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Scientists Say There May Be “Humans” All Over the Universe
1dImagine, if you will, that future humans manage to travel to other worlds and find… more humans. According to one University of Cambridge astrobiologist, that scenario may be more likely than you’d think. In a new interview with the BBC ‘s Science Focus magazine , an evolutionary palaeobiologist at the institution’s Department of Earth Sciences named Simon Conway Morris declared that researchers
Covid patients in ICU now almost all unvaccinated, says Oxford scientist
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17hCovid Patients ICU Oxford
Exclusive: Prof Sir Andrew Pollard says most of those infected who are fully vaccinated will experience only mild symptoms Opinion: Getting jabs to the unvaccinated never more critical Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage Covid-19 is no longer a disease of the vaccinated, the head of the Oxford jab programme has said. The “ongoing horror” of patients gasping for breath in
In a first test of its planetary defense efforts, NASA's going to shove an asteroid
1dNASA is about to launch the first mission of its new planetary defense office. A spacecraft will attempt to knock a small asteroid off course by ramming into it. (Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Steve Gribben)
Scientists Propose Jumpstarting Mars’ Magnetic Field to Make It Habitable
2dAny long term human presence on Mars — colonization, research, visit and travel — that didn’t confine settlers to airtight compounds would rely on a stable atmosphere that doesn’t lose too many particles or fry human bodies with too much radiation. Now, scientists from a star-studded list of universities and organizations, including NASA’s own chief scientist James Lauer Green, are suggesting tha
UK visa scheme for prize-winning scientists receives no applications
1dExclusive: A fast-track visa route for Nobel prize laureates and other award-winners in science, engineering, the humanities and medicine has failed to attract any applicants
Man Keeps a Rock For Years, Hoping It's Gold. It Turned Out to Be Far More Valuable
1dNo wonder he couldn't crack it open!
Work From Home Works Until You Need Time Off
1dT he change started about a year ago. I had just finished cooking my Thanksgiving turkey. I’d picked up smoking meats as a hobby during the first year of the pandemic, but that day, I couldn’t really taste much. Later that night, I wasn’t able to smell anything. Soon I was quarantined in a room in our house. For 11 days my wonderful, patient wife would bring bottles of Pedialyte to my door. I was
Why people with mental illness are at higher risk of COVID
1dFederal health officials have been urging adults with psychiatric conditions to get a booster shot to increase their COVID protection. It turns out being mentally ill puts you at higher risk. (Image credit: Andriy Onufriyenko/Getty Images)
Republicans are changing state laws to try to get out of federal vaccine mandates
1dNationwide, conservative lawmakers have come together to propose and pass bills aimed at nullifying federal vaccine mandates. Public health experts worry exemptions make the workforce vulnerable. (Image credit: Orlin Wagner/AP)
United Kingdom Declares Octopuses, Squids Are Sentient Beings
2hFeel the Love The United Kingdom has confirmed what everybody who ugly cried during “My Octopus Teacher” already knew: Octopuses are sentient — capable, that is, of perceiving things like pain and pleasure. The country is adding an amendment to its Animal Welfare Sentience Bill to recognize creatures such as octopus, crabs, squids, and lobsters along with “all other decapod crustaceans and cephal
Post-Brexit scheme to lure Nobel winners to UK fails to attract single applicant
11hProgramme to allow those with prestigious global prizes to get fast-track visas dismissed as ‘elitist’ and a ‘joke’ A post-Brexit scheme to draw the world’s most celebrated academics and other leading figures to the UK has failed to attract a single applicant in the six months since it opened, it has been reported. The visa route open to Nobel laureates and other prestigious global prize winners
A New Kind of Cell Discovered in The Heart Seems to Be Critical For Your Heartbeat
22hWe've only just identified it.
New tests show neolithic pits near Stonehenge were human-made
11hRing of hollows has been called the largest prehistoric structure found in Britain, but some were sceptical When a series of deep pits were discovered near the world heritage site of Stonehenge last year, archaeologists excitedly described it as the largest prehistoric structure ever found in Britain – only for some colleagues to dismiss the pits as mere natural features. Now scientific tests hav
Elon Musk Threatens Bank With “One Star Review on Yelp” Unless They Drop Lawsuit
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1dMusk JPMorgan Yelp
Bank Memes Last week JPMorgan sued Tesla , arguing the company owed it $162 million. “We have provided Tesla multiple opportunities to fulfill its contractual obligations, so it is unfortunate that they have forced this issue into litigation,” read a statement issued by the bank. And now, Musk is beefing with the bank — in the most Musk way imaginable. “If JPM doesn’t withdraw their lawsuit, I wi
Watch the entire Beaver Moon lunar eclipse in 1 minute time-lapse
1dIt was the longest partial eclipse in 580 years.
‘It was terrifying’: ancient book’s journey from Irish bog to museum treasure
2dA new book tells the story of the painstaking process to preserve the 1,200-year-old Faddan More Psalter One summer’s day in Tipperary as peat was being dug from a bog, a button peered out from the freshly cut earth. The find set off a five-year journey of conservation to retrieve and preserve what lay beyond: a 1,200-year-old psalm book in its original cover. Bogs across Europe have thrown up al
Australia declares La Niña phenomenon has begun
14hThe climate pattern can lead to significant weather changes in different parts of the world.
Nasa to slam spacecraft into asteroid in mission to avoid future Armaggedon
1dTest drive of planetary defence system aims to provide data on how to deflect asteroids away from Earth That’s one large rock, one momentous shift in our relationship with space. On Wednesday, Nasa will launch a mission to deliberately slam a spacecraft into an asteroid to try to alter its orbit – the first time humanity has tried to interfere in the gravitational dance of the solar system. The a
AstraZeneca CEO links Europe’s Covid surge to rejection of its vaccine
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12hAstraZeneca Europe
Scientists sceptical about Pascal Soriot’s suggestion Oxford jab may give longer-lasting protection Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage Scientists have reacted with scepticism to claims by AstraZeneca’s CEO that low uptake of the Oxford/AstraZeneca jab among elderly Europeans could explain the current surge in Covid-19 infections in mainland Europe. Pascal Soriot told BB
Evolution Tells Us We Might Be the Only Intelligent Life in the Universe
2dAre we alone in the universe? It comes down to whether intelligence is a probable outcome of natural selection, or an improbable fluke . By definition, probable events occur frequently, improbable events occur rarely—or once. Our evolutionary history shows that many key adaptations—not just intelligence, but complex animals, complex cells, photosynthesis, and life itself—were unique, one-off even
Scientist reveals cause of lost magnetism at meteorite site
1dA University of Alaska Fairbanks scientist has discovered a method for detecting and better defining meteorite impact sites that have long lost their telltale craters. The discovery could further the study of not only Earth's geology but also that of other bodies in our solar system.
New research outlines how longer lives are tied to physical activity
1dJust about everyone knows that exercise is good for you. Some people can even rattle off reasons it keeps your muscles and joints strong, and how it fights off certain diseases. But how many people can tell you the story of why and how physical activity was built into human biology?
Astronomers detect a black hole in NGC 1850
1dAn international team of astronomers reports the detection of a black hole in a globular cluster known as NGC 1850. The newly found black hole is about 11 times more massive than the sun and turns out to be a part of a binary system. The finding was detailed in a paper published November 12 on arXiv.org.
Skyrmions: Fundamental particles modeled in beam of light
1dScientists at the University of Birmingham have succeeded in creating an experimental model of an elusive kind of fundamental particle called a skyrmion in a beam of light.
How well do wet masks contain droplets? Study shows damp masks still stop respiratory droplet penetration
1dAfter studying the effectiveness of varying layers of masks in stopping respiratory droplets from escaping face masks, a team of international researchers has now turned their attention to modeling what happens to droplets when they come in contact with wet masks. Their results show that damp masks are still effective at stopping these droplets from escaping the mask and being atomized into smalle
A New Theory for Systems That Defy Newton’s Third Law
2dIn nonreciprocal systems, “exceptional points” are helping researchers understand phase transitions and possibly other phenomena.
Covid-19 news: Unvaccinated have 14 times greater risk of covid death
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10hCovid Europe US Austria
The latest coronavirus news updated every day including coronavirus cases, the latest news, features and interviews from New Scientist and essential information about the covid-19 pandemic
New Australopithecus sediba bones suggest extinct hominin was bipedal
10hThe discovery of new Australopithecus sediba fossils mean we can now reconstruct most of the spine of one individual, and strengthen the case that the species was bipedal at least some of the time
The Tamagotchi Was Tiny, but Its Impact Was Huge
11hIt’s been 25 years since the little device first hit store shelves, but its simple brilliance lives on in today’s most popular games.
New deep learning method adds 301 planets to Kepler's total count
1dScientists recently added a whopping 301 newly validated exoplanets to the total exoplanet tally. The throng of planets is the latest to join the 4,569 already validated planets orbiting a multitude of distant stars. How did scientists discover such a huge number of planets, seemingly all at once? The answer lies with a new deep neural network called ExoMiner.
Mystery of high performing novel solar cell materials revealed in stunning clarity
1dResearchers from the University of Cambridge have used a suite of correlative, multimodal microscopy methods to visualize, for the first time, why perovskite materials are seemingly so tolerant of defects in their structure. Their findings were published today in Nature Nanotechnology.
DNA replication under the microscope
1dCryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) has enabled researchers to study how the DNA replication machinery assembles at sites where DNA is damaged.
Covid-19 news: Austria goes back into lockdown
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1dUK Europe COVID Years
The latest coronavirus news updated every day including coronavirus cases, the latest news, features and interviews from New Scientist and essential information about the covid-19 pandemic
The host galaxy of a fast radio burst
1dFast radio bursts (FRBs) are bright pulses of emission at radio wavelengths (seen mostly at wavelengths of tens of centimeters) whose physical mechanism(s) are mysterious. The bursts last between hundredths of a millisecond to a few milliseconds, and none of them has been associated with a specific source, even though thousands of FRBs have been detected since the first one was spotted fourteen ye
Team maps out how autophagy functions in mammals; SARS-CoV-2 infection can disrupt the process
1dThe intricate biological process known as autophagy plays a vital role in keeping our cells healthy and functioning by sweeping up and recycling bits of debris and invading microorganisms.
Getting quantum dots to stop blinking
1dQuantum dots, discovered in the 1990s, have a wide range of applications and are perhaps best known for producing vivid colors in some high-end televisions. But for some potential uses, such as tracking biochemical pathways of a drug as it interacts with living cells, progress has been hampered by one seemingly uncontrollable characteristic: a tendency to blink off at random intervals. That doesn'
New possibilities for life at the bottom of Earth's ocean, and perhaps in oceans on other planets
6hIn the strange, dark world of the ocean floor, underwater fissures, called hydrothermal vents, host complex communities of life. These vents belch scorching hot fluids into extremely cold seawater, creating the chemical forces necessary for the small organisms that inhabit this extreme environment to live.
Two-meter COVID-19 rule is 'arbitrary measurement' of safety
8hA new study has shown that the airborne transmission of COVID-19 is highly random and suggests that the two-meter rule was a number chosen from a risk 'continuum', rather than any concrete measurement of safety.
New process breaks bulk metal into atoms for sustainable catalyst production
8hScientists have discovered a new process to break bulk metal into atoms to produce heterogeneous catalysts without any chemical waste, which will lead to new sustainable ways of making and using molecules in the most atom-efficient way.
Vehicles are an under-recognized source of urban ammonia pollution
11hBy disrupting normal societal activities, such as driving, COVID-19 lockdowns afforded a unique opportunity to study their impacts on the environment. Researchers now report in ACS' Environmental Science & Technology Letters that satellite data from before and during the spring 2020 lockdown in Los Angeles shows that vehicles, rather than agriculture, are the main source of urban airborne ammonia
Prehistoric moms cared for kids better than we thought
12hA new study from The Australian National University (ANU) has revealed the death rate of babies in ancient societies is not a reflection of poor healthcare, disease and other factors, but instead is an indication of the number of babies born in that era.
When bees get a taste for dead things: Meat-eating 'vulture bees' sport acidic guts
13hA little-known species of tropical bee has evolved an extra tooth for biting flesh and a gut that more closely resembles that of vultures rather than other bees.
Space telescope launch delayed after site incident
14hThe launch of the James Webb Space Telescope, which astronomers hope will herald a new era of discovery, has been delayed until December 22 after an accident at its launch facility in French Guiana, NASA said Monday.
Tectonic shift in Southern Ocean caused dramatic ancient cooling event
3hNew research has shed light on a sudden cooling event 34 million years ago that contributed to formation of the Antarctic ice sheets.
Rare Einstein papers set record at Paris auction
5hAlbert Einstein's handwritten notes for the theory of relativity fetched a record 11.6 million euros ($13 million) at an auction in Paris on Tuesday.
Women are less blinded by attractiveness than men
8hMany studies in psychology have shown that people judge how trustworthy a person is on the basis of their first impression of the other person's facial features. Whether there actually are differences between men and women in this respect has now been investigated by the researchers Dr. Johanna Brustkern, Prof. Dr. Markus Heinrichs and Dr. Bastian Schiller from the Department of Psychology at the
Pesticide found to reduce fertility in blue orchard bee
10hA pair of researchers at the University of California, Davis has found that the neonicotinoid pesticide imidacloprid can reduce fertility rates in the blue orchard bee. In their paper published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the group describes testing the response of the valuable pollinator to the presence of imidacloprid.
Dart: Mission to smack Dimorphos asteroid set for launch
22hA spacecraft is set to launch on a mission to nudge an asteroid off course.
23h
Scientists Warn That Marketers Are Trying to Inject Ads Into Dreams
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2dWarn Marketers Ads
Researchers and sleep experts are ringing alarm bells about a nascent marketing tactic: injecting advertisements into your dreams. A trio of researchers at Harvard, MIT and the University of Montreal published an essay on dream hacking in Aeon warning that, according to a recent survey, 77 percent of marketers plan to use dreamtech advertising in the next three years. “Multiple marketing studies
2d
Scientists Say Mini-Black Holes May Have Smashed Into the Moon
3dBlack Hole Holes A team of researchers say that the Moon is peppered with craters from miniature black holes — and they may reveal some breakthrough insights on dark matter. The scientists, who published a paper of their findings in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society , believe that swarms of atom-sized black holes formed shortly after the Big Bang. As these hyper-dense objects
Why Was This Ancient Mammoth Tusk Discovered at the Bottom of the Ocean?
1dA discovery in the Pacific Ocean off California leads to “an ‘Indiana Jones’ mixed with ‘Jurassic Park’ moment.”
Trust the Teachers
1dEvery effective American teacher seeks the trust of society, of parents, and of the young people they teach. Public education as a whole depends on these bonds of trust. Our divisive politics regarding how to teach children about slavery, race, and other difficult subjects in school has broken that trust. Anyone who has ever taught for one day knows that trust must be earned. Facing a classroom f
NASA Is About to Launch a Probe That Will Smash Into an Asteroid, Nudging Its Orbit
2dYou can watch the launch online!
Scientists urge caution over proposals to impose vaccine passports in UK
2dExperts’ warning as Covid crackdowns across Europe result in widespread protests Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage Proposals to impose vaccine passports and other restrictions on the movements of unvaccinated people in the UK should be treated with caution, scientists warned last week. Such plans would not lead to rapid reductions in Covid-19 case numbers and could tri
NASA Is Launching an Asteroid-Smashing Spacecraft Today and It’s Powered by an Ion Drive
2hAsteroid Slam NASA is launching a spacecraft destined to slam into an asteroid as part of its Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission tonight, from the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. Its purpose: to test whether we’re capable of deflecting a killer asteroid before it strikes Earth. But before it meets its final destination, NASA is using the spacecraft to test out brand new io
Russian anti-satellite missile test draws condemnation from space companies and countries
4hAcross the globe, nations and space companies alike are speaking out about Russia's anti-satellite (ASAT) test that forced astronauts in space to take cover.
Who invented the lightbulb?
10hThough Thomas Edison credited as the man who invented the lightbulb, this revolutionary technology was in fact developed by several inventors.
Magnetic Anomaly in New Mexico Reveals an Invisible Signature of Meteorite Impacts
18hThere's something unusual about these rocks.
The Magellanic Stream May Be 5 Times Closer to Us Than We Ever Realized
19hThis could change the galaxy's future.
1d
Housework may promote health in old age, study suggests
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1dHousework Yishun Study
Researchers found chores could help prevent disease and falls, though other experts have urged caution Household chores might seem a drag, but researchers have suggested tasks like dusting, scrubbing floors and washing the windows might help adults to stay healthy into old age. Writing in the journal BMJ Open, a Singapore-based team of researchers said regular physical activity “improves physical
Elon Musk Says “At Least” Half His Tweets are Made on Toilet
1dPotty Humor In an extremely shocking turn of events, Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has claimed that he posts “at least” half of his tweets from the toilet. “At least 50% of my tweets were made on a porcelain throne,” Musk tweeted Sunday night , presumably from the toilet. “It gives me solace,” he added . On a basic level, this isn’t that shocking, because really, who among us can claim they don’
The Algorithm That Lets Particle Physicists Count Higher Than Two
1dThomas Gehrmann remembers the deluge of mathematical expressions that came cascading down his computer screen one day 20 years ago. He was trying to calculate the odds that three jets of elementary particles would erupt from two particles smashing together. It was the type of bread-and-butter calculation physicists often do to check whether their theories match the results of experiments. Source
Video captures great white shark's gruesome attack on a seal near Cape Cod
1dA great white shark attacks a seal near Cape Cod, and video captured the gory battle.
One Day, Seeing a Helicopter Fly on Mars May Be Commonplace. That Day Is Not Today
1dJust look at it go!
Our Universe Is Finely Tuned For Life, And There's an Explanation For Why That Is So
1dIt's no accident we're here… right?
Experts Say AR Could Let People “Reality Block” Stuff They Don’t Like
2dIf you thought polarization was bad during the last two elections, get ready for the next iteration of Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg’s power over reality. Experts tell Business Insider that the company’s Metaverse could allow people to “reality block” stuff they don’t like, even hiding entire unwelcome topics from users’ vision. “Folks should be worried,” AR entrepreneur Shawn Frayne told Insider
Watching Saturday Night Live Is Like Doomscrolling
2dWatching Saturday Night Live has always been an uneven experience—there are duds and gems, silliness and darker satire, and often stark shifts in tone from one sketch to the next. But given the anxious state of the world today, watching the show has started to feel uncannily like doomscrolling through a social-media feed. The news the show is riffing on has been unrelentingly bleak for years, and
Here's Why Earthquakes' 'Four-Leaf Clover' Shockwaves Are Dangerous Instead of Lucky
2dYour chances of survival might depend on where you're standing.
The next giant leap: why Boris Johnson wants to ‘go big’ on quantum computing
2dOpportunities for business, health and the environment offered by superfast processors are huge – and so are the hurdles The technology behind everyday computers such as smartphones and laptops has revolutionised modern life, to the extent that our day-to-day lives are unimaginable without it. But an alternative method of computing is advancing rapidly, and Boris Johnson is among the people who h
The Dangerous Experiment on Teen Girls
2dS ocial media gets blamed for many of America’s ills, including the polarization of our politics and the erosion of truth itself. But proving that harms have occurred to all of society is hard. Far easier to show is the damage to a specific class of people: adolescent girls, whose rates of depression, anxiety, and self-injury surged in the early 2010s, as social-media platforms proliferated and e
The Sierra Nevada Might Have Two Geological Birthdays – One Old And One Young
2dNo wonder it's so hard to date.
Simulated Mars Base Got Kinda Rebellious, Worrying Scientists
3hOne of the things that astronauts need to contend with when we colonize Mars is isolation. After all, they’ll be alone with just their fellow crew members for months or even years at a time. Plus, it could get even get worse if a “The Martian” situation occurs and someone ends up totally alone on the Red Planet. Unfortunately, a recent long term isolation experiment on a simulated Mars base found
NASA Pushes Back James Webb Launch After Mysterious “Incident”
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7hNASA Webb Telescope
Unplanned Release After decades of delays and billions of dollar spent, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is encountering even more hiccups ahead of its launch — and this time, it appears to be plain old human error. This time, technicians encountered a heart-stopping “incident” while mounting the structure to the Ariane 5 rocket’s launch vehicle adapter. “A sudden, unplanned release of a clamp b
Biden Needs an Enemy
12hLess than a year ago, America was led by a man who governed to please the Fox News host Tucker Carlson and toyed with the idea of imposing martial law . After Donald Trump, you’d think the American people would just enjoy having a normal president who doesn’t use his Twitter account to threaten neighboring countries or corporations . But they don’t. Take one look at national polling numbers and y
Vaquitas Could Soon Be Extinct. Mexico Will Largely Determine Their Fate.
14hOnly about 10 vaquitas remain, but scientists say there’s still hope for the elusive porpoises. Their fate largely depends on the Mexican government.
Six ways shoebox-sized satellites are trying to change the world
14hThe CubeSat began as an educational tool but is now helping out humanity
El Salvador President Announces “Bitcoin City” Tax Haven
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23hEl Salvador Bitcoin
Bitcoin City El Salvador’s president Nayib Bukele has announced plans to build the world’s first fully crypto-backed “Bitcoin City.” Bukele made the announcement over the weekend as part of a cringe-inducing live show featuring bright concert-style lighting — and even tacky CGI UFOs , for some reason. He says Bitcoin City will be income, property, and capital gains tax free, and be funded by El S
A Thanksgiving History Lesson in a Handful of Corn
1dThe cornmeal that has become a staple of the holiday table reflects millenniums of work by Native Americans — a legacy that Indigenous people are trying to keep alive.
Adele’s Shocking Attack on Complacency
1dNo one broke Adele’s heart this time. Until now, her music has centered on the brutality of romantic rejection—the way it can throw a human soul against a wall, snapping bones that never heal right, instilling a kind of existential PTSD. Yet, though her new album is about “ divorce, babe, divorce ,” betrayal, cruelty, and nasty rumors are for once not part of the story. According to Adele’s inter
Looking for a Stolen Idol? Visit the Museum of the Manhattan D.A.
1dInvestigators have seized so many looted artifacts — more than 3,000 — that storing and caring for them until they can be returned is now a full-time job.
In Leaked Email, Elon Musk Issues Interesting Warning to Tesla Managers
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1dElon Musk Tesla Music
Chief Email Officer According to an email sent to all staff at Tesla in early October and obtained by CNBC , CEO Elon Musk warned that any manager who doesn’t execute his directions, state why they believe he is wrong, or request further clarification, will be “asked to resign immediately.” It’s a decisive tone that shouldn’t come as too much of a shock — Musk is the CEO, after all. And, to be fa
Do Childhood Colds Help the Body Respond to COVID?
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1d2 COVID 19 Vaccine
A mechanism known as “original antigenic sin” protects some people from flu. Whether it helps immune reactions to coronaviruses is still unclear — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
How to Talk to Your Family About Cryptocurrency
1dCryptocurrencies have taken the financial world by storm this year. Practically everybody is talking about digital tokens. But is it really goodbye US dollar? Not so fast. When your uncle asks if he should invest in some Bitcoin — or Floki , for that matter — you should have some answers ready. So without further ado, here’s your one-stop shop if you want to sound like you know what you’re talkin
How many black holes are there in the universe?
