This Blog Is Powered By The Life Technology™ News And Advertising Network. Subscribe To This Blog Via Feedburner / Atom 1.0 / RSS 2.0.
News
Life Technology™ Medical News
New Cancer Drug Enhertu Approved in UK
Study Reveals 15.7 nHSV Infections per 100,000 US Hospital Births
Low Rate of Emergency Visits Linked to Semaglutide: Study
Monash Study Addresses Australia's Contraception Challenges
University of Manitoba Study Eliminates Breast Cancer Brain Tumors
Psychological Impact of Immigration Detention on Children
The Mystique of the Happy Dad in Popular Culture
Study Reveals Inconsistent Breast Cancer Lymphedema Diagnosis
Key Tool for Heart Specialists: Long-Term Risks in Single-Ventricle Repair
Early Detection of Autism in Infants: University Study
Managing Diabetes: Importance of Regular Blood Sugar Monitoring
New International League Against Epilepsy Definition Boosts Diagnosis
Pfizer Halts Development of Once-Daily Obesity Pill
Study: EHR Data for Homelessness Screening
Liver Cancer Linked to Non-Viral Liver Disease
Global Lockdown Policies During Covid-19: Racist?
Global Diabetes Impact: 6% Affected, 1.6M Deaths
Novel Link Found: Body Fat and Anxiety Connection
Mother's Unbreakable Rule: No Outdoor Shoes Indoors
Flu Season 2024-2025: High Severity, Record Hospitalizations
Study Reveals Link Between E-Cigarettes and COPD
Drug Reserpine Shows Promise for Treating Retinitis Pigmentosa
Understanding the Mutational Landscape of Colorectal Cancer
Understanding the Aggressiveness of Pancreatic Cancer
Enteroviruses: Causes of Common Cold to Polio
First UK Baby Born After Mother's Womb Transplant
Impact of Generative AI on Learning and Ethics
Parents Seek Assessments for Child Development Concerns
Keele University Study: Barriers to Asthma Treatment Alternatives
Tragedy Strikes Paris Cryotherapy Session
Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Science News
Diamonds with Optically Active Defects: New Quantum Sensor Breakthrough
Impact of Hot Spots on Explosive Initiation
Impact of Ratings on Purchasing Decisions
Sdsu Endowed Alfred Chair Prof Enhances Dairy Wastewater Treatment
How AI Enhances Customer Expectations in Hospitality
Men Struggle with Intimate Partner Violence Effects
Therapist Confronts Client Over Dog Abuse
Researchers Find Durable Wheat Alternative: Pearl Millet Gains Favor
Accuracy of Ecological Data on iNaturalist and eBird
Salmon Ecosystem Strategy Boosts Global Biodiversity
Australia's Honeybees in Crisis: Varroa Destructor Threat
Coastal Town Scenarios: Beach Staples Vanish
Trump's Executive Orders Limiting Education Content
Trees' Circadian Clocks Influence Growth and Seasonal Events
Pitt Researchers Unveil Detailed Bacteriophage Structure
Sun's Role in Moon Water Formation Explored
Study Reveals TOI-270 d: Giant Rocky Planet with Hot Atmosphere
India's Severe Air Pollution: Study Shows Effective Emission Cuts
NASA's Hubble Finds Runaway Magnetar in Milky Way
Saltwater Intrusion on the Rise in Estuaries
Coastal Archaeological Sites at Risk: Climate Change Impact
New Findings: Ubiquinone Not Sole Carrier in Mammals
Mysterious 'Oumuamua: Solar System Visitor Sparks Astronomical Frenzy
Understanding the Source of Your Drinking Water
Deadly Volcanic Ash: Silent Threat from Eruptions
Scientists Uncover Hailstone Growth Secrets
Challenges in Propane Dehydrogenation: Achieving Ambient Conditions
Boosting Resilience: Community Bonds in Disaster Response
Taiwan University Team Innovates Biomass Conversion Platform
Earth's Magnetic Field Utilized for Creating Nanoparticles
Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Technology News
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
Advanced AI: Your Ultimate Vacation Guide
AI Researchers Find Over-training Challenges for Large Language Models
Architectural Observations in Benevento, Italy
Artificial Intelligence: Mirror of Humanity
UK Government Allocates £65 Million for Borealis Space Defense
Balancing Human and AI Goals: Measuring Alignment Efficiently
South Africa's Transition to Renewable Energy Sparks Hope
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSWednesday, 29 January 2020
WHO warns world to 'take action' over China virus
The World Health Organization on Wednesday warned all governments to "take action" over the SARS-like virus spreading from China that has killed 132 people and infected around 6,000 others.
Two defunct satellites speed toward possible collision
Two decommissioned satellites sped towards each other Wednesday at a combined speed of almost 33,000 miles (53,000 kilometers) an hour, raising the risk of a collision that would send thousands of pieces of debris hurtling through space.
News Corp aggregator aims to break free from tech platforms
Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. on Wednesday unveiled an online news aggregation service, aiming to break away from the tech platforms that dominate digital media.
Five people in France confirmed to have coronavirus
The daughter of a Chinese tourist who is seriously ill in a Paris hospital has become the fifth person in France to be confirmed with the coronavirus, officials said Wednesday.
