ScienceDaily: Top News |
- Using light to treat Alzheimer's disease
- Honesty varies significantly between countries
- Child with drug-resistant TB successfully treated at American hospital
- Programmable electronic glasses provide children effective, digital lazy eye treatment
- Prostate cancer screening under age of 55 may be of limited value
- Falls and brawls top list of causes for eye injuries in United States
- Loss of diversity near melting coastal glaciers
- Network analysis shows systemic risk in mineral markets
- New brain imaging technique identifies previously undetected epileptic seizure sites
- Meeting transportation needs will improve lives of those with ASD, their families
- Really, what is the internet of things?
- Researchers design, patent graphene biosensors
- Super environmentally friendly: the 'fool’s gold battery'
- Invention of forge-proof ID to revolutionize security
- Lasers could rapidly make materials hotter than the Sun
- Invasive freshwater species in Europe’s lakes and rivers: How do they come in?
- The dinosaur ankle re-evolved amphibian-like development in birds
- Breakthrough in the treatment of HIV by successfully developing a prototype vaccine vector
- Disparities in colorectal cancer death rates take a large economic toll
- Receiving curative lung cancer surgery varies by state
- Healthy diet may reduce risk of ovarian cancer in African-American women
- Predicting breast cancer risk in Hispanic women
- FDA approves adjuvant yervoy in melanoma
Using light to treat Alzheimer's disease Posted: 15 Nov 2015 04:24 PM PST |
Honesty varies significantly between countries Posted: 15 Nov 2015 04:22 PM PST |
Child with drug-resistant TB successfully treated at American hospital Posted: 15 Nov 2015 04:21 PM PST |
Programmable electronic glasses provide children effective, digital lazy eye treatment Posted: 14 Nov 2015 03:52 PM PST |
Prostate cancer screening under age of 55 may be of limited value Posted: 14 Nov 2015 03:50 PM PST |
Falls and brawls top list of causes for eye injuries in United States Posted: 14 Nov 2015 03:50 PM PST |
Loss of diversity near melting coastal glaciers Posted: 13 Nov 2015 03:13 PM PST Melting glaciers are causing a loss of species diversity among benthos in the coastal waters off the Antarctic Peninsula, impacting an entire seafloor ecosystem. This has been verified in the course of repeated research dives, the results of which were recently published by experts from Argentina, Germany and Great Britain. |
Network analysis shows systemic risk in mineral markets Posted: 13 Nov 2015 03:13 PM PST |
New brain imaging technique identifies previously undetected epileptic seizure sites Posted: 13 Nov 2015 11:47 AM PST Researchers have developed a brain imaging technique for patients whose epilepsy does not respond to drug treatment and are not candidates for seizure-relieving surgeries. The imaging technique, known as glutamate chemical exchange saturation transfer (GluCEST), images changes in glutamate levels in brain structures that identify the location of seizures not detected with conventional MRI. |
Meeting transportation needs will improve lives of those with ASD, their families Posted: 13 Nov 2015 11:45 AM PST |
Really, what is the internet of things? Posted: 13 Nov 2015 08:24 AM PST |
Researchers design, patent graphene biosensors Posted: 13 Nov 2015 08:24 AM PST Graphene is the first truly two-dimensional crystal, which was obtained experimentally and investigated regarding its unique chemical and physical properties. In 2010, two researchers were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics "for ground-breaking experiments regarding the two-dimensional material graphene." There has now been a considerable increase in the number of research studies aimed at finding commercial applications for graphene and other two-dimensional materials. |
Super environmentally friendly: the 'fool’s gold battery' Posted: 13 Nov 2015 08:01 AM PST High-performance lithium ion batteries face a major problem: Lithium will eventually start to run out as batteries are deployed in electric cars and stationary storage units. Researchers have now discovered an alternative: the "fool's gold battery". It consists of iron, sulfur, sodium and magnesium – all elements that are in plentiful supply. This means that giant storage batteries could be built on the cheap and used stationary in buildings or next to power plants, for instance. |
Invention of forge-proof ID to revolutionize security Posted: 13 Nov 2015 08:01 AM PST |
Lasers could rapidly make materials hotter than the Sun Posted: 13 Nov 2015 07:59 AM PST |
Invasive freshwater species in Europe’s lakes and rivers: How do they come in? Posted: 13 Nov 2015 07:59 AM PST A new article has identified escape from aquaculture facilities, releases in the wild due to pet/aquarium trade and stocking activities as the main pathways of alien species introduction in European lakes and rivers. Germany, the UK and Italy are the main entry gateways. The authors recommend tightened controls, and improved prevention and management measures in order to halt the increasing trend of freshwater alien species introductions in Europe. |
The dinosaur ankle re-evolved amphibian-like development in birds Posted: 13 Nov 2015 07:59 AM PST In the 19th century, Darwin's most vocal scientific advocate was Thomas Henry Huxley, who is also remembered as a pioneer of the hypotheses that birds are living dinosaurs. He noticed several similarities of the skeleton of living birds and extinct dinosaurs, among them, a pointed portion of the anklebone projecting upwards onto the shank bone (aka drumstick). This "ascending process" is well known to specialists as a unique trait of dinosaurs. However, until the late 20th century, many scientists were doubtful about the dinosaur-bird link. Some pointed out that the ascending process in most birds was a projection of the neighbouring heel bone, rather than the anklebone. If so, it would not be comparable, and would not support the dinosaur-bird link. |
Breakthrough in the treatment of HIV by successfully developing a prototype vaccine vector Posted: 13 Nov 2015 07:59 AM PST |
Disparities in colorectal cancer death rates take a large economic toll Posted: 13 Nov 2015 07:56 AM PST |
Receiving curative lung cancer surgery varies by state Posted: 13 Nov 2015 07:56 AM PST |
Healthy diet may reduce risk of ovarian cancer in African-American women Posted: 13 Nov 2015 07:56 AM PST |
Predicting breast cancer risk in Hispanic women Posted: 13 Nov 2015 07:56 AM PST The first breast cancer risk-prediction model based entirely on data from Hispanic women, including whether a woman was born in or outside of the United States, provided a more accurate assessment of Hispanic women's risk of developing breast cancer compared with existing models based on data from non-Hispanic women. |
FDA approves adjuvant yervoy in melanoma Posted: 13 Nov 2015 07:53 AM PST |
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