ScienceDaily: Top News |
- Ads effective even in the midst of multitasking, studies find
- NOAA's DSCOVR going to a 'far out' orbit
- Pilotless aircraft will play critical roles in precision agriculture
- Relationship critical for how cells ingest matter
- Hospitals helping violence victims could save millions
- Researchers use oxides to flip graphene conductivity
- Beating the clock: researchers develop new treatment for rabies
- Antiangiogenesis drugs could make major improvement in tuberculosis treatment
- How a cancer-causing virus blocks human immune response
- 3D enzyme model provides new tool for anti-inflammatory drug development
- Chronic insomniacs may face increased risk of hypertension
- New breast cancer risk prediction model more accurate than current model
- High cholesterol in 30s, 40s, increases later risk of heart disease
- Researchers image, measure tubulin transport in cilia
- Engineering self-assembling amyloid fibers
- Phase 1 clinical trial of CUDC-101 'throws kitchen sink' at head and neck cancer
- Students master math through movement using Kinect for Windows
- Gigantic ring system around J1407b much larger, heavier than Saturn's
- Girls lead boys in academic achievement globally
- Collagen: Powerful workout with water
- Good bedtime habits equal better sleep for kids
- Electronic circuits with reconfigurable pathways closer to reality
- Scientists discover a new blood platelet formation mechanism
- Higher dementia risk linked to more use of common drugs
- Possible therapeutic target for common, but mysterious brain blood vessel disorder
- Largest-ever autism genome study finds most siblings have different autism-risk genes
- New strategy to combat 'undruggable' cancer molecule
- New Canadian guideline to help prevent, manage adult obesity
- Nocturnal leg cramps more common in summer
- Geothermal microbial reservoirs: Staircase fractures in microbialites and travertines
- Got bees? Got vitamin A? Got malaria? Loss of pollinators increases risk of malnutrition, disease
- Lung cancer: Study finds potential new drug target
- Metabolic mystery solved, lending insight into Lafora disease
- Dental experts show why wound healing is impaired in diabetics
- Is head CT overused in emergency departments?
- Brain study sheds light on how children with autism process social play
- Majority of homeless adults with mental illness have high rates of cognitive deficits
- Cochlear implant users can hear, feel the beat in music
- Partly wrong with a chance of being right: Weather forecast
- Researchers identify materials to improve biofuel, petroleum processing
- Swarm of microprobes to head for Jupiter
- Climate models disagree on why temperature 'wiggles' occur
- Would you tell your manager you had a mental health problem?
- Meteosat-7 becomes EUMETSAT's longest-serving operational satellite
- How tropical parasite hijacks cells
- In infants, pain from vaccinations shows up in brain activity
- New mechanism to aid cells under stress identified
- Nanoshuttle wear and tear: It’s the mileage, not the age
- Brain circuit that regulates thirst identified
- Hilltop panorama marks Mars rover's 11th anniversary
- Helicopter could be 'scout' for Mars rovers
- Researchers make magnetic graphene
- Cause for decline of Missouri River pallid sturgeon identified
- Frogs prove ideal models for studying developmental timing
- Visualizing interacting electrons in a molecule
- Chemists find a way to unboil egg whites: Ability to quickly restore molecular proteins could slash biotechnology costs
- Mindfulness-based program in schools making a positive impact, study shows
- Towards a scientific process freed from systemic bias
- Mother's stress hormone levels may affect fetal growth and long term health of child
- How cancer turns good cells to the dark side
Ads effective even in the midst of multitasking, studies find Posted: 26 Jan 2015 02:06 PM PST Those video ads playing in the corner of your computer screen, in the midst of multitasking, may have more impact than you realize. They may be as effective as ads you're really watching, says one expert. It depends on how you perceive and process media content -- whether your processing 'style' is to focus more on one thing or to take it all in. It also may depend on your mood. |
NOAA's DSCOVR going to a 'far out' orbit Posted: 26 Jan 2015 02:06 PM PST |
Pilotless aircraft will play critical roles in precision agriculture Posted: 26 Jan 2015 02:05 PM PST |
Relationship critical for how cells ingest matter Posted: 26 Jan 2015 01:47 PM PST To survive and fulfill their biological functions, cells need to take in material from their environment. In this process, proteins within the cell pull inward on its membrane, forming a pit that eventually encapsulates the material in a bubble called a vesicle. Researchers have now revealed a relationship that governs this process, known as endocytosis. |
Hospitals helping violence victims could save millions Posted: 26 Jan 2015 01:46 PM PST In the first systematic look at the economic outcomes of hospital-based violence intervention, researchers demonstrate that, in addition to transforming victims' lives, these programs may indeed save a significant amount of money compared to non-intervention, in various sectors including health care and criminal justice, up to about $4 million to serve 90 clients in a 5-year period. |
Researchers use oxides to flip graphene conductivity Posted: 26 Jan 2015 01:46 PM PST |
Beating the clock: researchers develop new treatment for rabies Posted: 26 Jan 2015 01:46 PM PST Successfully treating rabies can be a race against the clock. Those who suffer a bite from a rabid animal have a brief window of time to seek medical help before the virus takes root in the central nervous system, at which point the disease is almost invariably fatal. Now, researchers have successfully tested a treatment on mice that cures the disease even after the virus has spread to the brain. |
