ScienceDaily: Top News |
- Smoking cessation medications do not appear to increase risk of neuropsychiatric side effects, study finds
- Trust in the cloud could be pinned to online scoring system
- Cell death mechanism may, paradoxically, enable aggressive pancreatic cells to live on
- Research team realizes 3-color photodetector
- Genes that control smooth muscle contraction identified
- Effectiveness of extractive industries transparency initiative explored
- Researchers develop magnifying smartphone screen app for visually impaired
- Investigators reduce sugar content of yogurt without reducing sweetness
- Novel collagen fingerprinting identifies a Neanderthal bone among 2,000 fragments
- How skeletal stem cells form the blueprint of the face
- Paperbark tree to unlock climate change
- When beauty becomes the beast: Research efforts successfully combat invasive species
- Attosecond physics: Understanding the microcosmos
- Changing the world, one fridge at a time
- Critical to screen patients with rheumatoid arthritis for hearing impairment
- Gateway to the brain
- Cpf1: CRISPR-enzyme scissors cutting both RNA and DNA
- Researchers uncover 'local heroes' of immune system
- DNA barcodes gone wild
- Successful laboratory test of photoswitchable anti-tumor agent
- Bourbon or rye? You can't tell the difference, new study says
- Drug-overdose deaths hold steady in some high drug trafficking areas
- Fructose alters hundreds of brain genes, which can lead to a wide range of diseases
- Blood pressure targets for individuals with kidney disease should consider patients' age
- Higher muscle mass associated with lower mortality risk in people with heart disease
- Rainforest study shows biodiversity loss worse than anticipated
- Climate change threatens already volatile Urmia Lake
- Finding the Genetic Cause for Intellectual disability
- Single molecule electronic DNA sequencing advanced
- Gender stereotyping may start as young as three months, study of babies' cries shows
- Test aims to identify shale gas hazard in groundwater
- Blood transfusions in high risk malaria zones could be made safer with new blood treatment technology
- Inspirational managers may harm workers' health
- Adding some salt to the recipe for energy storage materials
- Sleep loss detrimental to blood vessels
- Infant BMI is good predictor of obesity at age two
- Researcher studies how animals puncture things
- Study of chimpanzees explores early origins of human hand dexterity
- Organ recipients with previous cancers linked to higher death rates, new cancers
- Longitudinal trial of safety, efficacy of calcium supplement used to enhance bone mineral density
- Study points to how low-income, resource-poor communities can reduce substance abuse
- Plastic below the ocean surface
- New study shows electronic health records often capture incomplete mental health data
- Study links neighborhood greenness to reduction in chronic diseases
- In child heart patients, novel approach improves symptoms of hazardous lymph blockage
- Researchers find moderate vascular risk in southwest native population
- Water color, phytoplankton growth in the Gulf of Maine are changing
- Immune cells in organ cavities play essential role in fast tissue repair
- Tighter enforcement along the US-Mexico border backfired, researchers find
- Young adult survivors of childhood cancer report feeling middle-aged
- Leg-wing cooperation in baby birds, dinosaurs is key transition in origin of flight
- Trick of the light may help diseased plants attract greenfly
- The importance of resting phases in B cell development
Posted: 22 Apr 2016 05:10 PM PDT |
Trust in the cloud could be pinned to online scoring system Posted: 22 Apr 2016 11:17 AM PDT An easy-to-use online tool to help build people's trust in the cloud has been developed by computer scientists. Cloud computing is widely recognized as a highly useful technology, with multiple benefits such as huge data storage capabilities, computational power, lower costs for companies and individuals, simplicity of use, and flexibility of application. |
Cell death mechanism may, paradoxically, enable aggressive pancreatic cells to live on Posted: 22 Apr 2016 11:12 AM PDT |
Research team realizes 3-color photodetector Posted: 22 Apr 2016 11:12 AM PDT |
