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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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Monday, October 04, 2021

Domesticated salmon have smaller eyes in the farm but not in the wild

The domestication of Atlantic salmon through years of fish farming has led to farmed Atlantic salmon developing smaller eyes according to a new piece of research published in the journal Evolutionary Applications.

Cool oasis for Cretaceous feathered dinosaurs

The Jehol Biota, an ancient ecosystem in Liaoning province in northeastern China, includes a dense and diverse array of Cretaceous flora and fauna and is a hot spot of feathered dinosaur fossils. A new study reconstructs a cool climate and high elevation at the site, providing critical environmental context for the wide array of dinosaurs preserved there.

New research reveals need for flexible, tailored support for domestic abuse survivors

A four-year evaluation led by academics at the University of Central Lancashire (UCLan), in partnership with Bangor University, the University of East London and Manchester Metropolitan University, has revealed the need for flexible domestic violence and abuse services that are more tailored and responsive to survivors' changing needs.

Image: Hubble views galaxy NGC 5728

Meet NGC 5728, a spiral galaxy around 130 million light-years from Earth. This image was acquired using Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3), which is extremely sensitive to visible and infrared light. Therefore, it beautifully captures the regions of NGC 5728 that are emitting light at those wavelengths. However, there are many other types of light that galaxies such as NGC 5728 emit, which WFC3 can't see.

US duo win Nobel Medicine Prize for heat and touch work

US scientists David Julius and Ardem Patapoutian on Monday won the Nobel Medicine Prize for discoveries on receptors for temperature and touch, the jury said.

source https://phys.org/news/2021-10-duo-nobel-medicine-prize.html

New plant in Germany aims to cut flying's carbon footprint

German officials on Monday unveiled what they said is the world's first commercial plant for making synthetic kerosene, touted as a climate-friendly fuel of the future.

source https://techxplore.com/news/2021-10-germany-aims-carbon-footprint.html

US duo win Nobel Medicine Prize for heat and touch work

US scientists David Julius and Ardem Patapoutian on Monday won the Nobel Medicine Prize for discoveries on receptors for temperature and touch, the jury said.

Half a degree makes a big difference in a warming world

Half a degree Celsius may not seem like much, but climate experts say a world that has warmed 1.5 degrees Celsius above 19th-century levels compared to 2C could be the difference between life and death.

source https://phys.org/news/2021-10-degree-big-difference-world.html

Senegal's old capital on the frontline against rising sea

In the northern Senegalese city of Saint-Louis, excavators are ripping up the beach to lay giant blocks of basalt, in an eleventh-hour effort to keep the sea at bay.

source https://phys.org/news/2021-10-senegal-capital-frontline-sea.html

California authorities rush to mitigate impact of major oil spill

Authorities in California's beachfront Orange County cities scrambled Sunday to mitigate the fallout from a major oil spill off the coast that caused "substantial ecological impacts."

source https://phys.org/news/2021-10-california-authorities-mitigate-impact-major.html

1.5C is the climate goal, but how do we get there?

The science is painfully clear: to cap global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius—given that we're already at 1.1C—means slashing carbon pollution in half by 2030, and to zero by mid-century.

source https://phys.org/news/2021-10-15c-climate-goal.html

Fires, floods, flying insects: 10 recent climate-fuelled disasters

From a summer of fire and record floods, to freak frosts and locusts invasions, experts say man-made climate change is wreaking havoc on the world's weather.

source https://phys.org/news/2021-10-insects-climate-fuelled-disasters.html

Facebook chooses 'profit over safety,' says whistleblower

The whistleblower who shared a trove of Facebook documents alleging the social media giant knew its products were fueling hate and harming children's mental health revealed her identity Sunday in a televised interview, and accused the company of choosing "profit over safety."

source https://techxplore.com/news/2021-10-facebook-profit-safety-whistleblower.html

Research reveals how much plastic debris is currently floating in the Mediterranean Sea

A team of researchers have developed a model to track the pathways and fate of plastic debris from land-based sources in the Mediterranean Sea. They show that plastic debris can be observed across the Mediterranean, from beaches and surface waters to seafloors, and estimate that around 3,760 metric tons of plastics are currently floating in the Mediterranean.

source https://phys.org/news/2021-10-reveals-plastic-debris-mediterranean-sea.html

Artificial intelligence makes it faster, easier to analyze hockey video

Researchers have made a key advancement in the development of technology to automatically analyze video of hockey games using artificial intelligence.

source https://phys.org/news/2021-10-artificial-intelligence-faster-easier-hockey.html

Half a degree makes a big difference in a warming world

Half a degree Celsius may not seem like much, but climate experts say a world that has warmed 1.5 degrees Celsius above 19th-century levels compared to 2C could be the difference between life and death.

Senegal's old capital on the frontline against rising sea

In the northern Senegalese city of Saint-Louis, excavators are ripping up the beach to lay giant blocks of basalt, in an eleventh-hour effort to keep the sea at bay.

California authorities rush to mitigate impact of major oil spill

Authorities in California's beachfront Orange County cities scrambled Sunday to mitigate the fallout from a major oil spill off the coast that caused "substantial ecological impacts."

1.5C is the climate goal, but how do we get there?

The science is painfully clear: to cap global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius—given that we're already at 1.1C—means slashing carbon pollution in half by 2030, and to zero by mid-century.

Fires, floods, flying insects: 10 recent climate-fuelled disasters

From a summer of fire and record floods, to freak frosts and locusts invasions, experts say man-made climate change is wreaking havoc on the world's weather.

Research reveals how much plastic debris is currently floating in the Mediterranean Sea

A team of researchers have developed a model to track the pathways and fate of plastic debris from land-based sources in the Mediterranean Sea. They show that plastic debris can be observed across the Mediterranean, from beaches and surface waters to seafloors, and estimate that around 3,760 metric tons of plastics are currently floating in the Mediterranean.

Artificial intelligence makes it faster, easier to analyze hockey video

Researchers have made a key advancement in the development of technology to automatically analyze video of hockey games using artificial intelligence.