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Life Technology™ Medical News

Researchers Uncover Brain's Resilience to Neuron Loss

FDA Approves Pembrolizumab for Head and Neck Cancer

U.S. Reports Fewer Than 30 Measles Cases, Ohio Outbreaks End

Tooth Disorders Prompted 1.9M ER Visits in 2020-2022

Cleveland Clinic Study Enhances Drug Resistance Understanding

New Recommendations for Axial Spondyloarthritis in 2022

Immunotherapy Revolutionizes Cancer Treatment

Advances in Vasculopathy Management for Systemic Sclerosis

Rising Pediatric ER Visits for Acute Allergic Reactions

Genetic Forms of Autism: Brain Activity Patterns & Behavior

Special Care for Young Adults with Chronic Diseases: EULAR Congress Insights

Study Reveals Decline in Physical Fitness of US Youth

Rising Alcohol-Related Liver Disease Deaths Among Women

Ferulic Acid in Rice Bran Suppresses Intestinal Contractions

525K Excess Deaths in 2023 Linked to Education & Health

Promoting Physical Activity for Rheumatic Diseases

Eular Emphasizes Role of Nurses in Rheumatology Care

Eular Recommendations for Managing Osteoarthritis

Global Impact: Disparities in RMD Resources

Managing Information for Rheumatic Musculoskeletal Diseases

Eular Stresses Patient Empowerment in Rheumatology

Challenges in Predicting Diabetic Foot Ulcers Healing

Improving Cancer Therapy: Challenges of CAR-T Cell Survival

Researchers Identify Coordinator of Muscle Repair After Injuries

Novel Immuno-PET/CT Technique Identifies CD70 Biomarker for Nasopharyngeal Cancer

World Health Assembly Adopts WHO Pandemic Agreement

Study Links Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria to ICU Disinfection

A*STAR GIS Scientists Develop AI Method for Faster Cancer Tracking

Understanding Myelodysplastic Syndromes: Survival Rate and Progression Risk

AI Guidance for Clinicians to Reduce Clostridioides Difficile Spread

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Life Technology™ Science News

France's Nuclear Arsenal: European Defense Urgency

Exploring Methods to Boost Ocean Carbon Uptake

Florida Reaches Milestone, Ancient Teen Remains Found, Uranus Moons Study

New Species of Tyrannosaur Discovered in Mongolia

AI Impact on Job Market: Employers Seek New Skills

Satellite Data Reveals Ancient Ruins & Carbon Levels

World Leaders Take Major Steps Towards Marine Protection

Pumas' Sanctuary Amid Urban Growth in Sao Paolo

Breakthrough Visualization of Key Protein Structures

Air Pollution Linked to 50,000 Annual US Deaths

Japan Meteorological Agency Chief Dismisses Summer Earthquake Rumors

Ocean Currents Boost Vessel Fuel Efficiency at Paris Tech Fair

Fossil Corals Hint at Steeper Sea Level Rise

"Engineering Chiral Electron Pathways Unveiled in Quantum Phenomenon"

Astronomers Discover Gas and Dust Disks Around Young Stars

Scientists Find Evidence of Planetary Boundary in Oceans

AI and ML Revolutionize Particle Physics Understanding

Sky Assistance Enhances Forest Fire Prevention in São Carlos

Role of Acyl Carrier Protein in Fatty Acid Biosynthesis

Gulf Reef Fish Population Surges for 2025 Red Snapper Season

Antarctic Detector Unveils Mysterious Particle Signals

Gender-Equality Paradox: Preferences in Equal Societies

Rare Intermediate: Crystal-Glass Hybrid Stability Study

"Global Radio Telescopes Unite for Stunning Universe Images"

Ancient Egyptian Family Dynamics Unveiled

Negotiators' Emotional Strategies: Impact and Perception

Challenges of Drug Delivery in Lung Microenvironment

Impact of Forest Fires on Human Health and Biodiversity

Study on Japanese Weasel's Impact on Ecosystems

Nagoya University's Breakthrough: Efficient PAH Synthesis

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Life Technology™ Technology News

Internet Searches: World Events, Celebrities, DIY Help

AI overviews have transformed Google search. Here's how they work—and how to opt out

Workers need better tools and tech to boost productivity. Why aren't companies stepping up to invest?