Genes that control smooth muscle contraction identified Posted: 22 Apr 2016 11:12 AM PDT |
Effectiveness of extractive industries transparency initiative explored Posted: 22 Apr 2016 11:12 AM PDT |
Researchers develop magnifying smartphone screen app for visually impaired Posted: 22 Apr 2016 11:12 AM PDT A smartphone application that projects a magnified smartphone screen to Google Glass has been developed, which allows users to navigate using head movements to view a corresponding portion of the magnified screen. They have shown that the technology can potentially benefit low-vision users, many of whom find the smartphone's built-in zoom feature to be difficult to use due to the loss of context. |
Investigators reduce sugar content of yogurt without reducing sweetness Posted: 22 Apr 2016 11:12 AM PDT A team from a Danish food ingredients company has manipulated the metabolic properties of yogurt-producing bacteria to sweeten the yogurt naturally, while reducing sugar in the final product. Similar manipulations have also all but eliminated lactose, so that those with lactose intolerance can also enjoy the yogurt. They have accomplished all of this using microbiological methods that predate the era of genetic technologies. |
Novel collagen fingerprinting identifies a Neanderthal bone among 2,000 fragments Posted: 22 Apr 2016 09:07 AM PDT Scientists have used a new molecular fingerprinting technique to identify one Neanderthal bone from around 2,000 bone fragments. All the tiny pieces of bone were recovered from a key archaeological site, Denisova Cave in Russia, with the remaining fragments found to be from animal species like mammoths, woolly rhino, wolf and reindeer. It is the first time that researchers have identified traces of an extinct human from an archaeological site using a technique called 'Zooarchaeology by Mass Spectrometry' or ZooMS. |
How skeletal stem cells form the blueprint of the face Posted: 22 Apr 2016 08:56 AM PDT |
Paperbark tree to unlock climate change Posted: 22 Apr 2016 08:56 AM PDT Synonymous with the Australian landscape, the paperbark tree is most recognized for its distinctive bark, but it is the leaves that have found themselves at the center of research which could provide crucial insights into climate change. The research found Melaleuca leaves preserved in ancient wetlands could be used to reconstruct past rainfall activity. |
When beauty becomes the beast: Research efforts successfully combat invasive species Posted: 22 Apr 2016 08:55 AM PDT |
Attosecond physics: Understanding the microcosmos Posted: 22 Apr 2016 08:55 AM PDT |
Changing the world, one fridge at a time Posted: 22 Apr 2016 08:55 AM PDT To help change the world, have a look inside your fridge -- this is one of the messages contained in a new article. Food waste has attained monumental proportions in both the developed and developing worlds, and the sum of individual consumer's actions can have major impacts on a global scale, according to the article's author. |
Critical to screen patients with rheumatoid arthritis for hearing impairment Posted: 22 Apr 2016 08:55 AM PDT |
Posted: 22 Apr 2016 08:53 AM PDT Scientists have derived a structural model of a transporter at the blood-brain barrier called Mfsd2a. This is the first molecular model of this critical transporter, and could prove important for the development of therapeutic agents that need to be delivered to the brain --- across the blood-brain barrier. In future, this could help treat neurological disorders such as glioblastoma. |
Cpf1: CRISPR-enzyme scissors cutting both RNA and DNA Posted: 22 Apr 2016 08:53 AM PDT |
Researchers uncover 'local heroes' of immune system Posted: 22 Apr 2016 08:53 AM PDT |
Posted: 22 Apr 2016 08:53 AM PDT |
Successful laboratory test of photoswitchable anti-tumor agent Posted: 22 Apr 2016 06:19 AM PDT Photoswitchable agents might reduce side effects of a chemotherapy. So far, photodynamic therapies have been dependent on oxygen in the tissue. But hardly any oxygen exists in malignant, rapidly growing tumors. A group of researchers has now developed a photo-switchable molecule as a basis of an oxygen-independent method. |
Bourbon or rye? You can't tell the difference, new study says Posted: 22 Apr 2016 06:19 AM PDT |
