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Location American Science News for 28 April 2017
The Cassini spacecraft is beginning its final set of daring orbits with breathtaking images of the Saturn system and rings
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#AskSymmetry Twitter chat with Tulika Bose

Symmetry Magazine - 28 Apr 2017 23:59
See Boston University physicist Tulika Bose's answers to readers' questions about research at the Large Hadron Collider.
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Mapping the edge of reality

Science Daily - 28 Apr 2017 23:45
A genetic algorithm has been determined to confirm the rejection of classical notions of causality.
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A five-year study has found the mechanism responsible for repairing damage to mitochondrial DNA. This discovery could pave the way for new treatments for cancer and neurodegenerative diseases, say the researchers. This r...
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Hybrid circuits can increase computational power of chaos-based systems New research from North Carolina State University has found that combining digital and analog components in nonlinear, chaos-based integrated circuits can improve their computational power by enabling processing of a lar...
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New organic lasers one step closer to reality

Phys.org - 28 Apr 2017 22:40
New organic lasers one step closer to reality New research could make lasers emitting a wide range of colors more accessible and open new applications from communications and sensing to displays.
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In an analysis of Medicare billing data submitted by more than 2,300 United States physicians, researchers have calculated the average number of surgical slices, or cuts, made during Mohs micrographic surgery (MMS), a pr...
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Modern metabolic science yields better way to calculate indoor carbon dioxide The air we breathe out can help us improve the quality of the air we breathe in. But to do so, one needs a reliable way to calculate the concentration of carbon dioxide we produce indoors. Researchers have developed a ne...
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With the Trump administration stripping away firearms legislation, can citizen scientists and technologists rein in the excesses of US gun culture?
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New Prostate Cancer Screening Guidelines Don't Go Far Enough (Op-Ed) Do the new guidelines about screening for prostate cancer go far enough?
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A newly-created prognostic tool reliably predicts the recurrence of parathyroid cancer, enabling physicians to identify patients at the highest risk. Consequently, the tool also helps to determine the optimum postoperati...
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Zika virus can persist in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), lymph nodes and colorectal tissue of infected rhesus monkeys for weeks after the virus has been cleared from blood, urine and mucosal secretions, according to a study.
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Are Cholesterol, Saturated Fat Less Important to Heart Disease? Blame chronic inflammation (rather than cholesterol) for heart disease, a new editorial says. But the stance is controversial -- here's why.
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The first study illustrating the safety and efficacy of endoscopic needle-knife therapy for intestinal strictures in patients with inflammatory bowel disorder has been released by physicians. The results appear to be pro...
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Scientists Create the Most Successful Artificial Womb Yet

Singularity Hub - 28 Apr 2017 19:10
Scientists Create the Most Successful Artificial Womb Yet Among modern medicine's achievements, one of the most dramatic has been a steep reduction in infant mortality. Yet, even today, there are exceptions. Babies born prematurely often have to battle to stay alive. Our best t...
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Physicist Describes 45 Gruesome Ways to Die (or Not)

Live Science - 28 Apr 2017 19:10
Physicist Describes 45 Gruesome Ways to Die (or Not) There is something morbidly fascinating about the prospect of exploring the most outlandish, unusual and downright unlikely circumstances that could cause your demise.
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The FlowLight system tracks how busy workers are on their computers ­- and warns off colleagues if you are not to be disturbed
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A study shows they would give up the chance to win money to avoid hearing ideas they disagree with. So much for the champions of enlightenment
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The swollen colon: Cause of chronic inflammation discovered Too much of the oncogene Bcl-3 leads to chronic intestinal diseases, report investigators. They describe in a new report exactly how it throws the immune system off-balance.
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Antibiotics may impede the health properties of whole grain, especially for women, recent study demonstrates. The results emphasize the importance of maintaining a restrictive use of antibiotics.
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Recent years have witnessed significant debates on proteins in milk, in particular the differences between A1 and A2 proteins. However, there is still no scientific evidence to determine whether milk with one protein typ...
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Study revises the development, evolutionary origin of the vertebrate brain Researchers have made the first detailed map of the regions into which the brain of one of the most closely-related organisms to the vertebrates is divided and which could give us an idea of what our ancestor was like.
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