Top Science News
February 19, 2016
Feb. 19, 2016 Pluto's largest moon may have gotten too big for its own skin. Images from NASA's New Horizons mission suggest that Pluto's moon Charon once had a subsurface ocean that has long since frozen and ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 Researchers have successfully simulated how a ring-shaped black hole could cause general relativity to break down: assuming the universe contains at least five dimensions, that ...
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Feb. 17, 2016 Researchers report strong evidence of an interbreeding event between Neanderthals and modern humans occurring around 100,000 years ago, much earlier ...
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Feb. 16, 2016 A common ancestor of apes and humans, Chororapithecus abyssinicus, evolved in Africa, not Eurasia, two million years earlier than previously thought, ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 A hormone instrumental in the aging process is under genetic control, introducing a new pathway by which genetics regulates aging and disease, new ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 Laboratory rats who breathed Beijing's highly polluted air gained weight and experienced cardio-respiratory and metabolic dysfunctions. A study found pollution-breathing pregnant rats had heavier lungs and livers and increased tissue inflammation. These rats had higher LDL cholesterol; higher ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 The intestinal microbiota is necessary to ensure optimum postnatal growth and contributes to determining the size of adult individuals, notably in the event of undernutrition. The key element in this relationship is Insulin-like Growth Factor-1 (IGF-1), whose production and activity are in part ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 Zika virus has been detected in the amniotic fluid of two pregnant women whose fetuses had been diagnosed with microcephaly, according to a study. The report suggests that Zika virus can cross the placental barrier, but does not prove that the virus ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 Astronomers have discovered an unnamed pair of stars that sets a new record for both the longest duration stellar eclipse (3.5 years) and longest period between eclipses (69 years) in a ...
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Feb. 17, 2016 Using statistical physics, network theorists have developed the first-ever tool to identify whether systems -- be they technological, ecological, or biological -- are in danger ...
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Feb. 17, 2016 Astronomers have discovered a new source that confirmed the fact that binary systems with strong colliding stellar winds comprise a separate new population of high-energy ...
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Feb. 17, 2016 For two decades it was thought that most near-Earth objects (NEOs) -- asteroids and comets that may pose a hazard to life on Earth -- end their existence in a dramatic final plunge into the Sun. A new study finds instead that most of those objects ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 Long before the dinosaurs, hefty herbivores called pareiasaurs ruled Earth. Now, for the first time, a detailed investigation of all Chinese specimens of these creatures -- often described as the 'ugliest fossil reptiles' -- has been published by ...
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Feb. 16, 2016 Reconstructing the emergence and evolution of life on our planet is tightly linked to the questions as to when and to what extent Earth's atmosphere became oxygenated. New geological studies based on data from Western Greenland indicate that small levels of atmospheric oxygen developed already 3.8 ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 A widespread and permanent loss of forests in Madagascar that occurred 1,000 years ago was due not to climate change or any natural disaster, but to human settlers who set fire to the forests to make way for grazing cattle, ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 Newly-excavated village in the Jordan Valley sheds light on the historical shift from foraging to agriculture, ...
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Health News
February 19, 2016
Feb. 18, 2016 Researchers have successfully disrupted a genetic chain of events in a mouse model of schizophrenia and reversed memory deficits, one of the disorder's most difficult-to-treat symptoms. This ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 An analysis of scientific reports and comments on the health effects of a salty diet reveals a polarization between those supportive of the hypothesis that population-wide reduction of salt intake is ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 People who drink wine, liquor or beer regularly are less prone to heart failure and heart attacks than those who rarely or never drink. Three to five drinks a week can be good for your ...
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Feb. 17, 2016 Half the world's population (nearly 5 billion) will be short-sighted (myopic) by 2050, with up to one-fifth of them (1 billion) at a significantly increased risk of blindness if current trends ...
