News



Life Technology™ Medical News

Study: Low Long-Term Second Cancer Risk in Early Breast Cancer

High Under-5 Mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa

Parkinson's Disease: Mitophagy and Cell Health

Study: Estradiol-Based Hormone Therapy and Memory Performance

Study Reveals High Stroke Rate in Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander People

The Complicated Question: Getting a Covid-19 Vaccine

Novel Intervention Boosts Quality of Life in Sickle Cell Adolescents

Understanding Cancer Cells' Flexibility: Epigenetic Influence

Challenges of Short Bowel Syndrome in Gastroenterology

Managing Resistance in Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumors

Pad2 Enzyme Promotes Tumor Growth in Pancreatic Cancer

High Dropout Rates in Youth Sports Linked to Social Class

Myocardial Infarction: Infectious Disease Discovery

U.S. Regulators Approve Updated Covid-19 Shots, Limiting Access

Understanding Glaucoma: Impact of Steroid Eye Medications

Breakthrough in Fight Against Viral Diseases

Music-Enhanced Breathwork Boosts Brain Regions: Study

Study Links Better Sleep and Diet to Mental Well-Being

Cannabis-Based Treatment Improves Insomnia Sleep Quality

Obesity-Causing Food Lipids Linked to Asthma Inflammation

Hope Rises: Biomarker Predicts CDK4/6 Response in ER+ Breast Cancer

Study Reveals Disappearance of Midlife Unhappiness Hump

Innovative 3D-Printing and Nanodiamonds for Fetal Lung Repair

Mapping Human Brain Response to Body Part Removal

Brain Cells Overactivated: Link to Parkinson's Identified

Study Reveals Diverse Evolution of Mantle Cell Lymphoma

Leveraging Nature's Check: Purdue Researchers Target Cancer

Biochemical Approach Reducing Drug-Seeking Behavior

Living Heart Valves Show Promise for Pediatric Heart Conditions

Study Reveals Therapeutic Clues for Treating Childhood Brain Tumor

Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSS

Life Technology™ Science News

Genetic Diversity in British Woodlands: Planting vs. Colonization

Sauropod Bones Unearthed in Ibirá, São Paulo

Neolithic Revolution: Shift to Farming in Human History

8% of Your Genome: Viral Souvenir from Evolutionary Past

New Bacteria Species Linked to Leishmaniasis in Amazon

Tiny Fish Study Reveals Effects of Oil and Flame Retardants

Researchers Discover Genomic Evidence of Plague of Justinian

Impactful Supercell Thunderstorms in Europe: Summer's Fury

Yale Study Uncovers Evolution of Amblyopsid Cavefishes

Astronomers Discover Conflicting Data on Exoplanet GJ 1132 b

Chinese Academy of Sciences Study Maps PM2.5 Pollution Transport

Textbook Picture of Planet Formation Gets Cosmic Twist

"NeuO Revealed: Selective Neuronal Staining Mechanism Unveiled"

Presence of Essential Elements in Air, Water, and Food

Material Selection Challenges: Theory vs. Experiment in Discovery

Pangolin Species Face Extinction Risk

Unveiling the Importance of Gut Microbiome Interactions

Global Agricultural Trade Impact on Water Distribution

Cells' Localized Translation Impact on Protein Function

Study Reveals Link Between Low Water Levels and Air Pollution Deaths

Tuning Valence Electron Ratios for Magnetic Properties

Study Reveals Gender Stereotypes Hinder Female Bosses

Insights into Exosome Dynamics: Breakthrough Research at Regensburg

Researchers Uncover Mechanism of Action of Protective Protein PspA

Artifacts Found in Mediterranean Sea Off Egypt Coast

Newly Discovered Crocodile-Relative Predator Fossil from Argentina

Orangutans' Balanced Diet: Lessons for Humans

Stockholm University Reveals Botulinum Toxin Blueprint

Developing Sustainable Blue Economies in Africa

New High-Energy Compound Revolutionizes Rocket Fuel

Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSS

Life Technology™ Technology News

Real-time technique directly images material failure in 3D to improve nuclear reactor safety and longevity

Mit Researchers Develop Real-Time 3D Monitoring for Nuclear Reactor

The '100,000-year data gap': Researcher explains why robots lag behind AI chatbots

Rapid Advancement of AI Chatbots: Personal Assistants to Therapists

Novel signal detector could significantly cut energy consumption in next-generation wireless communication networks

Novel CF-MIMO Signal Detector Cuts Energy Use by 58%

Research Team Boosts Heat-to-Electricity Efficiency

Tiny defects deliver big gains: Controlling oxygen vacancies boosts thermoelectric efficiency by 91%

Smarter navigation: AI helps robots stay on track without a map

AI-Powered Solution Enhances Robot Navigation

'Resident Evil' makers marvel at 'miracle' longevity

"Resident Evil: A Decade-Long Zombie Survival Saga"

Next-generation wireless systems can benefit from robust, low-overhead semantic communication framework

Advancements in Semantic Communications: Enhancing User Experience

YouTube TV subscribers may lose access to Fox content, including sports, due to contract dispute

Fox Channels at Risk on YouTube TV: Content Deal Uncertain

Smart packaging reveals product condition through color changes

University of Vaasa Research: Smart Packaging with Color-Changing Inks

EU Researchers Cultivate Fungi on Agricultural Waste for Greener Construction

From mushrooms to new architecture: The rise of living, self-healing buildings

Guanidinium Thiocyanate Boosts Perovskite Solar Cells

Simple salt could help unlock more powerful perovskite solar cells

Nrel Researchers Suggest Testing Perovskite Solar Modules Outdoors

Perovskite experts push for outdoor tests to validate durability of emerging solar technology

