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Science News

Location American Science News for 16 December 2015
New technology called spectral CT imaging allows clinicians to get a more complete picture of patients' health. The technology for colored imaging is not only on the horizon, but it is also on the campus of a research fa...
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Penguin Candid Camera: Little Birds Reveal Hunting Secrets Wearing video cameras, the world's smallest penguins have revealed their hunting secrets: The little blue birds swim together to stalk groups of prey, but when it comes to catching and killing their meals, it's every pen...
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Penguins On The Hunt - Attached Camera Captures Pursuit | Video Researchers fastened a camera to a little penguin in order to study its foraging behavior. The study found that the penguins tend work together to capture 'schooling prey' and are likely to work alone for 'solitary prey'...
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Scientists discover the function, connections of three cell types in the brain Using genetic tools to interrogate cell types sheds light on how the brain processes visual information, report scientists. Learning how the brain analyzes visual information at a detailed level may one day help doctors ...
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How brain architecture leads to abstract thought

Science Daily - 16 Dec 2015 22:17
Using 20 years of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data from tens of thousands of brain imaging experiments, computational neuroscientists have created a geometry-based method for massive data analysis to rea...
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Chewing slowly helps prevent excessive weight gain in children Waiting 30 seconds in between bites of food allows children to realize they're no longer hungry before they overeat -- preventing excessive weight gain, concludes a new study.
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Greywater reuse for irrigation is safe, study shows

Science Daily - 16 Dec 2015 22:17
There was no additional incidence of gastroenteritis or water-related diseases caused by use of treated greywater in gardens, even when compared to tap water and other irrigation water sources, researchers report at the ...
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To prevent preeclampsia, new research suggests that low-dose aspirin should be given prophylactically to all women at high risk (those with diabetes or chronic hypertension) and any woman with two or more moderate risk f...
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When rejection comes from within

Science Daily - 16 Dec 2015 22:16
A new cellular structure responsible for previously unexplained rejection of organ transplants has been identified. This discovery could one day revolutionize transplantation practice by modifying risk assessment of reje...
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Environment, behavior contribute to some 80 percent of cancers, study reveals A team of researchers has found quantitative evidence proving that extrinsic risk factors, such as environmental exposures and behaviors weigh heavily on the development of a vast majority (approximately 70 to 90 percent...
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New weapon in fight against breast cancer: New mouse model The first clinically-relevant mouse model of human breast cancer to successfully express functional estrogen receptor positive adenocarcinomas has been created by researchers. This model should be a powerful tool for tes...
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Zombie Alert! Medical Journal 'Warns' of Walking Dead A tongue-in-cheek medical journal article takes a spooky tone with its metaphor for infectious disease.
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New metamaterial manipulates sound to improve acoustic imaging Researchers from North Carolina State University and Duke University have developed a metamaterial made of paper and aluminum that can manipulate acoustic waves to more than double the resolution of acoustic imaging, foc...
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Big moves in protein structure prediction and design

Science Daily - 16 Dec 2015 21:05
Big moves in protein structure prediction and design New reports on the modular construction of certain types of protein molecules are the latest in a series of advances in protein structure prediction and design. Because naturally occurring proteins act as nanomachines to...
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Potential New Particle Shows Up at the LHC, Thrilling and Confounding Physicists The gigantic accelerator in Europe has produced hints of an exotic particle that defies the known laws of physics --
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Devising an inexpensive, quick tuberculosis test for developing areas Tuberculosis (TB) is a highly infectious disease and a major global health problem, especially in countries with developing health care systems. Because there is no fast, easy way to detect TB, the deadly infection can s...
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Historic Photos Paint Picture of Greenland Ice Loss

Live Science - 16 Dec 2015 20:57
Historic Photos Paint Picture of Greenland Ice Loss A picture is worth a thousand words, or, in Greenland, a thousand scientific measurements.
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'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' - Review

Live Science - 16 Dec 2015 20:45
'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' - Review An early look at what to expect from Episode VII.
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Using antibiotics alone to treat children with uncomplicated acute appendicitis is a reasonable alternative to surgery when chosen by the family. A new study has found that three out of four children with uncomplicated a...
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Expert Voices - Robert Lawrence Kuhn

Live Science - 16 Dec 2015 20:43
Expert Voices - Robert Lawrence Kuhn Author and PBS host Robert Lawrence Kuhn brings his unique, mind-bending questions to the Expert Voices platform.
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Fad Diet? Experts Take New View on Intermittent Fasting Intermittent fasting, or fasting just a few days a week, was initially decried by health experts as unhealthy. But new studies show it might not be so bad.
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Is a Real Lightsaber Possible? Science Offers a New Hope Are real lightsabers possible?
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