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Nyheder2018april11

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The Atlantic
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Paul Ryan Makes His ExitPaul Ryan RepublicanUpdated on April 11 at 9:46 a.m. ET For months, House Republicans and Democrats alike have traded bets on whether Speaker Paul Ryan would run for reelection. Now, it seems, they have their answer. At a House Republican conference meeting on Wednesday morning, Ryan informed colleagues that he will not seek reelection in his Wisconsin district, according to multiple House Republican sources. A sour
7h
Viden
500+
Ny forskning: Slikmunde har mindre fedt i kroppenForskere har opdaget, at sukkertrang måske kan kædes sammen med mindre fedme – og øget risiko for forhøjet blodtryk.
5h
Ingeniøren
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Så er den gal igen-igen: Citronkage overskrider grænseværdi for giftige fluorstoffer med faktor 3.857I en ny test finder Forbrugerrådet igen en færdigkage, som overskrider de vejledende grænseværdier for sundhedsskadelige og persistente fluorstoffer med flere tusind gange.
9h
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Rigide journalføringskrav hæmmer overblikket i journalenEr hele denne skriftliggørelse af vores patientkontakter og alle selvfølgelighederne til gavn for patientsikkerheden? For mig er svaret klart.
4min
The Atlantic
2
The Most Important Exchange of the Zuckerberg HearingIn his second day of congressional hearings, Mark Zuckerberg began the proceedings in the House of Representatives on Wednesday with an identical opening statement to the one he gave in the Senate on Tuesday. But from that point forward, the proceedings went in a very different direction. The House members were much more aggressive and more pointed in their questioning, repeatedly cutting off the
4min
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Ludwig scientists share new cancer research findings at 2018 AACR Annual MeetingLudwig Cancer Research released today the full scope of findings to be presented by Ludwig researchers at this year's American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting in Chicago, Ill., April 14-18, 2018. Research conducted by more than 100 Ludwig scientists will be presented in symposiums, plenaries, town meetings, education sessions and poster sessions.
12min
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Does age at menopause affect memory?Entering menopause at a later age may be associated with a small benefit to your memory years later, according to a study published in the April 11, 2018, online issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
12min
Live Science
55
Synthetic Marijuana Tainted with Rat Poison Linked to 3 DeathsSynthetic marijuana that causes severe bleeding has killed three people and sickened more than 100 others, and now, officials believe they have identified the dangerous drug's contaminant: rat poison.
14min
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Zuckerberg defends Facebook business modelMark Zuckerberg defended Facebook's business model on Wednesday against fierce criticism of how it feeds user data to advertisers, even as he admitted his own personal information had been leaked to outside companies.
20min
Popular Science
4
Planetary nurseries are far more varied and beautiful than we expectedSpace Planets are basically just giant dust bunnies. At an ESO site in Chile’s Atacama Desert, a unique telescope has allowed astronomers to make unprecedented observations of the “dusty disks” that form around young…
23min
New on MIT Technology Review
84
FDA approves first AI-powered diagnostic that doesn’t need a doctor’s help
29min
Big Think
4
“Another nail in the coffin for learning styles” – students did not benefit from studying according to their supposed learning styleThe idea that we learn better when taught via our preferred modality or “learning style” – such as visually, orally, or by doing – is not supported by evidence. Read More
32min
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
With bikes, transit, Uber unveils new vision of urban transportUber Car AppUber announced plans Wednesday to add mass transit, bike-sharing and other options to its mobile app, as it unveiled a vision for urban transportation integrating options in addition to ridesharing.
33min
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Research brief: Vaccines to treat opioid abuse and prevent fatal overdosesA team of scientists from the University of Minnesota Medical School and Minneapolis Medical Research Foundation at Hennepin Healthcare is developing vaccines against heroin and prescription opioids, such as oxycodone and fentanyl.
33min
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

EPA's IRIS program has made substantial progress, says new reportThe US Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) program has made 'substantial progress' in implementing recommendations outlined in past reports by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, improving the program's overall scientific and technical performance, says a new Academies report. The program, which is used to assess the hazards
33min
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Swamp microbe has pollution-munching powerSewage treatment may be an unglamorous job, but bacteria are happy to do it. Sewage plants rely on bacteria to remove environmental toxins from waste so that the processed water can be safely discharged into oceans and rivers. Now, a bacterium discovered by Princeton researchers in a New Jersey swamp may offer a more efficient method for treating toxins found in sewage, fertilizer runoff and other
33min
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Two dinosaurs fetch over 1.4 million euros each in Paris saleTwo dinosaur skeletons marketed as hip design objects— one of a diplodocus, the other of an allosaurus—sold for more than 1.4 million euros ($1.7 million) apiece at auction in Paris on Wednesday.
44min
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Airbus aiming to step up A320neo productionAirbus aims to boost production of its A320neo aircraft and step up deliveries in the second quarter of the medium-haul carrier despite persistent engine woes, chief executive Tom Enders said Wednesday.
44min
The Atlantic
58
Paul Ryan's Unrealized Conservative VisionPaul Ryan RepublicansPaul Ryan’s dream for much if not all of his time in Congress was to leave a deeply conservative imprint on American social and fiscal policy—to reshape and slim down the safety-net programs of Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security so as to control the ballooning national debt. After 20 years, all he got was some tax cuts. Ryan will leave the House next year having achieved more in politics tha
48min
The Atlantic
3
Are Helicopter Parents Ruining a Generation?“Initially, helicopter parenting appears to work,” says Julie Lythcott-Haims, author of How to Raise an Adult. “ As a kid, you're kept safe, you're given direction, and you might get a better grade because the parent is arguing with the teacher.” But, ultimately, parents end up getting in the child’s way. In the first episode of Home School , The Atlantic ’s new animated series on parenting, Lyth
48min
The Scientist RSS

Fossilized Brains Called into Question, Might be MicrobesAuthors of a new study suggest that 520-million-year-old structures, previously identified as the brains of ancient arthropods, are instead preserved microbial biofilms.
50min
The Scientist RSS

French Scientists Petition for Firm Stance Against SpringerMore than 2,000 signatories urge a national consortium of French academic institutions to refuse an increase in journal subscription fees.
50min
Viden

Andreas Mogensens rumkapsel landet i Danmark: 'Det er for sindssygt. Hvor er det sejt'Danmarks Tekniske Museum har købt kapslen af russerne efter to års forhandlinger.
54min
Viden

Zuckerberg ristet godt igennem: Bekræfter massiv dataindsamlingFacebook indsamler data om dig, når du ikke er logget ind – og indsamler data om folk der slet ikke har en Facebook-profil. Det bekræfter Facebooks direktør.
54min
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
8
Road salt pollutes drinking water wells in suburban New York StateRoad salt applied during the winter lingers in the environment, where it can pollute drinking water supplies. In a recent study in the Journal of Environmental Quality, researchers identify landscape and geological characteristics linked to elevated well water salinity in a suburban township in Southeastern New York.
56min
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
New methodology helps study of promising targeted drug delivery scaffoldNorthwestern Engineering researchers have developed a new way to manipulate a virus shell that self-assembles from proteins and holds promise as a carrier for disease detection, drug delivery, and vaccinations.
56min
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
28
'Everything-repellent' coating could kidproof phones, homesIn an advance that could grime-proof phone screens, countertops, camera lenses and countless other everyday items, a materials science researcher at the University of Michigan has demonstrated a smooth, durable, clear coating that swiftly sheds water, oils, alcohols and, yes, peanut butter.
1h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Digital addiction increases loneliness, anxiety and depressionA new study by two San Francisco State University professors of health education finds that smartphone use can be similar to other types of substance use.
1h
Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
15
'Everything-repellent' coating could kidproof phones, homesIn an advance that could grime-proof phone screens, countertops, camera lenses and countless other everyday items, a materials science researcher has demonstrated a smooth, durable, clear coating that swiftly sheds water, oils, alcohols and, yes, peanut butter.
1h
The Atlantic
70
China Viewed From AboveSimply a collection of some amazing recent aerial images showing the vast diversity of landscapes across China, from cities to mountains, deserts to sea shores, and much more.
1h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Thin, flexible polymers record 'conversations' deeper in the brain with less injury-riskResearchers at the University of Southern California Viterbi School of Engineering have developed thin, flexible polymer-based materials for use in microelectrode arrays that record activity more deeply in the brain and with more specific placement.
1h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Some can combat dementia by enlisting still-healthy parts of the brainPeople with primary progressive aphasia, a rare dementia that initially attacks the language center of the brain, recruit other areas of the brain to decipher sentences. People who have had strokes or injuries to the brain have been shown to enlist intact brain regions to accomplish tasks. The new study is one of the first to show that people with a neurodegenerative disease can call upon intact a
1h
Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
25
Specific bacteria in the small intestine are crucial for fat absorptionA new study — one of a few to concentrate on microbes in the upper gastrointestinal tract — shows how the typical calorie-dense western diet can induce expansion of microbes that promote the digestion and absorption of high-fat foods. Over time, the steady presence of these microbes can lead to over-nutrition and obesity.
1h
Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
16
The neural circuitry of parental behaviorScientists have deconstructed the brain circuits that control parenting behavior in mice, and identified discrete sets of cells that control actions, motivations, and hormonal changes involved in nurturing young animals.
1h
Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
10
Formation of supercontinents and strength of ocean tidesThe cyclic strengthening and weakening of ocean tides over tens of millions of years is likely linked to another, longer cycle: the formation of Earth's supercontinents every 400 to 600 million years, according a new study.
1h
New on MIT Technology Review
7
This AI thinks like a dogIt won’t lick your face, but a new artificial-intelligence system mimics canine behavior to make dog-like decisions. Other animals could be next.
1h
Popular Science
28
China is using furnaces to manufacture 10 billion tons of rainEastern Arsenal Plans for thousands of chemical rainmakers in the Tibetan Plateau. To solve its water shortage problems, China is building a computerized network of tens of thousands of chemical rainmakers designed to create 10 billion tons of rainfall…
1h
Viden

Qwerty og 123456: Vores kodeord til hjemmesider kan snart være fortidNye standarder for kodeord og sikkerhed kan gøre dine genbrugte kodeord overflødige.
1h
Big Think
5
The unexamined business is not worth doing. Why having a philosopher at the office is a good business choiceWant to improve your business? Hire a philosopher. Read More
2h
Scientific American Content: Global
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A Command Center in the Mammalian Brain Orchestrates Parenting BehaviorsA mouse study deconstructs for the first time a neural circuit underlying a complex social behavior — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

'Everything-repellent' coating could kidproof phones, homesIn an advance that could grime-proof phone screens, countertops, camera lenses and countless other everyday items, a materials science researcher at the University of Michigan has demonstrated a smooth, durable, clear coating that swiftly sheds water, oils, alcohols and, yes, peanut butter.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Scientists find excess mitochondrial iron, Huntington's disease linkThe research identifying a pathway for Huntington's disease helps lay the foundation for developing drug therapies.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Road salt pollutes drinking water wells in suburban New York stateRoad salt applied during the winter lingers in the environment, where it can pollute drinking water supplies. In a recent study in the Journal of Environmental Quality, researchers identify landscape and geological characteristics linked to elevated well water salinity in a suburban township in Southeastern New York.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Reconstruction of major North Atlantic circulation system shows weakeningRising levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere have affected one of the global ocean's major circulation systems, the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), slowing the redistribution of heat in the North Atlantic Ocean. The resulting changes have been felt along the Northeast US Shelf and in the Gulf of Maine, which has warmed 99 percent faster than the global ocean over the past
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Personalized tumor vaccine shows promise in pilot trialA new type of cancer vaccine has yielded promising results in an initial clinical trial. The personalized vaccine is made from patients' own immune cells, which are exposed to the contents of the patients' tumor cells, and injected into the patients to initiate a wider immune response. The trial, conducted in advanced ovarian cancer patients, showed that about half of the vaccinated patients had s
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Ludwig researchers devise and test pioneering personalized ovarian cancer vaccineA Ludwig Cancer Research study has shown that an entirely new type of personalized cancer vaccine induces novel, potent and clinically effective immune responses in patients receiving a combination of standard therapies for recurrent, stage III and IV ovarian cancer.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Double hit on melanoma unlocks barrier to immunotherapyResearchers at EPFL and UNIL have discovered a dangerous liaison between immune cells that limits the efficacy of immunotherapy in melanoma. But they also found a way to disrupt it. The study is published in Science Translational Medicine.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Student class engagement soars when they use personal data to learnBrigham Young University life sciences professors have found that giving students access to their personal biological data has a profound impact on their learning experience. In a summary of their experiment, published in high-ranking scientific journal PLOS ONE, the researchers report students with access to data about their own microbiome — the trillions of tiny microorganisms that live in a pe
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Novel drug shows promise against acute myeloid leukemiaIn a study published online today in Science Translational Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine researchers report that an experimental peptide (small protein) drug shows promise against the often-lethal cancer acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and describe how the drug works at the molecular level. The findings have led to a Phase I/II clinical trial for patients with advanced AML and advance
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Fossil study sheds light on ancient butterfly wing colorsPioneering new research has given an illuminating new insight into the metallic, iridescent colors found on the earliest known ancestors of moths and butterflies, which inhabited the Earth almost 200 million years ago.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

The secret life of teeth: Evo-devo models of tooth developmentA simple, straightforward developmental rule — the 'patterning cascade' — is powerful enough to explain the massive variability in molar crown configuration over the past 15 million years of ape and human evolution.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Newly discovered salty subglacial lakes could help search for life in solar systemResearchers from the University of Texas Institute for Geophysics (UTIG) have helped discover the first subglacial lakes ever found in the Canadian High Arctic.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Nature-based solutions can prevent $50 billion in Gulf Coast flood damagesWhile coastal development and climate change are increasing the risk of flooding for communities along the US Gulf Coast, restoration of marshes and oyster reefs are among the most cost-effective solutions for reducing those risks, according to a new study.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Recent land loss in Mississippi Delta vastly exceeds prehistoric land gainA study of the evolution of the Mississippi Delta reveals that a thousand years ago, even as sea levels rose, new land in the region grew at steady rates. Unfortunately, the study also shows, this resilience of the delta is greatly outpaced by modern land loss in the region. This suggests that only a small portion of the Mississippi Delta will be sustainable in future, as the
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Mississippi River diversions will produce new land, but slowly, Tulane study saysAlthough river diversions that bring land building sediment to shrinking coastlands are the best solution to sustaining portions of the Mississippi Delta, rate of land building will likely be dwarfed by the rate of wetland loss, a new Tulane University study says.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Training the immune system to fight ovarian cancerA personalized cancer vaccine safely and successfully boosted immune responses and increased survival rates in patients with ovarian cancer, according to results from a pilot clinical trial.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Scientists discover first subglacial lakes in Canadian ArcticAn analysis of radar data led scientists to an unexpected discovery of two lakes located beneath 550 to 750 meters of ice underneath the Devon Ice Cap, one of the largest ice caps in the Canadian Arctic. They are thought to be the first isolated hypersaline subglacial lakes in the world.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Babies make the link between vocal and facial emotionThe ability of babies to differentiate emotional expressions appears to develop during their first six months. But do they really recognise emotion or do they only distinguish the physical characteristics of faces and voices? Researchers from the University of Geneva, Switzerland, have just provided an initial answer to this question, measuring the ability of six-month-old babies to make a connect
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

200-million-year-old insect color revealed by fossil scalesResearchers from the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology (NIGP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and their colleagues from Germany and the UK reported scale architectures from Jurassic Lepidoptera from the UK, Germany, Kazakhstan and China and Tarachoptera (a stem group of Amphiesmenoptera) from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

New method prioritizes species for conservation in the face of uncertaintyA new way to prioritize species for conservation efforts outperforms other similar methods, according to research presented in PLOS ONE by Rikki Gumbs of Imperial College London, UK, and colleagues at the Zoological Society of London, UK.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Humans may have occupied Indonesian site Leang Burung 2 earlier than previously thoughtRenewed excavations at the Late Pleistocene Leang Burung 2 rock shelter archaeological site on the island of Sulawesi, Indonesia have revealed new evidence of early human occupation, according to findings by Adam Brumm of Griffith University's Australian Research Centre for Human Evolution, and colleagues from Indonesia's National Research Centre for Archaeology (ARKENAS), published April 11, 2018
2h
Latest Headlines | Science News
29
Colorful moth wings date back to the dinosaur eraMicroscopic structures that scatter light to give color to the wings of modern butterflies and moths date back almost 200 million years.
2h
Big Think
18
Study reveals long-term effects of delaying school start timeThe study examines students at a secondary school in Singapore, which leads the world in Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) rankings. Read More
2h
New Scientist – News
3
War in space may happen soon, but it won’t be what you expectThe US is making noises about increasingly militarising space, but orbital conflict won’t be a battle of spaceships and bombs
2h
New Scientist – News
1
Science fans have many reasons to take to the streets againA global rally against the denigration of science was a huge event in 2017. The need for a repeat this weekend is strong, says Jonathan Berman
2h
New Scientist – News
1
Species with big sex differences are more likely to die outWhen sexual selection leads to extreme differences between sexes like the peacock's tail, it makes species more likely go extinct
2h
New Scientist – News
62
Encrypt your data with random quantum weirdnessRandom number generators are key to data encryption, but it’s impossible to prove that most truly work. A new one uses quantum laws to guarantee randomness
2h
Big Think
20
You can use the internet “telepathically” using this device, developed at MITResearchers believe it’ll interweave the internet, A.I., and the human brain in away that’ll create a “second self.” Read More
2h
Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
12
An immunological memory in the brainInflammatory reactions can change the brain's immune cells in the long term — meaning that these cells have an 'immunological memory.' This memory may influence the progression of neurological disorders that occur later in life, and is therefore a previously unknown factor that could influence the severity of these diseases.
2h
Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
11
Mutant ferrets offer clues to human brain sizeScientists have engineered ferrets genetically to study abnormally small brain size in humans — and, in the process, discovered hints as to how our brains evolved.
2h
Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
10
New driver of extinction: Adaptations for sexual selectionBy analyzing thousands of fossilized ancient crustaceans, a team of scientists found that devoting a lot of energy to the competition for mates may compromise species' resilience to change and increase their risk of extinction.
2h
Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
13
New quantum method generates really random numbersResearchers have developed a method for generating numbers guaranteed to be random, through the use of quantum mechanics. The experimental technique surpasses all previous methods for ensuring the unpredictability of its random numbers and may enhance security and trust in cryptographic systems.
2h
Science | The Guardian
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Green-haired turtle that breathes through its genitals added to endangered listWith its punky green mohican the striking Mary river turtle joins a new ZSL list of the world’s most vulnerable reptiles It sports a green mohican, fleshy finger-like growths under its chin and can breathe through its genitals. The Mary river turtle is one of the most striking creatures on the planet, and it is also one of the most endangered. Continue reading…
2h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
200-million-year-old insect color revealed by fossil scalesCan researchers determine the color of a 200-million-year-old insect? Scientists from China, Germany and the U.K. have new evidence that reveals the true color of fossil insects. The research was recently published in Science Advances.
2h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Humans may have occupied Indonesian site Leang Burung 2 earlier than previously thoughtRenewed excavations at the Late Pleistocene Leang Burung 2 rock shelter archaeological site on the island of Sulawesi, Indonesia have revealed new evidence of early human occupation, according to findings by Adam Brumm of Griffith University's Australian Research Centre for Human Evolution, and colleagues from Indonesia's National Research Centre for Archaeology (ARKENAS), published April 11, 2018
2h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
New method prioritizes species for conservation in the face of uncertaintyA new way to prioritize species for conservation efforts outperforms other similar methods, according to research presented in PLOS ONE by Rikki Gumbs of Imperial College London, UK, and colleagues at the Zoological Society of London, UK.
2h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
6
Mississippi River diversions will produce new land, but slowly, study saysAlthough river diversions that bring land building sediment to shrinking coastlands are the best solution to sustaining portions of the Mississippi Delta, a new Tulane University study concludes that the rate of land building will likely be dwarfed by the rate of wetland loss.
2h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Student class engagement soars when they use personal data to learnA group of Brigham Young University professors have found that giving students access to their personal biological data has a profound impact on their learning experience.
2h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
53
The secret life of teeth: Evo-devo models of tooth developmentAcross the world of mammals, teeth come in all sorts of shapes and sizes. Their particular size and shape are the process of millions of years of evolutionary fine-tuning to produce teeth that can effectively break down the foods in an animal's diet. As a result, mammals that are closely related and have a similar menu tend to have teeth that look fairly similar. New research suggests, however, th
2h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
6
Nature-based solutions can prevent $50 billion in Gulf Coast flood damagesWhile coastal development and climate change are increasing the risk of flooding for communities along the U.S. Gulf Coast, restoration of marshes and oyster reefs are among the most cost-effective solutions for reducing those risks, according to a new study.
2h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
88
Newly discovered salty subglacial lakes could help search for life in solar systemAn analysis of radar data led scientists to an unexpected discovery of two lakes located beneath 550 to 750 metres of ice underneath the Devon Ice Cap, one of the largest ice caps in the Canadian Arctic. They are thought to be the first isolated hypersaline subglacial lakes in the world.
2h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

New methodology helps study of promising targeted drug delivery scaffoldResearchers studied a self-assembling virus shell to learn how to change its physical properties so it can be designed for use in detecting diseases and targeted drug delivery and vaccinations.
2h
Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
37
Scientists discover a role for 'junk' DNAResearchers have determined how satellite DNA, considered to be 'junk DNA,' plays a crucial role in holding the genome together.
2h
Feed: All Latest
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Mark Zuckerberg Is Revealing Facebook’s Terrible Power in CongressMark Zuckerberg FacebookMark Zuckerberg's testimony is not just about Cambridge Analytica. He's answering for the un-checked influence that Facebook wields—on its users, and the world.
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Feed: All Latest
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Want to Fight Sea Level Rise? Look to San Francisco’s Ocean BeachDuring a big storm, the bluffs along Ocean Beach can lose 25 to 40 feet. Here's how San Francisco is hedging against sea level rise.
2h
The Atlantic
30
Defending Assad, Russia Cries 'Fake News'As Russia tells it, reports of an attack over the weekend in the Syrian town of Douma that left victims’ mouths foaming and corneas burned do not suggest what the United States and its European allies suspect: that the Russian-backed Syrian government once again used chemical weapons against its own people. Instead, according to a statement from the Russian Foreign Ministry, they amount to “fake
2h
The Atlantic
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When a 'Diva' Is DiagnosedMariah Carey DisorderThough diagnosed in 2001, the pop titan Mariah Carey kept quiet about her mental illness until speaking to People for this week’s cover story titled, “My Battle With Bipolar Disorder.” It was only recently that she began receiving treatment for her swings between hypomania and depression, having previously lived in denial of her bipolar II disorder. She says she’s now going public because she’s “
2h
The Atlantic
2K
Paul Ryan Personifies the Devil's Bargain the GOP Struck With TrumpPaul Ryan, who once aspired to advance the vision of conservative icon Jack Kemp, will leave Washington carrying a more tarnished legacy—as the most important enabler of Donald Trump. No one in the GOP was better equipped, by position and disposition alike, to resist Trump’s racially infused, insular nationalism, or to define a more inclusive competing vision for the party. Instead, Ryan chose to
2h
Big Think
73
$2.4 billion later, vitamins and supplements appear to have no valueYou already get all the vitamins you need on your dinner plate. Read More
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Viden

Klimaforandringernes skueplads: 3 danske projekter overvåger smeltende ArktisEnorme smeltende ismasser, svækkede havstrømme og ødelagte økosystemer. Tre danske projekter har netop fået støtte til klimaforskning i Arktis.
2h
Viden

Smartphones, Hollywood-film og busruter – kunstig intelligens bliver brugt overaltDer er stor forskel på kunstig intelligens i virkeligheden og på film.
2h
Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
35
Atlantic Ocean circulation at weakest point in more than 1,500 yearsNew research provides evidence that a key cog in the global ocean circulation system hasn't been running at peak strength since the mid-1800s and is currently at its weakest point in the past 1,600 years. If the system continues to weaken, it could disrupt weather patterns from the United States and Europe to the African Sahel, and cause more rapid increase in sea level on the US East Coast.
3h
Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
13
Nasal mist vaccine suppresses peanut allergy in miceA new research study reports that a vaccine delivered as an ultrafine nasal spray was found to limit or prevent peanut allergy symptoms in mice. This study is the first step in potentially developing a vaccine to treat food allergies in humans.
3h
Live Science
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Oceans' Mysterious Magnetic Field Is Mapped in Stunning Detail from SpaceSatellites circling Earth have mapped an elusive, invisible force in unprecedented detail: the magnetic field created by the currents in the planet's salty oceans, according to new research.
3h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

New technology could wean the battery world off cobaltA research team led by scientists at the University of California, Berkeley, has opened the door to using metals other than cobalt in lithium-based batteries, and have built cathodes with 50 percent more lithium-storage capacity than conventional materials.
3h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

NIST's new quantum method generates really random numbersResearchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) havedeveloped a method for generating numbers guaranteed to be random by quantum mechanics.Described in the April 12 issue of Nature, the experimental technique surpasses all previous methodsfor ensuring the unpredictability of its random numbers and may enhance security and trust incryptographic systems.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Study reveals every bowel tumor and bowel cancer cell have unique genetic fingerprintsNew research on bowel cancer has shown that every tumor is different, and that every cell within the tumor is genetically unique. In the first study of its kind, researchers from the Wellcome Sanger Institute, UK and Hubrecht Institute (KNAW) in The Netherlands, used the latest single cell and organoid technologies to understand the mutational processes of the disease. Reported in Nature, the stud
3h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Stronger evidence for a weaker Atlantic overturningThe Atlantic overturning circulation is weaker today than any time before in more than 1000 years. Sea surface temperature data analysis provides new evidence that this major ocean circulation has slowed down by roughly 15 percent since the middle of the 20th century, according to a study published in the highly renowned journal Nature. Human-made climate change is a prime suspect for these worryi
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

The neural circuitry of parental behaviorHHMI scientists have deconstructed the brain circuits that control parenting behavior in mice, and identified discrete sets of cells that control actions, motivations, and hormonal changes involved in nurturing young animals.
3h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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Atlantic Ocean circulation at weakest point in more than 1,500 yearsNew research led by University College London (UCL) and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) provides evidence that a key cog in the global ocean circulation system hasn't been running at peak strength since the mid-1800s and is currently at its weakest point in the past 1,600 years. If the system continues to weaken, it could disrupt weather patterns from the United States and Europe to th
3h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Smithsonian scientists and collaborators demonstrate new driver of extinctionBy analyzing thousands of fossilized ancient crustaceans, a team of scientists led by NMNH paleontologist Gene Hunt found that devoting a lot of energy to the competition for mates may compromise species' resilience to change and increase their risk of extinction. Hunt, NMNH postdoctoral fellow M. João Fernandes Martins, and collaborators at the College of William and Mary and the University of So
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Mutant ferrets offer clues to human brain sizeHHMI scientists have engineered ferrets genetically to study abnormally small brain size in humans — and, in the process, discovered hints as to how our brains evolved.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

An immunological memory in the brainInflammatory reactions can change the brain's immune cells in the long term — meaning that these cells have an 'immunological memory.' This memory may influence the progression of neurological disorders that occur later in life, and is therefore a previously unknown factor that could influence the severity of these diseases. Scientists at the DZNE, the Hertie Institute for Clinical Brain Research
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86
This Photographer Recreates 'Ghostbusters' and 'Back to the Future' in MiniatureFelix Hernandez builds elaborate sets on which to shoot his painstakingly detailed images.
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New Scientist – News
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Your boss is probably to blame for meetings starting lateHalf of all meetings start late – and your boss is probably to blame. A study found that meetings delayed just 10 minutes are likely to be less productive
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Science | The Guardian
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Gulf Stream current at its weakest in 1,600 years, studies showWarm current that has historically caused dramatic changes in climate is experiencing an unprecedented slowdown and may be less stable than thought – with potentially severe consequences The warm Atlantic current linked to severe and abrupt changes in the climate in the past is now at its weakest in at least 1,600 years, new research shows. The findings, based on multiple lines of scientific evid
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The Atlantic
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The Rider Is the Best Film of 2018 So FarBrady Blackburn (Brady Jandreau), the protagonist of The Rider , was a rodeo cowboy until a few months ago, when he fell off a bucking horse and suffered a traumatic head injury. With a metal plate in his head and doctor’s orders never to return to the saddle, Brady mostly finds himself wandering around South Dakota’s Pine Ridge Reservation (where he lives with his father and sister) with little
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The Atlantic
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When a Bigger Penis Means Swifter ExtinctionThe oldest penis ever found is 425 million years old, and belongs to an animal whose scientific name— Colymbosathon ecplecticos —means “astounding swimmer with a large penis.” Large is relative, though. The entire creature is just a fifth of an inch long, but for its size, its penis is still “ large and stout ,” according to its discoverers. That’s not unusual for the ostracods—the ancient group
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BBC News – Science & Environment
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Climate change dials down Atlantic Ocean heating systemAn Atlantic Ocean circulation system that warms Europe's climate is weaker today than it has been in 1,000 years, say scientists.
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Live Science
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Spooky Entangled Photons Create Perfectly 'Unhackable' Random NumbersA special experimental setup produces certifiably random numbers to use in the creation of "unhackable" messages
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Blog » Languages » English
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April open promotions are here!Hello Eyewirers! Our next round of open promotions for Scouts, Scythes , Mods , and Mentors is approaching. We will also consider new Mystics ! During this time you can fill out the open promotion form here to be considered by HQ without requiring player sponsors. Scout, Scythe, and Mentor Qualifications: Have at least earned 50,000 points and completed 500 cubes Maintain at least 90% accuracy ov
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

