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Life Technology™ Medical News

Brain's Creation of Cognitive Maps: A Key to Decision-Making

Study Reveals Adrenal Crisis Management in Emergency

American Heart Association Backs Arkansas in Sugary Drink Battle

Advances in PET Tracers for Parkinson's Disease

Global Health Challenge: Developing Effective Dengue Vaccines

Alcohol-Related Diagnoses Linked to Child Maltreatment

Cholera Outbreaks Surge, Governments Seek Control

Higher Fatality Risk for Pedestrians and Cyclists Hit by SUVs

Study Links Fewer Nurses to Longer Hospital Stays

Higher Cigarette Tax Linked to Lower Child Mortality

Exercise Mitigates Cancer Treatment Side Effects

AI Model Classifies Pediatric Sarcomas from Digital Pathology Images

Liquid Biopsy Detects Early CRC Recurrence: VICTORI Study

Preventing Maternal Deaths: AI Screening for Heart Weakness

Keytruda Clears Minimal Residual Disease in Early-Stage Cancers

Skin-Based Test Detects Signature Features of Progressive Supranuclear Palsy

Unraveling the Mystery of Knee Osteoarthritis

AI Algorithms Enhance Drug Discovery for EV71

Chinese Scientists Develop Next-Gen Influenza Vaccine Strategy

Lung Cancer Exploits Fetal Genes, Affects Female Outcomes

Study from York University: Reassuring News for Parents of Concussed Children

Study Reveals Emergence of Babesiosis in Mid-Atlantic

Dyslexia Diagnosis: New Online Screening Tool Validated

Study Shows CAD/CAM Techniques Enhance Jaw Reconstruction

Genetic Predisposition for Muscle Strength Linked to Lower Cardiovascular Disease Mortality

New Method Predicts Early-Stage Kidney Damage from Cancer Treatments

Study Links Stress to Worsened COPD Symptoms

Higher Bile Duct Injury Risk in Robotic Cholecystectomy

Study Reveals Racial Disparities in Immediate Breast Reconstruction

Atrium Health Levine Cancer Institute Fights Financial Toxicity

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Life Technology™ Science News

AI-Generated Essays Fall Short of Student Efforts

Bio-Batteries by Electroactive Microorganisms: Advantages and Challenges

How Brands Anticipate Consumer Behavior

Experts Call for Paradigm Shift in Molecular Dynamics Data Management

Researchers Recreate Ancient Metabolic Process

Gray Wolf Released in Colorado Dies in Rocky Mountain National Park

Novel Technique Enhances Stem Cell Therapy for Neurodegenerative Diseases

Enhancing Imaging: On-Chip Polarization Devices

Novel Strategy Enhances Ruthenium Catalysts for Hydrogen Oxidation

Collaboration with Scientists Boosts Climate Adaptation

Study by University of Agder Reveals 66% Horses Exposed to Tick-Borne Pathogens

Challenges in Sustaining Small and Medium-Sized Cities

Digital Tools Enhancing Children's Learning Experience

Unlocking Satellite Archives for Sustainable Development Goals

Tribe Uncovers Ancestral Link to Chaco Canyon

Plastic Waste Threatens Seabird Hormones

New Strategy for Stabilizing Organozinc Compounds

Quantum Computer Outperforms Supercomputers

Monash University Discovers Abundance of Virus in Bacteria

Magnetars: Galactic Zoo's Rare & Powerful Source of FRBs

Challenges of Mars Communication: Signal Delays & Bandwidth

Earth's Natural Satellite: The Moon's Origin and Orbit

Marine Predator Collapse Benefits Another in Coastal Ecosystems

New Theory Explains Species Distribution Patterns

Cadmium Sulfide: Key in Photocatalytic Hydrogen Production

Green Infrastructure Vital for Climate-Resilient Cities

New Technique Reveals MicroRNAs' Gene Control

Research Team Produces Neutron-Rich Isotope Hydrogen-6

Global Crisis: 9-14 Million Tons of Ocean Plastic Threatens Marine Health

Bioengineers Develop Rapid Gene Mutation Screening Method

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Life Technology™ Technology News