Health experts: Human-to-human spread of new virus worrying
World health officials expressed "great concern" Wednesday that a dangerous new virus is starting to spread between people outside of China, a troubling development as China and the world frantically work to contain the outbreak. For a second day, the number of infections grew dramatically.
NASA shutting down space telescope, infrared eyes to cosmos
NASA is pulling the plug on one of its great observatories—the Spitzer Space Telescope—after 16 years of scanning the universe with infrared eyes.
Study: Antioxidant flavonol linked to lower risk of Alzheimer's dementia
People who eat or drink more foods with the antioxidant flavonol, which is found in nearly all fruits and vegetables as well as tea, may be less likely to develop Alzheimer's dementia years later, according to a study published in the January 29, 2020, online issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
Gut reaction: How immunity ramps up against incoming threats
A new study has revealed how the gut's protective mechanisms ramp up significantly with food intake, and at times of the day when mealtimes are anticipated based on regular eating habits.
Long life, good health
In a new report published today in Circulation, experts outline national and global goals to help people live healthier for longer. While heart disease and stroke-related deaths continue to decline, the rate at which they're declining has slowed and obesity rates are on the rise.
2019 novel coronavirus is genetically different to SARS and should be considered a new human-infecting coronavirus
A new genetic analysis of 10 genome sequences of novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) from nine patients in Wuhan finds that the virus is most closely related to two bat-derived SARS-like coronaviruses, according to a study published in The Lancet.
Scientists find record warm water in Antarctica, pointing to cause behind troubling glacier melt
A team of scientists has observed, for the first time, the presence of warm water at a vital point underneath a glacier in Antarctica—an alarming discovery that points to the cause behind the gradual melting of this ice shelf while also raising concerns about sea-level rise around the globe.
Coupled quantum dots may offer a new way to store quantum information
Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and their colleagues have for the first time created and imaged a novel pair of quantum dots—tiny islands of confined electric charge that act like interacting artificial atoms. Such "coupled" quantum dots could serve as a robust quantum bit, or qubit, the fundamental unit of information for a quantum computer. Moreover, the patterns of electric charge in the island can't be fully explained by current models of quantum physics, offering an opportunity to investigate rich new physical phenomena in materials.
Researchers studying motivational aspects of mindfulness find quality differs by situation
What makes people more or less mindful from one situation to the next? Researchers have found that mindfulness is not entirely something an individual brings to a situation and rather is partly shaped by the situations they encounter.
Demand for drone delivery in e-retail is high, ability to meet that demand low
Consumers want what they want, and they want it now. Drone delivery has long been talked about as an option to satisfy consumer delivery demands, but how realistic is it? New research in the INFORMS journal Transportation Science looks at how possible and desirable it is to use drones for delivery for e-retailers considering cost and effectiveness in certain population areas and in certain locations.
Monitoring intermediates in CO2 conversion to formate by metal catalyst
Plants take in energy from sunlight to transform atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) into sugars and then other materials for growth and metabolic functions. Mimicking this photochemical reaction to efficiently convert CO2 into fuels and industrially important chemicals would support a sustainable energy future and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Prescribed burns benefit bees
Freshly burned longleaf pine forests have more than double the total number of bees and bee species than similar forests that have not burned in over 50 years, according to new research from North Carolina State University.
UCLA researchers find chronic inflammation contributes to cancer metastasis
The study reveals a detailed epigenetic mechanism for how interleukin-1-beta, a common cytokine that helps fight infections during inflammation, plays a critical role in cancer metastasis. The researchers found that chronic exposure to interleukin-1-beta can promote lung cancer metastasis through inheritable changes of gene expression without altering DNA sequence. Because of these gene alterations, cancer cells can memorize this phenotype—known as epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, an important step during cancer metastasis—to successfully reach distance organs and subsequently colonize.
The health of foundation species promotes the stability of the ecosystems that depend on them
Anyone who's read "The Lorax" will recognize that certain species serve as the foundation of their ecosystems. When the truffula trees disappear, so to do the swomee-swans and bar-ba-loots. However, the same is not necessarily true the other way around.
Better than reality: NASA scientists tap virtual reality to make a scientific discovery
NASA scientists using virtual reality technology are redefining our understanding about how our galaxy works.
Researchers develop new bio-inspired wing design for small drones
Researchers from Brown University have designed a new type of wing that could make small fixed-wing drones far more stable and efficient.
Drug lord's hippos make their mark on foreign ecosystem
Four hours east of Medellin in northern Colombia's Puerto Triunfo municipality, the sprawling hacienda constructed by infamous drug lord Pablo Escobar of "Narcos" fame has become a tourist attraction. When Escobar's empire crashed, the exotic animals housed at his family's zoo, including rhinos, giraffes and zebras, were safely relocated to new homes... except for the hippopotamuses.
Cheap nanoparticles stimulate immune response to cancer in the lab
University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers have developed nanoparticles that, in the lab, can activate immune responses to cancer cells. If they are shown to work as well in the body as they do in the lab, the nanoparticles might provide an effective and more affordable way to fight cancer.
Research team investigates abnormal neuron activity in Rett syndrome
The brain undergoes dramatic change during the first years of life. Its circuits readily rewire as an infant and then child encounters new sights and sounds, taking in the world and learning to understand it. As the child matures and key developmental periods pass, the brain becomes less malleable—but certain experiences create opportunities for parts of the adult brain to rewire and learn again.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)