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Life Technology™ Medical News

Researchers Unveil Insights Into Learning Speed Phenomenon

Researchers at UCL and UCLH Uncover Brain Regions for Logical Thinking

Brisk Walking Reduces Heart Rhythm Risks

Mid-Afternoon Dose of Beclomethasone for Asthma Control

Genetic Changes Impacting Epilepsy Medication Response

Study Reveals DNA Monitoring Predicts Skin Cancer Recurrence

Medicaid Expansion Boosts Access to Lung Cancer Care

Researchers Develop Highly Effective Antibothropic Serum

Research at Faculty of Education and Sport–Álava Enhances Goalkeeper Training

Human Brain Learns to Filter Distractions: EEG Study

Study Reveals Muscle Proteins' Role in Memory

New Strategy to Boost Multiple Myeloma Treatment Efficiency

Artificial Intelligence Revolutionizing Cancer Treatment

Key Vaccine Advisory Committee Convenes Under Health Secretary Kennedy

Hybrid Music Therapy Benefits Heart Failure and COPD

Gut Bacteria Boost Anti-Cancer Immunity

Wild Animals' Reproductive Adaptations: Insights for Human Health

Study Links Mental Disorders to Lower Parenthood Odds

AI Tool Reveals Disease Proteins Misfolding

Novel Compound ML233 Inhibits Melanin Production

Autism Rate Among U.S. Children Rises

New Immunotherapy Strategy Reduces Cancer Recurrence

Measles Outbreak Spreads: Texas, New Mexico, Ohio Cases

Porcupine Inhibition: Promising Treatment for Sclerosteosis

Smartphones Revolutionize Health Management in India

Bra Fitting and Body Armor Testing: Andrea Porter's Unique Journey

Study Reveals Impact of Female Genital Mutilation on Women's Health

Researchers Uncover Natural Heart Protection Mechanism

Challenges of Harm Reduction in Rural America

Supreme Court Upholds Affordable Care Act Benefits

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Life Technology™ Science News

Evolutionary History of Crocodilians Unveiled

Endangered Species Act: 50 Years of Bipartisan Unity

Researchers at University of Oxford Uncover Origin of Earth's Water

New Food Source Sustains Honey Bee Colonies Without Pollen

Bird Feeder Dispute Reveals Resource Competition Among Species

International Study Enhances Earthquake Rupture Predictions

Potato Growers Battle Aerial Stem Rot Challenge

Chinese Community Translates Hispanic Songs on NECM

University of Barcelona Study Challenges Traditional Work Foundations

Tropical Seagrass Resilience Amid Climate Threats

Machine-Learning Workflow Boosts Organic Crystal Output

"Titan: Saturn's Largest Moon with Unique Atmosphere"

Rise in Heat Wave Exposure Across Central Asia's Croplands

Research Team Makes Breakthrough in Satellite-Based Air Quality Monitoring

"Exploring Peatlands: UC Santa Cruz Professor Studies Tropical Wetlands"

Inactive Ingredients in Agricultural and Pharmaceutical Products: Potential Water Contaminants

Resilient Entrepreneurs Navigate Emotional Rollercoaster

Solar Storm Expected to Create Stunning Aurora Across More US States

Global Warming Triples Ocean Heat Waves

Global Health Threat: Urgent Need for Novel Antibiotic Drugs

Bumble Bee Study Reveals Impact of Air Pollution on Gut Microbes

How Prescribed Burns Combat Wildfires

New Handheld Radiation Detector Developed in Finland

Research Reveals Circadian Clock's Noise-Filtering Power

Cornell Study: Smell Influences Friendship Potential

Bizarre Weather Phenomenon: Ammonia-Water "Mushballs" Storm

Efficient Water Splitting for Clean Hydrogen

Study Reveals How Age and Brain Shape Impact Dogs' Olfactory Connectivity

Devastating 7.7 Magnitude Earthquake Hits Myanmar

Quebec Researchers Target Cancer-Causing Protein

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Life Technology™ Technology News