University of South China Advances Nuclear Reactor Radiation Shielding

Breakthrough Research: Deafblind to Understand Live Conversations

Enhancing Transport and Building Infrastructure Safety

AI Personal Assistants: Beyond Chatbots, Real Work Mastery

Efficient Lithium Extraction Method Developed by Penn State

Aluminum Alloys: Overcoming Hydrogen Embrittlement

Masters of Coordinated Motion: Fish Schooling Secrets

Spain Debates Renewable Energy Role in Blackout

Transition to Electric Power: Nickel's Role in Climate Neutrality

AI-Powered Systems: Transformative Innovations or Flawed Magic?

Silicon Microchips: Key to Modern Tech

Modern Scientific Communication: Challenges in Digital Era

Cornell Tech Rates NYC Streets for Robot Friendliness

How Distractions Impact Social Media Usage

Australians Struggle with Severe Housing Crisis

Improving Efficiency: Copper Catalysts for CO2 Conversion

Scientists Race to Develop Sustainable Energy Sources

AI Researchers Introduce D1: Enhanced Language Model

Pandemic Sparks June Care: Connecting Families with Local Childcare

Microsoft Commits to Boosting Presence in Europe

Enhancing UAV Capabilities for Diverse Applications

Risks of AI Companions for Minors: US Tech Watchdog Study

Power Outage Raises Concerns in Spain and Portugal

Study Reveals 25% of Scooter Injury Patients Used Substances

Starbucks Unveils First 3D Printed Store in the U.S.

Toyota Partners with Waymo for Autonomous Driving

Canada's The Metals Company Seeks US Approval for Deep-Sea Mining

Rise of Undetectable Deepfakes: Threat to Democracy

Optireduce System Accelerates AI Training on Cloud Servers

Kennesaw State University Introduces Autonomous Robot for Inventory Tracking

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Saturday, December 19, 2020

Satellite uses SAR imagery to capture world's sharpest images

A satellite carrying a camera that is so powerful it can capture an image of virtually any object on Earth with crystal-clear resolution is now offering its services to the public.

source https://techxplore.com/news/2020-12-satellite-sar-imagery-capture-world.html

Satellite uses SAR imagery to capture world's sharpest images

A satellite carrying a camera that is so powerful it can capture an image of virtually any object on Earth with crystal-clear resolution is now offering its services to the public.

United Airlines to resume Boeing 737 MAX flights in February

United Airlines became the latest carrier to announce a timeframe to fly the Boeing 737 MAX again, saying Friday the jet would resume flights in February.

source https://techxplore.com/news/2020-12-airlines-resume-boeing-max-flights.html

Florida launches investigation into hacking of its servers

Florida officials acknowledged Friday that state servers appear to have been compromised by overseas hackers who gained entry by imbedding malicious code into networking software from a Texas-based software company, SolarWinds.

source https://techxplore.com/news/2020-12-florida-hacking-servers.html

Hacked networks will need to be burned 'down to the ground'

It's going to take months to kick elite hackers widely believed to be Russian out of the U.S. government networks they have been quietly rifling through since as far back as March in Washington's worst cyberespionage failure on record.

source https://techxplore.com/news/2020-12-hacked-networks-ground.html

Two dead, hundreds flee floods in Philippine storm

At least two people were killed and hundreds forced to flee their inundated homes in the Philippines as torrential rain triggered flooding and landslides in the storm-battered archipelago, officials said Saturday.

source https://phys.org/news/2020-12-dead-hundreds-philippine-storm.html

More than half of Hudson River tidal marshes were created accidentally by humans

In a new study of tidal marsh resilience to sea level rise, geologist and first author Brian Yellen at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and colleagues observed that Hudson River Estuary marshes are growing upward at a rate two to three times faster than sea level rise, "suggesting that they should be resilient to accelerated sea level rise in the future," he says.