NIH researchers crack mystery behind rare bone disorderResearchers at the National Institutes of Health worked with 15 patients from around the world to uncover a genetic basis of 'dripping candle wax' bone disease. The rare disorder, known as melorheostosis, causes excess bone formation that resembles dripping candle wax on x-rays. The results, appearing in Nature Communications, offer potential treatment targets for this rare disease, provide import
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Scientific American Content: Global
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The Public Doesn't Take Flu Seriously EnoughA century after the catastrophic pandemic of 1918, too many people still aren’t getting vaccinated — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Quantum Mechanics Creates a Totally Random Number GeneratorA perfectly provable random number generator is the bedrock of good cryptography. This scientist wants to make one.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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New quantum method generates really random numbersResearchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) havedeveloped a method for generating numbers guaranteed to be random by quantum mechanics.Described in the April 12 issue of Nature, the experimental technique surpasses all previous methodsfor ensuring the unpredictability of its random numbers and may enhance security and trust incryptographic systems.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Atlantic Ocean circulation at weakest point in more than 1,500 yearsNew research led by University College London (UCL) and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) provides evidence that a key cog in the global ocean circulation system hasn't been running at peak strength since the mid-1800s and is currently at its weakest point in the past 1,600 years. If the system continues to weaken, it could disrupt weather patterns from the United States and Europe to th
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Stronger evidence for a weaker Atlantic overturningThe Atlantic overturning—one of Earth's most important heat transport systems, pumping warm water northward and cold water southward—is weaker today than any time before in more than 1000 years. Sea surface temperature data analysis provides new evidence that this major ocean circulation has slowed down by roughly 15 percent since the middle of the 20th century, according to a study published in t
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Scientists demonstrate new driver of extinctionThe lengths that some males go to attract a mate can pay off in the short-term. But according to a new study from scientists at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History (NMNH), extravagant investments in reproduction also have their costs.
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Science | The Guardian
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The Guardian view on medical dangers: evolution in action | EditorialThe emergence of new strains of bacteria which can resist antibiotics or digest processed foodstuffs in our guts shows the law of unintended consequences operates everywhere The first case anywhere in the world of a strain of gonorrhea resistant to all known antibiotics was reported late last month. The diagnosis was made in England, but it appears that the infection came from an encounter in sout
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The Atlantic
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Paul Ryan’s Sad LegacyPaul Ryan RepublicansPaul Ryan announced Wednesday morning that that he will not run for reelection in his Wisconsin district, ending his tumultuous, historical, and brief tenure as speaker of the House. Throughout his career in Washington, Ryan enjoyed the reputation of being a policy whiz and a fastidious student of the federal budget. Among audiences in the nation’s often innumerate capital, an appendix has a kind
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The Atlantic
86
The Teachers’ Movement Goes VirtualWhen West Virginia teachers initiated a nine-day labor strike this past winter, they secured national attention and a 5 percent pay raise. Oklahoma and Kentucky educators followed suit , with Arizona teachers threatening to do the same . Amid all this organizing was another strike threat, not previously reported, last week in California: between teachers in online classrooms and the organization
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Scientific American Content: Global
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Ocean Heat Waves Are Getting WorseSpikes in sea temperatures stress marine ecosystems, particularly coral reefs — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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New era of precision antimatter studiesThe ALPHA experiment at CERN has carried out the most precise and accurate measurement ever done on antimatter.
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The Atlantic
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Bartleby the SpeakerPaul Ryan, like Herman Melville’s Bartleby , would prefer not to. He would prefer not to stick around much longer in an increasingly toxic Washington. He would prefer not to have to drag himself through another cycle of fundraisers . He would prefer not to have to grapple with a splintered caucus and conservatives who periodically threaten to depose him. He would prefer not to risk losing the spe
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Specific bacteria in the small intestine are crucial for fat absorptionA new study — one of a few to concentrate on microbes in the upper gastrointestinal tract — shows how the typical calorie-dense western diet can induce expansion of microbes that promote the digestion and absorption of high-fat foods. Over time, the steady presence of these microbes can lead to over-nutrition and obesity.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Study explores new strategy to develop a malaria vaccineA serum developed by Yale researchers reduces infection from malaria in mice, according to a new study. It works by attacking a protein in the saliva of the mosquitoes infected with the malaria parasite rather than the parasite itself. If the novel approach proves effective in further studies, it could potentially be used to enhance existing malaria vaccines, the researchers said.
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Latest Headlines | Science News
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Einstein’s general relativity reveals new quirk of Mercury’s orbitA tiny effect of general relativity on Mercury’s orbit has been calculated for the first time.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Zuckerberg: regulation of social media firms is 'inevitable'Mark Zuckerberg FacebookFacebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg told a House oversight panel Wednesday that he believes it is "inevitable" there will be regulation of the social media industry and also disclosed to lawmakers that his own data was included in the personal information sold to malicious third parties.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Trump signs law weakening shield for online servicesPresident Donald Trump has signed a new law aimed at curbing sex trafficking.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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NASA finds wind shear slamming Tropical Cyclone KeniNASA satellite imagery showed that Tropical Cyclone Keni was being battered by vertical wind shear. NASA-NOAA's Suomi NPP satellite revealed that wind shear was pushing the clouds and storms associated with Keni to the southeast of the center.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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New bioinformatics tool identifies and classifies CRISPR-Cas systemsDesigned to improve the utility and availability of increasingly diverse CRISPR-Cas genome editing systems, the new CRISPRdisco automated pipeline helps researchers identify CRISPR repeats and cas genes in genome assemblies. The freely available software provides standardized, high throughput analytical methods that detect CRISPR repeats and accurately assign class, type, and subtypes, as describe
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Scientists discover a role for 'junk' DNAResearchers at the University of Michigan Life Sciences Institute and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute have determined how satellite DNA, considered to be "junk DNA," plays a crucial role in holding the genome together.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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How to catch a fish genome with big dataIf you eat fish in the U.S., chances are it once swam in another country. That's because the U.S. imports over 80 percent of its seafood, according to estimates by the United Nations. New genetic research could help make farmed fish more palatable and bring America's wild fish species to dinner tables. Scientists have used big data and supercomputers to catch a fish genome, a first step in its sus
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Mushrooms, feathers combine in biodegradable shoesTwo University of Delaware students put their best foot forward at this year's National Sustainable Design Expo, showing off a biodegradable shoe they fashioned using mushrooms, chicken feathers and textile waste.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Airway disease in racehorses more prevalent than previously thought, study findsRacehorses need their breath to run their best. But inflammatory airway disease (IAD) can rob them of their stamina.
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New Scientist – News
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Need a new look? Facebook’s AI fashion designer has some ideasFacebook has built an AI fashion designer that is intended to be truly creative. It has designed more than 1000 handbags, jumpers and T-shirts
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cognitive science
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If AI Thinks Like a Human it Might Get Depressed Like Onesubmitted by /u/NaiveSkeptic [link] [comments]
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Fascinating zoo of discs discovered around young starsNew images from the SPHERE instrument on ESO's Very Large Telescope are revealing the dusty discs surrounding nearby young stars in greater detail than previously achieved. They show a bizarre variety of shapes, sizes and structures, including the likely effects of planets still in the process of forming.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Tiny distortions in universe's oldest light reveal strands in cosmic webScientists have decoded faint distortions in the patterns of the universe's earliest light to map huge tubelike structures invisible to our eyes — known as filaments — that serve as superhighways for delivering matter to dense hubs such as galaxy clusters.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Brain activity of free-flying batsResearchers have developed a way to study the brain of a bat as it flies, recording for the first time what happens as a roving animal focuses and refocuses its attention.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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How intestinal bacteria can affect your blood sugar and lipid levelsIntestinal bacteria have attracted recent attention since they were discovered to influence various physiological functions and diseases in humans. Researchers analyzing the influence of changes in intestinal bacteria on sugar and lipid metabolism have found that secondary bile acids produced by intestinal bacteria can influence blood glucose and lipid concentrations as well as parts of their mole
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Higher risk of infectious disease with both high and low cholesterolThe so-called good cholesterol, HDL, is associated with infectious disease, new research shows.
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Viden
4
En af 87 millioner: Zuckerberg blev selv ramt af Facebook-skandalenTopchefen fik også lækket sine oplysninger, da analysefirma udnyttede brugeres personlige data.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Whispering pines: Trees tell story of WWII battleshipThroughout most of World War II, Allied bombers tried repeatedly to sink the Tirpitz, Germany's biggest battleship and a bete noir of Britain's wartime leader Winston Churchill, who took to calling it 'the beast'.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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NASA sees ex-Tropical Cyclone Iris now better organizedSatellite imagery showed that the former tropical cyclone known as Iris appeared better organized and more circular.
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Science : NPR
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From The Big Bang To This CommentaryIn 13.7 , we aimed to present the passion, the drama, the social and intellectual relevance of science as one of the deepest expressions of engagement with the unknown, says physicist Marcelo Gleiser. (Image credit: George Rose/Getty Images)
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The Atlantic
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The Curse of Being a Highly Selective CollegeGetting into America’s top colleges is extremely hard, but making sense of how it’s decided who gets in is arguably even harder. By and large, colleges—especially the most selective ones—are allowed to keep their methods to themselves. Terry Hartle, of the American Council on Education, the leading group representing colleges and universities, calls admission to an elite college “very desirable,
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Snowfall patterns may provide clues to Greenland Ice SheetA new study from a team of researchers led by University of Wisconsin-Madison Space Science and Engineering Center scientist, Claire Pettersen, describes a unique method involving cloud characteristics for measuring snowfall that could help answer some big questions about the Greenland Ice Sheet.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
NASA finds wind shear slamming Tropical Cyclone KeniNASA satellite imagery showed that Tropical Cyclone Keni was being battered by vertical wind shear. NASA-NOAA's Suomi NPP satellite revealed that wind shear was pushing the clouds and storms associated with Keni to the southeast of the center.
4h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Scientists discover a role for 'junk' DNAResearchers at the University of Michigan Life Sciences Institute and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute have determined how satellite DNA, considered to be 'junk DNA,' plays a crucial role in holding the genome together.
4h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Biologically inspired membrane purges coal-fired smoke of greenhouse gasesA series of nanoscopic membranes made of water saturated by an enzyme naturally developed over millions of years to clear CO2 empties coal smoke of the greenhouse gas more cheaply and efficiently than any known.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
NASA sees ex-Tropical Cyclone Iris now better organizedSatellite imagery showed that the former tropical cyclone known as Iris appeared better organized and more circular.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

How to catch a fish genome with big dataResearchers assembled and annotated genome of the Seriola dorsalis fish species, aka California Yellowtail. Z-W sex determination identified in Seriola dorsalis. XSEDE Extended Collaborative Support Services, Blacklight, and Stampede resources utilized in fish genome discovery. This research on California Yellowtail could potentially help in its sustainable aquaculture harvest.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Genetic screening tool identifies how the flu infiltrates cellsResearchers have developed a genetic screening tool that identified two key factors that allow the influenza virus to infect human lung cells. The technique uses new gene editing tools to create a library of modified cells, each missing a different gene, allowing scientists to see which changes impact their response to flu. This in turn could identify potential targets for antiviral drugs.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Genetic variant might be a better marker for heart diseaseResearchers have found that a newly identified subset of a known genetic variant found primarily in individuals of South Asian descent may be a better marker for carriers of heart dysfunction in this population and that individuals with this genetic variant are more likely to develop early signs of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
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New Scientist – News
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The Nile river is at least 30 million years oldSediment deposits reveal when the longest river in the world started flowing from Ethiopia to the Mediterranean
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TED Talks Daily (SD video)
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How language shapes the way we think | Lera BoroditskyThere are about 7,000 languages spoken around the world — and they all have different sounds, vocabularies and structures. But do they shape the way we think? Cognitive scientist Lera Boroditsky shares examples of language — from an Aboriginal community in Australia that uses cardinal directions instead of left and right to the multiple words for blue in Russian — that suggest the answer is a r
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Live Science
12
Scientists Solve the Molecular Puzzle of 'Flammable Ice'Where does "flammable ice" come from?
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Study reveals declining Central American frog species are bouncing backFor more than 40 years, frog populations around the world have been declining. Now, a new study reports that some Central American frog species are recovering, perhaps because they have better defenses against a deadly fungal pathogen.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

New bioinformatics tool identifies and classifies CRISPR-Cas systemsDesigned to improve the utility and availability of increasingly diverse CRISPR-Cas genome editing systems, the new CRISPRdisco automated pipeline helps researchers identify CRISPR repeats and cas genes in genome assemblies.
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Ingeniøren
1
Esben Lunde: Analyseskandalen betyder mere iltsvind i danske farvandeDet bliver alligevel ikke 50 ud af 119 danske kystområder, der ved udgangen af 2021 lever op til målene om udvaskning af kvælstof, som giver iltsvind. Det oplyste miljøministeren på samråd onsdag.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Even short international travel can spread colistin-resistant bacteriaThe use of the antibiotic colistin, a last-resort treatment option in the infection by multidrug-resistant bacteria, is increasingly impeded by colistin-resistant bacteria. Researchers used biochemical and genetic assays to track resistant strains of bacteria in Japanese travelers returning from Vietnam. The researchers found short trips to a developing country can lead to the appearance of the co
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cognitive science
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Live Q&A Happening NOW with Developmental Neurobiologist Jeff Lichtman!submitted by /u/iloveescience [link] [comments]
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Popular Science
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Is a hot dog a sandwich? The Apollo 13 astronauts had some thoughtsSpace The ubiquitous American food flew aboard quite a number of missions Forty-eight years ago today, a Saturn V rocket lifted off from the Kennedy Space Center, sending astronauts Jim Lovell, Jack Swigert, and Fred Haise into space on NASA’s…
5h
Quanta Magazine
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A Revealer of Secrets in the Data of Life and the UniverseIn statistics, abstract math meets real life. To find meaning in unruly sets of raw numbers, statisticians like Donald Richards first look for associations: statistical links between, say, smoking and lung cancer, or the closing values of the New York Stock Exchange one day and the Tokyo exchange the next. Further study can then probe whether one phenomenon causes the other, or if both have commo
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
RB1 gene mutations underlie clinical resistance to CDK 4/6 inhibitor breast cancer therapyA multi-institutional research team has identified what may be a novel mechanism underlying acquired resistance to CDK 4/6 inhibitor treatment for breast cancer.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
4
Brain activity can predict success of depression treatmentMcLean Hospital and Harvard Medical School researchers believe they have uncovered a method that could be useful in predicting a depressed patient's treatment prognosis, prior to starting treatment.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Large disparities in impact of cardiovascular disease persist between statesLarge disparities remain in the impact of cardiovascular disease around the United States, mostly due to risk factors that can be changed.
5h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Genetic variant might be a better marker for heart diseaseResearchers at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine have found that a newly identified subset of a known genetic variant found primarily in individuals of South Asian descent may be a better marker for carriers of heart dysfunction in this population and that individuals with this genetic variant are more likely to develop early signs of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
9
How neurodegenerative diseases might occur
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
9
How spiders can harm and help flowering plantsThe enemy of my enemy is my friend. Now researchers show that this principle also holds for crab spiders and flowering plants. While it's true that the spiders do eat or drive away useful pollinators such as bees, they're also attracted by floral scent signals to come and help if the plant is attacked by insects intent on eating it.
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The Web’s Recommendation Engines Are Broken. Can We Fix Them?Algorithms used by Facebook, YouTube, and other platforms keep us clicking. But those systems often promote misinformation, abuse, and polarization. Is it possible to temper them with a sense of decency?
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Discovery could let doctors customize brain's immune response to diseasesThe University of Virginia neuroscience lab that discovered that the brain connects directly to the immune system now has found evidence that doctors could load up the brain with custom blends of immune cells to battle genetic disorders and neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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Vascular problems associated with symptoms of menopause and quality of life measuresA new study shows that more frequent and severe menopausal symptoms such as hot flashes, sleep disturbance, loss of sexual interest, weight gain and other quality of life measures, were associated with markers of vascular aging, according to researchers at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Airway disease in racehorses more prevalent than previously thought, U of G study findsUniversity of Guelph researchers examined lung tissue from 95 racehorses that had actively raced or trained before their deaths and found a majority had inflammatory airway disease (IAD).Previous research suggested the disease occurs in up to half of equine athletes.The first of its kind study suggests even racehorses without respiratory signs could have IAD.
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Scientific American Content: Global
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Why Do Bananas Change Color?Bananas undergo chemical and physical changes to become more appealing. — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
29
School-based yoga can help children better manage stress and anxietyParticipating in yoga and mindfulness activities at school helps third-graders exhibiting anxiety improve their well-being and emotional health, according to a new study.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
12
Cheaper, less toxic and recyclable light absorbers for hydrogen productionAchieving artificial photosynthesis in solution remains limited by the use of costly and toxic metal-based compounds to harvest light. Researchers now propose an efficient alternative using semiconductor nanocrystals (also called quantum dots) based on cheaper and less toxic elements, such as copper, indium and sulfur.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

One thing leads to another: Causal chains link health, development, and conservationThe BioScience Talks podcast features discussions of topical issues related to the biological sciences.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Viagra has the potential to be used as a treatment for rare cancersThe class of drugs currently prescribed to treat male erectile dysfunction has been flagged for its potential to be included in new trials for anti-cancer drugs, in a new clinical study published today in the open-access journal, ecancermedicalscience.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

The 100th meridian, where the Great Plains begin, may be shiftingNearly a century and a half after explorer John Wesley Powell zeroed in on the 100th meridian west as the dividing line between the humid east and arid west of the United States, researchers say he was right — but that climate change is now moving the line eastward, into the traditionally fertile Midwest. The effects on US farming and other pursuits could be huge.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

The brain combats dementia by shifting resourcesThe brain continues to put up a fight even as neurodegenerative diseases like dementia damage certain areas and functions. In fact, recent findings in a Baycrest-University of Arizona study suggest that one method the brain uses to counter these diseases is the reassigning of tasks to different regions.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Animated short created to raise public awareness about liver failureAn animated short-film produced by the ALIVER consortium titled 'Life After Liver Failure' premieres tomorrow morning at the BioTech Village in The International Liver Congress™ 2018.
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The Atlantic
76
All the Ways Russia Enables AssadRussian Donald TrumpAs the United States seemed moving closer to striking government targets in Syria Wednesday morning, Donald Trump opened the day with a series of harsh tweets. But rather than threatening the Syrian regime directly, he opened up by threatening Russia. Russia vows to shoot down any and all missiles fired at Syria. Get ready Russia, because they will be coming, nice and new and “smart!” You shouldn
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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EU's tough new data protection rulesThe European Union introduces tough new data protection rules next month to give people more control over the way their personal information is used online, as Facebook is grilled over the Cambridge Analytica scandal.
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Uber's New Game Plan: Rental Cars, Transit, and Jump BikesUber Car AppThe company's bid for dominance now hinges on controlling every way you move.
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Ingeniøren

Kommuner og energiselskaber vil drive egne datanetværkAarhus Kommune og energiselskabet Seas NVE er i gang med at etablere selvstændige netværk til sensordata.
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cognitive science
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The Whole Field of "Consciousness Studies" Is Probably Bullshitsubmitted by /u/rachelsmantra [link] [comments]
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New on MIT Technology Review
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To get smarter AI, DARPA wants to get inside our brains
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Having one eye better than the other may explain ants' left biasUnlike Derek Zoolander, ants don't have any difficulty turning left. New research has now found rock ants often have one eye slightly better than the other, which could help explain why most of them prefer to turn left, given the choice.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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The emotions we feel may shape what we seeOur emotional state in a given moment may influence what we see, according to new findings. In two experiments, researchers found that participants saw a neutral face as smiling more when it was paired with an unseen positive image.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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New glaucoma treatment could ease symptoms while you sleepEye drops could one day treat glaucoma while you sleep — helping to heal a condition that is one of the leading causes of blindness around the world.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Weight loss is an important predictor of cancerUnintended weight loss is the second highest risk factor for some forms of cancer, concludes the first robust research analysis to examine the association.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
8
Alzheimer's disease redefined: New research framework defines Alzheimer's by brain changes, not symptomsResearchers propose shifting the definition of Alzheimer's disease in living people — for use in research — from the current one, based on cognitive changes and behavioral symptoms with biomarker confirmation, to a strictly biological construct. This represents a major evolution in how we think about Alzheimer's.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Europe plans remote update to keep aging Mars probe stableThe European Space Agency plans to remotely update the software on its Mars Express probe to ensure the aging spacecraft remains stable.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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EU unveils new consumer protections after 'dieselgate' scandalThe EU on Wednesday unveiled rules to bolster European consumer protections by ensuring "tougher fines" for cheating companies and stronger legal ways to compensate victims.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Synthesizing a deadly mushroom toxinThe death-cap mushroom has a long history as a tool of murder and suicide, going back to ancient Roman times. The fungus, Amanita phalloides, produces one of the world's deadliest toxins: α-amanitin. While it may seem ill-advised, researchers are eager to synthesize the toxin because studies have shown that it could help fight cancer. Scientists now report in the Journal of the American Chemical S
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Study proposes link between formation of supercontinents, strength of ocean tidesThe cyclic strengthening and weakening of ocean tides over tens of millions of years is likely linked to another, longer cycle: the formation of Earth's supercontinents every 400 to 600 million years, according a new study. The new findings have implications for the formation of our planet, its climate and the evolution of life on Earth, according to the study's authors. The new research suggests
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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7 things you may not know about new car warrantiesMost of us know the new-car basic warranty, often referred to as the "bumper-to-bumper warranty," is designed to protect the owner against any factory defects during the first few years of ownership. But did you know this coverage doesn't actually apply to the bumpers? The vehicle's bumpers are considered body panels and so aren't covered.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Old proteins tell tales of historical artifacts and the people who touched them"Dead men tell no tales" is a common saying, but according to an article in Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN), the weekly newsmagazine of the American Chemical Society, the old proteins on historical artifacts, such as manuscripts and clothing, can tell quite a yarn.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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The 100th meridian, where the Great Plains begin, may be shiftingIn 1878, the American geologist and explorer John Wesley Powell drew an invisible line in the dirt-a very long line. It was the 100th meridian west, the longitude he identified as the boundary between the humid eastern United States and the arid Western plains. Running south to north, the meridian cuts northward through the eastern states of Mexico, and on to Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, the
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Futurity.org
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These test formats favor different gendersWhen taking standardized tests, girls perform better with open-ended questions, but boys score higher on multiple choice, research shows. The new study in Educational Researcher shows test format explains about 25 percent of the variation in state- and district-level gender achievement gaps in the United States. The association appears stronger in English language arts than in math, researchers s
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Cactus roots inspire creation of water-retaining materialDuring rare desert rainfalls, cacti waste no time sopping up and storing a storm's precious precipitation. Inspired by this natural phenomenon, scientists report in a study appearing ACS Macro Letters that they have developed a material that mimics cactus roots' ability to rapidly absorb and retain vast amounts of water with a minimal amount of evaporation. They say this unique material could lead
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Scientists discover greener way of making plasticsResearchers at the Energy Safety Research Institute (ESRI) at Swansea University have found a way of converting waste carbon dioxide into a molecule that forms the basis of making plastics. The potential of using global ethylene derived from carbon dioxide (CO2) is huge, utilising half a billion tonnes of the carbon emitted each year and offsetting global carbon emissions.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Research gives new understanding of 17th century Scottish natural historyIn a new paper published in the Royal Society Journal of the History of Science: Notes and Records Dr Lee Raye of Swansea University College of Arts and Humanities has re-examined a section of the Latin natural history text Scotia Illustrata by Robert Sibbald. The original book, written by Sibbald in Edinburgh and published in six sections in 1684, is one of the first natural science books ever pr
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The Atlantic
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The 3 Questions Mark Zuckerberg Hasn’t AnsweredNear the end of the Senate’s marathon interview of Mark Zuckerberg on Tuesday, Senator Kamala Harris took the dais. She was not pleased. “I am concerned about how much Facebook values trust and transparency—if we agree that a critical component of a relationship of trust and transparency is that we speak truth and we get to the truth,” said Harris. “During the course of this hearing, these last f
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Popular Science
42
Watch: Day two of Mark Zuckerberg's Washington testimonyTechnology Follow along with all the social network drama Mark Zuckerberg is back on the stand in front of the House.
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Futurity.org
1
Bowhead whales sing a varied, jazzy repertoireBowhead whales have a surprisingly diverse, constantly shifting vocal playlist, a new study shows. Scientists analyzed audio recordings gathered year-round east of Greenland. Humans almost hunted this population of bowhead whales to extinction in the 1600s and experts recently estimated their numbers at about 200 animals. Audio recordings gathered from 2010 to 2014 indicate a healthy population,
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Old proteins tell tales of historical artifacts and the people who touched them'Dead men tell no tales' is a common saying, but according to an article in Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN), the weekly newsmagazine of the American Chemical Society, the old proteins on historical artifacts, such as manuscripts and clothing, can tell quite a yarn.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Study proposes link between formation of supercontinents, strength of ocean tidesThe cyclic strengthening and weakening of ocean tides over tens of millions of years is likely linked to another, longer cycle: the formation of Earth's supercontinents every 400 to 600 million years, according a new study.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
2
Cactus roots inspire creation of water-retaining materialDuring rare desert rainfalls, cacti waste no time sopping up and storing a storm's precious precipitation. Inspired by this natural phenomenon, scientists report in a study appearing ACS Macro Letters that they have developed a material that mimics cactus roots' ability to rapidly absorb and retain vast amounts of water with a minimal amount of evaporation. They say this unique material could lead
6h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Synthesizing a deadly mushroom toxinThe death-cap mushroom has a long history as a tool of murder and suicide, going back to ancient Roman times. The fungus, Amanita phalloides, produces one of the world's deadliest toxins: α-amanitin. While it may seem ill-advised, researchers are eager to synthesize the toxin because studies have shown that it could help fight cancer. Scientists now report in the Journal of the American Chemical S
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Thyroid tumors in Alaska natives are larger and more advanced at diagnosisA new study spanning 45 years has shown that while Alaska Natives have a similar incidence of thyroid cancer as the US white population, their tumors at the time of diagnosis tend to be larger and to have spread beyond a localized area.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Prototype of most advanced quantum memory presented by two Kazan universitiesIn this paper we experimentally demonstrated a broadband scheme of the multiresonator quantum memory-interface. The microwave photonic scheme consists of the system of mini-resonators strongly interacting with a common broadband resonator coupled with the external waveguide. We have implemented the impedance matched quantum storage in this scheme via controllable tuning of the mini-resonator frequ
6h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
2
Research gives new understanding of 17th century Scottish natural historyA new examination of a pre-industrial Scottish natural history book gives a new understanding of post-industrial environmental change in the country.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Synchrotron science could give soybeans a boostScientists at the University of Liverpool, together with Japanese colleagues, have gained new insight into how soil bacteria sense and adapt to the levels of oxygen in their environment. The findings could be used to help develop new treatments to promote crop growth and tackle disease.
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
19
OpenWings project: Scientists to build the avian tree of lifeBirds are the only surviving descendants of dinosaurs. Birds also are used to study a large range of fundamental topics in biology from understanding the evolution of mating systems to learning about the genetic and environmental factors that affect their beautiful plumages.
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
19
Wildlife haven of Sulawesi much younger than first thought, according to new researchAn Oxford University collaboration has shed light on the origins of some of South East Asia's most iconic and unique wildlife; the 'deer-pig' (Sulawesi Babirusa), 'warty pig' and the 'miniature buffalo.' In doing so, the research has revealed that Sulawesi, the island paradise where they were discovered, is younger than previously thought.
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Researchers find doubling shelter cats' space radically reduces upper respiratory diseaseFeline upper respiratory infection in shelter cats can be dramatically decreased by doubling cage sizes and providing cats with two compartments, reported Morris Animal Foundation-funded researchers at the University of California, Davis.
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Extensive seagrass meadows discovered in Indian Ocean through satellite tracking of green turtlesResearch led by Swansea University's Bioscience department has discovered for the first time extensive deep-water seagrass meadows in the middle of the vast Indian Ocean through satellite tracking the movement of green sea turtles.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
17
Silent marine robots record sounds underwaterSilent marine robots that record sounds underwater are allowing researchers to listen to the oceans as never before. While pilot whales make whistles, buzzes and clicks, pods of hunting dolphins create high-pitched echolocation clicks and larger species such as sperm whales make louder, slower clicks. As well as eavesdropping on marine life, the recordings can be used to measure sea-surface wind s
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
5
US health care systems can learn from the worldThe Task Force report explores how the US can apply global lessons to improve community health.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
7
Rare brain disease in children: Major breakthroughs in Rasmussen's encephalitisResearchers are banding together to conquer a rare orphan pediatric disease. They have recently proven what scientists had already suspected: the disease is autoimmune, which means that it attacks patients using their own immune system.
6h
Live Science
100+
New Ocean Current Discovered Off the Coast of MadagascarA new ocean current has been discovered off the coast of Madagascar, and it could influence the climate patterns of the globe in surprising ways.
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Viden
73
LIVE TV Zuckerberg: Vi lytter ikke med på dine telefonsamtalerFacebooks stifter svarer netop nu – for anden dag i træk – på spørgsmål i Kongressen.
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
55
SPHERE reveals fascinating zoo of discs around young starsThe SPHERE instrument on ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile allows astronomers to suppress the brilliant light of nearby stars in order to obtain a better view of the regions surrounding them. This collection of new SPHERE images is just a sample of the wide variety of dusty discs being found around young stars.
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Futurity.org
9
‘Genetic sweet tooth’ may come with lower body fatPeople with the “sweet tooth” gene variation of FGF21 tend to have less body fat than others, new research shows. That’s surprising because past research found that they have a particular sweet tooth and eat more sugar than others. “This is just a small piece of the puzzle describing the connection between diet and sugar intake and the risk of obesity and diabetes,” says study author Niels Grarup
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Surprising discovery: Sweet tooth gene connected with less body fatLast year researchers from the University of Copenhagen discovered that a particular craving for sweet things may be determined by a genetic variation. Now the researchers, in collaboration with an English group, have discovered that people with this genetic disposition for a sweet tooth have less body fat.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
MIPT delivers world's first biosensor chips based on copper and graphene oxideScientists have developed biosensor chips of unprecedented sensitivity, which are based on copper instead of the conventionally used gold. Besides making the device somewhat cheaper, this innovation will facilitate the manufacturing process. This engineering solution is an important step towards developing biological sensors based on photonic and electronic technology. By relying on standard manuf
6h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Swansea scientists discover greener way of making plasticsA new catalyst that allows for the conversion of the green house gas carbon dioxide to an industrial precursor for many plastics has been developed by scientists in the Energy Safety Research Institute at Swansea University as an alternative to using petroleum raw materials.
6h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
11
Most primitive kangaroo ancestor rediscovered after 30 years in obscurityA handful of tiny teeth have led scientists to identify the most distant ancestor of today's kangaroos. The fossils were found in the desert heart of Australia, and then hidden away, and almost forgotten in a museum collection for over three decades. The findings are published in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.
6h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
4
Unusual climate during Roman times plunged Eurasia into hunger and diseaseA recent study published in an esteemed academic journal indicates that volcanic eruptions in the mid 500s resulted in an unusually gloomy and cold period.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
2
New gadgets help reveal the collective behavior of wild animalsAn international team of scientists led by Swansea University biologists describe how novel technologies are transforming our understanding of why wild animals form different groups.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

The dinosaur menu, as revealed by calciumBy studying calcium in fossil remains in deposits in Morocco and Niger, researchers have been able to reconstruct the food chains of the past, thus explaining how so many predators could coexist in the dinosaurs' time. This study was conducted by researchers from the CNRS, ENS de Lyon and Claude Bernard Lyon 1 University, in partnership with the French National Museum of Natural History and Sorbon
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Pepper plant sops up personal care product antibioticIt sometimes can be hard to find toothpastes, soaps and other toiletries without antibiotics. Their popularity has caused an increase in environmental levels of antimicrobial substances, such as triclocarban (TCC), which end up in the water and soil used to grow crops. Scientists report in the ACS' Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry that TCC and related molecules can end up in food, with p
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
4
New gadgets help reveal the collective behavior of wild animalsAn international team of scientists led by Swansea University biologists describe how novel technologies are transforming our understanding of why wild animals form different groups.
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Emoji skin tones promote diversity on TwitterEmoji characters with adapted skin tones are used positively and are rarely abused, a study of Twitter posts has shown.
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
5
Mars Express v.2.0Every so often, your smartphone or tablet receives new software to improve its functionality and extend its life. Now, ESA's Mars Express is getting a fresh install, delivered across over 150 million km of space.
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
4
Having one eye better than the other may explain ants' left biasUnlike Derek Zoolander, ants don't have any difficulty turning left. New research from the University of Bristol has now found rock ants often have one eye slightly better than the other, which could help explain why most of them prefer to turn left, given the choice.
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
5
Baby fish led astray by high CO2 in oceansBaby fish will find it harder to reach secure shelters in future acidified oceans – putting fish populations at risk, new research from the University of Adelaide has concluded.
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
5
New way to control the way liquids dry on surfaces could benefit car, computing and printing industriesA new way to control how liquids dry on surfaces which could bring benefits to a range of industries, has been discovered by researchers from Northumbria University and The Open University.
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Scientific American Content: Global
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Many Scientific Studies Are Bogus, but Blockchain Can HelpThe technology best known for enabling Bitcoin is ideal for sharing data securely so colleagues can assess new research claims — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
6h
Popular Science
14
Even apps go on sale—here’s how to get the lowest priceDIY Set up price-drop alerts. Although you can download many apps for free, sometimes, you need to pay up for a program. To bring down that cost, here's how to set up price-drop alerts.
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Most primitive kangaroo ancestor rediscovered after 30 years in obscurityA handful of tiny teeth have led scientists to identify the most distant ancestor of today's kangaroos. The fossils were found in the desert heart of Australia, and then hidden away, and almost forgotten in a museum collection for over three decades. The findings are published in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
9
New land motion map shows the human impact on the UK landscapeResearchers at the University of Nottingham who developed groundbreaking technology which was used to create the first country-wide land motion map of Scotland, have scored another first by creating a new UK-wide ground motion map.
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Using research to end modern slaveryA new report published today looks in detail at what research is being undertaken about modern slavery in the UK and what research we still need.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
6
Sea lion colony confirmed, but work still neededWhile celebrating the Department of Conservation's announcement of a New Zealand sea lion (rāpoka) breeding colony on Stewart Island, a Massey University marine mammal specialist is calling further action to protect the endangered species.
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
14
The dinosaur menu, as revealed by calciumBy studying calcium in fossil remains in deposits in Morocco and Niger, researchers have been able to reconstruct the food chains of the past, thus explaining how so many predators could coexist in the dinosaurs' time. This study, conducted by the Laboratoire de géologie de Lyon: Terre, planètes et environnement (CNRS/ENS de Lyon/Claude Bernard Lyon 1 University), in partnership with the Centre fo
6h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Facebook's data lockdown is a disaster for academic researchersFacebook Cambridge AnalyticaFacebook recently announced dramatic data access restrictions on its app and website. The company framed the lockdown as an attempt to protect user information, in response to the public outcry following the Cambridge Analytica scandal.
6h
Futurity.org
1
‘Good’ cholesterol has links to infectious diseaseNew research links so-called “good” HDL cholesterol with infectious diseases such as gasteroenteritis and pneumonia. “Surprisingly, we found that individuals with both low and high HDL cholesterol had high risk of hospitalization with an infectious disease. Perhaps more importantly, these same groups of individuals had high risk of dying from infectious disease,” explains Børge Nordestgaard, prof
6h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Biodiversity: All the colors of the rainbowMadagascar is a chameleon paradise. A team of researchers has now discovered three new species, among them a beautifully colored rainbow chameleon. These species are all restricted to very small ranges, and are probably highly threatened.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Scientists use carbon nanotube technology to develop robust water desalination membranesA research team of Shinshu University, Japan, has developed robust reverse osmosis membranes that can endure large-scale water desalination. To meet the demand of potable water at low cost, more robust membranes capable of withstanding harsh conditions, while remaining chemically stable to tolerate cleaning treatments, are necessary. The key lays in carbon nanotechnology. A multi-walled carbon nan
6h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Extensive seagrass meadows discovered in Indian Ocean through satellite tracking of green turtlesResearch led by Swansea University's Bioscience department has discovered for the first time extensive deep-water seagrass meadows in the middle of the vast Indian Ocean through satellite tracking the movement of green sea turtles.
6h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
The thermodynamics of computingInformation processing requires a lot of energy. Energy-saving computer systems could make computing more efficient, but the efficiency of these systems can't be increased indefinitely, as ETH physicists show.
6h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

