Wednesday, June 19, 2013

The Rhythm of the Arctic Summer: Diverse Activity Patterns of Birds During the Arctic Breeding Season

Our internal circadian clock regulates daily life processes and is synchronized by external cues, the so-called Zeitgebers. The main cue is the light-dark cycle, whose strength is largely reduced in ...  > full story
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What Do Memories Look Like?

Scientists develop a way to see the structures that store memories in a living brain. ...  > full story
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Validating Maps of the Brain's Resting State

Researchers have provided important validation of maps of the brain at rest that may offer insights into changes in the brain that occur in neurological and psychiatric disorders. ...  > full story
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Three Centaurs Follow Uranus Through the Solar System

Astrophysicists have confirmed that Crantor, a large asteroid with a diameter of 70 km has an orbit similar to that of Uranus and takes the same amount of time to orbit the Sun. Researchers have demonstrated for the first time that this and a further two ...  > full story
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Researchers Discover Immunity Mechanism: Platelets Patrolling the Bloodstream

Scientists have discovered a mechanism that is used to protect the body from harmful bacteria. Platelets, a component of blood typically associated with clotting, were discovered to ...  > full story
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Distracted Walking: Injuries Soar for Pedestrians on Phones

More than 1,500 pedestrians were estimated to be treated in emergency rooms in 2010 for injuries related to using a cell phone while walking, according to a new nationwide study. ...  > full story
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Sound Waves Precisely Position Nanowires

The smaller components become, the more difficult it is to create patterns in an economical and reproducible way, according to an interdisciplinary team of researchers who, using sound waves, can place nanowires in repeatable patterns for potential ...  > full story
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City Slicker or Country Bumpkin: City-Life Changes Blackbird Personalities

The origins of a young animal might have a significant impact on its behavior later on in life. Researchers have been able to demonstrate in hand-reared blackbirds that urban-born individuals are less curious and ...  > full story
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Contribution of Particulate Matter from Air Pollution to Forest Decline

Air pollution is related to forest decline and also appears to attack the protecting wax on tree leaves and needles. Scientists have now discovered a responsible mechanism: particulate matter salt compounds that become deliquescent ...  > full story
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Possible Record-Setting Deadzone for Gulf of Mexico Predicted

Scientists are forecasting that this year's Gulf of Mexico hypoxic "dead" zone will be between 7,286 and 8,561 square miles which could place it among the ten largest recorded. A second forecast, for the Chesapeake Bay, calls for a ...  > full story
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Seismic Gap Outside of Istanbul: Is This Where the Expected Marmara Earthquake Will Originate From?

Earthquake researchers have now identified a 30 kilometers long and ten kilometers deep area along the North Anatolian fault zone just south of Istanbul that could be the starting point for a strong ...  > full story
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Personality Test Finds Some Mouse Lemurs Shy, Others Bold

In the last 10 years the study of animal personality has gained ground with behavioral ecologists. Researchers have now found distinct personalities in the grey mouse lemur, the tiny, saucer-eyed primate native to the African ...  > full story
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Top Environment News


Environmentally Friendly Battery Made from Wood

Taking inspiration from trees, scientists have developed a battery made from a sliver of wood coated with tin that shows promise for becoming a tiny, long-lasting, efficient and environmentally friendly energy source. The device is 1,000 times ...  > full story

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Health & Biomedical Sciences


Mind & Brain

Storytelling Program Helps Change Medical Students' Perspectives on Dementia

Treating patients with dementia can be viewed as a difficult task for doctors, but researchers say that storytelling may be one way to improve medical students' perceptions of people affected by the condition. Participation in a creative ...  > full story

Biological & Earth Sciences


Plants & Animals

Infections Increase Risk of Mood Disorders, Study Suggests

New research shows that every third person who is diagnosed for the first time with a mood disorder has been admitted to hospital with an infection prior to the diagnosis. The study is the largest of its kind to date to show a clear correlation ...  > full story

Fossils & Ruins

When It Comes to Mammals, How Big Is Too Big?

Mammals vary enormously in size, from weighing less than a penny to measuring more than three school buses in length. Some groups of mammals have become very large, such as elephants and whales, while others have always been small, like primates. A ...  > full story

Physical & Applied Sciences


Space & Time

The Turbulent, High-Energy Sky Is Keeping NuSTAR Busy

NuSTAR has been busy studying the most energetic phenomena in the universe. Recently, a few high-energy events have sprung up, akin to "things that go bump in the night." When one telescope catches a sudden outpouring of high-energy light in the ...  > full story

Matter & Energy

How Useful Is Fracking Anyway? Study Explores Return of Investment

The value of a fuel's long-term usefulness and viability is judged through its energy return on investment; the comparison between the eventual fuel and the energy invested to create it. The energy return on investment study finds that shale gas has ...  > full story

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Healing Ear Infections Faster

Otolaryngologists now usea stainless steel device to insert into the ear that provides an easier, safer and faster treatment for a common problem. ...  > full story

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