1dIn a recent study, researchers determined that about 1% of all the "normal" (that is, not dark) matter in the universe is bound up inside black holes.
5 non-returning Aboriginal boomerangs discovered in dried-up riverbed
1dFive rare "non-returning" boomerangs found in dry riverbed in South Australia were probably used hundreds of years ago to hunt waterbirds, according to a new study.
Why Bosses Are Inflexible About Flexible Work Arrangements
1dSince lockdown, employees have adopted new work habits, but many execs want a return to the old normal.
Why Is France So Afraid of God?
1dIllustrations by Cristiana Couceiro W hat forces hold a liberal democracy together? What forces can tear a liberal democracy apart? These were some of the questions on my mind as I listened earlier this year to the French education minister, Jean-Michel Blanquer, defend a proposal that had been placed before the nation. The setting was grand: the French Senate, a chamber as elegant as an opera ho
Are zebras white with black stripes or black with white stripes?
2dZebras' black-and-white coloration is iconic, but what color are their stripes?
The Complicated Truth About Trump 2024
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2dTrump Biden 2024 Five
If Donald Trump tries to run for president again, one of his former campaign advisers has a plan to dissuade him. Anticipating that Trump may not know who Adlai Stevenson was or that he lost two straight presidential elections in the 1950s, this ex-adviser figures he or someone else might need to explain the man’s unhappy fate. They’ll remind Trump that if he were beaten in 2024, he would join St
Is Delta the last Covid ‘super variant’?
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2dDelta Covid 19 Variant
The Delta variant was first detected a year ago and is now dominant across the globe. Scientists are concerned that a new strain could supersede it Every week, a group of epidemiologists across the north-east of the United States joins a Zoom call entirely devoted to discussing the latest hints of new Covid-19 variants being reported around the world. “It’s like the weather report,” says William
A Mass Extinction 250 Million Years Ago Seems to Have Had Multiple Causes
2dMost species didn't stand a chance.
Ant Colonies Can Share a Single 'Social' Metabolism, All Thanks to The Way They Kiss
3dSoldered by saliva.
Watch NASA Launch DART, a Mission to Crash Into an Asteroid
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6hNASA Earth DART Asteroid
An early morning liftoff kicks off DART, NASA’s first mission to test a spacecraft that could one day save Earth from a deadly space rock.
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Pascal Soriot links AstraZeneca jab to low UK hospitalisations
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10hAstraZeneca Europe
Chief executive says more data needed to explain Europe’s higher rate of admissions
The Armpits of White Boys
11hD uring the predeparture orientation at the crumbling three-star hotel by the sea—with its white portico and its lobbies smelling like a Native Jetty swamp—the exchange student is warned about a number of things. Ex-exchange students—by now so Americanized, you would think they had spent their entire lives in the U.S.—regale him with anecdotes both funny and scary: host fathers casually dropping
The Tomb Raiders of the Upper East Side
13hW hen Matthew Bogdanos got a tip about a looted mummy coffin whose corpse had been dumped in the Nile, he approached the coffin’s buyer—the Metropolitan Museum of Art—with few of the courtesies traditionally accorded New York’s premier cultural institution. Bogdanos, a 64-year-old prosecutor in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, is chief of its Antiquities Trafficking Unit. The only one of
We May Have Underestimated The First Known Outbreak of Bubonic Plague
20hHow the 'first pandemic' took hold.
Do Babies Cry in The Womb? Ultrasounds Show Something Strange Going On
20hWhat are they doing in there?
This New Hubble Pic Reveals a Dramatic Cosmic Phenomenon in All Its Gory Detail
1dFrom chaos comes beauty.
'False fossils' littered across Mars may complicate the search for life on Red Planet
1dResearchers warn that there are dozens of potential false biosignatures on Mars that could hinder the search for alien life.
Researchers Want to Restore ‘Good Noise’ in Older Brains
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1dCOVID 19 Brain
Aging people lose variation in brain oxygen levels—a sign of declining cognitive flexibility. A new drug study probes whether that loss can be reversed.
Polluting greenhouse gases being sold online and smuggled to UK
8hExperts say hydrofluorocarbons, which are used in fridges and aerosols, make global warming worse.
1st drug to treat genetic cause of dwarfism approved by FDA
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12hFDA Achondroplasia
The drug is designed to stimulate bone growth and increase height in affected children.
The Conservative War on Education That Failed
13hI n the recent governor’s race in Virginia, Glenn Youngkin scored a huge upset win days after promising to ban critical race theory from Virginia schools. Youngkin is hardly the only Republican calling for school bans. In Texas, Representative Matt Krause sent a letter to school administrators about books in their district. Did they have Ta-Nehisi Coates on their shelves? Isabel Wilkerson’s Caste
The Hubble Telescope Checks In With the Most Distant Planets
14hThe spacecraft’s farseeing eye once again sets its gaze on Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
Climate change: Conspiracy theories found on foreign-language Wikipedia
14hPages in languages other than English wrongly suggest scientists are divided over the causes of global warming.
How a dream coach helped Benedict Cumberbatch and Jane Campion put the unconscious on screen
1dKim Gillingham explains how her work on The Power of the Dog enabled the ‘lioness of an artist’ and her ‘translucent’ star to access their inmost drives To access his dreams the surrealist artist Salvador Dalí napped while sitting on a chair, holding keys over an upturned metal plate. After he lost consciousness, the keys dropped onto the plate, jangling him awake so he could paint fresh from his
What we know so far about AY.4.2 and other new coronavirus variants
1dThe delta variant could be overtaken by AY.4.2, a more transmissible coronavirus variant that may be less likely to cause symptoms, while another variant from central Africa is being closely monitored
The 5:2 Diet Has One Key Advantage Over Traditional Diets, New Study Claims
1dThis could be really important.
Bruce Willis Apparently Refused to Watch NASA Launch Asteroid-Smashing Rocket
1hRough Necks NASA invited movie star Bruce Willis to the launch of a spacecraft that’s gonna smash into an asteroid to see if we could deflect a killer space rock — that’s the plot to Willis’s 1998 “Armageddon,” for those keeping score — but he apparently had better things to do. As The Washington Post ‘s Christian Davenport tweeted , NASA Administrator Bill Nelson admitted that Willis isn’t atten
Top Employees Depart SpaceX as Pressure Mounts for Next Gen Rocket Development
4hSeparation Anxiety Things are shaking up at SpaceX — and it’s not just another Starship explosion . Three of the aerospace company’s top executives have left their roles in the past two weeks, CNBC reports . They include VP of propulsion Will Heltsley, VP of mission and launch operations Lee Rosen, and senior director of mission and launch operations Ricky Lim. What that all means for the spacefl
Uh Oh, Someone Built a Tesla With Dual Giant Machine Guns
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5hTesla Model X Machine
Machine Gun Tesla It’s exactly what coffee culture needed — a YouTube studio for gun nuts partnering with coffee roaster Black Rifle Coffee to mount dual machine guns to the inside of a Tesla Model X. Hey, at least, it makes for a clickworthy thumbnail. The Model X got the militaristic makeover courtesy of FullMag Studios, a Tennessee-based video producer. The car features a full-service espresso
How to Talk to Your Family About the Metaverse
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7hMetaverse VR AR Asia
With the news of Mark Zuckerberg’s new pet project to create a fully-digital world, the metaverse is a topic that’s getting more buzz than ever. Naturally, your mom or dad might have a few questions about it when it comes time for Thanksgiving. Heck, you might have a few of the same questions yourself. Well, have no fear: We’ve created a handy guide with all the essential talking points you need
COVID Tests Weren’t Designed for This
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8hCovid One HSE PCR Testing
Updated at 12:44 p.m. ET on November, 23 2021 In a world with perfect coronavirus tests, people could swab their nose or spit in a tube and get near-instant answers about their SARS-CoV-2 status. The products would be free, fast, and completely reliable. Positives would immediately shuttle people out of public spaces and, if needed, into treatment ; negatives could green-light entry into every st
Why Frozen Turkeys Explode When Deep-Fried
10hWhen water and boiling oil mix, the result can be volatile — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
NASA Really Wants to Slam a Spacecraft Into an Asteroid
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12hNASA DART Earth Dimorphos
The DART mission is scheduled to launch early Wednesday. It will crash into an asteroid to see if it's possible to deflect one.
Buried in Volcanic Ash, Scenes from the Canary Islands
1dThe Cumbre Vieja volcano has now been erupting for more than two months, continuing to generate lava flows and earthquakes on the Spanish island of La Palma. It has also been spewing millions of cubic meters of volcanic ash into the air, and as the ash falls, it blankets the nearby landscape. The ash can fall like hail or drift like dust, and it piles up and drifts in the wind, covering houses, f
Astronomers have found a second trojan asteroid sharing Earth’s orbit
1dAn Earth trojan is an asteroid that shares our planet’s orbit around the sun, moving just ahead of or behind our planet – and astronomers have now discovered that we have two
Devious ‘Tardigrade’ Malware Hits Biomanufacturing Facilities
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1dTardigrade Malware
The surprisingly sophisticated attack is “actively spreading” throughout the industry.
The science of preserving sight | Joshua Chu-Tan
1dAs you get older, your eyes worsen and become susceptible to a disease called age-related macular degeneration — the leading cause of blindness, with no cure in sight. Sharing the science of how your vision works, researcher Joshua Chu-Tan offers breakthrough insights on a lesser-known RNA that could change the treatment for this disease, preserving the gift of sight for longer and improving the
Designing microbe factories for sustainable chemicals
1dThe science is clear: fossil fuels are harmful to the environment. So why is it so difficult for us to stop using them? Economic reasons are at least part of the answer. From our energy grid to the manufacturing of certain textiles and other products, many parts of our society are built to use fossil fuels. Transitioning away will come at some cost.
No, 'Overtraining' Is Not The Reason For Your Weight Loss Plateau. Here's Why
1dIt could be something else instead.
From oximeters to AI, where bias in medical devices may lurk
2dAnalysis: issues with some gadgets could contribute to poorer outcomes for women and people of colour The UK health secretary, Sajid Javid, has announced a review into systemic racism and gender bias in medical devices in response to concerns it could contribute to poorer outcomes for women and people of colour. Writing in the Sunday Times , Javid said: “It is easy to look at a machine and assume
Misremembering Something May Be Evidence That Your Memory Is Actually Working
3dTo err is human… and healthy.
The McDonald’s Ice Cream Machine Hacking Saga Has a New Twist
3hThe cold war between a startup and a soft-serve machine manufacturer is heating up, thanks to a newly released trove of internal emails.
The Football Game That Transcends Tradition
4hPhotographs by Julien James This past Saturday, after a one-year hiatus because of the coronavirus pandemic, more than 50,000 spectators filled the Camping World football stadium in Orlando to watch the Florida Classic—the 76th face-off between Florida A&M University and Bethune-Cookman University. The storied rivalry between two of America’s premier historically Black universities is a part of t
The Tempting, Poisonous Wealth of House of Gucci
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8hGaga House Gucci Patrizia
In House of Gucci , opulence is not always alluring. But Ridley Scott’s new movie takes its time before delving into the insidious, gilded world of the Italian luxury label. The film, which charts the turbulent marriage of the fashion heir Maurizio Gucci (played by Adam Driver) to the ambitious Patrizia Reggiani (Lady Gaga), instead opens with the pair’s gentle romance. He’s a law student who wan
How AI Is Deepening Our Understanding of the Brain
9hArtificial neural networks are famously inspired by their biological counterparts. Yet compared to human brains, these algorithms are highly simplified, even “cartoonish.” Can they teach us anything about how the brain works? For a panel at the Society for Neuroscience annual meeting this month, the answer is yes. Deep learning wasn’t meant to model the brain. In fact, it contains elements that a
It's Time To Fear the Fungi
10hClimate change could threaten humans' protection from fungal infections. It's time to fear the fungi.
NSO was about to sell hacking tools to France. Now it’s in crisis.
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11hNSO Israeli Spyware
The story has been updated to include the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ denial that it was in the process of purchasing NSO Group tools. In July, accusations emerged that spyware from NSO Group had targeted French president Emmanuel Macron, causing a major controversy. The company denied the claims—part of a string of allegations about use of the Israeli hacking group’s Pegasus software . I
Evidence of Hanukkah's Maccabee rebellion unearthed in Israel
12hMore than 2,000 years ago, a guerrilla army of Jewish rebels stormed and defeated a stronghold of the occupying Seleucid Empire.
Urban trees are a singular weapon in stormwater management
12hIt's hard to overstate the environmental importance of trees, which among other functions pull climate change-inducing carbon from the atmosphere, clean the air of toxins and help control runoff.
Humans Have Broken a Fundamental Law of the Ocean
12hThe size of undersea creatures seemed to follow a strange but stable pattern—until industrial fishing came along.
Cancel Culture Isn’t the Real Threat to Academic Freedom
13hT he woman in the video is about the same age as my mother. She is speaking at a school-board meeting in Virginia as a concerned parent. “I’ve been very alarmed by what’s going on in our schools,” she reads from prepared notes. “You are now teaching, training our children to be social-justice warriors and to loathe our country and our history.” Her voice is soft but stern. She recounts her youth
Another Problem for Latinx
13hE lection Night almost killed Latinx . As results started trickling in, media figures and political strategists struggled to process what they were seeing in Florida and Texas. The “blue wave” that polls had suggested would punish Republicans was instead showing a dramatic shift in Latino-voter support toward the GOP. What could explain this? Democrats’ embrace of “wokeness” and, in this case, us
You Should Be Afraid of the Next ‘Lab Leak’
14hCovid might not have come out of a medical research lab, but it raises some urgent questions about how those facilities operate.
Rare Einstein manuscript is 'most valuable' ever to come to auction
1dA rare 54-page manuscript written by Albert Einstein and Michele Besso could earn a record sum at auction on Tuesday, Nov. 23
Everything Is a Multivitamin
1dIn 1993, a SWAT team equipped with night-vision goggles and assault rifles surrounded Mel Gibson’s mansion under the cover of darkness. They burst into the home, eventually finding the movie star wearing a bathrobe in his kitchen. Gibson put his hands up and the agents cuffed him immediately, over protestations that he had done nothing wrong, and certainly nothing dangerous. His crime? The posses
Octopus-inspired camouflage fabric can change colour to blend in
1dA material made with layers that have different tensions wrinkles when heated, which can be used to reflect light such that an object matches its surroundings
Before geoengineering to mitigate climate change, researchers must consider some fundamental chemistry
1dIt's a tempting thought: With climate change so difficult to manage and nations unwilling to take decisive action, what if we could mitigate its effects by setting up a kind of chemical umbrella—a layer of sulfuric acid in the upper atmosphere that could reflect the sun's radiation and cool the Earth?
Double Asteroid Redirection Test launch could be key step forward in planetary defense
1dNASA's latest launch into outer space is going to make an impact. In fact, that's its entire mission.
Peeking into a chrysalis, videos reveal growth of butterfly wing scales
1dIf you brush against the wings of a butterfly, you will likely come away with a fine sprinkling of powder. This lepidopteran dust is made up of tiny microscopic scales, hundreds of thousands of which paper a butterfly's wings like shingles on a wafer-thin roof. The structure and arrangement of these scales give a butterfly its color and shimmer, and help shield the insect from the elements.
Kids, teens believe girls aren't interested in computer science, study shows
1dChildren as young as age 6 develop ideas that girls are less interested than boys in computer science and engineering—stereotypes that can extend into the late teens and contribute to a gender gap in STEM college courses and related careers.
Security is everyone’s job in the workplace
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1dDruva AI Cloud Data
Hackers around the globe are smart: they know that it isn’t just good code that helps them break into systems; it’s also about understanding—and preying upon—human behavior. The threat to businesses in the form of cyberattacks is only growing—especially as companies make the shift to embrace hybrid work. But John Scimone, senior vice president and chief security officer at Dell Technologies, says
Surprise discovery of two new—and very loud—frog species
1dScientists from the University of Newcastle, Australian Museum, South Australian Museum, and Queensland National Parks and Wildlife have found and described two new, very loud frog species from eastern Australia: the Slender Bleating Tree Frog, Litoria balatus, and Screaming Tree Frog, Litoria quiritatus.
Climate warming forecasts may be too rosy: study
1dUN projections of how much current climate policies and national pledges to cut carbon pollution will slow global warming are more uncertain than widely assumed, researchers reported Monday.
Magellanic Stream arcing over Milky Way may be five times closer than previously thought
1dOur galaxy is not alone. Swirling around the Milky Way are several smaller, dwarf galaxies—the biggest of which are the Small and Large Magellanic Clouds, visible in the night sky of the Southern Hemisphere.
IBM’s 127-Qubit Eagle Is the Biggest Quantum Computer Yet
1dProgress in quantum computing is no longer just about how big your chip is. But IBM has taken a major leap forward with the release of a 127-qubit processor. Milestones in quantum computing are getting increasingly difficult to asses as the variety of technologies and the yardsticks used to judge them proliferate. While both IBM and Google build their devices out of superconducting qubits, differ
Scientists discover the first ferromagnetic quasicrystals
1dSince the discovery of quasicrystals (QCs), solids that mimic crystals in their long-range order but lack periodicity, scientists have sought physical properties related to their peculiar structure. Now, an international group of researchers led by Tokyo University of Science, have reported a long-range magnetic order in QCs with icosahedral symmetry that turns ferromagnetism below certain tempera
Nudging an asteroid off course could one day save the world
1dThis week, humanity will for the first time set out to move an object in the solar system
Heat flow controls the movement of skyrmions in an insulating magnet
1dTiny amounts of heat can be used to control the movement of magnetic whirlpools called skyrmions, RIKEN physicists have shown. This ability could help to develop energy-efficient forms of computing that harness waste heat.
An absolutely bonkers plan to give Mars an artificial magnetosphere
1dTerraforming Mars is one of the great dreams of humanity. Mars has a lot going for it. Its day is about the same length as Earth's, it has plenty of frozen water just under its surface, and it likely could be given a reasonably breathable atmosphere in time. But one of the things it lacks is a strong magnetic field. So if we want to make Mars a second Earth, we'll have to give it an artificial one
The Ecology of the First Thanksgiving
1dFood sources around Plymouth Colony were so abundant because of Native land management — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
The Package Is the Message
1dJason Fulford and Tamara Shopsin O f all the things I’ve purchased during the pandemic, the most useful has been a box cutter. Until last summer, I had put off buying one for more than 15 years, through no fewer than nine apartment moves’ worth of unpacking with dull scissors and countless struggles against shipping boxes bound by tape reinforced with tiny threads. This knife entered my life as a
TikTok’s Next Big Move? To Become Facebook
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1dTikTok Big Facebook
ByteDance, the Chinese company behind TikTok and Douyin, has global ambitions to challenge Meta’s universe.
COVID-19 vaccines versus “purity of essence,” revisited
1dAntivaxxers frequently make the false claim that mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines "permanently alter your DNA". These claims are really a concern about "impurifying" their "purity of essence" and have now gone into some truly disturbing territory, such as antivaxxers calling themselves "purebloods". The post first appeared on Science-Based Medicine .
The Tragedy of Tom and Shiv
1dThis article contains spoilers through the sixth episode of Succession Season 3. The marriage between Shiv Roy and Tom Wambsgans is, at this point, built on mutual ambition and cold white wine, and the wine at least has turned poisonously sour. On tonight’s episode of Succession , “What It Takes,” as the Roys travel to Virginia to anoint a new Republican presidential candidate at a power brokers’
Glennon Doyle: ‘So many women feel caged by gender, sexuality, religion’
2dGlennon Doyle’s memoir inspired Adele – but do we all need to be ‘untamed’? The marriage wasn’t unbearable, but it didn’t feel right any more. The lightbulb moment came when she realised she needed to think about what she truly wanted, rather than about what society had trained her to think she wanted. Also, she became aware that remaining in an unhappy marriage meant she wasn’t being the parent s
The Future of Digital Assistants Is Queer
2dAI assistants continue to reinforce sexist stereotypes, but queering these devices could help reimagine their relationship to gender altogether.
Some Pacific countries will take years to vaccinate 50% of adult population, modelling shows
2dPredictions from Lowy Institute indicate Papua New Guinea will take five years to vaccinate just a third of its population See all our coronavirus coverage Some Pacific countries will have less than a quarter of adults vaccinated by the end of the year, with predictions that Papua New Guinea will take five years to vaccinate just one-third of its population, undermining economic recovery and thre
Is it better to be a grandmother than a mother? | Ed Cumming
2dWhy does the sternest of British matriarchs turn to puree when confronted with her children’s young, wonders a rookie parent On Thursday morning I sent my mother a WhatsApp message. “Entertaining discussion on Radio 4 about how it’s better being a grandmother than a mother,” I wrote. She didn’t reply. It is not easy being a son. On the Today programme, Amol Rajan and Sheila Hancock had been discu
How do we know the effect of boosters? | David Spiegelhalter and Anthony Masters
2dLike seatbelts, vaccines lower risk and two studies reveal the protection that a third jab offers Last week, the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) reported encouraging research on booster doses. That analysis estimated that, compared with the preceding waned protection, the booster reduced the risks of symptomatic Covid-19 disease in people over 50 by around 85%. Compared with not being vaccinated
FBI searching one-time New Jersey waste dump for body of Jimmy Hoffa
3dThe former waste dump, condemned as an environmental disaster site in the 1980s, could be the resting place of Teamster boss Jimmy Hoffa, a recent deathbed confession revealed.
Exposure to Chemical from Babies Linked to Aggression
1dA study finds that the odorless compound hexadecanal, or HEX, increases aggressive behavior in women but has a calming effect on men.
Milk allergy could be treated with gradual exposure to baked milk
2dChildren who were gradually exposed to baked milk powder learned to tolerate higher doses in a small clinical trial
Study predicts the behavior of a Kondo cloud in a superconductor
6hIn recent years, many physicists worldwide have been investigating the behavior of hybrid nanostructures. These are systems that are typically made up of two or more materials. Special attention in this class of structures is paid to magnetic impurities interacting with superconducting and normal metallic contacts.
Einstein’s notes on theory of relativity fetch record €11.6m at auction
8hManuscript handwritten by physicist and a colleague in 1913-14 fetched nearly four times estimate Albert Einstein’s handwritten notes on the theory of relativity fetched a record €11.6m (£9.7m) at an auction in Paris on Tuesday. The manuscript had been valued at about a quarter of the final sum, which is by far the highest ever paid for anything written by the genius scientist. Continue reading..
