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Science News

Location American Science News for 28 December 2015

Six Technologies That Hit Their Tipping Points in 2015

Singularity Hub - 28 Dec 2015 21:40
Six Technologies That Hit Their Tipping Points in 2015 To the average person, it may seem that the biggest technology advances of 2015 were the larger smartphone screens and small app updates. But a lot more happened than that....
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Undiagnosed Diseases Program gives answers where there were none An Undiagnosed Diseases Program provides an ending for one family's 24 year search for answers to their children's health issues.
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A dozen inherited traits related to sleep, wake, and activity cycles that are associated with severe bipolar disorder have been identified by an international team of researchers.
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The presence of myopia, or nearsightedness, significantly affects the muscles used in focusing the lens of the eye -- a finding with important implications for the development of 'accommodating' implanted intraocular len...
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The body can control inflammatory response triggered by invasions of microbial pathogens, such as bacteria and viruses, a discovery that could lead to the development of new therapeutic agents for uncontrolled inflammati...
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The beneficial effects of using psychological therapy to treat the symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome are not only short term but are also long lasting, a new meta-analysis has found.
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Diabetes is the leading cause of kidney failure, and scientists have found that infusing just a small dose of a cytokine, thought to help cause that failure, can instead prevent or reverse it.
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Second contagious form of cancer found in Tasmanian devils Transmissible cancers are believed to arise extremely rarely in nature. One of the few known transmissible cancers causes facial tumors in Tasmanian devils, and is threatening this species with extinction. Today, scienti...
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Study opens new door for ALS drug discovery

Science Daily - 28 Dec 2015 23:12
Researchers have discovered the first-ever evidence-based description of the neuronal protein clumps thought to be important in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, a fatal neurodegene...
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Heart attack patients who had previously undergone coronary artery bypass graft surgery were less likely than other heart attack patients, including those with prior angioplasty, to be treated within the 90-minute recomm...
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Mattel Goes High-Tech with Virtual Reality View-Master Toy One of your favorite childhood playthings just got a modern makeover.
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Ram Statue Unearthed on Christmas Eve May Represent Jesus A hand-carved marble statue of a ram that was uncovered last week along Israel's Mediterranean coast has archaeologists guessing about who carved the creation.
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While gaseous carbon dioxide has been a harmful byproduct of human industry--it is the main greenhouse gas emitted through human activities, according to the Environmental Protection Agency--it is an essential ingredient...
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A genetic modification in the mucous membrane of the esophagus, the Barrett esophagus, can lead to esophageal cancer. If certain biomarkers are contained in these tissue alterations, so-called miDNA, these are extremely ...
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Survivors of cancer pay thousands of dollars in excess medical expenditures every year, with the excess financial burden varying by age and cancer site, a new report suggests.
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A proof-of-concept, phase 2 trial by an international research team has found promising results for a myostatin antibody in treating the decline in muscle mass and power associated with aging.
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Lifestyle switching: Bacillus cereus is able to resist certain antibiotic therapies The pathogenic bacterium Bacillus cereus causes vomiting and diarrhea as well as systemic and local infections. A team of researchers has reported for the first time that B. cereus, following contact with certain antibio...
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Eating healthy or feeling empty?

Science Daily - 28 Dec 2015 19:46
Eating too much is typically considered one of the prime culprits of obesity. Now a new study has looked specifically at overconsumption of 'healthy' foods which consumers often perceive as less filling.
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Potential New Particle Sparks Flood of Theories

Scientific American - 28 Dec 2015 19:15
Potential New Particle Sparks Flood of Theories Physicists have produced nearly 100 papers on the latest tantalizing results from the Large Hadron Collider --
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A Schrödinger's cat-like experiment has used lasers to kick a cloud of atoms into locations half a metre apart simultaneously
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Understanding the mechanism for generating electric current without energy consumption at room temperature A group of researchers in Japan and China identified the requirements for the development of new types of extremely low power consumption electric devices by studying Cr-doped (Sb, Bi)2Te3 thin films. This study has been...
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New Kind of Hydrothermal Vent Forms Ghostly Chimneys

Live Science - 28 Dec 2015 16:19
New Kind of Hydrothermal Vent Forms Ghostly Chimneys Deep in the Caribbean Sea, researchers have discovered a new type of hydrothermal vent unlike any seen before, with huge, ghostly mounds formed from an ingredient common in baby powder.
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