ScienceDaily: Top News |
- To clean up ocean plastics focus on coasts, not the Great Pacific garbage patch
- How ants self-organize to build their nests
- Making weak TB drugs strong again
- Why Spiderman can't exist: Geckos are 'size limit' for sticking to walls
- Human sounds convey emotions clearer and faster than words
- New findings may enhance PARP inhibitors therapy in breast cancer
- Cheaper solar cells with 20.2 percent efficiency
- Explosive underwater volcanoes were a major feature of 'Snowball Earth'
- Mapping out cell conversion
- Light-activated nanoparticles prove effective against antibiotic-resistant 'superbugs'
- Scientists solve 3D structure of protein that guides the immune system
- Tiny electronic implants monitor brain injury, then melt away
- Cardiac arrests in high-rise buildings: Low survival rates above 3rd floor
- Core set of genes for plant-fungal symbiosis uncovered by researchers
- Laws of nature predict cancer evolution
- Broken UV light leads to key heart muscle cell discovery
- Environmental policy behind imbalance in phosphorus, nitrogen levels of the North Sea
- No more needles at the dentist: Just a tiny electric current instead
- Girls more likely to be cyber-bullying victims
- Cranberry extract confirmed to help fighting urinary tract infections in breastfed babies under age one
- Austerity has slowed regional recovery during the post-2008 recession, says new study
- New biomarkers for improved treatment of severe heart- and lung disease
- Ticks that transmit Lyme disease reported in nearly half of all US counties
- Intelligent electronics to become durable, flexible and functional through new technology
- Scientists use wood to create biodegradable, renewable alternative to Styrofoam
- Stepping beyond our 3D world
- Streaming services are a blessing and a curse for the music industry
- An image is worth a thousand kilos?
- Increased childbirth at Indian health facilities led to no matching reduction in maternal deaths
- Harmful mutations have accumulated during early human migrations out of Africa
- Ads for candy-flavored e-cigarettes could encourage vaping among school children
- Report identifies positive news on kidney disease in the US, yet challenges remain
- Seeing where energy goes may bring scientists closer to realizing nuclear fusion
- Thwarting abnormal neural development with a new mutation
- Frequent contact between parents, adult children is beneficial to both
- Predictability of DNA markers for population-level study based on species-level variation
To clean up ocean plastics focus on coasts, not the Great Pacific garbage patch Posted: 18 Jan 2016 07:39 PM PST |
How ants self-organize to build their nests Posted: 18 Jan 2016 03:49 PM PST Ants collectively build nests whose size can reach several thousand times that of individual ants and whose architecture is sometimes highly complex. However, their ability to coordinate several thousand individuals when building their nests remains a mystery. To understand the mechanisms involved in this process, researchers combined behavioral analysis, 3D imaging and computational modeling techniques. Their work shows that ants self-organize by interacting with the structures they build thanks to the addition of a pheromone to their building material. |
Making weak TB drugs strong again Posted: 18 Jan 2016 03:44 PM PST Biophysicists have discovered why the bacteria that cause tuberculosis (TB) are naturally somewhat resistant to antibiotics known as fluoroquinolones. Their findings, based on mapping the detailed three-dimensional structure of the drugs interacting with an essential enzyme in the TB germ, also reveal why some TB drugs are more potent than others and suggest how drug developers can make fluoroquinolones more efficacious against mutations that make the lung disease drug resistant. |
Why Spiderman can't exist: Geckos are 'size limit' for sticking to walls Posted: 18 Jan 2016 03:43 PM PST Latest research reveals why geckos are the largest animals able to scale smooth vertical walls -- even larger climbers would require unmanageably large sticky footpads. Scientists estimate that a human would need adhesive pads covering 40 percent of their body surface in order to walk up a wall like Spiderman, and believe their insights have implications for the feasibility of large-scale, gecko-like adhesives. |