NASA’s DART mission will try to deflect an asteroid by flying into it
11hThe Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission is scheduled to launch on 24 November and will smash into the asteroid Dimorphos
The Riemann conjecture unveiled by physics
6hA mystery of mathematics that has remained unsolved for more than 150 years can be unraveled thanks to a completely unexpected approach coming from statistical physics. This is the important conclusion of Giuseppe Mussardo, professor of Theoretical Physics at SISSA, and Andrè Leclair of Cornell University reported in an article just published in the Journal of Statistical Mechanics (JSTAT). The tw
I have ADHD and was scared of psychedelics. Then I found myself eating magic truffles … | Deborah Frances-White
7hThe safe, repetitive domesticity of lockdown made me face my demons and seek therapy, while also making me hungry for sensation and risk. So I set off for a retreat in Amsterdam If you had asked me pre-pandemic if I would ever touch psychedelics, I would have said absolutely not. The speed of my brain is literally my only skill. As a standup comedian and podcaster, I can walk out on stage with ab
Hybrid salmon found in Canada may be a result of climate change
5hSalmon found near the mouth of the Cowichan river on Vancouver Island are a hybrid species of coho and Chinook, which may have arisen as the timing and location of their spawning grounds overlapped
Trees cool the land surface temperature of cities by up to 12°C
7hAn analysis of satellite data from 293 cities in Europe has found that trees have a big cooling effect while other green spaces don't
Pythagoras' revenge: Humans didn't invent mathematics, it's what the world is made of
1dMany people think that mathematics is a human invention. To this way of thinking, mathematics is like a language: it may describe real things in the world, but it doesn't "exist" outside the minds of the people who use it.
Life Is Complicated–Literally, Astrobiologists Say
12hA new theory suggests that searches for molecular complexity could uncover convincing evidence of extraterrestrial life—and do so soon — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
The art of a great urban wildlife photo
14hAndrew Budziak spends his nights photographing the animals of Toronto, Canada.
Can Synthetic Biology Save Us? This Scientist Thinks So.
14hDrew Endy is squarely focused on the potential of redesigning organisms for useful purposes. He also acknowledges significant challenges.
Astronomers discover more than 300 possible new exoplanets
3hUCLA astronomers have identified 366 new exoplanets, thanks in large part to an algorithm developed by a UCLA postdoctoral scholar. Among their most noteworthy findings is a planetary system that comprises a star and at least two gas giant planets, each roughly the size of Saturn and located unusually close to one another.
Natural selection has been acting on hundreds of human genes in the last 3,000 years
10hNatural selection has been acting on more than 700 human genes over the last 3,000 years, perhaps contributing to the persistence of disorders like inflammatory bowel disease.
Crypto Bros Furiously Angry After Failing to Buy the US Constitution
6hAfter failing to purchase a copy of the US Constitution, a community of crypto enthusiasts are now what experts might describe as “ Big Mad .” It all began when the group, known as ConstitutionDAO, set out to purchase a copy of the founding document in an auction held by British fine arts brokers Sotheby’s, Vice reported . It was your classic meme investment , inspired by the classic Nic Cage act
Which Streaming Services Are Best For You?
1dWhether you're a hardcore cord-cutter or an animation fan, there's a platform for you. Here are the best we've tried.
Macy’s Is Hawking Its Thanksgiving Parade Balloons as NFTs Because Nothing Matters Anymore
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4hMacy NFT Day Parade
Parade Rainer Macy’s announced ahead of this year’s Turkey Day that it’s releasing digital reproductions of some of its iconic Thanksgiving Parade floats as non-fungible tokens (NFTs) in the name of charity — and, we presume, because nothing matters anymore . First reported by Business Insider , this logical endpoint of all things crapitalism is being split up into three categories — “classic, ra
How positively and negatively charged ions behave at interfaces
8hHow positively and negatively charged ions behave at the interface between a solid surface and an aqueous solution has been investigated by researchers from the Cluster of Excellence RESOLV at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum, its sister research network CALSOLV in Berkeley, and the University of Evry in Paris. At the SOLEIL synchrotron, they were able to use terahertz spectroscopy to observe exactly w
Birthday
2dGabriela Pesqueira / The Atlantic At first, birthdays were reserved for kings and saints. But it’s rainbow sprinkles and face painting for everybody these days. The best way to avoid having your birthday ruined is to avoid having any expectations for your birthday. Without the delineation of years, time would become an expanse of open water. Horizonless, shark-filled. One of my biggest fears. A r
Hepatitis drug increases antibiotic potency, limits antibiotic resistance
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8hAntibiotic Resistance
An FDA-approved drug for hepatitis C can increase bacterial sensitivity to antibiotics and reduce the likelihood of antibiotic resistance, according to a new study led by New York University researchers published in Cell Chemical Biology. The drug called telaprevir works by blocking the function of chaperones—important proteins that fold other proteins in the cell—in bacteria.
How bacteria makes copper into an antibiotic
8hCopper in small quantities is an essential nutrient but can also be toxic. Human immune cells use copper to fight invading pathogens. Some microorganisms, in turn, have evolved ways to take up copper and incorporate it into biological molecules, either as a way to absorb copper for nutrition or to neutralize its toxic effects.
How to Preserve and Share Grandma's Recipes
12hGoing digital can save time and money and keep family traditions alive.
2d
NASA launches spacecraft to kick an asteroid off course
3hNASA is preparing to launch a mission to deliberately smash a spacecraft into an asteroid—a test run should humanity ever need to stop a giant space rock from wiping out life on Earth.
To the Moon review – beguiling essay on the satellite’s pervasive pull
12hThreading together sequences showing the lunar face of subjects from love to madness, this is a gorgeous journey into outer and inner space It only takes eight minutes of To the Moon before we hear the ripples of Debussy’s Clair de Lune , over a gorgeous vintage montage of embracing lovers. It’s the equivalent of Pomp and Circumstance at the Proms for Tadhg O’Sullivan’s beautifully succinct visua
Austria’s vaccine order is an admission of failure
2dEurope resorts to ever tougher measures to contain Covid-19
High-speed propeller star is fastest spinning confirmed white dwarf
1dA white dwarf star that completes a full rotation once every 25 seconds is the fastest spinning confirmed white dwarf, according to a team of astronomers from the Universities of Sheffield and Warwick.
The James Webb Space Telescope: Origins, design and mission objectives
1dNASA’s James Webb Space Telescope will be the most powerful in history, giving us the deepest ever view into space.
How to Identify What You Enjoy
6hListen and subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Googl e | Pocket Casts In adulthood, many of us are forced to recalibrate our relationship with joy. As responsibilities multiply exponentially, time grows limited, and challenges mount, it becomes harder to make time for fun, let alone remember what it feels like. As we explore the key components of happiness—pleasure, joy, and satisfac
China launched second missile during July hypersonic test, reports say
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18hChina Chinese US Fired
The separate, previously unknown, missile release reportedly took place while the vehicle was soaring at hypersonic speeds China’s launch of a nuclear-capable missile carrying a hypersonic glide vehicle also included the unprecedented launch of a separate missile from that vehicle, according to multiple reports. The test showed China’s development of its strategic, nuclear-capable weapons as more
One year on this giant, blistering hot planet is just 16 hours long
6hThe hunt for planets beyond our solar system has turned up more than 4,000 far-flung worlds, orbiting stars thousands of light years from Earth. These extrasolar planets are a veritable menagerie, from rocky super-Earths and miniature Neptunes to colossal gas giants.
If alien probes are already in the solar system, maybe we could detect them calling home
11hIt's been 70 years since physicist Enrico Fermi asked his famous question: "Where is everybody?" And yet, the tyranny of the Fermi Paradox is still with us and will continue to be until definitive evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence (ETI) is found. In the meantime, scientists are forced to speculate as to why we haven't found any yet and, more importantly, what we should be looking for. By f
SPOILER ALERT: Spoiler Alerts Are Making Us All Stupid
10hIf you think they’re protecting the experience of experiencing art, you’re more deluded than you know.
3D-printed 'living ink' is full of microbes and can release drugs
7hA living ink made entirely from bacterial cells can be 3D-printed to make structures that release anti-cancer drugs or mop up toxins from the environment
New formula provides key to predicting microbial growth
1dJust like cars need fuel to run, microorganisms need energy to live.
This Rolex Is Made Using Eye-Surgery Lasers
1dThe 2021 Rolex Datejust 36's unique dial pattern is etched into the surface using femtosecond laser technology.
After slow starts, COVID vaccination rates in some Asian nations are now soaring
1dSeveral nations in the Asia-Pacific region, richer and poorer, had slow starts to their immunization campaigns but have since zoomed past the United States and many nations in Europe. (Image credit: Heng Sinith/AP)
Massive study reveals editorial bias and nepotism in biomedical journals
5hScientific journals are expected to consider research manuscripts dispassionately and without favor. But in a study publishing on November 23rd in the open access journal PLOS Biology, Alexandre Scanff, Florian Naudet and Clara Locher from the University of Rennes, and colleagues, reveal that a subset of journals may be exercising considerable bias and favoritism.
The First Wave review – Covid’s devastating early days in New York
10hMatthew Heineman’s powerful documentary captures the most acute weeks of the crisis as a Long Island hospital struggles to cope Shot inside a New York hospital at the start of the pandemic, this documentary is an overwhelming emotional watch. In March last year, City of Ghosts director Matthew Heineman started filming on the wards of the Long Island Jewish Medical Center ; he stayed for four mont
Free green services could substantially reduce emissions
14hUsing carbon tax revenue to fund free green electricity and public transport could significantly reduce individual households' greenhouse gas emissions, a new study has found.
How accurate is the weather forecast? | Mona Chalabi
8hNo one remembers when you're right, but no one forgets when you're wrong. Your local weather person knows that saying all too well. But while they take a lot of the heat (get it?), how much of it is actually justified? In this episode, Mona Chalabi looks at weather forecasting data to see how accurate these predictions really are, and gives us tips for when we should–and shouldn't–trust the fore
Snow cover critical for revegetation following high-severity forest fires
1dHow much and how long a severely burned Pacific Northwest mountain landscape stays blanketed in winter snow is a key factor in the return of vegetation, research by Oregon State University and the University of Nevada, Reno shows.
31 Stimulating Gifts for All the Best People in Your Life
1dTurbocharge the holidays with a speedy electric scooter, the smartest robot vacuum, and presents that are just plain fun.
How smart is an octopus?
1dThe unique brainpower of octopuses—known for their intelligence and Houdini-like escapes—has been revealed by University of Queensland researchers.
UK employers step up demand for workers vaccinated against Covid
18hAnalysis shows job adverts requiring candidates to be jabbed rose by 189% between August and October Employers in the UK are following the lead of their counterparts in the US by stepping up demands for staff to be vaccinated against Covid-19, analysis of recruitment adverts reveals. According to figures from the jobs website Adzuna, the number of ads explicitly requiring candidates to be vaccina
The Least Exciting Avenger
5hThis may sound harsh, but Clint Barton, a.k.a. Hawkeye, was never the most exciting Avenger in the Marvel films. Next to near-invincible heroes such as Thor, Captain America, and the Hulk, he just looked ill-equipped, wielding a bow and arrow against monstrous aliens and killer robots. One of the original six protagonists in 2012’s Avengers , the master archer (played by Jeremy Renner) gradually
Can we perceive gender from children's voices?
8hThe perception of gender in children's voices is of special interest to researchers, because voices of young boys and girls are very similar before the age of puberty. Adult male and female voices are often quite different acoustically, making gender identification fairly easy.
What Are You Going to Tweet After You Die?
11hThe artful death announcements of Chadwick Boseman and MF DOOM show us how the way we die online can help the living grieve.
Expanding Mental Health Care Is a Medical Necessity
1dThe COVID pandemic made a long-standing problem even more urgent — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
Study: AI technology no silver bullet for hiring the best employees
12hArtificial intelligence technology is now used by a growing number of companies looking to hire the best employees, but new research from Rice University warns how it can incorporate biases and overlook important characteristics among job applicants.
New device modulates visible light—without dimming it—with the smallest footprint and lowest power consumption
1dOver the past several decades, researchers have moved from using electric currents to manipulating light waves in the near-infrared range for telecommunications applications such as high-speed 5G networks, biosensors on a chip, and driverless cars. This research area, known as integrated photonics, is fast evolving and investigators are now exploring the shorter—visible—wavelength range to develop
How to Keep Work Notifications From Taking Over Your Life
2dTeach your devices to respect your boundaries.
Grand Theft Auto: The Trilogy Is a Wasted Opportunity
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11hGTA Trilogy Three TDE
This “definitive edition” is a buggy and broken trip down memory lane. You might want to stay at home.
Analysis of Mars's wind-induced vibrations sheds light on the planet's subsurface properties
6hSeismic data collected in Elysium Planitia, the second largest volcanic region on Mars, suggest the presence of a shallow sedimentary layer sandwiched between lava flows beneath the planet's surface. These findings were gained in the framework of NASA's InSight mission (Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport), in which several international research partners,
Starwatch: a close lunar encounter with Pollux
1dThe brightest star in the constellation Gemini, the twins, is named after the son of Leda and Zeus On the evening of 23 November, the moon will have a close encounter with the star Pollux, the brightest star in the constellation Gemini, the twins. Pollux marks the head of one twin. The other twin is marked by the star Castor. Although Pollux is the brighter star, it was Castor that was given the
The Deep Toll of Tar Sands On Canada’s Indigenous People
1dAlberta’s tar sands — also called oil sands — have helped make Canada the world’s fourth-largest oil producer, with significant economic benefits. But the ecological impacts are so vast and so deep that the local Indigenous people say the industry has challenged their very existence.
Origami, kirigami inspire mechanical metamaterials designs
8hThe ancient arts of origami, the art of paper-folding, and kirigami, the art of paper-cutting, have gained popularity in recent years among researchers building mechanical metamaterials. Folding and cutting 2D thin-film materials transforms them into complex 3D structures and shapes with unique and programmable mechanical properties.
New COVID Antivirals Do Not Replace the Need to Vaccinate
1dWith the advent of new COVID drugs comes the fear that people will opt out of vaccination altogether — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
Mysterious Fast Radio Bursts Are Finally Coming into Focus
1dTwenty years after their initial detection, enigmatic blasts from the sky are starting to deliver tentative answers, as well as plenty of science — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
Independent stress response makes octocorals more robust
10hCoral reefs are among the most species-rich ecosystems on the planet. Octocorals, which include soft corals, gorgonians, and sea pens, are important members of these marine communities. They could even outcompete reef-building stony corals in the future, as they are better able to deal with heat stress and increasing ocean acidification, which makes them less sensitive to the consequences of globa
Ultrathin solar cells get a boost: 2D perovskite compound has the right stuff to challenge bulkier products
1dRice University engineers have achieved a new benchmark in the design of atomically thin solar cells made of semiconducting perovskites, boosting their efficiency while retaining their ability to stand up to the environment.
Bacterial Builders Are the Key to Concrete Alternatives
3hScientists use calcite-producing microorganisms to transform a wet sand mixture into solid brick.
At the Dawn of Life, Heat May Have Driven Cell Division
9hAn elegant ballet of proteins enables modern cells to replicate themselves. During cell division, structural proteins and enzymes coordinate the duplication of DNA, the division of a cell’s cytoplasmic contents, and the cinching of the membrane that cleaves the cell. Getting these processes right is crucial because errors can lead to daughter cells that are abnormal or unviable. Source
Researchers make ultra-sensitive cancer detector from 2D materials
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1d1 2D Cancer Cells Atlas
Cells can produce unique electrical signals. These signals can be linked to various cancers, such as the breast, lung, liver, brain, pancreas and prostate cancers, meaning that they can be used as indicators for early cancer diagnosis. Thus, using electrical signals as indicators and targets for cancer treatments could potentially improve the outcome for cancer patients. A team of researchers from
How climate change goaded the transition from nomadic hunter-gatherers to settlement and farming societies
20hBased on the identification of plant remains, Tel Aviv University and Tel-Hai College researchers provide the first detailed reconstruction of the climate in the Land of Israel at the end of the last ice age (20,000-10,000 years before present). The researchers claim that significant climate changes characterizing the period, manifested by sharp differences in temperature and precipitation not onl
Sri Lanka ends farm chemical ban as organic drive fails
2dSri Lanka abandoned its quest to become the world's first completely organic farming nation on Sunday, announcing it would immediately lift an import ban on pesticides and other agricultural inputs.
Body Language Pseudoscience Is Flourishing on YouTube
2dIn celebrity interviews and homicide cases, video sleuths are searching for the truth—but what if the signals are all wrong?
Our Favorite Mattress Deals for Black Friday (So Far)
12hTrouble sleeping? A bunch of our favorite WIRED-Reviewed hybrid, organic, and foam mattresses are on sale right now.
KPD 0005+5106: Roasted and shredded by a stellar sidekick
1dAn exhausted star still has some punches to deliver. Astronomers have found that a white dwarf is pummeling a companion object—either a lightweight star or a planet—with incessant blasts of heat and radiation plus a relentless gravitational pull tearing it apart.
Measuring the brightness of our galaxy at key ultraviolet wavelength
1dA new study led by Southwest Research Institute determined the brightness of the galactic Lyman-alpha background using a SwRI-developed instrument aboard NASA's Kuiper Belt space probe, New Horizons.
Learning to read starts earlier than you might think: Five tips from an expert
1dIn the early weeks of their lives and even before birth, babies are skilfully processing important information about the sounds they hear. They are attuning to tones, patterns of language and distinguishing their own familiar adults' voices. Making sense of sounds, patterns, words and sentences are important skills that will help a child as they progress towards reading.
Author who squats on domains to fake affiliations and added Wolf Blitzer as a co-author up to a dozen retractions
1dA putative brain surgeon with a penchant for fabricating his affiliations and co-authors — including Wolf Blitzer of CNN — has lost several more papers to retraction. As we reported in August, Michael George Zaki Ghali, or someone using that name: bought two fake web domains for the Karolinska Institutet [KI] to make it look … Continue reading
What Happens When We Go Without Sleep?
3hIf hallucinations aren’t enough of a wake-up call, your body will start tricking you to get the rest it needs.
Microplastics aren't just a problem for the ocean, they're in our soils too
10hOne of the environmental legacies of COVID-19 may well be vast amounts of plastic pollution. Since the beginning of the pandemic, scientists have warned of the long-term threat of littering face masks and other PPE into the environment.
Image: Hubble catches celestial prawn drifting through the cosmic deep
1dThe Prawn Nebula is a massive stellar nursery located in the constellation Scorpius, about 6,000 light years from Earth. Though the nebula stretches 250 light-years and covers a space four times the size of the full moon, it emits light primarily in wavelengths the human eye cannot detect, making it extremely faint to earthbound viewers. Hubble's gaze, however, shows a small section of the nebula
Climate Change Might Be Driving Albatrosses to Divorce
3minAlbatrosses do not fall in love the way humans do. When the birds couple up, it’s almost always for keeps. Their lives start lonely—albatross parents lay only one egg at a time, and may leave their offspring unattended for days—and at just a few months old, each juvenile embarks on an epic solo voyage at sea. They fly for months and months and months, learning what it is to be a bird. “It can be
How to Talk to Your Family About Space Tourism
4minBillionaires are extremely keen on getting into space — and taking other billionaires’ money in exchange for a seat. Here’s how to talk to your family about it. As You Pass the Mashed Potatoes As of right now, a handful of companies are starting to sell tickets on board their spacecraft to “space,” with the hopes of establishing an entirely new industry. But everything from the environmental impa
Monkeys, guinea pigs and native English speakers have very similar brain responses to speech sounds, study finds
38minSpeech sounds elicit comparable neural responses and stimulate the same region in the brain of humans, macaques and guinea pigs, researchers report. The finding could help pave the way for better understanding and diagnosis of auditory processing deficits.
Justinianic Plague was nothing like flu and may have struck England before it reached Constantinople, new study suggests
38min'Plague sceptics' are wrong to underestimate the devastating impact that bubonic plague had in the 6th to 8th centuries CE, argues a new study based on ancient texts and recent genetic discoveries. The same study suggests that bubonic plague may have reached England before its first recorded case in the Mediterranean via a currently unknown route, possibly involving the Baltic and Scandinavia.
Chemotherapy may affect muscle cells at lower doses than previously thought
1hPrevious research has found that chemotherapy can trigger muscle loss in people living with cancer, but a new study out of found it may also affect the way the body builds new muscle — and at lower doses than previously known, having potential implications for treatments and rehab programs.
Researchers unlock the potential of trees for managing environmental impacts in cities
1hResearchers have conducted an empirical field study and concluded that single urban trees, such as street trees, function differently than trees grown in clusters featuring significantly greater transpiration rates. This result offers a new understanding of how to manage the landscape in urban settings to reduce the harmful effects of stormwater runoff.
A stunning 3D map of blood vessels and cells in a mouse skull could help scientists make new bones
1hScientists have used glowing chemicals and other techniques to create a 3D map of the blood vessels and self-renewing 'stem' cells that line and penetrate a mouse skull. The map provides precise locations of blood vessels and stem cells that scientists could eventually use to repair wounds and generate new bone and tissue in the skull.
New research could help boost growth of clean cooking in sub-Saharan Africa
1hResearchers have new evidence that could help rapidly boost efforts to scale-up the adoption of clean cooking with liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) in sub-Saharan Africa. The new study suggests that supply-side interventions such as shortening the distance to LPG retail points and improving access to multi-burner LPG stoves could help increase the consumption of the clean cooking fuels, for the benef
Black Friday Bowflex C7 bike deal: Get 40% off spin bike
1hThis Black Friday Bowflex C7 bike deal will save you $600 at Best Buy on a high-quality spin bike.
Walter Gratzer, Biophysical Chemist and Science Writer, Dies at 89
2hHis career bridged impactful research in molecular biology and biochemistry with prolific science writing for academic and nonacademic audiences alike.
Prize-winning technology for large-scale energy storage
2hSafe, cheap and sustainable technology for energy storage has been developed. It is based on two major breakthroughs: the manufacture of wood-based electrodes in rolled form, and a new type of water-based electrolyte.
Strategy to overcome tumors’ resistance to immunotherapy generates promising clinical trial results
2hImmune checkpoint inhibitors strengthen the immune response against cancer cells, but the medications are ineffective against certain tumors. Results from a new clinical trial indicate that adding radiation may overcome this resistance to immune checkpoint inhibitors.
Save Up to 35 Percent on Premium Chargers and More During Anker’s Black Friday Sale
2hThere’s no better time to stock up on chargers and power banks for your smartphone, laptop, or tablet. Anker, one of the best-known names in wireless technology, has some great deals during its Black Friday sale , now through November 28. Save up to 35 percent on chargers, hubs, power cables, generators, and more. Here’s a rundown of some of the best deals: Anker PowerPort Atom III Slim (Four Por
Hubble finds flame Nebula's searing stars may halt planet formation
2hThe Flame Nebula or NGC 2024 is a large star-forming region in the constellation Orion that lies about 1,400 light-years from Earth. Hubble studied this nebula to look for protoplanetary disks, or "proplyds"—disks of gas and dust around stars that may one day form new solar systems.
Researchers develop new approach to nanoparticles that stop internal bleeding
2hWhen a person experiences a trauma that leads to significant bleeding, the first few minutes are critical. It's important that they receive intravenous medication quickly to control the bleeding, but delivering the medication at the right rate can prove challenging. Slower infusions can cause fewer negative reactions, but the medication might not work fast enough, particularly in the case of a ser
Zena Stein, 99, Dies; Researcher Championed Women’s Health
2hShe studied the impact of AIDS on women and explored the effects of famine and poverty on health with an “unwavering commitment to social justice.”
Q&A: Potential Partiality in Scientific Publishing
2hThe Scientist interviewed clinical pharmacologist Clara Locher, coauthor of a new survey aimed at detecting editorial bias, regarding her team’s findings about biomedical publishing.