Antiangiogenesis drugs could make major improvement in tuberculosis treatment Posted: 26 Jan 2015 01:46 PM PST |
How a cancer-causing virus blocks human immune response Posted: 26 Jan 2015 01:46 PM PST |
3D enzyme model provides new tool for anti-inflammatory drug development Posted: 26 Jan 2015 01:46 PM PST |
Chronic insomniacs may face increased risk of hypertension Posted: 26 Jan 2015 01:17 PM PST |
New breast cancer risk prediction model more accurate than current model Posted: 26 Jan 2015 01:17 PM PST |
High cholesterol in 30s, 40s, increases later risk of heart disease Posted: 26 Jan 2015 01:17 PM PST Most young adults might assume they have years before needing to worry about their cholesterol. But new findings suggest that even slightly high cholesterol levels in otherwise healthy adults between the ages of 35 and 55 can have long-term impacts on their heart health, with every decade of high cholesterol increasing their chances of heart disease by 39 percent. |
Researchers image, measure tubulin transport in cilia Posted: 26 Jan 2015 12:05 PM PST The mechanism behind tubulin transport and its assembly into cilia have been observed in a new study, including the first video imagery of the process. "Cilia are found throughout the body, so defects in cilia formation affect cells that line airways, brain ventricles or the reproductive track," said the study's lead author. |
Engineering self-assembling amyloid fibers Posted: 26 Jan 2015 12:05 PM PST Nature has many examples of self-assembly, and bioengineers are interested in copying these systems to create useful new materials or devices. Amyloid proteins, for example, can self-assemble into the tangled plaques associated with Alzheimer's disease -- but can also form very useful materials, such as spider silk, or biofilms around living cells. Researchers have now come up with methods to manipulate natural proteins so that they self-assemble into amyloid fibrils. |
Phase 1 clinical trial of CUDC-101 'throws kitchen sink' at head and neck cancer Posted: 26 Jan 2015 10:52 AM PST |
Students master math through movement using Kinect for Windows Posted: 26 Jan 2015 10:52 AM PST |
Gigantic ring system around J1407b much larger, heavier than Saturn's Posted: 26 Jan 2015 10:52 AM PST |
Girls lead boys in academic achievement globally Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:50 AM PST Considerable attention has been paid to how boys' educational achievements in science and math compare to girls' accomplishments in those areas, often leading to the assumption that boys outperform girls in these areas. Now, using international data, researchers have determined that girls outperform boys in educational achievement in 70 percent of the countries they studied -- regardless of the level of gender, political, economic or social equality. |
Collagen: Powerful workout with water Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:50 AM PST |
Good bedtime habits equal better sleep for kids Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:49 AM PST |
Electronic circuits with reconfigurable pathways closer to reality Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:49 AM PST |
Scientists discover a new blood platelet formation mechanism Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:47 AM PST A new cellular mechanism, called the endocycle, encourages the formation of platelets, the cells needed to coagulate blood. In mouse models, endocycles can help to control thrombocytopenia, a disease caused by a deficit in platelet production that causes heavy haemorrhaging. The new process could act as an alternative source of platelets when the normal mechanisms fail. |
Higher dementia risk linked to more use of common drugs Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:47 AM PST A large study links a significantly increased risk for developing dementia, including Alzheimer's disease, to taking commonly used medications with anticholinergic effects at higher doses or for a longer time. Many older people take these medications, which include nonprescription diphenhydramine (Benadryl). |
Possible therapeutic target for common, but mysterious brain blood vessel disorder Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:46 AM PST Tens of millions of people worldwide have abnormal, leak-prone sproutings of blood vessels in the brain called cerebral cavernous malformations. These abnormal growths can lead to seizures, strokes, and hemorrhages, yet their precise molecular cause has never been determined. Now, cardiovascular scientists have studied this pathway in heart development to discover an important set of molecular signals, triggered by CCM-linked gene defects, that potentially could be targeted to treat the disorder. |
Largest-ever autism genome study finds most siblings have different autism-risk genes Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:46 AM PST The largest-ever autism genome study reveals that the disorder's genetic underpinnings are more complex than previously thought: Most siblings who have autism have different autism-linked genes. The study's data is part of the historic first upload of approximately 1,000 autism genomes to the Autism Speaks MSSNG portal in Google Cloud Platform. The data will be openly available for global research in order to speed understanding of autism and the development of individualized treatments. |
New strategy to combat 'undruggable' cancer molecule Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:46 AM PST Three of the four most fatal cancers are caused by a protein known as Ras; either because it mutates or simply because it ends up in the wrong place at the wrong time. Ras has proven an elusive target for scientist trying to cure the deadly diseases. Now a group of researchers has discovered an unknown way for RAS to find its proper place in the cell. Their discovery may lead to completely novel approaches to curing cancer. |