North-exposed ice cliffs accelerate glacier meltETH researchers have confirmed the suspicion that north-facing ice cliffs on debris-covered glaciers in the Himalayas accelerate ice melt.
6h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Wildlife haven of Sulawesi much younger than first thought, according to new researchAn Oxford University collaboration has shed light on the origins of some of South East Asia's most iconic and unique wildlife; the 'deer-pig' (Sulawesi Babirusa), 'warty pig' and the 'miniature buffalo.' In doing so, the research has revealed that Sulawesi, the island paradise where they were discovered, is younger than previously thought.
6h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Nasal mist vaccine suppresses peanut allergy in miceA new research study publishedin the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology and supported by FARE reports that a vaccine delivered as an ultrafine nasal spray was found to limit or prevent peanut allergy symptoms in mice. This study, conducted by researchers with the Mary H. Weiser Food Allergy Center at the University of Michigan, is the first step in potentially developing a vaccine to treat
6h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
3
Why do some children read more?A new study of more than 11,000 7-year-old twins found that how well children read determines how much they read, not vice versa.
6h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Darker emoji skin tones promote diversity, Twitter study showsEmoji characters with modified skin tones are used positively and are rarely abused, a study of Twitter posts has shown.
6h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Sensing interactions between moleculesAn experimental approach to visualize structures of organic molecules with exceptional resolution is reported by physicists and chemists from the University of Münster, Germany. The study is published in the scientific journal "Nature Nanotechnology".
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
10
Drones will soon decide who to killThe US Army recently announced that it is developing the first drones that can spot and target vehicles and people using artificial intelligence (AI). This is a big step forward. Whereas current military drones are still controlled by people, this new technology will decide who to kill with almost no human involvement.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Women earn less after they have kids, despite strong credentialsWomen without kids have earned more than employed mothers for decades or longer. But differences between these two kinds of workers, in terms of the education under their belts and the job experience on their resumes, are diminishing.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
A guide to poker scams – how not to get stungWinning in a casino is difficult enough when you have the house edge to contend with, but there are people who want to make it even harder. There are legitimate ways that other players can make life difficult for you, even if some of their tactics are not in the spirit of the game and they are within the law. One example is trying to get a player to throw away their poker hand, even though they ho
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Researchers engineer new pathways for self-assembled nanostructuresOne way that scientists control the structure of materials at the nanoscale – where features are a few to several hundred nanometers (nm) – is by using "self-assembly," in which molecules are designed such that they spontaneously come together to form a desired structure or pattern. Self-assembly is a powerful approach to controlling order at the nanoscale and is one way that scientists can design
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Viden
1
Klar til anden halvleg: Kan Kongressen ryste en selvsikker Zuckerberg?Kl. 16 dansk tid går den anden af to høringer i den amerikanske kongres i gang. Du kan følge seancen live her på dr.dk.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
11
Why the fuss about nurdles?Nurdles. The name sounds inoffensive, cuddly even…. However, nurdles are anything but. "Nurdle" is the colloquial name for "pre-production plastic pellets" (which is in itself rather a mouthful); these are the raw material of the plastic industry – the building blocks for plastic bottles, plastic bags, drinking straws, car components, computer keyboards – in fact almost anything you can think of t
6h
New on MIT Technology Review
4
China has been hacking American IP again
6h
Dagens Medicin

Psykiatere udskriver patienter, før de er færdigbehandledeSeks ud af ti voksenpsykiatere sender jævnligt patienter hjem, før de er færdigbehandlede, viser ny undersøgelse. »Det er uanstændigt,« siger Lægeforeningens formand.
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Scientific American Content: Global
100+
Automobile Dashboard Technology Is Simply AwfulNew cars have amazing technology everywhere but the dashboard — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
7h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Alcoholic liver disease replaces hepatitis C infection as the leading cause of liver transplantation in patients without hepatocellular carcinoma in the USATwo independent US studies confirm that, from 2016 onwards, alcoholic liver disease has led to more liver transplants than hepatitis C infection in patients without hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).
7h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Tree rings provide vital information for improved climate predictionsUsing a decade-long sequence of annual growth rings from pine trees, scientists at the NMR Centre at Umeå University's Chemical Biological Centre in Sweden have introduced a highly advanced technique for tracking the carbon metabolism of plants and its environmental controls.
7h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Energy injustice? Cost, availability of energy-efficient lightbulbs vary with poverty levelsEnergy-efficient lightbulbs are more expensive and less available in high-poverty urban areas than in more affluent locations, according to a new University of Michigan study conducted in Wayne County.
7h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Scientists to build the avian tree of lifeWith the support of the National Science Foundation, scientists have embarked on a large-scale project to build the evolutionary tree of all bird species using cutting-edge technologies to collect DNA from across the genome. This project, called OpenWings, will produce the most complete evolutionary tree of any vertebrate group to-date.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Even short travel can spread colistin-resistant bacteriaThe use of the antibiotic colistin, a last-resort treatment option in the infection by multidrug-resistant bacteria, is increasingly impeded by colistin-resistant bacteria. Japanese researchers used biochemical and genetic assays to track resistant strains of bacteria in Japanese travelers returning from Vietnam. The researchers found short trips to a developing country can lead to the appearance
7h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Researchers find doubling shelter cats' space radically reduces upper respiratory diseaseFeline upper respiratory infection in shelter cats can be dramatically decreased by doubling cage sizes and providing cats with two compartments, reported Morris Animal Foundation-funded researchers at the University of California, Davis.
7h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
A new tailor-made approach to biofuelsEU researchers designed and tested cell structures, cellulosomes, that help breakdown abundant biomass waste to produce value-added chemicals, such as advanced biofuels.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
7
Forest plants on the edge of existence in tropical AfricaTropical rain forests are one of the most biologically diverse habitats on the planet but description of flora and fauna and understanding of their evolutionary history are far from complete. As they are a source of sustainable resources including potential pharmaceuticals, cuisine and timber, there is an increasing need for assessing global biodiversity changes.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
7
Novel process for surface hardening of stainless steelStainless steel is the material of choice in various industries where corrosion resistance is of utmost importance, take for instance parts that are exposed to harsh environments. However, this highly favourable property does not always go hand in hand with high surface hardness, wear resistance and fatigue strength.
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Ingeniøren
1
Usikre klimaprognoser kræver flytbare huseFremtidens klimaforhold er så svære at spå om, at ­Foreningen af ­Rådgivende Ingeniører overvejer, om man skal til at bygge fleksible, flytbare bygninger med kortere levetid.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
11
Researchers develop smart sensors to prevent power outagesWho turned out the lights?
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Curious to know what it's like to be in the line of fire?University of South Australia researchers and the SA Country Fire Service (CFS) have joined forces to give residents a searing experience of a bushfire – all from the safety of a virtual reality headset.
7h
Feed: All Latest
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How to Share Songs on Spotify, Apple Music, Tidal, and Google Play MusicSpotify Music ServiceAll of the popular streaming services have features where you can follow friends or recommend tracks. Here's how to use them.
7h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Absence of a transcription factor halts tooth development in mid-strideResearchers have found a key role in tooth development for the transcription factor Specificity protein 7, or Sp7. Using an animal model, the researchers found that a lack of Sp7 interrupts the maturation of two types of specialized cells that help create teeth. Such basic knowledge about the development of teeth or bones adds to understanding of craniofacial abnormalities, which are among the mos
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Researchers suggest ancient preserved circulatory and nervous systems in China are actually biofilmsA small team of researchers from Germany and China has found evidence that suggests ancient preserved circulatory and nervous systems found in Chengjiang, China, are actually the remains of biofilms. In their paper published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, the group describes their study of hundreds of fossils collected from the Chengjiang site and what they found.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
5
New solar PV tool accurately calculates degradation rates, saving money and guiding business decisionsHow long a product can be expected to perform at a high level is a fundamental indication of quality and durability. In the solar industry, accurately predicting the longevity of photovoltaic (PV) panels is essential to increase energy production, lower costs, and raise investor and consumer confidence. A new software package developed by the U.S. Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy L
7h
Dagens Medicin

Uddannelsespladser i akutmedicin snart klarDe tre videreuddannelsesregioner er for tiden ved at gøre klar til de første intro-forløb i akutmedicin.
7h
Scientific American Content: Global
42
Silliness and Scams Seem to Always Hitch a Ride with Human ActivityA look at follies, foibles and fumbles — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
200+
Tungsten 'too brittle' for nuclear fusion reactorsScientists at the University of Huddersfield have been using world-class new facilities to carry out experiments that could aid the development of nuclear fusion reactors, widely regarded as the "Holy Grail" solution to future energy needs.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Bleached anemones found to stress fish living in themA team of researchers with the University of Glasgow in Scotland and Centre de Recherches Insulaires et Observatoire de l'Environnement, French Polynesia, has found that orange-fin anemonefish (aka clownfish) living among bleached anemones exhibit signs of stress—namely a higher-than-normal metabolic rate. In their paper published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, the group describes their st
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
5
Mesotocin found to be the driver behind prosocial behavior in pinyon jaysA team of researchers with the University of Nebraska has found that the hormone mesotocin plays a major role in pinyon jay prosociality. In their paper published in the journal Biology Letters, the group describes experiments they conducted with the birds and what they found.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
12
What if New York City had no light pollution?I grew up on a small island off the West Coast of Canada, with the darkest skies you could hope for. Although I live in a small town now, with some light pollution, I can still see the Milky Way from my backyard.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
74
Biologically inspired membrane purges coal-fired smoke of greenhouse gasesA biologically inspired membrane intended to cleanse carbon dioxide almost completely from the smoke of coal-fired power plants has been developed by scientists at Sandia National Laboratories and the University of New Mexico.
8h
The Scientist RSS

Sweet Tooth Gene Tied to Less Body FatA study of more than 450,000 people finds a certain genetic variant associated with eating more carbs is linked to a thicker waist and higher blood pressure, but less fat.
8h
The Scientist RSS

Image of the Day: Tumor OrganoidsMiniature versions of bladder cancers could help physicians identify personalized treatment options for patients.
8h
Dagens Medicin

Ny radiologi-professor skal forske i tyktarmskræftOverlæge Søren R. Rafaelsen er ansat som professor i abdominal radiologi på Vejle Sygehus, Sygehus Lillebælt.
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Scientific American Content: Global
200+
Brain Cells Communicate with Mechanical Pulses, Not Electric SignalsPhysicists who have revived experiments from 50 years ago say nerve cells communicate with mechanical pulses, not electric ones — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Scientific American Content: Global
23
How Not to Care What Other People ThinkSavvy Psychologist Dr. Ellen Hendriksen offers nine ways to stop caring what other people think — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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BBC News – Science & Environment
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Nazi legacy found in Norwegian treesThe chemical fog used to hide the Tirpitz battleship in WWII stunted the growth of trees.
8h
Futurity.org
3
Scientists see neurons fire in brain of flying batResearchers can now study the brain of a bat in flight, recording for the first time how a roving animal’s neurons fire as it shifts attention to the next obstacle in its path. The new wireless technology let scientists see what happens in the brains of animals as they behave naturally, uninhibited by laboratory constraints. Because bats share the same basic brain structure as all mammals, includ
8h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Pepper plant sops up personal care product antibioticIt sometimes can be hard to find toothpastes, soaps and other toiletries without antibiotics. Their popularity has caused an increase in environmental levels of antimicrobial substances, such as triclocarban (TCC), which end up in the water and soil used to grow crops. Scientists report in the ACS' Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry that TCC and related molecules can end up in food, with p
8h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Many young East Europeans have experienced more racism and xenophobia since the Brexit voteHalf of young East Europeans living in England and Scotland who were surveyed by researchers said they had experienced an increased level of racism and xenophobia since the Brexit vote.
8h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
British Asian footballers ignored by scouts from professional clubs, research saysBritish Asians are being excluded from professional soccer clubs because scouts will not come to watch them play in amateur clubs, research says.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
That contract your computer made could get you in a legal bindThere is a lot of hype in the business world surrounding the emerging blockchain technology and so called "smart contracts—computer programs which execute the terms of an agreement. But like all computer programs, smart contracts can malfunction and even develop a mind of their own.
8h
The Atlantic
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Trump's Dangerous Threat of WarThe problem is not simply that congressional leaders won’t stop President Trump from firing Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, and maybe Special Counsel Robert Mueller, and plunging America into a constitutional crisis. The problem is that those congressional leaders—while allowing Trump to do all this—are also allowing him to take the United States to war. On Wednesday morning, Trump tweete
8h
Popular Science
91
Contagious cancer is killing off Tasmanian devils, but there might finally be hopeAnimals This could save the species from extinction. Tasmanian devils are one of the very few unlucky creatures on this planet to carry a transmissible cancer. Nearly 95 percent of affected populations have died (and most…
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Science-Based Medicine
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Adding Sensation to Robotic LimbsRecently scientists have managed to stimulate the brain in such a way that approximated some of the sensations of a natural limb in a paralyzed subject. No, they did not regain sensation, but the research is a powerful proof of concept. It shows that it is possible to produce natural-feeling sensation through electrical stimulation of the cortex, an important step for brain-machine interface resea
8h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
9
Aiming at a target: the science of particle productionFor some, a target is part of a game of darts. For others, it's a retail chain. In particle physics, it's the site of an intense, complex environment that plays a crucial role in generating the universe's smallest components for scientists to study.
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Ingeniøren

Elektrisk Ærøfærge igen udskudtProblemer med underleverandører udsætter endnu engang idriftsættelse af den nye elektriske Ærøfærge med fire måneder.
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Feed: All Latest
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RAVPower Power Bank Exclusive DealFacebook Cambridge AnalyticaA WIRED deal on an outstanding battery pack, Air Force-grade smartwatch, and other gadgets galore.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Sending electrons on a rollercoaster rideA first-of-its-kind X-ray instrument for frontier research with high-brightness X-rays is now in operation at Argonne National Laboratory. The new device utilizes a unique superconducting technology that speeds electrons on a path much like that of a rollercoaster.
8h
The Atlantic
81
Dear Therapist: My Fiancé Is a Slacker Around the HouseEditor’s Note: Every Wednesday, Lori Gottlieb answers questions from readers about their problems, big and small. Have a question? Email her at dear.therapist@theatlantic.com. Dear Therapist, I am engaged to be married to a man I love very deeply, and with whom I am very comfortable and happy. I have been in long-term relationships filled with doubts and anxiety before, and I feel nothing of thos
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The Atlantic
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Remembering Animation's Legendary Isao TakahataMuch of Isao Takahata’s 1991 animated film Only Yesterday is told through vivid recollections: Its Japanese title, Omoide Poro Poro , literally means “memories come tumbling down.” The protagonist, Taeko Okajima, is a 27-year old woman heading to the Japanese countryside on vacation when she is idly struck by memories of her 10-year-old self, formative stories and events that take on new meaning
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The Atlantic
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Why My Grandmother Carried a Plastic Brain in Her PurseI remember the bag from my childhood. Transparent and oblong, just large enough to fit a handful of papers, a few essentials, and a plastic brain. My 93-year-old grandmother, Marjorie Pearlson, once loved this bag, filling it with conversation starters. She was a woman who could talk to any stranger and pull an organ replica out of her purse with a straight face. Growing up, I would witness this
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Dagens Medicin

Andelen af børn og unge med psykiatriske diagnoser er fordoblet på få årDe seneste syv år er andelen af børn og unge, som får en psykiatrisk diagnose, steget fra fire til ni pct. Ingen grund til bekymring, mener formand for Børne og Ungdomspsykiatrisk Selskab.
8h
Futurity.org
1
Boys with asthma more likely to break bonesIndependent of age, boys with asthma who had between 1 and 3 recent wheezing episodes were 30 percent more likely to fracture a bone than boys who had not experienced a wheeze, research finds. The same association was not found in girls, although older girls with the disease did have an increased risk of fracture. “What we do in early childhood determines what could happen in later life, and whet
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
How you helped create the crisis in private dataFacebook Cambridge AnalyticaAs Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg testifies before Congress, he's likely wondering how his company got to the point where he must submit to public questioning. It's worth pondering how we, the Facebook-using public, got here too.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
30
Researchers discover three new, highly threatened chameleon species in MadagascarMadagascar is a chameleon paradise. A team of researchers has now discovered three new species, among them a beautifully coloured rainbow chameleon. These species are all restricted to very small ranges, and are probably highly threatened.
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Feed: All Latest
41
The 'Despacito' YouTube Hack Was Probably Pretty Simple to Pull OffThe removal of YouTube's most popular video this week was likely the result of a low-cost phishing scam rather than sophisticated hacking.
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Live Science
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This 'Disappearing' Optical Illusion Proves Your Brain Is Too Smart for Its Own GoodStare at these colors for 20 seconds and see what happens.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Location and voice technology are the future of retailRetailers, struggling to connect with their customers, have been trialling new technologies to blend in-store and digital experiences.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
4
Preventing sexual violence—lessons from rebel armies in Burundi and UgandaI conduct research on wartime sexual violence. But hold on.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
48
Blazing a path for buried bits in quantum chipsNIST researchers have pioneered a process that drastically simplifies fabrication of the kind of nanoscale microchip features that may soon form the basis of a quantum computer, among other applications.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
8
Are baby boomers returning to religion?Many in the baby boomer generation—known for ushering in an era of protests that brought about transformative change in American society—are increasingly turning to churches, temples and mosques to find meaning in their later years of life.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
9
Target Earth—how asteroids made an impact on AustraliaOur planet has had a few close encounters with asteroids of late.
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Live Science
200+
Nubian Stone Tablets Unearthed in African 'City of the Dead'A vast "city of the dead" in Sudan revealed stones inscribed with the oldest language in southern Africa.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
33
Plants 'hedge their bets' in germination—the route to better crop yieldsResearchers at the University of Birmingham have revealed how plants 'hedge their bets' by getting their seeds to germinate at different times. Their work identifies routes to reduce variability in agriculture and produce more consistent outcomes for farmers and food production, according to research published today.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
4
Poll finds youth distrust social media, planning to voteAs debate swirls about tech companies' responsibility to protect their users' data and Congress questions Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg about third parties mining information about millions of site users, a new poll suggests that the romance between college-age Americans and social media may be cooling, or at least isn't passionate.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
29
Synchrotron science could give soybeans a boostScientists at the University of Liverpool, together with Japanese colleagues, have gained new insight into how soil bacteria sense and adapt to the levels of oxygen in their environment. The findings could be used to help develop new treatments to promote crop growth and tackle disease.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
8
Confirmation bias: I believe, therefore it's trueThere's no shortage of global issues. Nuclear tensions, increasing drug use, genocide in Syria, mass shootings, extreme weather events, animals going extinct, obesity … these are only a few on an almost endless list.
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New Scientist – News
55
Facebook to examine tens of thousands of apps for data misuseThe US Senate questioned Mark Zuckerberg yesterday about Cambridge Analytica. He said Facebook will investigate thousands of other apps for similar misuse
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Capturing and analysing limb injuries in race horsesMassey University researchers are investigating limb injuries in race horses by capturing the 3-D movements of their limbs on camera and modelling it on computers.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
The thermodynamics of computingInformation processing requires a lot of energy. Energy-saving computer systems could make computing more efficient, but the efficiency of these systems can't be increased indefinitely, as ETH physicists show.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
4
3-D human modelling technology projects body shape and size within 10 secondsShopping well-fitting clothes online or making bespoke garments can be done more easily with the intelligent 3-D human modelling technology developed by The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU), which digitally reconstructs the shape and size of a person accurately from two full body photographs within 5-10 seconds.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
20
Duel of the inflammatory master regulators—insights for drug discoveryAnti-inflammatory drugs such as dexamethasone can have harmful side effects on the skin, bones and metabolism. Structural biology research from Emory University School of Medicine has implications for the long-standing quest to separate these drugs' benefits from their side effects.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Image: 3-D-molded interconnect devicesAn alternative to conventional circuit boards, these '3-D-molded interconnect devices' add electrical connectivity to the surface of three-dimensional structures.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Shedding new light on laser additive manufacturingAdditive manufacturing (AM, also known as 3-D printing) allows us to create incredibly complex shapes, which would not be possible using traditional manufacturing techniques. However, objects created using AM have different properties from traditional manufacturing routes, which is sometimes a disadvantage.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Turning injectable medicines into inhalable treatments with the help of smart phone componentsImagine if all childhood vaccines could get delivered with an inhaler rather than shots; or wiping away tuberculosis bacteria in a patient's lungs with an inhaler; or disinfecting a hospital room thoroughly with a diffuser.
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Feed: All Latest
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Raytheon's New Radar Could Help Bring Flying Cars to Our CitiesAs drones and flying cars move into reality, we need radar systems better equipped for keeping an eye on everyone.
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Feed: All Latest
46
The Best Nintendo Switch Deals and Console Bundles (2018)The best Nintendo Switch console deals and bundle prices. Also the games and essentials you'll want on day one.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Indigenous people's experiences on social media differ significantly from the mainstream population: national studyA new national report released today on Indigenous Australians' social media practices has found social media plays a complex role in the lives of Indigenous people, and often differs considerably from non-Indigenous populations.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
20
Our sun—three different wavelengthsFrom March 20-23, 2018, NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory captured three sequences of our sun in three different extreme ultraviolet wavelengths. The resulting images illustrate how different features that appear in one sequence are difficult, if not impossible, to see in the others.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Researchers find manganese oxide-coated filters remove contaminants from hospital wastewaterResearchers at Penn State have developed a water filtration system that removes contaminants and reduces toxicity in hospital wastewater.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Deep learning transforms smartphone microscopes into laboratory-grade devicesResearchers at the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering have demonstrated that deep learning, a powerful form of artificial intelligence, can discern and enhance microscopic details in photos taken by smartphones. The technique improves the resolution and color details of smartphone images so much that they approach the quality of images from laboratory-grade microscopes.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
6
Materials that make heat worse for kids demand a rethink by designersIt is with some relief that Australians are leaving behind the excruciatingly hot days of summer. But did you ever stop to think about the role of design in making matters better – or worse? Spending all day in air-conditioned rooms before walking out to a car that has baked in the sun all day is an exercise in extremes that many of us have faced. It's easy to forget these conditions are shaped an
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
27
Extreme climate variability destabilizing West Coast ecosystemsNew research shows that extreme climate variability over the last century in western North America may be destabilizing both marine and terrestrial ecosystems.
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NYT > Science
83
Chinese Sperm Bank Seeks Donors. Only Good Communists Need Apply.A Beijing hospital advertised for donors with “good ideological thoughts” who “support the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party.”
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NYT > Science
42
Australia Diary: For the BirdsA Sydneysider rediscovers her wild home through the eyes and ears of a New Yorker.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
8
Understanding microbial competition for nitrogenNitrogen is a hot commodity in the surface ocean. Primary producers including phytoplankton and other microorganisms consume and transform it into organic molecules to build biomass, while others transform inorganic forms to access their chemical store of energy. All of these steps are part of the complex nitrogen cycle of the upper water column.
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Latest Headlines | Science News
31
Should you bank your baby’s umbilical cord blood? Here’s a guide for thinking through the issue.The professionals have advice to give, but the decision is ultimately a personal one.
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Scientific American Content: Global
7
Expanding Global Access to Essential Heart MedicationsModernizing the World Health Organization's official list of vital medications — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Dagens Medicin

200 praktiserende læger kan tvinges på pension fra august 2019200 læger har fået dispensation fra at blive akkrediteret og skal derfor lukke deres praksis senest 31. august 2019. PLO-formand, Christian Freitag, kalder situationen alvorlig og vil tage initiativ til at drøfte sagen med regionerne.
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New on MIT Technology Review
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CRISPR trials are about to begin in people—but we still don’t know how well it works in monkeysMonkey studies look encouraging but show there’s still a lot to learn about the gene-editing technology.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
6
'Tour of the Moon' 4K reduxIn the fall of 2011, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) mission released its original Tour of the Moon, a five-minute animation that takes the viewer on a virtual tour of our nearest neighbor in space. Six years later, the tour has been recreated in eye-popping 4K resolution, using the same camera path and drawing from the vastly expanded data trove collected by LRO in the intervening years.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Want computers to see better in the real world? Train them in virtual realityScientists have developed a new way to improve how computers "see" and "understand" objects in the real world by training the computers' visual systems in a virtual environment.
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Live Science
200+
That's Cheating! Medieval Dice with No 1 or 2 Found on Street in NorwayThe dice had two 4s and 5s, but no 1s or 2s.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
18
A cosmic gorilla effect could blind the detection of aliensA well-known experiment with young people bouncing a ball showed that observers focusing on counting the passes failed to detect a man in a gorilla suit crossing the screen. According to researchers at the University of Cádiz (Spain), something similar could be happening when astronomers seek intelligent, non-earthly radio signals, which perhaps manifest themselves in dimensions that escape our pe
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
66
Does physical activity influence the health of future offspring?Physical and mental exercise can affect the learning ability of future offspring, at least in mice. This particular form of inheritance is mediated by certain RNA molecules that influence gene activity. These molecules accumulate in both the brain and germ cells following physical and mental activity. Prof. André Fischer and colleagues from the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) i
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
9
Birds migrate away from diseasesIn a unique study, researchers at Lund University in Sweden have mapped the origins of migratory birds. They used the results to investigate and discover major differences in the immune systems of sedentary and migratory birds. The researchers conclude that migratory species benefit from leaving tropical areas when it is time to raise their young, because moving away from diseases in the tropics e
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
4
When enemies come to help"The enemy of my enemy is my friend." Now, researchers at the University of Zurich show that this principle also holds for crab spiders and flowering plants. While it's true that the spiders eat or drive away useful pollinators such as bees, they're also attracted by floral scent signals to come and help if the plant is attacked by insects intent on eating it.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Robust and inexpensive catalysts for hydrogen productionResearchers from the Ruhr University Bochum (RUB) and the University of Warwick were able to observe the smallest details of hydrogen production with the synthetic mineral pentlandite. This makes it possible to develop strategies for the design of robust and cost-effective catalysts for hydrogen production. The working groups of Prof. Wolfgang Schuhmann and Dr. Ulf-Peter Apfel from the RUB and the
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Scientists discover a link between superconductivity and the periodic tableScientists from Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology and Skoltech have demonstrated the high-temperature superconductivity of actinium hydrides and discovered a general principle for calculating the superconductivity of hydrides based on the periodic table alone. The results of their study were published in the Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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A tool based on the use ofcarbon nanoparticles enables detection of antidepressants in urine samplesA University of Cordoba research group has designed a tool that enables detection of antidepressants in urine samples in low concentrations. This new method is uses a newly developed material based on carbon nanotubes on the inside of pipette tips normally used laboratory analysis.
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Ingeniøren
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Danske politikere forstår ikke kunstig intelligens: »De fleste famler i blinde«Politikerne på Christiansborg skal sikre, at vi har en fornuftig og dækkende lovgivning, men både it-eksperter og politikerne selv mener ikke, at de danske lovgivere forstår kunstig intelligens.
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Ingeniøren

Zuckerberg i senatet: Undskylder for Cambridge Analytica-skandalenFacebooks stifter havde mere travlt med at undskylde end med at forklare, hvordan Facebook overvåger sine brugere, da han i går var indkaldt af senatet.
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Scientific American Content: Global
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Can a Pill That Boosts "Resilience" Treat Depression?A clinical trial tests a new way to reverse the psychiatric disorder — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
2
Medscape's annual physician compensation report finds modest increase in physician payThis is the 2018 Medscape Annual Physician Compensation Report, which surveys more than 20,000 US physicians across 29 specialties on questions such as quality of life, salary, and more. It has been used by more than 470,000 physicians in the US to assess information on compensation, hours worked, time spent with patients, and what they find most rewarding — and challenging — about their jobs
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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SPHERE reveals fascinating zoo of discs around young starsNew images from the SPHERE instrument on ESO's Very Large Telescope are revealing the dusty discs surrounding nearby young stars in greater detail than previously achieved. They show a bizarre variety of shapes, sizes and structures, including the likely effects of planets still in the process of forming.
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The Atlantic
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The Senate Tries to Figure Out FacebookMark Zuckerberg FacebookThe sound of the camera shutters told the story. On Tuesday, when Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg entered Room 216 of the Hart Senate Office Building to testify in front of the Senate Judiciary and Commerce committees, dozens of photographers crowded the witness table, and the space filled with the sound of rain beating on a tin roof. By the hearing’s end, five hours later, it faded to a slow drizzl
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The Atlantic
76
A Single Solution for New York's Two Biggest ProblemsWhen I was growing up in Brooklyn in the 1980s, it was a watchword for urban decay, notorious for its high levels of violent crime and joblessness. Most of our family friends fled the city as soon as they could cobble together a down payment for a house in the suburbs, and it was hard to blame them. But the Salams toughed it out, and we are now delighted to have done so. By the 2010s, New York Ci
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The Atlantic
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The Myth of 'Learning Styles'In the early ‘90s, a New Zealand man named Neil Fleming decided to sort through something that had puzzled him during his time monitoring classrooms as a school inspector. In the course of watching 9,000 different classes, he noticed that only some teachers were able to reach each and every one of their students. What were they doing differently? Fleming zeroed in on how it is that people like to
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The Atlantic
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Maine's Fitful Experiment With a New Way of VotingIn two months, Maine voters will go to the polls to select their nominees to succeed the state’s pugnacious two-term Republican governor, Paul LePage. Whether all of the candidates accept the results of those party primaries, however, remains a surprisingly open question. The June 12 balloting will be the first statewide elections in the nation to use ranked-choice voting, a system Maine voters a
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The Atlantic
87
One Way to Get Through to Trump? ChildrenIf President Trump decides to launch military strikes on Syria, following the most recent gas attacks by the Assad regime, it’s a good bet that children will be central to his rationale. In a tweet on Sunday, he mentioned young victims of the attacks: Many dead, including women and children, in mindless CHEMICAL attack in Syria. Area of atrocity is in lockdown and encircled by Syrian Army, making
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The Atlantic
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Killing Eve Is a Sign of TV to ComeBBC America’s new drama Killing Eve , which debuted on Sunday night, is already one of the most critically acclaimed new shows of the year, alongside HBO’s Barry and Netflix’s The End of the F*ing World. And, like both those shows, it’s tricky to categorize. Killing Eve at its core is a cat-and-mouse spy story between an MI6 investigator named Eve Polastri (Sandra Oh) and a glamorous assassin k
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Dagens Medicin

PLO er tilfreds med nye ændringer af vagtlægegebyretPraktiserende lægers formand er glad for, at færre læger skal betale det omstridte vagtlægegebyr, men fastholder kritikken af, at gebyret ikke helt afskaffes.
10h
Ingeniøren
50
Siemens skal levere ladestandere til elbusser på SjællandEn aftale mellem Movia og Siemens skal give sikkerhed for, at infrastrukturen for elbusser er på plads, så operatørerne lettere kan byde ind med elbus-drift.
10h
The Scientist RSS

Worlds Largest Cell and Gene Therapy Plant OpensLonza will employ more than 200 full-time staff to work at the Texas-based facility, the company says.
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Dagens Medicin