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Latest Health Headlines
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Feb. 19, 2016 The first three-dimensional 'map' of a critical protein that malaria parasites use to invade human red blood cells has been created, offering clues for developing a vaccine countering the most widespread species of ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 Researchers developed a mathematical model to estimate the rates of mutation as a function of the nearby sequences of DNA 'letters' -- called nucleotides. This new model not only provides clues into the process of mutation, but also helps discover ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 An international research team has successfully modified immune cells to recognize and specifically target tumor cells in mice. Cancer treatments based on the findings would likely have fewer side effects than standard therapies currently in use, ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 A new study shows that the act of creating pluripotent stem cells for clinical use is unlikely to pass on cancer-causing mutations to ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 Fair warning to presidential candidates participating in upcoming presidential debates: your inappropriate nonverbal behavior is noticed, and it could overshadow the substance of what you ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 Injured nerve cells in the limbs (the peripheral nervous system or PNS) can regrow and repair. Nerve cells in the central nervous system (CNS) -- brain and spinal cord -- cannot. Now a network of genes has been identified in a mouse study that promotes PNS repair. In addition, an existing drug that mimics that gene network has been repurposed to promote nerve regeneration in the ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 The INTERGROWTH-21st Consortium has published the final set of charts that enable healthcare professionals worldwide to assess the weight, length and head circumference of newborns from 24 to 42 weeks of gestation, and which apply to all babies, regardless of race or ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 New ground has been broken in our understanding of the complex functioning of the brain. The research demonstrates that brain cells, known as astrocytes, which play fundamental roles in nearly all aspects of brain function, could be adjusted by neurons in response to injury ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 According to a new study most people are able to navigate easily by following audio guidance while walking or cycling. The study investigated two different guidance types: route guidance and ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 Having an occasional drink is fine, but 'binge' drinking is a known health hazard and now high blood pressure may need to be added to the list of possible consequences. Young adults in their twenties who regularly binge drink have higher blood pressure which may increase the risk of developing hypertension, concludes a ...
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Feb. 16, 2016 An academic has published a study showing that young women with high emotional intelligence are more likely to use manipulative behaviors, resulting in a greater engagement in ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 Bacteria that live in the gut interact with dietary components to affect health and wellness. Scientists now finds key components in breast milk that promote healthy infant growth and how interactions with the gut bacteria drive ...
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Physical/Tech News
February 19, 2016
Feb. 16, 2016 The first successful detection of gases in the atmosphere of a super-Earth reveals the presence of hydrogen and helium, but no water vapor. The ...
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Feb. 15, 2016 Physicians and biomedical engineers from Johns Hopkins report what they believe is the first successful effort to wiggle fingers individually and independently of each other using a mind-controlled ...
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Feb. 15, 2016 In what may provide a potential path to processing information in a quantum computer, researchers have switched an intrinsic property of electrons from an excited state to a relaxed state on demand ...
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Feb. 15, 2016 Using a sophisticated, custom-designed 3-D printer, regenerative medicine scientists have proved that it is feasible to print living tissue structures to replace injured or diseased tissue in ...
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Latest Physical/Tech Headlines
updated 2:23pm EST
Feb. 19, 2016 Over the last decade, one researcher has spent his time figuring out how to deliver chemotherapy drugs into cancerous tumors -- and nowhere else. Now his lab has designed a set of nanoparticles attached to strands of DNA that can change shape to ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 Researchers are using nanoparticles to kill tumor cells inside the eye. This nanotechnology also has the potential to be used for multiple applications in ophthalmology and other disciplines, they ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 Graphene is a so-called 2D material, meaning that it is only one atom thick film. Graphite, which is a well-known material, consists of huge number of graphene layers on top of each other. Now researchers say that a 2D material device may prove ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 Emissions from the transport sector can be drastically reduced with more streamlined trucks. Researchers have calculated, and have had built an initial version of the transport vehicle of ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 Astronomers have measured the rotation rate of 'super-Jupiter-class' exoplanet 2M1207b by observing the varied brightness in its atmosphere. This is the first rotation rate measurement of a massive exoplanet using direct imaging. The observations also confirm that the planet's atmosphere has layers ...
