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Life Technology™ Medical News
Study Reveals NIPT Superiority Over STSS in DS Screening
Study Reveals Tumor Biology Differences in Black vs. White Veterans
Wearable Pulse Oximeter for Sleep Apnea Monitoring
New Study: Methotrexate as Alternative to Prednisone
Improved Lung Transplant Outcomes with New Allocation Guidelines
Astroglial Cells Lead Brain Activity Regulation
Helping Your Primary School Child Navigate Romantic Relationships
The Importance of Homeostasis in Living Organisms
Waist-to-Height Ratio Predicts Heart Failure Incidence
How Mindfulness Eases Anxiety & Boosts Focus
Single Gene's Key Role in Liver Energy Storage
Pharmaceutical CEO Reveals Vast Cannabis Stockpile
Study Links Rising Temperatures to Severe Sleep Apnea
Heart Failure Patients Lack Regular Cardiologist Visits
Personalized Treatments for Cancer, Heart Disease & More
Struggling to Focus? Regain Productivity with These Tips
Impact of Parental Ancestry on Child Genetic Changes
Study: Monoamine Neurotransmitters in Hippocampal Activation
AI Algorithm Excels in Heart Failure Detection Kenya Study
UCLA & UCSD Researchers Create Injectable Sealant
US Approves First Blood Test for Alzheimer's
Texas Measles Outbreak Slowing: Fewer Than 10 New Cases
Pharmaceutical Cannabidiol Formulation Shows Cardiac Safety
Stress Link to Alzheimer's in Postmenopausal Women
Revolutionizing Health Care: Overcoming Design Limits
"Second-Highest Measles Cases in U.S. Since 2000"
Elusive HIV: Researchers Struggle to Find Vaccine
3,500 Sleep-Related Infant Deaths Annually in US
Study Finds OTC Hearing Aids Less Effective
Air Pollution Linked to Increased Bone Loss in Postmenopausal Women
Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Science News
Larger Hilbert Space Key for Quantum Error Correction
Technological Advances in Precision Physiological Monitoring
"Parthenon: Iconic Temple of Athena on Acropolis Hill"
Residents of Jemna Transform Lives with Palm Grove Takeover
Deadly Storms Devastate Missouri, Kentucky, Virginia
Indian Space Agency's Earth Observation Satellite Launch Fails
21 Dead as Severe Storms Hit Missouri & Kentucky
Archaeologists Discover Ancient Cemeteries in Tangier
Quantum Transformations: Molecule's Light Absorption Dance
Moon's Dark Nearside vs. Rugged Farside: NASA's Lunar Interior Insight
Study Reveals Ultraweak Photon Emission in Living Systems
New Findings in Archaeopteryx Fossil, Voyager 1 Thrusters Revived, Evolutionary Assumptions Challenged
Abandoned Tugboat Found in Lake Michigan
Black Shark Fins Spotted on Central Israel Beach
University of Seville Study: Fiscal-Monetary Policy Impact on Eurozone Growth
British Poets Explore Childhood and Masculinity with Lawnmower Poetry
"Engineers Mimic Marine Shells for Enhanced Energy Absorption"
Belgian Researchers Find Low-Emission Zones Improve Air Quality
"Harmony of Corals and Microbes: Vital Ecosystem Indicators"
Melting Glaciers in Boulder Expose Sulfate Minerals
New Method Identifies Genetic Changes in Oxygen-Producing Microbes
Boosting Radiative Cooling Efficiency for Climate Control
From Hull to Grain: The Rice Milling Process Explained
New Research Reveals Widespread Animal Behavior Patterns
Ozone Hole's Reversible Impact on Southern Ocean Carbon
Ancient Sediment Cores Reveal Global Cooling Event
Evolution of Efficient Light-Emitting Materials
Uncovering Fundamental Mechanism of G Protein-Coupled Receptors
Researchers Uncover Antibiotic Resistance Mechanism
Unveiling EP1: Key GPCR Subtype in PGE2 Signaling
Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Technology News
Cryptocurrency Users Face Security Threats
Paris kidnap bid highlights crypto data security risks
Tin-Halide Perovskites: Promising Semiconductors for TFTs
A new strategy to fabricate highly performing thin-film tin perovskite transistors
Fortnite Unavailable on Apple App Store: Epic Games Battle
'Fortnite' unavailable on Apple devices worldwide
Musk's xAI blames 'unauthorized' tweak for 'white genocide' posts
Elon Musk's AI Startup Blames Unauthorized Modification
Establishing electromagnetic wave measurement standards to ensure the performance of Korea's Starlink
Korea Research Institute Sets Standards for 6G Satellite System
Expansion of Low Earth Orbit Satellite Networks Reshaping Communications
Algorithms aim to make real-time data processing possible anywhere on Earth
