Top Science News
November 23, 2016
Nov. 22, 2016 Naturally occurring chemicals found in road salts commonly used to de-ice paved surfaces can alter the sex ratios in nearby frog populations, a phenomenon that could reduce the size and viability of ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 Frozen beneath a region of cracked and pitted plains on Mars lies about as much water as what's in Lake Superior, largest of the Great Lakes, researchers using NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter have ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Researchers have discovered a way to remove specific fears from the brain, using a combination of artificial intelligence and brain scanning technology. Their technique could lead to a new way of ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Astronomers have found, for the first time, a large population of distant dwarf galaxies that could reveal important details about a productive period of star formation in the universe billions of ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 Lack of paid leave and outdated maternity care are barriers to breastfeeding that disproportionately impact families of color. This is the first study to show how these disparities translate into differences in ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Scientists offer a genetic explanation for the age-old conundrum of why cancer is more common in males than females. Females, it turns out, carry an extra copy of certain protective genes in their cells -- an additional line of defense against the cells growing out ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 A new Theory of Connectivity represents a fundamental principle for how our billions of neurons assemble and align not just to acquire knowledge, but to generalize and draw conclusions ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Studying how gut bacteria affect behavior in zebrafish could lead to a better understanding of how probiotics may affect the central nervous system ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 The brightest area on Ceres stands out amid shadowy, cratered terrain in a dramatic new view from NASA's Dawn spacecraft, taken as it looked off to the side of the ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Astronomers have found an extremely faint dwarf satellite galaxy of the Milky Way. The satellite, named Virgo I, lies in the direction of the constellation Virgo. At the absolute magnitude of -0.8 in the optical waveband, it may well be the faintest satellite galaxy yet found. Its discovery ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Scientists have developed a new process for creating flexible supercapacitors that can store more energy and be recharged more than 30,000 times ...
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Nov. 15, 2016 A big challenge in cognitive or rehabilitation neurosciences is the ability to design a functional hybrid system that can connect and exchange information between biological systems, like neurons in the brain, and human-made electronic devices. A large effort of researchers in Italy brought ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 In the popular nursery story The Three Little Pigs, the prudent porker who builds his house of brick is chided by his pals, who choose much easier ways to construct their respective abodes. Only later in the cautionary tale does the reader discover ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Around 300 million years ago, the landmass that is now North America collided with Gondwana, a supercontinent comprised of present-day Africa and South America. That clash of continents lifted tons of rock high above the surrounding terrain to form the southern end of the Appalachian Mountains now ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 Dramatic, widespread shoreline loss is revealed in new NASA/U.S. Geological Survey annual maps of the Louisiana marshlands where the coastline was most heavily coated with oil during the 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 A team of scientists conducting a recent biodiversity survey in the ancient church forests of Ethiopia made an unexpected discovery -- a rather infamous ant species (<em>Lepisiota canescens</em>) displaying signs of supercolony formation. The ...
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Health News
November 23, 2016
Nov. 21, 2016 While some people rely more on reason and evidence than others when deciding on their beliefs, a new report suggests people can also come to see a reliance on reason and evidence as a moral issue -- ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 Teenagers, aged between 11 and 18, drink almost a bathtub full of sugary drinks on average a year, according to new ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 When two people smell the same thing, they can have remarkably different reactions, depending on their cultural background. Researchers have found that even when two cultures share the same language ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 A new study of mortality patterns in humans, monkeys and apes suggests that the last few generations of humans have enjoyed the biggest life expectancy boost in primate history. Yet males still lag ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 A team of investigators has found a possible mechanism explaining why use of the sugar substitute aspartame might not promote weight loss. In their report, the researchers show how the aspartame breakdown product phenylalanine interferes with the action of an enzyme previously shown to prevent metabolic syndrome - a group of symptoms associated ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 Genetic variations that increase schizophrenia risk are rare, making it difficult to study their role. To overcome this, scientists analyzed the genomes of more than 41,000 people in the largest study of its kind to date. Their study reveals regions of the genome where mutations increase schizophrenia ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 Biochemical “cross talk” in an important pathway can be altered so that immune system cells that have turned cancerous can be eliminated, say scientists. Their findings could have future implications for treating cancer with the help ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 A team of biomedical engineering researchers has identified a cause of fluid swelling of the brain, or cellular edema, that occurs during ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 Early math knowledge is as important as early literacy for children's subsequent achievement. In fact, research has shown that early math skills predict later school success better than early reading skills, and can even predict income in adulthood. Now a new longitudinal study has found that young children whose mothers supported them during play, specifically in their labeling of object ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 The prevalence of emergency department visits for adverse drug events in the United States was estimated to be 4 per 1,000 individuals in 2013 and 2014, and the most common drug classes involved were anticoagulants, antibiotics, diabetes agents, and opioid analgesics, according to a ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 Heads-up display technology -- think Google Glass -- offers lots of information to users in seconds, literally in front of their eyes. Access to information is critical in today's fast-paced world, but new research indicates that the multitasking needed to process that readily available information ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 Humans, as well as many other organisms, possess internal clocks. The exact timing, however, can differ between individuals – for instance, some people are early risers whereas others are "night owls". Now scientists have investigated what underlies such timing variations ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 Sleepiness after a large meal is something we all experience, and new research with fruit flies suggests higher protein and salt content in our food, as well as the volume consumed, can lead to ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 Even when people know better, they often rely on inaccurate or misleading information to make future decisions. But why are we so easily influenced by ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Heart disease, the leading cause of death in America, can be combated by implementing a simple walking regimen. Researchers found that moderately intensive walking improves cardiovascular risk factors in the ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 While newborn screening is one of the national public health services that has transformed preventive healthcare, there are certain ethical and legal concerns about what happens to the babies' genetic information beyond the ...
