ScienceDaily: Top News |
- The artificial materials that came in from the cold
- Younger and older patients experience different symptoms from the same breast cancer drugs, researcher finds
- Preventing diabetes at the office
- Multifaceted RNA-mediated regulatory mechanisms in Streptococcus pyogenes
- Tiebreaks push competition, in more than sports
- Tropical groundwater resources resilient to climate change
- Wearable energy generator uses urine to power wireless transmitter
- Potential treatment for cirrhosis discovered by scientists
- There is less knowledge about global species diversity than previously assumed
- Diagnostics with birefringence
- Worldwide resource for exploring genes' hidden messages
- Scientists demonstrate DNA-based electromechanical switch
- Virus hijacks protein machine and then kills the host
- Drug provides another treatment option for an early form of breast cancer
- Non-small cell lung cancers can be sorted in clusters by endocytic changes
- AIDS treatment benefits health, economics of people without HIV, study shows
- Fallopian tube organoids promise better understanding of ovarian cancer, infertility
- Scientists show how drug molecules regulate a medically important protein
- Sex differences in brain may underlie neurodevelopmental disorders more common in males
- Northern spotted owl decline linked to invasive owl, habitat loss, and climate
- Periodic table of protein complexes
- Effective, selective tweets can advance research from lab to policymakers
- Study offers remedy to flu vaccine delivery problems
- Unhealthy choices cost company health care plans billions of dollars
- More kids with autism evaluated as preschoolers, but more progress needed in early recognition
- What is your memory style?
- Obstacles not always a hindrance to proteins
- The need to name all forms of life: 60 new species of dragonflies described from Africa
- New clues to halting nerve degeneration
The artificial materials that came in from the cold Posted: 11 Dec 2015 12:40 PM PST |
Posted: 11 Dec 2015 10:23 AM PST The long-term outcomes in postmenopausal women who took two widely used breast cancer treatments have been analyzed. Researchers found that although both drugs were safe and effective, and had no detrimental effect on overall quality of life, there were some differences in the type and severity of symptoms the women experienced with each treatment, and these especially differed by age. |
Preventing diabetes at the office Posted: 11 Dec 2015 10:22 AM PST For people who already have high blood sugar, preventing diabetes could amount to just another day at the office. Employees enrolled in a workplace intervention program as a group lost more weight, showed greater reductions in fasting blood sugar and ate less fat than employees who received only written health guidelines for diabetes prevention, researchers report. |
Multifaceted RNA-mediated regulatory mechanisms in Streptococcus pyogenes Posted: 11 Dec 2015 10:17 AM PST A researcher describes that the bacterial immune defense system CRISPR-Cas9 is diverse and widespread among bacteria. She shows that the present possibilities offered by this gene editing tool can be expanded by combining natural unrelated defense systems to allow several changes in the targeted DNA at the same time. |
Tiebreaks push competition, in more than sports Posted: 11 Dec 2015 10:17 AM PST What can be done when two athletes, applicants for a job, or products perform equally well? The strategy used for resolving ties and determining bid limits decides on whether competition is pushed or not. In tennis, for instance, the tiebreak generates excitement. In other types of sports, the tie is resolved in favor of the supposedly weaker: In weightlifting, the athlete with the lower body mass is declared the winner. In and outside of sports, competition is often pushed by letting the supposedly weaker competitor win in case of a tie, say experts. |
Tropical groundwater resources resilient to climate change Posted: 11 Dec 2015 10:01 AM PST |
Wearable energy generator uses urine to power wireless transmitter Posted: 11 Dec 2015 10:01 AM PST A pair of socks embedded with miniaturized microbial fuel cells and fueled with urine pumped by the wearer's footsteps has powered a wireless transmitter to send a signal to a PC. This is the first self-sufficient system powered by a wearable energy generator based on microbial fuel cell technology. |
Potential treatment for cirrhosis discovered by scientists Posted: 11 Dec 2015 10:01 AM PST |
There is less knowledge about global species diversity than previously assumed Posted: 11 Dec 2015 10:00 AM PST |
Diagnostics with birefringence Posted: 11 Dec 2015 09:44 AM PST |
Worldwide resource for exploring genes' hidden messages Posted: 11 Dec 2015 09:44 AM PST |
Scientists demonstrate DNA-based electromechanical switch Posted: 11 Dec 2015 09:44 AM PST |
Virus hijacks protein machine and then kills the host Posted: 11 Dec 2015 09:44 AM PST |
Drug provides another treatment option for an early form of breast cancer Posted: 11 Dec 2015 09:43 AM PST |
Non-small cell lung cancers can be sorted in clusters by endocytic changes Posted: 11 Dec 2015 09:43 AM PST |
AIDS treatment benefits health, economics of people without HIV, study shows Posted: 11 Dec 2015 09:42 AM PST |
Fallopian tube organoids promise better understanding of ovarian cancer, infertility Posted: 11 Dec 2015 09:42 AM PST |
Scientists show how drug molecules regulate a medically important protein Posted: 10 Dec 2015 03:18 PM PST |
Sex differences in brain may underlie neurodevelopmental disorders more common in males Posted: 10 Dec 2015 03:16 PM PST Female infants have larger gray-matter volumes than males around the temporal-parietal junction of the brain, research shows. This brain region is important for processing of social information that is expressed in others' faces and voices, a function that is impaired in autism spectrum disorders (ASD), possibly helping to explain the higher risk for certain forms of ASD in males. |
Northern spotted owl decline linked to invasive owl, habitat loss, and climate Posted: 10 Dec 2015 03:16 PM PST |
Periodic table of protein complexes Posted: 10 Dec 2015 11:45 AM PST |
Effective, selective tweets can advance research from lab to policymakers Posted: 10 Dec 2015 11:45 AM PST With more than 300 million monthly users, Twitter's success has piqued the interests of many science researchers as a possible tool to publicize new research findings. In a recent study, researchers have examined the usefulness of Twitter and developed tips for the scientific community on how to use the social media tool to advance their research from the lab to the hands of health policymakers. |
Study offers remedy to flu vaccine delivery problems Posted: 10 Dec 2015 11:08 AM PST The annual delivery of influenza vaccine to the American public is hardly a straight shot from federal health officials to vaccine manufacturers to physicians to patients. A recurring and vexing part of the process is a supply-chain hitch that can leave patients waiting for flu shots even when the supply of the medicine is abundant. Now experts off a potential remedy by proposing a new kind of contract between flu vaccine manufacturers and the retailers that purchase and dispense the shots to patients. |
Unhealthy choices cost company health care plans billions of dollars Posted: 10 Dec 2015 11:05 AM PST |
More kids with autism evaluated as preschoolers, but more progress needed in early recognition Posted: 10 Dec 2015 09:56 AM PST |
Posted: 10 Dec 2015 09:56 AM PST Why is it that some people have richly detailed recollection of past experiences (episodic memory), while others tend to remember just the facts without details (semantic memory)? A research team has shown for the first time that these different ways of experiencing the past are associated with distinct brain connectivity patterns that may be inherent to the individual and suggest a life-long 'memory trait'. |
Obstacles not always a hindrance to proteins Posted: 10 Dec 2015 09:52 AM PST |
The need to name all forms of life: 60 new species of dragonflies described from Africa Posted: 10 Dec 2015 09:52 AM PST |
New clues to halting nerve degeneration Posted: 10 Dec 2015 09:45 AM PST |
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