New Canadian guideline to help prevent, manage adult obesity Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:45 AM PST A new Canadian guideline to help prevent and manage obesity in adult patients recommends body mass index measurement for both prevention and management and structured behavioral changes to help those who are overweight or obese to lose weight. The guideline is aimed at physicians and health care providers. |
Nocturnal leg cramps more common in summer Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:45 AM PST Painful nocturnal leg cramps are about twice as common during summer than in winter, found a new study. Because quinine is commonly prescribed to treat leg cramps, researchers looked at the number of new quinine prescriptions for adults over 50 years of age in British Columbia, Canada, from Dec. 1, 2001 to Oct. 31, 2007. They found that prescriptions for quinine peaked in British Columbia in July as did Google searches for leg cramps. |
Geothermal microbial reservoirs: Staircase fractures in microbialites and travertines Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:45 AM PST Geologists have come up with a new model of the development of fractures showing a stairway trajectory, commonly occurring in finely laminated rock, such microbialites and travertines. These fractures strongly enhance permeability by connecting several highly porous zones enveloped in tight impermeable levels. Understanding and predicting this fracture pattern geometry, distribution, and interconnection is valuable not only for locating water supplies, but also for oil, gas, and geothermal exploration. |
Got bees? Got vitamin A? Got malaria? Loss of pollinators increases risk of malnutrition, disease Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:44 AM PST More than half the people in some developing countries could become newly at risk for malnutrition if crop-pollinating animals -- like bees -- continue to decline, experts say. Despite popular reports that pollinators are crucial for human nutritional health, no scientific studies have actually tested this claim -- until now. |
Lung cancer: Study finds potential new drug target Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:44 AM PST Targeting a key enzyme and its associated metabolic programming may lead to novel drug development to treat lung cancer, researchers report. Cancer cells undergo metabolic alterations to meet the increased energy demands that support their excess growth and survival. The Krebs cycle in the mitochondria of cells is used to supply both energy and building materials for cell growth. Two mitochondrial enzymes -- pyruvate carboxylase (PC) and glutaminase replenish carbon to the Krebs cycle. |
Metabolic mystery solved, lending insight into Lafora disease Posted: 26 Jan 2015 09:44 AM PST The metabolic function of the essential enzyme laforin has been identified by researchers, which opens new pathways to treating the deadly Lafora's disease. Lafora disease occurs as a result of the laforin gene being mutated. Mutations in the gene encoding the laforin protein result in the accumulation aberrant glycogen-like accumulations called Lafora bodies that resemble plant starch more than human glycogen. |
Dental experts show why wound healing is impaired in diabetics Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:24 AM PST |
Is head CT overused in emergency departments? Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:24 AM PST |
Brain study sheds light on how children with autism process social play Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:24 AM PST |
Majority of homeless adults with mental illness have high rates of cognitive deficits Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:24 AM PST Nearly three-quarters of homeless adults with mental illness in Canada show evidence of cognitive deficits, such as difficulties with problem solving, learning and memory, new research has found. The study-believed to be the largest of its kind -assessed neurocognitive functioning indicators such as mental processing speed, verbal learning and memory in 1,500 homeless adults in five Canadian cities. |
Cochlear implant users can hear, feel the beat in music Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:24 AM PST People who use cochlear implants for profound hearing loss do respond to certain aspects of music, contrary to common beliefs and limited scientific research, says a research team. The scientists say exposure to the beat in music, such as drums, can improve the emotional and social quality-of-life of cochlear implant users and may even help improve their understanding and use of spoken language. |
Partly wrong with a chance of being right: Weather forecast Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:23 AM PST The inaccuracy of weather forecasts has personal implications for people around the world. New research from Tel Aviv University prioritizes, for the first time, the reasons for forecasting failures across different regions of the planet, quantifying the causes -- man-made and natural -- for weather prediction inaccuracies. |
Researchers identify materials to improve biofuel, petroleum processing Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:23 AM PST |
Swarm of microprobes to head for Jupiter Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:23 AM PST A swarm of tiny probes each with a different sensor could be fired into the clouds of Jupiter and grab data as they fall before burning up in the gas giant planet's atmosphere. The probes would last an estimated 15 minutes according to planetary scientists. Transmitting 20 megabits of data over 15 minutes would be sufficient to allows scientists to get a picture of a large part of the atmosphere of the planet. |