Over halvdelen af kommunerne har tilknyttet faste læger på plejehjem62 pct. af landets kommuner har tilknyttet faste læger på et eller flere plejehjem. Projektchef i Vive mener, at der er en faglig gevinst for lægerne ved at være med i ordningen
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Having one eye better than the other may explain ants' left biasUnlike Derek Zoolander, ants don't have any difficulty turning left. New research from the University of Bristol has now found rock ants often have one eye slightly better than the other, which could help explain why most of them prefer to turn left, given the choice.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
4
Baby fish led astray by high CO2 in oceansBaby fish will find it harder to reach secure shelters in future acidified oceans — putting fish populations at risk, new research from the University of Adelaide has concluded.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Wildfire smoke associated with more ER visits for heart, stroke ailments among seniorsExposure to smoke from wildfires was associated with increased rates of emergency room visits for heart- and stroke-related illness, especially among adults age 65 and older.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Simultaneous chemo and immunotherapy may be better for some with metastatic bladder cancerResearchers from Mount Sinai and Sema4, a health information company and Mount Sinai venture, have discovered that giving metastatic bladder cancer patients simultaneous chemotherapy and immunotherapy is safe and that patients whose tumors have certain genetic mutations may respond particularly well to this combination approach, according to the results of a clinical trial published in European Ur
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Ingeniøren
10
Analyse: Skandalesalg af vaccine-fabrik udstiller regeringens krig med kritiske revisorerSalget af den statslige vaccineproduktion på Amager er blevet en slagsmark, som kommer til at afgøre, om Rigsrevisionen i fremtiden vil blive taget alvorligt, når den kulegraver skandaler i det offentlige.
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Viden
4
Mogensens rumkapsel kan snart ses på teknisk museumRumkapslen, der sendte første dansker i verdensrummet, udstilles på Teknisk Museum i Helsingør.
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Science | The Guardian
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We’re running out of time to stop killer robot weapons | Bonnie DochertyThe fully autonomous AI weapons now being developed could disastrously transform warfare. The UN must act fast It’s five years this month since the launch of the Campaign to Stop Killer Robots , a global coalition of non-governmental groups calling for a ban on fully autonomous weapons. This month also marks the fifth time that countries have convened at the United Nations in Geneva to address the
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The Atlantic
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Converting to Buddhism as a Form of Political ProtestSHIRASGAON, India—More than 500 low-caste Hindus filled the Veera Maidan, an open field at the edge of a dusty Maharashtra village, on a recent Sunday night. Neighbors openly gawked from porches as the throngs of people filed in, many dressed in symbolic white saris and kurtas. Under floodlights, they chanted: “I shall have no faith in Rama and Krishna who are believed to be incarnations of God n
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
5
CEO Zuckerberg apologizes for Facebook's privacy failuresMark Zuckerberg FacebookUnder fire for the worst privacy debacle in his company's history, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg batted away often-aggressive questioning from lawmakers who accused him of failing to protect the personal information of millions of Americans from Russians intent on upsetting the U.S. election.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Six takeaways from Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg's Senate testimony on data breachesMark Zuckerberg FacebookOne Silicon Valley star witness, 44 media-hungry senators, and five hours of mostly tough questions and often ambiguous answers.
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Ingeniøren
22
Dansk limteknologi uden epoxy sigter mod bilindustrienIværksættervirksomheden RadiSurf får hjælp af partnerskabet Kemi i Kredsløb til at lime metal og plast uden lim med giftige epoxy- og cyanakrylatforbindelser i.
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Nyheder – Forskning – Videnskab

Overraskelse: Gen bag ’den søde tand’ forbundet med mindre kropsfedtSidste år fandt forskere fra Københavns Universitet ud af, at særligt stor sukkertrang…
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Science | The Guardian
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Rocks, clocks, and zombie lineages | Elsa PanciroliRecent research on solenodon molecules reminds us the study of fossils is far from extinct We can now extract DNA from pretty much anything. If US crime series are anything to go by (they are not), sequencing it only takes an afternoon at a desktop computer, and an expression of determination. DNA can not only help identify murderers, but tell us how animal groups are related to one another. In t
12h
Viden
81
Zuckerberg fik senatorer til at ligne teknologiske analfabeterDet amerikanske senat kom aldrig helt tæt på at ryste Facebooks stifter under høring.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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In quest of the coldest possible antihydrogenCurrently, one of the major goals in ultracold science is to cool antihydrogen atoms to as close to absolute zero as possible. Ultracold antihydrogen would pave the way toward ultraprecise antimatter experiments that could help answer some of the most perplexing questions about antimatter. For example, how does gravity act on antimatter? Why don't we see any antimatter in the universe? And could i
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
9
Learning computer programming, with no teachers and no tuitionAspiring software engineers Kevin Yook and Becky Chen are hunched over a computer screen, fervently discussing lines of code indecipherable to the average person.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Appliance giant Thermomix fined in Australia over burns defectKitchen appliance giant Thermomix was fined Aus$4.6 million (US$3.5 million) in Australia Wednesday for breaching consumer laws after users of its mixers were burned by hot liquids due to a faulty seal.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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French startup Plume out to crowd-source air qualityFrench startup Plume Labs is out to let people breath easier, whether preparing for a marathon or just bicycling to work.
13h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Study: Vaccine suppresses peanut allergies in miceA vaccine may successfully turn off peanut allergy in mice, a new study shows.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Trouble in Paradise: Tourism surge lashes Southeast Asia's beachesHordes of tourists clamber across the white sand with selfie sticks as Thai park rangers wade into turquoise waters to direct boats charging into the cliff-ringed cove.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Fishing 'nomads': corralling carp on China's Thousand Island LakeOn a clear sunny morning in eastern China, the surface of Qiandao Lake boils with tens of thousands of thrashing carp as they are swept into the nets of fisherman like Ye Zhiqing.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Cyprus on frontline against lionfish invasion of MediterraneanEquipped with harpoons and waterproof notebooks, Louis, Carlos and Antonis dive deep into the crystal clear waters of Konnos Bay in Cyprus on a mission to capture predatory lionfish.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Japan team maps 'semi-infinite' rare earth reservesJapanese researchers have mapped vast reserves of rare earth elements in deep-sea mud, enough to feed global demand on a "semi-infinite basis," according to a fresh study.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
EasyJet, two others in running for Alitalia: companyTroubled Italian airline, Alitalia, said Tuesday that it has received three takeover offers, including one by a consortium led by British low-cost carrier EasyJet.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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US public companies have increasingly shorter lifespans, research saysAt a time when more Americans are living longer, the companies where many people spend their working lives have increasingly shorter lifespans, according to research from Indiana University's Kelley School of Business.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Faba fix for corn's nitrogen needResearchers have good news for growers. Farmers raising a nitrogen-hungry crop like sweet corn may save up to half of their nitrogen fertilizer cost. The key: using a faba bean cover crop.
13h
Ingeniøren
1
Nyuddannede ingeniører fravælger kategorisk det offentligeArbejdsopgaverne er ikke spændende nok, og lønnen er for lav, siger de unge.
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Science | The Guardian
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Why are kittens so cute? You asked Google – here's the answerEvery day millions of people ask Google life’s most difficult questions. Our writers answer some of the commonest queries A few months ago, my family and I went to a nearby cat rescue shelter to get a kitten. There were five in the available litter to choose from, but as we were watching them play, one of the two tabbies boldly decided to scale a nearby sack of bedding, then promptly fell in head
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Nanoparticles for lung cancer pass next testThe most common type of lung cancer, non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), continues to be difficult to treat, with five year survival rates of about 36 percent for stage 3A tumors. Jefferson College of Pharmacy researchers are developing a new treatment approach based on nanotechnology that was recently shown to be effective in mouse models of the disease. The research was published in the journal
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Viden
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Har Alberte Windings gener gjort hende til musiker og forfatter?Har alle lige mulighed for at blive kunstnere? Forskning viser, at kreativitet er mere arveligt, end vi tidligere har troet.
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Ingeniøren

Elev-boykot på 20 til 50 procent kan lægge omstridt trivselsmåling i gravenSlutdato d. 3. august for mulighed for at få slettet cpr-numre i Undervisningsministeriets trivselsmåling skyldes frygt for, at det statistiske grundlag smuldrer.
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Ingeniøren

Udviklere i etisk opgør: Slut med usikre barbiedukker der overvåger vores børnInternet of Things er trods stor hype fortsat et umodent teknologisk område, som mangler etiske og sikkerhedsmæssige standarder. Ny dansk forskning viser, at udviklere savner praktiske værktøjer til at designe sikre og etiske Iot-løsninger
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Viden
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Facebooks aktier steg under Zuckerberg-høringEfter massive kursfald steg kurserne med 4,5 procent i går.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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New glaucoma treatment could ease symptoms while you sleepEye drops developed by UBC researchers could one day treat glaucoma while you sleep — helping to heal a condition that is one of the leading causes of blindness around the world.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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US public companies have increasingly shorter lifespans, IU research saysAt a time when more Americans are living longer, the companies where many people spend their working lives have increasingly shorter lifespans, according to research from Indiana University's Kelley School of Business.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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The emotions we feel may shape what we seeOur emotional state in a given moment may influence what we see, according to findings published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. In two experiments, researchers found that participants saw a neutral face as smiling more when it was paired with an unseen positive image.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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Want computers to see better in the real world? Train them in a virtual realityDatasets play a crucial role in the training and testing of the computer vision systems. Using manually labeled training datasets, a computer vision system compares its current situation to known situations and takes the best action it can 'think' of — whatever that happens to be. Scientists have developed a new way to improve how computers 'see' and 'understand' objects in the real world by trai
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Faba fix for corn's nitrogen needResearchers have good news for growers. Farmers raising a nitrogen-hungry crop like sweet corn may save up to half of their nitrogen fertilizer cost. The key: using a faba bean cover crop.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

There's a better way to screen for cervical cancerA new study in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute indicates that high-quality cervical cancer screening can be done effectively using a completely automated approach. The researchers involved in the study indicate that automated technology could increase cervical screening coverage in underserved regions.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Severity of menopause symptoms could help predict heart diseaseHeart disease remains the leading cause of death in women. A study of 138 menopausal women examined the association of mood, symptoms, and quality of life measures with the key markers of vascular aging, a major risk factor for the development of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Study results are published online today in Menopause, the journal of The North American Menopause Society.
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New on MIT Technology Review
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This battery advance could make electric vehicles far cheaperSila Nanotechnologies has pulled off double-digit performance gains for lithium-ion batteries, promising to lower costs or add capabilities for cars and phones.
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New on MIT Technology Review
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Bitcoin is eating QuebecA Canadian hydropower operation put out the welcome mat for bitcoin miners. Shortly thereafter, it was overrun.
16h
Ingeniøren
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Lyskryds står pivåbne for hackerangrebLygtepæle og lyskryds med sim-kort på åbne bredbånd gør dem nemme at finde og angribe. Og så står døren åben til den samlede forsyning.
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Four Questions Congress Should Actually Ask Mark ZuckerbergMark Zuckerberg FacebookMark Zuckerberg left a lot of questions unanswered before Senate committees on Tuesday. House members might try these more pointed queries when the Facebook CEO appears before them on Wednesday.
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BBC News – Science & Environment
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Map records UK's small ups and downsThe subtle warping of the land surface across Britain is fully mapped in detail for the first time.
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Feed: All Latest
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Mark Zuckerberg Makes Facebook Privacy Sound So EasyMark Zuckerberg Facebook[In his testimony to Congress, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg repeatedly misrepresented the amount of control Facebook users really have over their data.](https://www.wired.com/story/mark-zuckerberg-congress-day-one)
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Mark Zuckerberg's Congress Testimony Day One: Simple Questions, Hard AnswersMark Zuckerberg FacebookThe basic lines of questioning Congress pursued show just how inscrutable Facebook remains to most Americans.
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NYT > Science
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Trilobites: Clown Fish Need More Energy to Live in a Bleached HomeWarmer oceans can bleach sea anemones, not just coral. The clown fish that rely on these stinging animals for shelter become very stressed out, scientists report.
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New on MIT Technology Review
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Well-rehearsed, evasive Mark Zuckerberg tries to explain Facebook user privacy to CongressMark Zuckerberg Facebook
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ArXiv Query

Spectral Statistics of Non-Hermitian Random Matrix EnsemblesRecently Burkhardt et. al. introduced the $k$-checkerboard random matrix ensembles, which have a split limiting behavior of the eigenvalues (in the limit all but $k$ of the eigenvalues are on the order of $sqrt{N}$ and converge to semi-circular behavior, with the remaining $k$ of size $N$ and converging to hollow Gaussian ensembles). We generalize their work to consider non-Hermitian ensembles wi
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The Atlantic
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The 13 Strangest Moments From the Zuckerberg HearingMark Zuckerberg FacebookShortly after 2:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Mark Zuckerberg sat down in a chair topped with a booster cushion to face 44 U.S. senators in his first-ever public appearance at a congressional hearing. And that was only the beginning of the weirdness. The dialogue between Facebook’s CEO and the members of the Senate Judiciary and Commerce Committees that has followed over the next several hours covered wide
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The Atlantic
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The Atlantic Daily: Rethink Our ApproachWhat We’re Following Facebook Face-Off: Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s CEO, appeared before the Senate Judiciary and Commerce Committees on a day of testimony that showed the limits of the senators’ ability to press him for answers. One of the major issues discussed was Facebook’s handling of a data breach by the political-consulting firm Cambridge Analytica, which affected an estimated 87 million p
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BBC News – Science & Environment
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Iron Age study targets British DNA mysteryA project to sequence DNA from ancient remains may solve a puzzle involving people from south-east Britain.
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BBC News – Science & Environment
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How ancient DNA is transforming our view of the pastAncient DNA from human remains has helped construct a new narrative for human history.
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Futurity.org
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App guides Parkinson’s disease patients through ‘freezing’Engineering students at Rice University designed an iPhone app to help patients with Parkinson’s disease overcome a symptom known as “freezing,” in which the legs temporarily refuse to follow the brain’s command to lift and move forward. For many of these patients, visual, audio, or vibratory cues can help them overcome freezing. The app may be the most comprehensive way to provide those cues, th
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Futurity.org
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Classroom yoga for kids may relieve anxietyParticipating in yoga and mindfulness activities at school may help anxious third-graders improve their well-being and emotional health, according to a small study. “Even younger children are experiencing a lot of stress and anxiety, especially around test time.” Researchers worked with a public school in New Orleans to add mindfulness and yoga to the school’s existing empathy-based programming f
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Futurity.org
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What microbes in dead bodies can tell us about the livingThe postmortem microbiome, populations of micro-organisms that move in after death, can provide crucial insights into public health, a new study shows. What’s telling is that regardless of many factors—sex, ethnicity, or even type of death—the microbiome is consistent and distinct, depending on the number of days after death. With partnerships between forensic entomologists and medical examiners,
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The Atlantic
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Mark Zuckerberg Is Halfway to Scot-FreeMark Zuckerberg FacebookMark Zuckerberg finally walked into Congress today in a suit and Facebook-blue tie. He sat alone in a chair, behind a brown wooden desk, backed by a short-row of Facebook lawyers, and facing a U of nearly half the Senate, a joint hearing of the Senate Judiciary and Commerce Committees. And as the first day of the hearings came to a close, not one Senator had landed a good punch on the CEO of Face
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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Study confirms link between traumatic brain injury and dementiaThe risk of dementia, including Alzheimer's, was significantly higher in people who had experienced a traumatic brain injury (TBI) than with people who had no history of TBI, according to one of the largest studies to date on that association.
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Viden
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Zuckerberg i fuld kontrol: Glider af på kritiske spørgsmål fra SenatetMark Zuckerberg har relativt let overstået den første halvdel af spørgsmålene i Senatets høring.
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Futurity.org
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How conservation pros can engage Amish and Mennonite communitiesResearchers have identified several factors that can improve coordination between Plain (the Amish and conservative Mennonite) communities and agricultural professionals such as conservation agents. The researchers found that agricultural professionals face challenges as well as opportunities on issues relating to conservation and pollution when working with Amish and conservative Mennonite commu
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Popular Science
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A third of heavy pot users suffer severe nausea—and they’ve all landed on the same weird solutionHealth But there's got to be a better way. CHS is a condition where heavy marijuana users are frequently wracked with bouts of intense abdominal pain, along with severe nausea and vomiting. And the vast majority…
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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How to avoid a roadblock when reprogramming cellsScientists have helped to answer lingering questions about cellular reprogramming.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Does physical activity influence the health of future offspring?Physical and mental exercise is not only beneficial for your own brain, but can also affect the learning ability of future offspring — at least in mice.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Bloodless revolution in diabetes monitoringScientists have created a non-invasive, adhesive patch, which promises the measurement of glucose levels through the skin without a finger-prick blood test, potentially removing the need for millions of diabetics to frequently carry out the painful and unpopular tests.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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High efficiency solar power conversion allowed by a novel composite materialA composite thin film made of two different inorganic oxide materials significantly improves the performance of solar cells. Researchers have developed this material which combines two crystal phases comprising the atomic elements bismuth, manganese, and oxygen. The combination of phases optimizes this material's ability to absorb solar radiation and transform it into electricity. The results are
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Humans and others exposed to prenatal stress have high stress levels after birthVertebrate species, including humans, exposed to stress prenatally tend to have higher stress hormones after birth, according to a new study. While previous research has reported examples of maternal stress experience predicting offspring stress hormones in different species, this study is the first to empirically demonstrate the impact of prenatal stress on offspring stress hormone levels using d
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Making computer animation more agile, acrobatic — and realisticAnimation in film and video games is hard to make realistic: each action typically requires creating a separate controller, while deep reinforcement learning has yet to generate realistic human or animal motion. Computer scientists have now developed an algorithm that uses reinforcement learning to generate realistic simulations that can even recover realistically, after tripping, for example. The
22h
The Atlantic
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The Atlantic Politics & Policy Daily: Sitting ZuckToday in 5 Lines Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein reportedly signed off on the FBI’s raid of President Trump’s personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, on Monday. Agents reportedly targeted records about payments to women who claim they had affairs with Trump. During a press briefing, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters that Trump “ certainly has the power ” to fire Spe
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Tiny injectable sensor could provide unobtrusive, long-term alcohol monitoringEngineers have developed a tiny, ultra-low power chip that could be injected just under the surface of the skin for continuous, long-term alcohol monitoring. The chip is powered wirelessly by a wearable device such as a smartwatch or patch. The goal of this work is to develop a convenient, routine monitoring device for patients in substance abuse treatment programs.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Cancer risk rises as patients wait for diagnostic testingThe longer a patient with a positive screening result waits for diagnostic testing, the worse their cancer outcomes may become, according to a literature review of breast, cervical, colorectal, and lung studies.
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Facebook’s Cambridge Analytica Scandal Shows the Price of Tech UtopiaWas everything users gained from Facebook worth what they gave up?
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BBC News – Science & Environment
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Earth's magnetic ocean tides mapped from spaceSatellites make the most detailed observations yet of the magnetism generated by moving seawater.
23h
Dagens Medicin

Fri mig for den frie ordinationsretBegrebet ‘fri ordinationsret’ er en mytologisk illusion som hverken har eller har haft nogen retlig legitimitet.
23h
The Atlantic
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Donald Trump's Strange JusticeHow President Trump feels about due process appears to depend on whether he or his associates are the ones being investigated. Monday, after the news broke that federal investigators had raided the office, hotel room, and home of Trump's longtime personal attorney Michael Cohen, the president called it “an attack on our country, in a true sense,” and “an attack on what we all stand for.” It was a
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The Scientist RSS

Vision Restored: The Latest Technologies to Improve SightCell implants, gene therapy, even optogenetics are making headway in clinical trials to treat various forms of blindness.
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New on MIT Technology Review
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The next breathalyzer may be a chip implanted under your skin
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Two Colorado studies find resistance mechanisms in ALK+ and ROS1+ cancersIn one of 12 ROS1+ samples and 15 of 43 ALK+ samples, new kinases had been altered to allow treatment resistance. However, 'we found a lot of stuff besides kinase mutations,' a researcher says. 'What we're trying to say is that resistance happens in a lot of different ways and we need to be thinking about all the genetic and non-genetic changes that can occur.'
23h
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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Nanoparticles for lung cancer pass next testNon-small cell lung cancer Nanoparticles pass the next stage of development in preclinical tests.
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Big Think
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Why is there a higher suicide rate in the spring?The suicide rate goes up in spring and summer, ad not winter as many believe, and some recent studies are suggesting a link between immune-system inflammation from pollen and and seasonal depression that can lead to suicide. Read More
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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'Footquakes': Messi really does make the Earth trembleIt's a scientific fact: when living football legends Neymar or Lionel Messi scores a goal, the Earth moves and the ground shakes.
23h
Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Making computer animation more agile, acrobatic—and realisticIt's still easy to tell computer-simulated motions from the real thing – on the big screen or in video games, simulated humans and animals often move clumsily, without the rhythm and fluidity of their real-world counterparts.
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How Many G's Will the Hyperloop Pull in Its Next Test?Elon Musk tweeted that a hyperloop test will accelerate to half the speed of sound and brake in just 1.2 kilometers.
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Ex-Commerce Secretary Pritzker on Saving the Future of JobsFormer Commerce secretary Penny Pritzker, cochair of a task force on the future of work, says the nation needs to "relink education, work, and opportunity."
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Inside Science
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How Big Spiders Use Nanoscale Physics to FlyHow Big Spiders Use Nanoscale Physics to Fly New study reveals the complex strategies crab spiders use to soar on streamers of silk. vlcsnap-2017-01-08-12h20m32s857.png A crab spider spins silk lines into the breeze in preparation for a ballooning flight. Image credits: Moonsung Cho Rights information: This photo can only be used if published with this Inside Science story. Creature Tuesday, Apri
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Live Science
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After Death, Your Microbiome Could Still Help the LivingYou don't need to be alive for your microbiome to be useful to science.
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New on MIT Technology Review
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Solar industry jobs are set to grow this year, despite Trump’s tariffs
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Live Science
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Greenland Has a Mysterious 'Dark Zone' — And It's Getting Even DarkerA new study investigates the dark zone that seems to be getting bigger on the western edge of the ice sheet.
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Viden
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Hestekræfter som 50 biler: Se Danmarks nye vindtunnel blæse ekstrem vindNyt anlæg har kostet over 80 millioner og skal bl.a. gøre vindmøller mindre støjende.
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Our humanity contains multitudes: Dehumanization is more than overlooking mental capacities [Social Sciences]A longstanding conclusion of work on dehumanization is that the denial of humanity facilitates violence, in part by loosening restraints against harming others (1–3). Rai et al. (4) propose that dehumanization only begets instrumental violence. They claim that dehumanization does not facilitate moral violence because moral violence necessitates blame and…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Reply to Fincher et al.: Conceptual specificity in dehumanization research is a feature, not a bug [Social Sciences]Fincher et al. (1) argue that our conceptualization of dehumanization as “the failure to engage in social cognition of other human minds” (2) is too narrow. Importantly, Fincher et al. (1) do not dispute our actual findings. They agree that reduced perception of mental and emotional states in victims generates…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
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Water-like anomalies as a function of tetrahedrality [Applied Physical Sciences]Tetrahedral interactions describe the behavior of the most abundant and technologically important materials on Earth, such as water, silicon, carbon, germanium, and countless others. Despite their differences, these materials share unique common physical behaviors, such as liquid anomalies, open crystalline structures, and extremely poor glass-forming ability at ambient pressure. To…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Local protein solvation drives direct down-conversion in phycobiliprotein PC645 via incoherent vibronic transport [Chemistry]The mechanisms controlling excitation energy transport (EET) in light-harvesting complexes remain controversial. Following the observation of long-lived beats in 2D electronic spectroscopy of PC645, vibronic coherence, the delocalization of excited states between pigments supported by a resonant vibration, has been proposed to enable direct excitation transport from the highest-energy to…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Successful reprogramming of cellular protein production through mRNA delivered by functionalized lipid nanoparticles [Chemistry]The development of safe and efficacious gene vectors has limited greatly the potential for therapeutic treatments based on messenger RNA (mRNA). Lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) formed by an ionizable cationic lipid (here DLin-MC3-DMA), helper lipids (distearoylphosphatidylcholine, DSPC, and cholesterol), and a poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) lipid have been identified as very promising…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
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Escalation of competition into conflict in competitive networks of Formula One drivers [Social Sciences]This article investigates the factors that escalate competition into dangerous conflict. Recent sociological theorizing claims that such escalations are particularly likely in dyads of structurally equivalent people (i.e., actors who have the same relations with the same third parties). Using panel data on Formula One races from 1970 through 2014,…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

MDMX acidic domain inhibits p53 DNA binding in vivo and regulates tumorigenesis [Biochemistry]The MDM2 homolog MDMX oncoprotein is indispensable for inhibition of p53 during normal embryonic development and malignant transformation, yet how MDMX harnesses p53 functions is unclear. In addition to a canonical N-terminal p53-binding domain, recent work suggests the central acidic domain of MDMX regulates p53 interaction through intramolecular mimicry and…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

IpdAB, a virulence factor in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, is a cholesterol ring-cleaving hydrolase [Biochemistry]Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) grows on host-derived cholesterol during infection. IpdAB, found in all steroid-degrading bacteria and a determinant of pathogenicity, has been implicated in the hydrolysis of the last steroid ring. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that IpdAB orthologs form a clade of CoA transferases (CoTs). In a coupled assay with a…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
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S-nitrosylation drives cell senescence and aging in mammals by controlling mitochondrial dynamics and mitophagy [Biochemistry]S-nitrosylation, a prototypic redox-based posttranslational modification, is frequently dysregulated in disease. S-nitrosoglutathione reductase (GSNOR) regulates protein S-nitrosylation by functioning as a protein denitrosylase. Deficiency of GSNOR results in tumorigenesis and disrupts cellular homeostasis broadly, including metabolic, cardiovascular, and immune function. Here, we demonstrate that
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Cross-linking of Orai1 channels by STIM proteins [Biochemistry]The transmembrane docking of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+-sensing STIM proteins with plasma membrane (PM) Orai Ca2+ channels is a critical but poorly understood step in Ca2+ signal generation. STIM1 protein dimers unfold to expose a discrete STIM–Orai activating region (SOAR1) that tethers and activates Orai1 channels within discrete ER–PM junctions….
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Single-nucleotide resolution dynamic repair maps of UV damage in Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome [Biochemistry]We have adapted the eXcision Repair-sequencing (XR-seq) method to generate single-nucleotide resolution dynamic repair maps of UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers and (6-4) pyrimidine–pyrimidone photoproducts in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome. We find that these photoproducts are removed from the genome primarily by incisions 13–18 nucleotides 5′ and 6–7 nucleotides 3′ to…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Exploring the structural origins of cryptic sites on proteins [Biophysics and Computational Biology]Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of proteins reveal the existence of many transient surface pockets; however, the factors determining what small subset of these represent druggable or functionally relevant ligand binding sites, called “cryptic sites,” are not understood. Here, we examine multiple X-ray structures for a set of proteins with validated…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Loss of TDP43 inhibits progression of triple-negative breast cancer in coordination with SRSF3 [Cell Biology]Aberrant alternative splicing has been highlighted as a potential hallmark of cancer. Here, we identify TDP43 (TAR DNA-binding protein 43) as an important splicing regulator responsible for the unique splicing profile in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). Clinical data demonstrate that TDP43 is highly expressed in TNBC with poor prognosis. Knockdown…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Small proline-rich protein 2B drives stress-dependent p53 degradation and fibroblast proliferation in heart failure [Cell Biology]Heart disease is associated with the accumulation of resident cardiac fibroblasts (CFs) that secrete extracellular matrix (ECM), leading to the development of pathological fibrosis and heart failure. However, the mechanisms underlying resident CF proliferation remain poorly defined. Here, we report that small proline-rich protein 2b (Sprr2b) is among the most…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Molecular and structural architecture of polyQ aggregates in yeast [Cell Biology]Huntington’s disease is caused by the expansion of a polyglutamine (polyQ) tract in the N-terminal exon of huntingtin (HttEx1), but the cellular mechanisms leading to neurodegeneration remain poorly understood. Here we present in situ structural studies by cryo-electron tomography of an established yeast model system of polyQ toxicity. We find…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
2
Phylogenetic homogenization of amphibian assemblages in human-altered habitats across the globe [Ecology]Habitat conversion is driving biodiversity loss and restructuring species assemblages across the globe. Responses to habitat conversion vary widely, however, and little is known about the degree to which shared evolutionary history underlies changes in species richness and composition. We analyzed data from 48 studies, comprising 438 species on five…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
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Global increase and geographic convergence in antibiotic consumption between 2000 and 2015 [Environmental Sciences]Tracking antibiotic consumption patterns over time and across countries could inform policies to optimize antibiotic prescribing and minimize antibiotic resistance, such as setting and enforcing per capita consumption targets or aiding investments in alternatives to antibiotics. In this study, we analyzed the trends and drivers of antibiotic consumption from 2000…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Embryophyte stress signaling evolved in the algal progenitors of land plants [Evolution]Streptophytes are unique among photosynthetic eukaryotes in having conquered land. As the ancestors of land plants, streptophyte algae are hypothesized to have possessed exaptations to the environmental stressors encountered during the transition to terrestrial life. Many of these stressors, including high irradiance and drought, are linked to plastid biology. We…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
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RNA-mediated gene regulation is less evolvable than transcriptional regulation [Evolution]Much of gene regulation is carried out by proteins that bind DNA or RNA molecules at specific sequences. One class of such proteins is transcription factors, which bind short DNA sequences to regulate transcription. Another class is RNA binding proteins, which bind short RNA sequences to regulate RNA maturation, transport,…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Cooption of an appendage-patterning gene cassette in the head segmentation of arachnids [Evolution]The jointed appendages of arthropods have facilitated the spectacular diversity and success of this phylum. Key to the regulation of appendage outgrowth is the Krüppel-like factor (KLF)/specificity protein (Sp) family of zinc finger transcription factors. In the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, the Sp6-9 homolog is activated by Wnt-1/wingless (wg) and…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Recombinant immunotoxins with albumin-binding domains have long half-lives and high antitumor activity [Medical Sciences]Recombinant immunotoxins (RITs) are chimeric proteins consisting of a Fv that binds to a cancer cell and a portion of a protein toxin. One of these, Moxetumomab pasudotox, was shown to be effective in treating patients with some leukemias, where the cells are readily accessible to the RIT. However, their…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Inhibition of Enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) induces natural killer cell-mediated eradication of hepatocellular carcinoma cells [Medical Sciences]Natural killer (NK) cell-mediated tumor cell eradication could inhibit tumor initiation and progression. However, the factors that regulate NK cell-mediated cancer cell eradication remain unclear. We determined that hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells exhibit transcriptional down-regulation of NK group 2D (NKG2D) ligands and are largely resistant to NK cell-mediated eradication. Because…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

A zipped-helix cap potentiates HAMP domain control of chemoreceptor signaling [Microbiology]Environmental awareness is an essential attribute for all organisms. The chemotaxis system of Escherichia coli provides a powerful experimental model for the investigation of stimulus detection and signaling mechanisms at the molecular level. These bacteria sense chemical gradients with transmembrane proteins [methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs)] that have an extracellular ligand-binding..
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Adeno-associated virus Rep proteins antagonize phosphatase PP1 to counteract KAP1 repression of the latent viral genome [Microbiology]Adeno-associated virus (AAV) is a small human Dependovirus whose low immunogenicity and capacity for long-term persistence have led to its widespread use as vector for gene therapy. Despite great recent successes in AAV-based gene therapy, further improvements in vector technology may be hindered by an inadequate understanding of various aspects…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
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Nonmonotonic spatial structure of interneuronal correlations in prefrontal microcircuits [Neuroscience]Correlated fluctuations of single neuron discharges, on a mesoscopic scale, decrease as a function of lateral distance in early sensory cortices, reflecting a rapid spatial decay of lateral connection probability and excitation. However, spatial periodicities in horizontal connectivity and associational input as well as an enhanced probability of lateral excitatory…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Antidepression action of BDNF requires and is mimicked by G{alpha}i1/3 expression in the hippocampus [Neuroscience]Stress-related alterations in brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) expression, a neurotrophin that plays a key role in synaptic plasticity, are believed to contribute to the pathophysiology of depression. Here, we show that in a chronic mild stress (CMS) model of depression the Gαi1 and Gαi3 subunits of heterotrimeric G proteins are…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Kv4.2 autism and epilepsy mutation enhances inactivation of closed channels but impairs access to inactivated state after opening [Physiology]A de novo mutation in the KCND2 gene, which encodes the Kv4.2 K+ channel, was identified in twin boys with intractable, infant-onset epilepsy and autism. Kv4.2 channels undergo closed-state inactivation (CSI), a mechanism by which channels inactivate without opening during subthreshold depolarizations. CSI dynamically modulates neuronal excitability and action potential…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Endothelial GqPCR activity controls capillary electrical signaling and brain blood flow through PIP2 depletion [Physiology]Brain capillaries play a critical role in sensing neural activity and translating it into dynamic changes in cerebral blood flow to serve the metabolic needs of the brain. The molecular cornerstone of this mechanism is the capillary endothelial cell inward rectifier K+ (Kir2.1) channel, which is activated by neuronal activity–dependent…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