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Feb. 17, 2016 Scientists use video footage to analyze Jupiter's transport barriers and examine prior conclusions about Jupiter's ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 Incredibly dense and powerful objects beyond our Milky Way Galaxy may prevent the escape of high-energy gamma rays that accompany the production of the cosmic neutrinos detected on Earth by the IceCube Neutrino Observatory buried deep in the Antarctic ice sheet, according to a ...
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Feb. 15, 2016 Hundreds of webcams recorded the historic event: In 2013 February 15, the approach of asteroid (367943) Duende to our planet was being closely monitored by both the public and the scientific community worldwide when suddenly a superbolide entered the atmosphere above the region of Chelyabinsk in ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 A revolution in the treatment and rehabilitation of muscle/tendon injuries is on its way with the development of a ground-breaking new ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 People find it increasingly difficult to distinguish between computer-generated images and real photos, researchers have shown, but they do say that a small amount of training greatly improves ...
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Feb. 17, 2016 While it seems prestigious -- and tax-savvy -- to be based in the Cayman Islands or Luxembourg, companies that choose to do so aren't actually worth more, according to a new study. It's the companies whose subsidiaries are offshore that are reaping the financial benefits. However, there are hidden costs associated with this ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 Walking with a wearable robotic exoskeleton may enable people with multiple sclerosis to walk more efficiently by reducing the energy and muscle activity needed to walk, according to ...
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Environment News
February 19, 2016
Feb. 18, 2016 By using satellites, biologists are now able to map which areas are most sensitive to climate variability on a global scale. A new metric, Vegetation Sensitivity Index (VSI), allows a more ...
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Feb. 17, 2016 By 2050 climate change will increase the groundwater deficit even more for four economically important aquifers in the western US. The new report is the first to integrate scientists' knowledge about ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 Palaeontologists have shed new light on some unusual dinosaur tracks from northern China. The tracks appear to have been made by four-legged sauropod dinosaurs yet only two of their feet have left ...
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Feb. 17, 2016 A genetic study on the courtship behavior of mutant fruit flies may illuminate human sexual ...
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Latest Environment Headlines
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Feb. 19, 2016 Researchers have surveyed immune genes across flowering plants to uncover the molecular 'traps' that plants use to ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 A new species of plant has been discovered on the subtropical Japanese island of Yakushima (located off the southern coast of Kyushu in Kagoshima prefecture) and named it ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 A colony of feral rhesus macaques calls the banks of the Silver River in Silver Springs State Park in central Florida its home. The monkeys are part of a larger feral population living throughout the Cross Florida Greenway. Many locals enjoy having the monkeys in the park, but wildlife officials are concerned about overpopulation caused by human feeding, the nonnative animals' ecological impact ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 A new microfluidic device may help scientists quickly home in on the electric field 'sweet spot' -- the range of electric potentials that will harmlessly and temporarily open up membrane pores to let DNA in. In principle, the simple device could be used on any microorganism or cell, significantly ...
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Feb. 19, 2016 For long time freshwater has been seen as one potential cause for rapid climate change in the North Atlantic – Arctic region – probably most people have heard about the ‘Gulf Stream is slowing down’ scenarios with freshwater leading to sluggish currents and less heat being transported to ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 Anaerobic gut fungi perform as well as the best fungi engineered by industry in their ability to convert plant material into sugars that are easily transformed into fuel and other products, ...
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Feb. 16, 2016 A new biorefinery process has proven to be significantly more effective at producing ethanol from algae than previous ...
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Feb. 16, 2016 Using novel, recently developed techniques for analysis of Doppler polarimetric weather surveillance radar data, biologists examined impediments (crosswinds and oceans) of nocturnally migrating songbirds in Eastern North America. Migrants in flight ...
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Feb. 17, 2016 New research explores the impact of hunter-gatherers on north Pacific marine food webs and the behaviors that helped preserve their network of ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 A new study is providing clues about how Antarctica's nation-sized Ross Ice Shelf might respond to a warming climate. US and Japanese oceanographers showed that a 100,000-square-mile section of the ice shelf broke apart within 1,500 years during a warming period after the last ...
