ScienceDaily: Top News |
- 3-D printing with custom molecules creates low-cost mechanical sensor
- Psychedelic drug prevents asthma development in mice
- Serotonin-deficient brains more vulnerable to social stress
- Nano-antioxidants prove their potential
- Buckyballs offer environmental benefits
- Floods created home of Europe's biggest waterfall
- F-bombs notwithstanding, all languages skew toward happiness: Universal human bias for positive words
- Coral snake venom reveals a unique route to lethality
- Swimming reptiles make their mark in the Early Triassic
- Brain develops abnormally over lifespan of people who stutter
- Molecular Gastronomy: Understanding physical and chemical processes of cooking and eating
- Combine solar thermal energy with biomass gasification for natural gas substitute
- New evidence of global warming: Remote lakes in Ecuador not immune to climate change
- Electricity from biomass with carbon capture could make western US carbon-negative
- Amber fossil links earliest grasses, dinosaurs and fungus used to produce LSD
- Inherited gene variations tied to treatment-related hearing loss in cancer patients
- Origins of colorectal cancer tumor cells traced
- Sunlight and vitamin D levels higher for coastal populations
- World thunderstorm 'map' key to assessing climate change
- Controlling genes with light: Light-activated genes might be precisely controlled and targeted
- Earth's surprise inside: Geologists unlock mysteries of the planet's inner core
- Evidence for dark matter in the inner Milky Way
- Stellar partnership doomed to end in catastrophe
- Pick a card, any card: How magicians sway decision-making
- Both Liberals, Conservatives Can Have Science Bias
- Electrochromic polymers create broad color palette for sunglasses, windows
- What autism can teach us about brain cancer: Both disorders involve faults in same protein
- Energy drinks significantly increase hyperactivity in schoolchildren, study finds
- The Sun’s activity in the 18th century was similar to that now
- Do clothes make the doctor? Patient perceptions of physicians based on attire
- 3-D vaccine spontaneously assembles to pack a powerful punch against cancer, infectious diseases
- Can't sing? Do it more often
- Frozen semen from lions are capable to produce embryos
- An Internet of Things reality check
- Multiple sclerosis: pathological progression of disease documented
- Scientists identify a new population of regulatory T-cells
- Awkward positions, distractions and fatigue may trigger low back pain
- Immune Biomarkers Help Predict Early Death, Complications in HIV Patients with TB
- Forcing wounds to close
- In the quantum world, the future affects the past: Hindsight and foresight together more accurately 'predict' a quantum system’s state
- Preemies may have psychiatric problems as adults
- A one-two punch against ovarian cancer
- Pregnant woman with placenta accreta saved
- Consumer preferences and the power of scarcity
- Critical molecule in fight against lung infection
- Drug combinations a good approach for infectious fungus, research shows
- Nanovectors combine cancer imaging and therapy
- Would federal lands takeover in Utah harm the public? Experts think so
3-D printing with custom molecules creates low-cost mechanical sensor Posted: 09 Feb 2015 02:13 PM PST Imagine printing out molecules that can respond to their surroundings. Chemists teamed up with engineers who are using 3-D printers to create 3-D printed objects with new capabilities. Scientists created a bone-shaped plastic tab that turns purple under stretching, offering an easy way to record the force on an object. |
Psychedelic drug prevents asthma development in mice Posted: 09 Feb 2015 02:13 PM PST |
Serotonin-deficient brains more vulnerable to social stress Posted: 09 Feb 2015 02:13 PM PST Mice deficient in serotonin -- a crucial brain chemical implicated in clinical depression -- are more vulnerable than their normal littermates to social stressors, according to a new study. Following exposure to stress, serotonin-deficient mice did not respond to the standard antidepressant Prozac. The results point to new strategies to help alleviate treatment-resistant depression. |
Nano-antioxidants prove their potential Posted: 09 Feb 2015 02:13 PM PST |
Buckyballs offer environmental benefits Posted: 09 Feb 2015 01:15 PM PST |
Floods created home of Europe's biggest waterfall Posted: 09 Feb 2015 01:14 PM PST |