Elon Musk's AI Chatbot Grok Sparks Controversy
Elon Musk's AI company says Grok chatbot focus on South Africa's racial politics was 'unauthorized'
US Government Relinquishes Internet Control After 30 Years
How a decades-old tech battle remains as relevant today as ever
Metrology matters: The hidden science driving the green and digital transition
The Science of Measurement: Metrology in Daily Life
Surge in Interest for Encrypted Messaging Apps
Governments continue losing efforts to gain backdoor access to secure communications
NASA X-59's latest testing milestone: Simulating flight from the ground
Nasa's X-59 Supersonic Aircraft Tests Success
Alibaba's Tongyi Lab Introduces Cost-Effective LLM Training
Alibaba's ZeroSearch method uses simulated search results to slash LLM training costs
Saudi Arabia has big AI ambitions. They could come at the cost of human rights
Trump Reveals New Deals with Saudi Arabia
Australia's Search for Waste Disposal Alternatives
Waste-to-energy in Australia: How it works, where new incinerators could go, and how they stack up
Revolutionizing Lighting: White LEDs' Impact Since 1996
Study maps three decades of white LED progress and key innovation drivers
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSMonday, 2 November 2020
Your favorite music can send your brain into a pleasure overload
We all know that moment when we're in the car, at a concert or even sitting on our sofa and one of our favorite songs is played. It's the one that has that really good chord in it, flooding your system with pleasurable emotions, joyful memories, making your hair stand on edge, and even sending a shiver or "chill" down your spine. About half of people get chills when listening to music. Neuroscientists based in France have now used EEG to link chills to multiple brain regions involved in activating reward and pleasure systems. The results are published in Frontiers in Neuroscience.
Proteogenomic study on circulating proteins gives new insights for translational studies, drug development
A new paper from the international SCALLOP consortium, led from Karolinska Institutet in collaboration with Pfizer Research and Development, shows that differences in plasma protein biomarker levels are controlled by hundreds of genetic variants across the human genome, and that these insights can be used to predict which drug targets that are likely to be effective future medicines. The study has been published in the October issue of Nature Metabolism.
New method shows potential for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease
In Alzheimer's disease, a protein (peptide) forms clumps in the brain and causes sufferers to lose their memory. In a recently published article, a research group at Uppsala University described a new treatment method that increases the body's own degradation of the building blocks that lead to these protein clumps.
Focus on COVID-19 deaths in under-65s for better insights into infection rates across populations, say researchers
Simply comparing the total number of deaths across countries may provide a misleading representation of the underlying level of transmission of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, because of large differences in reported COVID-19 death rates in elderly populations in different countries.
Hospitals plan to meet urgent need for post COVID-19 rehabilitation
As more people survive COVID-19 hospitalization, the need for rehabilitation may become increasingly important, according to a new study by Harvard Medical School researchers published in PM&R .
Asian-Australians hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic
More than four in five Asian-Australians say they have experienced instances of discrimination during the COVID-19 pandemic, new analysis from The Australian National University (ANU) shows.
COVID-19 lockdowns cause polio spike in Pakistan
A spike in the number of polio cases in Pakistan—the last refuge of the virus in the world along with neighboring Afghanistan—is being attributed by health experts to disruption in vaccination services caused by lockdowns and restrictions against spread of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Boosting the capacity of supercapacitors
Carefully designed covalent organic frameworks could make supercapacitor electrodes that have a greater ability to store electric charge.
