Science News
Endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty: Promising new weight loss procedure
Science Daily - 20 Jan 2016 20:57
A novel treatment method -- endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty -- might offer a new solution for obese patients. Endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty is a minimally invasive, safe and cost-effective weight loss intervention, accor...
New Seafloor Map Reveals Secrets of Ancient Continents' Shoving Match
Live Science - 20 Jan 2016 18:00
Tectonic plates may have inched across the Earth's surface to where they are now over billions of years. But they left behind traces of their movement under the sea in bumps and gashes that researchers can map.
New knowledge on why patients with type 2 diabetes present smelling problems
Science Daily - 20 Jan 2016 20:37
In a study in type 2 diabetic rats, researchers have identified alterations in specific nerve cells that are important for odor identification. The findings might explain why type 2 diabetic patients often experience sme...
Ice-like phonons in liquid water discovered
Phys.org - 21 Jan 2016 01:58
For more than 100 years, scientists have debated what the underlying molecular structure of water is, and the common view has been that H2O molecules are either "water-like" or "ice-like." Now through computer simulation...
Long-Term Opioid Use Linked to Depression
Live Science - 21 Jan 2016 01:38
People who use opioid medicines for pain may face a higher risk of depression, a new study finds.
Eating Healthy Fats May Reduce Deaths from Heart Disease
Live Science - 21 Jan 2016 01:10
To prevent heart disease deaths, people may want to focus more on eating more unsaturated fat, rather than eating less saturated fat, a new study suggests.
And then there were nine
The Economist - 21 Jan 2016 00:57
THE past two decades have seen astronomers' catalogue of planets expand over two-hundredfold, as new techniques and better telescopes have found more than 2,000 of them orbiting stars other than the sun. But in the solar...
Self-heating lithium-ion battery could beat the winter woes
e! Science News - 21 Jan 2016 00:39
A lithium-ion battery that self heats if the temperature is below 32 degrees Fahrenheit has multiple applications, but may have the most impact on relieving winter "range anxiety" for electric vehicle owners, according t...
Switchable material could enable new memory chips
e! Science News - 21 Jan 2016 00:38
Two MIT researchers have developed a thin-film material whose phase and electrical properties can be switched between metallic and semiconducting simply by applying a small voltage. The material then stays in its new con...
Survey finds the percentage of undergraduate women at 9 colleges who were sexually assaulted during 2014-2015 academic year varied considerably
Science Daily - 20 Jan 2016 23:37
In a survey of students at nine U.S. colleges and universities, the percentage of undergraduate women who experienced a sexual assault, defined as sexual battery or rape, during 2014-2015 academic year varied considerabl...
Emotion-processing networks disrupted in sufferers of depression
Science Daily - 20 Jan 2016 23:30
Regions of the brain that normally work together to process emotion become decoupled in people who experience multiple episodes of depression, neuroscientists report. The findings may help identify which patients will be...
Chickenpox, shingles vaccine may cause corneal inflammation in some patients
Science Daily - 20 Jan 2016 23:29
In use for more than 20 years, the varicella zoster virus vaccine for chickenpox and shingles is considered an essential medicine by the World Health Organization (WHO). However, researchers have found, in rare instances...
Using light for targeted drug delivery could help fight tumors, local infections
e! Science News - 20 Jan 2016 23:25
Some drug regimens, such as those designed to eliminate tumors, are notorious for nasty side effects. Unwanted symptoms are often the result of medicine going where it's not needed and harming healthy cells. To minimize ...
This may be the world's oldest Jurassic dinosaur fossil
New Scientist - 20 Jan 2016 23:00
The well-preserved bones of a juvenile meat-eating dinosaur found in Wales promise to reveal secrets about how Jurassic species diversified
Mini T. Rex: 'Welsh Dragon' May Be Earliest Jurassic Dinosaur
Live Science - 20 Jan 2016 23:00
Two brothers hunting for ichthyosaur fossils along the coast of the United Kingdom came across something far more astounding: The bones of what may be the earliest known dinosaur from the Jurassic period in the U.K., and...
Crisis in antibiotic resistance could be slowed by blood test
New Scientist - 20 Jan 2016 23:00
A test that can distinguish between bacterial and viral infections could prevent unnecessary use of antibiotics that speeds the rise of drug resistance
LIGO and Gravitational Waves: A Graphic Explanation
Scientific American - 20 Jan 2016 23:00
Infographic from Scientific American breaks down the technology behind our ongoing search for ripples in spacetime --
Planet X May Be Real - Evidence Mounting For 9th Planet | Video
Live Science - 20 Jan 2016 22:45
A possible planet - larger than Earth but smaller than Neptune - orbiting the Sun once every 15,000 years, could explain the peculiar clumping of Kuiper Belt Objects in our solar system.
Metal 'Snow' May Power Earth's Magnetic Field
Live Science - 20 Jan 2016 22:38
The power source for Earth's magnetic field may be magnesium minerals trapped in the core since our planet's violent birth.
Photos: The Oldest Known Evidence of Warfare Unearthed
Live Science - 20 Jan 2016 22:09
The oldest known evidence of human warfare has been unearthed in Kenya, suggesting warfare is an ancient part of the human repertoire.
10,000-Year-Old Battered Bones May Be Oldest Evidence of Human Warfare
Live Science - 20 Jan 2016 22:09
The oldest known evidence of human warfare has been unearthed in Kenya, suggesting that warfare is an ancient part of the human repertoire.
Grisly massacre site in Africa reveals one of the earliest wars
New Scientist - 20 Jan 2016 22:00
Ten skeletons found near Lake Turkana in Kenya show signs of violent death in the oldest known incident of hunter-gatherer warfare, 10,000 years ago