ScienceDaily: Top News |
- Enigma of coexistence of people with Rh+ and Rh- blood groups solved
- New elements recently added to periodic table
- Tiniest particles shrink before exploding when hit with x-ray laser
- Job growth, consumer spending to boost state and national economies
- Biologists develop method for antibiotic susceptibility testing
- Shallow flooding reduces a major rice pest, researchers find
- Phase of the moon affects amount of rainfall
- Nanosheet growth technique could revolutionize nanomaterial production
- Oncologists issue guidance for allocating scarce chemotherapy drugs
- Proton beam therapy offers potential to treat childhood brain cancer with fewer severe side effects than conventional radiotherapy
- Media narratives counter prejudice attitudes
- New type of nanowires, built with natural gas heating
- Proteins most associated with aging revealed in study
- Awareness of aspirin's benefits saves lives
- Novel calibration tool will help astronomers look for habitable exoplanets
- Future for charismatic pika not as daunting as once feared
- Cornell researchers create first self-assembled superconductor
- Lasting impressions: Psychologists discover what influences our food choices
- First impressions: When the mating market resembles a super market
- Recent studies show value of technology, in-person communications
- Icy ebb and flow influenced by hydrothermal activity
- Bile acid supports the production of blood stem cells
- How do mushrooms contribute to global warming?
Enigma of coexistence of people with Rh+ and Rh- blood groups solved Posted: 31 Jan 2016 06:22 AM PST A new study showed that incidence and morbidity of many diseases and disorders correlate negatively with frequencies of Rh+ heterozygotes (i.e. the carriers of one copy of the gene for Rh positivity and one copy of the gene for Rh negativity) in the population of individual countries. At the same time, the disease burden associated with the same disorders correlated positively with frequency of Rh negative subjects in individual countries. Together with the observed worse health status and higher incidence of many disorders in Rh negative subjects published by the same research team last autumn, this result probably solved 80 years old enigma of coexistence of carriers of two variants of Rhesus gene in the same population. |
New elements recently added to periodic table Posted: 30 Jan 2016 03:24 PM PST |
Tiniest particles shrink before exploding when hit with x-ray laser Posted: 30 Jan 2016 03:24 PM PST Researchers assumed that tiny objects would instantly blow up when hit by extremely intense light from the world's most powerful X-ray laser. But to their astonishment, these nanoparticles initially shrank instead – a finding that provides a glimpse of the unusual world of superheated nanomaterials that could eventually also help scientists further develop X-ray techniques for taking atomic images of individual molecules. |
Job growth, consumer spending to boost state and national economies Posted: 30 Jan 2016 03:24 PM PST |
Biologists develop method for antibiotic susceptibility testing Posted: 30 Jan 2016 03:23 PM PST A team of biologists and biomedical researchers has developed a new method to determine if bacteria are susceptible to antibiotics within a few hours, an advance that could slow the appearance of drug resistance and allow doctors to more rapidly identify the appropriate treatment for patients with life threatening bacterial infections. |
Shallow flooding reduces a major rice pest, researchers find Posted: 30 Jan 2016 03:23 PM PST |
Phase of the moon affects amount of rainfall Posted: 30 Jan 2016 03:21 PM PST |
Nanosheet growth technique could revolutionize nanomaterial production Posted: 30 Jan 2016 03:21 PM PST |
Oncologists issue guidance for allocating scarce chemotherapy drugs Posted: 30 Jan 2016 03:21 PM PST Claiming that clinicians lack formal and concrete allocation guidance when faced with a critical drug shortage, experts in pediatric oncology and bioethics have issued a framework to avoid waste and guide difficult prioritization decisions among children in need of scarce life-saving chemotherapy treatment. |
Posted: 30 Jan 2016 03:21 PM PST Proton beam therapy -- a more precise form of radiotherapy -- to treat the childhood brain cancer medulloblastoma appears to be as safe as conventional radiotherapy with similar survival rates, according to new research. Importantly, the findings suggest that proton radiotherapy may not be as toxic to the rest of a child's body as conventional radiotherapy. |
Media narratives counter prejudice attitudes Posted: 30 Jan 2016 03:20 PM PST |
New type of nanowires, built with natural gas heating Posted: 30 Jan 2016 03:20 PM PST |
Proteins most associated with aging revealed in study Posted: 29 Jan 2016 02:13 PM PST When people turn about 80 years of age, approximately half of the body's proteins are damaged by oxidation. Oxidation occurs because of random chemical degradations that are associated with converting food to energy in the presence of oxygen. Certain proteins known to be associated with aging and age-related diseases such as Alzheimer's disease and cancer are also at a high risk for destabilization caused by oxidation. |
Awareness of aspirin's benefits saves lives Posted: 29 Jan 2016 02:10 PM PST |
Novel calibration tool will help astronomers look for habitable exoplanets Posted: 29 Jan 2016 02:10 PM PST Promising new calibration tools, called laser frequency combs, could allow astronomers to take a major step in discovering and characterizing earthlike planets around other stars. These devices generate evenly spaced lines of light, much like the teeth on a comb for styling hair or the tick marks on a ruler--hence their nickname of "optical rulers." |
Future for charismatic pika not as daunting as once feared Posted: 29 Jan 2016 02:05 PM PST The American pika is thought by many biologists to be a prime candidate for extirpation as the planet continues to warm. But a new study paints a different, more complex future for this rock-dwelling little lagomorph. Pikas may survive, even thrive, in some areas, the researchers say, while facing extirpation in others. The research is important because pikas are considered a sentinel species for climate change impacts. |
Cornell researchers create first self-assembled superconductor Posted: 29 Jan 2016 02:04 PM PST |
Lasting impressions: Psychologists discover what influences our food choices Posted: 29 Jan 2016 02:04 PM PST |
First impressions: When the mating market resembles a super market Posted: 29 Jan 2016 02:04 PM PST |
Recent studies show value of technology, in-person communications Posted: 29 Jan 2016 02:04 PM PST Across four different research groups in the United States and Canada, findings from personality and social psychologists suggest that text messaging and social media can have emotional and psychological benefits. However, these benefits often fail to match those of in-person social interactions. As our society increasingly relies on digital forms of social interaction, there may be costs as well as benefits to the quality of our relationships and our emotional health. |
Icy ebb and flow influenced by hydrothermal activity Posted: 29 Jan 2016 10:43 AM PST |
Bile acid supports the production of blood stem cells Posted: 29 Jan 2016 06:07 AM PST Bile acid is transferred from the mother to the fetus via the placenta to enable the fetus to produce blood stem cells, new research shows. Bile acids are normally found in adults, to help digest food. However, in studies of pregnant mice, researchers found large amounts of bile acids also inside the fetus. |
How do mushrooms contribute to global warming? Posted: 29 Jan 2016 06:07 AM PST |
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