Albanese and Chalmers Focus on Productivity Growth Summit

Benchmarking hallucinations: New metric tracks where multimodal reasoning models go wrong

Advancements in Multimodal Large Language Models

Physicists Innovate Quantum Clocks for Precise Time Measurement

A framework for realizing a microscopic, highly precise and energy-efficient quantum clock

AI Technology Generates Podcasts on Scientific Papers, Fooling Authors

AI-generated podcasts open new doors to make science accessible

New imaging method reveals how lithium-metal batteries lose capacity over time

Potential Power Boost: Lithium-Metal Batteries vs. Lithium-Ion

Google turns internet queries into conversations

Google Introduces Conversational Search with AI Summaries

Race Against Time: Finding Survivors After Disaster

Robots to the rescue: Miniature robots offer new hope for search and rescue operations

Unlocking Insights from Vast Visual Collections

Researcher explores visual media through the lens of machine vision

Predicting post-disaster waste disposal times to improve resilience to tsunamis and earthquakes

Devastating Threats: Tsunamis and Earthquakes' Impact

Impacts of Floating Solar on Biodiversity and Climate

New approach models potential and trade-offs of floating solar

Evaporative cooling tech could curb data centers' rising energy demands

New Cooling Technology for Data Centers

Florida Homeowners Get Expert Advice on Flood-Resistant Materials

New tool could help homeowners weather flood risks, lower insurance costs

Explainable AI: New framework increases transparency in decision-making systems

New Explainable AI Technique Enhances Image Classification

New ocean mapping technology helps ships cut fuel use and CO₂ emissions

Unsw Academic Utilizes Ocean Currents for Eco-Friendly Shipping

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Tuesday, December 08, 2020

Hidden symmetry could be key to more robust quantum systems, researchers find

Researchers have found a way to protect highly fragile quantum systems from noise, which could aid in the design and development of new quantum devices, such as ultra-powerful quantum computers.

source https://phys.org/news/2020-12-hidden-symmetry-key-robust-quantum.html

Hidden symmetry could be key to more robust quantum systems, researchers find

Researchers have found a way to protect highly fragile quantum systems from noise, which could aid in the design and development of new quantum devices, such as ultra-powerful quantum computers.

Charles Darwin was right about why insects are losing the ability to fly

Most insects can fly.

Charles Darwin was right about why insects are losing the ability to fly

Most insects can fly.

source https://phys.org/news/2020-12-charles-darwin-insects-ability.html

Dogs may never learn that every sound of a word matters

Despite their excellent auditory capacities, dogs do not attend to differences between words that differ only in one phoneme (e.g., "dog" vs "dig"), according to a new study by Hungarian researchers of the Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest (ELTE). In the study, they measured brain activity with non-invasive electroencephalography (EEG) on conscious dogs. This might be a reason why the number of words dogs learn to recognize typically remains low throughout their life. The study is published in Royal Society Open Science.

source https://phys.org/news/2020-12-dogs-word.html

Dogs may never learn that every sound of a word matters

Despite their excellent auditory capacities, dogs do not attend to differences between words that differ only in one phoneme (e.g., "dog" vs "dig"), according to a new study by Hungarian researchers of the Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest (ELTE). In the study, they measured brain activity with non-invasive electroencephalography (EEG) on conscious dogs. This might be a reason why the number of words dogs learn to recognize typically remains low throughout their life. The study is published in Royal Society Open Science.

Steep rise in depressive symptoms among 7-12 year olds during UK-wide lockdown

The prevalence of depressive symptoms rose substantially among young children during the UK-wide lockdown in response to the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic, finds research focusing on one region of England and published online in Archives of Disease in Childhood.

Healthcare workers 7 times as likely to have severe COVID-19 as other workers

Healthcare workers are 7 times as likely to have severe COVID-19 infection as those with other types of 'non-essential' jobs, finds research focusing on the first UK-wide lockdown and published online in the journal Occupational & Environmental Medicine.

Australia to reveal laws to make Google and FB pay for news

Australia's government will reveal legislation in Parliament on Wednesday that would make Facebook and Google pay for journalism.

Research: Millions of smart devices vulnerable to hacking

Researchers at a cybersecurity firm say they have identified vulnerabilities in software widely used by millions of connected devices—flaws that could be exploited by hackers to penetrate business and home computer networks and disrupt them.

Second US judge blocks Trump's TikTok ban

A second US federal judge has suspended a Trump administration executive order threatening to ban TikTok in the United States.