Save up to 50% on Coway smart air purifiers this Black Friday
2hTake advantage of this great deal on Coway Air Purifiers this Black Friday. With fast shipping, the air quality in your home can be enhanced within a week.
The science of extreme weather — and how to reduce the harm | Al Roker, Al Gore, David Biello and Latif Nasser
2hFloods, droughts, heat waves and cold blasts — why is the weather becoming more extreme? Environmentalist and "America's weatherman" Al Roker discusses the link between climate change and disruptions to weather patterns worldwide, followed by a conversation between Nobel laureate Al Gore and TED science curator David Biello about the science of extreme weather and emerging solutions to reduce the
Dear world leaders, these are our climate demands | Xiye Bastida, Shiv Soin and Latif Nasser
2hInvesting in green energy, holding large corporations accountable for their pollution, stopping pipeline and oil extraction initiatives — these are non-negotiable actions to protect the planet, but they are still just the bare minimum, say climate activists Xiye Bastida and Shiv Soin. In conversation with radio researcher Latif Nasser, Bastida and Soin share their list of six crucial climate dema
Roboats are autonomous ferries, waste collectors and bridges all in one
3hsubmitted by /u/Confident_Bison_7375 [link] [comments]
An international study led by UBC Okanagan researchers suggests repeated use of small doses of psychedelics such as psilocybin or LSD can be a valuable tool for those struggling with anxiety and depression
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This Japanese Startup's Biomaterials Replace Cashmere and Wool
3hsubmitted by /u/kernals12 [link] [comments]
Cells | Perspective: Why and How Ubiquitously Distributed, Vascular-Associated, Pluripotent Stem Cells in the Adult Body (vaPS Cells) Are the Next Generation of Medicine
3hsubmitted by /u/lunchboxultimate01 [link] [comments]
On the Path to 6G: Embracing the Next Wave of Low Earth Orbit Satellite Access
3hsubmitted by /u/doctor101 [link] [comments]
Sweden is taking the lead to persuade the rest of the EU to ban crypto-currency mining to hit the 1.5C Paris climate goal
3hsubmitted by /u/lughnasadh [link] [comments]
Daughter of first American in space on next Blue Origin flight
3hSixty years after her father's historic flight, she too will cross the final frontier: Laura Shepard Churchley, daughter of the first American in space Alan Shepard, will be one of six passengers on Blue Origin's next flight.
NASA Delays Webb Telescope Launch Following an ‘Incident’
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3hNASA Webb Telescope
NASA has been working on the James Webb Space Telescope for 20 years, and there have been numerous delays. The marvel of astronomical technology is currently preparing for launch, but NASA says we’ll have to wait just a bit longer . Following a minor “incident,” NASA has pushed the launch of Webb back by four days. That will give the team time to check for damage one last time before launch. The
Nanosized and metastable molybdenum oxides as negative electrode materials for durable high-energy aqueous Li-ion batteries [Chemistry]
3hThe development of inherently safe energy devices is a key challenge, and aqueous Li-ion batteries draw large attention for this purpose. Due to the narrow electrochemical stable potential window of aqueous electrolytes, the energy density and the selection of negative electrode materials are significantly limited. For achieving durable and high-energy…
Neural networks to learn protein sequence-function relationships from deep mutational scanning data [Biophysics and Computational Biology]
3hThe mapping from protein sequence to function is highly complex, making it challenging to predict how sequence changes will affect a protein’s behavior and properties. We present a supervised deep learning framework to learn the sequence–function mapping from deep mutational scanning data and make predictions for new, uncharacterized sequence variants….
Defective cytokinin signaling reprograms lipid and flavonoid gene-to-metabolite networks to mitigate high salinity in Arabidopsis [Agricultural Sciences]
3hCytokinin (CK) in plants regulates both developmental processes and adaptation to environmental stresses. Arabidopsis histidine phosphotransfer ahp2,3,5 and type-B Arabidopsis response regulator arr1,10,12 triple mutants are almost completely defective in CK signaling, and the ahp2,3,5 mutant was reported to be salt tolerant. Here, we demonstrate that the arr1,10,12 mutant is…
Translesion polymerase eta both facilitates DNA replication and promotes increased human genetic variation at common fragile sites [Cell Biology]
3hCommon fragile sites (CFSs) are difficult-to-replicate genomic regions that form gaps and breaks on metaphase chromosomes under replication stress. They are hotspots for chromosomal instability in cancer. Repetitive sequences located at CFS loci are inefficiently copied by replicative DNA polymerase (Pol) delta. However, translesion synthesis Pol eta has been shown…
A role of anterior cingulate cortex in the emergence of worker-parasite relationship [Neuroscience]
3hWe studied the brain mechanisms underlying action selection in a social dilemma setting in which individuals’ effortful gains are unfairly distributed among group members. A stable “worker–parasite” relationship developed when three individually operant-conditioned rats were placed together in a Skinner box equipped with response lever and food dispenser on opposite…
Seeds of imperfection rule the mesocrystalline disorder in natural anhydrite single crystals [Chemistry]
3hIn recent years, we have come to appreciate the astounding intricacies associated with the formation of minerals from ions in aqueous solutions. In this context, a number of studies have revealed that the nucleation of calcium sulfate systems occurs nonclassically, involving the aggregation and reorganization of nanosized prenucleation species. In…
Structure of the translating Neurospora ribosome arrested by cycloheximide [Biochemistry]
3hRibosomes translate RNA into proteins. The protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide (CHX) is widely used to inhibit eukaryotic ribosomes engaged in translation elongation. However, the lack of structural data for actively translating polyribosomes stalled by CHX leaves unanswered the question of which elongation step is inhibited. We elucidated CHX’s mechanism of…
BAP1 forms a trimer with HMGB1 and HDAC1 that modulates gene x environment interaction with asbestos [Genetics]
3hCarriers of heterozygous germline BAP1 mutations (BAP1+/−) are affected by the “BAP1 cancer syndrome.” Although they can develop almost any cancer type, they are unusually susceptible to asbestos carcinogenesis and mesothelioma. Here we investigate why among all carcinogens, BAP1 mutations cooperate with asbestos. Asbestos carcinogenesis and mesothelioma have been linked…
Molecular structure of an open human KATP channel [Biochemistry]
3hKATP channels are metabolic sensors that translate intracellular ATP/ADP balance into membrane excitability. The molecular composition of KATP includes an inward-rectifier potassium channel (Kir) and an ABC transporter–like sulfonylurea receptor (SUR). Although structures of KATP have been determined in many conformations, in all cases, the pore in Kir is closed….
Amyloid {beta} 42 fibril structure based on small-angle scattering [Biological Sciences]
3hAmyloid fibrils are associated with a number of neurodegenerative diseases, including fibrils of amyloid β42 peptide (Aβ42) in Alzheimer’s disease. These fibrils are a source of toxicity to neuronal cells through surface-catalyzed generation of toxic oligomers. Detailed knowledge of the fibril structure may thus facilitate therapeutic development. We use small-angle…
Correlated diffusion in lipid bilayers [Biophysics and Computational Biology]
3hLipid membranes are complex quasi–two-dimensional fluids, whose importance in biology and unique physical/materials properties have made them a major target for biophysical research. Recent single-molecule tracking experiments in membranes have caused some controversy, calling the venerable Saffman–Delbrück model into question and suggesting that, perhaps, current understanding of membrane hydrody
Correction to Supporting Information for Volkov et al., Thyroid hormone receptors mediate two distinct mechanisms of long-wavelength vision [Neuroscience]
3hNEUROSCIENCE Correction to Supporting Information for “Thyroid hormone receptors mediate two distinct mechanisms of long-wavelength vision,” by Leo I. Volkov, Jeong Sook Kim-Han, Lauren M. Saunders, Deepak Poria, Andrew E. O. Hughes, Vladimir J. Kefalov, David M. Parichy, and Joseph C. Corbo, which was first published June 15, 2020; 10.1073/pnas.1920086117…
Correction for Kraus et al., Americans misperceive racial economic equality [Psychological and Cognitive Sciences]
3hPSYCHOLOGICAL AND COGNITIVE SCIENCES Correction for “Americans misperceive racial economic equality” by Michael W. Kraus, Julian M. Rucker, and Jennifer A. Richeson, which was first published September 18, 2017; 10.1073/pnas.1707719114 (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 114, 10324–10331). The authors note that on page 10329, left column, the third paragraph, there…
Inner Working: The hidden lives of volcanic plumes provide clues about eruption activity [Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences]
3hVolcanoes can pave their surroundings with lava, send clouds of hot ash downslope to smother cities, and even generate massive tsunamis. The most recent high-profile eruption on the Canary Islands spawned viral videos of slow, steady folds of smoldering lava enveloping houses and swimming pools. A volcano’s plume, such as…
Correction for Wainright et al., Species invasion progressively disrupts the trophic structure of native food webs [Ecology]
3hECOLOGY Correction for “Species invasion progressively disrupts the trophic structure of native food webs,” by Charles A. Wainright, Clint C. Muhlfeld, James J. Elser, Samuel L. Bourret, and Shawn P. Devlin, which published November 1, 2021; 10.1073/pnas.2102179118 (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 118, e2102179118). The authors note that, due to…
Pregnancy and weaning regulate human maternal liver size and function [Physiology]
3hDuring pregnancy, the rodent liver undergoes hepatocyte proliferation and increases in size, followed by weaning-induced involution via hepatocyte cell death and stromal remodeling, creating a prometastatic niche. These data suggest a mechanism for increased liver metastasis in breast cancer patients with recent childbirth. It is unknown whether the human liver…
Hexavalent sperm-binding IgG antibody released from vaginal film for development of potent on-demand nonhormonal female contraception [Applied Biological Sciences]
3hNonhormonal products for on-demand contraception are a global health technology gap; this unmet need motivated us to pursue the use of sperm-binding monoclonal antibodies to enable effective on-demand contraception. Here, using the cGMP-compliant Nicotiana-expression system, we produced an ultrapotent sperm-binding IgG antibody possessing 6 Fab arms per molecule that bind…
Research team releases Great Lakes sediment material for measuring organic pollutants
3hPeople who live near the Great Lakes might go there to enjoy a swim or a boat ride. But if you're visiting from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), you might go boating for science.
Research looks at entropy generation from hydrodynamic mixing in ICF experiments
3hResearch conducted at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) is taking a closer look at entropy—the measure of internal energy per unit temperature that is unavailable for doing useful work—in experiments at the National Ignition Facility (NIF).
What do people think about the psychology of sports team fandom?
3hSo one thing I've been trying to understand recently is how people — specifically fans get so intensely emotionally invested in sports teams. I'm not immune to this myself as I also have teams which I root for. I get happy when they win and sad when they lose, but I usually get over it pretty quickly. I know lots fans who get significantly more into than I do, even for sports we both love. They p
NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter images Saturn
3hFrom a viewpoint about 90 kilometers (56 miles) above Lacus Veris, "Lake of Spring," the camera aboard NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spacecraft imaged Saturn on October 13, 2021. In this view, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) was looking down at the north face of the rings, and from this perspective the rings in front of Saturn appear below its equator.
NASA's Curiosity rover sends a picture postcard from Mars
3hAn artistic interpretation of Curiosity's view high up on a Martian mountain was created by mission team members who were stunned by the sweeping landscape.
As Federal Disaster Aid Languishes, Private Lenders Are Filling the Gap
3hA new program allows Morgan Stanley to front money for disaster repairs and then get paid back, with interest, by taxpayers.
CDC Pathology Investigator Dies Unexpectedly at 65
3hSherif Zaki worked at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for more than 30 years, and was renowned for uncovering crucial intel on various outbreak-causing scourges, from Ebola and Zika to SARS and influenza.
Nasa opsender fartøj, der skal smadre asteroide ud af kurs
4hI morgen opsendes test-missionen, der skal ramme en asteroide.
Pre-Black Friday Doorbusters: Save On A High-End Pocket Projector
4hProjectors are fantastic for home movie nights , but finding a high-quality one for a good price can be tough. Consider the Prima Pocket Projector , which is on sale for just $279.97 (reg. $799) as a part of our Pre-Black Friday Doorbusters Sale. The Prima Pocket Projector is as slim and as light as an iPhone 7s Plus, but it casts a large shadow as it is capable of producing a 200″ cinema-quality
Black Friday Deal: Save 32% on this dog DNA test kit
4hThe Black Friday dog DNA test kit deal will let you discover your dog's exact breeding makeup and health risks without breaking the bank.
UK enters wave of excess deaths not fully explained by Covid
4hThird, unexpected, rise during pandemic raises possibility of fatalities caused by NHS strains and lack of early diagnosis
Where did COVID-19 start? Evidence points to market
4hThe Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan, China has emerged as the most likely source of the COVID-19 outbreak, making a possible alternative explanation that the virus leaked from a research lab increasingly unlikely, according to a new paper. Sleuthing through health records and genomic and epidemiologic data from the earliest days of COVID-19, Michael Worobey, a virus evolution expert at t
Newly Announced Exoplanet-Hunting Space Telescope Funded by Breakthrough Initiative
4hImage by Wikipedia. Alpha Centauri AB is on the left, Beta Centauri on the right, and Proxima Centauri is at the center of the red circle. Move over, James Webb: humanity is about to get another eye in the sky. There’s just been a new space telescope announced, named TOLIMAN, and it’s already got funding from the Breakthrough project . The telescope is designed around two things: its target, and
Q&A: How to Keep Antarctica Safe from Invasive Species
5hThe Scientist spoke with University of Wollongong ecologist Dana Bergstrom about protecting the continent's native plants and animals in the face of climate change and a growing human presence.
Climate Pledges Still Not Enough to Keep Warming Below 2-Degree Limit
5hCurrent national targets to cut emissions could result in nearly 3 degrees C of warming — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
Beska gener ska ge svenska cideräpplen
5hTusen äppelfröplantor växer just nu till sig på Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet. Korsningar mellan svenska härdiga äpplen och cideräpplen. Några av dem kommer att ge nya äppelsorter som har tillräckligt med bitterarom för cidertillverkning. Franska och engelska sorter av cideräpplen fungerar inte så bra på svenska breddgrader, men nu har de korsats med härdiga svenska äpplesorter. I dag står tusen
Empress Catherine the Great's letter on smallpox vaccination to go up for auction
5hA letter written by Russian empress Catherine the Great on April 20, 1787, stressing the importance of the smallpox vaccine will go up for auction in London.
Revolution in imaging with neutrons: FRM II research group develops new processing method for image data
5hAn international research team has developed a new imaging technology. In the future this technology could not only improve the resolution of neutron measurements by many times but could also reduce radiation exposure during x-ray imaging.
HHMI Kickstarts $2 Billion Initiative to Boost Diversity in STEM
5hThe Howard Hughes Medical Institute will invest the funds over 10 years across all stages of the STEM pipeline.
NFL hall of famer Michael Strahan going to space with Bezos’s Blue Origin
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5hMichael Strahan BO
Super Bowl champ will join daughter of astronaut Alan Shepard Duo will join four paying customers on flight NFL hall of famer Michael Strahan is going to space next month. Strahan, who turned 50 on Sunday and won Super Bowl XLII during his 15-year career with the New York Giants, will join Laura Shepard Churchley, the eldest daughter of astronaut Alan Shepard, on the 9 December mission aboard the
Tropical trees grow less in warmer years so they take in less CO2
5hA 21-year study of a patch of tropical forest shows that the trees produce less wood in years when temperatures are higher, suggesting these forests will mop up less carbon dioxide in future
1 in 5 early galaxies may be hiding in space dust
5hAstronomers have discovered two previously invisible galaxies 29 billion light-years away from Earth. The discovery suggests that up to one in five such distant galaxies remain hidden from our telescopes, camouflaged by cosmic dust. The new knowledge changes perceptions of our universe’s evolution since the Big Bang . “The next step is to identify the galaxies we overlooked, because there are far
New species of green microalga identified in São Paulo
6hA group led by researchers affiliated with the Phycology Laboratory at the Federal University of São Carlos (UFSCar) in the state of São Paulo, Brazil, have discovered a new species of green microalga in a reservoir located in the northwest of the state. As a result of the discovery, microalgae of the genus Nephrocytium have been moved to an order belonging to a different taxonomic class and phylo
A new project to support student carers
6hStaffordshire University is leading a project to better support students with caring responsibilities alongside their studies.
Dopamine plays key role in songbird mating
6hIn humans, the dopamine system has been tied to rewards and pleasurable sensations. As well as to memory and learning. A recent study from McGill University, published in Current Biology, suggests that dopamine may also play a key role in shaping what songs female songbirds enjoy, which may ultimately affect mating as females choose (and then remember) their mates based on the songs they prefer.
Virtual reality tool to be used in the fight against disease
6hScience has the technology to measure the activity of every gene within a single individual cell, and just one experiment can generate thousands of cells worth of data. Researchers at Lund University in Sweden have now revolutionized the way this data is analyzed—by using 3D video gaming technology. The study is published in the journal iScience.
Studying Facial Expressions | Facial Action Coding System (FACS) Practice | Action Unit 10 (AU10)
6hsubmitted by /u/Broad-Fuel4116 [link] [comments]
Best Foot Massagers for Relaxation, Pain Relief, and Healing
6hAfter a long hard day, there’s nothing better (and sometimes, more necessary) than a foot rub. While going to a professional masseuse regularly will add up, there is a more cost-effective alternative that will knead out the knots at home. Enter the best foot massagers, which can improve circulation, stimulate muscles, reduce tension, and provide pain relief . The best foot massagers cater to your
First moth species on Alpenrose discovered
6hAn Austrian-Swiss research team was able to find a previously unknown glacial relic in the Alps, the Alpine rose leaf-miner moth. It is the first known species to have its caterpillars specializing on the rust-red alpine rose, a very poisonous, widely distributed plant that most animals, including moths and butterflies, strictly avoid. The extraordinary record was just published in the peer-review
Meat substitutes are still tricky to market to consumers despite pandemic growth
6hThe plant-based/meat alternative market has been growing for years, but it was during the pandemic that its profile soared. Meat substitutes remain relatively niche products, however. So how can its proponents break through to consumers?
Finding the perfect employee
6hThere is an eternal question when hiring: "Is this person really the right fit?" Even if a candidate has the skills for the job, does their personality fit the company culture? Do their goals align with those of the organization? In the very short span of a selection process, it is very difficult to get to know the person behind the mask and find the answers to these questions. A new paper publish
An exploration of tipping in complex systems
6hComplex systems can be found in a diverse array of real-world scenarios, but are unified by their ability to suddenly transition between drastically different patterns of behavior. Known as 'tipping,' this type of transformation is generally triggered by small changes in the parameters of individual systems—whose effects can rapidly cascade to alter entire networks of interacting subsystems. In th
AstraZeneca calls on UK to increase science investment
6hChair of pharma group says support will boost economy as it opens £1bn R&D campus in Cambridge
Black Friday Hydrow Deal: 20% off this advanced rowing machine
6hOne of the most advanced rowing machines, the Hydrow, is selling for 20% off for Black Friday.
Marine Oxygen Levels are the Next Great Casualty of Climate Change
7hThe increasing frequency of dead zones will affect billions of people who rely on the ocean for survival — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
Nordsjællandsk plastvirksomhed 3D-printer værktøjet
7hPLUS. Plastvirksomheden Carmo har udviklet teknologi til specialfremstilling af sprøjtestøbningsværktøjer.
I Beat Him By 6 Inches! | Street Outlaws: No Prep Kings
7hStream Street Outlaws: No Prep Kings on discovery+ ► https://go.discovery.com/tv-shows/street-outlaws-no-prep-kings #StreetOutlawsNoPrepKings #StreetRacing #Discovery About Street Outlaws: No Prep Kings: Street racers battle at rough, untested tracks across the country and earn points depending on how they perform. Whoever has the most points at the end is crowned the true No Prep King! Subscribe
Därför får bara ena tvillingen typ 2-diabetes
7hEn tvilling kan vara sjuk i typ-2 diabetes, medan den andra tvillingen inte utvecklar sjukdomen. Skillnader i genernas aktivitet kan vara förklaringen. Forskare från Lunds universitet har upptäckt en så kallad epigenetisk förändring hos tvillingar med typ 2-diabetes. Epigenetiska förändringar sker bland annat genom dna-metylering, en kemisk process som styr genernas funktion . Processen påverkas
Healthy placentas could protect brains of growth-restricted babies
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7hCells Protect Growth
Placentas from mothers of healthy newborns could one day be used to reduce brain injury in growth-restricted babies, according to new research. The findings show that stem cells sourced from a healthy placenta may reduce damaging inflammation in these babies after only three days. “There is currently no treatment to protect the brains of a growth-restricted baby,” says Julie Wixey from the Centre
Unraveling the interactions of individual sugar molecules with cells
7hSugars interact with the cell surface through sugar-binding proteins called lectins. These interactions play a fundamental role in many of the cell's biological processes. One important function is the modulation of the immune response towards an outside threat. In a recent Nature Chemical Biology paper, ICMS researchers team up with researchers from Leiden University to unravel the interactions o
A COVID-19 peptide vaccine for the induction of SARS-CoV-2 T cell immunity
7hNature, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41586-021-04232-5
Researchers find fake news about controversial topics contributes to political polarization
7hIt's been a year since America experienced one of its most divisive elections in decades. Although President Joe Biden has called for unity, recent data from a new measurement, the USC Polarization Index, has shown political polarization remains as bad today as it was a year ago.
Enhanced triboelectric nanogenerators of polymeric sulfur blends with toxin-free synthesis
8hA triboelectric nanogenerator (TENG) is an energy-harvesting device that converts mechanical energy into electricity through contact separation or relative sliding movements of two opposite tribo-polar materials. Researchers from Inha University previously reported the first example of sulfur backbone polymer-based TENG. The surface of the sulfur copolymer film was directly fluorinated using toxic
Novel, inexpensive catalysts enabling noble metal chemistry
8hAlkynes have many uses in industry. Until now, it was assumed that gold- or platinum-based catalysts were absolutely necessary for certain chemical reactions with alkynes. Chemists at Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU) have now succeeded in carrying out the same reactions with considerably less expensive materials. The team reports on its work in the Journal of the American Chemical S
MKID detectors turn out to have 100 times lower noise
8hScientists use superconducting detectors (MKIDs) to discern the spectrum of exoplanets from their faint glow. Now, researchers from SRON Netherlands Institute for Space Research and TU Delft have observed 100 times lower noise than expected, providing a new fundamental physics insight: the relationship between the number of quasiparticles and their lifetime vanishes. The study has been published i
A chip-scale microscope for high-throughput fluorescence imaging
8hConventional light microscopy has been instrumental for studying cells and microorganisms; fluorescence microscopy enabled visualization of even smaller cell features by selectively adding fluorescent labels to molecules. These microscopes are often comprise bulky and expensive systems that require regular maintenance to keep the lenses aligned. Additionally, they need to strike a compromise betwe
Nanotechnology offers pain relief for tooth sensitivity
8hIn an Australian first, researchers from the University of Queensland have used nanotechnology to develop effective ways to manage tooth sensitivity.
Swapping spit helps ants share metabolic labour
8hAnt colonies use fluids passed mouth-to-mouth to create a colony-wide metabolism, shows a study published in eLife.
