- Why Early Human Ancestors Took to Two Feet
- All Universe's Light Since Big Bang Measured
- Monkey Teeth Help Reveal Neanderthal Weaning
- Arctic Life: Clues to Possible Life On Mars
- Drug Reverses Alzheimer's Deficits in Mice
- Molecule That Triggers Sensation of Itch Found
- Stellar Outbursts: Astronomical Mystery Solved
- Earth's Mantle Affects Long-Term Sea-Level Rise
- White Tiger Mystery Solved: It's in the Genes
- IQ Predicted by Ability to Filter Visual Motion

Biophysicists Measure Mechanism That Determines Fate of Living Cells
For the first time, biophysicists
have measured the molecular force
required to mechanically transmit
function-regulating signals within
a cell. A new laboratory method,
named the tension gauge tether
approach, has made it possible to
... > full story
- more on:

Scientists Offer First Definitive Proof of Bacteria-Feeding Behavior in Green Algae
Researchers have captured images
of green alga consuming bacteria,
offering a glimpse at how early
organisms dating back more than 1
billion years may have acquired
free-living photosynthetic cells.
... > full story
- more on:

Hubble Reveals the Ring Nebula’s True Shape
The Ring Nebula's distinctive
shape makes it a popular
illustration for astronomy books.
But new observations by NASA's
Hubble Space Telescope of the
glowing gas shroud around an old,
dying, sun-like star reveal a new
twist. ... > full story
- more on:

Hidden Population of Exotic Neutron Stars
Magnetars -- the dense remains of
dead stars that erupt sporadically
with bursts of high-energy
radiation -- are some of the most
extreme objects known in the
Universe. A major campaign using
NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory
and several other satellites shows
... > full story
- more on:

Flat Spray-on Optical Lens Created
Engineers have made a breakthrough
utilizing spray-on technology that
could revolutionize the way
optical lenses are made and used. ... > full story
- more on:

The Secret Lives (and Deaths) of Neurons
Researchers have uncovered
surprising insights about how
nerve cells rewire themselves,
shedding light on a process linked
with neurodegenerative diseases
and neurodevelopmental disorders
like schizophrenia and autism. ... > full story
- more on:

Depression Linked to Telomere Enzyme, Aging, Chronic Disease
The first symptoms of major
depression may be behavioral, but
the common mental illness is based
in biology — and not limited
to the brain, new research
suggests. ... > full story
- more on:

Ants and Carnivorous Plants Conspire for Mutualistic Feeding
An insect-eating pitcher plant
teams up with ants to prevent
mosquito larvae from stealing its
nutrients, according to new
research. ... > full story
- more on:

Baby's Life Saved With Groundbreaking 3-D Printed Device That Restored His Breathing
A bioresorbable splint has been
created and used for first time at
the University of Michigan, where
doctors implanted the device in an
infant and stopped a
life-threatening condition called
... > full story
- more on:

Top 10 New Species of 2012
An amazing glow-in-the-dark
cockroach, a harp-shaped
carnivorous sponge and the
smallest vertebrate on Earth are
just three of the newly discovered
top 10 species selected by a
global committee of taxonomists. ... > full story
- more on:

Brain Can Be Trained in Compassion, Study Shows
A new study shows that adults can
be trained to be more
compassionate. The report
investigates whether training
adults in compassion can result in
greater altruistic behavior and
related changes in neural systems
underlying compassion. ... > full story
- more on:

