Sign In
to Vote &
Create Storyboards.
 

Science News

Location American Science News for 19 January 2014

New hope for Gaucher patients

EurekAlert! - 19 Jan 2014 07:00
(Weizmann Institute of Science) Weizmann Institute scientists have discovered a new cellular pathway implicated in Gaucher disease. Their findings may offer a new therapeutic target for the management of this disease, as...
Read More
11
0

Thirty-year-old Data Offers New View Of Venus

Live Science - 19 Jan 2014 01:19
Thirty-year-old Data Offers New View Of Venus Researcher finds convincing evidence for water molecules inside Venus.
Read More
3
0
Rosetta, the European Space Agency's comet-chasing satellite, is getting a very public wake-up call on Jan. 20. The "Wake Up Rosetta" live stream event will begin at 4:15 a.m. EST.
Read More
2
0
With Emotion Recognition Algorithms, Computers Know What You're Thinking A handful of companies are developing algorithms that can read the human emotions behind nuanced and fleeting facial expressions to maximize advertising and market research campaigns. Major corporations including Procter...
Read More
0
0
Sea Shepherd is continuing its campaign to raise awareness about the recent capture of approximately 250 bottlenose dolphins in Taiji, Japan's infamous 'killing cove'. A combined five pods have been held in the cove sinc...
Read More
0
0

Genome of the Blood-Sucking Hookworm Decoded

Live Science - 19 Jan 2014 20:15
Genome of the Blood-Sucking Hookworm Decoded Hookworms are parasitic worms, and they currently infect about 700 million people in the world. Now, researchers say they've decoded this blood-sucker's genome, which could lead to better ways to prevent or treat the con...
Read More
0
0

Panda Cub Bao Bao Makes Public Debut at National Zoo

Live Science - 19 Jan 2014 20:13
Panda Cub Bao Bao Makes Public Debut at National Zoo Visitors to the Smithsonian's National Zoo in Washington, D.C., can finally get a glimpse of the panda cub Bao Bao. The baby bear made her public debut on Saturday (Jan. 18), but apparently slept through much of it.
Read More
0
0

Extreme El Niños Could Hit Twice As Often

Live Science - 19 Jan 2014 20:00
Extreme El Niños Could Hit Twice As Often The most intense El Niño events may soon hit every 10 years, instead of every 20 years, thanks to warming water in the eastern Pacific Ocean, a new study predicts.
Read More
0
0

Devastating El Niño events to double this century

New Scientist - 19 Jan 2014 20:00
Extreme El Niño events that could kill tens of thousands of people will become twice as common because of climate change     
Read More
0
0

'I Quit' Will Be Familiar Refrain in 2014

Live Science - 19 Jan 2014 14:09
'I Quit' Will Be Familiar Refrain in 2014 More employees plan to look for new jobs this year than since the recession started. What's driving them?
Read More
0
0
Entrepreneurial Spirit Burns Brightest in Minority Students The drive among students to become entrepreneurs when they grow up decreases as they get older, new research shows.
Read More
0
0
Will Your New Boss Be a Jerk? New Computer Program Can Tell Companies looking to hire new CEO's or any manager could use a new computer test to determine if the prospective boss is a little too self absorbed.
Read More
0
0
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology) New approach developed at MIT could generate power from sunlight efficiently and on demand.
Read More
0
0
(University of California - Santa Cruz) Astronomers have discovered a distant quasar illuminating a vast nebula of diffuse gas, revealing for the first time part of the network of filaments thought to connect galaxies in...
Read More
0
0

Keeping whales safe in sound

EurekAlert! - 19 Jan 2014 07:00
(Terry Collins Assoc) The International Union for the Conservation of Nature is intensifying global efforts to safeguard whales and other marine species from the harms of powerful noise used in seismic seafloor surveys b...
Read More
0
0

York scientists investigate the fiber of our being

EurekAlert! - 19 Jan 2014 07:00
(University of York) Research at the University of York's Structural Biology Laboratory, in collaboration with groups in Canada, the USA and Sweden, has begun to uncover how our gut bacteria metabolize the complex dietar...
Read More
0
0
(University of Edinburgh) Renewable tidal energy sufficient to power about half of Scotland could be harnessed from a single stretch of water off the north coast of the country, engineers say.
Read More
0
0
(Cleveland Clinic) Cleveland Clinic researchers have identified a protein in the brain that plays a critical role in the memory loss seen in Alzheimer's patients, according to a study to be published in the journal Natur...
Read More
0
0
(University of Cambridge) Research on first data release from Gaia-ESO project suggests the Milky Way formed by expanding out from the centre, and reveals new insights into the way our Galaxy was assembled.
Read More
0
0
Scientists have found that chimpanzees, our closest living relatives with whom we share 98 percent of our genes, are able to use hand gestures to achieve shared goals. Humans working with chimps raised in captivity in th...
Read More
0
0

Wow! The Most Amazing Images in Science This Week

Live Science - 19 Jan 2014 01:46
Wow! The Most Amazing Images in Science This Week The Southern Alps, space junk and the Tarantula Nebula -- just a few of our favorite images for this week.
Read More
0
0
The European Space Agency's Rosetta satellite is currently hibernating, but the alarm clock is set for Jan. 20. The "Wake Up Rosetta" campaign is just the beginning for the ESA's satellite as it plans to rendezvous with ...
Read More
0
0

{TITLE}

{PUBLISHER} - {PUBLISHED_DATE}
{TITLE} {CONTENT}
Read More
{VIEWS}
0


Storyboard
Print
{VIEWS}
0
0




Share this Article

Location



Create Storyboard