This Blog Is Powered By Life Technology™. Visit Life Technology™ At www.lifetechnology.com Subscribe To This Blog Via Feedburner / Atom 1.0 / RSS 2.0.
News
Life Technology™ Medical News
Impact of Diet on Cancer Risk
How Paranormal Beliefs Provide Comfort in Uncertain Times
Pennsylvania Faces Looming Shortage of Registered Nurses
Scientists Discover Potential Tooth Regeneration Solution
Africa Reassesses Health Care Approach Amid Declining Foreign Aid
Understanding Stimming: Self-Stimulatory Movements in Autism
CDC's Disease Detectives Revived Amid Measles Crisis
Breakthrough Study: M2-Exos Enhance Bone Regeneration
Rising Outbreaks of Contagious Liver Inflammation Among Men
Study Explores Stigma Impact on SGM Families' Children
Oropouche Virus: Widespread Threat in Latin America
CHOP Unveils Longitudinal Atlas of Neuroblastoma
Health Care Reallocation: Impact on Child Heart Surgery
Digital Technology Use and Dementia Risk: Unveiling the Connection
Effects of Systemic Sclerosis on Skin and Organs
Social Coordination: Fluid Dance with Dynamic Sensory Processing
The Power of Flow State: Boost Happiness & Productivity
Oral Medication and Light Therapy Boost Vitiligo Repigmentation
Study Suggests Sauerkraut Benefits Gut Health
Robots Enhance Efficiency at El Camino Health
Moodivate App Shows Double Symptom Reductions
Understanding the Causes of Schizophrenia
Polio Outbreaks in War Zones: Virus Eradication Near
Study Reveals Guilt and Shame Drive End-of-Life Treatments
Gut Health's Link to Sleep Apnea: New Therapeutic Insights
Study Suggests Being Single Lowers Dementia Risk
Embryo Mix-Up at Brisbane IVF Lab Sparks Global Headlines
Early Impairment of Social Engagement in Children with ASD
Researchers Warn of Decreased Sensitivity to Piperaquine
Professor Volckens Investigates Toxic Air in Los Angeles Fires
Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Science News
Social Community Norms: Embracing Individual Expression
Phones Stay Cool: Future Tech for Efficient Supercomputers, Electric Cars, and Medical Devices
90,000 Tons of Nuclear Waste Stored Across 39 States
McGill University AI Verifies Honey Origin
Colossal Biosciences Revives Dire Wolf DNA
Genetics Research Reveals Insights on Heredity and Traits
El Niño Phenomenon Impact on South Atlantic Marine Ecosystems
University of Delaware Scientist Uncovers Circular RNA Role
Study Explores Stigma Impact on SGM Families' Children
UM Researchers Develop Deep Learning Model for Predicting Compound Protein Interactions
Study Reveals Tropical Forests' Diverse Chemistry
Earth's Heat Transfer to Oceans: Key Climate Patterns
Cosmological Model by Copernicus Resembles Arab Astronomer's
Europe's Raptor Poisoning Crisis: 1996-2016 Assessment
Hydrogen Generation via Photocatalysis: Green Fuel Innovations
Beneath the Surface: Pollution's Secret Journey
University of Miami Study Reveals Wave Formation Secrets
Preventing Traumatic Brain Injuries: Monitoring Skull Pressure
Study Reveals Resistance to Peaceful Protests in North America
Ancient Atlantic Water Carved Mediterranean Trough
New Nanocage Filters PFAS Efficiently
Pikachu Spotted Fleeing Police in Antalya, Turkey
Pressure Mounts on Companies to Prioritize Planet Stewardship
"Crucial CRISPR Breakthrough: Targeted Gene Modification"
Climate Change Report Warns of Widespread Impact
Nasa's Imap Arrives for Testing at Marshall Space Center
Impact of Microplastics on Human Body: Ingestion and Inhalation
Deadliest Natural Threat: Earthquakes' Impact on Society
Rise of Pornography Use in Modern Times
New Methods Developed for MXene Production at TU Wien
Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Technology News
Robocake: Innovative Edible Robotic Cake Collaboration
Debate Over Efficient Fuels: Nuclear Power and Machine Learning
Advancements in Machine Learning for Content Creation
Lancaster University Study Reveals UK Solar Farm Land Use