Tests Lead to Doubling of Fuel Cell Life
Researchers working to improve
durability in fuel cell powered
buses have discovered links
between electrode degradation
processes and bus membrane
durability. The team is
quantifying the effects of
electrode degradation stressors in
... > full story
- more on:
- Biophysicists Measure Fate of Living Cells
- Bacteria-Feeding in Green Algae Confirmed
- Hubble reveals the Ring Nebula’s true shape
- Hidden Population of Exotic Neutron Stars
- Flat Spray-On Optical Lens Created
- The Secret Lives (And Deaths) of Neurons
- Depression Linked to Telomere Enzyme, Aging
- Ants, Carnivorous Plants: Mutualistic Feeding
- Baby's Life Saved With 3-D Printed Device
- Top 10 New Species of 2012
- Brain Can Be Trained in Compassion
- Tests Lead to Doubling of Fuel Cell Life
- more top science stories
Top Medical News
Heart Healthy Lifestyle May Cut Kidney Disease Patients' Risk of Kidney Failure
Compared with kidney disease patients who had zero or one heart healthy lifestyle component in the ideal range, those with two, three, and four ideal factors had progressively lower risks for kidney failure over four years. No kidney disease ... > full story
Top Technology News
Researchers Design Photobioreactor to Produce Biofuel from Algae
Researchers have patented a new device that allows more efficiently to cultivate microalgae and can be used as raw material for biofuel or for other valuable substances in the agri-food or pharmaceutical ... > full story
- Nano-Needles for Cells: Tiny Needles Can Force Medicine Into Cells, Even When They Resist Taking It
- New Filtration Material Could Make Petroleum Refining Cheaper, More Efficient
- Atomic-Scale Investigations Solve Key Puzzle of LED Efficiency
- Cradle Turns Smartphone Into Handheld Biosensor
- more top technology stories
Top Environment News
King Richard III Found in 'Untidy Lozenge-Shaped Grave'
A new article on the archaeology of the Search for Richard III reveals for the first time specific details of the grave dug for King Richard III and discovered under a car park in ... > full story
- Serengeti Road Divides Biologists: Will a Road Across the Northern Tier of Serengeti National Park Ruin It?
- Tomatoes: The World's Favorite Fruit, Only Better-Tasting and Longer-Lasting
- Reforestation Study Shows Trade-Offs Between Water, Carbon and Timber
- New Target to Boost Plant Resistance to Insects and Pathogens Identified
- more top environment stories
More Science Headlines
Updated 15 minutes ago | Next update in 2 hours 45 minutes
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2 pm EDT
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Discovery of How a Key Enzyme of the Spliceosome Exerts Its Controlling Function
May 24, 2013 To sustain life, processes in biological cells have to be strictly controlled both in time and in space. Researchers have elucidated a previously unknown mechanism that regulates one of the essential processes accompanying gene expression in higher ... > full story -
Help at Hand for Schizophrenics
May 24, 2013 How can healthy people who hear voices help schizophrenics? Finding the answer for this is at the center of research conducted by a group of scientists in ... > full story -
Immune Cell Activation in Multiple Sclerosis: New Indicator Molecules Visualize Activation of Auto-Aggressive T Cells
May 24, 2013 Biological processes are generally based on events at the molecular and cellular level. To understand what happens in the course of infections, diseases or normal bodily functions, scientists would need to examine individual cells and their activity ... > full story -
New Insights Contradict Promising Alzheimer's Research
May 24, 2013 Approximately a year ago, the journal Science published an article about bexarotene as a potential Alzheimer's drug -- a significant breakthrough and an important starting point for further Alzheimer's research. Now other researchers have tested ... > full story -
Cause of Infantile Amnesia Revealed: New Neuron Formation Could Increase Capacity for New Learning, at Expense of Old Memories
May 24, 2013 New research presented today shows that formation of new neurons in the hippocampus -- a brain region known for its importance in learning and remembering -- could cause forgetting of old memories by causing a reorganization of existing brain ... > full story
11 am EDT
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New Method for Predicting Cancer Virulence
May 24, 2013 A new way of tackling cancer and predicting tumor virulence are has been reported by a team of researchers. The scientists have shown that, in all cancers, an aberrant activation of numerous genes specific to other tissues occurs. For example, in ... > full story -