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Feb. 16, 2016 A team of scientists have weighed in on whether microstructures found in 3.46-billion-year-old samples of a silica-rich rock called chert found in Western Australia are the planet's oldest fossils. The purported fossils have been a heated scientific ...
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Feb. 17, 2016 In recent years, climate scientists have grown increasingly concerned that massive rivers of ice flowing into the ocean from Greenland and Antarctica could accelerate as the planet warms, leading to a catastrophic collapse of Earth's ice sheets. But a new article presents an alternative narrative of the manner in which an ice sheet can ...
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Society/Education News
February 19, 2016
Feb. 16, 2016 A major international study has provided a fresh perspective on how children around the world feel about their lives. The Children's Worlds study asked children about all key aspects of their lives ...
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Feb. 11, 2016 At the rate humans are emitting carbon into the atmosphere, Earth may suffer irreparable damage that could last tens of thousands of years, according to a new analysis published this ...
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Feb. 12, 2016 Why do we remember some events, places and things, but not others? Our brains prioritize rewarding memories over others, and reinforce them by replaying them when we are at rest, according to new ...
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Feb. 11, 2016 When carbon dioxide is stored underground in a process known as geological sequestration, it can find multiple escape pathways due to chemical reactions between carbon dioxide, water, rocks and ...
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Latest Society/Education Headlines
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Feb. 19, 2016 In 2011, California embarked on one of the biggest and most controversial criminal justice experiments in history. Following the Supreme Court’s decision in Brown v. Plata, the state passed the Public Safety Realignment Act – in legislative shorthand AB 109 – which required that California’s 58 counties develop policies that best fit their local needs in anticipation of the transfer of ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 More than 1,000 scientists from nonprofit, corporate, academic, and private institutions say that public doubts about genetically modified food crops are hindering the next Green ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 Global market integration is key to buffering future commodity prices and food security from the negative effects of climate change on agriculture, says an agricultural economist in a new ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 Increasing health care providers' level of concern about prescription drug abuse in their communities may be an effective public health tool in fighting America's prescription drug abuse epidemic, according to a ...
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Feb. 9, 2016 Everyone marches to the beat of their own drum: From walking to talking to producing music, different people's movements occur at different speeds. But do these differences influence coordination of group actions? The answer is yes, according to researchers. The finding has the potential to help us predict for each person how successful they will be in a group task, depending on how similar their ...
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Feb. 8, 2016 There is a strong relationship between sleep problems and poor academic performances among adolescents, a new study demonstrates. Results show that high school students going to bed between 10 and 11 p.m. on weekdays get better ...
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Feb. 2, 2016 Many K-12 school efforts to reduce bullying have proven not very effective, leading educators to wonder what bullying prevention approach works best. A new study finds one anti-bullying program works extremely well. The study of more than 7,000 ...
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Jan. 28, 2016 When practicing and learning a new skill, making slight changes during repeat practice sessions may help people master the skill faster than practicing the task in precisely the same way, researchers ...
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Feb. 18, 2016 New research calls for actions to ensure equal wages for equally performing or skilled employees and to encourage female students to engage in scientific studies, as females are only 4.2% of ...
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Feb. 16, 2016 After a review of the recent scientific literature, researchers concluded that the benefits associated with the reduction of mercury emissions far outweigh the cost to ...
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Feb. 12, 2016 Collaborative capabilities are more critical than ever as team science and engineering become the norm. New research on interactive team cognition provides insights into challenges faced by such collective ...
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Feb. 11, 2016 A team of computer scientists is the first to solve a game theory scenario that has vexed researchers for nearly a century. The game, known as 'Colonel Blotto,' has been used to analyze the potential outcomes of elections and other similar two-party conflicts since its invention in 1921. Until now, however, the game has been of limited use because it lacked a definitive ...
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