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Physical/Tech News
November 23, 2016
Nov. 17, 2016 Colors are produced in a variety of ways. The best known colors are pigments. However, the very bright colors of the blue tarantula or peacock feathers do not result from pigments, but from ...
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Nov. 17, 2016 Solely adjusting the aspect ratio of a pipe -- regardless of its shape -- precisely controls how medicine, pollutants, nutrients and chemicals travel down it and hit their target, scientists have ...
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Nov. 17, 2016 Fast radio bursts, or FRBs, are mysterious flashes of radio waves originating outside our Milky Way galaxy. A team of scientists has now observed the most luminous FRB to date, called FRB ...
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Nov. 17, 2016 Scientists have reverse engineered a biosynthetic pathway for more effective carbon fixation that is based on a new CO2-fixing enzyme that is nearly 20 times faster than the most prevalent enzyme in ...
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Latest Physical/Tech Headlines
updated 2:03am EST
Nov. 22, 2016 An ultrathin film of fused silver nanowires that is both transparent and highly conductive to electric current has been produced by a cheap and simple method devised by an international team of ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 If you could watch a molecule of medicine attaching to a cell receptor in extreme slow motion, they would look something like a space ship docking with a space station -- some twists, turns, sputters then locking together tight. With a new improvement to atomic force microscopy by engineers, seeing ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 A team of physicists has constructed and tested a compact, efficient converter capable of modifying the quantum properties of individual photons. The new device should facilitate the construction of complex quantum computers, and in the future may become an important element in global quantum ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 A low-power tabletop source of ultrashort electron beams could replace car-size laboratory devices, ...
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Nov. 17, 2016 For the first time, an optical clock has traveled to space, surviving harsh rocket launch conditions and successfully operating under the microgravity that would be experienced on a satellite. This demonstration brings optical clock technology much closer to implementation in space, where it could ...
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Nov. 16, 2016 Researchers have discovered a "super-Earth" type planet, GJ 536 b, whose mass is around 5.4 Earth masses, in orbit around a nearby very bright star. The exoplanet is not within the star's habitable zone, but its short orbital period of 8.7 days and the luminosity of its star, a red dwarf which is quite cool and near to our Sun, make it an attractive candidate for investigating its atmospheric ...
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Nov. 16, 2016 Stars are not perfect spheres. While they rotate, they become flat due to the centrifugal force. A team of researchers has now succeeded in measuring the oblateness of a slowly rotating star with unprecedented precision. The researchers have determined stellar oblateness using asteroseismology -- ...
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Nov. 16, 2016 A liquid ocean lying deep beneath Pluto's frozen surface is the best explanation for features revealed by NASA's New Horizons spacecraft, according to a new analysis. The idea that Pluto has a subsurface ocean is not new, but the study provides the most detailed investigation yet of its likely role ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 New technology could revolutionize printed electronics by enabling high quality semiconducting molecular crystals to be directly spray-deposited on any ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 One of the greatest mysteries of experimental physics is how so-called high-temperature superconducting materials work. Despite their name, high-temperature superconductors operate at chilly temperatures less than minus 135 degrees Celsius. They can be used to make superefficient power cables, ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Android users are more honest than iPhone users say psychologists, in a study published this week which is the first to find a link between personality and smartphone ...
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Nov. 15, 2016 There is a conception that bullied children with few friends can find new ones online. But a new study reports that bullied children are excluded from new communication forums that have developed as a result of the digital ...
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Environment News
November 23, 2016
Nov. 22, 2016 A new study of the temporary slowdown in the global average surface temperature warming trend observed between 1998 and 2013 concludes the phenomenon represented a redistribution of energy within the ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Think of all the things your mom taught you - sit up straight, close your mouth when you chew your food, remember to say please and thank you...the list goes on. When it comes to learning how to ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 A mineral far below Earth's surface may hold the key to how much water is stored in the planet, a researcher ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 New research has found evidence of original keratin and melanosome preservation in a 130-million-year-old Eoconfuciusornis specimen. The work extends the timeframe in which original molecules may ...