Ancient human relative, Australopithecus sediba, 'walked like a human, but climbed like an ape'
8hAn international team of scientists has discovered a two-million-year-old fossil vertebrae from an extinct species of ancient human relative.
Researchers recover ancient mammoth tusk during deep-sea expedition
8hThe ocean's dark depths hold many secrets. For more than three decades, MBARI has been exploring the deep waters off the coast of central California. During an expedition aboard the R/V Western Flyer in 2019, ROV pilot Randy Prickett and scientist Steven Haddock made a peculiar observation.
Protein complex study uncovers unexpected differences between people and yeast
8hFor the first time, researchers have constructed a detailed 3D structure of human SAGA, a 20-piece molecular machine crucial to human life.
A new snow tracking sensor
8hRoofs collapsing under heavy snow, mini-avalanches in cities, and flash floods are just some of the winter headaches that could be resolved if there were a better way to track snow cover. With that in mind, Ph.D. student Mohamed Karim El Oufir, research assistant Anas El Alem, and Professor Karem Chokmani from Institut national de la recherche scientifique (INRS) are working on a sensor that can t
Optoelectrode changes reduce injuries to brain tissue, improve nerve research
8hThe use of electrodes placed inside the brains of laboratory specimens has pushed the field of neuroscience to new findings for decades. Common silicon-based electrodes rely on established production methods but are stiff and prone to injuring the brain. More pliable polymer-based electrodes avoid these issues but are difficult to scale, especially when integrating light emitters for neuron stimul
China's new family planning policy comes from old playbook
8hChina's universal three-child policy was passed into law this past August to boost the country's birth rate, after a two-child limit—implemented more than five years ago—failed to do so.
Why the oil industry's pivot to carbon capture and storage, while it keeps on drilling, isn't a solution
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8hCarbon Capture Svante
After decades of sowing doubt about climate change and its causes, the fossil fuel industry is now shifting to a new strategy: presenting itself as the source of solutions. This repositioning includes rebranding itself as a "carbon management industry."
Study proposes a two-step plan to combat China's waning agricultural exports
8hFor the past 17 years, China has imported more agricultural products than it has exported. Finding ways to improve the export competitiveness of its agricultural products has been a pressing challenge for China since it joined the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001. To date, research into the issue has largely focused on the macro perspective; little research has been conducted from a micro po
Pore-mouth catalysis boosting the formation of iso-paraffins from syngas over bifunctional catalysts
8hThe bifunctional catalysts consisting of spinel ZnAlOx and SAPO-11 zeolite can directly convert syngas (a mixture of H2 and CO) into high-quality gasoline. The selectivity of C5–C11 gasoline-range hydrocarbons can reach 79% with a high content of iso-paraffins. The formation of iso-paraffins over ZnAlOx/SAPO-11 catalyst follows a pore-mouth catalysis mechanism, which means the isomerization of lin
How lighting affects office workers
8hAlthough we usually do not realize this, lighting is an essential part of our daily lives. After all, without light, no sight. Next to enabling us to see safely and comfortably move from place A to B, lighting also has a large impact on how we perceive and appreciate spaces. Ph.D. student Adrie de Vries has investigated how lighting affects the experience and performance of knowledge workers in an
Island conservationists identify key barriers to meeting biodiversity targets
8hThe impacts of invasive alien species, habitat loss and climate change are compounded in small island nations, which are highly dependent on biodiversity for their economic and social wellbeing. The failure to meet global biodiversity targets clearly indicates the need for more effective biodiversity management and conservation efforts, and this in turn requires better understanding of the current
Owners Resort to Hacking Smart Treadmills After NordicTrack Locks Them Out
8hIt’s natural to expect that if you buy something, you can do whatever you want with it. However, the complexity of laws around intellectual property has made that difficult. The right to repair movement is gaining steam with even Apple loosening restrictions on tinkering with your own hardware . NordicTrack is not so enlightened, though. After customers started installing their own apps on the co
Forskere lokker MRSA i dødsfælde med dopede peptider
8hPLUS. Ved at tilsætte særlige peptider er forskere lykkedes med at fordoble effekten af udfordret antibiotikum mod MRSA.
Skogsbruket förstör infrastruktur för miljonbelopp
8hSkogsbruket måste förändras för att skydda samhällsviktiga funktioner, menar en ny rapport som Skogsstyrelsen tagit fram med flera andra myndigheter. Om inte riskerar vi höga samhällskostnader i framtiden.
US astronomy has ambitious plans — but it needs global partners
8hNature, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03514-2 Ten-year ‘decadal survey’ sets out plans for a ‘super Hubble’, powerful ground-based telescopes and opportunities for international collaboration.
Earth is headed for well over two degrees of warming
8hNature, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03507-1 Modellers look at how climate policies might change with time — and find a wide range of possible outcomes, none of them good.
5 Activities That Prevent Cognitive Decline
9hThese evidence-based activities have shown to improve or preserve your brain's ability to think, learn or remember while aging.
What We Can Learn from Babies’ Gut Microbiomes
9hAs with adults, infants’ gut bacteria are less diverse than ever, which may play a role in disease progression later in life. C-sections and antibiotics may be partly to blame.
How a powerful new telescope will reveal distant secrets
9hThe James Webb Space Telescope will soon soar into the heavens
No Bones, No Scales, No Eyeballs: Appetite Grows for Lab-Grown Seafood
9hCell-based fish taste the same as their wild and farmed counterparts. But will it ever make economic sense to produce this kind of protein? — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
Prep yourself to get lots of gift cards for the holidays
9hAmid supply chain issues resulting in emptying store shelves, the most common holiday present this year may be a gift card, according to a retail expert. “Everything I have read says there’s plenty of demand. I wonder what it’s going to get spent on,” says John Talbott , director of the Center for Education and Research in Retailing at the Indiana University Kelley School of Business. “I think th
Antidepressant prevents most serious COVID-19 complications
9hThe low-cost antidepressant fluvoxamine prevents some of the most serious complications of COVID-19, sharply reducing the risk of hospitalization and death, researchers report. Results of the study, the largest yet to evaluate a common, low-cost antidepressant as a treatment for COVID-19, appear in The Lancet Global Health . This trial, conducted in Brazil, confirms results from the first trial o
The Atlantic Daily: The Home Is the Future of Work—And Travel
9hEvery weekday evening, our editors guide you through the biggest stories of the day, help you discover new ideas, and surprise you with moments of delight. Subscribe to get this delivered to your inbox. Every Thanksgiving, I, like so many other people, will journey from my office to my family dining table. This Thanksgiving, that journey will be about 10 feet. For a smaller-than-you-might-think,
Ung hjerteforsker modtager prestigefyldt pris i USA
9hEn af verdens største patientforeninger, American Heart Association, tildeler dansk forsker Young Investigator Award.
Spørg Fagfolket: Ændrer det på Jordens masse, at vi graver efter olie og gas?
9hEn række læsere vil gerne vide, hvordan det påvirker Jordens masse, at vi graver efter alt muligt. Det svarer lektor fra Aarhus Universitet på.
2.8 millioner kroner til forskning i psykisk sygdom hos børn
9hHvordan påvirker børns omgivelser og gener udviklingen af psykisk sygdom? Det vil adjunkt ved Institut for Biomedicin på Aarhus Universitet, Anna Starnawska, undersøge.
LevitasBio Announces New Integrated Approaches to Sample Preparation and Cell Enrichment
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9hLevitasBio Announces Cell
LevitasBio has announced the expansion of its product portfolio with the release of two new product lines that will enable researchers and laboratory personnel to better process and characterize human, animal and plant samples.
Hjertesvigtspatienter med atrieflimren har oftere brug for hospitalshjælp
10hPersoner med hjertesvigt har flere sengedage på hospitalerne og oftere brug for indlæggelse og ambulant hjælp, hvis de i tillæg til deres hjertesvigt også får atrieflimren. Forskellen er overraskende stor, siger forsker.
Reducing cell culture contamination with INTEGRA's versatile pipettes
10hINTEGRA Biosciences – a leading provider of high quality laboratory equipment – supplies a comprehensive range of liquid handling tools that are ideal for sterile cell biology workflows.
Bio-Rad Introduces StarBright UltraViolet 400 Dye for Flow Cytometry
10hStarBright UltraViolet 400 Dye Offers Maximal Brightness and Narrow Excitation and Emission Profiles for Precise Resolution
Forbruget af antibiotika falder på landets plejehjem
10hBeboerne på landets plejehjem får udskrevet mindre antibiotika af deres læger end tidligere. Siden 2016 er antallet af recepter faldet med 23 procent.
Compounds from soybeans may improve animal health
10hAntimicrobial compounds that soybean plants produce when threatened by insects, diseases and even drought may help animals stay healthy, thereby reducing the need for antibiotics.
LabTalk Podcast – Phagocidal Macrophages: A New Battle Tactic Against Resistant Cancers
10h[no content]
Should Twitter politely warn users not to tweet hate speech?
10hWarning Twitter users of the potential consequences of tweeting hate speech can temporarily reduce their hateful language on the platform, research suggests. “Debates over the effectiveness of social media account suspensions and bans on abusive users abound, but we know little about the impact of either warning a user of suspending an account or of outright suspensions in order to reduce hate sp
Pakkeforløb med fokus på gentagne indlæggelser er en succes på nogle afdelinger og rammer ved siden af på andre
10hPakkeforløb til patienter med gentagne indlæggelser er blevet afprøvet i Region Syddanmark. På nogle afdelinger hjælper pakkeforløbet til et forløbsorienteret fokus og overblik over målgruppen. På andre afdelinger har pakkeforløbet ramt ved siden af dagligdagen, siger projektchef bag evaluering af de syddanske pakkeforløb.
Nedgang i antallet af lægemiddelindustriens kliniske forsøg i Danmark i 2020
10hDer var gang i færre kliniske forsøg i Danmark i 2020 end i 2019. Til gengæld blev der igangsat flere nye kliniske forsøg. Lægemiddelindustriforeningen holder godt øje med tallene, da Danmark hele tiden skal være en interessant partner for lægemiddeludviklere at lave kliniske forsøg i.
Inre proteinrörelse förklarar cellens energibalans
10hForskare har "filmat" hur ett protein, som reglerar energibalansen i cellen, förändrar sin struktur för att katalysera en kemisk reaktion. De molekylära mekanismerna som ligger till grund för hur en cell styr energikonsumtion och lagring är ännu inte helt kända. – Vår studie presenterar nya rön för en välkänd enzymatisk reaktion i cellen. Studien bidrar till den generella förståelsen av hur prote
Do vaccines protect against long COVID? What the data say
10hNature, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03495-2 Vaccines reduce the risk of developing COVID-19 — but studies disagree on their protective effect against long COVID.
Coal plants are closing faster than expected, governments can keep the exit orderly
10hThe international climate summit in Glasgow aimed to "consign coal power to history". But while some major coal-consuming countries have agreed to phase out the fossil fuel in the 2030s, Australia is not one of them.
The seas are coming for us in Kiribati. Will Australia rehome us?
10hOur atoll nation is barely two meters above sea level, and the waters are coming for us.
The New Dawn of Psychedelic Medicine
10hPsychedelics have always been around, and millions of people have turned to them for healing and personal growth, outside the designs of the law. Now they are back with renewed force, supported by scientific studies that empirically demonstrate the efficacy of ‘medicines’ such as MDMA, ayahuasca, ketamine or psilocybin , the molecule that confers the attribute of “magic” to mushrooms. submitted b
The Original Lost in Space Series (1965-68) by Irwin Allen
10hsubmitted by /u/yadavvenugopal [link] [comments]
DART Asteroid Deflection Mission Ready for Launch
10hWhy is NASA planning on deliberately crashing a spacecraft into a small asteroid that poses no threat to the Earth? It’s a test of an asteroid deflection system – DART (Double Asteroid Redirection Test) . Why the “double”? Most articles on the topic don’t say, and I had two hypotheses. The first is that the mission is targeting two asteroids, or actually a binary asteroid, Didymos (Greek for “twi
Can Facebook Be Contained?
11hThe New Puritans A growing illiberalism, fueled by social media, is trampling democratic discourse, Anne Applebaum argued in October. The result is a chilling atmosphere in which mob justice has replaced due process and forgiveness is impossible. The paramount value of the university has always been academic freedom, the freedom of university departments and professors to decide what to teach and
Participants wanted: A study on emotions and memory
11hI’m currently conducting a study on memory and emotion regulation. If you could spare some time, please complete this survey. I will be asking you about your everyday memory and how you manage your emotions. All data is anonymous. You are eligible to participate in this study if you are aged 18- 75 and understand written English. The survey will take no longer than 20 minutes to complete. Please
Save 30% On These Top-Selling Apps With This Pre-Black Friday Sale
11hFor just a few days, we’re offering Black Friday deals on our top apps and software . Check out these 10 Pre-Black Friday Doorbusters deals, each of which can be accessed with code APPS30. AOMEI Backupper Professional Edition: Lifetime Subscription Losing your data can be a disaster. AOMEI Backupper helps protect against it, with backup support for everything on your PC, selective file restore, a
Rymdfarkost sänds iväg för att krocka med asteroid
11hPå morgonen den 24 november, svensk tid, ska rymdfarkosten DART skickas ut i rymden. Den ska göra det första praktiska testet för att rikta om en asteroid – en teknik som kan användas för att skydda jorden mot hotande asteroidnedslag.
Daily briefing: Adoption advice for academics
11hNature, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03528-w Two scientists discovered that the journey to becoming adoptive parents has unique challenges for academics. Plus, the first quantum computer to pack 100 qubits and the vast research infrastructure being created to support China’s climate goals.
Black Friday augmented reality globe deal: Get 30% off a globe for kids
12hYou can save $16.80 with this Black Friday augmented reality globe deal, the perfect educational device for young globe-trotters!
Publisher Correction: Assessing the impact of suppressing Southern Ocean SST variability in a coupled climate model
12hScientific Reports, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-02519-1
Author Correction: Learning spin liquids on a honeycomb lattice with artificial neural networks
12hScientific Reports, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-02472-z
Food insecurity in First Nations
12hTen years in the making, a study co-led by a researcher at Université de Montréal warns that many First Nations face three to five times the rate of food insecurity than the Canadian population overall—especially families with children.
Prototype SETI hardware gets first data from VLA
12hA system designed to provide data from the National Science Foundation's Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) for analysis in the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) has successfully acquired data from a VLA antenna. The system—dubbed COSMIC: the Commensal Open Source Multimode Interferometer Cluster—is designed to receive data from a newly-developed parallel Ethernet interface to the
Rare Einstein manuscript set to fetch millions
12hAlbert Einstein's handwritten notes for the theory of relativity are being auctioned in Paris on Tuesday, expected to fetch millions of euros.
Hemipteran–ant mutualism could represent symbiotic invasion
12hAnts are among the most diverse and abundant insects on the planet. Both native and invasive ants are capable of forming mutualisms with hemipteran insects, preying on non-hemipteran herbivores and indirectly affecting primary production. To date, most research has focused on only one or two levels of interaction between ants, other arthropods, and plants, and few studies have focused on the poten
Author Correction: Maladaptive activation of Nav1.9 channels by nitric oxide causes triptan-induced medication overuse headache
12hNature Communications, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-26676-z
Bias-corrected CMIP6 global dataset improves dynamical downscaling projection of future climate
12hProjections of the Earth's future climate at a finer scale are important in climate-related studies. However, the typical spatial resolution of CMIP6 models is approximately 100 km, which is not sufficient for resolving fine-scale orography, land cover and dynamics of the atmosphere, hindering their ability to simulate extreme weather and climate events.
Nyt dansk forskningscenter skal løse den akutte mangel på it-specialister
12hEt samarbejde mellem landets universiteter og Alexandra Instituttet skal uddanne flere it-specialister og ændre den generelle opfattelse af it-fagene.
Fremtidens mobilitet er elektrisk: Store krav til batterier og effektelektronik
12hPLUS. Ekspert i industriel elektronik tror på, at øget samarbejde mellem universiteterne kan give nye startups på et felt i stor forandring.
PFAS-forurening i jord kan varmes væk, inden den når vand
12hPLUS. Krüger tør nu godt love, at man kan få bugt med PFAS-forurening, inden den gør skade på drikkevand eller vandmiljø. Både miljø- og klimavenligt.
New details behind how the Shigella pathogen delivers bacterial proteins into our cells
12hShigella, a bacterial pathogen that causes dysentery and is the leading cause of childhood diarrheal diseases, inserts a pore called a translocon into an infected person's intestinal cells and then injects bacterial proteins into the cells. There, the proteins hijack the cells' machinery to help Shigella multiply. In a study published in mBio, a team at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) has unc
Artificial intelligence powers protein-folding predictions
12hNature, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03499-y Deep-learning algorithms such as AlphaFold2 and RoseTTAFold can now predict a protein’s 3D shape from its linear sequence — a huge boon to structural biologists.
University of Glasgow ‘in discussions to retract’ seven papers, confirming Retraction Watch reporting
13hThe University of Glasgow is “in discussions to retract” seven papers by a pharmacology researcher who worked there for more than 25 years, after it learned of allegations on PubPeer by pseudonymous whistleblower Clare Francis. The development confirms reporting by Retraction Watch earlier this month. In that post, we wrote: The story begins in December … Continue reading
Molekylær hacking: Kræftgen omprogrammerer ”proteinfabrikker” til at fremme celledeling
13hRibosomerne i vores celler, der også er kendt som ”proteinfabrikker”, kan blive ændret…
Why green energy firm Bulb's collapse is not a big blow for renewables
13hBulb’s collapse may not directly affect the amount of investment flowing into new UK renewable projects, but is nonetheless a bad look for such a high profile green energy firm to fail.
Author Correction: Multi-trophic markers illuminate the understanding of the functioning of a remote, low coral cover Marquesan coral reef food web
13hScientific Reports, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-02477-8
Author Correction: Effect of Au substrate and coating on the lasing characteristics of GaAs nanowires
13hScientific Reports, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-02531-5
Early Black Friday Deal: Save up to $80 on these air purifiers at Amazon
13hGrab a great early Black Friday deal on this selection of Medify air purifiers.
Why the U.S. Hasn’t Stopped Syphilis From Killing Babies
13hWhen pregnant mothers who have syphilis go untreated, there is a 40 percent chance their babies will be miscarried, be stillborn, or die shortly after birth. Countries including Cuba, Malaysia, and Sri Lanka have wiped out congenital syphilis while the U.S. faces its highest incidence in nearly 30 years. Why?
Support deaf participants at virtual conferences
13hNature, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03487-2
Science community steps up to reform open access
13hNature, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03485-4
Ditch gendered terminology for cell division
13hNature, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03490-7
Ahmedabad: local data beat the heat
13hNature, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03486-3
How burnout and imposter syndrome blight scientific careers
13hNature, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03042-z Most scientists love what they do, but job satisfaction levels hit a new low, Nature’s survey finds.
Functionally distinct roles for eEF2K in the control of ribosome availability and p-body abundance
14hNature Communications, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-27160-4 Processing bodies are phase separated compartments enriched in translationally repressed mRNAs. Here, Smith et al. show that, in sensory neurons, eukaryotic elongation factor 2 kinase (eEF2K) plays key roles in the regulation of processing body abundance and the formation of translationally inactive ribosome
Persistence against benzalkonium chloride promotes rapid evolution of tolerance during periodic disinfection
14hNature Communications, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-27019-8 Phenotypically tolerant, persister bacterial subpopulations can survive transient antibiotic treatment and facilitate resistance evolution. Here, Nordholt et al. show that E. coli can display persistence against a widely used disinfectant and this is associated with alterations in the cell surface and with a
Identification of disease-linked hyperactivating mutations in UBE3A through large-scale functional variant analysis
14hNature Communications, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-27156-0 UBE3A gene dysregulation is associated with neurodevelopmental disorders, but predicting the function of UBE3A variants remains difficult. The authors use a high-throughput assay to categorize variants by functional activity, and show that UBE3A hyperactivity increases the risk of neurodevelopmental disease.
Dopamine promotes aggression in mice via ventral tegmental area to lateral septum projections
14hNature Communications, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-27092-z The authors show that terminal activity of dopaminergic neurons selectively projecting from the ventral tegmental area to the lateral septum is sufficient for promoting aggression and necessary for establishing baseline aggression in mice.
ACE2-like carboxypeptidase B38-CAP protects from SARS-CoV-2-induced lung injury
14hNature Communications, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-27097-8 Endogenous ACE2 is a receptor for SARS-CoV-2 and a recombinant soluble ACE2 protein can inhibit SARS-CoV-2 infection acting as a decoy. Here the authors show that B38-CAP, an ACE2-like enzyme but not a decoy for the virus, is protective against SARS-CoV-2-induced lung injury in animal models.
Lightwave-driven scanning tunnelling spectroscopy of atomically precise graphene nanoribbons
14hNature Communications, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-26656-3 Here, the authors perform lightwave-driven terahertz scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy of graphene nanoribbons with atomic resolution in three dimensions, revealing localized wavefunctions that are inaccessible by conventional scanning tunnelling microscopy.
Naked mole-rat brown fat thermogenesis is diminished during hypoxia through a rapid decrease in UCP1
14hNature Communications, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-27170-2 Naked mole-rats are hypoxia-tolerant mammals, and during hypoxia their body temperature decreases via unknown mechanisms. Here the authors report that the hypoxia-induced body temperature decrease in naked mole rats occurs through decreased brown adipose tissue thermogenesis via decreases in a key thermogeni
Spatial and temporal intratumour heterogeneity has potential consequences for single biopsy-based neuroblastoma treatment decisions
14hNature Communications, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-26870-z Neuroblastoma is a devastating tumour in children. Here, the authors analyse multi-region patient samples using genomics and transcriptomics, revealing temporal and spatial heterogeneity and questioning the reliability of single-biopsy based diagnostics.
Author Correction: Automated Gleason grading of prostate cancer tissue microarrays via deep learning
14hScientific Reports, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-02195-1
Rystede teknikere lige James Webb teleskopet i stykker?
14hOpsendelsen af James Webb teleskopet er udsat fire dage – indtil videre – da teknikere kom til at ryste teleskopet under klargøring. Nu vil Nasa sikre sig, at intet gik i stykker.
Great Green Wall brings life back to Niger desert
14hOnce a desolate landscape, the Simiri plateau in Niger is now a small paradise for fauna and flora.
Poor diets imperilling people and the planet: report
14hNearly half the world's population suffer from poor nutrition linked to too much or not enough food, a global assessment said Tuesday with wide-ranging impacts on health and the planet.
Flooding in India's Bangalore after heavy rains
14hIndian tech hub Bangalore has been inundated by floodwater after torrential downpours that have killed scores of people across the country's south in the past few weeks.
Study: Remote ocean wilderness areas are 'living time machines,' teeming with large fish
15hA new, widespread study of the global state of marine coral reef wilderness by WCS, NGS, and university collaborators found that remote ocean wilderness areas are sustaining fish populations much better than some of the world's best marine reserves. Findings show that remote reefs protect three times as many stocks as marine reserves, and shelter many important and threatened species that require
Soft food diet increases risks for captive animals released in wild
15hServing up too much soft food to animals rescued into captivity might reduce their survival chances when released back into the wild.