Starfish-inspired tube feet could help underwater robots get a grip

Soft Robotics in Autonomous Systems: Bioinspired Adhesion for Grippers

"Ice Batteries: Texas A&M Boosts Thermal Energy Storage"

Ice-cooled buildings could ease strain on power grid

Recycling lithium from old electric vehicle batteries could be done cheaply with new electrochemical process

Reusing Spent EV Batteries: Recycling for New Energy

Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSS

Tuesday, 1 October 2019

Researchers use drones to weigh whales

By measuring the body length, width and height of free-living southern right whales photographed by drones, researchers were able to develop a model that accurately calculated the body volume and mass of the whales.

Mob mentality rules jackdaw flocks

Jackdaws are more likely to join a mob to drive off predators if lots of their fellow birds are up for the fight, new research shows.

Russian alcohol consumption down 40%: WHO

Russia might still have a reputation as a nation of hard drinkers, but a report by the World Health Organization published Tuesday showed alcohol consumption has dropped by 43 percent since 2003.

Massive iceberg breaks off Antarctica—but it's normal

A more than 600-square-mile iceberg broke off Antarctica in recent days, but the event is part of a normal cycle and is not related to climate change, scientists say.

Twitter lets users sideline unwanted direct messages

Twitter on Monday said it is rolling out a filter that will hide away unwanted direct messages, providing a new tool to stymie abuse.

Air France to offset daily CO2 emissions by next year

French carrier Air France will offset the carbon dioxide emissions of its 500-odd daily internal flights by 2020 at a cost of millions of euros, the company's CEO has announced.

Iran state TV says country to launch 3 satellites this year

Iran's state TV says the country plans to send three satellites into orbit in the next three months despite a failed launch in August.

Juul stops funding San Francisco vaping measure

Juul Labs Inc. announced Monday that it will stop supporting a ballot measure to overturn an anti-vaping law in San Francisco, effectively killing the campaign.

'Relaxed' enzymes may be at the root of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease

Treatments have been hard to pinpoint for a rare neurological disease called Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT), in part because so many variations of the condition exist. So far, mutations on more than 90 genes have been positively linked to the disorder; a patient needs just one of those mutations for the disease to emerge.

Researchers' new method enables identifying a person through walls from candidate video footage, using only WiFi

Researchers in the lab of UC Santa Barbara professor Yasamin Mostofi have enabled, for the first time, determining whether the person behind a wall is the same individual who appears in given video footage, using only a pair of WiFi transceivers outside.

The rise of deal collectives that punish profits

Researchers from the University of San Diego and University of Arizona published a new paper in the Journal of Marketing, which examines the rise of deal collectives that exploit ill-designed deals that give away more than companies intended.

Climate change could pit species against one another as they shift ranges

Species have few good options when it comes to surviving climate change—they can genetically adapt to new conditions, shift their ranges, or both.

Researchers publish comprehensive review on respiratory effects of vaping

Four scientists from four leading universities in the United States conducted a comprehensive review of all e-cigarette/vaping peer-reviewed scientific papers that pertain to the lungs and published their findings today in the British Medical Journal.

Quantum material goes where none have gone before

Rice University physicist Qimiao Si began mapping quantum criticality more than a decade ago, and he's finally found a traveler that can traverse the final frontier.

Cracking how 'water bears' survive the extremes

Diminutive animals known as tardigrades appear to us as plump, squeezable toys, earning them irresistible nicknames such as "water bears" and "moss piglets."

Biologists track the invasion of herbicide-resistant weeds into southwestern Ontario

A team including evolutionary biologists from the University of Toronto (U of T) have identified the ways in which herbicide-resistant strains of an invasive weed named common waterhemp have emerged in fields of soy and corn in southwestern Ontario.

Monthly phone check-in may mean less depression for families of patients with dementia

A monthly, 40-minute phone call from a non-clinical professional may suppress or reverse the trajectory of depression so frequently experienced by family members caring for patients with dementia at home, according to a study led by researchers at UC San Francisco.

Expanding Medicaid means chronic health problems get found and health improves, study finds

Nearly one in three low-income people who enrolled in Michigan's expanded Medicaid program discovered they had a chronic illness that had never been diagnosed before, according to a new study.

Babies have fewer respiratory infections if they have well-connected bacterial networks

Microscopic bacteria, which are present in all humans, cluster together and form communities in different parts of the body, such as the gut, lungs, nose and mouth. Now, for the first time, researchers have shown the extent to which these microbial communities are linked to each other across the body, and how these networks are associated with susceptibility to respiratory infections in babies.

Study reveals falsification issues in higher education hiring processes

When concerns are expressed about distrust in science, they often focus on whether the public trusts research findings.

Arrows and smartphones: daily life of Amazon Tembe tribe

They hunt with bows and arrows, fish for piranhas and gather wild plants, while some watch soap operas on TV or check the internet on phones inside thatch-roof huts.

Child deaths in Africa could be prevented by family planning

Children under 5 years of age in Africa are much more likely to die than those in wealthy countries as a direct result of poor health outcomes linked to air pollution, unsafe water, lack of sanitation, an increased family size, and environmental degradation, according to the first continent-wide investigation of its kind.