Drug-overdose deaths hold steady in some high drug trafficking areas Posted: 22 Apr 2016 06:19 AM PDT Areas in the US with the highest drug-overdose death rates are not always places with high drug trafficking, according to a new analysis. Drug-overdose mortality rates have increased an average of 6.7 percent per year since 1979 but held relatively steady in most US border counties, indicating that drugs appear to pass through these counties without affecting the death rates of their residents. |
Fructose alters hundreds of brain genes, which can lead to a wide range of diseases Posted: 22 Apr 2016 06:19 AM PDT |
Blood pressure targets for individuals with kidney disease should consider patients' age Posted: 22 Apr 2016 05:01 AM PDT Systolic blood pressure levels above 140 mmHg were linked with higher risks of coronary heart disease, stroke, kidney failure, and death in patients with chronic kidney disease of all ages, but the magnitude of these associations diminished with more advanced age, report researchers at the end of their study on the topic. Diastolic blood pressure levels below 70 mmHg were associated with a higher risk of death, but otherwise they showed no association with cardiovascular outcomes. |
Higher muscle mass associated with lower mortality risk in people with heart disease Posted: 22 Apr 2016 05:00 AM PDT Cardiovascular disease patients who have high muscle mass and low fat mass have a lower mortality risk than those with other body compositions, researchers have found. The findings also suggest that regardless of a person's level of fat mass, a higher level of muscle mass helps reduce the risk of death. |
Rainforest study shows biodiversity loss worse than anticipated Posted: 22 Apr 2016 04:54 AM PDT |
Climate change threatens already volatile Urmia Lake Posted: 22 Apr 2016 04:54 AM PDT |
Finding the Genetic Cause for Intellectual disability Posted: 22 Apr 2016 04:54 AM PDT Disorders in the same gene PIGG are the cause for intellectual disability with seizures and hypotonia, scientists have discovered. PIGG is one of the enzymes active in the GPI anchor glycolipid synthesis and the current study revealed its significance in the development of the cerebral nervous system. |
Single molecule electronic DNA sequencing advanced Posted: 22 Apr 2016 04:52 AM PDT |
Gender stereotyping may start as young as three months, study of babies' cries shows Posted: 22 Apr 2016 04:52 AM PDT |
Test aims to identify shale gas hazard in groundwater Posted: 22 Apr 2016 04:52 AM PDT A test has been developed to check for contamination of shallow groundwater from unconventional gas extraction techniques, such as fracking. Methods used for shale gas extraction include hydraulic fracturing, commonly known as fracking, in which shale rocks below ground are split with high-pressure fluids to release gas that is recovered for fuel. Coal bed methane is extracted from deep coal seams by drilling into the coal to reduce the pressure and release gas. |
Posted: 22 Apr 2016 04:52 AM PDT Patients, especially children, who undergo blood transfusions in sub-Saharan Africa are at high risk of transfusion-transmitted malaria. A new trial suggests that treating donated blood with a new technology that combines UV radiation and vitamin B is safe and could minimize the risk of malaria infection following blood transfusions. |
Inspirational managers may harm workers' health Posted: 22 Apr 2016 04:52 AM PDT Managers who inspire their staff to perform above and beyond the call of duty may actually harm their employees' health over time, according to researchers. Transformational leadership has previously been associated with positive employee well-being, better sleep quality, fewer depressive symptoms and reduced general absenteeism in the short term. |
Adding some salt to the recipe for energy storage materials Posted: 22 Apr 2016 04:51 AM PDT |
Sleep loss detrimental to blood vessels Posted: 22 Apr 2016 04:51 AM PDT |
Infant BMI is good predictor of obesity at age two Posted: 22 Apr 2016 04:51 AM PDT |
Researcher studies how animals puncture things Posted: 22 Apr 2016 04:51 AM PDT |