Human sounds convey emotions clearer and faster than words Posted: 18 Jan 2016 10:49 AM PST It takes just one-tenth of a second for our brains to begin to recognize emotions conveyed by vocalizations. It doesn't matter whether the non-verbal sounds are growls of anger, the laughter of happiness or cries of sadness. More importantly, the researchers have also discovered that we pay more attention when an emotion (such as happiness, sadness or anger) is expressed through vocalizations than we do when the same emotion is expressed in speech. |
New findings may enhance PARP inhibitors therapy in breast cancer Posted: 18 Jan 2016 10:45 AM PST |
Cheaper solar cells with 20.2 percent efficiency Posted: 18 Jan 2016 10:45 AM PST |
Explosive underwater volcanoes were a major feature of 'Snowball Earth' Posted: 18 Jan 2016 10:44 AM PST |
Posted: 18 Jan 2016 10:44 AM PST |
Light-activated nanoparticles prove effective against antibiotic-resistant 'superbugs' Posted: 18 Jan 2016 10:44 AM PST |
Scientists solve 3D structure of protein that guides the immune system Posted: 18 Jan 2016 10:44 AM PST |
Tiny electronic implants monitor brain injury, then melt away Posted: 18 Jan 2016 10:44 AM PST A new class of small, thin electronic sensors can monitor temperature and pressure within the skull - crucial health parameters after a brain injury or surgery - then melt away when they are no longer needed, eliminating the need for additional surgery to remove the monitors and reducing the risk of infection and hemorrhage. |
Cardiac arrests in high-rise buildings: Low survival rates above 3rd floor Posted: 18 Jan 2016 10:44 AM PST |
Core set of genes for plant-fungal symbiosis uncovered by researchers Posted: 18 Jan 2016 10:44 AM PST A group of genes necessary for plants to form beneficial relationships with nutrient-bearing soil fungi has been uncovered by a team of scientists. They compared the genomes of plants that form these symbiotic relationships to those that don't. A better understanding of the genetic basis of the symbiosis may one day yield better crop plants that require less fertilizer input. |
Laws of nature predict cancer evolution Posted: 18 Jan 2016 10:44 AM PST The spread of mutations through a cancer follows natural laws -- and is therefore theoretically predictable, just as we can predict the movement of celestial bodies or the weather, a study shows. This intriguing research raises the possibility that doctors could take clinical decisions on how an individual patient's cancer will change, and what treatments should be used, by applying mathematical formulas to tumor biopsies. |
Broken UV light leads to key heart muscle cell discovery Posted: 18 Jan 2016 07:31 AM PST For a team of investigators trying to generate heart muscle cells from stem cells, a piece of broken equipment turned out to be a good thing. The faulty equipment pushed the researchers to try a different approach. Their new method uses a "Matrigel mattress" to rapidly generate cardiac cells suitable for heart disease studies and drug discovery. |
Environmental policy behind imbalance in phosphorus, nitrogen levels of the North Sea Posted: 18 Jan 2016 07:27 AM PST |
No more needles at the dentist: Just a tiny electric current instead Posted: 18 Jan 2016 07:27 AM PST |
Girls more likely to be cyber-bullying victims Posted: 18 Jan 2016 07:26 AM PST |
Posted: 18 Jan 2016 07:26 AM PST Cranberry extract helps fighting urinary tract infections (UTIs) in breastfed babies under one year of age, new research confirms. This work has proven that this compound prevents the prescription of antibiotics in the prophylaxis for recurrent urinary tract infections in infants with vesicoureteral reflux (VUR), so preventing the risk of increasing the bacterial antibiotic resistance. |
Austerity has slowed regional recovery during the post-2008 recession, says new study Posted: 18 Jan 2016 07:26 AM PST Austerity measures at national level have not helped regions to recover following the 2008 economic crisis, according to a new study of the UK and other EU countries. On the contrary, high public debt countries have been more successful in sheltering their regional economies, the research concludes. |
New biomarkers for improved treatment of severe heart- and lung disease Posted: 18 Jan 2016 07:26 AM PST |
Ticks that transmit Lyme disease reported in nearly half of all US counties Posted: 18 Jan 2016 07:25 AM PST |
Intelligent electronics to become durable, flexible and functional through new technology Posted: 18 Jan 2016 05:45 AM PST |
Scientists use wood to create biodegradable, renewable alternative to Styrofoam Posted: 18 Jan 2016 05:44 AM PST |