CSI1, PATROL1, and exocyst complex cooperate in delivery of cellulose synthase complexes to the plasma membrane [Plant Biology]Cellulose synthesis occurs exclusively at the plasma membrane by cellulose synthase complexes (CSCs). Therefore, delivery of CSCs to discrete sites at the plasma membrane is critical for cellulose synthesis. Despite their significance, the delivery of CSCs is poorly understood. Here we used proteomics approaches, functional genetics, and live cell imaging…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Chloroplast SRP43 acts as a chaperone for glutamyl-tRNA reductase, the rate-limiting enzyme in tetrapyrrole biosynthesis [Plant Biology]Assembly of light-harvesting complexes requires synchronization of chlorophyll (Chl) biosynthesis with biogenesis of light-harvesting Chl a/b-binding proteins (LHCPs). The chloroplast signal recognition particle (cpSRP) pathway is responsible for transport of nucleus-encoded LHCPs in the stroma of the plastid and their integration into the thylakoid membranes. Correct folding and assembly of…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
6
Crystal structure of human lysyl oxidase-like 2 (hLOXL2) in a precursor state [Biochemistry]Lysyl oxidases (LOXs), a type of copper- and lysyl tyrosylquinone (LTQ) -dependent amine oxidase, catalyze the oxidative deamination of lysine residues of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins such as elastins and collagens and generate aldehyde groups. The oxidative deamination of lysine represents the foundational step for the cross-linking of elastin and…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Sortase ligation enables homogeneous GPCR phosphorylation to reveal diversity in {beta}-arrestin coupling [Biochemistry]The ability of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) to initiate complex cascades of cellular signaling is governed by the sequential coupling of three main transducer proteins, G protein, GPCR kinase (GRK), and β-arrestin. Mounting evidence indicates these transducers all have distinct conformational preferences and binding modes. However, interrogating each transducer’s mechanism…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

OSR1 regulates a subset of inward rectifier potassium channels via a binding motif variant [Biochemistry]The with-no-lysine (K) (WNK) signaling pathway to STE20/SPS1-related proline- and alanine-rich kinase (SPAK) and oxidative stress-responsive 1 (OSR1) kinase is an important mediator of cell volume and ion transport. SPAK and OSR1 associate with upstream kinases WNK 1–4, substrates, and other proteins through their C-terminal domains which interact with linear…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Binding site for coenzyme A revealed in the structure of pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase from Moorella thermoacetica [Biochemistry]Pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (PFOR) is a microbial enzyme that uses thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP), three [4Fe-4S] clusters, and coenzyme A (CoA) in the reversible oxidation of pyruvate to generate acetyl-CoA and carbon dioxide. The two electrons that are generated as a result of pyruvate decarboxylation are used in the reduction of low…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Water-mediated conformational preselection mechanism in substrate binding cooperativity to protein kinase A [Biophysics and Computational Biology]Substrate binding cooperativity in protein kinase A (PKA) seems to involve allosteric coupling between the two binding sites. It received significant attention, but its molecular basis still remains not entirely clear. Based on long molecular dynamics of PKA and its complexes, we characterized an allosteric pathway that links ATP binding…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Structural basis for the ethanol action on G-protein-activated inwardly rectifying potassium channel 1 revealed by NMR spectroscopy [Biophysics and Computational Biology]Ethanol consumption leads to a wide range of pharmacological effects by acting on the signaling proteins in the human nervous system, such as ion channels. Despite its familiarity and biological importance, very little is known about the molecular mechanisms underlying the ethanol action, due to extremely weak binding affinity and…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Fusogenic micropeptide Myomixer is essential for satellite cell fusion and muscle regeneration [Cell Biology]Regeneration of skeletal muscle in response to injury occurs through fusion of a population of stem cells, known as satellite cells, with injured myofibers. Myomixer, a muscle-specific membrane micropeptide, cooperates with the transmembrane protein Myomaker to regulate embryonic myoblast fusion and muscle formation. To investigate the role of Myomixer in…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Circadian clock activity of cryptochrome relies on tryptophan-mediated photoreduction [Chemistry]Cryptochromes (CRYs) entrain the circadian clocks of plants and animals to light. Irradiation of the Drosophila cryptochrome (dCRY) causes reduction of an oxidized flavin cofactor by a chain of conserved tryptophan (Trp) residues. However, it is unclear how redox chemistry within the Trp chain couples to dCRY-mediated signaling. Here, we…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Mechanistic insights into staphylopine-mediated metal acquisition [Chemistry]Metal acquisition is vital to pathogens for successful infection within hosts. Staphylopine (StP), a broad-spectrum metallophore biosynthesized by the major human pathogen, Staphylococcus aureus, plays a central role in transition-metal acquisition and bacterial virulence. The StP-like biosynthesis loci are present in various pathogens, and the proteins responsible for StP/metal transportation…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Seagrass habitat metabolism increases short-term extremes and long-term offset of CO2 under future ocean acidification [Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences]The role of rising atmospheric CO2 in modulating estuarine carbonate system dynamics remains poorly characterized, likely due to myriad processes driving the complex chemistry in these habitats. We reconstructed the full carbonate system of an estuarine seagrass habitat for a summer period of 2.5 months utilizing a combination of time-series…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Grassland biodiversity can pay [Economic Sciences]The biodiversity–ecosystem functioning (BEF) literature provides strong evidence of the biophysical basis for the potential profitability of greater diversity but does not address questions of optimal management. BEF studies typically focus on the ecosystem outputs produced by randomly assembled communities that only differ in their biodiversity levels, measured by indices…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
1
Dependence of the evolution of carbon dynamics in the northern permafrost region on the trajectory of climate change [Environmental Sciences]We conducted a model-based assessment of changes in permafrost area and carbon storage for simulations driven by RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 projections between 2010 and 2299 for the northern permafrost region. All models simulating carbon represented soil with depth, a critical structural feature needed to represent the permafrost carbon–climate feedback, but…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Identification of a queen and king recognition pheromone in the subterranean termite Reticulitermes flavipes [Evolution]Chemical communication is fundamental to success in social insect colonies. Species-, colony-, and caste-specific blends of cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) and other chemicals have been well documented as pheromones, mediating important behavioral and physiological aspects of social insects. More specifically, royal pheromones used by queens (and kings in termites) enable workers…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

New tRNA contacts facilitate ligand binding in a Mycobacterium smegmatis T box riboswitch [Genetics]T box riboswitches are RNA regulatory elements widely used by organisms in the phyla Firmicutes and Actinobacteria to regulate expression of amino acid-related genes. Expression of T box family genes is down-regulated by transcription attenuation or inhibition of translation initiation in response to increased charging of the cognate tRNA. Three…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Split cGAL, an intersectional strategy using a split intein for refined spatiotemporal transgene control in Caenorhabditis elegans [Genetics]Bipartite expression systems, such as the GAL4-UAS system, allow fine manipulation of gene expression and are powerful tools for interrogating gene function. Recently, we established cGAL, a GAL4-based bipartite expression system for transgene control in Caenorhabditis elegans, where a single promoter dictates the expression pattern of a cGAL driver, which…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

IRF9 and unphosphorylated STAT2 cooperate with NF-{kappa}B to drive IL6 expression [Immunology and Inflammation]In response to IFNβ, the IL6 gene is activated, modestly at early times by ISGF3 (IRF9 plus tyrosine-phosphorylated STATs 1 and 2), and strongly at late times by U-ISGF3 (IRF9 plus U-STATs 1 and 2, lacking tyrosine phosphorylation). A classical IFN-stimulated response element (ISRE) at −1,513 to −1,526 in the…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Anti-CTLA-4 therapy requires an Fc domain for efficacy [Immunology and Inflammation]Ipilimumab, a monoclonal antibody that recognizes cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen (CTLA)-4, was the first approved “checkpoint”-blocking anticancer therapy. In mouse tumor models, the response to antibodies against CTLA-4 depends entirely on expression of the Fcγ receptor (FcγR), which may facilitate antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis, but the contribution of simple CTLA-4 blockade…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Rlip depletion prevents spontaneous neoplasia in TP53 null mice [Medical Sciences]TP53 (p53) is a tumor suppressor whose functions are lost or altered in most malignancies. p53 homozygous knockout (p53−/−) mice uniformly die of spontaneous malignancy, typically T-cell lymphoma. RALBP1 (RLIP76, Rlip) is a stress-protective, mercapturic acid pathway transporter protein that also functions as a Ral effector involved in clathrin-dependent endocytosis….
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Establishment of human pluripotent stem cell-derived pancreatic {beta}-like cells in the mouse pancreas [Medical Sciences]Type 1 diabetes is characterized by autoimmune destruction of β cells located in pancreatic islets. However, tractable in vivo models of human pancreatic β cells have been limited. Here, we generated xenogeneic human pancreatic β-like cells in the mouse pancreas by orthotopic transplantation of stem cell-derived β (SC-β) cells into…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
1
PUMA amplifies necroptosis signaling by activating cytosolic DNA sensors [Medical Sciences]Necroptosis, a form of regulated necrotic cell death, is governed by RIP1/RIP3-mediated activation of MLKL. However, the signaling process leading to necroptotic death remains to be elucidated. In this study, we found that PUMA, a proapoptotic BH3-only Bcl-2 family member, is transcriptionally activated in an RIP3/MLKL-dependent manner following induction of…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Reduction of lipid accumulation rescues Bietti’s crystalline dystrophy phenotypes [Medical Sciences]Bietti’s crystalline dystrophy (BCD) is an intractable and progressive chorioretinal degenerative disease caused by mutations in the CYP4V2 gene, resulting in blindness in most patients. Although we and others have shown that retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells are primarily impaired in patients with BCD, the underlying mechanisms of RPE cell…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
1
LTP requires postsynaptic PDZ-domain interactions with glutamate receptor/auxiliary protein complexes [Neuroscience]Long-term potentiation (LTP) is a persistent strengthening of synaptic transmission in the brain and is arguably the most compelling cellular and molecular model for learning and memory. Previous work found that both AMPA receptors and exogenously expressed kainate receptors are equally capable of expressing LTP, despite their limited homology and…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

BACE1 SUMOylation increases its stability and escalates the protease activity in Alzheimer’s disease [Neuroscience]Amyloid beta (Aβ) is a major pathological marker in Alzheimer’s disease (AD), which is principally regulated by the rate-limiting β-secretase (i.e., BACE1) cleavage of amyloid precursor protein (APP). However, how BACE1 activity is posttranslationally regulated remains incompletely understood. Here, we show that BACE1 is predominantly SUMOylated at K501 residue, which…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Kruppel homolog 1 represses insect ecdysone biosynthesis by directly inhibiting the transcription of steroidogenic enzymes [Physiology]In insects, juvenile hormone (JH) and the steroid hormone ecdysone have opposing effects on regulation of the larval–pupal transition. Although increasing evidence suggests that JH represses ecdysone biosynthesis during larval development, the mechanism underlying this repression is not well understood. Here, we demonstrate that the expression of the Krüppel homolog…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Endoplasmic reticulum-localized CCX2 is required for osmotolerance by regulating ER and cytosolic Ca2+ dynamics in Arabidopsis [Plant Biology]Ca2+ signals in plant cells are important for adaptive responses to environmental stresses. Here, we report that the Arabidopsis CATION/Ca2+ EXCHANGER2 (CCX2), encoding a putative cation/Ca2+ exchanger that localizes to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), is strongly induced by salt and osmotic stresses. Compared with the WT, AtCCX2 loss-of-function mutant was…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Internal states and extrinsic factors both determine monkey vocal production [Psychological and Cognitive Sciences]A key question for understanding speech evolution is whether or not the vocalizations of our closest living relatives—nonhuman primates—represent the precursors to speech. Some believe that primate vocalizations are not volitional but are instead inextricably linked to internal states like arousal and thus bear little resemblance to human speech. Others…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Identifying psychological responses of stigmatized groups to referendums [Psychological and Cognitive Sciences]Public votes and referendums on the rights of marginalized communities are utilized in 27 states and occur with some regularity. However, research has only recently begun to examine the psychological consequences of these voter referendums for members of stigmatized groups, and a number of important questions remain regarding the internal…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
5
Cracking the social code of speech prosody using reverse correlation [Psychological and Cognitive Sciences]Human listeners excel at forming high-level social representations about each other, even from the briefest of utterances. In particular, pitch is widely recognized as the auditory dimension that conveys most of the information about a speaker’s traits, emotional states, and attitudes. While past research has primarily looked at the influence…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
75
The opportunity cost of animal based diets exceeds all food losses [Sustainability Science]Food loss is widely recognized as undermining food security and environmental sustainability. However, consumption of resource-intensive food items instead of more efficient, equally nutritious alternatives can also be considered as an effective food loss. Here we define and quantify these opportunity food losses as the food loss associated with consuming…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Divergent trends of open-surface water body area in the contiguous United States from 1984 to 2016 [Sustainability Science]The contiguous United States (CONUS), especially the West, faces challenges of increasing water stress and uncertain impacts of climate change. The historical information of surface water body distribution, variation, and multidecadal trends documented in remote-sensing images can aid in water-resource planning and management, yet is not well explored. Here, we…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Correction for Bevan et al., Holocene fluctuations in human population demonstrate repeated links to food production and climate [Correction]ANTHROPOLOGY, SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE Correction for “Holocene fluctuations in human population demonstrate repeated links to food production and climate,” by Andrew Bevan, Sue Colledge, Dorian Fuller, Ralph Fyfe, Stephen Shennan, and Chris Stevens, which was first published November 20, 2017; 10.1073/pnas.1709190114 (Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 114:E10524–E10531). The authors note that…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Correction for Paluck et al., Changing climates of conflict: A social network experiment in 56 schools [Correction]PSYCHOLOGICAL AND COGNITIVE SCIENCES Correction for “Changing climates of conflict: A social network experiment in 56 schools,” by Elizabeth Levy Paluck, Hana Shepherd, and Peter M. Aronow, which was first published January 4, 2016; 10.1073/pnas.1514483113 (Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 113:566–571). The authors wish to note the following: “We reported…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Correction for Bernardo-Seisdedos et al., Structural basis and energy landscape for the Ca2+ gating and calmodulation of the Kv7.2 K+ channel [Correction]BIOPHYSICS AND COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY Correction for “Structural basis and energy landscape for the Ca2+ gating and calmodulation of the Kv7.2 K+ channel,” by Ganeko Bernardo-Seisdedos, Eider Nuñez, Carolina Gomis, Covadonga Malo, Álvaro Villarroel, and Oscar Millet, which was first published February 20, 2018; 10.1073/pnas.1800235115 (Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 115:2395–2400)….
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Correction for Jiang et al., Proteins induced by telomere dysfunction and DNA damage represent biomarkers of human aging and disease [Correction]MEDICAL SCIENCES Correction for “Proteins induced by telomere dysfunction and DNA damage represent biomarkers of human aging and disease,” by Hong Jiang, Eric Schiffer, Zhangfa Song, Jianwei Wang, Petra Zürbig, Kathrin Thedieck, Suzette Moes, Heike Bantel, Nadja Saal, Justyna Jantos, Meiken Brecht, Paul Jenö, Michael N. Hall, Klaus Hager, Michael…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
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In This Issue [This Week in PNAS]Pheromone distinguishes termite royalty from worker castes Primary queen of R. flavipes with attendant workers. Image courtesy of Matt Bertone (North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC). For eusocial insects, caste systems prescribe crucial social and reproductive division of labor. Nestmates primarily recognize one another and their roles within the colony…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
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Profile of Dorothy L. Cheney and Robert M. Seyfarth [Profiles]Field studies in Africa over the past four decades by ethologists Dorothy Cheney and Robert Seyfarth have uncovered a trove of insights into the behavior, communication, and social cognition of nonhuman primates. The pair’s research further reveals evolutionary antecedents of the human mind. University of Pennsylvania professors emeriti, Cheney and…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Global amphibian declines have winners and losers [Ecology]Global change imperils a large swath of the planet’s biodiversity, portending a future with decreasing species richness and functioning of natural ecosystems (1). However, the effects of global change are highly variable across scales (2). For example, while the data are contentious, patterns of local stability or increases in species…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
1
BDNF signaling: Harnessing stress to battle mood disorder [Neuroscience]The link between the onset of major depressive disorder (MDD) and loss of neurotrophins in the brain is of interest to clinicians and basic scientists. MDD is caused by a combination of genetic, environmental, and psychological factors. Trauma, chronic health problems, and substance abuse are risks (1), as are grief…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
1
Good news and bad news of blue carbon [Ecology]Traditionally, ocean acidification researchers have focused on how secular changes in carbon dioxide (CO2) or pH will impact organisms. Global mean pH is estimated to have decreased by 0.1 pH units (representing a 28% increase in acidity) since the preindustrial age and may drop another 0.3 pH units by the…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Amide-forming chemical ligation via O-acyl hydroxamic acids [Biophysics and Computational Biology]The facile rearrangement of “S-acyl isopeptides” to native peptide bonds via S,N-acyl shift is central to the success of native chemical ligation, the widely used approach for protein total synthesis. Proximity-driven amide bond formation via acyl transfer reactions in other contexts has proven generally less effective. Here, we show that…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Catalyst design by scanning probe block copolymer lithography [Chemistry]Scanning probe block copolymer lithography (SPBCL), in combination with density-functional theory (DFT), has been used to design and synthesize hydrogen evolution catalysts. DFT was used to calculate the hydrogen adsorption energy on a series of single-element, bimetallic, and trimetallic (Au, Pt, Ni, and Cu) substrates to provide leads that could…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Continuous plating/stripping behavior of solid-state lithium metal anode in a 3D ion-conductive framework [Chemistry]The increasing demands for efficient and clean energy-storage systems have spurred the development of Li metal batteries, which possess attractively high energy densities. For practical application of Li metal batteries, it is vital to resolve the intrinsic problems of Li metal anodes, i.e., the formation of Li dendrites, interfacial instability,…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Light-induced dilation in nanosheets of charge-transfer complexes [Chemistry]We report the observation of a sizable photostrictive effect of 5.7% with fast, submillisecond response times, arising from a light-induced lattice dilation of a molecular nanosheet, composed of the molecular charge-transfer compound dibenzotetrathiafulvalene (DBTTF) and C60. An interfacial self-assembly approach is introduced for the thickness-controlled growth of the thin films….
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
2
Rapid enhancement of chemical weathering recorded by extremely light seawater lithium isotopes at the Permian-Triassic boundary [Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences]Lithium (Li) isotope analyses of sedimentary rocks from the Meishan section in South China reveal extremely light seawater Li isotopic signatures at the Permian–Triassic boundary (PTB), which coincide with the most severe mass extinction in the history of animal life. Using a dynamic seawater lithium box model, we show that…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

South American monsoon response to iceberg discharge in the North Atlantic [Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences]Heinrich Stadials significantly affected tropical precipitation through changes in the interhemispheric temperature gradient as a result of abrupt cooling in the North Atlantic. Here, we focus on changes in South American monsoon precipitation during Heinrich Stadials using a suite of speleothem records covering the last 85 ky B.P. from eastern…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Levy flight movements prevent extinctions and maximize population abundances in fragile Lotka-Volterra systems [Ecology]Multiple-scale mobility is ubiquitous in nature and has become instrumental for understanding and modeling animal foraging behavior. However, the impact of individual movements on the long-term stability of populations remains largely unexplored. We analyze deterministic and stochastic Lotka–Volterra systems, where mobile predators consume scarce resources (prey) confined in patches. In…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue

Synergistic activity of cosecreted natural products from amoebae-associated bacteria [Microbiology]Investigating microbial interactions from an ecological perspective is a particularly fruitful approach to unveil both new chemistry and bioactivity. Microbial predator–prey interactions in particular rely on natural products as signal or defense molecules. In this context, we identified a grazing-resistant Pseudomonas strain, isolated from the bacterivorous amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum. Genome
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
1
Reversal of orbital angular momentum arising from an extreme Doppler shift [Physics]The linear Doppler shift is familiar as the rise and fall in pitch of a siren as it passes by. Less well known is the rotational Doppler shift, proportional to the rotation rate between source and receiver, multiplied by the angular momentum carried by the beam. In extreme cases the…
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences current issue
2
Opinion: How to achieve better flood-risk governance in the United States [Social Sciences]Recent flood disasters (Fig. 1) have exposed issues with how flood risk is governed in the United States, raising questions about who owns responsibility for managing and paying for losses. In February 2017, 190,000 residents were evacuated as the primary and emergency spillways at Oroville Dam in California failed, a…
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Big Think
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New research shows siblings can make you more empathicBoth younger and older siblings uniquely contribute to each others’ empathy development. Read More
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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Vampire bats' bloody teamworkVampire bats are the only mammals that feed exclusively on blood. The way they manage to do that offers us some remarkable insights into hologentics and evolution.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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Making computer animation more agile, acrobatic — and realisticAnimation in film and video games is hard to make realistic: each action typically requires creating a separate controller, while deep reinforcement learning has yet to generate realistic human or animal motion. UC Berkeley computer scientists have now developed an algorithm that uses reinforcement learning to generate realistic simulations that can even recover realistically, after tripping, for
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Popular Science
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California’s snow drought is a recipe for dangerNexus Media News Scant snowfall is fueling drought, floods, wildfires and mudslides. The Sierra Nevada snowpack is exceptionally meager this year, putting California’s water supply at risk and portending more floods, wildfires and mudslides over the…
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Live Science
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If 'Oumuamua Is an Alien Spacecraft, It's Keeping Quiet So FarAre there intelligent aliens living on the cigar-shaped, interstellar object that's zooming through our solar system? To find out, astronomers in Western Australia used the Murchison Widefield Array telescope to eavesdrop on the rocky visitor.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Scientists learn how to avoid a roadblock when reprogramming cellsOver a decade ago, Shinya Yamanaka and Kazutoshi Takahashi made a discovery that would revolutionize biomedical research and trigger the field of regenerative medicine. They learned how to reprogram human adult cells into cells that behave like embryonic stem cells. Scientists were shocked that something so complex could be done so simply, and they had thousands of questions.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Study finds humans and others exposed to prenatal stress have high stress levels after birthVertebrate species, including humans, exposed to stress prenatally tend to have higher stress hormones after birth, according to a new Dartmouth-led study published in Scientific Reports. While previous research has reported examples of maternal stress experience predicting offspring stress hormones in different species, this study is the first to empirically demonstrate the impact of prenatal str
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Engineers build smallest volume, most efficient wireless nerve stimulatorIn 2016, University of California, Berkeley, engineers demonstrated the first implanted, ultrasonic neural dust sensors, bringing closer the day when a Fitbit-like device could monitor internal nerves, muscles or organs in real time. Now, Berkeley engineers have taken neural dust a step forward by building the smallest volume, most efficient wireless nerve stimulator to date.
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Live Science
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If You Want Your Friend to Vaccinate Their Kids, Don't Try to Change Their MindNudging people toward the right behavior without trying to win their hearts is the key to improving vaccination rates.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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Experience of black doctoral students underscores need for diversity in STEMThe danger and risk of riding out a storm is symbolic of the decision black men make to pursue a graduate degree in engineering. They do so knowing they will face challenges, but the barriers described by black men who shared their experiences as part of a six-year study show how race was a greater obstacle than they expected.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Scientists learn how to avoid a roadblock when reprogramming cellsScientists at the Gladstone Institutes, in Nobel Laureate Shinya Yamanaka's laboratory, helped answer lingering questions about cellular reprogramming.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Biomarker panel can guide treatment of brain cancerBrazilian researchers have identified seven biomarkers that could be used at the time of the primary diagnosis to show which glioma patients will tend to progress to a more aggressive form of the disease
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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Tiny injectable sensor could provide unobtrusive, long-term alcohol monitoringEngineers have developed a tiny, ultra-low power chip that could be injected just under the surface of the skin for continuous, long-term alcohol monitoring. The chip is powered wirelessly by a wearable device such as a smartwatch or patch. The goal of this work is to develop a convenient, routine monitoring device for patients in substance abuse treatment programs.
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Live Science
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65 Pounds of Plastic Trash Tore This Whale Apart from the InsideThe sperm whale likely died of an infection after it could not expel all the plastic.
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The Scientist RSS
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Alzheimers Should be Characterized by Biomarkers: ReportA proposed definition of the disease emphasizes signs of neurodegeneration and the presence of β-amyloid and tau, rather than cognitive symptoms.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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A cosmic gorilla effect could blind the detection of aliensA well-known experiment with young people bouncing a ball showed that when an observer focuses on counting the passes, he does not detect if someone crosses the stage disguised as a gorilla. Something similar could be happening to us when we try to discover intelligent non-earthly signals, which perhaps manifest themselves in dimensions that escape our perception, such as the unknown dark matter a
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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US farm lobby wants strict definition of 'meat'A major US agriculture lobbying group on Tuesday threw its weight behind an effort to keep the "meat" label off of lab-created products, including ones that employ animal cells.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Rivers worldwide threatened by pharma waste: studiesRiver systems around world are coursing with over-the-counter and prescription drug waste harmful to the environment, researchers said Tuesday.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Airbus to offer sleeping berths down in cargo holdSoon when you fly in an Airbus jet and you fancy a bit of shut-eye, all you will need do is make your way down to the cargo hold.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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What to do if Facebook says your info was used by Cambridge AnalyticaFacebook Cambridge AnalyticaWith Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg set to testify before Congress on the scandal involving data firm Cambridge Analytica, the social network is informing individual users their profiles may have been used for the firm's political targeting without their consent.
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Latest Headlines | Science News
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50 years on, vaccines have eliminated measles from the AmericasThanks to high vaccination rates, measles has mostly disappeared from the Americas.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Study finds humans and others exposed to prenatal stress have high stress levels after birthVertebrate species, including humans, exposed to stress prenatally tend to have higher stress hormones after birth, according to a new Dartmouth-led study published in Scientific Reports. While previous research has reported examples of maternal stress experience predicting offspring stress hormones in different species, this study is the first to empirically demonstrate the impact of prenatal str
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The Atlantic
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The 1918 Flu Pandemic: Photos From a Century AgoOne hundred years ago, an outbreak of influenza spread rapidly across the world, and killed more than 50 million—and possibly as many as 100 million—people within 15 months. The speed of the pandemic was shocking; the numbers of dead bodies overwhelmed hospitals and cemeteries. Quarantine centers, emergency hospitals, public use of gauze masks, and awareness campaigns were all undertaken swiftly
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Scientists uncover details of viral infections that drive environmental, human healthNew research offers a glimpse into the complexity of interactions between bacteria and the viruses — or phages — that infect them.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Melting of Arctic mountain glaciers unprecedented in the past 400 yearsGlaciers in Alaska's Denali National Park are melting faster than at any time in the past four centuries because of rising summer temperatures, a new study finds.
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Popular Science
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These ancient, swimming reptiles may have been the biggest animals of all timeAnimals England's ichthyosaurs have changed the course of paleontology again. In 2016, Paul de la Salle was walking along the beach in the British town of Lilstock when he came across a rock that looked suspiciously bone-like. Specifically, a…
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Popular Science
20
Let's watch Mark Zuckerberg testify in front of CongressMark Zuckerberg FacebookTechnology Get ready for the wildest couple hours C-Span has to offer. Mark Zuckerberg is in Washington to testify in front of House and Senate committees. Let's watch, shall we?
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New on MIT Technology Review
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This algorithm automatically spots “face swaps” in videosBut the same system can be used to make better fake videos that are harder to detect.
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Big Think
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Apple says all its facilities worldwide are running on 100% renewable energyApple reports that it has completed an aggressive, years-long effort to reduce its environmental footprint. Read More
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The Atlantic
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The Good Friday Agreement in the Age of BrexitIt’s been 20 years since the Good Friday Agreement formally brought an end to a period in Northern Ireland known, perhaps too understatedly, as “The Troubles.” The three-decade conflict pitted Protestant Unionists, who wanted to preserve Northern Ireland’s status as part of the U.K., against Catholic Republicans, who sought to leave the U.K. and join the Republic of Ireland. Fighting among parami
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The Atlantic
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'It's Difficult for Trans People to Enter Public Spaces'It’s easy to take for granted the ability to move through public spaces without consequence. But for many marginalized communities, this simply isn’t the reality. “[People] say that we’re unnatural, that we’re perverted, that we’re not genuine people,” says a transgender woman in Cecilia Golding and Nick Finegan’s documentary, The Swimming Club . “It’s difficult for trans people to enter public s
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Facebook's biggest Black Lives Matter page was reportedly fake, according to CNNMark Zuckerberg FacebookOne of Facebook's biggest pages devoted to the Black Lives Matter movement was reportedly fake.
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New on MIT Technology Review
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The US military desperately wants to weaponize AI
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
37
Thin engineered material perfectly redirects and reflects soundMetamaterials researchers have created a thin plastic structure with geometric details allowing it to control the redirection and reflection of sound waves with almost perfect efficiency.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
69
Center of world's marine biodiversity is in dangerResearchers have found that the world's center of biodiversity is under widespread threat of losing a key marine resource.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
19
New sodium-ion electrolyte may find use in solid-state batteriesA newly discovered structure of a sodium-based material allows the materials to be used as an electrolyte in solid-state batteries, according to researchers. The team is fine-tuning the material using an iterative design approach that they hope will shave years off the time from research to everyday use.
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New Scientist – News
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Life on nearest exoplanet may have been wiped out by superflareBad news for life near Proxima Centauri – the star has been seen emitting explosive blasts of radiation that would destroy the ozone on its Earth-like planet
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Apple announces (PRODUCT)RED iPhone 8 and 8 Plus models to help combat AIDSApple announced red versions of the iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus, special edition models that will be available for pre-order online on Tuesday and in stores on Friday. The red 8 and 8 Plus start at $699 and $799, respectively for the 64GB model, and climb to $849 and $949, for 256GB. Those are the same prices as Apple charges for iPhone 8s and 8 Plus's in other colors.
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Cancer risk rises as patients wait for diagnostic testingThe longer a patient with a positive screening result waits for diagnostic testing, the worse their cancer outcomes may become, according to a literature review of breast, cervical, colorectal, and lung studies in the journal CA led by researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.
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Berkeley engineers build smallest volume, most efficient wireless nerve stimulatorBerkeley engineers have taken their neural dust invention a step forward by building the smallest volume, most efficient wireless nerve stimulator to date.
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Cohesive neighborhoods, less spanking result in fewer child welfare visitsThe child welfare system is more likely to intervene in households in 'less neighborly' neighborhoods and in which parents spank their kids, a new study shows.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Study highlights the health and economic benefits of a US salt reduction strategyNew research, published in PLOS Medicine, conducted by researchers at the University of Liverpool, Imperial College London, Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts and collaborators as part of the Food-PRICE project, highlights the potential health and economic impact of the United States (US) Food and Drug Administration's proposed voluntary salt policy.
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Large-scale study links PCOS to mental health disordersWomen with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), the most common hormone condition among young women, are prone to mental health disorders, and their children face an increased risk of developing attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD), according to a new study published in the Endocrine Society's Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
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US FDA sodium reformulation targets projected to save lives and costsCommercial adherence to the United States (US) Food and Drug Administration (FDA) 2016 sodium reformulation targets for processed foods will cost-effectively reduce cardiovascular disease (CVD), according to a modeling study published this week in PLOS Medicine.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Silicon Valley wunderkind Zuckerberg in eye of the stormFacebook Mark ZuckerbergHis goal was to change the world with computer code, but now Mark Zuckerberg is facing the test of his life in rescuing Facebook from a deepening crisis over its failure to protect privacy and thwart manipulation.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Gecko-inspired adhesives help soft robotic fingers get a better gripResearchers have developed a robotic gripper that combines the adhesive properties of gecko toes and the adaptability of air-powered soft robots to grasp a much wider variety of objects than the state of the art.
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Big Think
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Is April the cruelest month? What T.S. Eliot really meantIs April the cruelest month? What did T.S. Eliot mean by that? Read More
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Viden
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LIVE-TV Zuckerberg: Jeg håber ikke, vores dataindsamling overrasker brugerneMark Zuckerberg er i fuld sving med at afgive forklaring i Kongressen om misbrug af data fra 87 millioner profiler.
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Quanta Magazine
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The Elusive Calculus of Insects’ Altruism and Kin SelectionIn 1964, the evolutionary biologist William D. Hamilton seemingly explained one of the greatest paradoxes in biology with a simple mathematical equation. Even Charles Darwin had called the problem his “one special difficulty” a century earlier in On the Origin of Species , writing that it made him doubt his own theory. The paradox in question is the altruistic behavior exhibited most famously by
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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More organic than thou? Rebel farmers create new food labelWas your tomato grown in dirt or water? Organic shoppers might notice additional labels this summer that will give them the answer—and tell them whether their choices align with what a rebellious group of farmers and scientists deem the true spirit of the organic movement.
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Live Science
83
How (and Where) Did Hannibal Cross the Alps? Experts Finally Have AnswersA documentary takes a fresh look at the incredible journey made by Hannibal — and his famous elephants.
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Science | The Guardian
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Belgrade Yuri Gagarin monument shrinks away after head jibesStream of sarcasm and parodies about scale of bust to plinth leads to it being dismantled In 1961, Yuri Gagarin’s legendary space flight lasted just 108 minutes. A monument in Belgrade to the first person in space did not last much longer, being swiftly dismantled after causing online hilarity owing to its curiously small head. On Sunday, a number of Serbian websites noticed that a monument to th
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Enter the Intense World of Competitive Yo-YoingFor these players, yo-yos are much more than just toys.
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Popular Science
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Cambridge Analytica Facebook scandal: how to find out if your data was compromisedFacebook Data M. ZuckerbergTechnology Are you one of the unlucky 87 million? A simple check to see if your Facebook data ended up in the wrong hands.
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Live Science
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Have Archaeologists Discovered the Tomb of King Tut's Wife? Maybe.So far, archaeologists have remained tight-lipped about their findings.
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The Atlantic
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My Facebook Was Breached by Cambridge Analytica. Was Yours?Facebook has begun to notify users who were affected by the Cambridge Analytica data breach. If you or one of your friends installed the personality-quiz app “This Is Your Digital Life” prior to 2015, then some of your data illicitly made it to the servers of the voter-profiling company. If your data was ensnared in the breach, you’re not alone. I’m also one of Cambridge Analytica’s victims. (If
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Scientific American Content: Global
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Fragmented U.S. Privacy Rules Leave Large Data Loopholes for Facebook and OthersU.S. companies follow more comprehensive privacy laws in other countries but have little incentive to protect U.S. consumers the same way — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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NeuWrite West