Nervous System; Parkinson's Research; Parkinson's; Neuroscience; Disorders and Syndromes; Chronic Illness;
Proteins in Migration: New Animal Model Provides Important Clues on Mechanisms of Parkinson's Disease
May 24, 2013 Scientists have developed a novel experimental model that reproduces for the first time this pattern of alpha-synuclein brain spreading and provides important clues on the mechanisms underlying this pathological process. They triggered the ... > full story -
A New Strategy Required in the Search for Alzheimer's Drugs?
May 24, 2013 In the search for medication against Alzheimer's disease, scientists have focused on -- among other factors -- drugs that can break down Amyloid beta (A-beta). After all, it is the accumulation of A-beta that causes the known plaques in the brains ... > full story -
New Microsphere-Based Methods for Detecting HIV Antibodies
May 24, 2013 Detection of HIV antibodies is used to diagnose HIV infection and monitor trials of experimental HIV/AIDS vaccines. New, more sensitive detection systems being developed use microspheres to capture HIV antibodies and can measure even small amounts ... > full story -
Brain Tumor; Cancer; Personalized Medicine; Alzheimer's Research; Women's Health; Diseases and Conditions;
Infantile Myofibromatosis: First Drug Targets in Childhood Genetic Tumor Disorder
May 24, 2013 Two mutations central to the development of infantile myofibromatosis (IM) -- a disorder characterized by multiple tumors involving the skin, bone, and soft tissue—may provide new therapeutic targets, according to ... > full story
8 am EDT
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Scientists Make Breast Cancer Advance That Turns Previous Thinking on Its Head
May 23, 2013 Scientists have made an advance in breast cancer research which shows how some enzymes released by cancerous cells could have a protective ... > full story -
Research Identifies a Way to Make Cancer Cells More Responsive to Chemotherapy
May 23, 2013 Breast cancer characterized as "triple negative" carries a poor prognosis, with limited treatment options. In some cases, chemotherapy doesn't kill the cancer cells the way it's supposed to. New research explains why some cancer cells don't respond ... > full story -
New Discovery in Fight Against Deadly Meningococcal Disease: Understanding the Pathway of How the Bacterium Colonizes People
May 23, 2013 Neisseria meningitidis is an important human pathogen that can cause rapidly progressing, life threatening meningitis and meningococcal sepsis in humans, according to authors of a new study. People can be carriers of the bug and not get any ... > full story -
Technique to Detect Breast Cancer in Urine Developed
May 23, 2013 Medical researchers have developed a new screening method that uses urinalysis to diagnose breast cancer – and determine its severity – before it could be detected with a ... > full story -
Noninvasive Detection, Diagnosis of Oral Cancer
May 23, 2013 More effective detection and diagnosis of oral cancer could result from an advance in noninvasive imaging of epithelial tissue. The research is thought to have the potential to change the way doctors look for precancerous and cancerous areas in a ... > full story
5 am EDT
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Vaccine Blackjack: IL-21 Critical to Fight Against Viral Infections
May 23, 2013 Scientists have shown that an immune regulatory molecule called IL-21 is needed for long-lasting antibody responses in mice against viral ... > full story -
Discarded Immune Cells Induce the Relocation of Stem Cells
May 23, 2013 The study reveals a surprising coordination between two fundamental body systems, the immune and the hematopoietic. The study has implications for the understanding of metastasis, because malignant stem cells involved in tumor formation could take ... > full story -
Powerful New Method IDs Therapeutic Antibodies
May 23, 2013 Scientists have devised a powerful new technique for finding antibodies that have a desired biological effect. The newly reported technique should greatly speed the process of discovering medicines, diagnostics and laboratory ... > full story -
Schools Should Provide Students With Daily Physical Activity, Experts Say
May 23, 2013 A new report from the Institute of Medicine says schools should be responsible for helping pupils engage in at least 60 minutes of vigorous or moderate intensity activity during each school ... > full story -
Genomic Analysis Lends Insight to Prostate Cancer
May 23, 2013 Researchers have used next generation genomic analysis to determine that some of the more aggressive prostate cancer tumors have similar genetic origins, which may help in predicting cancer ... > full story
2 am EDT
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When Oxygen Is Short, EGFR Prevents Maturation of Cancer-Fighting miRNAs