Drone Outperforms Pilots in International Racing Event

Penn Engineers Develop First Light-Powered Neural Network Chip

Mark Zuckerberg Defends Meta in Antitrust Trial

Lithium Salt Unveils Potential for Affordable Battery Innovation

Virtual Worlds in Video Games: Architectural Environments Influence Gameplay

Innovative Desalination Tech Cuts Waste

Online Opinions Split: A Divided Conversation

The Power and Perils of AI Models

"Stretchable Self-Healing Lithium Battery Innovation"

Chinese Scientists Develop iDust Tool for Improved Dust Storm Predictions

Texas Engineers Uncover Breakthrough in Battery Technology

Scientists Uncover Peculiar Term: Vegetative Electron Microscopy

Ukraine War Impact: Geothermal Solution for UK Energy Crisis

Revolutionizing Audio: 3D Surround Sound Speaker

Study Reveals 10% of Websites Breach Ad Standards

Mark Zuckerberg Testifies in US Antitrust Trial

Biofilm Breakdown: Seawater Threatens Tunnel Concrete

Rising Technology-Driven Fraud: US Losses Exceed $10B

Corn Protein Enhances Lithium-Sulfur Battery Performance

Evolution of Vocabulary: Impact on Values and Interactions

Titanic Sinking: AI Systems Preventing Ship Disasters

Chinese Firm Catl Reports 32.9% Profit Surge

Canada's Election: Social Media Filters Campaign News

Japanese Authorities Issue Cease-and-Desist to Google

Virtual New Colleagues at Denmark's Royal Unibrew

Eco-Friendly Method Boosts Perovskite Solar Cell Efficiency

High-Stakes NFL Draft Negotiations: Competitive Advantage and Cooperation

Meta Chief Mark Zuckerberg Testifies in US Antitrust Trial

New AI Model Generates High-Quality Images Safely

Understanding Neural Networks: Key Ingredients for AI

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Wednesday, 18 September 2019

Indonesian haze closes schools, sparks fears for Singapore F1

Toxic haze from Indonesian forest fires closed thousands of schools across the country and in neighbouring Malaysia Wednesday, while air quality worsened in Singapore just days before the city's Formula One motor race.

Facebook auto-generating pages for Islamic State, al-Qaida

In the face of criticism that Facebook is not doing enough to combat extremist messaging, the company likes to say that its automated systems remove the vast majority of prohibited content glorifying the Islamic State group and al-Qaida before it's reported.

Number of abortions in US falls to lowest since 1973

The number and rate of abortions across the United States have plunged to their lowest levels since the procedure became legal nationwide in 1973, according to new figures released Wednesday.

The long road to clean energy

The vital transition to a zero-carbon economy is likely to be a long and rocky road. So-called green energy is booming, but not fast enough to curb climate change, which is accelerating at an alarming pace as oil, gas and coal consumption soar.

Health fears prompt Swiss 5G revolt

Switzerland was among the first countries to begin deploying 5G, but health fears over radiation from the antennas that carry the next-generation mobile technology have sparked a nationwide revolt.

Study finds manufacturing, driving and cleaning jobs linked to the highest risk of developing type 2 diabetes

Professional drivers, manufacturing workers and cleaners have a threefold increased risk of type 2 diabetes (T2D) compared with university teachers and physiotherapists, according to a new study presented at this year's Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) and published in Diabetologia (the journal of EASD).

Deprivation associated with increased risk of death following hospital admission with type 2 diabetes

New research presented at this year's Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 Sept) shows that where you live has an impact on how likely you are to die for patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D), and how likely you are to be readmitted to hospital for patients with type 1 diabetes (T1D) following hospital discharge. The study is by Dr. Tim Robbins, Institute of Digital Healthcare, WMG, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK, and colleagues from both the University of Warwick and University Hospitals Coventry & Warwickshire NHS Trust, UK.

Early signs of adult diabetes are visible in children as young as 8 years old

Early signs of adulthood type 2 diabetes can be seen in children as young as 8 years old, decades before it is likely to be diagnosed, according to a new genetic study being presented at this year's European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) Annual Meeting in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 September).