Strengthening the food supply chain in response to the COVID-19 pandemic
15hThe unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic sent shock waves through systems and markets around the world, causing complex economic disruptions. The agricultural market too faced significant challenges. A new article in Applied Animal Science analyzes these challenges to learn from the experience. Specifically, the authors examine protein-sector food supply chains and present lessons learned from the COVI
Why Insurance Is Broken, And How One Company Is Fixing It
15hOne of the toughest moments of a break-in or disaster is losing your stuff. The US saw 1.2 million property crimes in 2018, two-thirds of which happened at homes and apartments, and 387,000 fires at homes in the same year. And while insurance is supposed to help, many find it can be a long, drawn-out nightmare. Why is the insurance protecting our stuff so broken? And how are we starting to fix it
Virtual Reality Therapy
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16hFDA Virtual Reality VR
Are virtual reality headsets a valid tool for treating back pain? Maybe. The post first appeared on Science-Based Medicine .
60 miljoner barn går inte i skolan
16hAllt fler barn i världen går i grundskolan, men sedan år 2010 har den positiva trenden delvis stannat av. Fattigdom och väpnade konflikter pekas ut som de största bromsklossarna.
Læger: Væk med unødigt bureaukrati for udenlandske kolleger
18hRegeringen og Folketinget må sætte turbo på at løse problemet med årelange ventetider for udenlandske læger, der ønsker at arbejde i Danmark, skriver Camilla Noelle Rathcke, formand for Lægeforeningen, forud for dagens samråd i Sundhedsudvalget.
Don’t Sleep on Black Friday & Cyber Monday Mattress Bed Sales 2021
18hHow the Pandemic is Affecting the Mattress Supply Chain
How can I read abstract descriptions/poetry, understand & interpret it, but not create these types of texts?
19hsubmitted by /u/hesitantAsk [link] [comments]
Astronaut Chris Hadfield on life in space – podcast
19hChris Hadfield was the first Canadian to walk in space, became commander of the International Space Station, and became a viral sensation after covering Bowie like no one else. He speaks to the Guardian’s science editor, Ian Sample, about life as an astronaut, the new race to the moon and his new novel, The Apollo Murders. Archive: Canadian Space Agency, Nasa, EMI, DW News, ITV News, CNBC TV, BBC
Astronaut Chris Hadfield on life in space
19hChris Hadfield was the first Canadian to walk in space, became commander of the International Space Station, and became a viral sensation after covering Bowie like no one else. He speaks to the Guardian’s science editor, Ian Sample, about life as an astronaut, the new race to the moon and his new novel, The Apollo Murders.. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/sciencepod
Trods kommende forbud stiger landbrugets forbrug af medicinsk zink til smågrise
21hPLUS. Stigende jordforurening og antibiotikaresistens har ført til EU-forbud. Men svinebønderne er så træge til at ændre praksis, at selv formanden er skuffet.
5 Vulnerable Animal Species That May Surprise You
22hThese animals aren’t quite on the endangered species list, but if we’re not careful, they soon could be.
Highly cited cancer immunologist “seriously breached” research conduct code: Australia institute
22hA cancer immunologist who as of 2017 was “the most highly cited immunologist in Australia” has “seriously breached Codes relating to responsible research conduct,” according to his former employer. QMIR Berghofer in Brisbane “has commissioned an independent external investigation after a number of complaints relating to the research conduct of a former employee Professor Mark … Continue reading
Stream Securely With This Limited-Time Pre-Black Friday Doorbuster
22hA few years ago, an argument broke out about whether streaming was really “the future of entertainment.” Modern events have settled that argument for good, yet that’s left consumers wondering where to get quality content, especially documentaries and informative videos. The CuriosityStream + KeepSolid VPN Unlimited Lifetime Subscription Bundle ensures you always have something great to watch, whi
Snow cover critical for revegetation following forest fires
22hWith wildfires devastating mountain ecosystems across the western United States, their successful forest revegetation recovery hinges on, among other factors, an adequate lasting snowpack, according to new research.
Simulation reveals molecular footprint of organic air pollutants
22hJoining the global effort to curb air pollution, researchers have developed computational tools to accurately assess the footprint of certain organic atmospheric pollutants. Their simulation could help government agencies keep a closer check on human-made sources of carbon-based pollutants.
Scientists may need to rethink how genomics impacts risk for OCD
22hBoth rare and commonly observed differences in the DNA letters strung along a person's chromosomes can explain about a third of the risk for being diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), according to a new study.
Tech companies underreport CO2 emissions
22hCompanies in the digital technology industry are significantly underreporting the greenhouse gas emissions arising along the value chain of their products. Across a sample of 56 major tech companies surveyed, more than half of these emissions were excluded from self-reporting in 2019. At approximately 390 megatons carbon dioxide equivalents, the omitted emissions are in the same ballpark as the ca
Chinese doctors query Beijing’s Covid contact tracing policy
23hClaim that strategy risks stoking public panic marks rare criticism of Communist government
'The Cartoon Guide to Physics': Quirky comic book is 35% off at Amazon
23hLarry Gonick's "The Cartoon Guide to Physics" would be a fun for anyone curious about physics. It's now 35% off for Black Friday.
Deer Can Carry the Coronavirus: Here's What That Means for the Pandemic
1dA new study found more than 80 percent of white-tailed deer in Iowa contracted SARS-CoV-2 last winter.
Space-based Solar Power as a Catalyst for Space Development
1dsubmitted by /u/thispickleisntgreen [link] [comments]
KSTAR, a magnetic fusion device run by South Korean researchers broke its own record in a super-hot plasma field to maintain a plasma center ion temperature of 100 million degrees Celsius for 30 seconds. The previous record set in 2020 was 20 seconds
1dsubmitted by /u/Dr_Singularity [link] [comments]
NASA Reveals Bold Plan to Put a Nuclear Reactor on The Moon Within 10 Years
1dsubmitted by /u/passintimendgas [link] [comments]
Rolls-Royce's all-electric airplane smashes record with 387.4 MPH top speed | Engadget
1dsubmitted by /u/Fun-Bug1060 [link] [comments]
How do we convince the 75% of the public who say they're concerned or alarmed about climate change to take action? Alex Blumberg, Host of ‘How to Save a Planet,’ shares how he thinks we ought to talk about climate change on this episode of Watt It Takes
1dsubmitted by /u/powerhousesam [link] [comments]
Former Defense Officials Weigh-In On Proposed ASTRO, the newly formed research office responsible for extensive investigations into reputed sightings of UAP.
1dsubmitted by /u/Madridsta120 [link] [comments]
The reasons behind lithium-ion batteries' rapid cost decline
1dsubmitted by /u/altmorty [link] [comments]
In 1997 Wired magazine published a "10 things that could go wrong in the 21st century"; Almost every single one of them has come true.
1dsubmitted by /u/lughnasadh [link] [comments]
New record solar cell efficiency for perovskite+silicon at 29.8%, vs average current cells near 23%. This type of cell will probably be the next generation solar cell. Has a clear path toward 35% efficiency and beyond the theoretical maximum single layer cell of 27-28%.
1dsubmitted by /u/thispickleisntgreen [link] [comments]
NASA prepares to deflect asteroid for first time in planetary defence test | Science & Tech News
1dsubmitted by /u/esprit-de-lescalier [link] [comments]
NASA wants to put a nuclear reactor on the Moon to power future manned bases
1dsubmitted by /u/mancinedinburgh [link] [comments]
The Asian Development Bank is using carbon credits to fund the purchase of coal powered electricity plants, so it can shut them down.
1dsubmitted by /u/lughnasadh [link] [comments]
How much will obesity cost the economy by 2060? – According to this research, the projected costs associated with obesity will account for an average of 3.6% of a country’s gross domestic product (GDP) by 2060.
1dsubmitted by /u/Gari_305 [link] [comments]
Wearable for Opioid Users Injects Narcan If You Overdose
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1dWearable Opioid Overdose
A new gadget could bring harm reduction into the world of medtech. Researchers at the University of Washington are developing a wearable Narcan injector for opioid users that can detect whether or not the wearer is breathing — and, if they aren’t, administer the drug to reverse an overdose. The wearable, described in a new paper in the journal Scientific Reports, is similar to an insulin pump — a
Save 30% or more on Slime Kits this Black Friday
1dFor the kids (or adults) in your life who can't get enough slime, here are the best Black Friday slime kit deals for 2021.
How to Talk to Your Annoying Family About Vaccines
1dCongratulations! You ‘ re lucky enough to be seated, in relatively safety, around the Thanksgiving table in-person this year with your annoying family instead of having to do so over Zoom and/or risk catching the plague that, at this time last year, had no vaccine. But wait! What’s that your irritating aunt just said about how her neighbor — who’s a nurse , by the way — told her something about C
Best Budget Gaming Monitors of 2021
1dGaming monitors have enjoyed something of a renaissance over the past few years. There are more choices available on the market than ever before. All this choice can make it difficult to find the best budget gaming monitor, especially if you’re not ready to invest a small fortune in a premium gaming setup. Technological innovations previously confined to high-end monitors have steadily trickled d
COVID gets airborne: Team models delta virus inside an aerosol for the first time
1dIn May 2021, the Centers for Disease Control officially recognized that SARS-CoV-2—the virus that causes COVID-19—is airborne, meaning it is highly transmissible through the air.
COVID-19 case severity: How genetic differences leave immune cells at a disadvantage
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1dCancer Immune Cells
New research shows how genetic variations linked to severe cases of COVID-19 affect our immune cells. The study is one of the first in-depth look at the connections between COVID-19 severity and gene expression in many types of immune cells. This work could guide the development of new COVID-19 therapies to boost immune cell function.
Long-term blood sugar history predicts risk of severe COVID-19 among diabetics
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1dICU Two Covid Risk
People with type 2 diabetes who contract COVID-19 are nearly 50 percent more likely to wind up in intensive care if they have poorly managed their blood sugar levels over the long-term than those with better long-term glycemic control, according to a study using anonymized health care data.
How do we know we're tired?
1dWhy do we need sleep? New research takes a step towards solving this mystery by discovering a mechanism of sleep in zebrafish, with some supporting evidence in mice.
How cells feel curvature
1dCells in your body cannot see, but they can feel their surroundings and their own shape. Scientists now showed via both – experiments and theory – how cells can sense the curvature of tissue around them and how this influences their inner workings.
Optimized second-generation mRNA vaccine demonstrated improved protection against COVID-19 in preclinical testing
1dResearchers conducted a head-to-head test of the second-generation vaccine CV2CoV compared with CVnCoV. The scientists assessed the vaccines' ability to provoke an immune response as well as their protective efficacy against COVID-19 in non-human primates.
Black Friday deal: Save 15% on this KVV air purifier for large spaces
1dThis KVV air purifier is perfect for filtering out particles in a large area. At 15% off the original price, it's also a great deal.
Super thin solar cells hit new efficiency benchmark
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1dRice Solar Cells 2D
Researchers have achieved a new benchmark in the design of atomically thin solar cells made of semiconducting perovskites, boosting their efficiency while retaining their ability to stand up to the environment. The lab of Aditya Mohite of Rice University’s George R. Brown School of Engineering discovered that sunlight itself contracts the space between atomic layers in 2D perovskites enough to im
Click chemistry-enabled CRISPR screening reveals GSK3 as a regulator of PLD signaling [Cell Biology]
1dEnzymes that produce second messengers are highly regulated. Revealing the mechanisms underlying such regulation is critical to understanding both how cells achieve specific signaling outcomes and return to homeostasis following a particular stimulus. Pooled genome-wide CRISPR screens are powerful unbiased approaches to elucidate regulatory networks, their principal limitation being the…
Gender stereotypes about interests start early and cause gender disparities in computer science and engineering [Psychological and Cognitive Sciences]
1dSocietal stereotypes depict girls as less interested than boys in computer science and engineering. We demonstrate the existence of these stereotypes among children and adolescents from first to 12th grade and their potential negative consequences for girls’ subsequent participation in these fields. Studies 1 and 2 (n = 2,277; one…
Lymph node formation and B cell homeostasis require IKK-{alpha} in distinct endothelial cell-derived compartments [Immunology and Inflammation]
1dGlobal inactivation of IκB kinase (IKK)-α results in defective lymph node (LN) formation and B cell maturation, and loss of IKK-α–dependent noncanonical NF-κB signaling in stromal organizer and hematopoietic cells is thought to underlie these distinct defects. We previously demonstrated that this pathway is also activated in vascular endothelial cells…
Ccp1-Ndc80 switch at the N terminus of CENP-T regulates kinetochore assembly [Genetics]
1dKinetochores, a protein complex assembled on centromeres, mediate chromosome segregation. In most eukaryotes, centromeres are epigenetically specified by the histone H3 variant CENP-A. CENP-T, an inner kinetochore protein, serves as a platform for the assembly of the outer kinetochore Ndc80 complex during mitosis. How CENP-T is regulated through the cell…
Host genotype structures the microbiome of a globally dispersed marine phytoplankton [Ecology]
1dPhytoplankton support complex bacterial microbiomes that rely on phytoplankton-derived extracellular compounds and perform functions necessary for algal growth. Recent work has revealed sophisticated interactions and exchanges of molecules between specific phytoplankton–bacteria pairs, but the role of host genotype in regulating those interactions is unknown. Here, we show how phytoplankton microb
Exploring the signaling space of a GPCR using bivalent ligands with a rigid oligoproline backbone [Medical Sciences]
1dG protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs) are one of the most important drug–target classes in pharmaceutical industry. Their diversity in signaling, which can be modulated with drugs, permits the design of more effective and better-tolerated therapeutics. In this work, we have used rigid oligoproline backbones to generate bivalent ligands for the gastrin-releasing…
The physical basis of mollusk shell chiral coiling [Applied Mathematics]
1dSnails are model organisms for studying the genetic, molecular, and developmental bases of left–right asymmetry in Bilateria. However, the development of their typical helicospiral shell, present for the last 540 million years in environments as different as the abyss or our gardens, remains poorly understood. Conversely, ammonites typically have a…
Past insecticide exposure reduces bee reproduction and population growth rate [Ecology]
1dPesticides are linked to global insect declines, with impacts on biodiversity and essential ecosystem services. In addition to well-documented direct impacts of pesticides at the current stage or time, potential delayed “carryover” effects from past exposure at a different life stage may augment impacts on individuals and populations. We investigated…
Harmful algal blooms and cyanotoxins in Lake Amatitlan, Guatemala, coincided with ancient Maya occupation in the watershed [Environmental Sciences]
1dHuman-induced deforestation and soil erosion were environmental stressors for the ancient Maya of Mesoamerica. Furthermore, intense, periodic droughts during the Terminal Classic Period, ca. Common Era 830 to 950, have been documented from lake sediment cores and speleothems. Today, lakes worldwide that are surrounded by dense human settlement and intense…
Molecular mechanisms of sperm motility are conserved in an early-branching metazoan [Environmental Sciences]
1dEfficient and targeted sperm motility is essential for animal reproductive success. Sperm from mammals and echinoderms utilize a highly conserved signaling mechanism in which sperm motility is stimulated by pH-dependent activation of the cAMP-producing enzyme soluble adenylyl cyclase (sAC). However, the presence of this pathway in early-branching metazoans has remained…
Claudin-2 and claudin-12 form independent, complementary pores required to maintain calcium homeostasis [Physiology]
1dCalcium (Ca2+) homeostasis is maintained through coordination between intestinal absorption, renal reabsorption, and bone remodeling. Intestinal and renal (re)absorption occurs via transcellular and paracellular pathways. The latter contributes the bulk of (re)absorption under conditions of adequate intake. Epithelial paracellular permeability is conferred by tight-junction proteins called claudin
Rational regulation of water-seeking effort in rodents [Economic Sciences]
1dIn the laboratory, animals’ motivation to work tends to be positively correlated with reward magnitude. But in nature, rewards earned by work are essential to survival (e.g., working to find water), and the payoff of that work can vary on long timescales (e.g., seasonally). Under these constraints, the strategy of…
Scaling concepts in 'omics: Nuclear lamin-B scales with tumor growth and often predicts poor prognosis, unlike fibrosis [Applied Physical Sciences]
1dPhysicochemical principles such as stoichiometry and fractal assembly can give rise to characteristic scaling between components that potentially include coexpressed transcripts. For key structural factors within the nucleus and extracellular matrix, we discover specific gene-gene scaling exponents across many of the 32 tumor types in The Cancer Genome Atlas, and…
Synaptotagmin 1 oligomerization via the juxtamembrane linker regulates spontaneous and evoked neurotransmitter release [Neuroscience]
1dSynaptotagmin 1 (syt1) is a Ca2+ sensor that regulates synaptic vesicle exocytosis. Cell-based experiments suggest that syt1 functions as a multimer; however, biochemical and electron microscopy studies have yielded contradictory findings regarding putative self-association. Here, we performed dynamic light scattering on syt1 in solution, followed by electron microscopy, and we…
Light-driven dynamic surface wrinkles for adaptive visible camouflage [Engineering]
1dCamouflage is widespread in nature, engineering, and the military. Dynamic surface wrinkles enable a material the on-demand control of the reflected optical signal and may provide an alternative to achieve adaptive camouflage. Here, we demonstrate a feasible strategy for adaptive visible camouflage based on light-driven dynamic surface wrinkles using a…
Tailoring of electronic and surface structures boosts exciton-triggering photocatalysis for singlet oxygen generation [Environmental Sciences]
1dArising from reduced dielectric screening, excitonic effects should be taken into account in ultrathin two-dimensional photocatalysts, and a significant challenge is achieving nontrivial excitonic regulation. However, the effect of structural modification on the regulation of the excitonic aspect is at a comparatively early stage. Herein, we report unusual effects of…
Warming winters in lakes: Later ice onset promotes consumer overwintering and shapes springtime planktonic food webs [Ecology]
1dGlobal climate warming is causing the loss of freshwater ice around the Northern Hemisphere. Although the timing and duration of ice covers are known to regulate ecological processes in seasonally ice-covered ecosystems, the consequences of shortening winters for freshwater biota are poorly understood owing to the scarcity of under-ice research….
Vitexin inhibits APEX1 to counteract the flow-induced endothelial inflammation [Physiology]
1dVascular endothelial cells are exposed to shear stresses with disturbed vs. laminar flow patterns, which lead to proinflammatory vs. antiinflammatory phenotypes, respectively. Effective treatment against endothelial inflammation and the consequent atherogenesis requires the identification of new therapeutic molecules and the development of drugs targeting these molecules. Using Connectivity Map, w
Profile of Gines Morata [Profiles]
1dGinés Morata grew up in remote village in southeast Spain. As a child, he says, he had no scientific role models or sources of inspiration. Yet, by the end of graduate school, Morata had made two groundbreaking discoveries in Drosophila that are still influencing the field of developmental biology, including…
The active grandparent hypothesis: Physical activity and the evolution of extended human healthspans and lifespans [Evolution]
1dThe proximate mechanisms by which physical activity (PA) slows senescence and decreases morbidity and mortality have been extensively documented. However, we lack an ultimate, evolutionary explanation for why lifelong PA, particularly during middle and older age, promotes health. As the growing worldwide epidemic of physical inactivity accelerates the prevalence of…
Innovative wood use can enable carbon-beneficial forest management in California [Sustainability Science]
1dResponsible stewardship of temperate forests can address key challenges posed by climate change through sequestering carbon, producing low-carbon products, and mitigating climate risks. Forest thinning and fuel reduction can mitigate climate-related risks like catastrophic wildfire. These treatments are often cost prohibitive, though, in part because of low demand for low-value…
Are political parties getting in the way of our health?
1dToday, the two major political parties are often blamed for a plethora of problems in American governance. But for most of the last century and a half, political party competition has had positive effects on the welfare of Americans.
The divided brain and the unmaking of the western world — is technology re-programming our brains to see the world through an ultimately damaging perspective? (A conversation with Iain McGilchrist and a discussion of the implications of his work)
1dConversation with Iain Link Still can't believe we got to have this conversation. I feel like I got to talk to Kant or Hume or Nietzsche or Dostoyevsky while they were still alive. Totally surreal. Beyond that, though, I'm so deeply grateful to Iain for his work. I don't know if many of you haven't heard of Iain or his flagship work "The Master and His Emissary", but if you haven't this might be
Systematic Review: What is Linguistic Creativity in Schizophrenia
1dsubmitted by /u/Broad-Fuel4116 [link] [comments]
(Repost) (Academic) The effect of communication guidelines on peoples' infantilising attitudes towards people with disabilities (18+)
1dI'm doing a research project as part of my course and I would really appreciate having people complete the exercise I have linked! It can be done on mobile and should only take 10-20 minutes to complete. Results won't be published anywhere but you can contact me after December 17th to see the results of the project. Here is the link: [Research project (Qualtrics)]( https://dcupsychology.fra1.
Hurricanes expected to linger over Northeast cities, causing greater damage
1dBy the late 21st century, northeastern U.S. cities will see worsening hurricane outcomes, with storms arriving more quickly but slowing down once they've made landfall. As storms linger longer over the East Coast, they will cause greater damage along the heavily populated corridor, according to a new study.
One in five galaxies in the early universe could still be hidden behind cosmic dust
1dAstronomers have discovered two previously invisible galaxies 29 billion light-years away. Their discovery suggests that up to one in five such distant galaxies remain hidden from our telescopes, camouflaged by cosmic dust. The new knowledge changes perceptions of our universe's evolution since the Big Bang.
Digital teaching: Opportunity or challenge?
1dResearchers explain why digital teaching cannot replace face-to-face teaching in university education, but can certainly be seen as a complementary tool. The future of teaching and learning may lie in so-called blended learning, a mix of face-to-face and online education.
Climate uncertainty colors flood risk assessment
1dUnderstanding how climate change will affect the flooding of rivers may become easier with a new framework for assessing flood risk that's been developed by an interdisciplinary team.
Researchers study the link between vitamin D and inflammation
1dAn active metabolite of vitamin D (not the over-the-counter version) is involved in shutting down inflammation, new research shows.
Rodents could be asymptomatic carriers of SARS-like coronaviruses, study suggests
1dSome ancestral rodents likely had repeated infections with SARS-like coronaviruses, leading them to acquire tolerance or resistance to the pathogens, according to new research. This raises the possibility that modern rodents may be reservoirs of SARS-like viruses, the researchers say.
An action plan for solving the climate crisis | John Doerr and Ryan Panchadsaram
1d"How much more damage do we have to endure before we realize that it's cheaper to save this planet than to ruin it?" asks engineer and investor John Doerr. In conversation with Countdown cofounder Lindsay Levin, Doerr and systems innovator Ryan Panchadsaram lay out six big objectives that — if pursued with speed and scale — could transform society and get us to net-zero emissions by 2050. An act
COVID-19 has changed priorities in dating, sex, and love
1dCOVID-19 has caused a dramatic shift in people’s priorities when it comes to dating, sex, and love, according to an annual study on single adults. Some of the changes could last well beyond the pandemic, say faculty from the Kinsey Institute at Indiana University. This is the 11th year for Match.com’s “Singles in America” study, which Kinsey Institute executive director Justin Garcia and senior r
Titan-in-a-Test-Tube: Earthbound Chemists Search for Alien Life
1dResearchers simulated the conditions on Saturn’s largest moon to see how matter there might come alive.
How will carbon pricing impact inflation?