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Latest Environment Headlines
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Nov. 22, 2016 Engineers have developed the first transgenic grass species that can take up and destroy RDX -- a toxic compound that has been widely used in explosives since World War II and contaminates military bases across the U.S. and some offsite drinking ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 The parasite that causes river blindness infects about 37 million people in parts of Africa and Latin America, causing blindness and other major eye and skin diseases in about 5 million of them. A study now sheds light on the genetic makeup of the parasite, a step toward the goal ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 A new method for measuring the mechanical force cells exert on their surroundings has now been devised, which can help scientists design better biomaterial scaffolds for ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 Scientists studying naturally high carbon dioxide coral reefs in Papua New Guinea found that erosion of essential habitat is accelerated in these highly acidified waters, even as coral growth continues to slow. The new research has important implications for coral reefs around the world as the ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 North Atlantic coral populations -- key to supporting a variety of sea life -- are under threat from climate change, a study ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Most of the extra heat trapped by human-generated emissions is ending up in the oceans. But tracking the temperature of the world's oceans to monitor the change is trickier than it might seem. While satellites monitor surface temperature, measuring the ocean's interior temperature poses a ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 Solar cells can be made with tin instead of lead, scientists find. This breakthrough may make solar power cheaper and more commercially viable, and even usable for mobile phones, laptops and ...
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Nov. 22, 2016 Scientists have warned that high hopes for the success of the Paris Agreement could be dashed if lessons aren’t learned from the challenges and experiences of climate monitoring in Europe.The long term success of the Agreement depends on the availability of well-designed and functioning monitoring and review mechanisms, according to a ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 The turkeys we'll be sitting down to eat on Thursday have a history that goes way back. Archaeologists have unearthed a clutch of domesticated turkey eggs used as a ritual offering 1,500 years ago in Oaxaca, Mexico -- some of the earliest evidence ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Hundreds of years before the first Thanksgiving, Native Americans were raising and feasting on America's classic holiday meal. This is the first time scientists have suggested that turkeys were potentially domesticated by early Native Americans in the southeastern ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Fluid dynamics met history for a team of researchers who studied the Boston Molasses Flood, a disaster that claimed 21 lives, injured 150 and flattened buildings in the Commercial Street area of Boston in 1919. A trio of fluid dynamics physicists explain how they were inspired to study this event ...
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Nov. 18, 2016 Where's the best place to start when retracing the life of a person who lived 4,000 years ago? Turns out, it's simple -- you start at ...
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Society/Education News
November 23, 2016
Nov. 21, 2016 In a hopeful sign for the health of the nation's brains, the percentage of American seniors with dementia is dropping, a new study finds. The ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 The more children are exposed to household tobacco smoke in early childhood, the greater their risk of adopting antisocial behavior toward others, ...
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Nov. 16, 2016 Scientists have identified the first evidence of Deepwater Horizon oil in a land animal - the Seaside Sparrow. The scientists analyzed the diet and feathers of sparrows collected more than a year ...
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Nov. 16, 2016 The number of people in the world with high blood pressure has reached 1.13 billion, according to new research. The largest ever study of its kind, the research involved the World Health Organization ...
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Latest Society/Education Headlines
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Nov. 22, 2016 Trends in infectious disease mortality in the United States from 1980 through 2014 have been released by ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Cement manufacturing is among the most carbon-intensive industrial processes, but an international team of researchers has found that over time, the widely used building material reabsorbs much of the carbon dioxide emitted when it ...
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Nov. 21, 2016 Chemistry researchers have developed a simple diagnostic test that can identify the level of cocaine in a person's urine or oral fluid, outlines a new report. The new test offers a low cost, quick method which could be used for testing at the roadside, in the workplace or in ...
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Nov. 17, 2016 The persistent 'conserve or catch' conflict in marine reserve network design has now been resolved by ...
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Nov. 16, 2016 The warmth of a father's love has a special influence on young people, and makes them feel optimistic and determined to strive for greater things. It also boosts the math grades of teenage girls and the language ability of ...
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Nov. 11, 2016 Physicists avoid highly mathematical work despite being trained in advanced mathematics, new research ...
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Nov. 7, 2016 Speech difficulties are linked with difficulties in learning to read when children first start school, but these effects are no longer apparent at 8 years of age, new research ...
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Nov. 1, 2016 Positive school climates contribute to academic achievement and can improve outcomes for students from low socioeconomic backgrounds, according to a ...
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Oct. 25, 2016 The coordinated cyber attack that crippled parts of the internet on Friday highlighted key policy problems, a cybersecurity scholar ...
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Oct. 24, 2016 Over one-third of Americans report health problems -- from asthma attacks to migraine headaches -- when exposed to common fragranced consumer products such as air fresheners, cleaning supplies, laundry products, scented candles, cologne, and personal care products. The same study also found that fragranced products may affect profits, with more than 20% of respondents entering a business, but ...
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Oct. 20, 2016 Employees who participate in a workplace weight management program—even those without significant weight loss—have reduced health care costs and improved quality of life (QOL), reports a new ...
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Oct. 18, 2016 A study of 20 major cloud hosting services has found that as many as 10 percent of the repositories hosted by them had been compromised -- with several hundred of the "buckets" actively providing malware. Such bad content could be challenging to find, however, because it can be rapidly assembled ...
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