China, Nepal say Everest a bit higher than past measurements

China and Nepal have jointly announced a new height for Mount Everest, ending a discrepancy between the two nations.

Researchers study the effects of parental job loss on families during the pandemic

A team of UTSA researchers has discovered that economic implications because of COVID-19 can have a devastating ripple effect on children. Monica Lawson, assistant professor of psychology, Megan Piel, assistant professor of social work and Michaela Simon, psychology graduate student in the UTSA College for Health, Community and Policy, have recently published a research article on the effects of parental job loss during the COVID-19 pandemic and risk of psychological and physical abuse toward children.

Britain starts virus vaccinations as California locks down

A pensioner became the first person to get the newly approved coronavirus jab on Tuesday, as a long-awaited vaccine roll-out began in Britain.

Research brief: Global trends in nature's contributions to people

In a new study published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a research team co-led by the University of Minnesota, examined the risks to human well-being and prosperity stemming from ongoing environmental degradation.

Beavers may help amphibians threatened by climate change

The recovery of beavers may have beneficial consequences for amphibians because beaver dams can create the unique habitats that amphibians need.

Two discoveries advance basic and applied additive manufacturing research

A research team led by Tao Sun, associate professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Virginia, has made two discoveries that can expand additive manufacturing in aerospace and other industries that rely on strong metal parts.

Travel restrictions must be used in a targeted way to be effective at controlling local COVID-19 transmission: study

The measures may have limited impact on the epidemic within individual countries except those with low levels of the virus or that have strong travel links with countries experiencing high rates of infection.

Microbes to demonstrate biomining of asteroid material aboard space station

As humanity moves closer to the possibility of living and working millions of miles from Earth on planets like Mars, scientists are looking beyond our planet at how to acquire the materials needed to establish a self-sustaining presence in space.

Science leaders issue clarion call for evidence-based policy

Since the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, US science leaders and others have expressed frustration with the lack of an informed and coherent federal response, a sentiment that echoes objections to the handling of other pressing issues, such as climate change. Writing in BioScience, an assemblage of the past presidents of the American Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS) have issued an appeal for the reinvigoration of sound policy and governance through the careful consideration of sound science.

Scientists discover how COVID-19 virus causes multiple organ failure in mice

UCLA researchers are the first to create a version of COVID-19 in mice that shows how the disease damages organs other than the lungs. Using their model, the scientists discovered that the SARS-CoV-2 virus can shut down energy production in cells of the heart, kidneys, spleen and other organs.

Large US study confirms COVID-19 complications: Lung, kidney and cardiovascular issues

A large study of patients in the United States who contracted coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) confirms many complications of the disease, according to new research in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).

Natural reward theory could provide new foundation for biology

A link between evolution over short time frames (microevolution) and long time frames (macroevolution) that could open new approaches to understanding some of biology's deepest questions is proposed by Dr. Owen Gilbert of the Department of Integrative Biology at the University of Texas at Austin (U.S.) in a new paper, published in the open-access, peer-reviewed journal Rethinking Ecology.

Study identifies links between atopic dermatitis and autoimmune diseases

In a recent study published in the British Journal of Dermatology, individuals with atopic dermatitis, or eczema, were more likely to also have various autoimmune diseases, especially those involving the skin, the gastrointestinal tract, or the connective tissue.

Career thoughts and parental relationships in adolescents with ADHD

A new study published in The Career Development Quarterly looked for potential links between negative or dysfunctional career thoughts and the quality of parental relationships in high school students with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

Most U.S. social studies teachers feel unprepared to teach civic learning

Only one in five social studies teachers in U.S. public schools report feeling very well prepared to support students' civic learning, saying they need additional aid with instructional materials, professional development and training, according to a RAND Corporation survey.

Digital stethoscope uses artificial intelligence for diagnosing lung abnormalities

Stethoscopes are a ubiquitous and cost-effective tool for medical diagnosis, but they open the door to subjectivity and can experience high levels of environmental noise. This makes it difficult to properly diagnose lung abnormalities, like COVID-19, by listening to sounds from the body.

What are schools doing to feed students during COVID-19-related closures?

As schools across the United States are grappling with remote and hybrid learning due to the COVID-19 pandemic, a new study in the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, investigates the initial responses of child nutrition administrative agencies in all 50 US states and the District of Columbia (DC), five US territories, and the US Department of Interior Bureau of Indian Education (BIE).