Study of chimpanzees explores early origins of human hand dexterity Posted: 22 Apr 2016 04:51 AM PDT Chimpanzees use manipulative dexterity to evaluate and select figs, a vital resource when preferred foods are scarce, according to a new study. The action resembles that of humans shopping for fruits, and the study demonstrates the foraging advantages of opposable fingers and careful manual prehension, or the act of grasping an object with precision. The findings shed new light on the ecological origins of hands with fine motor control. |
Organ recipients with previous cancers linked to higher death rates, new cancers Posted: 22 Apr 2016 04:51 AM PDT |
Longitudinal trial of safety, efficacy of calcium supplement used to enhance bone mineral density Posted: 21 Apr 2016 02:14 PM PDT |
Study points to how low-income, resource-poor communities can reduce substance abuse Posted: 21 Apr 2016 02:13 PM PDT Cocaine use has increased substantially among African Americans in some of the most underserved areas of the United States. Interventions designed to increase connection to and support from non-drug using family and friends, with access to employment, the faith community, and education, are the best ways to reduce substance use among African Americans and other minorities in low-income, resource-poor communities, a study concludes. |
Plastic below the ocean surface Posted: 21 Apr 2016 02:13 PM PDT |
New study shows electronic health records often capture incomplete mental health data Posted: 21 Apr 2016 02:13 PM PDT |
Study links neighborhood greenness to reduction in chronic diseases Posted: 21 Apr 2016 02:13 PM PDT Higher levels of greenness (trees, park space and other vegetation) in neighborhoods is linked with significantly lower chronic illnesses, diabetes, hypertension and high cholesterol, public health researchers has shown. The findings were based on 250,000 Medicare recipients age 65 and vegetation presence measured by NASA satellite imagery. |
In child heart patients, novel approach improves symptoms of hazardous lymph blockage Posted: 21 Apr 2016 02:13 PM PDT Pediatric researchers have devised an innovative, safe and minimally invasive procedure that helps relieve rare but potentially life-threatening airway blockages occurring in children who had surgery for congenital heart defects. Physician-researchers developed new imaging tools to treat plastic bronchitis -- in which abnormal circulation causes lymphatic fluid to dry into solid casts that clog a child's airways. |
Researchers find moderate vascular risk in southwest native population Posted: 21 Apr 2016 02:13 PM PDT |
Water color, phytoplankton growth in the Gulf of Maine are changing Posted: 21 Apr 2016 02:12 PM PDT The amount of dissolved organic carbon from rivers emptying into the Gulf of Maine has increased over the last 80 years, a trend they predict will continue through 2100 if annual precipitation continues to increase, warn researchers. Runoff is changing the color of the seawater, reducing the light available to phytoplankton for photosynthesis, causing a decline in overall productivity. |
Immune cells in organ cavities play essential role in fast tissue repair Posted: 21 Apr 2016 02:12 PM PDT |
Tighter enforcement along the US-Mexico border backfired, researchers find Posted: 21 Apr 2016 02:11 PM PDT |
Young adult survivors of childhood cancer report feeling middle-aged Posted: 21 Apr 2016 02:11 PM PDT |
Leg-wing cooperation in baby birds, dinosaurs is key transition in origin of flight Posted: 21 Apr 2016 12:00 PM PDT New research based on high-resolution x-ray movies reveals that despite having extremely underdeveloped muscles and wings, young birds acquire a mature flight stroke early in their development, initially relying heavily on their legs and wings to work in tandem to power the strenuous movement. The new study is important for understanding the development of flight in modern birds and reconstructing its origins in extinct dinosaurs. |
Trick of the light may help diseased plants attract greenfly Posted: 21 Apr 2016 12:00 PM PDT The leaves of virus-infected plants reflect light differently to attract the attention of disease-spreading greenfly, new research suggests. Scientists have shown for the first time that plant viruses alter the surface of leaves, influencing how light is polarized and helping insects to potentially 'see' infected plants. |
The importance of resting phases in B cell development Posted: 21 Apr 2016 12:00 PM PDT |
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