Science News
UCLA researchers create exceptionally strong and lightweight new metal
e! Science News - 24 Dec 2015 06:14
A team led by researchers from the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science has created a super-strong yet light structural metal with extremely high specific strength and modulus, or stiffness-to-wei...
Liver hormone could tame our love of cakes and booze
New Scientist - 24 Dec 2015 19:00
Dubbed the "sweet tooth hormone", FGF21 reduced how much sugar and alcohol monkeys wanted to consume
Sci-Fi Short Film 'Uncanny Valley' Paints a Dark Future for Virtual Reality
Singularity Hub - 24 Dec 2015 18:00
What's the worst possible outcome of virtual reality technology going mainstream? A generation of burnt-out, washed-up VR junkies losing touch with reality and surviving only to sustain their virtual existence. That...
Choreographing the dance of electrons
Phys.org - 24 Dec 2015 17:51
Scientists at the National University of Singapore (NUS) have demonstrated a new way of controlling electrons by confining them in a device made out of atomically thin materials, and applying external electric and magnet...
CERN's Next Director-General on the LHC and Her Hopes for International Particle Physics
Scientific American - 24 Dec 2015 17:30
Fabiola Gianotti talks to Nature ahead of taking the helm at Europe's particle-physics laboratory on January 1 --
Pocket-Size Device Turns Smartphone into a High-Powered Microscope
Live Science - 24 Dec 2015 15:38
A new pocket-size microscope could give you a closer look at the world around you.
Animal Sex: How Santa's Reindeer Do It
Live Science - 24 Dec 2015 15:38
In the months preceding Christmas, Santa's sleigh-pulling ungulates are engaged in a very different activity -- mating. Reindeer sex involves herding, defending harems and ignoring lovers.
Will Concussions Keep Kids from Football? (Op-Ed)
Live Science - 24 Dec 2015 08:23
Youth sports are not the biggest risk kids face, so should those activities be banned?
Can Games Be a Game-Changer for Climate? (Op-Ed)
Live Science - 24 Dec 2015 07:56
Global warming isn't a game, but gameplay might giving people a firm grasp of the risks.
Efficacy of major chlamydia drug confirmed
Science Daily - 24 Dec 2015 05:18
In one of the most tightly controlled trials ever conducted of drugs used to treat sexually transmitted infections, researchers have confirmed that azithromycin remains effective in the treatment of urogenital chlamydia.
New antibodies with an extra fragment overcome malaria parasite diversity
Science Daily - 24 Dec 2015 05:17
A new groundbreaking mechanism that generates super-antibodies that can broadly target malaria parasites has been described in a new article. The antibodies described in this study were not only special for their broad r...
Ecologist finds another cause of antibiotic resistance
Science Daily - 24 Dec 2015 05:16
One researcher is concerned that there's more to the problem of antibiotic-resistant bacteria than the misuse of common medications. A senior research ecologist, this scientist believes environmental contaminants may be ...
Two Alzheimer's risk genes linked to brain atrophy, promise future blood markers
Science Daily - 24 Dec 2015 05:16
Two genetic variants previously linked to Alzheimer's disease have been more specifically tied to brain atrophy that is characteristic of the disease. Alzheimer's disease is a progressive illness that is the leading caus...
Guarding against immune responses limiting efficacy of antibody-based approaches to HIV
Science Daily - 24 Dec 2015 05:16
Immunogeneticists specializing in immunoglobulin GM genes monitored for immune responses that could limit the effectiveness of the broadly neutralizing antibody VRC01 in HIV-infected individuals in a phase 1 trial.
Music therapy increases effectiveness of pulmonary rehabilitation for COPD patients
Science Daily - 24 Dec 2015 05:16
Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) and other chronic respiratory disorders who received music therapy in conjunction with standard rehabilitation saw an improvement in symptoms, psychological well...
New SIR-Network Model helps predict dengue fever epidemic in urban areas
Science Daily - 24 Dec 2015 05:15
A new mathematical model has been introduced by experts, which offers a simplified approach to studying the spread of the infectious virus, Dengue fever, in urban areas, specifically breaking down the epidemic dynamics a...
Marijuana derivative reduces seizures in people with treatment-resistant epilepsy
Science Daily - 24 Dec 2015 05:15
Cannabidiol (CBD), a medical marijuana derivative, was effective in reducing seizure frequency and well-tolerated and safe for most children and young adults enrolled in a year-long study, researchers report. These lates...
Genome misfolding unearthed as new path to cancer
Science Daily - 24 Dec 2015 05:15
Researchers reveal a completely new biological mechanism that underlies cancer. By studying brain tumors that carry mutations in the isocitrate dehydrogenase genes, the team uncovered some unusual changes in the instruct...
Positive results for new oral drug for pulmonary hypertension
Science Daily - 24 Dec 2015 05:15
Largest study ever of pulmonary hypertension shows effective treatment may get easier for the mostly young women patients who have the rare heart disease. The oral drug Selexipag reduced hospitalizations and worsening sy...
Mapping cancer's 'social networks' opens new approaches to treatment
Science Daily - 24 Dec 2015 05:15
A computer model has been designed that applies techniques used to analyze social networks to identify new ways of treating cancer, according to a new article.
Targeting fat-tissue hormone may lead to type 2 diabetes treatment
Science Daily - 24 Dec 2015 05:13
The preclinical development of a therapeutic that could potentially be used to treat type 2 diabetes, fatty liver disease, and other metabolic diseases has been outlined in a new report. The researchers developed an anti...
Unsynching heartbeat a bit each day halts worsening heart failure
Science Daily - 24 Dec 2015 05:13
Applying a pacemaker's mild electrical shocks to push the heart in and out of normal synchronized contraction for part of each day may be an effective way to slow down the progression of heart failure, a disorder that af...