
Cassini Data Show Ice and Rock Mixture Inside Saturn's Moon Titan
By precisely tracking NASA's
Cassini spacecraft on its low
swoops over Saturn's moon Titan,
scientists have determined the
distribution of materials in the
moon's interior. The subtle
... > full story
- more on:

Scientists Discover 600 Million-Year-Old Origins of Vision
By studying the hydra, a member of
an ancient group of sea creatures
that is still flourishing,
scientists have made a discovery
in understanding the origins of
human vision. ... > full story
- more on:

Aquatic 'Dead Zones' Contributing to Climate Change
The increased frequency and
intensity of oxygen-deprived "dead
zones" along the world's coasts
can negatively impact
environmental conditions in far
more than local waters. Scientists
... > full story
- more on:

New Study Debunks Myths About Vulnerability of Amazon Rain Forests to Drought
A new study has concluded that
Amazon rain forests were
remarkably unaffected in the face
of once-in-a-century drought in
2005, neither dying nor thriving,
... > full story
- more on:

Shocking Recipe for Making Killer Electrons
Take a bunch of fast-moving
electrons, place them in orbit and
then hit them with the shock waves
from a solar storm. What do you
get? Killer electrons. That's the
shocking recipe revealed by ESA's
Cluster mission. ... > full story
- more on:

Scientists Solve Puzzle of Chickens That Are Half Male and Half Female
A puzzle that has baffled
scientists for centuries -- why
some birds appear to be male on
one side of the body and female on
the other -- has been solved by
researchers. The research, which
... > full story
- more on:

Traces of the Past: Computer Algorithm Able to 'Read' Memories
Computer programs have been able
to predict which of three short
films a person is thinking about,
just by looking at their brain
activity. The research provides
further insight into how our
... > full story
- more on:

Mysterious Cosmic 'Dark Flow' Tracked Deeper Into Universe
Distant galaxy clusters
mysteriously stream at a million
miles per hour along a path
roughly centered on the southern
constellations Centaurus and
Hydra. A new study tracks this
... > full story
- more on:

Development of More Muscular Trout Could Boost Commercial Aquaculture
A 10-year effort by a scientist to
develop transgenic rainbow trout
with enhanced muscle growth has
yielded fish with what have been
described as six-pack abs and
muscular shoulders that could
... > full story
- more on:

Sequencing Genome of Entire Family Reveals Parents Give Kids Fewer Gene Mutations Than Was Thought
Researchers have sequenced for the
first time the entire genome of a
family, enabling them to
accurately estimate the average
rate at which parents pass genetic
... > full story
- more on:
Roll over headlines to view top news summaries:
- Ice and Rock Mix Inside Saturn's Titan
- 600 Million-Year-Old Origins of Vision
- Aquatic 'Dead Zones' Add to Climate Change
- Myths About Amazon Rain Forests Debunked
- Shocking Recipe for Making Killer Electrons
- Why Some Chickens Are Half Male, Half Female
- Computer Algorithm Able to 'Read' Memories
- Mysterious Cosmic 'Dark Flow' Tracked
- Fish Developed With 'Six-Pack Abs'
- Family's Genome: Fewer Mutations Passed On
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11 am EST
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Seaweed Extract May Hold Promise for Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma Treatment
March 12, 2010 Seaweed extract may eventually emerge as a lymphoma treatment, according to laboratory research. Seaweeds containing fucoidan, a sulfated polysaccharide similar to heparin in chemical structure, have ... > full story -
How Electricity Moves Through Cells: Finding Has Implications for Improving Energy Efficiency
March 12, 2010 Researchers have created a molecular image of a system that moves electrons between proteins in cells. The achievement is a breakthrough for biology and could provide insights to minimize energy loss ... > full story -
Research Points to Way to Improve Heart Treatment
March 12, 2010 Current drugs used to treat heart failure and irregular heartbeat have limited effectiveness and have side effects. New basic science findings suggest a way that treatments could potentially be ... > full story -
More Maize Ethanol May Boost Greenhouse Gas Emissions
March 12, 2010 Mandated increases in the production of maize-derived ethanol will lead to land-use changes that boost carbon dioxide emissions enough to make the fuel a worse environmental option than burning ... > full story -
After a Fight With a Partner, Brain Activity Predicts Emotional Resiliency
March 12, 2010 Neural activity in the lateral prefrontal cortex can predict whether an individual will still be upset on the day after a conflict with his or her partner, according to new research. The findings ... > full story
8 am EST
-
Immune Cells That Fight Parasites May Promote Allergies and Asthma
March 12, 2010 Millions of people in both the developing and developed world may benefit from new immune-system research findings that identify a cell population that fights off parasitic infections but also causes ... > full story -
Why Female Moths Are Big and Beautiful
March 12, 2010 In most animal species, males and females show obvious differences in body size. But how can this be, given that both sexes share the same genes governing their growth? Entomologists studied this ... > full story -
Finding Charcot-Marie-Tooth Gene Ends a Quest and Begins New Era of Personalized Genomic Medicine
March 12, 2010 Baylor College of Medicine's Dr. James Lupski came to the end of a personal quest earlier this year when the Baylor Human Genome Sequencing Center sequenced his complete genome and identified the ... > full story -
Research Streamlines Data Processing to Solve Problems More Efficiently
March 12, 2010 Researchers have developed a new analytical method that opens the door to faster processing of large amounts of information, with applications in fields as diverse as the military, medical ... > full story -
Pediatric Sports Injuries: The Silent Epidemic
March 12, 2010 Two new studies focus on the dramatic rise of pediatric sports injuries in recent years. However, despite this alarming trend, awareness, education, warning signs and early treatment can make a ... > full story
5 am EST
-
End to Lice? Effectiveness of New Oral Treatment Demonstrated
March 12, 2010 French medical researchers have recently demonstrated the effectiveness of a new molecule in the fight against lice. Faced with the emergence of increasing resistance to conventional treatments by ... > full story -
Pharmacology
Today's Healthcare
Personalized Medicine
Diseases and Conditions
HIV and AIDS
Information Technology
Computer System Helps Reduce Adverse Drug Side Effects and Interactions in ICU Patients
March 12, 2010 To get life-threatening diseases under control, patients in the intensive care unit usually are administered many medications at the same time. Even for experts, it is difficult to keep track of the ... > full story -
Neutropenia: Research Findings Expected to Ease Treatment of Low Neutrophil Counts in Cancer Patients
March 12, 2010 New research may change neutropenia treatment for all childhood cancer patients. Neutropenia is the dangerous drop in white blood cells that leaves cancer patients at increased risk for infections ... > full story -
Khirbet Qeiyafa Identified as Biblical 'Neta'im'
March 12, 2010 Has another mystery in the history of Israel been solved? Researchers have identified Khirbet Qeiyafa as "Neta'im", which is mentioned in the Bible's book of ... > full story -
Men, Not Ladies, First: We're Still Sexist in Writing
March 12, 2010 Putting male names before female names in writing is a remnant of sexist thinking, new research ... > full story
2 am EST
-
Advance in Understanding Body’s Natural Defenses
