Science News
Deaths from 'Benzo' Sedatives Quietly Increasing
Live Science - 19 Feb 2016 01:55
Overdoses involving benzodiazepines are "a public health problem that has gone under the radar," a researchers says.
News from the secret world of the egg cell
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 22:35
The division of mammalian egg cells depends on cohesin proteins that embrace chromosomes before birth and are not renewed thereafter, scientists have discovered. The cohesin complex is remarkably long-lived but eventuall...
Link between intensive post-stroke rehabilitation and recovery demonstrated in rats
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 22:35
Researchers have demonstrated a causal relationship between rehabilitation-induced change of brain circuits and functional recovery through forced limb use in rats with stroke, providing crucial information for devising ...
Five-dimensional black hole could 'break' general relativity
e! Science News - 19 Feb 2016 01:08
Researchers have shown how a bizarrely shaped black hole could cause Einstein's general theory of relativity, a foundation of modern physics, to break down. However, such an object could only exist in a universe with fiv...
Stolen Radioactive Material: What Is Iridium-192?
Live Science - 19 Feb 2016 01:06
The radioactive material allegedly stolen from an oil field in Basra, Iraq, is likely too small to do as much damage as a dirty bomb, but its psychological effects could be huge, one expert says.
New image analytics may offer quick guidance for breast cancer treatment
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 23:52
For women with the most common type of breast cancer, a new way to analyze magnetic resonance images (MRI) data appears to reliably distinguish between patients who would need only hormonal treatment and those who also n...
That first drink is a learning experience
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 23:52
A research team has examined whether a single exposure to alcohol can induce memory and behavioral changes that could promote future drinking. Their data suggest that the perceived benefits of alcohol are registered and ...
B-cell diversity in immune system's germinal centers may hold key to broad-spectrum vaccines
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 23:51
The germinal centers that form in the body's lymph nodes work as a fitness boot camp in which B cells evolve to produce antibodies of increasingly higher affinity to an invading pathogen. This new finding overturns a pre...
What makes a bacterial species able to cause human disease?
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 23:51
The first comprehensive, cross-species genomic comparison of all 20 known species of Leptospira, a bacterial genus that can cause disease and death in livestock and other domesticated mammals, wildlife and humans, has no...
Engineered gene drives and the future
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 23:49
Engineered gene drives, which have the potential to spread desirable genes throughout wild populations or to suppress harmful species, have received a lot of recent attention because of their potential to control organis...
Areas of excellence found, also improvement needed in quality of mental health care in the U.S. military
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 23:49
The care provided by the US military health care system to service members suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder and depression is good in some areas, but needs improvement in other realms, according to a new stu...
Why do we still have mitochondrial DNA?
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 23:49
The mitochondrion isn't the bacterium it was in its prime, say two billion years ago. Since getting consumed by our common single-celled ancestor the 'energy powerhouse' organelle has lost most of its 2,000+ genes, likel...
How Much Sleep Do US Adults Get? List of States
Live Science - 18 Feb 2016 23:36
How many people in your state get 7 hours of sleep a night?
Five-dimensional black hole could 'break' general relativity
Phys.org - 18 Feb 2016 23:23
Researchers have shown how a bizarrely shaped black hole could cause Einstein's general theory of relativity, a foundation of modern physics, to break down. However, such an object could only exist in a universe with fiv...
'See' What You Breathe with New Air-Quality Monitor
Live Science - 18 Feb 2016 23:18
A new gadget can help people identify pollutants -- some smaller than the width of a hair -- in their homes.
Internally coupled ears enable directional hearing in animals
Phys.org - 18 Feb 2016 23:16
Humans use the time delay between the arrival of a sound wave at each ear to discern the direction of the source. In frogs, lizards and birds the distance between the ears is too small. However, they have a cavity connec...
Different genetic mutation patterns for HPV-positive throat cancer patients based on smoking history
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 22:50
Preliminary findings from a study examining the genetic alterations in HPV-positive oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma were recently presented. Researchers found differences in the genetic mutations of HPV-positive or...
Experimental drug may limit harmful effects of traumatic brain injury
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 22:50
An experimental drug may aid patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI), for which there is currently no effective treatment to prevent increased risk of dementia or other neurologic complications.
Unique next generation sequencing-based panel designed for pediatric cancer research
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 22:40
A next-generation sequencing (NGS)-based panel will be designed specifically for pediatric cancer research, say scientists. The assay would be designed to target biomarkers associated with childhood cancers.
A shot in the arm for flu vaccine distribution
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 22:40
Each fall, doctors stress the importance of getting a flu shot: influenza is the most frequent cause of death from a vaccine-preventable disease in the United States. But on-time delivery of the vaccine can be tenuous, a...
Scientists discover way to potentially track and stop human and agricultural viruses
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 22:35
A new discovery has broad ranging applications in stopping viral outbreaks such as hepatitis C in humans and a number of viruses in plants and animals because it applies to many viruses in the largest category of viral c...
50 percent of teens visiting emergency department report peer violence, cyberbullying
Science Daily - 18 Feb 2016 22:35
Nearly 50 percent of teens seen in the emergency department for any reason report peer violence and nearly 50 percent also report being the victims of cyberbullying, a new study has found. Almost one-quarter of teens in ...