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Science News

Location American Science News for 30 August 2016
Brain scans have found that dogs use different parts of their brains to process speech, and can tell what words mean if we use the right tone
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Planet Nine could spell doom for solar system

EurekAlert! - 30 Aug 2016 08:00
(University of Warwick) The solar system could be thrown into disaster when the sun dies if the mysterious 'Planet Nine' exists, according to research from the University of Warwick.
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Peter Diamandis: We'll Radically Extend Our Lives With New Technologies How long do you think you'll live? You probably have some idea, and no doubt, you can easily imagine a maximum limit. We humans tend to make it to 70, 80, or 90. The oldest person on record, Jeanne Calment, lived to 122....
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When farmers spray their fields with pesticides or other treatments, only 2 percent of the spray sticks to the plants. A significant portion of it typically bounces right off the plants, lands on the ground, and becomes ...
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Quest to find the 'missing physics' at play in landslides

e! Science News - 30 Aug 2016 23:52
During the 1990s, Charles S. Campbell, now a professor in the Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering at the University of Southern California, began exploring why large landslides flow great distances with ap...
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A team led by Nanfang Yu, assistant professor of applied physics at Columbia Engineering, has discovered a new phase-transition optical material and demonstrated novel devices that dynamically control light over a much b...
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Scientists have developed a new bioethical framework for addressing concerns surrounding potentially revolutionary research on human-animal embryos.
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Dentists are less likely to prescribe antibiotics after they receive a personalized report detailing their past prescription rates, according to a randomized controlled trial of UK dentists.
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Understanding how the 'police' of the cell world deal with 'intruders' and the 'injured' The job of policing the microenvironment around our cells is carried out by macrophages. Macrophages are the 'guards' that patrol most tissues of the body - poised to engulf infections or destroy and repair damaged tissu...
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How Self-Driving Cars Will Change It All--From Energy to Real Estate In a presentation at Singularity University's first annual Global Summit, Brad Templeton informed attendees, "Self-driving cars are going to change the world." You may have heard that before--but if anyone has the creden...
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Drug-induced abortion less safe in Ohio after 2011 law

New Scientist - 30 Aug 2016 22:00
A law intended to improve the safety of abortion by medication tripled the rate of complications because it stopped physicians from following latest research
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Resolving Starlight with Quantum Technology

Physics Buzz - 30 Aug 2016 21:35
Light is one of the most powerful tools we have for exploring the unknown. From a flashlight in a dark cave to starlight from distant galaxies, light illuminates the things and physical processes that surround us. In an ...
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Researchers are working to find the fastest way possible to treat and cure human African trypanosomiasis, long referred to as sleeping sickness. Human African trypanosomiasis, or HAT, is a tropical disease endemic to som...
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Addiction cravings may get their start deep in the right side of the brain If you really want a drink right now, the source of your craving may be a pea-sized structure deep inside the right side of your brain, according to scientists.
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A study confirms that respiratory viral detection, not child's age, explains the high rate of hospitalization for asthma attacks in children under six.
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The Affordable Care Act has substantially decreased the number of uninsured Americans and improved access to health care, though insurance affordability and disparities by geography, race/ethnicity, and income persist. T...
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Levels of retinoic acid, a vitamin A metabolite, are low in mice and humans with colorectal cancer, according to new research. People with high levels of an enzyme that degrades retinoic acid have a poor prognosis, repor...
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Slow-to-breed elephant hurtles towards extinction

New Scientist - 30 Aug 2016 20:55
The African forest elephant doesn't begin having offspring until its mid-20s - which makes population recovery a mammoth problem, even if poaching can be halted
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A City College of New York led-team headed by physicist Dr. Carlos Meriles has successfully demonstrated charge transport between Nitrogen-Vacancy color centers in diamond. The team developed a novel multi-color scanning...
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Radio telescopes across the world are swinging toward an intriguing signal that could point toward an intelligent extraterrestrial civilisation, but have come up empty
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How to Do Timeout: 12 Tips from Science

Live Science - 30 Aug 2016 20:20
How to Do Timeout: 12 Tips from Science Timeouts are very effective in helping children to learn good behavior, research shows. But it helps if parents do them correctly.
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Cannabinoid receptor activates spermatozoa

Science Daily - 30 Aug 2016 20:17
Biologists have detected a cannabinoid receptor in spermatozoa. Endogenous cannabinoids that occur in both the male and the female genital tract activate the spermatozoa: they trigger the so-called acrosome reaction, dur...
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