Posted: 09 Feb 2015 01:11 PM PST Arabic movie subtitles, Korean tweets, Russian novels, Chinese websites, English lyrics, and even the war-torn pages of the New York Times -- research examining billions of words, shows that these sources -- and all human language -- skews toward the use of happy words. This Big Data study confirms the 1969 Pollyanna Hypothesis that there is a universal human tendency to "look on and talk about the bright side of life." |
Coral snake venom reveals a unique route to lethality Posted: 09 Feb 2015 01:11 PM PST For more than a decade, a vial of rare snake venom refused to give up its secret formula for lethality; its toxins had no effect on the proteins that most venoms target. Finally, an international team of researchers figured out its recipe: a toxin that permanently activates a crucial type of nerve cell protein, preventing the cells from resetting and causing deadly seizures in prey. |
Swimming reptiles make their mark in the Early Triassic Posted: 09 Feb 2015 11:35 AM PST Vertebrate tracks provide valuable information about animal behavior and environments. Swim tracks are a unique type of vertebrate track because they are produced underwater by buoyant trackmakers, and specific factors are required for their production and subsequent preservation. Early Triassic deposits contain the highest number of fossil swim track occurrences worldwide compared to other epochs, and this number becomes even greater when epoch duration and rock outcrop area are taken into account. |
Brain develops abnormally over lifespan of people who stutter Posted: 09 Feb 2015 11:34 AM PST |
Molecular Gastronomy: Understanding physical and chemical processes of cooking and eating Posted: 09 Feb 2015 11:24 AM PST An expert in biophysics, epigenetics and food science is working to gain a deeper understanding of genome compaction within the cells in our bodies and the way it influences gene expression. "Molecular gastronomy," is dedicated to the study of the physical and chemical processes involved in cooking and eating. |
Combine solar thermal energy with biomass gasification for natural gas substitute Posted: 09 Feb 2015 10:07 AM PST |
New evidence of global warming: Remote lakes in Ecuador not immune to climate change Posted: 09 Feb 2015 10:07 AM PST |
Electricity from biomass with carbon capture could make western US carbon-negative Posted: 09 Feb 2015 10:07 AM PST Biomass conversion to electricity combined with technologies for capturing and storing carbon, which should become viable within 35 years, could result in a carbon-negative power grid in the western US by 2050. That prediction comes from an analysis of various fuel scenarios. Bioenergy with carbon capture and sequestration may be a better use of plant feedstocks than making biofuels. |
Amber fossil links earliest grasses, dinosaurs and fungus used to produce LSD Posted: 09 Feb 2015 10:07 AM PST A perfectly preserved amber fossil from Myanmar has been found that provides evidence of the earliest grass specimen ever discovered -- about 100 million years old -- and even then it was topped by a fungus similar to ergot, a hallucinogen which for eons has been intertwined with animals and humans. Among other things, it gave us the psychedelic drug LSD. |
Inherited gene variations tied to treatment-related hearing loss in cancer patients Posted: 09 Feb 2015 10:06 AM PST |
Origins of colorectal cancer tumor cells traced Posted: 09 Feb 2015 09:28 AM PST |
Sunlight and vitamin D levels higher for coastal populations Posted: 09 Feb 2015 09:28 AM PST People living close to the coast in England have higher vitamin D levels than inland dwellers. Exposure to sunlight is a crucial factor in vitamin D production and the research has also found that English coasts tend to see a greater amount of sunlight across the year when compared with inland areas. The study is the first time that data on sunlight and vitamin D levels have been linked to detailed geographical information. |
World thunderstorm 'map' key to assessing climate change Posted: 09 Feb 2015 08:32 AM PST |
Controlling genes with light: Light-activated genes might be precisely controlled and targeted Posted: 09 Feb 2015 08:32 AM PST Researchers have demonstrated a new way to activate genes with light, allowing precisely controlled and targeted genetic studies and applications. The method might be used to activate genes in a specific location or pattern, allowing more precise study of gene function, or to create complex systems for growing tissue or new therapies. |
