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Life Technology™ Medical News
Study Uncovers Health Care Disparities in IBD Care
Chinese Cancer Biologists Uncover Key Enzyme in Colorectal Tumor Formation
New Method Finds Personalized Cancer Treatments
Toxic Lead Stunts Growth of 12-Year-Old Bangladeshi
Study Reveals Hypertension Clues in Electronic Health Records
Tuberculosis Diagnoses Lower Than Expected During Pandemic
Enhanced Electronic Frailty Index Boosts Elderly Care
Study Reveals Gaps in Health Care Professionals' Awareness of Gender Diversity
Zero Coronary Artery Calcium Score: Age Impact on Cardiac Risk
Inga Rødahl Defends Thesis on Innate Lymphoid Cells
Global Challenge: Detecting Cardiac Arrhythmias in Spain
New Brain Scan Patterns Improve Depression Diagnosis
Study Reveals High Muscle Strength's Role in Preventing Type 2 Diabetes
Study Shows Increased Colonoscopy Rates with Patient Navigators
Study: Girls on Instagram & TikTok Report Negative Impact on Well-being
Buprenorphine Continuation in Opioid Use Disorder: Pain Evidence
New Study: Addressing Post-Traumatic Osteoarthritis Challenges
University of Ottawa Study Reveals Lower Human Heat Limits
China's First Dpp-1 Inhibitor Study: Key Findings
Tirzepatide Boosts Kidney & Heart Health in Obesity & HFpEF
Study Reveals Suboptimal Guideline Adherence for Chlamydia & Gonorrhea
Covid-19, Influenza, Measles Outbreaks Hit U.S.
Updated Evaluation of Bone Turnover Markers in Osteoporosis
Emergency Department Nurses in States with Abortion Bans Seek Guidance
Unveiling Brain Regions for Learning: Synaptic Plasticity
New Approach for Treating Aggressive Brain Tumors
Alzheimer's Study Reveals Brain Blood Vessel Clue
FDA Recalls Ground Coffee in 15 States for Mislabeling
New Drug Lowers Little-Known Blood Risk
Antibiotic-Resistant Superbug Circulating in Malaysian Hospital
Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Science News
Global Temperatures: 4°C Rise Predicted to Slash GDP
The Role of Eye Tracking in VR and AR Headsets
Nanoplastics: Unveiling the Unknown Toxicity
Research Team Develops Flexible Nanofiber Felt with Low Thermal Conductivity
Town and Blue Lagoon Spa Evacuated in Iceland Amid Volcano Threat
Hate Crime Reports Dip in U.S. Cities, Anti-Jewish and Anti-Muslim Incidents Surge
Cattle Herds Drown in Australian Outback Floods
Bitcoin Investor Takes SpaceX Flight Over North and South Poles
University of Washington Challenges Static View of East Asia's Paleolithic Period
Impact of Workaholics' Self-Images on Job Dedication
Challenges in Maintaining Finnish Lake Water Quality
Buzz Pollination: Bees Vibrating Flowers for Pollen
Quantum Breakthrough: Speeding Up Atom Superpositions
New Discovery: Proteins' Cellular Transformation Unveiled
Oldest Phosphatic Stromatoporoid Sponge Found in South China
Insight into Hafnium Oxide's Structural Phase Transition
Europe's Cern Lab Finds No Hurdles for World's Largest Collider
Yale-Led Study: Climate Change Threatens Butterflies
NASA Astronauts Wilmore and Williams Take Responsibility
Unprecedented Study Reveals Uranus' Atmospheric Secrets
Rare Primitive Meteorites Fall Near Aguas Zarcas, Costa Rica
Contaminated Air Exposure Linked to Disease Risks
Cutting-Edge AI 3D Food Printing with Infrared Cooking
Rice University Researchers Tackle PFAS Removal
U.S. Companies Developing Advanced Reactors for Energy Dominance
Tel Aviv University Researchers Unveil Cave-Painting Child Mystery
Study Reveals Impact of CEO Communication on Investor Trust
Carbon Emissions from Patient Travel: National Survey Insights
Water Management Practices Boost Groundwater Levels in Central Arizona
Understanding the Alt-Right: Beliefs and Identities
Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Technology News
Cryptocurrency Backing by Trump & Milei Costs Billions
Chemists Discover Breakthrough in Battery Interface Analysis
Paris Prosecutors Seek Justice for French Consumers in Volkswagen Dieselgate Scandal
Openai Unveils Open Generative Ai Model Amid Rising Competition
FTC Warns 23andMe on Personal Data Protection
Openai Raises $40 Billion, Valued at $300 Billion
Carmakers Face Tough Decisions Amid US Tariffs