March 12, 2010 Researchers in the UK have made a new advance in understanding how the body fights certain types of cancer and other disease such as Lupus and rheumatoid ... > full story -
Malaria in Pregnant Women: Step Towards a New Vaccine
March 12, 2010 By managing to express the protein that enables red blood cells infected with the malaria agent Plasmodium falciparum to bind to the placenta and by deciphering its molecular mechanisms, a team of ... > full story -
Breast Cancer Drug Fulvestrant Appears More Effective in the Presence of CK8 and CK18
March 12, 2010 Women's responsiveness to the second-line breast cancer drug fulvestrant may depend on whether the cancer cells are expressing two key proteins, scientists ... > full story -
Sustainability
Recycling and Waste
Environmental Science
Hazardous Waste
Agriculture and Food
Energy and the EnvironmentProduction of Chemicals from Wood Waste Made More Environmentally-Friendly and Cheaper
March 12, 2010 Researchers have discovered that the bacterium Cupriavidus basilensis breaks down harmful by-products which are produced when sugars are released from wood. They also managed to incorporate the ... > full story -
How a Romantic Breakup Affects Self-Concept
March 12, 2010 When a romantic relationship ends, an individual's self-concept is vulnerable to change, according to new ... > full story
11 pm EST
-
Novel Stroke Treatment Passes Safety Stage of Clinical Trial
March 11, 2010 A clinical research trial of a new treatment to restore brain cells damaged by stroke has passed an important safety stage, according to the neurologist who led the ... > full story -
If Bonobo Kanzi Can Point as Humans Do, What Other Similarities Can Rearing Reveal?
March 11, 2010 You may have more in common with Kanzi, Panbanisha and Nyota, three language-competent bonobos living at Great Ape Trust, than you thought. And those similarities, right at your fingertip, might one ... > full story -
Fewer Platelets Could Be Used for Some Cancer and Bone-Marrow Transplantation Patients
March 11, 2010 Physicians may be able to safely lower the platelet dosage in transfusions for cancer and bone-marrow transplant patients without risking increased bleeding, according to new ... > full story -
Inventing New Oat and Barley Breads
March 11, 2010 Scientists are working on a delicious new all-oat or all-barley ... > full story -
Youth Baseball Throwing Arm Injuries Are Rising Dramatically
March 11, 2010 Throwing arm injuries are on the rise in Little League and other youth baseball programs. After these injuries occur, many players are out for the season; others require surgery and must refrain from ... > full story
8 pm EST
-
Years of Smoking Associated With Lower Parkinson's Risk, Not Number of Cigarettes Per Day
March 11, 2010 Researchers have new insight into the relationship between Parkinson's disease and smoking. Several studies have shown that smokers have a lower risk of developing Parkinson's disease. A new study ... > full story -
Physicists Take Atoms for a Quantum Walk
March 11, 2010 A team of physicists has achieved a quantum walk in a quantum system with up to 23 steps. It is the first time that this quantum process using trapped ions has been demonstrated in detail. This ... > full story -
Movement Disorder Symptoms Are Lessened by an Antibiotic: Treating Worms With Ampicillin Helps Restore Normal Movement
March 11, 2010 Discovery of an antibiotic's capacity to improve cell function in laboratory tests is providing movement disorder researchers with leads to more desirable molecules with potentially similar traits, ... > full story -
Petroleum
Energy Issues
Energy and the Environment
Environmental Policies
Environmental Issues
Energy PolicyWorld Crude Oil Production May Peak a Decade Earlier Than Some Predict
March 11, 2010 In a finding that may speed efforts to conserve oil and intensify the search for alternative fuel sources, scientists in Kuwait predict that world conventional crude oil production will peak in 2014 ... > full story -
Massage Eases Anxiety, but No Better Than Simple Relaxation Does
March 11, 2010 A randomized trial shows three months after 10 massages, patients' anxiety symptoms were halved -- an improvement like that previously reported with psychotherapy, medications, or both. But the trial ... > full story
5 pm EST
-
Mother's Flu During Pregnancy May Increase Baby's Risk of Schizophrenia
March 11, 2010 Rhesus monkey babies born to mothers who had the flu while pregnant had smaller brains and showed other brain changes similar to those observed in human patients with schizophrenia, a study has ... > full story -
Atmospheric Nanoparticles Impact Health, Weather Professor Says
March 11, 2010 Nanoparticles are atmospheric materials so small that they can't be seen with the naked eye, but they can very visibly affect both weather patterns and human health all over the world -- and not in a ... > full story -
Scientists Make Important Discovery in Gene Regulation
March 11, 2010 Scientists have a greater understanding of how our genes are controlled following a major research project. The findings of the study, which looked at how proteins work as teams to control genes in ... > full story -
Can We Detect Quantum Behavior in Viruses?
March 11, 2010 Scientists are using the principles of an iconic quantum mechanics thought experiment -- Schrödinger's superpositioned cat -- to test for quantum properties in objects composed of as many as one ... > full story -
