Life Technology™ Medical News

Study Shows Wearable Tech Aids Type 2 Diabetes Exercise

Alarming Impact of Reduced HIV Funding: Lancet Study

Maximizing AI Benefits for Patient Care: Urgent Steps Needed

Routine Childhood Vaccine Coverage Remains Low

Study Shows Teledermatology Boosts Skin Excisions

Study Links PM2.5 to Skin Redness

Yale Research Reveals Insights on Fatty Liver Gene

Study Links Disadvantaged Neighborhoods to Dementia

Early Heart Problems Linked to Brain Health Changes

Maternal Diet in Third Trimester Linked to Offspring Mental Health

Eccentric Exercise: 5 Minutes Daily for Health Gains

Study Reveals Dismissal of Long Covid Patients

Predicting Predisposition: BRCA2 Mutations and Cancer

City of Hope Study: Cell Mutations Alone Not Enough for Tumor Formation

Breakthrough Study Reveals Brain Regions Influencing Metabolism

Coping with Pet Loss: A Common Challenge

Covid Infection Linked to Higher Autoimmune Risk

Study: Daily Physical Activity Lowers Cancer Risk

Restrictions on Abortion Pill in New Administration

Chinese Doctors Perform First Genetically Modified Pig Liver Transplant

Cost Concerns Prompted 1 in 3 Australians to Delay Dental Visits

Brain Functions Depend on Mitochondria for Energy

Limited Male Contraceptive Options: FDA Approval Disparity

Controlling Mosquito Population: Key in Malaria Prevention

Tiny Magnetic Robot Revolutionizes Early Cancer Detection

Study Reveals Factors Influencing Teen and Adult Obesity

Study Reveals Heroin-Seeking Genes in Brain

Early Signs of Alzheimer's: Beyond Cognitive Symptoms

Study Reveals Exosomes' Impact on Children's BBB

Breakthrough Discovery: Delaying Brain Cancer Recurrence

Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSS

Life Technology™ Science News

Extinct Parasitic Wasps in Amber: Venus Flytrap Abdomen Discovery

Accidental Discovery: Unraveling the Role of Whole-Genome Duplication

Arctic Permafrost Thaw Threatens Infrastructure

"GBIF Launches User-Friendly Species Occurrence Cube Service"

Study Shows Over 22% of North American Pollinators Face Extinction

Elon Musk's X Sees First-Year Ad Revenue Surge

Study Finds NHL Teams Benefit from Homegrown Players

New Reverse Genetics System for African Swine Fever Virus

Theoretical Physicists Determine Quantum Entanglement Statistics

Boosting Democracy Engagement: Right-Wing Populists Find Voice

Canada Proposes Artificial Intelligence and Data Act

Immigration Dominates Recent Election Campaigns

Ai Transforms Education: Lesson Planning, Grading, Student Engagement

Media Psychologists Study Impact of VR Environmental Documentaries

Study Reveals Machine-Learning Algorithm's Impact on US Housing

Rising Threat: Hot-Dry Events Impact Health

Puzzling Discrepancy in Hadley Circulation Trends

Study Shows User Search Habits Impact Belief Reinforcement

Researchers Explore Evolution of Human Facial Features

Impact of Francis Scott Key Bridge Collapse on Baltimore Residents

Climate Change Threatens Southern Ocean Ecosystems

Global Environmental Polycrisis: Threats Beyond Climate Breakdown

Classified Plans and Private Views: American Intelligence Protocol

Researchers at North Carolina State University Demonstrate Microplastic Removal System