Earth's surprise inside: Geologists unlock mysteries of the planet's inner core Posted: 09 Feb 2015 08:32 AM PST Seismic waves are helping scientists to plumb the world's deepest mystery: the planet's inner core. Thanks to a novel application of earthquake-reading technology, researchers have found that the Earth's inner core has an inner core of its own, which has surprising properties that could reveal information about our planet. |
Evidence for dark matter in the inner Milky Way Posted: 09 Feb 2015 08:30 AM PST A new study is providing evidence for the presence of dark matter in the innermost part of the Milky Way, including in our own cosmic neighborhood and the Earth's location. The study demonstrates that large amounts of dark matter exist around us, and also between us and the Galactic center. The result constitutes a fundamental step forward in the quest for the nature of dark matter. |
Stellar partnership doomed to end in catastrophe Posted: 09 Feb 2015 08:30 AM PST Astronomers have identified two surprisingly massive stars at the heart of the planetary nebula Henize 2-428. As they orbit each other the two stars are expected to slowly get closer and closer, and when they merge, about 700 million years from now, they will contain enough material to ignite a vast supernova explosion. |
Pick a card, any card: How magicians sway decision-making Posted: 09 Feb 2015 08:30 AM PST |
Both Liberals, Conservatives Can Have Science Bias Posted: 09 Feb 2015 08:30 AM PST |
Electrochromic polymers create broad color palette for sunglasses, windows Posted: 09 Feb 2015 06:50 AM PST Researchers have created a broad color palette of electrochromic polymers, materials that can be used for sunglasses, window tinting and other applications that rely on electrical current to produce color changes. The materials could allow sunglasses that change from clear to colored in seconds, at the push of a button. |
What autism can teach us about brain cancer: Both disorders involve faults in same protein Posted: 09 Feb 2015 06:50 AM PST Applying lessons learned from autism to brain cancer, researchers have discovered why elevated levels of the protein NHE9 add to the lethality of the most common and aggressive form of brain cancer, glioblastoma. Their discovery suggests that drugs designed to target NHE9 could help to successfully fight the deadly disease. |
Energy drinks significantly increase hyperactivity in schoolchildren, study finds Posted: 09 Feb 2015 06:50 AM PST |
The Sun’s activity in the 18th century was similar to that now Posted: 09 Feb 2015 06:49 AM PST Counting sunspots over time helps in knowing the activity of our star but the two indices used by scientists disagree on dates prior to 1885. Now an international team of researchers has tried to standardize the historical results and has discovered that, contrary to what one may think, the solar activity of our times is very similar to that of other times, such as the Enlightenment. Scientists have been counting sunspots since 1610 with small telescopes. Thus it has been verified that the Sun's activity increases every eleven years, according to the interval in the growth of the number of darker and colder spots in comparison with the rest of its surface. The more spots that appear, the more luminous the surrounding areas are, and our star shines brighter. |
Do clothes make the doctor? Patient perceptions of physicians based on attire Posted: 09 Feb 2015 06:48 AM PST What should doctors wear? And how does something as simple as their choice of a suit, scrubs or slacks influence how patients view them? A new analysis takes a comprehensive look – and finds that the answer isn't as simple as you might think. It also finds that doctors don't seem to be getting a lot of guidance on how to dress – despite the influence their attire can have on patients' perceptions. |
3-D vaccine spontaneously assembles to pack a powerful punch against cancer, infectious diseases Posted: 09 Feb 2015 06:48 AM PST Researchers have developed a novel 3-D vaccine that could provide a more effective way to harness the immune system to fight cancer as well as infectious diseases. The vaccine spontaneously assembles into a scaffold once injected under the skin and is capable of recruiting, housing, and manipulating immune cells to generate a powerful immune response. The vaccine was recently found to be effective in delaying tumor growth in mice. |