Era of Uncertainty: Rising Tensions and Authoritarianism
Texans Embrace Wind Energy Benefits Amid Criticisms
Apple Inc. Dodges Major Crisis Amid Pandemic
1 Million Pounds of Damaged Lithium-Ion Batteries in LA County
Chinese Automaker BYD Co. to Build Massive Factory in Brazil
Sony to Increase Prices for PlayStation 5 Consoles in Europe
"Revolutionary Water-Based Battery with 2,000-Cycle Stability"
Virtual Reality Study Shows Surprising Perception Manipulation
Meta Faces Trial Over Alleged Market Power Abuse
Human Body Motions for Video Games & VR
Captain Andrew Simons Warns Passengers of Choppy Channel Crossing
Georgia Tech Researchers Develop Microstructure Brain Sensor for Continuous BCI Integration
Team Develops Technique to Enhance Stainless Steel Strength
Chatgpt Enhances Nuclear Science: Zavier Ndum's Breakthrough
Flexible Battery Breakthrough: Shape-Shifting Power Innovation
Revolutionary Spatial Computing: Bridging Real and Digital Worlds
EU Researchers Develop Smarter Sustainable Cooling System
Augmented Reality System for Precise Timber Cuts
Japanese Scientists Develop Ultra-Thin Heat Pipe for Electronics
Advancements in Lithium-Ion Battery Technology
Perovskite Solar Cell Shows High Heat Resilience
Impact of Advanced Social Robots on Household Interactions
Rise of Intimate AI Relationships Sparks Concern
Indian Tree Gum Holds Potential for Eco-Friendly Supercapacitors
San Diego County Supervisors Address AI Policy
World's First 3D-Printed Train Station Unveiled in Japan
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSTuesday, 6 October 2020
California wildfires are huge this year, but not deadliest
With months still to go in California's fire season, the state has already shattered records for the amount of land scorched in a single year—more than 4 million acres to date, with one blaze alone surpassing the 1 million acre mark. Five of the 10 largest wildfires in state history have occurred since August.
Panel to announce 2020 Nobel Prize for physics
The 2020 Nobel Prize for physics is being announced Tuesday, an award that has in the past honored discoveries about the tiniest of particles and the vast mysteries of outer space.
Telehealth trains parents to improve behavior skills of children with autism
Training parents of children with autism spectrum disorder virtually about early behavioral intervention is an accessible and effective approach during the coronavirus pandemic or in other instances when in-person instruction is not possible, according to a Rutgers researcher.
Advancing multiprincipal alloys: Researchers explore new domains of compositionally complex metals
The most significant advances in human civilization are marked by the progression of the materials that humans use. The Stone Age gave way to the Bronze Age, which in turn gave way to the Iron Age. New materials disrupt the technologies of the time, improving life and the human condition.
'Like a fishing net,' nanonet collapses to trap drug molecules
Northwestern University researchers are casting a net for nanoparticles.
Individual suicide risk can be dramatically altered by social 'sameness,' study finds
Similarities among individuals living in the same communities can dramatically change their risk of dying by suicide, according to a new study by Indiana University researchers.
How Hispanic and Asian populations influence US food culture
Media and academics often equate assimilation with the process of immigrants becoming more similar to U.S.-born populations over time and across generations, says University of Arizona researcher Christina Diaz.
Black and Hispanic people more likely to live in high-risk flood zones, study finds
Black and Hispanic people and people with low incomes are more likely to live in areas at high risk of flooding from natural disasters than white and Asian people, according to a new study led by the University of Arizona.