Efficient Spare Parts Delivery Model Cuts Costs by Half
Researchers Develop Novel Organic Solar Cells
Satellite Captures Mandalay After 7.7 Magnitude Earthquake
New Degradation Mechanism in Lithium-Ion Batteries
Ict's Role in Augmenting CO2 Emissions in the United States
Dynamic Light Control Enhances Autonomous Vehicles & Medical Tech
"Fraunhofer CyberGuard Project: Standardized Playbooks for Online Security"
Germany's Plastic Packaging Waste Transformed into 3D-Printed Products
World's Smallest Wireless Flying Robot Hits Targets
Researchers Develop Infomorphic Neurons for Accurate Learning
Renault and Nissan Revise Partnership for Financial Stability
Brain Implant Translates Paralyzed Woman's Thoughts to Speech
Challenges Faced by African Data Workers
"23andMe Files for Bankruptcy After Selling 12 Million DNA Kits"
Myanmar Earthquake Exposes Regional Building Code Gaps
AI Chatbots' Truthfulness Enhanced with Chain of Thought Windows
Apple Inc. Progresses on New Office Complex in Culver City
Hackers Breach Oracle Systems, Steal Patient Data
Nokia Settles Patent Dispute with Amazon
Trump Confident in TikTok Deal Before April 5 Deadline
France Fines Apple 150 Million Euros for Privacy Feature
Microsoft: Tech Titan Founded by Gates & Allen
Microsoft's Ubiquitous Desktop Software: Decades of Impact
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSWednesday, 11 September 2019
Female gorillas must balance the reproductive costs of staying with or leaving an older male
When a gorilla group's silverback is close to the end of his reproductive years, females face a dilemma: Should they stay with him until he dies or leave him for another male? A team of researchers from the Max Planck Institute of Evolutionary Anthropology has now found that both strategies bear its costs: females face reproductive costs of staying with an older male as well as costs when they transfer to a new silverback.
Analysis of fingermarks with synchrotron techniques provide new insights
The findings by lead researchers Prof Simon Lewis and Dr. Mark Hackett may provide opportunities to optimise current fingermark detection methods or identify new detection strategies for forensic purposes.
Researchers create efficient semisynthesis of biopharmaceutic-Fc conjugates
Biopharmaceutics consisting of middle molecules, for example, peptide or nucleic-acid aptamers, have been attracting attention as promising molecular modalities in current drug discovery.
Time-saving simulation of peeling graphene sheets
Control of atomic-scale friction and adhesion is critical for effective manipulation of the motion of nano- or micro-meter scale objects at interfaces. For example, in nanotechnology controlling adhesion during the peeling process of graphene sheets plays a very important role in manipulation and fabrication. Graphene is a promising material due to its mechanical, electronic, magnetic, spintronic, and optical properties. In previous work, a comparison between simulation and experiment of peeling graphene has revealed its unique frictional and adhesive properties.
Recipe for planets
It's not every day that clues about the origin of our solar system fall from the sky, but one Victoria University of Wellington researcher has found just that—in a meteorite that collided with Earth 50 years ago.
Cancer research: The genetic context is crucial
A team at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU) in Munich has uncovered a mechanism behind the variability in the clinical course of Ewing sarcoma. The interaction between the acquired driver mutation and the germline genetic context in which it occurs determines the course of the disease.
Scientists explore genetic engineering to treat Parkinson's disease
Researchers of Sechenov University and University of Pittsburgh have described the most promising strategies in applying genetic engineering for studying and treating Parkinson's disease. This method could reveal the role of various cellular processes in progression of the disease, lead to new drugs and therapies, and determine their efficacy using animal disease models. The study was published in Free Radical Biology and Medicine.