Millions of Tires End Up in Landfills: Environmental Crisis

Study Reveals PhSLB1's Role in Petunia Branch Development

Quantum Nonlocality Study: Randomness Certification Breakdown

New Chemical Reaction for Solid Polymeric Networks

Global Surge in Fungal Infections: Urgent Need for New Therapies

York University Study Challenges Early Planetary Science Theories

Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSS

Life Technology™ Technology News

New Technology for Efficient VOC Management in Small Businesses

New Approach in AI Reshaping Data Privacy Landscape

Apple Announces iPhone 16 Launch in Indonesia

Cyprus to Subsidize Hotel Desalination Plants

GenAI: Transforming Beliefs with Fictitious Realities

Skoltech AI Center Enhances Neural Network Confidence

Automated Delivery Vehicle Encounters Pedestrian Dilemma

New Memory System Application Boosts Computing Efficiency

Major Security Flaws Uncovered in Computer Microprocessors

US Officials' Yemen Bombing Plans Exposed in Signal Chat

How Search Engine Queries Influence Opinions

The Energy Efficiency Battle: AI vs. Human Brain

Chibueze Amanchukwu Aims to Revolutionize Battery Technology

Elon Musk's Political Views Spark Exodus from X

Trump's World Liberty Financial to Launch Dollar-Backed Stablecoin

Signal Messaging App: Origins and Use by Trump Officials

Llm Integration Raises Concerns Over Data Security

Managing Battery Life for Cell Phones and Electric Vehicles

Semiconductor Trade Fair Calls for Global Chip Sector Cooperation

The Long History of Artificial Intelligence

Breakthrough in Microbe Vulnerability to Butanol Spurs Fuel Innovation

Nissan's New CEO Aims to Boost Model Sales

Signal: Top Secure Messaging App, Not for White House Ops

Lagarde's Remarks Spark Concerns Over Digital Euro

23andMe Files for Bankruptcy: Concerns Over Genetic Data

Builders Embrace Innovative Solutions Amid Rising Rental Costs

Tim Cook Lauds Next Generation Developers in China Hub

Over 40,000 US Bridges Deficient: FIU System for Restoration

Tactile Charts: Converting Visual Data for Accessibility

UN Urges Countries to Enhance Satellite Navigation Protections

Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSS

Friday, 18 October 2019

Croissant making inspires renewable energy solution

The art of croissant making has inspired researchers from Queen Mary University of London to find a solution to a sustainable energy problem.

Newly discovered virus infects bald eagles across America

Researchers have discovered a previously unknown virus infecting nearly a third of America's bald eagle population.

A charging box for Skydio 2 drones could attract business users

Skydio 2 Dock is from the company with the same name, Skydio. The company showed a video of it on Wednesday. They said in the video notes that "We look forward to partnering with our first customers and regulators to roll this product out responsibly. If you believe your drone program could benefit from a Skydio 2 Dock, please get in touch with us."

Research group advances perovskite solar technology for green energy production

In a new research paper published in Nature Energy earlier this month, Professor Michael McGehee and his research team demonstrate how to dramatically improve the stability of tin-containing perovskite material used in stacked solar cells, allowing for up to 30% power conversion efficiency.

How Purdue's aggressive sales of a painkiller blew up in its face

In 2002, Andrew Kolodny, a resident in psychiatry, attended a training session on pain treatment in Philadelphia.

America's endless battle against lethal drug fentanyl

In a windowless hangar at New York's John F. Kennedy airport, dozens of law enforcement officers sift through packages, looking for fentanyl—a drug that is killing Americans every day.

Lunch break lesson: how to reverse an opioid overdose

At a small shop selling handmade jewelry in South Philly, employees are skipping their lunch break for a good cause. They are getting training they all wanted—in how to save someone who has overdosed on opioids.

Deep-sea explorers seek out sunken World War II ships

MIDWAY ATOLL, Northwestern Hawaiian Islands (AP)—Deep-sea explorers scouring the world's oceans for sunken World War II ships are honing in on debris fields deep in the Pacific, in an area where one of the most decisive battles of the time took place.

US imposes tariffs on EU goods, targeting Airbus, wine and whisky

The United States imposed tariffs on a record $7.5-billion worth of European Union goods on Friday, despite threats of retaliation, with Airbus, French wine and Scottish whiskies among the high-profile targets.