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1dIndonesia Carbon G20
This is a re-post from the Citizens' Climate Lobby blog Inflation — the decline of purchasing power as prices rise — is currently at its highest level in 30 years . This has led to concern among the public and policymakers about the rising costs of many important products like food, shelter, gasoline, electricity, and cars. Senator Joe Manchin has said he will not “support a package that risks hu
High-speed propeller star is fastest spinning white dwarf
1dA white dwarf star that completes a full rotation once every 25 seconds is the fastest spinning confirmed white dwarf, according to a team of astronomers.
'Mantle wind' blows through slab window beneath Panama
1dVolcanic gases are helping researchers track large-scale movements in Earth's deep interior. Scientists have discovered anomalous geochemical compositions beneath Panama.
How sugar-loving microbes could help power future cars
1dIt sounds like modern-day alchemy: Transforming sugar into hydrocarbons found in gasoline. But that's exactly what scientists have done. Researchers report harnessing the wonders of biology and chemistry to turn glucose (a type of sugar) into olefins (a type of hydrocarbon, and one of several types of molecules that make up gasoline).
Breakthrough in fight on tick-borne CCHF virus is latest use of new strategy against diseases
1dUsing the same approach they recently used to create effective vaccine candidates against COVID-19 and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), scientists are tackling another virus: the tick-borne Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF).
Devastating Pacific Northwest Floods Could Carry a Climate Warning
1dSo-called atmospheric rivers could become more intense and drop more rain in the future — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
Researchers caution global economic growth could slide into stagnation
1dThe heady days of rapidly rising prosperity may be coming to an end, according to an interdisciplinary group of scientists. Developed democracies in particular look to be first in line for a long-run economic slowdown through the 21st century, and that, according to the researchers, should prompt some preparation for the additional fiscal and social stress that it will bring.
Developing high-performance MXene electrodes for next-generation powerful battery
1dTwo-dimensional MXene has been a rising star in the energy world as this material can store energy fast. But their unstable voltage output limits their applications. A collaborative research team has recently developed battery-like electrochemical Nb2CTx MXene electrodes with stable voltage output and high energy density by using a high-voltage scanning strategy. These latest findings may lead to
Parental depression is associated with worse childhood mental health, educational attainment, study finds
1dChildren who live with a parent who has depression are more likely to develop depression and to not achieve educational milestones, according to a new study.
After comparing 17.5 million strategies, researchers validate CDC's vaccine rollout recommendation
1dResearchers evaluated 17.5 million possible strategies the CDC could have recommended as it planned COVID-19 vaccine rollouts. While the researchers generally validate the CDC's plan, they did highlight some improvements, which could inform future vaccination strategies.
Cuba’s bet on home-grown COVID vaccines is paying off
1dNature, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03470-x Preprint data show that a three-dose combo of Soberana jabs has 92.4% efficacy in clinical trials.
What can you expect from another COVID winter?
1dThe US appears to be on the brink of a winter surge in COVID-19 cases, but experts from Johns Hopkins University offer hope that this winter will be better than the last. COVID-19 cases are on the rise again in the United States after dipping just three weeks ago. Vaccine effectiveness is waning and without widespread boosters, shots given six months ago remain at least 80-85% effective against s
Pre-Black Friday Doorbusters: This Ruler Can Measure Anything
1dNo matter who you are, what you do, or where you live, you will always need to measure something. It could be to hang your favorite picture on the wall or measure where to put that brand new computer monitor you bought for a new office space. As long as we’re alive, we’ll have to continue to measure. Most people will usually grab a bulky tape measurer or search the house for that wooden ruler tha
Mini-machine can chop and channel proteins
1dNature, Published online: 23 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03502-6 Scientists’ creation can cut proteins into pieces and thread them through a molecular tunnel.
Journal mulls expression of concern for Cassava Sciences paper
1dA journal is considering issuing an expression of concern for a 2005 paper by authors tied to a company that’s now under investigation for fraud, Retraction Watch has learned. The article, “Ultra-low-dose naloxone suppresses opioid tolerance, dependence and associated changes in mu opioid receptor–G protein coupling and Gβγ signaling,” was written by a group linked … Continue reading
Electric Airplane Sets All-Time Speed Record
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1dRolls-Royce Electric
Whoosh Rolls-Royce’s Spirit of Innovation electric airplane just crushed the all-electric top speed record, soaring through the air at 384.4 mph. That’s if the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) approves the flight and certifies the record. If the record does get certified, the company’s single-seater aircraft will have smashed the current record by an impressive 132 mph, which was set
Rock On with the Best Outdoor Bluetooth Speakers of 2021
1dHigh-fidelity sound is no longer relegated to the living room. Today you can take powerful speakers anywhere, whether you’re splashing in a mountain swimming hole, racing bicycles through the concrete canyons of Manhattan, or canoeing the labyrinthine marshes of the Everglades. Bluetooth connectivity further amplifies the potential for rugged, quality sound by allowing for cordless connections fr
Masser af penge til kræft, knap så mange til KOL: 'Det skaber ulighed i sundhedsvæsenet'
1dKommercielle interesser styrer i høj grad, hvor pengene til klinisk forskning ryger hen, viser rapport.
Indigenous women with breast cancer have more mastectomies
1dNative and Indigenous women with breast cancer have a higher percentage of mastectomy and a lower percentage of lumpectomy compared with white women, according to a new study. The study of 170,000 women uncovers disparities in breast cancer treatments that may lead to poorer health outcomes in Indigenous women, who currently have the worst breast cancer survival outcomes of any racial group in th
Attempts to curb illegal fishing are hurting small-scale fishers in Africa most
1dAttempts to curb illegal fishing in African waters while turning a blind eye to large fishing fleets which are most damaging to fish stocks are putting small-scale fisheries at risk, according to new research from the University of St Andrews.
Study digs up roles bacteria play in global carbon cycle
1dCornell researchers have developed an innovative technique to track microbes and understand the various ways they process soil carbon, findings that add to our knowledge of how bacteria contribute to the global carbon cycle.
Caucasian households in U.S. emit most carbon despite greater energy efficiency
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1dCaucasian Emit Energy
Residential energy use represents roughly one-fifth of annual greenhouse gas emissions in the United States. A team of researchers led by McGill University has used data from 60 million individual American households to look into how carbon emissions caused by household energy use vary by race and ethnicity across the country. Paradoxically, this first national level analysis found that even thoug
Penny-size computer monitors bone health
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1dDevelop Ultra Bone
Researchers have developed ultra-thin wireless devices called osseosurface electronics that grow to the surface of bone and could someday help monitor bone health and healing over long periods. “As a surgeon, I am most excited about using measurements collected with osseosurface electronics to someday provide my patients with individualized orthopedic care—with the goal of accelerating rehabilita
Author Correction: Hapten-mediated recruitment of polyclonal antibodies to tumors engenders antitumor immunity
1dNature Communications, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-25400-1
All-nighter: staying up to fight malaria
1dNature, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03500-8 Victor Chaumeau collects mosquitoes in Myanmar to better understand how to control malaria.
Black Friday sale: Read a free issue of All About History magazine and save 50% on a subscription
1dSubscribe to our sister publication today and take advantage of this amazing half-price Black Friday sale offer
Get active with 40% off this early Black Friday deal on the Fitbit Versa 2
1dEnjoy a massive $81 discount off this Fitbit Versa 2 health and fitness smartwatch in this early Black Friday deal.
Lettuce, cabbage for manatees? Feds, conservationists consider feeding sea cows after 1,000 deaths
1dManatees are starving in Florida, so state and wildlife agencies are considering an unprecedented measure: supplemental feedings.
Where will the next pandemic begin? The Amazon rainforest offers troubling clues
1dThe 10-year-old took off running down a dirt road in the heart of the Amazon rainforest, turning cartwheels, playing tag and picking fistfuls of wild bougainvillea.
Authorities identify source of oil sheen off Huntington Beach
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1dCalifornia Oil Spill HB
A day after an oil sheen was spotted off Huntington Beach, authorities believed they had identified and contained the source: a leak from the damaged area of a pipeline that ruptured in October, spilling an estimated 25,000 gallons of oil into the Pacific.
Bird study illustrates the interplay between disease transmission and behavior
1dA study examining eye disease in a common bird species shows how pathology and behavior interact in complex ways that determine how widely a pathogen can spread.
Black Friday Philips electric toothbrush deals: Get a great toothbrush on sale
1dWith these Black Friday Philips electric toothbrush deals, anyone can clean up their teeth-brushing act.
Vandværker kan også bidrage til CO2-fangst – og spare penge samtidig
1dPLUS. Som alternativ til traditionel blødgøring har Odsherred Forsyning installeret et anlæg, der tilsætter CO2 og dermed bremser udfældningen af kalk. Det er en fordel for både klima, miljø og økonomi.
Monarchs evolved mutations to withstand milkweed toxins; so did their predators
1dMonarch butterflies and their close relatives thrive on poisonous milkweed, thanks to genetic mutations that block the effects of the plant's toxins while allowing the poisons to accumulate in the caterpillar or adult insects as deterrents to hungry predators.
Researchers reveal how to turn a global warming liability into a profitable food security solution
1dLike a mirage on the horizon, an innovative process for converting a potent greenhouse gas into a food security solution has been stalled by economic uncertainty. Now, a first-of-its-kind Stanford University analysis evaluates the market potential of the approach, in which bacteria fed captured methane grow into protein-rich fishmeal. The study, published Nov. 22 in Nature Sustainability, finds pr
Publisher Correction: Evaluating machine learning techniques for archaeological lithic sourcing: a case study of flint in Britain
1dScientific Reports, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-02402-z
Michael Rutter (1933–2021)
1dNature, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03498-z Child psychiatrist who transformed understanding of autism.
GeSnOI mid-infrared laser technology
1dDirect band gap GeSn alloys have emerged as a promising group-IV gain material for low-cost infrared laser manufacturing. They face major issues like high threshold power, and low lasing temperature that hinder their integration into full CMOS-compatible photonic chips. Scientists in France have developed a specific GeSn-on-insulator (GeSnOI) technology that combines defects, strain, electronic-ba
Våld i hemmet vanligare i konfliktområden
1dDet finns ett samband mellan väpnad konflikt och våld i nära relationer. Det visar data från Colombia. Ju mer intensiv konflikt, desto större risk för en kvinna att utsättas för våld av sin partner eller före detta partner. Sexuellt våld mot kvinnor har utförts av alla väpnade grupper i Colombia. Det har använts med avsikt att skrämma och förnedra kvinnor och hela samhällen, skada fiender och i s
The Efficiency of Data Storage
1dAs our world becomes increasingly digital, math becomes more and more important (not that it wasn’t always important). Even in ancient times, math was a critical technology improving our ability to predict the seasons, design buildings and roads, and have a functioning economy. In recent decades our world has been becoming increasingly virtual and digital, run by mathematical algorithms, simulati
How we get turned around in familiar places
1dA new study suggests that the brain may treat similar environments as if they are even more different than a pair of environments that have nothing in common. Brain scientists call this concept “repulsion.” For example, imagine you’re walking through a chain supermarket, headed for the dairy section. You’ve done it a million times: Take a right at the entrance, away from the produce, and walk pas
FTC Will Crack Down On Companies That Make it Difficult to Cancel Services
1d(Image: FTC) The Federal Trade Commission has announced that it will begin “ramping up enforcement” against companies that manipulate people into starting subscriptions or that make it difficult to cancel services. It’s an unanticipated move that should disappoint almost no one—except maybe your cable company. In an announcement from late last month, the FTC said companies that failed to obtain i
Research team makes considerable advance in brain-inspired computing
1dA lab, whose work is concentrated on neuromorphic computing or brain-inspired computing, has new research that introduces hardware improvements by harnessing a quality known as 'randomness' or 'stochasticity'. Their research contradicts the perception of randomness as a quality that will negatively impact computation results and demonstrates the utilization of finely controlled stochastic features
New formulas describe boundary layer turbulence
1dMathematicians have derived the formulas for boundary layer turbulence 100 years after the phenomenon was first formulated. Mathematicians have been trying to understand the turbulence that arises when a flow interacts with a boundary, but a formulation has proven elusive. A team of mathematicians, led by University of California, Santa Barbara professor Björn Birnir and University of Oslo profes
Ny forsøgsordning med medicinsk cannabis kan tvinge samfundets svageste ud i selvkriminalisering
1dEn forlængelse af forsøgsordningen med medicinsk cannabis ser ud til at træde i kraft 1. januar 2022, og nogle af samfundets svageste står til at blive syltet.
Healthier UK diets linked to lower greenhouse gas emissions
1dA new analysis adds to evidence that nutritious diets are often more environmentally sustainable, while also demonstrating the feasibility of evaluating diet sustainability at the scale of specific foods—rather than broader food-group categories. Dr. Holly Rippin of the University of Leeds, U.K., and colleagues present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS ONE on November 24, 2021.
New theory connects tree uprooting and sediment movement
1dThe critical zone is Earth's outer skin, the space between treetops and bedrock. The critical zone is a community comprising rock, water, soil, air, and the flora and fauna that live on Earth's surface. As floods, landslides, and other geologic hazards shape landscapes, they transform the critical zone and the life-giving processes that support ecosystems.
Meteorological drought on global land likely to intensify in the future
1dDrought can cause severe effects on regional agriculture, water resources, and the ecological environment. Reliable prediction of future drought changes is important under global warming.
In-depth study of the biodiversity of the fungus causing olive tree Anthracnose
1dThe Department of Agronomy at the University of Córdoba leads an international study in which the different species of the pathogen are being understood thanks to samples collected over the course of 25 years.
Synen på växtförädling påverkas av kön och ålder
1dI princip allt som säljs i frukt- och grönsaksdisken har kommit till genom växtförädling, något som få konsumenter har kunskap om, visar en studie från SLU. Ändå är åsikterna många, vilket kan påverka utvecklingen av nya sorter. Det finns en tydlig skillnad mellan män och kvinnor i synen på växtförädling. Män är i allmänhet mer positiva både till konventionell växtförädling och till modern gentek
Delay laws on firearms purchases save lives
1dLegislation that enforces a 'cooling off' period between purchasing and acquiring a firearm reduces impulse purchases. It also limits the number of homicides, especially in the domestic sphere. This is demonstrated by behavioral economist David Schindler of Tilburg University on the basis of a quantitative study in various U.S. States. The publication will appear in the journal Review of Economics
Nu skyder Nasa asteroide ud af kurs: Sådan sker det
1dFor første gang nogensinde forsøger Nasa at skubbe en asteroide ud af kurs med et rumfartøj. Og DART-fartøjet gemmer på en række nye teknologier, der gør det muligt.
Bear Puts Out Multiple Forest Fires | Alaskan Bush People
1dStream Full Episodes of Alaskan Bush People: https://www.discoveryplus.com/show/alaskan-bush-people #Discovery #AlaskanBushPeople #OffGrid Subscribe to Discovery: http://bit.ly/SubscribeDiscovery Follow Us on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@Discovery We're on Instagram! https://instagram.com/Discovery Join Us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Discovery Follow Us on Twitter: https://twitter.co
The art critic in the machine tells forgeries from the real thing
1dNature, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03447-w A neural network can use the surface roughness of a painting to tell one person’s brushstrokes from another’s.
How dogs became humans’ best friends: from Neanderthals to now
1dNature, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03497-0 A lively tale of evolution, domestication, migration and fellowship.
Daily briefing: NASA spacecraft will die trying to deflect an asteroid
1dNature, Published online: 19 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03504-4 NASA will slam a multimillion-dollar spacecraft into an asteroid to test whether it is possible to change a space rock’s trajectory. Plus, childhood colds might change how the immune system responds to COVID.
Study: Lessons of COVID-19 underscore need for better teacher support
1dWhen the COVID-19 pandemic forced New Orleans public school teachers to switch from in-person instruction to a virtual or hybrid setting, the transition left many feeling anxious over their ability to impact student learning, according to a multi-agency study led by Tulane University.
'This image has been digitally altered': Disclaimer labels are meant to protect viewers' body image, but do they work?
1dAround the world, the negative effect of looking at thin and unrealistic media images on women's own body image has become an increasing concern.
Just as humans recognize faces, bees are born with an innate ability to find and remember flowers
1dWe've all watched a honeybee fly past us and land on a nearby flower. But how does she know what she's looking for?
How social science can help trace new paths out of the climate crisis
1dPolicymakers, industry and civil society leaders count on solid data to inform and guide strategies that will deliver on the objectives of the Paris Agreement. To support these decisions, scientists developed long-term global scenarios known as integrated assessment models (IAMs) that combine different strands of knowledge—natural science, engineering and economics.
TRX Strength Bands review
1dWe explore whether TRX Strength Bands are worth the hype in terms of design, user experience, and performance.
Blæksprutter og søstjerner inspirerer Novartis til at udvikle ny medicin mod slidgigt
1dNovartis er i Danmark gået i fase 2b med udviklingen af et lægemiddel mod slidgigt. Lægemidlet er inspireret af den måde, som forskellige dyr er i stand til at genetablere tabt væv.
Verdens første førerløse og elektriske containerskib søsat
1dEfter flere års forsinkelser er skibet Yara Birkeland søsat og skal over de næste år optimeres til at sejle førerløst. Skibet sparer 40.000 lastbilskørsler årligt.
A pandemic of armchair experts: How we decide who and what to believe
1dWe appear to live in an age of misinformation.
Ranked lists skew decision-makers' choices toward top option
1dIn an age of online restaurant reviews and product ratings, landing in first place on a "top 10" list can confer great benefits on the top-ranked option, magnifying the differences between it and all other choices and blinding people to important details that might otherwise affect their decision-making, according to research published by the American Psychological Association.
Studying the causes of biodiversity loss is a logistical Herculean task
1dThe question of the causes of species extinction confronts science with complex tasks. Dr. Sarah Redlich from the Biocentre discusses the challenge of creating a study design.
Study: Women structurally underrepresented in management research
1dWomen are structurally underrepresented in leading management and organization journals, a new study published today in Research Policy finds. Nora Lohmeyer(verwijst naar een andere website) of Radboud University and Carolin Auschra and Julia Bartosch of Freie Universität Berlin analyzed a dataset of 43,673 articles in fourteen top journals, and found that even in 2017, the most recent year of the
Battle of the Alamo: Background, events and aftermath
1dIn the Battle of the Alamo, outnumbered Texan rebels defended against a Mexican army during the Texas Revolution
Could negative emissions actually help curb climate change?
1dMany future climate scenarios suggest that negative emissions will be needed to limit global warming. Researchers are now investigating how feasible this is.
Salivbaserade snabbtest – smärtfria och enklare alternativ
1dDen vanligaste använda metoden att testa för covid-19 är med RT-PCR genom ett nässvalgsprov taget med bomullspinne. Provtagning från nässvalget är ofta obehaglig och RT-PCR-test kräver även analys i laboratorium. I en ny studie från Lunds universitet har forskare undersökt om snabbantigentest för covid-19 kan användas på saliv i stället för att pinna nässvalget.
Bringing the metaverse to life: How I built a virtual reality for my students, and what I've learned along the way
1dWe've been hearing a lot recently about the metaverse—a vision for the internet which uses technology like virtual and augmented reality to integrate real and digital worlds. With Facebook changing its name to Meta to focus on this space, and other big tech companies like Microsoft coming onboard, there is much discussion about the potential of the metaverse to enhance the way we socialize, work a
Our attitudes and emotions are affected by how the media describes migration
1dNews that describes migration in a positive context, makes us become more positive about immigration and vice versa. This is stated by Nora Theorin in a new dissertation on media and migration at the Department of Journalism, Media and Communication, University of Gothenburg.
You can help protect a fish species that is vital to oceanic ecosystems
1dOmega Protein Corp and Omega Protein, Inc. may not be household names, but many of their products are. These two companies, collectively known as "Omega," compose one of the largest reduction fishing organizations in North America. They capture and process fish known as menhaden, then resell the "reduced fish" for use in pet food, agriculture and aquaculture feed, and human fish oil supplements. B
Study: Warmer summers worsen tick infestations for US moose
1dIt's a ghastly sight: ticks by tens of thousands burrowed into a moose's broad body, sucking its lifeblood as the agonized host rubs against trees so vigorously that much of its fur wears away.
Dogs and TV: Here's what we know about how they respond
1dOn the face of it, a recently launched TV channel dedicated to dogs seems, well, barking mad. But our pets often spend long periods of time home alone, and providing some form of enrichment and stimulation can be very beneficial to dogs and their owners alike.
Invasive species are threatening Antarctica's fragile ecosystems as human activity grows and the world warms
1dWe tend to think Antarctica is isolated and far away—biologically speaking, this is true. But the continent is busier than you probably imagine, with many national programs and tourist operators crisscrossing the globe to get there.
Why Schizophrenia is Different for Women
1dIt's nothing like you see on TV. Science says estrogen and aging may have roles to play.
Employer surveillance during COVID has damaged trust
1dIncreasing use of staff surveillance by employers during the COVID-19 pandemic endangers trust in the workplace, according to a major new report by the University of St Andrews.
Warnings may reduce hate speech on Twitter, new study finds
1dWarning Twitter users about potential adverse consequences of their use of hate speech can decrease their subsequent posting of hateful language for a week, finds a new study by New York University's Center for Social Media and Politics.
NASA's DART mission has a sequel. How Europe's HERA will explore an asteroid impact aftermath.
1dThe Hera mission will follow NASA's DART asteroid-deflecting spacecraft to the binary space rock Didymos and detail the aftermath of DART's collision with the smaller of the two asteroids.
Author Correction: Distinct roles of androgen receptor, estrogen receptor alpha, and BCL6 in the establishment of sex-biased DNA methylation in mouse liver
1dScientific Reports, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-02512-8
Enjoy Pre-Black Friday Savings On This Sterilizing Robot That Kills Viruses and Germs
1dEven though we can’t see it, harmful bacteria are everywhere. While we can’t control the germs that live outside of our homes , we can control the ones that live among us, to some extent. One viable way to combat harmful germs from spreading in your house is using a sterilizing robot. Yes, a robot that kills germs. The ROCKUBOT is a high-tech robot buddy that eliminates germs and airborne viruses
Do babies cry in the womb?
1dFetuses show preliminary facial expressions that look like cries starting around 24 to 35 weeks. These facial movements of crying are soundless and too subtle to be felt by the mother.
Techtopia #215: Nu skal Danmark på AI-landkortet
1dEt nyt pionercenter for forskning i kunstig intelligens åbner i København. Målet er at positionere Danmark i det internationale kapløb om lederskab inden for AI.
Publisher Correction: Genomic characterization between strains selected for death-feigning duration for avoiding attack of a beetle
1dScientific Reports, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-02478-7
Var åttonde ung använder dopningspreparat
1dVar åttonde person i åldern 16-25 år har använt eller använder preparat som är muskelbyggande eller har som syfte att förändra kroppens utseende enligt en studie från Högskolan i Gävle. Att cirka 12 procent ungdom har tagit preparat för att förändra sin kropps utseende var en oväntat hög siffra för Anna Qvarfordt, Lena Svennberg och Göran Svedsäter, forskare inom Idrottsvetenskap vid Högskolan i
Battery-powered trains offer a cost-effective ride to a cleaner world
1dNature, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03448-9 A battery system could power a train for hundreds of kilometres before needing a charge of renewable energy.