May 23, 2013 Even while being dragged to its destruction inside a cell, a cancer-promoting growth factor receptor fires away, sending signals that thwart the development of tumor-suppressing microRNAs before it's dissolved, researchers have ... > full story -
Scientists Discover How Rapamycin Slows Cell Growth
May 23, 2013 University of Montreal researchers have discovered a novel molecular mechanism that can potentially slow the progression of some cancers and other diseases of abnormal growth. In the May 23 edition of the prestigious journal Cell, scientists have ... > full story -
Cinnamon Compound Has Potential Ability to Prevent Alzheimer's
May 23, 2013 Cinnamon: Can the red-brown spice with the unmistakable fragrance and variety of uses offer an important benefit? The common baking spice might hold the key to delaying the onset of -- or warding off -- the effects of Alzheimer's ... > full story -
Gold Nanocrystal Vibration Captured on Billion-Frames-Per-Second Film
May 23, 2013 A billon-frames-per-second film has captured the vibrations of gold nanocrystals in stunning detail for the first ... > full story -
New Screening Approach Uncovers Potential Alternative Drug Therapies for Neuroblastoma
May 23, 2013 Nearly two-thirds of patients with high-risk neuroblastoma -- a common tumor that forms in the nerve cells of children -- cannot be cured using tumor-killing cancer drugs. A new study reveals a new genomic approach to screen for compounds that ... > full story
11 pm EDT
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Alzheimer's Research; Alzheimer's; Dementia; Diseases and Conditions; Personalized Medicine; Healthy Aging;
Multiple Research Teams Unable to Confirm High-Profile Alzheimer's Study
May 23, 2013 Teams of highly respected Alzheimer’s researchers failed to replicate what appeared to be breakthrough results for the treatment of this brain disease when they were published last year in the journal ... > full story -
Ferrets, Pigs Susceptible to H7N9 Avian Influenza Virus
May 23, 2013 Chinese and US scientists have used a virus isolated from a person who died from H7N9 avian influenza infection to determine whether the virus could infect and be transmitted between ferrets. Ferrets are often used as a mammalian model in influenza ... > full story -
Stitching Defects Into World’s Thinnest Semiconductor
May 23, 2013 Researchers have grown high-quality crystals of molybdenum disulfide, the world's thinnest semiconductor, and studied how these crystals stitch together at the atomic scale to form continuous sheets, gaining key insights into the optical and ... > full story -
Regenerating Spinal Cord Fibers May Be Treatment for Stroke-Related Disabilities
May 23, 2013 A new study finds "substantial evidence" that a regenerative process involving damaged nerve fibers in the spinal cord could hold the key to better functional recovery by most stroke victims. The findings may offer new hope to those who suffer ... > full story -
First Successful Treatment of Pediatric Cerebral Palsy With Autologous Cord Blood: Awoken from a Persistent Vegetative State
May 23, 2013 Medics have succeeded in treating cerebral palsy with autologous cord blood. Following a cardiac arrest with severe brain damage, a two-and-a-half year old boy had been in a persistent vegetative state -- with minimal chances of survival. Just two ... > full story
8 pm EDT
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Chemists Find New Compounds to Curb Staph Infection
May 23, 2013 In an age when microbial pathogens are growing increasingly resistant to the conventional antibiotics used to tamp down infection, scientists have synthesized a potent new class of compounds capable of curbing the bacteria that cause staph ... > full story -
Pay Attention: How We Focus and Concentrate
May 23, 2013 Scientists have shed new light on how the brain tunes in to relevant ... > full story -
Spheres Can Form Squares
May 23, 2013 Everybody who has tried to stack oranges in a box knows that a regular packing of spheres in a flat layer naturally leads to a hexagonal pattern, where each sphere is surrounded by six neighbours in a honeycomb-like fashion. Researchers now report ... > full story -
Quest for Quantum Computing Advanced
May 23, 2013 Scientistst investigating the properties of ultra-thin films of new materials are helping bring quantum computing one step closer to ... > full story -
Key Find for Early Bladder Cancer Treatment
May 23, 2013 Aggressive forms of bladder cancer involve the protein PODXL – a discovery that could hold the key to improved treatment, according to new ... > full story
5 pm EDT
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Spectacular Stellar Nursery: ESO's Very Large Telescope Celebrates 15 Years of Success