Climate models disagree on why temperature 'wiggles' occur Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:23 AM PST Most climate models likely underestimate the degree of decade-to-decade variability occurring in mean surface temperatures as Earth's atmosphere warms. They also provide inconsistent explanations of why these wiggles occur in the first place, a new study finds. These inconsistencies may undermine the models' reliability for projecting the short-term pace and extent of future warming, and indicate that we shouldn't over-interpret recent temperature trends. The study analyzed 34 models used in the most recent IPCC assessment report. |
Would you tell your manager you had a mental health problem? Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:23 AM PST Although nearly four in 10 workers wouldn't tell their manager if they had a mental health problem, half said that if they knew about a coworker's illness, they would desire to help, a new survey shows. The survey reveals that workers have both negative and supportive attitudes about mental health in the workplace. |
Meteosat-7 becomes EUMETSAT's longest-serving operational satellite Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:22 AM PST |
How tropical parasite hijacks cells Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:22 AM PST |
In infants, pain from vaccinations shows up in brain activity Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:21 AM PST |
New mechanism to aid cells under stress identified Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:21 AM PST New details in a cellular mechanism that serves as a defense against stress have been identified by a team of biologists. The findings potentially offer insights into tumor progression and neurodegenerative diseases, such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's -- the cell's inability to respond to stress is a major cause of these diseases. |
Nanoshuttle wear and tear: It’s the mileage, not the age Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:20 AM PST As nanomachine design advances, researchers are moving from wondering if the nanomachine works to how long it will work -- an important question as there are so many potential applications, e.g., for medical uses including drug delivery and early diagnosis. Scientists observed a molecular shuttle powered by kinesin motor proteins and found it to degrade when operating, marking the first time degradation has been studied in detail in an active, autonomous nanomachine. |
Brain circuit that regulates thirst identified Posted: 26 Jan 2015 08:20 AM PST |
Hilltop panorama marks Mars rover's 11th anniversary Posted: 26 Jan 2015 07:53 AM PST |
Helicopter could be 'scout' for Mars rovers Posted: 26 Jan 2015 07:51 AM PST Getting around on Mars is tricky business. Each NASA rover has delivered a wealth of information about the history and composition of the Red Planet, but a rover's vision is limited by the view of onboard cameras, and images from spacecraft orbiting Mars are the only other clues to where to drive it. To have a better sense of where to go and what's worth studying on Mars, it could be useful to have a low-flying scout. |
Researchers make magnetic graphene Posted: 26 Jan 2015 06:59 AM PST Graphene has many desirable properties. Magnetism alas is not one of them. Magnetism can be induced in graphene by doping it with magnetic impurities, but this tends to disrupt graphene's electronic properties. Now physicists have found a way to induce magnetism in graphene while also preserving graphene's electronic properties. They have accomplished this by bringing a graphene sheet very close to a magnetic insulator -- an electrical insulator with magnetic properties. |
Cause for decline of Missouri River pallid sturgeon identified Posted: 26 Jan 2015 06:59 AM PST Oxygen-depleted dead zones between dams in the upper Missouri River have been directly linked with the failure of endangered pallid sturgeon embryos to survive, according to a study. The study is the first to make a direct link among dam-induced changes in riverine sediment transport, the subsequent effects of those changes on reduced oxygen levels and the survival of an endangered species, the pallid sturgeon. |
Frogs prove ideal models for studying developmental timing Posted: 26 Jan 2015 06:59 AM PST Thyroid hormone receptor alpha plays an important role in hind limb development in frogs, scientists have found. With new gene mutation technology, researchers were able to successfully mutate the gene in the tadpole models, discovering the value of tadpoles as ideal models for studying the role of hormones in development because of the timely metamorphosis from tadpole to juvenile frog, and because that transition is completely dependent on hormones. |
Visualizing interacting electrons in a molecule Posted: 26 Jan 2015 06:59 AM PST Scientists have succeeded in directly imaging how electrons interact within a single molecule. Understanding this kind of electronic effects in organic molecules is crucial for their use in optoelectronic applications, for example in organic light-emitting diodes, organic field-effect transistors and solar cells. |
Posted: 26 Jan 2015 06:59 AM PST |
Mindfulness-based program in schools making a positive impact, study shows Posted: 26 Jan 2015 06:59 AM PST |
Towards a scientific process freed from systemic bias Posted: 26 Jan 2015 06:59 AM PST |
Mother's stress hormone levels may affect fetal growth and long term health of child Posted: 26 Jan 2015 06:57 AM PST |
How cancer turns good cells to the dark side Posted: 26 Jan 2015 06:57 AM PST |
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