NASA imagery reveals Tropical Storm Gamma battered by wind shear
NASA's Terra satellite obtained visible imagery of Tropical Storm Gamma being battered by outside winds in the south central Gulf of Mexico. Over the weekend of Oct. 3 and 4, Gamma tracked over Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula.
Lopinavir-ritonavir is not an effective treatment for patients hospitalised with COVID-19
The drug combination lopinavir-ritonavir is not an effective treatment for patients admitted to hospital with COVID-19, according to the results of a randomised controlled trial published in The Lancet.
Novel testing platform designed for breast cancer cells
A Purdue University team has developed a novel testing platform to evaluate how breast cancer cells respond to the recurrent stretching that occurs in the lungs during breathing. The technology is designed to better understand the effects that the local tissue has on metastatic breast cancer to study how metastases grow in a new tissue.
Seeking ancient rainforests through modern mammal diets
Closed-canopy rainforests are a vital part of the Earth's modern ecosystems, but tropical plants don't preserve well in the fossil record so it is difficult to tell how long these habitats have existed and where rainforests might have once grown. Instead, scientists look to the diets of extinct animals, which lock evidence of the vegetation they ate into their teeth. A new study led by scientists at the American Museum of Natural History finds that the paradigm used to identify closed-canopy rainforests through dietary signatures needs to be reassessed. The findings are published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
NASA infrared imagery reveals wind shear displacing Marie's strongest storms
NASA's Aqua satellite provided an infrared view of Tropical Storm Marie that revealed the effects of outside winds battering the storm.
Modest increases in physician productivity can offset the cost of medical scribes
Requirements for electronic health records are greater now than ever, and that burden is exacerbating the problem of physician burnout. However, there might be a solution: the medical scribe.
COVID-19 transmission rebounds quickly after physical distancing rules are relaxed
Across the U.S., the relaxation of statewide physical distancing measures that are designed to control the COVID-19 pandemic frequently resulted in an immediate reversal of public health gains against SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes the disease, researchers from Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and colleagues reported.
As pandemic affects children's health, programs that work are still underused
The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has caused widespread harm to the health and well-being of already vulnerable children and adolescents in the U.S., particularly those in low-income households and children of color. Nevertheless, evidence-based programs known to reverse the negative effects of poverty are being widely neglected, according to a new report in Health Affairs. Such programs include basic income supports, other family supports, and universal health care structured to meet family needs. A combination of these interventions could substantially reduce the risks children face from poverty and early adversity, say the authors.
Excess folic acid during pregnancy harms brain development of mice
A UC Davis MIND Institute study of pregnant mice found that high amounts of folic acid during pregnancy harmed the brain development of embryos. Researchers say the findings indicate that more investigation is needed about the best recommended dosage for pregnant women.
Study defines risk factors for unemployment in working people with multiple sclerosis
Lauren Strober, Ph.D., at Kessler Foundation recently published results of the first prospective study of employment and multiple sclerosis (MS). Dr. Strober compared two groups of individuals with MS—those 'at risk' and 'not at risk' for unemployment, examining the influences of multiple factors on the likelihood of staying in the workplace. The article, "Determinants of unemployment in multiple sclerosis (MS): The role of disease measures, person-specific factors, and engagement in positive health-related behaviors" was epublished on September 2, 2020 by Multiple Sclerosis and Related Disorders.
Early referral to physical therapy improves function and other symptoms of back pain with sciatica
Starting physical therapy right away, rather than taking the usual watch and wait approach, helps to improve function and other outcomes for patients experiencing recent-onset back pain with sciatica (pain that radiates into the leg). Findings from a randomized controlled trial are published in Annals of Internal Medicine.
Social media postings linked to hate crimes
A new paper in the Journal of the European Economic Association, published by Oxford University Press, explores the connection between social media and hate crimes. The researchers combined methods from applied microeconomics with text analysis tools to investigate how negative rhetoric about refugees on social media may have contributed to hate crimes against refugees in Germany between 2015 and 2017.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)