source https://phys.org/news/2020-12-hudson-river-tidal-marshes-accidentally.html

Identifying where to reforest after wildfire

In the aftermath of megafires that devastated forests of the western United States, attention turns to whether forests will regenerate on their own or not. Forest managers can now look to a newly enhanced, predictive mapping tool to learn where forests are likely to regenerate on their own and where replanting efforts may be beneficial.

source https://phys.org/news/2020-12-reforest-wildfire.html

New class of cobalt-free cathodes could enhance energy density of next-gen lithium-ion batteries

Oak Ridge National Laboratory researchers have developed a new family of cathodes with the potential to replace the costly cobalt-based cathodes typically found in today's lithium-ion batteries that power electric vehicles and consumer electronics.

source https://techxplore.com/news/2020-12-class-cobalt-free-cathodes-energy-density.html

Plants can be larks or night owls just like us

Plants have the same variation in body clocks as that found in humans, according to new research that explores the genes governing circadian rhythms in plants.

source https://phys.org/news/2020-12-larks-night-owls.html

Researchers take a closer look at the genomes of microbial communities in the human mouth

Bacteria often show very strong biogeography—some bacteria are abundant in specific locations while absent from others—leading to major questions when applying microbiology to therapeutics or probiotics: how did the bacteria get into the wrong place? How do we add the right bacteria into the right place when the biogeography has gotten 'out of whack'?

source https://phys.org/news/2020-12-closer-genomes-microbial-human-mouth.html

United Airlines to resume Boeing 737 MAX flights in February

United Airlines became the latest carrier to announce a timeframe to fly the Boeing 737 MAX again, saying Friday the jet would resume flights in February.

Florida launches investigation into hacking of its servers

Florida officials acknowledged Friday that state servers appear to have been compromised by overseas hackers who gained entry by imbedding malicious code into networking software from a Texas-based software company, SolarWinds.

Hacked networks will need to be burned 'down to the ground'

It's going to take months to kick elite hackers widely believed to be Russian out of the U.S. government networks they have been quietly rifling through since as far back as March in Washington's worst cyberespionage failure on record.

Two dead, hundreds flee floods in Philippine storm

At least two people were killed and hundreds forced to flee their inundated homes in the Philippines as torrential rain triggered flooding and landslides in the storm-battered archipelago, officials said Saturday.

More than half of Hudson River tidal marshes were created accidentally by humans

In a new study of tidal marsh resilience to sea level rise, geologist and first author Brian Yellen at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and colleagues observed that Hudson River Estuary marshes are growing upward at a rate two to three times faster than sea level rise, "suggesting that they should be resilient to accelerated sea level rise in the future," he says.

Identifying where to reforest after wildfire

In the aftermath of megafires that devastated forests of the western United States, attention turns to whether forests will regenerate on their own or not. Forest managers can now look to a newly enhanced, predictive mapping tool to learn where forests are likely to regenerate on their own and where replanting efforts may be beneficial.

New class of cobalt-free cathodes could enhance energy density of next-gen lithium-ion batteries

Oak Ridge National Laboratory researchers have developed a new family of cathodes with the potential to replace the costly cobalt-based cathodes typically found in today's lithium-ion batteries that power electric vehicles and consumer electronics.

Plants can be larks or night owls just like us

Plants have the same variation in body clocks as that found in humans, according to new research that explores the genes governing circadian rhythms in plants.

Researchers take a closer look at the genomes of microbial communities in the human mouth

Bacteria often show very strong biogeography—some bacteria are abundant in specific locations while absent from others—leading to major questions when applying microbiology to therapeutics or probiotics: how did the bacteria get into the wrong place? How do we add the right bacteria into the right place when the biogeography has gotten 'out of whack'?