Science News
Ray Kurzweil: Our Brain Is a Blueprint for the Master Algorithm
Singularity Hub - 30 Jun 2017 19:00
Ray Kurzweil is an inventor, thinker, and futurist famous for forecasting the pace of technology and predicting the world of tomorrow. In this video, Kurzweil suggests the blueprint for the master algorithm--or a single,...
Fighting climate change could trigger a massive financial crash
New Scientist - 30 Jun 2017 20:07
The risks of global warming go far beyond the physical. If we don't start preparing for the transition to a low-carbon economy we're in for an incredibly bumpy ride
Do Smokers' Lungs Heal After They Quit?
Live Science - 30 Jun 2017 19:34Abortion law needs a UK-wide update, not just Northern Ireland
New Scientist - 30 Jun 2017 17:05
The provision of abortions for Northern Irish women has been a hot issue this week in both Belfast and Westminster, but UK-wide law has also failed to keep up with medical reality
Spinning electrons open the door to future hybrid electronics
Phys.org - 30 Jun 2017 17:00
A discovery of how to control and transfer spinning electrons paves the way for novel hybrid devices that could outperform existing semiconductor electronics. In a study published in Nature Communications, researchers at...
New measurement will help redefine international unit of mass
Phys.org - 1 Jul 2017 01:44
Using a state-of-the-art device for measuring mass, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have made their most precise determination yet of Planck's constant, an important value in scie...
Synthetic fingerprints make plastic particles tiny security keys
New Scientist - 30 Jun 2017 23:00
Randomly-generated wrinkles on tiny plastic particles that are just as unique as fingerprints could be useful for sending secure data
In urban Baltimore, poor neighborhoods have more mosquitoes
Science Daily - 30 Jun 2017 22:49
In Baltimore, Maryland, neighborhoods with high levels of residential abandonment are hotspots for tiger mosquitoes (Aedes albopictus), new research concludes. This environmental injustice may leave low-income urban resi...
Genes may cause tumor aggressiveness, drug resistance in African-American prostate cancer
Science Daily - 30 Jun 2017 22:07
A form of genetic variation, called differential RNA splicing, may have a role in tumor aggressiveness and drug resistance in African-American men with prostate cancer, according to research.
Blood doping: Were Armstrong and Russia wasting their time?
New Scientist - 30 Jun 2017 21:21
Doping with EPO appears to offer nothing but placebo effect in amateur riders. Is this the end for the drug that Lance Armstrong abused, wonders Chris Cooper
Altering gut bacteria pathways may stimulate fat tissue to prevent obesity
Science Daily - 30 Jun 2017 20:44
A biological link has been discovered between gut bacteria metabolism and obesity. A research team showed that blocking a specific intestinal microbial pathway can prevent obesity and insulin resistance, as well as cause...
New method for synthesising complex molecules
Science Daily - 30 Jun 2017 20:42
A recent computational modelling-based study aimed to understand the processes involved in chemical synthesis and improve them, report investigators.
What's really happening during an LHC collision?
Symmetry Magazine - 30 Jun 2017 20:40
It's less of a collision and more of a symphony. The Large Hadron Collider is definitely large. With a 17-mile circumference, it is the biggest collider on the planet. But the latter fraction of its name is a little misl...
Artificial Intelligence Predicts Death to Help Us Live Longer
Singularity Hub - 30 Jun 2017 20:00
Do not go gentle into that good night, Old age should burn and rave at close of day; Rage, rage against the dying of the light. Welsh poet Dylan Thomas' famous lines are a passionate plea to fight against the inevitabili...
New clues found to common respiratory virus
Science Daily - 30 Jun 2017 19:55
Scientists have solved the structure of a protein that helps a common respiratory virus evade the immune system. The team has identified critical parts of the protein that could be targeted with drugs or vaccines, openin...
Secret Square Discovered Beneath Neolithic Stone Monument
Live Science - 30 Jun 2017 19:42Discovery could influence methods to control bacteria on medical and other surfaces
Science Daily - 30 Jun 2017 18:51
New research has revealed how bacteria thin the liquid they are swimming through in order to free themselves when trapped by walls or other obstacles. This finding could influence methods to control bacterial growth on m...
Multiple sclerosis: Patients may benefit from over-the-counter therapy
Science Daily - 30 Jun 2017 18:50
Over-the-counter antioxidant lipoic acid holds promise for treating patients with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis, a pilot study suggests. Researchers are using the findings from the pilot trial to design the ex...
Colon cancer nuclear pore dynamics are captured by HS-AFM
Science Daily - 30 Jun 2017 18:50
One of the key reasons for cancer mortality is caused by the highly invasive behavior of cancer cells, which is often due to aggressive metastasis. Metastasis is facilitated by various growth factors and cytokines secret...
How the liver unclogs itself
Science Daily - 30 Jun 2017 18:50
Scientists have described the mechanical principles adopted by liver cells as they remove excess bile during obstructive cholestasis.
Liquid biopsies: A non-invasive look at treatment response
Science Daily - 30 Jun 2017 18:50
A new study shows that so-called "liquid biopsies", blood tests that detect circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA), may not only sound an early alert that a treatment's effect is diminishing, but may also help explain why -somet...
Sport feels less strenuous if you believe it's doing you good
Science Daily - 30 Jun 2017 18:50
"Sport is too much like hard work." For many, that is reason enough to pass when it comes to exercise. But does sport really have to make you break into a sweat? Psychologists have discovered that one's own expectations ...