Posted: 18 Jan 2016 05:44 AM PST Over centuries, humans have tried to discover a Theory of Everything. Possible candidates for this cachet, such as String Theory and Grand Unified Theory, require higher dimensions or higher-dimensional symmetries, for instance ten dimensions, despite their radical difference from the world we actually experience. One such symmetry – known as E8 – exists in eight dimensions and is the largest symmetry without counterparts in every dimension and is therefore called exceptional. Now a scientist has constructed E8 for the first time, along with other exceptional 4D symmetries, in the 3D space we inhabit. These exceptional symmetries are essentially 3D phenomena in disguise. |
Streaming services are a blessing and a curse for the music industry Posted: 18 Jan 2016 05:44 AM PST Paid music streaming services can increase revenues for the music industry and lead consumers to spend more money on music overall. Free streaming, in contrast, is less beneficial. These are the findings of a recent empirical study that included interviews with over 2500 music fans over the course of more than one year. They found that although free as well as paid streaming services reduce revenues from CDs and downloads, the subscription fees for paid streaming services over-compensate for the losses in other channels. |
An image is worth a thousand kilos? Posted: 18 Jan 2016 05:44 AM PST |
Increased childbirth at Indian health facilities led to no matching reduction in maternal deaths Posted: 18 Jan 2016 05:44 AM PST To reduce maternal and neo-natal deaths, India launched a cash transfer program in 2005 that provides monetary incentives for women to give birth in health facilities instead of at home. While the program successfully increased the use of health facilities for child birth, it did not reduce maternal deaths as much, especially in poor areas, a new paper reports. |
Harmful mutations have accumulated during early human migrations out of Africa Posted: 18 Jan 2016 05:43 AM PST Modern humans (Homo sapiens) are thought to have first emerged in Africa about 150,000 years ago. 100,000 years later, a few of them left their homeland traveling first to Asia and then further east, crossing the Bering Strait, and colonizing the Americas. Experts have developed theoretical models predicting that if modern humans migrated as small bands, then the populations that broke off from their original African family should progressively accumulate slightly harmful mutations - a mutation load. Moreover, the mutational load of a population should then represent a way of measuring the distance it has covered since it left Africa. In a nutshell: an individual from Mexico should be carrying more harmful genetic variants than an individual from Africa. |
Ads for candy-flavored e-cigarettes could encourage vaping among school children Posted: 18 Jan 2016 05:41 AM PST |
Report identifies positive news on kidney disease in the US, yet challenges remain Posted: 18 Jan 2016 05:41 AM PST The annual data report from the United States Renal Data System reveals both positive and negative trends in kidney disease in the US. Medicare spending for patients with chronic kidney disease aged 65 and older exceeded $50 billion in 2013 and represented 20 percent of all Medicare spending in that age group. In addition, the total cost to Medicare for end-stage kidney disease grew to $30.9 billion and accounted for 7.1 percent of the overall paid Medicare claims costs. |
Seeing where energy goes may bring scientists closer to realizing nuclear fusion Posted: 18 Jan 2016 05:41 AM PST An international team of researchers has taken a step toward achieving controlled nuclear fusion -- a process that powers the sun and other stars, and has the potential to supply the world with limitless, clean energy. The team developed a new technique to 'see' where energy is delivered during fast ignition experiments and improve energy delivery to the fuel target. |
Thwarting abnormal neural development with a new mutation Posted: 18 Jan 2016 05:41 AM PST |
Frequent contact between parents, adult children is beneficial to both Posted: 16 Jan 2016 06:50 PM PST |
Predictability of DNA markers for population-level study based on species-level variation Posted: 16 Jan 2016 06:47 PM PST To answer the question of whether genes that show high levels of variability across different species could also be useful in population-level evolutionary studies, scientists tested the utility of numerous genes previously found to be useful in inferring relationships of cactus species. Because the rate of evolution -- and, thus, the amount of variation -- is not constant, a screening step is necessary to discover genomic regions with sufficient variability between individuals of the target species. |
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