Nurturing the Study of NatureThis article is part of an ongoing blog series, titled Inequality in STEM: a Dive Into the Data . In this series, we cover recent research exploring and quantifying inequality in STEM. We'll discuss different aspects of inequality, including barriers to career advancement and a chilly social climate, as well as the efficacy of various interventions to combat bias. Our goal with these pieces is to
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New Scientist – News
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We can read memories by analysing brain gene activityMemories have unique genetic signatures that reveal what they are. The finding could lead to ways to read and alter memories in people with PTSD or phobias
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The Atlantic
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3 Million Uber Drivers Are About to Get a New BossEvery day, the world’s 3 million Uber drivers spend 8.5 million hours logged into the ride-hailing company’s app. That’s roughly 1,000 years of Uber driving packed into any given 24 hours. Because of this tremendous scale, Uber is the most important test case for the gig economy, the new economic arrangement where contract workers are arranged into a cohesive labor force by software. There are ma
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Blog » Languages » English

Introverts vs Extroverts: Personality Face-offPopularized by Swiss psychoanalyst Carl Jung, the introversion/extroversion personality continuum is one that we’ve heard a lot about in recent years. But what does it mean to be an introvert or an extroverts? Is one painfully shy and meek? Is the other brazen with a voice that could echo in a vacuum chamber? Well, not exactly. The main difference between extroverts and introverts is where they d
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
78
Melting of Arctic mountain glaciers unprecedented in the past 400 yearsGlaciers in Alaska's Denali National Park are melting faster than at any time in the past four centuries because of rising summer temperatures, a new study finds.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Polarization has strong impact on electrons, study showsNew research helps understand movement of electrons in two-dimensional systems.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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What social media platforms and search engines know about youFacebook Data M. ZuckerbergThe Facebook scandal involving the harvesting of data from tens of millions of users has raised a lot of questions about social media and search engines.
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A cosmic gorilla effect could blind the detection of aliensA well-known experiment with young people bouncing a ball showed that when an observer focuses on counting the passes, he does not detect if someone crosses the stage disguised as a gorilla. According to researchers at the University of Cádiz (Spain), something similar could be happening to us when we try to discover intelligent non-earthly signals, which perhaps manifest themselves in dimensions
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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Melting of Arctic mountain glaciers unprecedented in the past 400 yearsGlaciers in Alaska's Denali National Park are melting faster than at any time in the past four centuries because of rising summer temperatures, a new study finds.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
2
Tiny distortions in universe's oldest light reveal strands in cosmic webScientists have decoded faint distortions in the patterns of the universe's earliest light to map huge tubelike structures invisible to our eyes — known as filaments — that serve as superhighways for delivering matter to dense hubs such as galaxy clusters.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Facebook sends privacy alerts to affected usersFacebook Cambridge AnalyticaFacebook has begun alerting some users that their data was swept up in the Cambridge Analytica privacy scandal.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Beached whale dies despite rescue efforts at Argentina resortA whale that ran aground on a beach in Mar del Plata, Argentina's biggest seaside resort, has died despite rescue efforts to get it back into the sea.
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Popular Science
76
The surprising politics of sidewalksTechnology It takes a lot more than concrete to get a sidewalk built. For communities all over America, sidewalks present an increasingly contentious debate over issues of infrastructure spending, safety, and the rights of the individual.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Tiny distortions in universe's oldest light reveal clearer picture of strands in cosmic webScientists have decoded faint distortions in the patterns of the universe's earliest light to map huge tubelike structures invisible to our eyes – known as filaments – that serve as superhighways for delivering matter to dense hubs such as galaxy clusters.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Dense stellar clusters may foster black hole megamergersWhen LIGO's twin detectors first picked up faint wobbles in their respective, identical mirrors, the signal didn't just provide first direct detection of gravitational waves—it also confirmed the existence of stellar binary black holes, which gave rise to the signal in the first place.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Report: Breakthrough on devastating citrus disease unlikelyFlorida's citrus industry got some dire news Tuesday from an organization that advises the federal government on science and technical matters.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Fit for porpoise: Gene changes made 'river pig' uniqueChina's critically endangered Yangtze River porpoise is a distinct species, meaning it cannot interbreed with other porpoise types to pass on its DNA, a major analysis of the creature's genome revealed on Tuesday.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
17
Hepatitis C: A novel point-of-care assayOne of the major challenges identified by the WHO in efforts to eradicate the hepatitis C virus is the diagnosis of chronic cases that are generally asymptomatic. Major progress is required for new diagnostic techniques that can be 'decentralized,' in other words accessed by populations and countries with limited resources. Scientists have now developed and validated a rapid, reliable, point-of-ca
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
34
Outback radio telescope listens in on interstellar visitorA telescope in outback Australia has been used to listen to a mysterious cigar-shaped object that entered our Solar System late last year. When 'Oumuamua was first discovered, astronomers thought it was a comet or an asteroid from within the Solar System. But after studying its orbit and discovering its long, cylindrical shape, they realised 'Oumuamua was neither and had come from interstellar spa
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
12
Machine learning offers new way of designing chiral crystalsEngineers and chemists have successfully used the same technology at the core of facial recognition to design chiral crystals. This is the first study reporting the use of this technology, called logistic regression analysis, to predict which chemical groups are best for making chiral molecules.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
11
Researchers explore little-known, deadly fungal infectionsA new study sheds light on little-known fungal infections caused by the fungus Cryptococcus. There are currently no vaccines available for any fungal infection, which can be extremely deadly to patients under treatment for diseases like HIV, AIDS and cancer.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
9
Women most at risk for heart failure weeks after giving birthHeart failure is a leading cause of maternal morbidity and death in the US — with the rate of pregnancy-related deaths more than doubling between 1987 and 2011. Even so, much about heart failure-related hospitalizations before, during and after delivery is unknown.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
11
Why some beetles like alcoholAlcohol used as a 'weed killer' optimizes the harvest of ambrosia beetles.
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Cambridge Analytica Could Also Access Private Facebook MessagesA Facebook permission allowed an app to read messages between 1,500 Facebook users and their friends until October 2015—data that Cambridge Analytica could have accessed.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Zuckerberg says company working with Mueller probe (Update)Mark Zuckerberg FacebookApologetic Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg told senators Tuesday it had been "clearly a mistake" to believe the Trump-linked data-mining company Cambridge Analytica had discarded data that it had harvested from social media users in an attempt to sway 2016 elections.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Genetic screening tool identifies how the flu infiltrates cellsResearchers at the University of Chicago have developed a genetic screening tool that identified two key factors that allow the influenza virus to infect human lung cells. The technique uses new gene editing tools to create a library of modified cells, each missing a different gene, allowing scientists to see which changes impact their response to flu. This in turn could identify potential targets
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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GPM sees Keni following Tropical Cyclone Josie's trackAnother tropical cyclone called Keni has formed in the South Pacific Ocean between Vanuatu and Fiji and the data from the Global Precipitation Measurement mission or GPM found heavy rainfall occurring in the new storm.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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NASA watching stubborn remnants of ex-Tropical Cyclone IrisFormer Tropical Cyclone Iris continues to linger in the Southwestern Pacific Ocean off the coast of Queensland, Australia. NASA-NOAA's Suomi NPP satellite passed over the remnants of Iris on April 10.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Mini toolkit for measurements: New NIST chip hints at quantum sensors of the futureResearchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have created a chip on which laser light interacts with a tiny cloud of atoms to serve as a miniature toolkit for measuring important quantities such as length with quantum precision. The design could be mass-produced with existing technology.
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Newly discovered biomarkers could be key to predicting severity of brain tumor recurrenceResearchers have identified predictive biomarkers that could help assess the level of risk for recurrence in patients with malignant glioma. The study, led by Henry Ford Health System, was published today in Cell Reports. In an analysis of 200 tumor samples, the authors identified a set of epigenetic biomarkers that can predict, at a patient's initial diagnosis, which tumors are likely to recur wi
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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NASA's GPM sees Keni following Tropical Cyclone Josie's trackAnother tropical cyclone called Keni has formed in the South Pacific Ocean between Vanuatu and Fiji and the data from the Global Precipitation Measurement mission or GPM found heavy rainfall occurring in the new storm.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Study identifies new molecular target for treating deadly lung disease IPFScientists searching for a therapy to stop the deadly and mostly untreatable lung disease, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), found a new molecular target that slows or stops the illness in preclinical laboratory tests. Researchers at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center report their data in the journal Cell Reports. Studying mice with IPF and donated human cells, they identify a gene c
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Genetic screening tool identifies how the flu infiltrates cellsResearchers at the University of Chicago have developed a genetic screening tool that identified two key factors that allow the influenza virus to infect human lung cells. The technique uses new gene editing tools to create a library of modified cells, each missing a different gene, allowing scientists to see which changes impact their response to flu. This in turn could identify potential targets
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Gene jumpstarts regeneration of damaged nerve cellsSearching the entire genome, a Yale research team has identified a gene that when eliminated can spur regeneration of axons in nerve cells severed by spinal cord injury.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Gene that makes humans eat more sugar can also lower body fatYou are what you eat, the old saying goes. But what if, in fact, you eat certain things because of who you are? Scientists have known since 2013 that a common version of the gene FGF21 makes us consume more carbohydrates. Now, a group of researchers is showing that, despite the effect it has on diet, this gene variant actually decreases fat in the body. The results appear April 10 in the journal C
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Does physical activity influence the health of future offspring?Physical and mental exercise is not only beneficial for your own brain, but can also affect the learning ability of future offspring — at least in mice. Researchers from the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) report these findings in the journal Cell Reports.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Scientists uncover details of viral infections that drive environmental, human healthBelow the surface of systems as large and ancient as an ocean and as small and new as a human baby are communities of viruses and bacteria that interact to influence everything from worldwide oxygen levels to the likelihood a newborn will fall ill.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Marriage reduces depression in couples earning less than $60,000 per year, study findsPeople who are married and earning less than $60,000 per year in total household income have fewer symptoms of depression than comparable earning unmarried people, but for couples earning more, marriage doesn't show the same mental health benefits, according to a study co-authored by a Georgia State University researcher.
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The Atlantic
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Is It Better to Be Polite or Honest?The advice column as we know it today started with a deception. In The Athenian Mercury , a London magazine that ran from 1690 to 1697, the Athenian Society—supposedly a group of 30-some experts across many fields—answered anonymous reader questions. They replied to all sorts of queries, as Jessica Weisberg recounts in her new book Asking for a Friend : “Why alcohol killed erections and made peop
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Disparities in coastal stream restoration in central CaliforniaStream restoration efforts along the coast of Central California are unevenly distributed, with activity more likely to occur in areas that are more highly populated and dominated by residents who are "whiter, wealthier, and more educated," according to an analysis by researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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New study reveals that the center of the world's marine biodiversity is in dangerResearch led by Swansea University's Bioscience department have found that the world's centre of biodiversity is under widespread threat of losing a key marine resource.
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New Scientist – News
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Our eyesight is sharpest at twilight – and now we may know whyWe see best at dawn and dusk, and this could be because our brain activity changes at these times, making it easier to distinguish signals from background noise
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Scientific American Content: Global
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XPRIZE Projects Aim to Convert CO2 Emissions, but Skepticism RemainsSemifinalists hope to transform carbon dioxide into cement, bioplastic and other useful materials — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Big Think
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Ghost nations of Russia's civil warYou think the collapse of the Soviet Union was chaotic? You should have seen the start. Read More
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New on MIT Technology Review
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Russian forces are reportedly jamming US drones over Syria
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Scientists records brain activity of free-flying batsJohns Hopkins University researchers have developed a way to study the brain of a bat as it flies, recording for the first time what happens as a roving animal focuses and refocuses its attention.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Metamaterial device controls transmission and reflection of acoustic wavesMetamaterials researchers at Duke University have demonstrated the design and construction of a thin material that can control the redirection and reflection of sound waves with almost perfect efficiency.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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NREL opens large database of inorganic thin-film materialsAn extensive experimental database of inorganic thin-film materials that organizes a decade's worth of research at the Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) is now publicly available.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Everything we know about Internet gaming disorderAn analysis of articles on Internet gaming disorder (IGD) notes that the condition has a complex psychosocial background, and many personal, neurobiological, familial, and environmental factors may put certain individuals at increased risk.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Man develops severe 'thunderclap' headaches after eating world's hottest chili pepperTaking part in a hot chili pepper eating contest might have some unexpected consequences, highlight doctors in a recent case study.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Scientists uncover details of viral infections that drive environmental, human healthNew research from The Ohio State University offers a glimpse into the complexity of interactions between bacteria and the viruses — or phages — that infect them.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

New sodium-ion electrolyte may find use in solid-state batteriesA newly discovered structure of a sodium-based material allows the materials to be used as an electrolyte in solid-state batteries, according to researchers from Penn State and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). The team is fine-tuning the material using an iterative design approach that they hope will shave years off the time from research to everyday use.
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NYT > Science
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Senators: E.P.A. Files Undercut Pruitt’s Need for First-Class TravelIn a letter, two Democratic senators claim to have a document disputing the E.P.A. chief’s need for costly travel and other security measures.
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New on MIT Technology Review
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Virtual robots that teach themselves kung fu could revolutionize video gamesMachine learning may make it much easier to build complex virtual characters.
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The Atlantic
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The States Where People Die YoungWe’ve known for some time now that Americans are increasingly dying younger , but the scale and nature of the problem has been a little bit murky. There was speculation that the downturn in American life expectancy was all thanks to “deaths of despair ,” but some experts have said that might not be the full story , and that obesity and tobacco are still major factors in American mortality. A new
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TED Talks Daily (SD video)
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How a team of chefs fed Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria | José AndrésAfter Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico in 2017, chef José Andrés traveled to the devastated island with a simple idea: to feed the hungry. Millions of meals served later, Andrés shares the remarkable story of creating the world's biggest restaurant — and the awesome power of letting people in need know that somebody cares about them.
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Science : NPR
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PrEP Campaign Aims To Block HIV Infection And Save Lives In D.C.PrEP is shorthand for a pill that prevents HIV infection, if taken daily. As Washington, D.C. aims to cut new infections in half by 2020, it hopes to quadruple the number of residents on the medicine. (Image credit: Tyrone Turner/ WAMU)
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Indonesia's Lion Air buying 50 Boeing 737's in $6.2 bn dealIndonesia's Lion Air is buying 50 Boeing 737 MAX 10 airplanes in a deal valued at about $6.2 billion, the firms said Tuesday, as the carrier looks to cash in on a transport boom in the Southeast Asian nation.
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Researchers inaugurate a new era of precision antimatter studiesThe ALPHA experiment at CERN, led by Swansea University scientists, has carried out the most precise and accurate measurement ever done on antimatter.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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New study reveals that the center of the world's marine biodiversity is in dangerResearch led by Swansea University's Bioscience department have found that the world's center of biodiversity is under widespread threat of losing a key marine resource.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
5
Blood test may predict future risk of cardiovascular eventsDespite heart disease and type 2 diabetes being among the leading causes of death in the US, the mechanisms leading to and linking these two diseases remain incompletely understood. A new study by investigators at Brigham and Women's Hospital may help shed light on a molecular pathway that heart disease and diabetes share, and points to a biomarker that is elevated in women at risk of cardiovascul
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

NASA watching stubborn remnants of ex-Tropical Cyclone IrisFormer Tropical Cyclone Iris continues to linger in the Southwestern Pacific Ocean off the coast of Queensland, Australia. NASA-NOAA's Suomi NPP satellite passed over the remnants of Iris on April 10.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Thin engineered material perfectly redirects and reflects soundMetamaterials researchers from Duke University have created a thin plastic structure with geometric details allowing it to control the redirection and reflection of sound waves with almost perfect efficiency.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Perovskite technology is scalable, but questions remain about the best methodsAs perovskite solar cells set efficiency records and the nascent technology becomes more stable, another major challenge remains: the issue of scalability, according to researchers at the Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL).
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Professor Amitay receives Air Force grant to study flow separation on wing surfacesMichael 'Miki' Amitay, the James L. Decker '45 Endowed Chair in Aerospace Engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, has received a grant from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research to study the phenomenon of flow separation on aircraft wings, which could lead to improved aerodynamic performance in future-generation air vehicles.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Mini toolkit for measurements: New NIST chip hints at quantum sensors of the futureResearchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have created a chip on which laser light interacts with a tiny cloud of atoms to serve as a miniature toolkit for measuring important quantities such as length with quantum precision. The design could be mass-produced with existing technology.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
2
Marriage reduces depression in couples earning less than $60,000 per year, study findsPeople who are married and earning less than $60,000 per year in total household income have fewer symptoms of depression than comparable earning unmarried people, but for couples earning more, marriage doesn't show the same mental health benefits, according to a study co-authored by a Georgia State University researcher.
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Big Think
100+
Mark Zuckerberg’s testimony to congress begins today. What will he say?“In modern politics, even the leader of the free world needs help from the sultan of Facebookistan.” ― Rebecca MacKinnon Read More
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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D-Day for Facebook, Zuckerberg before skeptical lawmakersMark Zuckerberg FacebookFacebook chief Mark Zuckerberg was set for a fiery face-off on Capitol Hill Tuesday as he attempts to quell a firestorm over privacy and security lapses at the social network that have angered lawmakers and the site's two billion users.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Could you do it? Trips that ban cellphones, even for photosWould you take a trip without your cellphone?
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Bugs, microbes and death can inform the livingA new study shows that the postmortem microbiome — populations of micro-organisms that move in after death — can provide crucial insights into public health. What's telling is that regardless of many factors — sex, ethnicity or even type of death — the microbiome is consistent and distinct, depending on the number of days after death.
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Popular Science
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Here's what you need to know before Mark Zuckerberg's testimony in WashingtonMark Zuckerberg FacebookTechnology It's not going to be a fun trip to see the cherry blossoms Mark Zuckerberg will talk user data, Russian meddling, and possible regulations…
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Video: Why you can't buy fresh olivesOlives grow on trees. So why have you never seen a fresh, tree-ripened olive in the produce section at the grocery store?
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Scientists record brain activity of free-flying batsJohns Hopkins University researchers have developed a way to study the brain of a bat as it flies, recording for the first time what happens as a roving animal focuses and refocuses its attention.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Disparities in coastal stream restoration in central CaliforniaStream restoration efforts along the coast of Central California are unevenly distributed, with activity more likely to occur in areas that are more highly populated and dominated by residents who are 'whiter, wealthier, and more educated,' according to an analysis by researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Study says charisma trumped narcissism for voters in 2016 US presidential electionA new study of the 2016 US presidential election suggests that narcissism and charisma are both important predictors of voter choice. Researchers found that attributed charisma may serve as a balance to narcissism. Thus, followers of a candidate potentially look beyond negative leadership qualities to select those leaders who they perceive to have redeeming positive attributes and values.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Contrast-enhanced subharmonic imaging detects prostate cancers not identified by MRIA test of contrast-enhanced subharmonic imaging (SHI) has shown promise in detecting prostate cancers that were not identified by MRI, according to a study to be presented at the ARRS 2018 Annual Meeting, set for April 22-27 in Washington, D.C.
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Optimized perception in the twilight zoneAs neuroscientists at Goethe University Frankfurt have now discovered, the human brain processes weak visual stimuli better in the morning and evening than at noon.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Diamond-based circuits can take the heat for advanced applicationsWhen power generators transfer electricity, they lose almost 10 percent of the generated power. To address this, scientists are researching new diamond semiconductor circuits to make power conversion systems more efficient. Researchers in Japan successfully fabricated a key circuit in power conversion systems using hydrogenated diamond. These circuits can be used in diamond-based electronic device
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
4
Hotter, longer, more frequent — marine heatwaves on the riseWe know heatwaves over land have been increasing, but now new research reveals globally marine heatwaves have also been increasing in length, number and intensity over the past century. More intriguing still, this trend has accelerated markedly since 1982.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Warning signs: New US health study reveals 'dangerous disparities' among statesWorking-age Americans in 21 states faced a higher probability of premature death from 1990 to 2016, according to the most extensive state-by-state US health study ever conducted.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Wide differences exist between states in impact of diseaseThe impact of diseases varies widely across states, with tobacco, overweight, poor diet, alcohol and drug use, high blood sugar and high blood pressure accounting for many years lost to ill health, disability or early death.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
5
Malnutrition, anemia among Rohingya children in Bangladesh refugee campThe pervasiveness of malnutrition and anemia among Rohingya children in a refugee camp in Bangladesh exceeds emergency thresholds.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
New study shows invasive Chinese privet can be well controlled with lower concentrations of herbicideChinese privet is one of the most invasive shrubs in the southeastern United States – frequently growing in dense thickets along roadsides, on rights of way and in forests. Now the journal Invasive Plant Science and Management has good news for land managers battling the shrub. Researchers say you can achieve great control with much less herbicide than typically used.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Churchill's favourite butterfly to returnThe UK's changing climate means conditions may now be suitable for one of Sir Winston Churchill's favourite butterflies—the black-veined white—to return, a study has revealed.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
15
DNA testing can rapidly solve Legionnaires' disease outbreaksA DNA test method called polymerase chain reaction allowed New York City health officials to identify the source of a Legionnaires' disease outbreak within hours of specimen collection and should be considered in all Legionnaires' outbreak investigations, researchers say.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
23
Robust and inexpensive catalysts for hydrogen productionScientists were able to observe the smallest details of hydrogen production with the synthetic mineral pentlandite. This makes it possible to develop strategies for the design of robust and cost-effective catalysts for hydrogen production.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
18
How cheetahs outsmart lions and hyenasCheetahs in the Serengeti National Park adopt different strategies while eating to deal with threats from top predators such as lions or hyenas. A new study shows that male cheetahs and single females eat their prey as quickly as possible. Mothers with cubs, on the other hand, watch out for possible threats while their young are eating in order to give them enough time to eat their fill.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
100+
Birds migrate away from diseasesIn a unique study, researchers have mapped the origins of migratory birds. They used the results to investigate and discover major differences in the immune systems of sedentary and migratory birds. The researchers conclude that migratory species benefit from leaving tropical areas when it is time to raise their young — as moving away from diseases in the tropics enables them to survive with a le
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
100+
How cheetahs outsmart lions and hyenasCheetahs in the Serengeti National Park adopt different strategies while eating to deal with threats from top predators such as lions or hyenas. A new study in Springer's journal Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology shows that male cheetahs and single females eat their prey as quickly as possible. Mothers with cubs, on the other hand, watch out for possible threats while their young are eating in o
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Big Think
2K
For thousands of years, humans slept in two shifts. Should we do it again?Researchers believe that the practice of sleeping through the whole night didn’t really take hold until just a few hundred years ago. Read More
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Viden
12
Nyopdaget hvaløgle var et af de største dyr nogensindeDen 26 meter lange øgle levede for 205 millioner år siden – og fundet af fossilet kan måske opklare et gammelt knogle-mysterium.
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Viden
1
Sidste stop på Zuckerbergs undskyldnings-turné er Kongressen: Det kan vi forventeFacebooks stifter skal de næste to dage stå skoleret i USAs kongres, hvor han skal svare på spørgsmål om, hvordan Facebook vil beskytte brugerenes data. Den første høring starter kl. 20.15 og kan følges live på dr.dk.
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Viden
300+
Tjek om dine data har været en del af Facebook-skandalen42.000 danskeres data er havnet i Cambridge Analyticas data-høster. Nu kan du se, om du er en af dem.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Human impact on sea urchin abundanceSea urchin populations are more sensitive to human activities than previously believed, according to a half-century observational study. Researchers found that changing water temperature and algal blooms strongly affected sea urchin populations and even caused some abnormal development of their larvae. The research is published in the journal Ecological Indicators.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
91
Researchers connect the data to show an accelerating trend for marine heatwaves in our oceansAn international study in Nature Communications co-authored by researchers from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate Extremes (CLEX) and the Institute of Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) reveals globally marine heatwaves have increased over the past century in number, length and intensity as a direct result of warming oceans.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
91
Diamond-based circuits can take the heat for advanced applicationsWhen power generators like windmills and solar panels transfer electricity to homes, businesses and the power grid, they lose almost 10 percent of the generated power. To address this problem, scientists are researching new diamond semiconductor circuits to make power conversion systems more efficient.
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BBC News – Science & Environment
14K
The seismic signal of Lionel MessiWhen the Barcelona striker nets another wonder goal, the city literally shakes.
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Ingeniøren
7
Verdens første luksushotel i rummet åbner for reservationHar du 9,5 millioner dollars til overs, kan du booke 12 overnatninger på turistrumstationen Aurora Station.
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The Atlantic
35
The Yankees’ Biggest Strength May Be Their Greatest WeaknessOn the opening day of the season, Giancarlo Stanton—who last year hit 59 home runs en route to the National League MVP award before a December trade brought him to the New York Yankees—muscled two homers out of Toronto’s Rogers Centre. The first came on a low fastball that he shot to right. MLB’s Statcast measured it as the hardest-hit opposite-field blast since the system’s inception in 2015. Th
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Latest Headlines | Science News
400+
Ocean heat waves are becoming more common and lasting longerOver the last 100 years, the world’s oceans have sweltered through a rising number of heat waves.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Research suggests alternative treatment for beta blocker intolerant heart attack patientsBeta blockers have become a prescription drug staple for recovering heart attack patients. However, these blood pressure-reducing medications cannot be tolerated by many patients who are at higher risk for developing cardiovascular disease, including those with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and asthma, the elderly, and diabetics. As seen in the March 26 issue of Thyroid, researchers
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Patients with high-risk clinical features are at high risk for acute aortic dissectionPatients with one or more high-risk clinical features (tearing pain, hypotension, pulse deficit, neurologic deficit, new murmur) should be considered high risk for acute aortic dissection (AAD).
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Lack of vegetable choices in infant and toddler food is widespreadThe inability to foster children's taste for dark green vegetables is related to a lack of commercially prepared single-vegetable products, according to a new study led by researchers from the University of Colorado School of Medicine on the Anschutz Medical Campus.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Impact of Medicare annual wellness visit on detection of cognitive impairment is minimalIn the first nationwide study to measure the effect of the Medicare Annual Wellness Visit on early identification of cognitive impairment such as Alzheimer's disease, researchers from the Indiana University Center for Aging Research, Regenstrief Institute and IU Center for Health Innovation and Implementation Science found the visit has only minimal impact on detection of cognitive impairment as w
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Scientific American Content: Global
100+
State of the Union for Life Expectancy Is Positive, but Some States Lag BehindNewly published data highlights health trends throughout the country — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
34
Digital penicillin productionMicroorganisms are often used to produce chemicals. These processes are usually very complicated. It is hard to completely understand every detail of the process, when living organisms are involved. Therefore, bioreactors are often seen as 'black boxes' that can only be effectively exploited with a lot of experience. Scientists have succeeded in completely analyzing the penicillin production proce
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Machine learning offers new way of designing chiral crystalsEngineers and chemists at Hiroshima University successfully used the technology underlying facial recognition to design chiral crystals. This is the first study reporting the use of this technology, called logistic regression analysis, to predict which chemical groups are best for making chiral molecules. Results were published in Chemistry Letters.
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NYT > Science
400+
Trilobites: Why Scientists Are Battling Over PleasureThe question of whether the benefit from viewing a da Vinci is different from enjoying a visit to Pornhub or McDonalds is dividing psychologists and neuroscientists.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Fish have ears, so man-made noise threatens their survivalAn 'acoustic fog' from motorboat noise, underwater construction and other man-made marine sounds can threaten the survival of fish and their ability to communicate with each other, research has found.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Fathers missing in childhood obesity interventions, study findsFathers are often absent when it comes to family-based interventions to prevent childhood obesity, University of Guelph study finds.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Life expectancy significantly worse in deprived areasLife expectancy and health outcomes worsen the more deprived an area or population is, new research from Cass Business School has found.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Why you can't buy fresh olives (video)Olives grow on trees. So why have you never seen a fresh, tree-ripened olive in the produce section at the grocery store? Why are they always swimming in salty brine? Oh, and did you know that black olives are actually green? Watch as this video from Reactions breaks down the chemistry of these salty, oily stone fruits: https://youtu.be/oStoeHntfG8.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Sex and race disparities in cardiovascular health could be reducedSubstantial sex and racial gaps exist for cardiac rehabilitation referral at hospital discharge, especially among females, African-Americans, Hispanic and Asian patients leading to less favorable outcomes and/or survival rates.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Hepatitis C: A novel point-of-care assayOne of the major challenges identified by the WHO in efforts to eradicate the hepatitis C virus is the diagnosis of chronic cases that are generally asymptomatic. Major progress is required for new diagnostic techniques that can be 'decentralized,' in other words accessed by populations and countries with limited resources. Scientists from the Institut Pasteur and Inserm, in collaboration with the
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
2
Review examines everything we know about Internet gaming disorderAn analysis of all published articles on Internet gaming disorder (IGD) notes that the condition has a complex psychosocial background, and many personal, neurobiological, familial, and environmental factors may put certain individuals at increased risk.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Researchers propose a blockchain data network to boost manufacturingResearchers are proposing the creation of a public, open-source network that uses blockchains — the technology behind cryptocurrencies — to share verifiable manufacturing data. The system could be used as a peer-to-peer network that allows companies to find small- and medium-sized manufacturers that are capable of producing specific components on a reliable basis.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