Male Batterers Consistently Overestimate Rates of Violence Toward Partners, Study Finds
March 11, 2010 Men who engaged in domestic violence consistently overestimated how common such behavior is by two or three times, and the more they overestimated it the more they engaged in abusing their partner in ... > full story
2 pm EST
-
Brain Mechanism May Explain Alcohol Cravings That Drive Relapse
March 11, 2010 New research provides exciting insight into the molecular mechanisms associated with addiction and relapse. The study uncovers a crucial mechanism that facilitates motivation for alcohol after ... > full story -
Temporary Hearing Deprivation Can Lead to 'Lazy Ear'
March 11, 2010 Scientists have gained new insight into why a relatively short-term hearing deprivation during childhood may lead to persistent hearing deficits, long after hearing is restored to normal. The ... > full story -
Obesity Linked to Poor Colon Cancer Prognosis
March 11, 2010 Obese patients with colon cancer are at greater risk for death or recurrent disease compared to those who are within a normal weight range, according to a new ... > full story -
Computer Science
Computer Programming
Distributed Computing
Information Technology
Computer Modeling
Artificial IntelligenceConquering the Chaos in Modern, Multiprocessor Computers
March 11, 2010 A group of computer scientists have found a way to tame multiprocessor computers, which behave in wildly unpredictable ways even as the systems become widespread in the ... > full story -
Students' Perceptions of Earth's Age Influence Acceptance of Human Evolution
March 11, 2010 High school and college students who understand the geological age of the Earth (4.5 billion years) are much more likely to understand and accept human evolution, according to a new study. A 2009 ... > full story
- View all the latest headlines and summaries, or browse by topic below:
Health & Biomedical Sciences
Health & Medicine
Finding Charcot-Marie-Tooth Gene Ends a Quest and Begins New Era of Personalized Genomic Medicine
Baylor College of Medicine's Dr. James Lupski came to the end of a personal quest earlier this year when the Baylor Human Genome Sequencing Center sequenced his complete genome and identified the ... > full story
Mind & Brain
How a Romantic Breakup Affects Self-Concept
When a romantic relationship ends, an individual's self-concept is vulnerable to change, according to new ... > full story
- Novel Stroke Treatment Passes Safety Stage of Clinical Trial
- Years of Smoking Associated With Lower Parkinson's Risk, Not Number of Cigarettes Per Day
- Movement Disorder Symptoms Are Lessened by an Antibiotic: Treating Worms With Ampicillin Helps Restore Normal Movement
- Massage Eases Anxiety, but No Better Than Simple Relaxation Does
- more stories
Living Well
Men, Not Ladies, First: We're Still Sexist in Writing
Putting male names before female names in writing is a remnant of sexist thinking, new research ... > full story
- Students' Perceptions of Earth's Age Influence Acceptance of Human Evolution
- Game On? Video-Game Ownership May Interfere With Young Boys' Academic Functioning
- Discovery of 'Fat' Taste Could Hold the Key to Reducing Obesity
- Life Is Shorter for Men, but Sexually Active Life Expectancy Is Longer
- more stories
Biological & Earth Sciences
Plants & Animals
Immune Cells That Fight Parasites May Promote Allergies and Asthma
Millions of people in both the developing and developed world may benefit from new immune-system research findings that identify a cell population that fights off parasitic infections but also causes ... > full story
Earth & Climate
Production of Chemicals from Wood Waste Made More Environmentally-Friendly and Cheaper
Researchers have discovered that the bacterium Cupriavidus basilensis breaks down harmful by-products which are produced when sugars are released from wood. They also managed to incorporate the ... > full story
Fossils & Ruins
Khirbet Qeiyafa Identified as Biblical 'Neta'im'
Has another mystery in the history of Israel been solved? Researchers have identified Khirbet Qeiyafa as "Neta'im", which is mentioned in the Bible's book of ... > full story
- If Bonobo Kanzi Can Point as Humans Do, What Other Similarities Can Rearing Reveal?
- Pottery Leads to Discovery of Peace-Seeking Women in American Southwest
- Drastic Musk Ox Population Decline 12,000 Years Ago Due to Climate, Not Humans, Study Finds
- Unselfish Molecules May Have Helped Give Birth to the Genetic Material of Life
- more stories
Physical & Applied Sciences
Space & Time
Galaxy Study Validates General Relativity on Cosmic Scale, Existence of Dark Matter
While general relativity describes well the behavior of the solar system, Einstein's theory of gravity and spacetime has not been tested on cosmological scales. Now, a team has analyzed data on ... > full story
Matter & Energy
World Crude Oil Production May Peak a Decade Earlier Than Some Predict
In a finding that may speed efforts to conserve oil and intensify the search for alternative fuel sources, scientists in Kuwait predict that world conventional crude oil production will peak in 2014 ... > full story
Computers & Math
Research Streamlines Data Processing to Solve Problems More Efficiently
Researchers have developed a new analytical method that opens the door to faster processing of large amounts of information, with applications in fields as diverse as the military, medical ... > full story

