ScienceDaily: Top News |
- Detecting diabetes in a saliva sample with a smart phone
- Heat-activated ‘grenade’ to target cancer
- New study finds that everyday activities empower young people in care
- Extreme weather events in Chesapeake Bay give clues for future climate impacts
- Sleep interruptions worse for mood than overall reduced amount of sleep, study finds
- Forget counting sheep - therapy could help chronic pain sufferers get a good night’s sleep
- Some like it hot: Moth and butterfly species respond differently to climate change
- Everglades' alligator numbers drop after dry years
- Tumor RNA in platelets may diagnose and classify cancer, identify treatment strategies
- Long distance love affair
- A Prkci gene keeps stem cells in check
- New computational strategy finds brain tumor-shrinking molecules
- Record-setting flexible phototransistor revealed
- Study blocks ebola virus budding by regulating calcium signaling
- Divorce rate doesn't go up as families of children with disabilities grow
- Lack of 'sleep' may zap cell growth, brain activity, study in plants suggests
- New technique could prevent biofilms on catheters and medical implants
- Full-scale architecture for a quantum computer in silicon
- New metal alloy could yield green cooling technologies
- Simple mathematical formula models lithium-ion battery aging
- Super sensitive magnetic sensor created
- World’s first lab-in-a-briefcase
- Technique for analyzing bedrock could help builders, planners identify safe building zones
Detecting diabetes in a saliva sample with a smart phone Posted: 31 Oct 2015 05:35 AM PDT |
Heat-activated ‘grenade’ to target cancer Posted: 30 Oct 2015 07:06 PM PDT |
New study finds that everyday activities empower young people in care Posted: 30 Oct 2015 07:05 PM PDT |
Extreme weather events in Chesapeake Bay give clues for future climate impacts Posted: 30 Oct 2015 07:05 PM PDT For the millions of people who live in its expansive coastal areas, Chesapeake Bay provides an important source of income and recreational enjoyment. To protect the ecosystem and the livelihood of area residents, it is important to assess how climate variability and change will affect Chesapeake Bay's shallow water ecosystems and water quality. The intensity, duration, and frequency of extreme temperature- and precipitation-based events are key components to understanding the climate of Chesapeake Bay. |
Sleep interruptions worse for mood than overall reduced amount of sleep, study finds Posted: 30 Oct 2015 07:05 PM PDT |
Forget counting sheep - therapy could help chronic pain sufferers get a good night’s sleep Posted: 30 Oct 2015 01:14 PM PDT |
Some like it hot: Moth and butterfly species respond differently to climate change Posted: 30 Oct 2015 01:14 PM PDT |
Everglades' alligator numbers drop after dry years Posted: 30 Oct 2015 01:13 PM PDT |
Tumor RNA in platelets may diagnose and classify cancer, identify treatment strategies Posted: 30 Oct 2015 01:13 PM PDT |
Posted: 30 Oct 2015 01:13 PM PDT What people believe they want and what they might actually prefer are not always the same thing. And in the case of being outperformed as an element of romantic attraction, the difference between genuine affinity and apparent desirability becomes clearer as the distance between two people gets smaller. |
A Prkci gene keeps stem cells in check Posted: 30 Oct 2015 01:13 PM PDT When it comes to stem cells, too much of a good thing isn't wonderful: producing too many new stem cells may lead to cancer; producing too few inhibits the repair and maintenance of the body. Medical researchers now describe a key gene in maintaining this critical balance between producing too many and too few stem cells. |
New computational strategy finds brain tumor-shrinking molecules Posted: 30 Oct 2015 01:13 PM PDT Patients with glioblastoma, a type of malignant brain tumor, usually survive fewer than 15 months following diagnosis. Since there are no effective treatments for the deadly disease, researchers developed a new computational strategy to search for molecules that could be developed into glioblastoma drugs. In mouse models of human glioblastoma, one molecule they found shrank the average tumor size by half. |
Record-setting flexible phototransistor revealed Posted: 30 Oct 2015 12:31 PM PDT |
Study blocks ebola virus budding by regulating calcium signaling Posted: 30 Oct 2015 12:31 PM PDT |
Divorce rate doesn't go up as families of children with disabilities grow Posted: 30 Oct 2015 12:31 PM PDT |
Lack of 'sleep' may zap cell growth, brain activity, study in plants suggests Posted: 30 Oct 2015 12:31 PM PDT |
New technique could prevent biofilms on catheters and medical implants Posted: 30 Oct 2015 12:31 PM PDT Biofilms -- mats of bacteria similar to the plaque that grows on teeth -- frequently coat the surfaces of catheters, and of various medical implants and prostheses, where they can threaten lives or lead to failure of the implants. Antibiotics are impotent against biofilms. Now scientists show that coating implants with 'tissue plasminogen activator' can prevent Staphylococcus aureus, the leading cause of hospital-acquired infections, from forming biofilms. |
Full-scale architecture for a quantum computer in silicon Posted: 30 Oct 2015 12:31 PM PDT |
New metal alloy could yield green cooling technologies Posted: 30 Oct 2015 09:44 AM PDT |
Simple mathematical formula models lithium-ion battery aging Posted: 30 Oct 2015 09:44 AM PDT |
Super sensitive magnetic sensor created Posted: 30 Oct 2015 08:14 AM PDT Researchers have developed a new hybrid magnetic sensor that is more sensitive than most commercially available sensors. This technological breakthrough hails opportunities for the development of smaller and cheaper sensors for various fields such as consumer electronics, information and communication technology, biotechnology and automotive. |
World’s first lab-in-a-briefcase Posted: 30 Oct 2015 08:14 AM PDT |
Technique for analyzing bedrock could help builders, planners identify safe building zones Posted: 30 Oct 2015 08:11 AM PDT The thin layer of bedrock below the Earth's surface is the foundation for all life on land. Cracks and fractures within bedrock provide pathways for air and water, which chemically react to break down rock, forming soil -- an essential ingredient for all terrestrial organisms. Scientists have dubbed this layer Earth's 'critical zone.' Now scientists have found a way to predict the spatial extent of bedrock weathering. |
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