New study shows invasive Chinese privet can be well controlled with lower concentrations of herbicideChinese privet is one of the most invasive shrubs in the southeastern United States — frequently growing in dense thickets along roadsides, on rights of way and in forests. Now the journal Invasive Plant Science and Management has good news for land managers battling the shrub. Researchers say you can achieve great control with much less herbicide than typically used.
1d
Live Science
63
This Pouched Rat Can Sniff Out Tuberculosis in KidsTuberculosis is both deadly and difficult to test for. But a new paper suggests rats might make the illness easier to sniff out.
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New on MIT Technology Review
62
City emergency sirens can be hacked to sound rogue messages
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Ingeniøren
200+
MIT-rapport: AAU’s ingeniøruddannelser tilhører verdenselitenDet amerikanske topuniversitet har interviewet 178 ekspert fra hele verden, og deres svar placerer ingeniøruddannelserne fra Aalborg Universitet som fjerdebedst i verden. Den problembaserede undervisningsform får æren.
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Futurity.org
21
Friend groups shield kids from bullying better than 1 bestieHaving a group of friends to rely on appears to buffer children from the emotional hurt bullying causes better than a single “best” friend, a new study of more than 1,200 primary school children and their parents suggests. “A group of friends appears to protect the mental health of bullied children when just having a best friend makes little difference,” says co-lead researcher Lisa Mundy of the
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Futurity.org
13
Radio receiver ‘listens’ for dark matter particlesResearchers have developed a way to “listen” for the signs of dark matter axions, the particles that may make up dark matter. “We’ve built a radio that looks for a radio station, but we don’t know its frequency.” Forty years ago, scientists theorized a new kind of low-mass particle that could solve one of the enduring mysteries of nature: what dark matter is made of. Now a new chapter in the sear
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Digital penicillin productionTU Wien and Sandoz GmbH have successfully implemented a real-time computer simulation of the complex growth behaviour of penicillin producing organisms. This simulation now helps to keep the production process under control.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
100+
Virus's 'taste' for unusual sugar could lead to new cancer treatmentsThe way in which a rare virus attacks cells could hold the key to new therapies for aggressive brain and lung cancers, according to new research.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
8
Experience of black doctoral students underscores need to increase diversity in STEM fieldsThe danger and risk of riding out a storm is symbolic of the decision black men make to pursue a graduate degree in engineering. They do so knowing they will face challenges, but the barriers described by black men who shared their experiences as part of a six-year study show how race was a greater obstacle than they expected.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Cheaper, less toxic and recyclable light absorbers for hydrogen productionMimicking photosynthesis in plants, using light to convert stable and abundant molecules like water and CO2 into a high energy fuel (hydrogen) or into chemicals of industrial interest, is a major research challenge today. However, achieving artificial photosynthesis in solution remains limited by the use of costly and toxic metal-based compounds to harvest light. Researchers at CNRS, CEA and the U
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Five ivory objects that will be exempt from a proposed trade banWhen Michael Gove first called for responses from the public to his plan to ban ivory sales back in October 2017, the environment secretary said a ban would "put the UK front and centre of global efforts to end the insidious trade in ivory".
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Milestone for next-gen solid-state batteries to power future long-range electrical vehiclesImec, the world-leading research and innovation hub in nanoelectronics, energy and digital technologies and partner in EnergyVille, has fabricated an innovative type of solid-state Li-ion battery achieving an energy density of 200 Wh/liter at a charging speed of 0.5C (2 hours). This battery is a milestone on our roadmap to surpass wet Li-ion battery performance and reach 1000Wh/L at 2C by 2024. Wi
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Bugs, microbes and death can inform the livingA Michigan State University study, published in the current issue of Nature Scientific Reports, shows that the postmortem microbiome — populations of micro-organisms that move in after death — can provide crucial insights into public health. What's telling is that regardless of many factors — sex, ethnicity or even type of death — the microbiome is consistent and distinct, depending on the num
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
How cheetahs outsmart lions and hyenasCheetahs in the Serengeti National Park adopt different strategies while eating to deal with threats from top predators such as lions or hyenas. A new study in Springer's journal Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology shows that male cheetahs and single females eat their prey as quickly as possible. Mothers with cubs, on the other hand, watch out for possible threats while their young are eating in o
1d
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Robust and inexpensive catalysts for hydrogen productionTeams of scientists from the Ruhr University Bochum (RUB) and the University of Warwick were able to observe the smallest details of hydrogen production with the synthetic mineral pentlandite. This makes it possible to develop strategies for the design of robust and cost-effective catalysts for hydrogen production.
1d
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

DNA testing can rapidly solve Legionnaires' disease outbreaksA DNA test method called polymerase chain reaction allowed New York City health officials to identify the source of a Legionnaires' disease outbreak within hours of specimen collection and should be considered in all Legionnaires' outbreak investigations, researchers say in the April issue of the Journal of Environmental Health.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Birds migrate away from diseasesIn a unique study, researchers at Lund University in Sweden have mapped the origins of migratory birds. They used the results to investigate and discover major differences in the immune systems of sedentary and migratory birds. The researchers conclude that migratory species benefit from leaving tropical areas when it is time to raise their young — as moving away from diseases in the tropics enab
1d
EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Digital penicillin productionMicroorganisms are often used to produce chemicals. These processes are usually very complicated. It is hard to completely understand every detail of the process, when living organisms are involved. Therefore, bioreactors are often seen as 'black boxes' that can only be effectively exploited with a lot of experience. In Vienna, scientists have succeeded in completely analyzing the penicillin produ
1d
EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Competing in a global innovation economy: The current state of R&D in CanadaA new expert panel report, released today by the Council of Canadian Academies (CCA), provides the latest data and information on Canada's track record in fundamental research, applied research and experimental development, industrial R&D, and the relationship of these research efforts to wealth creation and prosperity through innovation.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Weight loss is an important predictor of cancerUnintended weight loss is the second highest risk factor for some forms of cancer, concludes the first robust research analysis to examine the association.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

New drug combo improves survival of women with rare uterine cancerAdding the monoclonal antibody drug trastuzumab — already used to treat certain breast cancers — to the chemotherapy regimen of women with a rare form of uterine cancer lengthens the amount of time their tumors are kept from growing, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers conducting a small phase II trial of the regimen, testing its safety and value
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
4
Gut bacteria keeps bears healthily obeseThe summer sun pokes its way through the pine trees to strike the forest floor, where a bear is feasting on blueberries. She can easily get through 50 kilograms a day.
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The Atlantic
100+
What Did You Do in the Trade War, Daddy?While Donald Trump has diverted his attention to other matters, here are some questions and answers to bear in mind, when he is back to talking about winning a trade war. Q. Is there a “China problem” to be dealt with? A. Yes. This was the theme of a piece I did just before the 2016 election: “ China’s Great Leap Backward .” Its argument was that through the decades since the beginning of China’s
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The Atlantic
84
Letters: Who Handles The Dishes?Doing Dishes Is the Worst Last week, Caroline Kitchener wrote about a new report that examines the strain dishwashing can have on heterosexual relationships. I always love reading The Atlantic , but today I take issue with some of the wording in your article “Doing Dishes Is the Worst.” You say (both in the article and in the Facebook status promoting the article), “Women who wash the vast majori
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
20
Polarization has strong impact on electrons, study showsThe movement of thousands of electrons underlies electronics. Yet, ubiquitous as electrons are, the particulars of their behavior continue to stump physicists. One phenomenon has proven especially puzzling: how electrons move under the influence of polarized electromagnetic waves.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
10
Deforestation in tropical Africa is not as bad as previously thoughtDeforestation has massive effects on the biosphere. It contributes to carbon emissions, changes in water cycles and biodiversity loss. The main cause of deforestation is the conversion of forested lands to agricultural lands.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Researchers develop more comprehensive acoustic scene analysis methodResearchers have demonstrated an improved method for audio analysis machines to process our noisy world. Their approach hinges on the combination of scalograms and spectrograms—the visual representations of audio—as well as convolutional neural networks (CNNs), the learning tool machines use to better analyze visual images. In this case, the visual images are used to analyze audio to better identi
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
4
Bugs, microbes and death can inform the livingIt's been said that people can be judged by the company they keep. New research from Michigan State University shows that what's true for the living also is true for the dead.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
25
Toxic levels of arsenic in Amazon basin well water: studyShallow wells dug for drinking water in the Amazon basin in order to avoid polluted rivers contain up to 70 times the recommended limit of arsenic, researchers warned Tuesday.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
6
Inside an asteroidWhy Perth scientists are hoping to score asteroid fragments brought back to Earth by an ambitious space mission.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
24
Almost 100 million adults have COPD in ChinaChronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is widespread in China with 8.6 percent of the country's adult population — almost 100 million people — suffering from the chronic lung disease, according to a new study. The study, which provided lung-function screenings for more than 50,990 participants, is the largest survey of COPD across age groups ever conducted in China.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
56
Substance that guides ant trail is produced by symbiotic bacteriaA research with ant from genus Atta reveals that a bacteria in their microbiota plays a key role in communication among individuals and also on the colony's defense against pathogens. A group of scientists also showed how a type of fungus participates on stingless bees' development cycle.
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Feed: All Latest
100+
What Random Walks in Multiple Dimensions Teach You About LifeThere are real world applications of the stochastic mathematical process known as a random walk—really.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
49
Swarm tracks elusive ocean magnetismThe magnetic field is arguably one of the most mysterious features of our planet. ESA's Swarm mission is continually yielding more insight into how our protective shield is generated, how it behaves and how it is changing. Adding yet another string to its bow, Swarm is now tracking changes in the magnetic field produced in the oceans in more detail that ever before.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Recovering SAS orders 50 Airbus A320-neosSAS said Tuesday it had ordered 50 Airbus A320-neos for its short and medium-haul routes, a sign of improving fortunes for the Scandinavian carrier after some difficult years.
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Big Think
500+
Cognitive gains from meditation last for seven years, research showsNew research from UC Davis shows forty volunteers still experiencing cognitive gains seven years after an intensive retreat. Read More
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
4
The story of techlash, and how the future might be differentAre you over social media? Are you disillusioned with a seemingly relentless pace of change? Does the future really, really worry you? You're not alone.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
EU court backs France ban of Uber service without notifying BrusselsUber Service CarThe EU's top court on Tuesday dealt another blow to US ridesharing giant Uber by backing the right of France and other member states to ban an illegal taxi service without notifying Brussels regulators.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
28
Natural disasters in 2017 cost record $144 bn: Swiss ReThe cost of natural diasters hit a record $144 billion (117 billion euros) last year, a study from one of the world's top reinsurance firms, Swiss Re, said Tuesday.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Volkswagen says considering board 'changes', may name new CEOScandal-hit car giant Volkswagen said Tuesday it was considering reshuffling its board and that chief executive Matthias Mueller could be replaced, although no decision has yet been made.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
When enemies come to helpThe enemy of my enemy is my friend. Now researchers at the University of Zurich show that this principle also holds for crab spiders and flowering plants. While it's true that the spiders do eat or drive away useful pollinators such as bees, they're also attracted by floral scent signals to come and help if the plant is attacked by insects intent on eating it.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
6
Scientists discover a link between superconductivity and the periodic tableScientists from Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology and Skoltech have discovered a general principle for calculating the superconductivity of hydrides based on the periodic table alone. Turned out that certain elements capable of forming superconducting compounds are arranged in a specific pattern in the periodic table.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

From Vascular Medicine: Focus on vascular imaging and diagnosticsVascular disease is a leading cause of morbidity and death worldwide. In order to combat the disease, specialists must have skills with imaging techniques. With this in mind, Vascular Medicine, the official journal of the Society for Vascular Medicine, dedicated its April 2018 issue to the topic of vascular imaging and diagnostics.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

New class of drugs could help tackle treatment-resistant cancersResearchers have discovered a new class of drug that has the potential to help cancer patients who no longer respond to existing therapies.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Cheaper, less toxic and recyclable light absorbers for hydrogen productionAchieving artificial photosynthesis in solution remains limited by the use of costly and toxic metal-based compounds to harvest light. Researchers at CNRS, CEA and the Université Grenoble Alpes propose an efficient alternative using semiconductor nanocrystals (also called quantum dots) based on cheaper and less toxic elements, such as copper, indium and sulfur.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

A tool based on the use ofcarbon nanoparticles enables detection of antidepressants in urine samplesThe test can be used to monitor therapeutic dosages, for cases of intoxication due to overdose or at a forensic level.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
5
School-based yoga can help children better manage stress and anxietyParticipating in yoga and mindfulness activities at school helps third-graders exhibiting anxiety improve their well-being and emotional health, according to a new Tulane University study published in the journal Psychology Research and Behavior Management.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Deciphering the 'mosaic' of the brainScientists' discovery sheds new light on how neurodegenerative diseases might occur.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
3
Higher risk of infectious disease with both high and low cholesterolThe so-called good cholesterol, HDL, is associated with infectious disease, new research from the University of Copenhagen and Copenhagen University Hospital shows.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Why does some tap water taste weird?Every year Australia's councils contest the academy awards of the water industry: the Best Tasting Tap Water in Australia. Entrants compete on clarity and colour as well as taste and odour.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Research ties persistence of 'white flight' to race, not socioeconomic factors"White flight" from the city to the suburbs has long been identified as producing racially segregated communities. Some scholars have argued the behavior is motivated not by race but by a desire to live in more stable and prosperous neighborhoods.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Research paints underwater pictures with soundSilent marine robots that record sounds underwater are allowing researchers at the University of East Anglia (UEA) to listen to the oceans as never before.
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New Scientist – News
500+
Robots don’t take people’s jobs – they make new onesA German study casts doubt on the story that automation will destroy jobs. Could it be true elsewhere?
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Ingeniøren

Ramt af cyberangreb: Halvdelen bliver ramt igen inden for et årEr man en gang blevet ramt af et målrettet cyberangreb, er der stor chance for, at du bliver ramt igen inden for et år. Det viser nye tal fra sikkerhedsfirmaet FireEyes kunder.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
The dark secrets of social media dark patternsTweeting praise or criticism gives you more power—and can pose a greater potential threat—than you may know, according to Michigan State University research.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
8
New light technique could result in less intrusive, more effective diagnosis for patientsA new method of using light to scan the human body, developed by researchers at the University of St Andrews, could result in less intrusive and more effective diagnosis for patients. The work is the result of a collaboration between researchers from the Schools of Physics and Astronomy, Biology, Medicine and the Scottish Oceans Institute at the University.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
17
How to turn light into atomic vibrationsSheet-like materials can have intriguing properties that could benefit devices from flexible electronics to solar cells. Researchers think they can customize the properties of these materials by using light pulses to rapidly switch the materials from one state to another. For example, light pulses could turn an electrical insulator into a conductor. But the ability to do this depends on how effici
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
8
The fight for clean emissions continuesIt is exactly 20 years since experts from Empa and VERT published the first test results on diesel particle filters. Today, more than 300 million vehicles worldwide are fitted with such filters. However, a VERT conference held at the Empa Academy revealed why the emission problem is by no means over.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Polarization has strong impact on electrons, study showsNew research helps understand movement of electrons in two-dimensional systems.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
10
Early 'chemobrain' intervention needed for breast cancer patients undergoing chemotherapyMore support is needed to help breast cancer patients and survivors manage 'chemobrain' symptoms, such as memory loss, short attention span and mental confusion, according to a study led by researchers from the National University of Singapore.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
How intestinal bacteria can affect your blood sugar and lipid levelsIntestinal bacteria have attracted recent attention since they were discovered to influence various physiological functions and diseases in humans. Japanese researchers analyzing the influence of changes in intestinal bacteria on sugar and lipid metabolism have found that secondary bile acids produced by intestinal bacteria can influence blood glucose and lipid concentrations as well as parts of t
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Researchers develop more comprehensive acoustic scene analysis methodResearchers have demonstrated an improved method for audio-analysis machines to process our noisy world. Their approach hinges on the combination of scalograms and spectrograms — the visual representations of audio — as well as convolutional neural networks (CNNs), the learning tool machines use to better analyze visual images. In this case, the visual images are used to analyze audio to better
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Feed: All Latest
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This Radio Hacker Could Hijack Emergency Sirens to Play Any SoundBalint Seeber found that cities around the US are leaving their emergency siren radio communication systems unencrypted and vulnerable to spoofing.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Ctenophores and the story of evolution in the oceansCtenophores (pronounced "TEEN-o-fours") are mysterious ocean drifters found anywhere from the ocean's edge to the deepest parts of the ocean. Colorful, translucent, and delicate, these predators slip through ocean waters capturing other animals, typically using their long, sticky tentacles.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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New material makes cooling devices more energy-efficientWaste heat from industry can often not be utilised because of its low temperature. With this material, it can be used in environmentally friendly cooling systems for example in the field of building technology. The research team from Kiel will present its material and its applications at the Hannover Messe 2018.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Newly discovered supernova remnants only reveal themselves at the highest gamma-ray energiesThe H.E.S.S. telescopes have surveyed the Milky Way for the past 15 years searching for sources of gamma radiation. The H.E.S.S. collaboration includes scientists of the Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics of the University of Tübingen led by Professor Andrea Santangelo and Dr. Gerd Pühlhofer. They are interested in sources of very high energy gamma radiation in the TeV energy range, i.e. in t
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Rats, cats, and people trade-off as main course for mosquitoes in Baltimore, Md.Understanding how neighborhood dynamics regulate mosquito bites is key to managing diseases like West Nile virus and Zika virus. Today in Parasites & Vectors, researchers report that in Baltimore, Md., socioeconomic differences between neighborhoods influence bite risk, with rats being a primary blood meal source in lower income neighborhoods.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Advancing the science of smell — with a hint of muskResearchers have identified key molecular mechanisms at work when people smell musks, a highly valued group of fixatives used in many perfumes and colognes. The discovery may have implications for a wide range of effects on mood and behavior in vertebrates, said the scientists.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Move over fake news: Hostile neighbors pose big threats to governancePropaganda by way of 'fake news' is one way a nation can wage war without firing a single shot. Another is through tactics of subversion and coercion, in which a country intentionally keeps neighboring countries weak in order to advance its own foreign policy interests, according to a new study.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Survival strategy: How one enzyme helps bacteria recover from exposure to antibioticsResearchers focused on an enzyme in gram-negative bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a pathogen that causes pneumonia and sepsis.
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Popular Science
100+
Music can seriously improve your workout. Here's how to create the perfect playlist.DIY And choose the right headphones to go with it. Countless studies have shown the right music can help you exercise longer and harder. Here's how to harness that science in the perfect workout playlist.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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The fishy problem of underwater noise pollutionWhen the famous explorer Jacques Cousteau released The Silent World, a documentary of his underwater adventures in 1953, he inspired generations of scientists to study the world's oceans.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Quantum simulator offers faster route for prime factorizationFactoring very large numbers into their prime "building blocks" is extremely difficult for classical computers, and this difficulty underlies the security of many cryptographic algorithms. While it's easy to factor the number 20 as the product of the primes 2 x 2 x 5, for example, factoring larger numbers becomes exponentially more difficult when using classical factoring algorithms.
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Ingeniøren
2
Omsider en høring om Femern: Får vi så de hemmelige trafikprognoser?Enhedslistens transportordfører har til sin egen store overraskelse overtalt de øvrige partier til at holde en offentlig høring om Femern-tunnelens omdiskuterede trafikprognoser. Han håber, at det betyder et opgør med hemmlighedskræmmeriet.
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Scientific American Content: Global
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To Keep NASA's Golden Age Alive, We Need More Telescopes–but Far Less Expensive OnesA focus on costly space telescopes is hurting the field — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
15
A magnetar just woke up after three years of silenceWhen stars reach the end of their main sequence, they undergo a gravitational collapse, ejecting their outermost layers in a supernova explosion. What remains afterward is a dense, spinning core primarily made up of neutrons (aka. a neutron star), of which only 3000 are known to exist in the Milky Way Galaxy. An even rarer subset of neutron stars are magnetars, only two dozen of which are known in
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Study results suggest genetic influence on social outcomes greater in meritocratic than communistic societiesA team of researchers from the U.K., Australia and the U.S. has found evidence that suggests genetic influence on social outcomes is greater in meritocratic than in communistic societies. In their paper published in the journal Nature Human Behavior, the group describes their study of people living in Estonia before and after the breakup of the Soviet Union and the impact it had on social outcomes
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Dagens Medicin

Ny KBU-model skal få flere læger til FærøerneSundhedsministeren vil oprette en ny særordning for færøske KBU-læger, der giver dem et forspring i KBU-ordningen, og som på sigt skal sikre bedre lægedækning på øerne.
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Dagens Medicin

Ny doktor vil forske i placeboeffekterLene Vase forsker i sammenhængen mellem psykologiske og neurobiologiske faktorer.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
A new wave of rock removal could spell disaster for farmland wildlifeMy (DM's) perception of threatened species habitats changed the first time I encountered a population of endangered lizards living under small surface rocks in a heavily cleared grazing paddock. That was 20 years ago, at a time when land managers were well aware of the biodiversity values of conservation reserves and remnant patches of native vegetation. But back then we knew very little about the
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
4
New tool helps minimize impact of solar activityUniversity of Saskatchewan researcher Lindsay Goodwin has developed a new way to measure the impact of solar activity on the ionosphere as indicated by northern lights and geomagnetic storms. The ionosphere is the upper part of the atmosphere.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
1
Machine learning offers new way of designing chiral crystalsEngineers and chemists at Hiroshima University successfully used the same technology at the core of facial recognition to design chiral crystals. This is the first study reporting the use of this technology, called logistic regression analysis, to predict which chemical groups are best for making chiral molecules.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
18
Risk stages defined for children with chronic kidney diseaseExperts in pediatric kidney disease have published a new staging system to help doctors better predict the length of time until a child with chronic kidney disease will need to undergo a kidney transplant or start receiving dialysis. Although this type of prognostic guide exists for adults, this is the first such tool specific to children.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

New clues to help restore fertility in women with disabling ovary disorderGround-breaking research out of the University of Otago, New Zealand, is showing potential to restore fertility in women suffering polycystic ovary syndrome.
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New on MIT Technology Review
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YouTube’s biggest videos have been hacked
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Reading the entire human genome – one long sentence at a timeFifteen years ago, the Human Genome Project announced they had cracked the code of life. Nonetheless, the published human genome map was incomplete and parts of our DNA remained to be deciphered. Now, a new study published in the journal Nature Biotechnology brings us closer to a complete genetic blueprint by using a nanotechnology-based sequencing technique.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Lifespan of new solar cell technologies to increase tenfoldArmi Tiihonen defended her doctoral dissertation at Aalto University 6 April 2018 on the ageing of new kinds of perovskite and dye-sensitised solar cells. She has developed ways to increase the lifetime of solar cells and also proposes ways to improve ageing tests for them.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
52
Four new 'hot Jupiter' exoplanets discoveredFour new "hot Jupiter" extrasolar planets have been detected as part of the Hungarian-made Automated Telescope Network-South (HATSouth) exoplanet survey. The newly found alien worlds are generally similar in size, but vary widely in mass. The discovery is detailed in a paper published April 4 on the arXiv pre-print server.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
4
Superacids are good medicine for super thin semiconductorsDesigning wearable sensors or other devices demands robust, flexible electronics. Extremely thin films, just one atom thick, such as molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), hold promise. Large-area synthesis of these materials is required for their commercialization. But today's thin films are plagued by structural defects. These defects degrade device performance. Scientists at New York University and the C
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Tubular science improves polymer solar cellsA popular polymer-based solar cell could produce more energy if the electronic charges can move efficiently through the cell's components. A novel three-component mixture allows conductive solar cell materials to self-align into columns. The alignment improves the efficiency. This, in turn, allows the solar cells to be fabricated more than three times thicker without degrading the high performance
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Hard X-ray flash breaks speed recordReactions in solar panels, catalytic converters, and other devices are governed by the quick motion of electrons. To capture the movement of these electrons, scientists use pulses of extremely high energy x-rays. The challenge is making the pulses short enough to get a good look at the electrons. Now, the shortest-ever pulses of hard x-rays were produced using two methods developed at SLAC's Linac
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Researchers discover how colliding oxygen molecules absorb lightScientists at Radboud University have managed to do what had never been tried before: accurately describe how colliding oxygen molecules absorb light. Our atmosphere consists of approximately 20 percent oxygen molecules, which constantly collide with each other and with the 80 percent of nitrogen molecules, and in doing so absorb light. The new theory describes the mechanism by which this takes pl
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
27
Brain Trauma: New Glasgow Coma Scale-pupils score and multifactor probability outcome chartsScientists have created new assessment tools that build on the Glasgow Coma Scale to provide greater information on injury severity and prognosis in patients with traumatic brain injury while still offering simplicity of use.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
15
Large-scale replication study challenges key evidence for the pro-active reading brainWhen people read or listen to a conversation, their pro-active brains sometimes predict which word comes next. But a scientific team now demonstrates that the predictive function of the human language system may operate differently than the field has come to believe in the last decade. Their study is the first large-scale, multi-laboratory replication effort for the field of cognitive neuroscience
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Paralyzed patient feels sensation againUsing a tiny array of electrodes implanted in the brain's somatosensory cortex, scientists have induced sensations of touch and movement in the hand and arm of a paralyzed man.
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
85
Later school start times really do improve sleep timeA new study indicates that delaying school start times results in students getting more sleep, and feeling better, even within societies where trading sleep for academic success is common.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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The evolutionary advantage of having eyebrowsEyebrows—we all have them, but what are they actually for? While eyebrows help to prevent debris, sweat, and water from falling into the eye socket, they serve another important function too – and it's all to do with how they move and human connection.
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The Atlantic
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The Revelation of Cardi BIt’s one of the best things mass entertainment has produced this year: Cardi B’s rendition of “Be Careful” on Saturday Night Live . As her band turned a loungey and minimal beat into a hushed, tense Latin jazz jam, the 25-year-old rap arriviste born Belcalis Almanzar addressed a cheating partner: “You still stutter after certain questions / You keep in contact with certain exes.” Shot from the wa
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
3
Outback radio telescope listens in on interstellar visitorA telescope in outback Australia has been used to listen to a mysterious cigar-shaped object that entered our solar system late last year.When 'Oumuamua was first discovered, astronomers thought it was a comet or an asteroid from within the solar system. But after studying its orbit and discovering its long, cylindrical shape, they realized 'Oumuamua was neither and had come from interstellar spac
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
3
Research ties persistence of 'white flight' to race, not socioeconomic factorsExamining population trends in racially mixed suburbs, Indiana University sociologist Samuel Kye finds that white flight occurs when nonwhite residents move in, regardless of socioeconomic factors.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
5
The dark secrets of social media dark patternsMSU researchers used the GamerGate controversy to uncover how one angry social media user inspired thousands to join its movement, amplify its messages, cyberbully innocent users and ultimately get thousands more to participate … without the users even knowing it. This can happen to anyone.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Why zombie slugs could be the answer to gardeners' woesSlugs and snails are the bane of almost every vegetable planting gardener and farmer. Slugs in particular have voracious appetites and are relentless in eating stems, leaves and shoots. No wonder gardeners have sought any means to control the spread of this crop killer. Unfortunately, the most common response – slug pellets – can have a terrible effect on other wildlife. One alternative is the par
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Our survey found 'questionable research practices' by ecologists and biologists – here's what that meansCherry picking or hiding results, excluding data to meet statistical thresholds and presenting unexpected findings as though they were predicted all along – these are just some of the "questionable research practices" implicated in the replication crisis psychology and medicine have faced over the last half a decade or so.
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Scientific American Content: Global
33
Reptiles Are Concentrated in Specific Locations, Often UnprotectedLizards, snakes and turtles are concentrated in largely unprotected areas — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Dagens Medicin

Ny brugerundersøgelse: Langt de fleste læger er utilfredse med sundhedsplatformenSeks ud af ti læger i Region Hovedstaden er utilfredse med Sundhedsplatformen. Professor i datalogi er ikke overrasket over lægernes utilfredshed.
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Dagens Medicin

Psykiatrien i Region Sjælland vil flytte og fyre ansattePsykiatrien i Region Sjælland skal finde 23 mio. kr. på budgettet. Ledelsen ønsker derfor at flytte rundt på en række læger, sygeplejersker, plejere og sekretærer. FOA frygter, det vil få mange til at søge væk og gøre det sværere at rekruttere.
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BBC News – Science & Environment
73
Silent robots listen to ocean windsAutonomous sea-gliders fitted with hydrophones gather information far from weather stations.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Physicists explore a safe alternative to X-ray security scannersA team of physicists at the University of Sussex are developing the science to create a safe and efficient 'paint' that can reveal, with terahertz (THz) radiation, the contents of luggage or objects hidden in clothing.
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Live Science
41
SpaceX Not to Blame for Loss of Top-Secret Spy SatelliteSpaceX isn't responsible for the loss of the top-secret Zuma spy satellite during the craft's launch earlier this year, according to media reports.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
5
More people staying longer in federally assisted housing strains ability to serve families, study findsPeople are staying in federally assisted housing for about six years, up from the average of 4 1/2 years 20 years ago, which is straining the federal rental assistance program's ability to serve families with children, according to a University of Kansas researcher.
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The Atlantic
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Why the GOP Is Making the Midterm Elections All About ImpeachmentTo the old-fashioned, it might seem crazy that the Republicans plan to fight the 2018 election as a referendum on a Trump impeachment. Traditional wisdom was: If the president of your party is unpopular, try your utmost to de-nationalize off-year elections. Focus the voters on local issues and down-ballot candidates! “Maybe you don’t like Trump. But you like the new factory openings in our distri
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
26
After Uber, Tesla incidents, can artificial intelligence be trusted?Given the choice of riding in an Uber driven by a human or a self-driving version, which would you choose?
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Scientific American Content: Global
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Psychological Weapons of Mass PersuasionThe truth about the controversial science that has everyone worried — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Science | The Guardian
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Nothing brings out tiny violins like pretty people moaning. But might they have a point? | Arwa MahdawiBeing beautiful mainly seems a blessing. But it can be a curse – and the main problem is that you are just not allowed to complain about it It’s tough being beautiful . Other women, women who are not so genetically blessed, despise you, you see. They worry you will steal their husband. They get together with their average-looking friends and say nasty things behind your inordinately elegant back
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Popular Science
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This guy ate a pepper so hot doctors thought he might be having an aneurysmScience The Carolina Reaper gets everyone in the end. You know the feeling: You’re just trying to compete in a pepper-eating contest and your poor stomach thinks you’ve maybe swallowed a whole fire. It’s trying to save you,…
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Dagens Medicin

Psykiatridirektør: Udvikling kræver omprioriteringOmplacering eller opsigelse af ansatte i psykiatrien i Region Sjælland skal skabe plads til, at virksomheden kan udvikle sig. Det siger psykiatridirektør Michael Werchmeister.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
7
Paralyzed patient feels sensation againUsing a tiny array of electrodes implanted in the brain's somatosensory cortex, Caltech scientists have induced sensations of touch and movement in the hand and arm of a paralyzed man.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
CFRP recycling—into the battery instead of the garbageCarbon fiber-reinforced plastics are gaining importance as components of aircraft. The trend is increasing the need for sustainable recycling concepts. At the ILA from April 25 to 29, 2018 in Berlin, Fraunhofer will present a technology that converts recycled carbon fibers into materials for batteries and fuel cells. This saves costs, improves the CO2 balance and opens up new means of recycling in
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The Atlantic
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Your Body is a Teeming BattlegroundI went to medical school , at least in part, to get to know death and perhaps to make my peace with it. So did many of my doctor friends, as I would find out. One day—usually when you’re young, though sometimes later—the thought hits you: You really are going to die. That moment is shocking, frightening, terrible. You try to pretend it hasn’t happened (it’s only a thought, after all), and you go
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Automated lightweight construction reduces weight and costsThe aircraft of the future flies electrically and autonomously, is feather-light and can be conveniently produced in a fully automated manner. While the electrification and permanent autopilot are still in their infancy, lightweight construction is already indispensable today. Digital manufacturing processes are about to be applied. Fraunhofer will present new automated production technologies for
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Ingeniøren

Spørg Scientariet: Hvordan genereres der ilt i fly?En læser vil gerne vide, hvor passagerfly og kampfly får deres ilt fra i kabinen. Det svarer testpilot fra Flyvevåbnet på.
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The Scientist RSS