The role of the sun in the spread of viral respiratory diseases
Why do most viral epidemics spread cyclically in autumn and winter in the globe's temperate regions? According to an interdisciplinary team of researchers of the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics, the University of Milan, the Lombardy regional agency for the environment and the Don Gnocchi Foundation, the answer is intimately related to the sun. Their theoretical model shows that both the prevalence and evolution of epidemics are strongly correlated with the amount of daily solar irradiation that hits a given location on the Earth at a given time of the year. The work of the Italian team was recently published in the iScience journal.
More than half of the Dutch population expressed privacy concerns relating to the coronavirus app
According to research by University of Twente researchers, last summer, 68% of Dutch people were moderately to very concerned about possible privacy issues resulting from the type of information a coronavirus app collects. In addition to privacy-related concerns, many citizens were also worried that an app might create a false sense of security, potentially making people more careless. At present, the CoronaMelder app has already been downloaded by 3.6 million users.
Biomimicry control for COVID diagnostics
Containing the scourge of COVID-19 requires testing of individuals, and isolating those who test positive, together with recent contacts, so as to prevent further spread. It is therefore critical to ensure that testing is independently verified so as to assure its accuracy.
Why robots and artificial intelligence creep us out
People tend to accept robots with humanlike characteristics up to a point. Then, things get strangely uncomfortable.
Flexible and transparent electronics fabricated using a two-dimensional semiconductor
In recent years, engineers worldwide have been trying to create electronic components that are increasingly flexible and versatile, as this could enable the fabrication of more sophisticated devices and robotic systems, such as electronic skins (e-skins) or wearable sensors. The overall objective of this particular area of research is to develop flexible electronics that can be manufactured and implemented on a large scale, but that also exhibit a high device density and excellent performance.
Blood test predicts ovarian cancer better than previously thought
A blood test already available to GPs in the UK is more predictive of ovarian cancer than previously thought and could also help pick up other forms of cancer, according to new research published in PLOS Medicine today (Wednesday) and funded by Cancer Research UK and NIHR.
COVID-19 and public compliance
A new study, led by the University of St Andrews, sheds fresh light on the conditions under which people in groups follow the behavior of others, which can help understand human behavior in relation to COVID-19 restrictions.
Underlying design mechanism and morphology of humanized bone probed
A team of biomedical engineers from Australia and Germany studied how human and mouse cells communicate with each other and found that this humanized tissue is physiologically integrated into single functional bone tissue which retains species-specific ultrastructural differences.
Seven different 'disease forms' identified in mild COVID-19
In a study recently published in the journal Allergy, a team of MedUni Vienna scientists led by immunologist Winfried F. Pickl and allergologist Rudolf Valenta (both from the Center for Pathophysiology, Infectiology and Immunology) showed that there are seven forms of disease in COVID-19 with mild disease course, and that the disease leaves behind significant changes in the immune system, even after 10 weeks. These findings could play a significant role in the treatment of patients and in the development of a potent vaccine.
Abnormal blood pressure levels while sleeping increase risk of heart disease, stroke
People who experience high blood pressure while sleeping are more likely to experience future cardiovascular disease especially heart failure, even when their daytime blood pressure is within normal ranges, according to new research published today in the American Heart Association's flagship journal Circulation.
Europe imposes new virus curbs as exasperation, anger grows
Germany on Monday led a further tightening of coronavirus restrictions in Europe that have triggered anger and frustration across the continent, while the COVID-19 crisis in the United States deepened.
Ambitious but controversial: Japan's new hydrogen project
Japan's new 2050 deadline for carbon neutrality has thrown a spotlight on its efforts to find new, greener fuel options, including an ambitious but controversial liquid hydrogen venture.
Global coronavirus death toll tops 1.2 million
More than 1.2 million people have died of coronavirus around the globe, according to an AFP tally from official sources at 0745 GMT on Monday.
Biomarker combination predicts kidney injury in critically ill children
Researchers at the University of Liverpool have identified a unique method of identifying the early signs of a potentially serious condition known as Acute Kidney Injury (AKI).
Canada should approve HIV self-testing
Canada should integrate self-testing for HIV into the health system to help reduce the burden of the disease, argues a commentary published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal.
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