM PDT |
Posted: 29 Jun 2015 10:24 AM PDT |
Tamper-resistant opioids will not solve opioid addiction problem, study suggests Posted: 29 Jun 2015 10:24 AM PDT Governments in Canada and the United States are promoting tamper-resistant drugs, which are more difficult to crush, snort or inject, to prevent addiction and other harms. Opioid users may tamper with prescribed tablets, capsules or patches for a faster "high." However, a research group argues, tamper-resistant formulations of drugs will not solve the problems of opioid addiction and overdose. |
New nanogenerator harvests power from rolling tires Posted: 29 Jun 2015 09:46 AM PDT |
The fear you experience playing video games is real, and you enjoy it Posted: 29 Jun 2015 09:45 AM PDT |
Predicting which glioblastoma patients may benefit from drug treatment Posted: 29 Jun 2015 09:45 AM PDT Clinicians testing the drug dasatinib, approved for several blood cancers, had hoped it would slow the aggressive growth of the deadly brain cancer glioblastoma; however, clinical trials to date have not found any benefit. Researchers who conducted one of those clinical trials, believe they know why dasatinib failed — and what to do about it. |
Muscial classification system: Computers get with the beat Posted: 29 Jun 2015 09:42 AM PDT |
Is Facebook the next frontier for online learning? Posted: 29 Jun 2015 09:42 AM PDT |
Food for thought: Use more forages in livestock farming Posted: 29 Jun 2015 09:41 AM PDT Small-scale livestock farming in the tropics can become more intensive yet sustainable if more and better forage is used to feed the animals being reared. This could benefit farming endeavors in rural South Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, Central America and the Caribbean, and see a move away from the increased reliance on grain-based feeds, say scientists. |
Freshwater and ocean acidification stunts growth of developing pink salmon Posted: 29 Jun 2015 09:34 AM PDT |
More than a third of children were physically assault in the last year Posted: 29 Jun 2015 09:34 AM PDT |
Neighborhood environments and risk for type 2 diabetes Posted: 29 Jun 2015 09:34 AM PDT |
Indonesian mud volcano likely human-caused, study suggests Posted: 29 Jun 2015 09:34 AM PDT |
Retreating sea ice linked to changes in ocean circulation, could affect European climate Posted: 29 Jun 2015 09:34 AM PDT |
Rare gene variant associated with middle ear infections Posted: 29 Jun 2015 09:34 AM PDT |
Feeling impulsive or frustrated? Take a nap Posted: 29 Jun 2015 08:10 AM PDT It's becoming increasingly common for people, especially adults, to not sleep an entire night. This can negatively impair a person's attention span and memory, as well as contribute to fatigue. Now researchers report that taking a nap may be an effective strategy to counteract impulsive behavior and to boost tolerance for frustration. |
Most plastic surgeons now use fat grafting as part of facelift surgery Posted: 29 Jun 2015 08:10 AM PDT In recent years, a large majority of US plastic surgeons have adopted fat grafting techniques as part of their approach to facelift surgery, reports a study. Fat grafting—transferring small amounts of the patient's own fat in strategic areas—has become a common technique utilized by most surgeons today performing facial rejuvenation, researchers report. |
Two techniques of temporal migraine surgery are 'equally effective' Posted: 29 Jun 2015 08:10 AM PDT |
Even stars older than 11 billion years have Earth-like planets Posted: 29 Jun 2015 08:10 AM PDT |
Researchers map important enzyme in fight against cancer Posted: 29 Jun 2015 08:10 AM PDT |
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