Image of the Day: SuckersA recently expanded online database allows researchers and the public to share and view videos of sea lampreys.
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NYT > Science
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Climate Change Denialists Say Polar Bears Are Fine. Scientists Are Pushing Back.In a new study, researchers single out a blog run by a Canadian zoologist as a primary source of dubious information about the status of polar bears.
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Feed: All Latest
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Helix Takes Clinical Genetic Testing Straight to ConsumersSoon, anyone curious about their health will be able to request a clinical DNA test—not just doctors.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Fly with individually air-conditioned seatsIn cooperation with its partner Gentherm, Fraunhofer has developed an air-conditioned business class seat (Aviation Double Seat). The seat features a combination of seat ventilation by means of fans and thermal regulation by seat heating. This leads to an optimal temperature control of the seat surface as well as a continuous moisture removal. The result is a permanently comfortable, dry climate o
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The Atlantic
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Michael Cohen Has a Big ProblemUpdated at 12:11 p.m. Whatever evidence federal prosecutors have collected concerning Michael Cohen, President Trump’s longtime attorney, it is most likely extraordinarily strong. Before federal agents raided Cohen’s home, hotel room, and office Monday afternoon, they would have had to convince high-ranking officials at the Department of Justice and a federal judge that a search warrant was neces
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BBC News – Science & Environment
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More than half your body is not humanHuman cells make up only 43% of the body's total cell count, while the rest are microscopic colonists.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Europe must sea food in a new way thanks to warming watersAquaculture, or fish farming, is one of the world's fastest growing food sectors, providing about half of all the fish we eat. As it stands, climate change is altering our ocean's environment, causing the seawater to become warmer and impacting the marine ecosystems profoundly. How will these changes affect marine species, consumers and industries that rely on them?
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Sensors in public spaces can help create cities that are both smart and sociableHow are smart cities meant to meet citizen needs? Big data from a network of sensors can give managers and planners a real-time, big-picture overview of traffic flows, public transport patronage, and water and power use. However, the needs of people in the city must be met at both the meta and micro levels.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Traveling into space – safely, quickly and cost-effectivelyLow Earth orbit increasingly resembles an overcrowded junkyard. Disused satellites, burned-out rocket stages and thousands of pieces of debris produced by collisions – all these things pose a threat to infrastructure in space. Fraunhofer researchers have developed a new radar system and other technologies to give spacecraft better protection against space junk. And that is not all: By virtue of an
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
6
Tackling the toughest questions with NanoSIMSIt may take a village to raise a child, according to the old proverb, but it takes an entire team of highly trained scientists and engineers to install and operate a state-of-the-art, exceptionally complex ion microprobe. Just ask Julie Smith, a nuclear security scientist at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
6
Scientific challenges and opportunities for remediating radioactive wasteOne of the nation's enduring scientific challenges has been to find effective ways of remediating millions of gallons of chemical and radioactive waste remaining from Cold War activities. Now a team of experts has combed through more than 100 studies to determine what is known of the complex chemical and rheological aspects of the waste and identify scientific issues that must be resolved to final
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Failing to match parents' educational achievements among men can be as distressing as being divorcedFailing to match the educational achievements of one's parents can be as distressing for men as having ethnic minority status or being divorced, new research says.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
7
Snowfall patterns may provide clues to Greenland Ice SheetThe Greenland Ice Sheet is melting, discharging hundreds of billions of tons of water into the ocean each year. Sea levels are steadily rising.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Harnessing 'Rashba spin-Seebeck effect' phenomenon will enable commercial devices to turn waste heat into electricityMechanical engineers at the University of California, Riverside, have reported success in using inexpensive materials to produce thermoelectric devices that transform low-level waste heat into electricity.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
3
Start of most sensitive search yet for dark matter axionThanks to low-noise superconducting quantum amplifiers invented at the University of California, Berkeley, physicists are now embarking on the most sensitive search yet for axions, one of today's top candidates for dark matter.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Outback radio telescope listens in on interstellar visitorA telescope in outback Western Australia has been used to listen to a mysterious cigar-shaped object that entered our Solar System late last year.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
2
Almost a third of fathers lack access to flexible work arrangementsAlmost a third of working fathers in the UK lack access to flexible work arrangements, new research says.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
1
Footballers' frequent transfers leave their wives and children feeling lonelyProfessional footballers' frequent transfers to new clubs leave their wives and children feel isolated and lonely as they move around the country, research says.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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ExoMars poised to start science missionThe Trace Gas Orbiter has reached its final orbit after a year of 'aerobraking' that ended in February. This exciting operation saw the craft skimming through the very top of the upper atmosphere, using drag on its solar wings to transform its initial highly elliptical four-day orbit of about 200 x 98 000 km into the final, much lower and near-circular path at about 400 km.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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What is the optimal way to diversify an economy?One of the eternal challenges of economic development is how to identify the economic activities that a country, city, or region should target. During recent years, a large body of research has shown that countries, regions, and cities, are more likely to enter economic activities that are related to the ones they already have. For instance, a region specialized in the exports of frozen fish and c
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
5
New result draws on 30 years of research and development and begins the definitive search for axion particlesForty years ago, scientists theorized a new kind of low-mass particle that could solve one of the enduring mysteries of nature: what dark matter is made of. Now a new chapter in the search for that particle has begun.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
21
New quantum device set to support measurement standards of the electrical currentAn international collaboration, including researchers from the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) and Royal Holloway, University of London, has successfully demonstrated a quantum coherent effect in a new quantum device made out of continuous superconducting wire – the Charge Quantum Interference Device (CQUID).
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
6
Iridescent photonic cellulose, mimicking the structural color of insects, with optical applicationsThe bright colors of some butterflies, beetles or birds are not due to the presence of pigments that selectively absorb light, but due to the so-called structural coloration. Structural coloration occurs on surfaces with a nanostructure with dimensions similar to those of the wavelength of the incident light (typically below the micron). These ordered nanostructures are known as photonic crystals.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
38
North-ex­posed ice cliffs ac­cel­er­ate glac­ier meltETH researchers have confirmed the suspicion that north-facing ice cliffs on debris-covered glaciers in the Himalayas accelerate ice melt.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
5
Repeat spawning comes with tradeoffs for troutSteelhead trout that spawn multiple times have more than twice the lifetime reproductive success of single spawning trout, suggesting there is a substantial benefit associated with repeat spawning. But it comes with a tradeoff, according to new research published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
87
Characterising the structure of self-assembling organic molecules on the surface of nanoparticlesA large collaboration led by scientists from École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland has used a powerful new approach to overcome the challenging task of characterising the structure of self-assembling organic molecules on the surface of nanoparticles.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
20
Substance that guides ant trail is produced by symbiotic bacteriaResearchers working on the Ribeirão Preto campus of the University of São Paulo (USP) in Brazil have discovered that a bacterium found in the microbiota associated with leafcutter ant species Atta sexdens rubropilosa produces so-called "trail pheromones," the aromatic chemical compounds used by the ants to lay a trail to their nest. An article on their findings has been published in Scientific Rep
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Dagens Medicin

Rigide krav til journalføring hæmmer overblikket i journalenKrav om alt – stort og småt – skal skrives ned gør det vanskeligere at få overblik i journalerne, og det tager kostbar tid fra patienterne.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
5
An oil-eating bacterium that can clean up pollution and spillsOil spills and their impact on the environment are a source of concern for scientists. These disasters occur on a regular basis, leading to messy decontamination challenges that require massive investments of time and resources. Seeking a solution, researchers are now studying Alcanivorax borkumensis, a bacterium that feeds on hydrocarbons. Professor Satinder Kaur Brar and her team at INRS have co
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
76
Researchers trace biological development via CRISPER-Cas9-induced scarring on DNATechnologies such as RNA sequencing are now revealing which genes are expressed in each individual cell. All cells can then be arranged systematically using similar expression profiles. Dr. Jan Philipp Junker, head of the Quantitative Developmental Biology research group at the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine in the Helmholtz Association (MDC), says, "Whenever we use such a technology t
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Tiny nanomachine successfully completes test driveTogether with colleagues from the USA, scientists from the University of Bonn and the research institute Caesar in Bonn have used nanostructures to construct a tiny machine that constitutes a rotatory motor and can move in a specific direction. The researchers used circular structures from DNA. The results will now be presented in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.
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The Atlantic
100+
The Deceptively Accessible Music of Cecil TaylorSometimes, when listening to an avant-garde giant of yore, it’s difficult to understand what made her so striking. A vanguard by definition lays the way for imitators, so eventually the things that once made her radical now seem conventional. This is not a challenge with Cecil Taylor’s music. The pianist and composer, who died Thursday at 89, retains his ability to shock, despite decades of work
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
5
Shaking up megathrust earthquakes with slow slip and fluid drainageMegathrust earthquakes are the most powerful type of earthquake, occurring at subduction zones where one tectonic plate is pushed beneath another. By contrast, slow slip events (SSEs) release seismic stress at a lower rate than large earthquakes, re-occurring in cycles across months to years. These processes can take place along the megathrust and other planes of weakness in response to loading, r
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Latest Headlines | Science News
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This material uses energy from ambient light to kill hospital superbugsA quantum dot–powered material could help reduce the number of hospital-acquired infections, including those with drug-resistant bacteria.
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Live Science
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Weird Neutrinos Can't Quite Explain Matter's Huge Riddle YetEarly results from an experiment deep underground have found no evidence that neutrinos are their own antiparticles.
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Live Science
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Restroom Hand Dryers Are Blowing Bacteria EverywhereUsing a restroom hand dryer? Your digits aren't as clean as you think.
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Mark Zuckerberg Answers to Congress For Facebook's TroublesTensions around Facebook's privacy and ad practices have escalated dramatically since the last time the company sat before Congress.
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Live Science
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What Happens If You Get Injected with Embalming Fluid?A woman in Russia died after doctors allegedly gave her an IV drip containing a formaldehyde solution instead of saline, according to news reports.
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Scientific American Content: Global
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Change Your Mind-Set, Reduce Your Chronic PainPsychological approaches can help control the agony and lessen the need for drugs — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Scientific American Content: Global
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Taming the Mighty Mississippi May Have Caused Bigger FloodsHuman meddling with the river is blamed for most of the rise in flood levels, but the role of climate remains unclear — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Ingeniøren
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Beslutning om Viking Link til England udskydesEnerginet og National Grid har udsat en endelig investeringsbeslutning om et omdiskuteret elkabel mellem Danmark og England. Årsagen er uklarhed om britiske plantilladelser.
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The Atlantic
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A House You Can Buy, But Never OwnATLANTA—It was not until a few years after he moved in that Zachary Anderson realized that he was not, in fact, the owner of the house he thought he’d purchased. Anderson had already spent tens of thousands of dollars repairing a hole in the roof, replacing a cracked sidewalk, and fixing the ceilings of the small two-bedroom home where he lives in southwest Atlanta. He was trying to get a reducti
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The Atlantic
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On Google and Facebook: 'The Finest Intelligence Operation on Earth'On Tuesday, Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook finally appears before Congress. Franklin Foer, who has extensively chronicled the relationship between social-media companies and democracy, had a report yesterday on the phase-change in national power that his appearance might indicate. (And you can take an advance look at Zuckerberg’s prepared testimony , highly underwhelming in my view.) Last week I ran
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Science | The Guardian
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To Brits with knickers in a twist over Americanisms: don't get your panties in a bunchMany ‘American’ phrases are actually British but a new book argues why we say what we say reveals a lot about our cultures To those dedicated warriors hunched over their keyboards or gripping their pens, ready to fire off an angry salvo about the Americanization of British English to their favorite newspaper, television channel or book publisher, linguist Lynne Murphy has a solemn warning: check
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Phononic SEIRA—enhancing light-molecule interactions via crystal lattice vibrationsA study published in Light: Science & Applications opens new avenues for fundamental studies of vibrational strong coupling, as well as for the development of novel infrared sensors for chemical recognition of very small amounts of molecules. The interaction of light and matter at the nanoscale is a key element for many fundamental studies and technological applications, ranging from light harvest
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Study analyzes the keys to fragmentation of metallic materialsScientists have analyzed the mechanisms behind the dynamic fragmentation of ductile metallic materials that exhibit large permanent deformations when subjected to severe mechanical loading. Previously, it was thought that dynamic fragmentation was triggered by the inherent defects of the material. What this research suggests is that the key mechanism may not be the porosity of the metallic materia
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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The absence of a single mitochondrial protein causes severe inflammationThe link between mitochondria and inflammation is still unclear. But it is known is that the accumulation of defective mitochondria that should have been removed causes inflammation. Scientists at the Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona) headed by Antonio Zorzano have demonstrated that the removal of a single mitochondrial protein in mouse muscle leads to severe inflammation throu
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Researchers design upgrade device for mass spectrometersResearchers from Skoltech and MIPT have developed a device for upgrading mass spectrometers used to analyze the chemical makeup of unknown substances. The new device analyzes one substance from four different perspectives. Alternatively, it enables multiple samples to be examined simultaneously. By contrast, conventional mass spectrometers analyze one substance at a time. The research paper was pu
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Team discloses the formation of burning ice in oceanic clay rich sedimentA KAIST research team has identified the formation of natural gas hydrates, so-called flammable ice, formed in oceans. Professor Tae-Hyuk Kwon from the Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering and his team found that clay minerals in oceanic clay-rich sedimentary deposits promote formation of gas hydrates and proposed the principle of gas hydrate formation in the clayey sedimentary layers.
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Ingeniøren
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Tyskernes interesse for dieselbiler i frit faldTyske bilkøbere vil nu lige så gerne have en elbil som en dieselbil. Udviklingen går hurtigt efter ny lovgivning, der gør diesellivet mere besværligt.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Discovery of compounds that keep plants freshA team of scientists at Nagoya University has discovered new compounds that can control stomatal movements in plants. Some of the compounds have been shown to prevent leaves from drying up suppressed withering when sprayed on rose and oat leaves. Further investigation could lead to the development of new compounds to extend the freshness of cut flowers and flower bouquets, reduce transportation co
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Low bending loss waveguide opens the avenue to downsizing of 3-D photonic integrated circuitsFemtosecond laser direct writing is a promising technology for the fabrication of photonic integrated chips mainly due to its intrinsic capability of three-dimensional (3-D) prototyping in transparent substrates. Currently, the difficulty in inducing large refractive index changes smoothly distributed in the laser-irradiated regions is the major obstacle for producing compact photonic integrated c
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Ingeniøren

Mikrofossil opkaldt efter dansk geologHenrik Nøhr-Hansen fra Geus lægger navn til en ny art af mikrofossiler.
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Ingeniøren
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Parkering: Københavns Kommune vælger software over sensorerMatematiske modeller er bedre til at forudsige trafikken end fysiske sensorer, der tæller biler.
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The Atlantic
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The Family Trying to Escape Blame for the Opioid CrisisMuch as the role of the addictive multibillion-dollar painkiller OxyContin in the opioid crisis has stirred controversy and rancor nationwide, so it has divided members of the wealthy and philanthropic Sackler family, some of whom own the company that makes the drug. In recent months, as protesters have begun pressuring the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and other cultural institutions to
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Mozilla's Internet Health Report Diagnoses Life OnlineThe foundation released a broad, sweeping report Tuesday about the state of our lives online.
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Ingeniøren

40 procent af de ansatte utilfredse med SundhedsplatformenTo ud af tre mener ikke, at platformen er brugervenlig.
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Viden
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Korrespondent om datalæk: Zuckerberg kan ikke snakke sig ud af det herKrise i Facebook efter massivt datalæk. Stifteren har et kæmpe problem.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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UEA research paints underwater pictures with soundSilent marine robots that record sounds underwater are allowing researchers to listen to the oceans as never before.While pilot whales make whistles, buzzes and clicks, pods of hunting dolphins create high-pitched echolocation clicks and larger species such as sperm whales make louder, slower clicks.As well as eavesdropping on marine life, the recordings can be used to measure sea-surface wind spe
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Inside Science
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Folding, Cutting and Crumpling GrapheneFolding, Cutting and Crumpling Graphene Before learning what can be done with graphene, we need to know what can be done to graphene. Origami_spring.jpg An origami spring made using a single piece of paper. Image credits: Jason7825 via Wikimedia Rights information: CC BY-SA 1.0 Technology Monday, April 9, 2018 – 13:15 Yuen Yiu, Staff Writer (Inside Science) — Graphene has long been touted as the
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Nyheder – Forskning – Videnskab

Det er lavstatus at tale 'perkersprog' i skolenTidligere var det primært børn med indvandrerbaggrund, som talte gadesprog, eller såkaldt…
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BBC News – Science & Environment
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Ancient sea reptile was one of the largest animals everSea reptiles the size of blue whales swam off the English coast 200 million years ago, fossils show.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Is Facebook really changing? Or just trimming its data haul?Facebook Data M. ZuckerbergLost amid a flurry of Facebook announcements about privacy settings and data access is a much more fundamental question: Is Facebook really changing its relationship with users, or just tinkering around the edges of a deeper problem—its insatiable appetite for the data it uses to sell ads?
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Jet Airways rules out Air India bidJet Airways on Tuesday became the latest major Indian airline to rule out a bid for debt-laden national carrier Air India in a new blow to the government's privatisation plans.
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Nyheder – Forskning – Videnskab

Risikoen for infektionssygdomme stiger ved både højt og lavt kolesterolDet såkaldt gode kolesterol, HDL, hænger sammen med infektionssygdomme, viser ny forskning…
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Science-Based Medicine
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Modern Reflexology: Still As Bogus As Pre-Modern ReflexologyReflexology is a belief system based on imaginary connections between spots on the skin and internal organs. It has no basis in science.
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Scientific American Content: Global
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Barriers to Scientific Research Are Holding Back InnovationScientists waste countless hours navigating paywalls to access research papers, but major changes are under way — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Race for Mexico's 'cocaine of the sea' pushes two species toward extinctionThe dried fish parts don't look like much to the novice eye, but the totoaba swim bladders discreetly displayed in this shop in Guangzhou, China sell for up to $20,000.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Ubisoft aims to rack up five billion players with Tencent dealFresh from winning a long corporate battle, French video game powerhouse Ubisoft is aiming for a tenfold surge in its global playing audience after securing a partnership with Chinese internet giant Tencent.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Backpage co-founders, executives indicted on prostitution chargesTwo co-founders of Backpage and top executives of the classified advertising website have been indicted on charges of enabling prostitution and money laundering.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Air France says 7 days of strikes cost company 170 mn eurosAir France said Tuesday that seven day-long strikes since February by workers demanding higher pay are set to cost it 170 million euros ($209 million).
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Sperm whale 'clicks' help scientists understand behaviourScientists have recorded thousands of hours of "clicks" that sperm whales make to forage for food and communicate, helping them better understand the behaviour of one of the Southern Ocean's key predators.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Anyone want to buy a dinosaur? Two on sale in ParisThe skeletons of an allosaurus and a diplodocus are up for auction in Paris this week, marketed as hip interior design objects—for those with big enough living rooms.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Apple turns green, claiming '100% clean energy'Apple said Monday it had achieved a goal of "100 percent clean energy" for its facilities around the world.
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Flat math and reading results in national report cardThe results of the latest Nation's Report Card are in and the news isn't good.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Large-scale replication study challenges key evidence for the pro-active reading brainWhen people read or listen to a conversation, their pro-active brains sometimes predict which word comes next. But a scientific team led by the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics in the Netherlands now demonstrates that the predictive function of the human language system may operate differently than the field has come to believe in the last decade. Their study is the first large-scale, mu
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Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
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Yes, Mark Zuckerberg will wear a suit for Congress testimonyFacebook Mark ZuckerbergYes, Mark Zuckerberg will wear a suit.
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Science | The Guardian
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Star Man: a lunar odyssey – in picturesInspired by everything from The Shining to the aubergine-coloured bathroom suite of his childhood, artist Tom Hammick’s Lunar Voyage is a beautiful, mesmerising depiction of a lonely traveller’s journey to the moon and back Continue reading…
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Science | The Guardian
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Africa's unsung scientists finally get their own journal to spread researchPublication will highlight pioneering work of scientists searching for cures to diseases like HIV and malaria and solutions to climate change A new journal to showcase Africa’s often-overlooked scientific research has been launched to give the continent’s scientists better global recognition. Scientific African will be the first “mega-journal” in Africa. It was unveiled in Kigali last week at Afr
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Viden
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Forskere arbejder igen med LSD og svampeDepression, angst, OCD og hovedpine kan måske afhjælpes af psykedeliske stoffer.
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Ingeniøren

Margrethe Vestager kræver gennemskuelige algoritmer: Ikke nok at pege på sort boksIfølge Gartner er store softwareleverandører ved at tilpasse deres produkter, så algoritmernes resultater kan forklares.
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Ingeniøren
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Stort flertal af danskerne støtter politisk indsats for elbiler73 procent af danskerne mener, at danske politikere bør gøre en særlig indsats for at fremme salget af elbiler, viser en ny undersøgelse af YouGov for Dansk Elbil Alliance.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Mount Sinai-led task force identifies ways US health care systems can learn from the worldThe Task Force report explores how the US can apply global lessons to improve community health.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Study: Women most at risk for heart failure weeks after giving birthHeart failure is a leading cause of maternal morbidity and death in the US — with the rate of pregnancy-related deaths more than doubling between 1987 and 2011. Even so, much about heart failure-related hospitalizations before, during and after delivery is unknown.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

UTSA researchers explore little-known, deadly fungal infectionsA new study by Althea Campuzano, Ph.D., a student at the University of Texas at San Antonio, and Floyd Wormley, Jr., Professor of Biology and Senior Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Studies, sheds light on little-known fungal infections caused by the fungus Cryptococcus. There are currently no vaccines available for any fungal infection, which can be extremely deadly to patients under trea
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Concussion increases the risk of prolonged headache woesEvery day people are whisked into hospital emergency rooms with concussions. A new study shows that even mild head trauma can cause major problems in daily life.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Later school start times really do improve sleep timeA new study in SLEEP, published by Oxford University Press, indicates that delaying school start times results in students getting more sleep, and feeling better, even within societies where trading sleep for academic success is common.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

New method lets doctors quickly assess severity of brain injuriesA new way to rapidly assess levels of consciousness in people with head injuries could improve patient care.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Alzheimer's disease redefined: New research framework defines Alzheimer's by brain changes, not symptomsNew research framework, published in Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association. First author Clifford R. Jack, Jr., M.D., of Mayo Clinic Rochester, MN and colleagues propose shifting the definition of Alzheimer's disease in living people — for use in research — from the current one, based on cognitive changes and behavioral symptoms with biomarker confirmation, to a stri
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

New biological research framework for Alzheimer's seeks to spur discoveryThe research community now has a biomarker-based construct for Alzheimer's which could result in a more precise and faster approach to testing drug and other interventions.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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New Glasgow Coma Scale-pupils score and multifactor probability outcome chartsThe University of Glasgow's Sir Graham Teasdale, co-creator of the Glasgow Coma Scale, has teamed with Paul M. Brennan and Gordon D. Murray of the University of Edinburgh to create new assessment tools that build on the Glasgow Coma Scale to provide greater information on injury severity and prognosis in patients with traumatic brain injury while still offering simplicity of use.
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New on MIT Technology Review
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Bitcoin would be a calamity, not an economyA cryptocurrency future sounds liberating. In reality, it would be a disaster for everybody.
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BBC News – Science & Environment
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Antarctic expedition hopes for Ernest Shackleton bonusA scientific cruise next year will look for Ernest Shackleton's famous lost ship given the opportunity.
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Science : NPR
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Everybody Lies, And That's Not Always A Bad ThingWhen we think of lies, we think of the big stuff. We say, "I could never do something like that." But big lies start with small deceptions. Dan Ariely talks about why we lie and why we're honest. (Image credit: Gary Waters /Getty Images/Ikon Images)
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The Atlantic
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Trump's Assault on the Rule of LawHours after the FBI raided the office, home, and hotel room of his sometime-personal attorney Michael Cohen, President Trump delivered an angry response at the White House on Monday. The group of people he targeted is wide and deep: Special Counsel Robert Mueller, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, former FBI Director James Comey, and his own appointee as U.S.
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New Scientist – News
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Theresa May pledges £75 million for prostate cancer researchThe prime minister, Theresa May, is to pledge £75 million for clinical trials researching prostate cancer, which affects around one in eight men in the UK
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Watch Mark Zuckerberg Testify Before Congress Live Right HereFacebook Data M. ZuckerbergOn Tuesday and Wednesday, Mark Zuckerberg will testify before the Senate and House of Representatives. Here's how to make sure you don't miss a minute.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Gender gap in academic medicine has negative impact, but there are simple solutionsExisting gender gaps in academic medicine may have a negative impact on workplace culture and organizational effectiveness, but there are simple, systems-based solutions, suggests a new study.
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Scientific American Content: Global
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Right Whales Seem to Think before They SpeakRather than always making the same call in response to the same stimuli, North Atlantic right whales are capable of changing their vocalizations. — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
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Futurity.org
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There’s a new, cheaper way to make grapheneResearchers have developed an economical and industrially viable strategy to produce graphene. The new technique addresses the long-standing challenge of an efficient process for large-scale production of graphene, and paves the way for sustainable synthesis of the material. Graphene is a two-dimensional material with a honeycomb structure of only one atom thick. Dubbed the material of the future
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NYT > Science
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F.D.A. Restricts Sales of Bayer’s Essure Contraceptive ImplantThe agency said the device could only be sold by doctors who agree to warn women of the serious risks associated with it.
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Porsche's 919 Hybrid Evo Wallops F1's Fastest CarsIgnoring the regulations that govern motorsports, the 919 Hybrid Evo beat F1 champ Lewis Hamilton's record time at Belgium's famed Spa Francorchamps track.
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Futurity.org
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These gene mutations link a bunch of different cancersResearchers completed the genetic sequencing and analyses of more than 11,000 tumors from patients, spanning 33 types of cancer and identifying about 300 genes that drive tumor growth. Remarkably, they say, just over half of all tumors analyzed carry genetic mutations that therapies already approved for use in patients could target. The types of cancer are all part of the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCG
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Viden
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Forskere undersøger søvnmangel: Hvad gør det ved nybagte mødre?Forskere fra Oxford og Aarhus Universitet skal undersøge, hvordan manglen på søvn påvirker hjernen.
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BBC News – Science & Environment
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Mission to Antarctica's Larsen ice shelvesAn international expedition next year will try to reach the site of a major new iceberg.
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The Atlantic
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The Atlantic Daily: How to Describe the WorldWhat We’re Following All Eyes on Syria: Dozens of civilians in the rebel-controlled town of Douma, Syria, were killed in a suspected chemical-weapons attack by President Bashar al-Assad’s regime. The attack crosses “red lines” against chemical warfare set by both President Obama and President Trump, and suggests that the Assad regime isn’t worried about an American response. Trump said on Monday
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Futurity.org
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What impact will cutting fuel economy rules have?Recently, the Environmental Protection Agency announced plans to weaken Obama administration gas emissions and fuel economy standards. Proposed in 2012, the CAFE (Corporate Average Fuel Economy) standards require automakers to nearly double the average fuel economy of new cars and trucks by 2025—making the US and Canada the only two major nations to adopt such long-range goals. In this interview,
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Futurity.org
7
To stay fertile, eggs demand food via food tubesNew research clarifies how female reproductive cells—eggs or oocytes—get the food they need to grow and remain fertile. The egg gets its food from little arm-like feeding tubes (called filopodia) that jut out from tiny cells surrounding the egg and must poke through a thick wall coating the egg in order to feed it. Until recently, scientists did not really understand the place and timing of the f
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Futurity.org
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Cancer ‘test kit’ could end one-size-fits-all treatmentA new cancer cell-based assay could help doctors diagnose cancer, better monitor the disease, and take a step closer to customized treatment for individual patients. The microfluidic device, which allows for precise control of fluids at the submillimeter scale, cultures circulating tumor cells (CTCs) collected from a patient’s blood and grows the CTC clusters in its microwells. CTCs are cells tha
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Futurity.org
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What happens when nanoparticles collideNew research on what happens when nanoparticles collide could one day inform the development of better helmets, protective earphones, and even devices to convert “junk” energy from airport runway vibrations into usable power. Using supercomputers, scientists modeled what happens when two nanoparticles smash into each other in a vacuum. The team ran simulations for nanoparticles with three differe
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Latest Headlines | Science News
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World’s hottest pepper may have triggered this man’s severe headachesA man ate one of the hottest peppers in the world. About a minute later, his head began pounding.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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Study: Almost 100 million adults have COPD in ChinaChronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is widespread in China with 8.6 percent of the country's adult population — almost 100 million people — suffering from the chronic lung disease, according to a new Tulane University study published in The Lancet. The study, which provided lung-function screenings for more than 50,990 participants, is the largest survey of COPD across age groups ever c
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Stop prioritizing the car to tackle childhood obesity, governments/planners urgedThe UK governments need to ditch a 42-year-old trend and stop prioritizing the car if they are serious about tackling childhood obesity, insist clinicians and transport experts in a call to action, published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News
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Man develops severe 'thunderclap' headaches after eating world's hottest chili pepperTaking part in a hot chili pepper eating contest might have some unexpected consequences, highlight doctors in the journal BMJ Case Reports.
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Science | The Guardian
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Man eats world's hottest chilli pepper – and ends up in hospitalCarolina Reaper appears to have narrowed the arteries in the competitive eater’s brain, causing a series of thunderclap headaches A man who took part in a chilli pepper eating contest ended up with more than he bargained for when he took on the hottest pepper in the world. After eating a Carolina Reaper pepper, the 34-year-old started dry heaving before developing a pain in his neck that turned i
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Popular Science
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Humans may have a surprising evolutionary advantage: Expressive eyebrowsAnimals Scientists still aren’t sure why early humans had such weird skulls—or why we don’t. It’s one of the first things you notice when you look at archaic humans in a textbook or museum. Just above the eyes rests an imposing feature, a prominent brow ridge…
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Live Science
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A Man Ate the 'World's Hottest' Pepper. Then the 'Thunderclap' Headaches StartedBiting into the "hottest pepper in the world" sounds painful enough. But for one man, the daring feat resulted in excruciating headaches.
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The Atlantic
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Silicon Valley Falls to EarthMark Zuckerberg FacebookWhen Mark Zuckerberg rehearsed the manic routine of a presidential candidate last year, he was of sound mind. Electoral success may have ultimately been beyond his talent set. But the culture accorded him the sort of profound respect that two-term senators and technocratic governors never receive. Zuckerberg sat on the cover of glossy magazines and reaped plaudits: for teaching himself Chinese (
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NYT > Science
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Trilobites: He Ate the World’s Hottest Pepper, Then Landed in the Hospital With ‘Thunderclap’ HeadachesAfter eating the Carolina Reaper during a contest, an unidentified patient suffered headaches so severe he was hospitalized. The symptoms resembled those of a stroke.
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The Scientist RSS

Homo Sapiens Fossil Pushes Back Date of Human Migration from AfricaAn 88,000-year-old finger bone places human ancestors in Arabia earlier than previously believed.
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The Scientist RSS

Human Cancer Drugs May Be Effective in Tasmanian DevilsA new study reveals similarities between the transmissible cancers that infect the endangered marsupials, and hints at ways to treat them.
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New Scientist – News
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One bad night’s sleep may increase levels of Alzheimer’s proteinA bad night’s sleep may lead to a protein linked to Alzheimer’s building up in the brain, but whether this raises the risk of the condition is unclear
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Science | The Guardian
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Theresa May launches £75m drive against prostate cancerProject will see 40,000 men recruited for research into the disease, which kills more than 11,000 a year The prime minister is to launch a new drive against prostate cancer, which kills more than 11,000 men every year in the UK and causes great anxiety and sometimes suffering for the 47,000 men who get a diagnosis. Theresa May will announce £75m for research that will recruit 40,000 men into tria
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The Atlantic
15
The Atlantic Politics & Policy Daily: Raiding PlacesToday in 5 Lines The FBI raided the office of President Trump’s personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, and seized records related to several topics, including payments to adult-film actress Stormy Daniels. Federal investigators also reportedly searched his home and hotel room. Trump condemned the suspected chemical attack in Syria as a “barbaric act” and said he will make a decision on the U.S. response
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
43
20-year-old mystery of malaria vaccine target solvedThe human piece of a malaria infection puzzle has been revealed for the first time, solving a long-standing mystery. A protein displayed on the surface of malaria parasites called 'TRAP' is a high-priority vaccine target, but how it interacts with human host cells has remained a puzzle. Scientists have discovered a receptor protein on the surface of human cells that the TRAP protein interacts with
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Latest Science News — ScienceDaily
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Lingering negative responses to stress linked with health a decade laterPeople whose negative emotional responses to stress carry over to the following day are more likely to report health problems and physical limitations later in life compared with peers who are able to 'let it go.'
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Live Science
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Please Help Name These Adorable Bald Eagle Hatchlings. Democracy Depends on It.For the love of democracy, please vote on what these adorable baby eagles should be named.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Practice leaders' and facilitators' perspectives on quality improvement may differPractice facilitators and practice leaders agreed on the value of a facilitated quality improvement program, but reached different judgments on practices' intensity and pace of change.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Leadership and adaptive reserve are not associated with blood pressure controlPrimary care leadership and practice resilience can strengthen organizational culture. In small primary care practices, however, practice adaptive reserve and leadership capability are not associated with baseline blood pressure control.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Interventions to decrease cardiovascular disease are not one-size-fits-allIn a study spanning four culturally different communities, tailored recruitment materials were developed to facilitate community engagement.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Solo medical practices outperform groups in treatment of cardiac diseaseSolo primary care practices in New York City are more likely than group practices to meet practice guidelines for reducing cardiovascular risk.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Major disruptions are frequent in primary careAmong 208 primary care practices, two-thirds experienced one or more major disruptive events, such as personnel changes or relocation, adversely affecting quality improvement efforts.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Use of quality improvement strategies among US primary care practicesSmall- to medium-sized practices with quality improvement systems (e.g., registries) are most likely to use quality improvement strategies. Practices with fewer major disruptions are more likely to use quality improvement strategies to improve cardiovascular preventive services.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Recruiting practices is costlyRecruiting practices for large scale quality improvement initiatives is difficult and costly ($5,529 per enrolled practice on average), and even more expensive for practices with no prior relationship with the study team.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Hospital ownership of practice may reduce physician burnoutAmong staff in small- to medium-sized primary care practices, hospital ownership is associated with positive perceptions of work environment and lower burnout.
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EurekAlert! – Breaking News

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality releases early findings from EvidenceNOWThe Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality today released early findings from EvidenceNOW, a multi-million dollar initiative to help primary care practices across the country more rapidly improve the heart health of Americans.
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BioNyt Videnskabens Verden (www.bionyt.dk) er Danmarks ældste populærvidenskabelige tidsskrift for naturvidenskab. Det er det eneste blad af sin art i Danmark, som er helliget international forskning inden for livsvidenskaberne.

Bladet bringer aktuelle, spændende forskningsnyheder inden for biologi, medicin og andre naturvidenskabelige områder som f.eks. klimaændringer, nanoteknologi, partikelfysik, astronomi, seksualitet, biologiske våben, ecstasy, evolutionsbiologi, kloning, fedme, søvnforskning, muligheden for liv på mars, influenzaepidemier, livets opståen osv.

Artiklerne roses for at gøre vanskeligt stof forståeligt, uden at den videnskabelige holdbarhed tabes.

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