Chameleon inspires 'smart skin' that changes color in the sun
A chameleon can alter the color of its skin so it either blends into the background to hide or stands out to defend its territory and attract a mate. The chameleon makes this trick look easy, using photonic crystals in its skin. Scientists, however, have struggled to make a photonic crystal "smart skin" that changes color in response to the environment, without also changing in size.
Can a DNA construction kit replace expensive antibody medication?
Researchers at KU Leuven in Belgium have developed a technique to make sheep produce new antibodies simply by injecting the DNA building blocks. This approach is much cheaper and more efficient than producing antibodies industrially and administering them afterwards. The study in animals with a similar size as humans brings us a step closer to the clinical use of antibody gene therapy.
International conflict isn't declining, new analysis finds
Contrary to popular belief, war is not declining, according to a new analysis of the last 200 years of international conflict.
Discovery challenges accepted rule of organic solar cell design
Solar cells that use mixtures of organic molecules to absorb sunlight and convert it to electricity, that can be applied to curved surfaces such as the body of a car, could be a step closer thanks to a discovery that challenges conventional thinking about one of the key components of these devices.
Jaws reveal Australia's ancient marsupial panda
New research has revealed that Australia's extinct short-faced kangaroos were a marsupial version of the giant panda, with jaws adapted to browsing woody, poor-quality vegetation.
Cloud-based tool provides clear communication for disaster situations
When a manmade or natural disaster, such as a tornado or hurricane, hits a populated area, communication devices such as cell phones are often impacted, leading to a reduction or inability to communicate for the first responders deployed in the immediate aftermath. A collaboration of researchers at the University of Missouri is hoping to provide better communication to first responders during that crucial time.
Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660 at center of game rumors, guesstimates
The rumors on what's next for gamers from Nvidia held sway over news headlines this week. Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660 Super on its way? What's the big deal? Nvidia planning to debut GeForce GTX 1650 Ti Graphics Card? What's the big deal?
Fire forces Japan to cancel rocket launch to ISS
A pre-dawn fire on Wednesday forced Japan's space agency to cancel the launch of an unnamed rocket meant to deliver supplies to the International Space Station, the operator said.
Veterans with PTSD, anxiety turn to beekeeping for relief
Gently lifting a wooden frame containing dozens of Italian honeybees, Vince Ylitalo seemed transfixed as he and several other veterans inspected the buzzing insects.
EPA to scale back use of animals to test chemical toxicity
The Environmental Protection Agency is aiming to reduce and eventually eliminate the use of mammals to test the toxicity of chemicals, a move backed by animal rights groups but criticized as irresponsible by a leading environmental organization.
No-spray zones divide French farmers from anxious neighbors
When tractors laden with pesticides and other chemicals start spraying the vineyards that produce fruity Bordeaux wines, Marie-Lys Bibeyran's phone starts to ring.
Focusing on key sustainable development goals would boost progress across all, analysis finds
By using a mathematical network analysis to map the relationships identified by an International Council for Science report, the University of Bath research reveals that direct efforts focussed on a critical few: Life below Water, Life on Land, and Gender Equality, would reinforce the virtuous circles buried in the network and hence lead to greater overall progress.
How long does a whale feed? New data gives insight into blue and fin whale behavior
Researchers using electronic tags were able to monitor blue and fin whales off the coast of Southern California over multiple weeks, providing new insight into the feeding behaviors of the two largest whale species. The researchers also found evidence of differences in the feeding intensity and habitat use of males and females of both species.
Uber trims more staff as it seeks a route to profit
Uber on Tuesday said it was laying off about eight percent of its product and engineering teams as the smartphone-summoned ride service tries to map a route to profitability.
Amazon bets big on India with mega-office
With 49 elevators moving a floor per second and zumba classes for its more than 15,000 employees, Amazon's new Indian headquarters, its biggest building globally, matches its ambitions in a vast but challenging market.
Apple takes on Netflix with a $5-a-month streaming service
Apple is finally taking on Netflix with its own streaming television service and, uncharacteristically for the company, offering it at a bargain price—$5 a month beginning on Nov. 1.
Motorbike taxi apps jostle for trade on crowded Lagos roads
Banker Yemi Adegbola used to leave his home in Lagos before 4 am each day, but would still arrive late to work because of the notorious traffic in Nigeria's biggest city.
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