Posted: 09 Feb 2015 05:36 AM PST If you've ever been told that you're 'tone deaf' or 'can't carry a tune,' don't give up. New research suggests that singing accurately is not so much a talent as a learned skill that can decline over time if not used. The ability to sing on key may have more in common with the kind of practice that goes into playing an instrument than people realize, according to experts. |
Frozen semen from lions are capable to produce embryos Posted: 09 Feb 2015 05:35 AM PST Scientists successfully produced embryos from African lions via assisted reproduction. What is genuinely new is the fact that they used immature eggs that were retrieved from African lionesses. After artificial maturation these eggs were injected with lions' sperm, previously stored in a cryobank. To the surprise of the scientists the development of the lion embryos was retarded in comparison to similar embryos from domestic cats. |
An Internet of Things reality check Posted: 09 Feb 2015 05:35 AM PST Connecting different kinds of devices, not just computers and communications devices, to the Internet could lead to new ways of working with a wide range of machinery, sensors, domestic and other appliances. Researchers suggest that we are on the verge of a another technological revolution but practicalities and legal obstacles may stymie the development of the so-called Internet of Things if they are not addressed quickly. |
Multiple sclerosis: pathological progression of disease documented Posted: 09 Feb 2015 05:35 AM PST |
Scientists identify a new population of regulatory T-cells Posted: 09 Feb 2015 05:35 AM PST |
Awkward positions, distractions and fatigue may trigger low back pain Posted: 09 Feb 2015 05:35 AM PST New research reveals the physical and psychosocial factors that significantly increase the risk of low back pain onset. In fact results show that being engaged in manual tasks involving awkward positions will increase the risk of low back pain by eight times. Those who are distracted during activities or fatigued also significantly increase their risk of acute low back pain. |
Immune Biomarkers Help Predict Early Death, Complications in HIV Patients with TB Posted: 09 Feb 2015 05:30 AM PST |
Posted: 09 Feb 2015 05:30 AM PST Skin not only provides an essential protective barrier against foreign materials and pathogens, but it also helps the body retain various fluids and electrolytes. When this barrier is damaged, the consequences can be devastating. Ulcers, bleeding and bacterial infections may result and the chances of these occurring increases the longer wounds remain open. Scientists have now revealed the mechanical forces that drive epithelial wound healing in the absence of cell supporting environment. |
Posted: 09 Feb 2015 05:30 AM PST In the quantum world, the future predicts the past. Playing a guessing game with a superconducting circuit called a qubit, a physicist has discovered a way to narrow the odds of correctly guessing the state of a two-state system. By combining information about the qubit's evolution after a target time with information about its evolution up to that time, the lab was able to narrow the odds from 50-50 to 90-10. |
Preemies may have psychiatric problems as adults Posted: 09 Feb 2015 05:30 AM PST |
A one-two punch against ovarian cancer Posted: 09 Feb 2015 05:30 AM PST |
Pregnant woman with placenta accreta saved Posted: 06 Feb 2015 02:47 PM PST |
Consumer preferences and the power of scarcity Posted: 06 Feb 2015 11:52 AM PST |
Critical molecule in fight against lung infection Posted: 06 Feb 2015 11:52 AM PST |
Drug combinations a good approach for infectious fungus, research shows Posted: 06 Feb 2015 09:53 AM PST Researchers have discovered that Candida albicans -- a leading cause of potentially fatal hospital-acquired infections -- rarely develops resistance to combination drug therapy and, when it becomes resistant, it also becomes less dangerous.The team may also have found a new way to eliminate Candida albicans in humans. |
Nanovectors combine cancer imaging and therapy Posted: 06 Feb 2015 09:51 AM PST Researchers have designed and developed hybrid gold-silica nanoparticles, which are turning out to be genuine therapeutic "Swiss Army knives". Tested in mice and on cultured human cells, they make it possible to combine two forms of tumor treatment and three imaging techniques. They notably have a greater drug loading and delivery capacity than carriers currently on the market, which opens interesting perspectives for cancer research. |
Would federal lands takeover in Utah harm the public? Experts think so Posted: 06 Feb 2015 09:51 AM PST |
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