Study stresses the importance of staying physically active and the negative effects of even short-term inactivity

A new study presented at this year's Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 September) highlights the negative health effects of even short periods of physical inactivity and stresses the importance of staying physically active.

Fruit flies' microbiomes shape their evolution

The expression "you are what you eat" has taken on new meaning. In an experiment in fruit flies, or Drosophila melanogaster, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have found that adding different species of microbes to the flies' food caused populations to diverge genetically, racking up significant genomic changes in just five generations.

Researchers develop thermo-responsive protein hydrogel

Imagine a perfectly biocompatible, protein-based drug delivery system durable enough to survive in the body for more than two weeks and capable of providing sustained medication release. An interdisciplinary research team led by Jin Kim Montclare, a professor of biomolecular and chemical engineering at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering, has created the first protein-engineered hydrogel that meets those criteria, advancing an area of biochemistry critical to not only to the future of drug delivery, but tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.

Brain imaging shows how nonverbal children with autism have slower response to sounds

Even though nonverbal or minimally verbal people who have autism spectrum disorder (ASD) make up between 25 and 30 percent of the total autistic population, almost no studies have been done focusing on this group and their particular needs.

Stabilizing neuronal branching for healthy brain circuitry

Neurons form circuits in our brain by creating tree-like branches to connect with each other. Newly forming branches rely on the stability of microtubules, a railway-like system important for the transport of materials in cells. The mechanisms that regulate the stability of microtubules in branches are largely unknown. New research from the Vickie & Jack Farber Institute for Neuroscience—Jefferson Health has identified a key molecule that stabilizes microtubules and reinforces new neuronal branches.

Microbiome may be involved in mechanisms related to muscle strength in older adults

A novel new study suggests that the gut microbiome has a role in mechanisms related to muscle strength in older adults. The work, led by researchers at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (HNRCA) at Tufts, is available as a pre-proof in advance of print in Experimental Gerontology.

NASA's Terra Satellite sees the birth of Tropical Storm Imelda

NASA's Terra satellite passed over the western Gulf of Mexico during the early afternoon of Sept. 17 and captured a visible image of the newly formed Tropical Depression 11.

Immigrants who committed felonies less likely than nonimmigrants to commit another felony

Prior research has shown that immigrants have lower rates of offending, arrest, and incarceration than nonimmigrants. However, that work hasn't examined whether this holds true for recidivism. A new study compared recidivism rates of foreign-born and native-born individuals formerly incarcerated for felonies and released from prisons in Florida. It found that immigrants are significantly less likely to reoffend by committing another felony than their nonimmigrant peers.

March of the multiple penguin genomes

The Penguin Genome Consortium sequences all living penguin species genomes to understand the evolution of life on the ice

Electronic nose can sniff out which lung cancer patients will respond to immunotherapy

An electronic nose that detects chemicals in the breath of lung cancer patients can identify with 85% accuracy those who will or will not respond to immunotherapy, according to new research published in the leading cancer journal Annals of Oncology today.

Quarter of teachers in England report 60-hour working week

One in four teachers work more than 60 hours a week and many work in the evenings, despite successive government promises to reduce their hours, according to a new UCL-led study.

Radiation may lower potential for side effects of CAR T therapy in non-hodgkin's lymphoma

Treating non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) patients with radiation therapy as an additional treatment while they wait for their CAR T cells to be manufactured may reduce the risk of CAR T therapy side effects once it is administered, according to a new study from researchers in the Abramson Cancer Center at the University of Pennsylvania. The study found patients who received radiation 30 days or fewer before their CAR T infusion did not experience serious cytokine release syndrome (CRS) or neurotoxicity, the two most common side effects of the gene therapy. Michael LaRiviere, MD, a resident in Radiation Oncology in Penn's Perelman School of Medicine, will present the findings today at the American Society for Radiation Oncology Annual Meeting in Chicago (Abstract #135).