Jämställd robot ger svar på tal
1dEn robot som inte bara sväljer förolämpningar uppfattas som mer trovärdig och intelligent. Det visar försök med en feministisk robot på Kungliga tekniska högskolan.
Europæisk databeskyttelsesråd advarer: Ny lovgivning sylter databeskyttelsen
1dEDPB påpeger i en udtalelse manglende sammenhæng mellem ny lovgivning og databeskyttelsesreglerne.
Branchefolk om ministerafvisning af altantilsyn: »Det betyder, at vi vil se kollaps igen«
1dPLUS. Byggebranchen er overrasket over, at boligministeren endegyldigt har droppet at indføre et tilsynskrav for de ældste og mest risikable altantyper.
Mediers bild av invandring påverkar våra attityder
1dNyheter som beskriver invandring i ett positivt sammanhang, får oss att bli mer positivt inställda till invandring och tvärtom. Det gäller framför allt ”alternativa medier” på höger- och vänsterkanten. Medier sägs ofta spela en central roll för vad människor anser om migration, men kunskapen är begränsad om hur, när och varför de påverkar. I sin doktorsavhandling har Nora Theorin undersökt instäl
Japanske forskere har langtidsbeskyttet aber mod hiv – dansk forsker er skeptisk
1dPLUS. Japanske forskere er lykkedes med at beskytte aber mod hiv i en årrække med en tilsyneladende nænsom vaccine. Dansk forsker mangler bevis for sikkerheden og har valgt en anden vej.
Elsevier’s Pandemic Profiteering
1dAristidis Tsatsakis, Konstantinos Poulas, Ronald Kostoff, Michael Aschner, Demetrios Spandidos, Konstantinos Farsalinos: you will need a disinfecting shower once you read their papers.
Saliva is superior over nasopharyngeal swab for detecting SARS-CoV2 in COVID-19 patients
1dScientific Reports, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-02097-2
Development of a chemical-free floatation technology for the purification of vein graphite and characterization of the products
1dScientific Reports, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-02101-9
Using multiple machine learning algorithms to classify elite and sub-elite goalkeepers in professional men’s football
1dScientific Reports, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-01187-5
Endophytic bacterial communities are associated with leaf mimicry in the vine Boquila trifoliolata
1dScientific Reports, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-02229-8
Effect of short-term peripheral myopic defocus on ocular biometrics using Fresnel “press-on” lenses in humans
1dScientific Reports, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-02043-2
Association of tear fluid amyloid and tau levels with disease severity and neurodegeneration
1dScientific Reports, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-01993-x
Assessment of the usefulness of prognostic Van Nuys Prognostic Index in the treatment in ductal carcinoma in situ in 15-year observation
1dScientific Reports, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-02126-0
Mycoplasma infection and ocular surface diseases: a nationwide cohort study
1dScientific Reports, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41598-021-01941-9
New Scientist is 65 years old and our mission remains the same as ever
1dThe desire to make exciting scientific news easy to understand spurred the foundation of New Scientist. That motivation is as strong today as it ever was
A durable and pH-universal self-standing MoC–Mo2C heterojunction electrode for efficient hydrogen evolution reaction
1dNature Communications, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-27118-6 Scalable fabrication of Low-cost hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) catalysts that can operate at industry-relevant conditions is highly needed for efficient water electrolyzers. Here the authors show a scalable synthesis of a MoC-Mo2C heterojunction electrode with efficient HER activity and high stability at
A unified drug–target interaction prediction framework based on knowledge graph and recommendation system
1dNature Communications, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-27137-3 Prediction of drug-target interactions (DTI) plays a vital role in drug development through applications in various areas, such as virtual screening for lead discovery, drug repurposing and identification of potential drug side effects. Here, the authors develop a unified framework for DTI prediction by comb
In-plane quasi-single-domain BaTiO3 via interfacial symmetry engineering
1dNature Communications, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-26660-7 In-plane polarized ferroelectric thin films typically exhibit complicated multidomain states, not desirable for optoelectronic device performance. Here, the authors combine interfacial symmetry engineering and anisotropic strain to design single-domain in-plane polarized ferroelectric BaTiO3 films.
A Phase I/II randomized trial of H56:IC31 vaccination and adjunctive cyclooxygenase-2-inhibitor treatment in tuberculosis patients
1dNature Communications, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-27029-6 Modulating the host immune response during tuberculosis is an emerging and critical advance in the therapeutic approach. Here the authors present data from a first-in-human phase I/II randomised trial on the safety and immunogenicity of adjuvant therapy of the H56:IC31 vaccine and cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitors
Nanometric flow and earthquake instability
1dNature Communications, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-26996-0 Extremely fine-grained fault rocks are intrinsically weak and behave as fluids even at low temperatures and fast deformation rates. Local production of fine-grained material during fault movement can lead to an earthquake instability.
Particle-like topologies in light
1dNature Communications, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-26171-5 One way to describe a particle is as a localised, 3-dimensional topological state, such as a skyrmion or hopfion. Here, the authors demonstrate and characterise particle-like skyrmionic hopfions in a free-space structured light beam.
The main oxidative inactivation pathway of the plant hormone auxin
1dNature Communications, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-27020-1 Auxin inactivation plays important roles in plant development. Here the authors show that the main route of IAA inactivation in Arabidopsis is via conjugation by GH3 IAA-amidosynthetases followed by DAO1 dioxygenase-mediated oxidation of the conjugated forms and hydrolysis by ILR1 to release inactive oxIAA.
Design of modular autoproteolytic gene switches responsive to anti-coronavirus drug candidates
1dNature Communications, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/s41467-021-27072-3 SARS-CoV-2 proteases are key targets for anti-viral drug development. Here the authors present modular tunable autoproteolytic gene switches for virus free cell culture screening of inhibitors.
Ældgammel naturmedicin kan forbedre moderne kræftbehandling
1dPlanter, som de oprindelige australske indbyggere, aboriginerne, brugte mod blandt andet infektioner,…
Efter Industri 4.0: Nu skal robotter og maskiner på hjul
1dPLUS. Fremtidens industrirobotter skal på hjul og programmeres af ‘mimende’ medarbejdere.
Meglio Latex-Free Resistance Bands review
1dWe break down why Meglio Latex-Free Resistance Bands are an affordable and easy-to-use gateway to the world of fitness bands that work for newbies and pros.
Dr. David Sinclair’s Supplement List for Longevity
1dsubmitted by /u/davidroberts323232 [link] [comments]
”IT-jättar bör inte styra den svenska skolan”
1dGlobala IT-företag har vunnit terräng inom skolan under pandemin. Att kommersiella krafter tar sig in i utbildningssystemets kärna och påverkar hur undervisningen bedrivs är olyckligt, anser Malin Ideland, professor i utbildningsvetenskap. Digitaliseringen fungerar dessutom som IT-jättarnas spionkamera in i svenska klassrum, skriver hon.
Does wealth always lead to a good education? New study proposes new model for predicting student success globally
1dNew research published in Frontiers in Education argues that analyzing the individual components that underlie socioeconomic status, such as parents' occupation or the number of books in a home, is a better predictor of student success across different cultures than the current composite index.
Black Friday dehumidifiers on sale: See what's in stock and get a great deal
1dThese Black Friday dehumidifiers on sale can solve issues with damp without breaking the bank.
Vi kan bedst lide opdrætslaks – så længe vi ikke ved hvad vi spiser
1dVi danskere foretrækker smagen af både konventionelt og økologisk opdrættet røget…
China creates vast research infrastructure to support ambitious climate goals
1dNature, Published online: 22 November 2021; doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03491-6 Carbon-neutrality institutes, and other initiatives to support a pledge to achieve net zero by 2060, are popping up like mushrooms across China.
Would a genetically engineered human be considered technology?
1dTitle submitted by /u/MarshyBarsh [link] [comments]
Spiritism
1d(Not: inte att förväxla med Spiritualism.) Systrarna Fox Att tro på andar och spöken är säkert en lika gammal företeelse som människan själv. “Modern” spiritism, med seanser och personer som … Continued Inlägget dök först upp på Vetenskap och Folkbildning .
This Four-Wheeled, Weatherproof Vehicle Aims to Redefine Personal Mobility
1dsubmitted by /u/SillyCubensis [link] [comments]
South Australia on Sunday became the first gigawatt scale grid in the world to reach zero operational demand on Sunday when the combined output of rooftop solar and other small non-scheduled generators exceeded all the local customer load requirements.
1dsubmitted by /u/thispickleisntgreen [link] [comments]
Shaping a sustainable future for a common plastic
1dBroad-based scientific team from government, academia and industry joins forces to identify new opportunities to reduce the environmental impact of polyurethane — one of the most widely used but little recycled plastic materials.
Where do I begin to pursue an academic career in cognitive science?
1dI completed my undergrad from a large state college in the United States with a 3.9 in computer science and mathematics; otherwise, I have a rather sparse resume when it comes to lab experience or academic research, and I don't have anyone that could write me a good recommendation (I was a bit of an underachiever despite my GPA). I was interested in going to work as a programmer, so I focused my
Researchers develop ultra-thin 'computer on the bone'
1dResearchers have developed an ultra-thin wireless device that grows to the surface of bone. Dubbed 'osseosurface electronics,' they could someday help physicians monitor bone health and healing over long periods.
Understanding how pathogenic fungi build their carbohydrate armor
1dA research team revealed the molecular architecture of fungal cell walls and the structural responses to stresses, aiding the development of antifungal drugs targeting cell wall components.
Promising treatment for Alexander disease moves from rat model to human clinical trials
1dAlexander disease is a progressive and rare neurological disorder with no cure or standard course of treatment. But a new study involving a rat model of the disease offers a potential treatment for the typically fatal condition.
Reading the mind of a worm
1dIt sounds like a party trick: scientists can now look at the brain activity of a tiny worm and tell you which chemical the animal smelled a few seconds before. But the findings of a new study are more than just a novelty; they help the scientists better understand how the brain functions and integrates information.
Scientists develop promising vaccine method against recurrent UTI
1dResearchers are investigating the use of whole-cell vaccines to fight urinary tract infection (UTI), part of an effort to tackle the increasingly serious issue of antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
Scientists create insights into perhaps the most extreme state of matter produced on Earth
1dExotic laser-produced high-energy-density (HED) plasmas akin to those found in stars and nuclear explosions could provide insight into events throughout the universe. Physicists have discovered a new way to measure and understand these plasmas, among the most extreme states of matter ever produced on Earth. Improved understanding could provide benefits ranging from fine-tuning the high-density pla
Scientists solve 50-year-old mystery behind plant growth
1dA team of researchers has demonstrated for the first time one way that a small molecule turns a single cell into something as large as a tree. For half a century, scientists have known that all plants depend on this molecule, auxin, to grow. Until now, they didn't understand exactly how auxin sets growth in motion.
Park and ride-anlæg skal bekæmpe trængsel: Professor tvivler på effekten
1dPLUS. Trafikselskabet Movia satser på at få flere bilister til at hoppe på toget med det såkaldte parkér-og-rejs-koncept. Men forskere tvivler på, at det er en god idé at lokke med p-pladser.
Insulin in the brain influences dopamins levels
1dIn the human brain, the hormone insulin also acts on the most important neurotransmitter for the reward system, dopamine. Insulin lowers the dopamine level in a specific region of the brain (striatum) that regulates reward processes and cognitive functions, among other things. This interaction can be an important driver of the brain's regulation of glucose metabolism and eating behavior.
Resilience of vertebrate animals in rapid decline due to humanmade threats
1dGlobal change is eroding life on earth at an unprecedented rate and scale. Species extinctions have accelerated over the last decades, with the concomitant loss of the functions and services they provide to human societies.
People are talking about Web3. Is it the Internet of the future or just a buzzword?
1dsubmitted by /u/wewewawa [link] [comments]
Can’t Wait For November 26th? Save On These Pre-Black Friday Doorbusters Deals Now!
1dThe biggest shopping day of the year is coming up, and we suspect that many of you can’t wait to get through Thanksgiving to take advantage of the deals. Lucky for you, we’ve not only compiled a huge inventory of great finds at even lower than our regularly discounted prices, we’re making them available to you even before Black Friday. So, not only are you avoiding the crowds, misbehaving custome
Antarctic ice-sheet destabilized within a decade
2dAfter the natural warming that followed the last Ice Age, there were repeated periods when masses of icebergs broke off from Antarctica into the Southern Ocean. A new data-model study now shows that it took only a decade to initiate this tipping point in the climate system, and that ice mass loss then continued for many centuries.
Rivers play key role in destructive coastal flooding, new research shows
2dRising oceans get more attention in climate change discussions, but rivers are rising, too, according to new research by a University of South Carolina postdoctoral fellow. The research shows that rivers need more attention in policy management and disaster preparation, both at the coast and farther inland.
Venom of cone snail could lead to future diabetes treatments
2dResearchers have found that variants of this cone snail venom could offer future possibilities for developing new fast-acting drugs to help treat diabetics.
Hi all. I’m researching on the behalf of a class project about VR for Gen Z college age students (18-24). I humbly ask for you to take a 5 min short survey and enter to win a 50$ Amazon gift card. Thank you for your time I really appreciate it
2dsubmitted by /u/Savings_Musician_917 [link] [comments]
Shell CEO Says Company Needs Oil To Finance Clean Energy Future
2dsubmitted by /u/jbrennan36 [link] [comments]
Vingummi-vitaminer lover flottere og stærkere hår, men eksperter er skeptiske
2dKun hvis du lider af alvorlig mangel, har du brug for ekstra vitaminer.
Hospital robots will save the lives of hundreds of premature babies
2dsubmitted by /u/altmorty [link] [comments]
At Entomo farms they harvest 50 million crickets a week and turn them into protein packed foods. Crickets contain more protein than beef and are being heralded as “the food of the future”.
2dsubmitted by /u/forestfudge [link] [comments]
Cloud seeding gains steam as West faces worsening droughts
2dsubmitted by /u/kernals12 [link] [comments]
Chinese crewed moon landing possible by 2030, says senior space figure
2dsubmitted by /u/lughnasadh [link] [comments]
CNN Tried Tesla's FSD Beta System, And Here's How It Went
2dsubmitted by /u/jbrennan36 [link] [comments]
How to get a traditional industry to automate
2dIn the legal industry we are currently witnessing an interesting paradox. Many lawyers want to start using new tech because of the possible advantages, but most get cold feet once they see that tech is not a cure-all. For example, in the subfield of legal document automation, lawyers are torn between using very simple solutions (making them miserable, because they get very little control & option
The worlds of crypto and video games are fast colliding, and it could result in a whole new generation of gaming experiences with real-world economies.
2dsubmitted by /u/lughnasadh [link] [comments]
Why Do We Like Music? | The Psychology Behind Why We Like Music
2dsubmitted by /u/mikeunknown [link] [comments]
Early Black Friday Savings: End Spam Calls For Good With RoboKiller
2dOur global data network has connected us all, for better or worse. And in the case of automated calls, texts, and comments , it’s definitely worse. Fortunately, you can send those annoying calls and texts packing with a 3-year subscription to RoboKiller, and it’s now 50% off as an early Black Friday deal. How AI Blocks Spam RoboKiller’s AI turns the prank call on its head. While number blocking h
Jennifer Aniston reklamerer for drik mod rynker: Men virker kollagenpulver?
2dPulveret kan angiveligt mindske appelsinhud og udglatte rynker.
New WhatsApp features and a version that will change your life for the better, Thanks to the developers of WABetaInfo. This new feature will put WhatsApp ahead of any other application. As we have already found WhatsApp
2dsubmitted by /u/ELAffandy [link] [comments]
Would you like to order a designer baby? (website simulates what is possible, including risks, as of 2027)
2dsubmitted by /u/Feuerz3ug [link] [comments]
Starlink
2dWORLD'S MOST ADVANCED BROADBAND INTERNET SYSTEM internet works by sending information through the vacuum of space, where it travels much faster than in fiber-optic cable and can reach far more people and places. While most satellite internet services today come from single geostationary satellites that orbit the planet at about 35,000km, Starlink is a constellation of multiple satellites that or
👀 'Where's the letter?'
2dOh, hey there! My research group needs participants desperately. We created 👀 ' Where's the letter? ', a fun video-game where you'll be asked to look for an object of interest among distracting things that you do not want. 🔎 The aim of the game is to find the "odd letter out" as quickly and accurately as possible by using either your mouse or trackpad to click on it + a final quick survey. The
Kunsten at grave det rigtige sted: Også små maskiner har brug for GPS
2dPLUS. Prisfald på GPS-teknologi gav tre mand med erfaring idéen til sammen at udvikle brugervenlig software til byggeindustrien.
This Massager Does More Than Pound Out Tired Muscles
2dWith 2022 rolling up fast, it’s already time to start considering the steps you’re ready to take to make the new year a great one. There are loads of professional and extracurricular goals you can set for yourself in the coming year, but your list should probably begin with improving your own emotional and spiritual well-being first and foremost. Because if you aren’t fundamentally happy and cont
Vad bråkade Béchamp och Pasteur om?
2dSvar av Erling Norrby, virolog, professor emeritus vid Karolinska institutet I mitten av 1800-talet fördes en intensiv debatt om teorin om uralstring. Förespråkare för denna teori hävdade att liv kunde uppstå spontant under vissa betingelser. De syftade då inte på evolution under årmiljoner, utan på snabba förlopp under dagar eller veckor. Uralstringsteorin kunde förklara sådant som varför det upp
Rådgivere redder Brøndbys tribuner med hoppeforsøg og studier af slagsange
2dPLUS. Fans var ved at hoppe tribunerne på Brøndby Stadion i stykker. En udskiftning var forestående, men studier af slagsange og hopperi har vist, at forstærkning og overvågning er nok.
2021 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #47
2dListing of articles linked to on the Skeptical Science Facebook Page during the past week: Sun, November 14, 2021 through Sat, November 20, 2021 The following articles sparked above average interest during the week: Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheeple? A.I. Maps 20 Years of Climate Conspiracies , COP Negotiators Demand Nations do More to Curb Climate Change, but Required Emissions Cuts Remain E
Save On Learning New Skills With These Pre-Black Friday Doorbusters
2dSometimes products and physical items get boring. As we grow older, a lot of us find value in gifts that stimulate our minds and that can even broaden our horizons. Give the gift of learning this holiday season with up to 98% off these 10 Pre-Black Friday Doorbusters Sale course bundles. The A to Z Cyber Security & IT Certification Training Bundle Learn ethical hacking from senior penetration tes
Pre-Black Friday Deal: Blanket Your Home With Connectivity With Meshforce M7
2dWi-Fi has become so important, scientists have even figured out how to turn dangerous radiation into a way to access Twitter . Getting the best Wi-Fi coverage in your home can be a challenge, though, so the Meshforce M7 was built to solve it quickly and easily. And it’s easier to get one now with an early Black Friday deal bringing its price down to $219 (reg. $249). Wi-Fi Wherever You Need It Wh
Rolls-Royce’s All Electric Aircraft Claims World Speed Record
2dsubmitted by /u/savuporo [link] [comments]
Nyt projekt skal lette dronernes liv i luften
2dDet vælter frem med store og små droner, men det er svært at tjene penge på de flyvende robotter. 5G-netværk, en lufthavn og et forskningsprojekt skal hjælpe teknikken og forretningsmodellerne på vej.
Sleep Better With An Early Black Friday Deal On Hupnos
2dThe right sleep schedule can make all the difference in your physical and mental well-being . The Hupnos Anti-Snoring Sleep Mask ensures you get the full amount of sleep you need, and right now you can save 52% with this early Black Friday deal. The Science of Snoring Snoring happens when your airway is restricted, either by your sleeping position or due to a medical concern. The higher pressure
Copy Any Text With This Early Black Friday Deal On The Scanmarker Air
2dWhile there are some places we probably don’t want scanners , there are many situations at work or while learning where grabbing a quote or some relevant data and keeping it in digital storage would be useful. The Scanmarker Air Digital Highlighter makes that easy and doable, and right now you can save 20% on it as a Pre-Black Friday deal. A Highlighter, But Better The Scanmarker Air works just l
Why futuristic technologies are bad and why they should be banned
2dFuturistic technologies are bad because they will steal jobs and, most likely, claim lives (due to either the futuristic technologies themselves or the bad people using them to harm people). They should all be banned to protect the jobs and lives of humanity and prevent a very dystopian future similar to the Terminator films from happening in real life. Please, spread this to end the technologica
Indigenous Four Corners Potato Makes a Comeback
2dA rediscovered tiny potato may hold secrets that could help science develop plants better suited to a changing climate.
Vingummi til håret og pulverdrik mod rynker: Skønheds-kosttilskud vinder frem
2dLige nu er især kollagenpulver populært. Også blandt de helt unge.
Shop Securely With 94% Off BelkaVPN For A Pre-Black Friday Sale
2dProtecting your information has never been more important, or harder to do . A strong virtual private network (VPN) can protect your financial and personal data, ensuring you can shop, browse, and stream securely this holiday. BelkaVPN offers fast, reliable protection, and right now you can save 94% on a lifetime subscription as an early Black Friday deal. Protection Anytime, Anywhere A VPN offer
Farliga nätdroger kan hittas med AI
2dNya droger med okänt innehåll är både ett stort folkhälsoproblem och en stor utmaning för kriminaltekniker. Nu föreslår forskare artificiell intelligens för att snabbare definiera farliga droger – innan de når marknaden. Spela videon för att veta mer om designer drugs på en minut.
Help Your Pets Thrive With This Pre-Black Friday Deal On 5Strands
2dAllergies have been increasing across the developed world, which has been attributed to better medicine, better understanding of allergens, and external factors like climate change . And just like us, our pets can suffer from these problems too. The 5Strands Pet Food & Environmental Intolerance Test helps you track down these issues and give your pet a better life. It’s on sale for just $134.99 (
What do you think will be the most common jobs once automation takes over?
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[September 2018] Why wouldn’t you want to live forever? New Scientist editors debate
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[January 2017] Artificial Intelligence: it will kill us | Jay Tuck | TEDxHamburgSalon
2dsubmitted by /u/TylerCorosa [link] [comments]
Yara Birkeland: World’s First Zero Emission Autonomous Containership Completes Maiden Voyage
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These Celebrities try to Live Forever – New Longevity Technology
2dsubmitted by /u/izumi3682 [link] [comments]
The CLIQ Packs A Comfortable Chair Into A Bottle-Sized Container
2dWhile the last few years have meant unusual experiments when we congregate outdoors , we’ve still been heading outdoors both together and alone to commune with nature or just hang out. The CLIQ chair is rated 4.5/5 stars on Amazon, and it makes being outside a little easier by giving you a camping chair the size of your water bottle. It’s on sale for just $89.99 (reg. $99). A Chair Anywhere Folde
The Transformer Table Is The Perfect Pre-Black Friday Deal
2dIf you grew up watching science fiction as a kid, the world around us can seem like the future you saw on TV. We have communicators in our pockets, advanced AIs work hard to make our lives easier, and computers controlled by voice are so common the UN has criticized them . The Transformer Table finally brings the future to furniture, with the kind of futuristic design we expect from the Enterpris