May 23, 2013 With this new view of a spectacular stellar nursery ESO is celebrating 15 years of the Very Large Telescope — the world's most advanced optical instrument. This picture reveals thick clumps of dust silhouetted against the pink glowing gas ... > full story -
How Do Cold Ions Slide?
May 23, 2013 Things not always run smoothly. It may happen, actually, that when an object slides on another, the advancement may occur through a ‘stop and go’ series in the characteristic manner which scientists call “stick-slip”, a ... > full story -
Biochemistry: Unspooling DNA from Nucleosomal Disks
May 23, 2013 The tight wrapping of genomic DNA around nucleosomes in the cell nucleus makes it unavailable for gene expression. This study describes a mechanism that allows chromosomal DNA to be locally displaced from nucleosomes for ... > full story -
Boosting Body's Natural Flu Killers as Way to Offset Virus Mutation Problem
May 23, 2013 The known difficulty in fighting influenza (flu) is the ability of the flu viruses to mutate and thus evade various medications that were previously found to be effective. Researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem have shown recently that ... > full story -
Huntington's Disease; Disorders and Syndromes; Depression; Chronic Illness; Mental Health Research; Psychology Research;
Breakthrough on Huntington's Disease
May 23, 2013 Researchers have succeeded in preventing very early symptoms of Huntington’s disease, depression and anxiety, by deactivating the mutated huntingtin protein in the brains of ... > full story
Health & Biomedical Sciences
Health & Medicine
Scientists Put Bowel Cancer Under the Microscope
Researchers have begun a two-year study which could help prolong the lives of people with colorectal ... > full story
- Hormone Replacement Therapy: British Menopause Society and Women's Health Concern Release Updated Guidelines
- New Recommendations for Management of High Blood Glucose in Hospitalized Patients
- Frequent Heartburn May Predict Cancers of the Throat and Vocal Cord
- Common Childhood Asthma Not Rooted in Allergens, Inflammation
- more stories
Mind & Brain
Future Doctors Unaware of Their Obesity Bias
Two out of five medical students have an unconscious bias against obese people, according to a new ... > full story
Living Well
Young Children Who Miss Well-Child Visits Are More Likely to Be Hospitalized
Young children who missed more than half of recommended well-child visits had up to twice the risk of hospitalization compared to children who attended most of their visits, according to a new ... > full story
Biological & Earth Sciences
Plants & Animals
Research Aims for Insecticide That Targets Malaria Mosquitoes
A team of scientists is working toward an insecticide that would target malaria-carrying mosquitoes but do no harm to other ... > full story
Earth & Climate
Researchers Search for Best Feed for the 'King' of the Rivers
The red mahseer is highly sought after by anglers and high end restaurants. Breeding them may be a bit easier now that researchers in Malaysia have found the best feed ... > full story
Fossils & Ruins
Small, Speedy Plant-Eater Extends Knowledge of Dinosaur Ecosystems
Dinosaurs are often thought of as large, fierce animals, but new research highlights a previously overlooked diversity of small dinosaurs. Paleontologists have now described a new dinosaur, the smallest plant-eating dinosaur species known from ... > full story
- New Archaeological 'High Definition' Sourcing Sharpens Understanding of the Past
- Allosaurus Fed More Like a Falcon Than a Crocodile: Engineering, Anatomy Work Reveals Differences in Dinosaur Feeding Styles
- Origins of Human Culture Linked to Rapid Climate Change
- Fourteen Closely Related Crocodiles Existed Around 5 Million Years Ago
- more stories
Physical & Applied Sciences
Space & Time
Magnetic Field Misbehavior in Solar Flares Explained: The Culprit Is Turbulence
When a solar flare erupts from the sun, its magnetic fields sometime break a widely accepted rule of physics. Why? Now we ... > full story
Matter & Energy
Observation of Skyrmions (Magnetic Vortex Structures) in a Ferromagnet With Centrosymmetry
Researchers using Lorentz electron microscopy have shown that magnetic skyrmions are spontaneously formed as nanomagnetic clusters in a ferromagnetic manganese oxide with ... > full story
Computers & Math
Making Chaos Visible: As Chaos Celebrates Its 50th Birthday, Biophysicist Christian Herbst Develops a New Method to Visualize It
Exactly 50 years after the US-American meteorologist Edward Lorenz discovered chaos (remember the "butterfly effect?") the topic is still as fascinating as ever. A new visualization technique helps to make chaos visible to the naked eye. The method ... > full story











