Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Aggressive Behavior Linked Specifically to Secondhand Smoke Exposure in Childhood

Children who are exposed to secondhand smoke in early childhood are more likely to grow up to physically aggressive and antisocial, regardless of whether they were exposed during pregnancy or their parents have a history of ...  > full story
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Low Population Immunity to New Bird Flu Virus H7N9 in Humans

The level of immunity to the recently circulating H7N9 influenza virus in an urban and rural population in Vietnam is very low, according to the first population level study to examine human immunity to the virus, which ...  > full story
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Visual Search Function: Where Scene Context Happens in Our Brain

Though a seemingly simple and intuitive strategy, visual search function -- a process that takes mere seconds for the human brain -- is still something that a computer can't do as accurately. Over the millennia of human ...  > full story
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Early-Life Traffic-Related Air Pollution Exposure Linked to Hyperactivity

Early-life exposure to traffic-related air pollution was significantly associated with higher hyperactivity scores at age 7, according to new research. ...  > full story
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'Whodunnit' of Irish Potato Famine Solved

An international team of scientists reveals that a unique strain of potato blight they call HERB-1 triggered the Irish potato famine of the mid-19th century. ...  > full story
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Opening Doors to Foldable Electronics With Inkjet-Printed Graphene

Imagine a bendable tablet computer or an electronic newspaper that could fold to fit in a pocket. The technology for these devices may not be so far off, thanks to new research. ...  > full story
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Compound in Mediterranean Diet Makes Cancer Cells 'Mortal'

New research suggests that a compound abundant in the Mediterranean diet takes away cancer cells' "superpower" to escape death. ...  > full story
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Ant Study Could Help Future Robot Teams Work Underground

Future teams of subterranean search and rescue robots may owe their success to the lowly fire ant, a much-despised insect whose painful bites and extensive networks of underground tunnels are all-too-familiar to people living in the southern United ...  > full story
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Bed Sharing Leads to Fivefold Increase in Risk of Crib Death for Babies Whose Parents Do Not Smoke

Parents who share a bed with their breastfed baby could face a fivefold increase in the risk of crib death, even if the parents do not smoke, according to a new study. ...  > full story
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Not Just Blowing in the Wind: Compressing Air for Renewable Energy Storage

A comprehensive study into the potential for compressed air energy storage in the Pacific Northwest has identified two locations in Washington state that could store enough Northwest wind energy combined to power about ...  > full story
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Roots of Future Tropical Rainfall: Sea Level Influenced Tropical Climate During the Last Ice Age

How will rainfall patterns across the tropical Indian and Pacific regions change in a future warming world? Climate models generally suggest that the tropics as a whole will get wetter, but the ...  > full story
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Heat-Related Deaths in Manhattan Projected to Rise: Killing Season May Push Into Spring and Fall

Researchers say deaths in Manhattan linked to warming climate may rise some 20 percent by the 2020s, and, in some worst-case scenarios, 90 percent or more by the 2080s. Higher ...  > full story
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Top Technology News


Going Green: U.S. Equipped to Grow Serious Amounts of Pond Scum for Fuel

A new analysis shows that the nation's land and water resources could likely support the growth of enough algae to produce up to 25 billion gallons of algae-based fuel a year in the United States, one-twelfth of the country's yearly needs. For the ...  > full story

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NASA’s BARREL Mission Launches 20 Balloons

In Antarctica in January, 2013 -- the summer at the South Pole -- scientists released 20 balloons, each eight stories tall, into the air to help answer an enduring space weather question: when the giant radiation belts surrounding Earth lose ...  > full story

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Protect Yourself From Latex Allergies

Plant biologists and immunochemists developed a way to produce rubber from a desert plant called guayule. The plant contains a natural rubber. ...  > full story

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