Confessions of a cannabis farmer: The Vietnamese getting Brits high

Holed up alone in a suburban British house thousands of miles from home, cannabis farmer Cuong Nguyen spent months carefully nurturing his plants, one of thousands of Vietnamese migrants working in the UK's multi-billion dollar weed industry.

Trial set in New York on Exxon's climate statements

Charges that Exxon Mobil misled investors on the financial risks of climate change will be heard in court this month after a New York judge gave the green light for a trial.

'Legal basis' an 'absolute prerequisite' for digital monies like Libra: G7

Facebook's proposed digital currency must have legal and regulatory issues worked out in key economies before it can be put into use, the Group of Seven economies said Thursday.

Longest non-stop flight to take off from New York to Sydney

A plane and its passengers are set to test the mental and physical limits of long-haul aviation when Qantas operates the first direct flight by a commercial airline from New York to Sydney this weekend.

Training social workers in fight against opioids

Nancy Ochoa was 15 years old the first time she used heroin with a group of friends. At 16, four months after the birth of her first child, her occasional drug use had turned into a "necessity."

A new approach to reconstructing protein evolution

There are an estimated 20,000 to 30,000 proteins at work in cells, where they carry out numerable functions, says computational molecular biologist Roman Sloutsky at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. "One of the central questions in all of biochemistry and molecular biology," he adds, is how their precisely-tuned functions are determined.

Cod or haddock? Study looks at 'name bias' and fisheries sustainability

Could you taste the difference between cod and other whitefish, such as haddock or hake, if you didn't know what you were eating? The answer may have implications for supporting local fisheries and food sustainability in New England, says UMass Amherst environmental conservation graduate student Amanda Davis.

Plant-based compound may enable faster, more effective gene therapy

Gene therapy has broadened the treatment possibilities for those with immune system deficiencies and blood-based conditions, such as sickle cell anemia and leukemia. These diseases, which once would require a bone marrow transplant, can now be successfully treated by modifying patients' own blood stem cells to correct the underlying genetic problem.

New study uncovers 'magnetic' memory of European glass eels

A new study led by researchers at the University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science and at the Institute of Marine Research in Norway found that European glass eels use their magnetic sense to "imprint" a memory of the direction of water currents in the estuary where they become juveniles. This is the first direct evidence that a species of fish uses its internal magnetic compass to form a memory of current direction.

Health care intervention: Treating high-need, high-cost patients

In crisis and with nowhere else to turn, thousands of patients with complex needs—serious mental and physical health problems and substance use disorders—every year flock to emergency rooms in Harris County, Texas and across the country. Referred to as "high-need, high-cost," these patients have limited ability to take care of themselves, making it challenging for doctors to find effective treatments.

Researcher invents an easy-to-use technique to measure the hydrophobicity of micro- and nanoparticle

The scientific and industrial communities who work with micro- and nanoparticles continue to labor with the challenge of effective particle dispersion. Most particles that disperse in liquids aggregate rapidly, and eventually precipitate, thereby separating from the liquid phase. While it is commonly accepted that the hydrophobicity of particles— how quickly water repels off a surface—determines their dispersion and aggregation potential, there has been no easy-to-use method to quantitatively determine the hydrophobicity of these tiny particles.

Is there evidence of the 'immigrant health paradox' among Arab Americans?

First generation immigrants to the United States from Latin America, South America, and Asia have been shown to have better health outcomes and behaviors than second generation (born in the U.S. to immigrant parents) and third generation (born in the U.S. to U.S.-born parents with immigrant heritage) immigrants—a phenomenon known as the "immigrant health paradox." But in a study led by Boston College Connell School of Nursing Assistant Professor Nadia Abuelezam, little evidence of an immigrant health paradox was found among immigrants from Arabic speaking countries in the Middle East and North Africa.

Increase health benefits of exercise by working out before breakfast

According to a new study, published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, health scientists at the Universities of Bath and Birmingham found that by changing the timing of when you eat and exercise, people can better control their blood sugar levels.