Science News
Periodic Table of Elements
Live Science - 28 Aug 2017 18:24Machine Learning Is Everywhere, But What Is It Exactly?
Singularity Hub - 28 Aug 2017 19:00
From Google's language translation app to autonomous cars, machine learning has become a key ingredient in multiple areas of our lives--but what exactly is it? In the simplest sense, machine learning is a method of compu...
Young adults, especially men, fall behind in high blood pressure treatment and control
Science Daily - 29 Aug 2017 00:41
Awareness, treatment and control of high blood pressure is significantly lower in young adults compared to middle-aged and older adults. Young men lag behind young women in all these areas related to high blood pressure....
Americans' risk of needing nursing home care is higher than previously estimated
Science Daily - 29 Aug 2017 00:41
One worry Americans face as they grow older is the possibility of needing nursing home care and paying for the associated costs. A new study finds that the average American's lifetime risk of using a nursing home is subs...
Self-identifying as disabled and developing pride in disability aid overall well-being
Science Daily - 29 Aug 2017 00:41
Experiencing stigma, the severity of a disability and a person's age and income level help determine whether someone with an impairment considers themselves to be a person with a disability, and experiencing stigma predi...
Boosting immune cell memory to improve vaccines and cancer immunotherapy
Science Daily - 29 Aug 2017 00:35
Drugs that activate the cells' proteasome, or recycling center, tip the balance in favor of memory CD8+ T cells, studies on mice show. This approach could be used to improve how well vaccines and immunotherapies work and...
Number of births, population prevalence of Down syndrome estimated in nine states
Science Daily - 28 Aug 2017 22:35
A new study estimates, for the first time, both the numbers of children born annually with Down syndrome in nine U.S. states and the prevalence of Down syndrome in each of those states' populations.
It's not a rat's race for human stem cells grafted to repair spinal cord injuries
Science Daily - 28 Aug 2017 22:30
More than one-and-a-half years after implantation, researchers report that human neural stem cells (NSCs) grafted into spinal cord injuries in laboratory rats displayed continued growth and maturity, with functional reco...
Medical treatment may prevent, alleviate mitral valve damage after a heart attack
Science Daily - 28 Aug 2017 22:07
A research team has shown, for the first time, that it may be possible to nonsurgically treat or even prevent the damage to a major heart valve that often occurs after a heart attack.
Complete remission of brain metastasis of difficult-to-treat tumor
Science Daily - 28 Aug 2017 22:07
Medical researchers report a remarkable treatment response in a patient participating in a clinical trial of a novel immune-system-based cancer therapy.
Single-nucleus RNA sequencing, droplet by droplet
Science Daily - 28 Aug 2017 22:07
Researchers describe a new single-cell expression profiling technique. Called DroNc-Seq, it merges an earlier platform with microfluidics, allowing massively parallel measurement of gene expression in structurally-compli...
New app uses smartphone selfies to screen for pancreatic cancer
Science Daily - 28 Aug 2017 22:07
A new app could lead to earlier detection of pancreatic cancer simply by snapping a smartphone selfie. The disease kills 90 percent of patients within five years, in part because there are no telltale symptoms or non-inv...
Snowstorms on Mars and Diamond Rains on Neptune
Physics Buzz - 28 Aug 2017 21:50
Two separate discoveries this week show how spectacular the weather can be on other planets in our solar system. First, a paper from Nature Geoscience explains a mechanism that can create snowstorms on Mars. A separate p...
Using donor stem cells to treat spinal cord injury
Science Daily - 28 Aug 2017 21:17
A new study in mice details a potential therapeutic strategy that uses stem cells to promote recovery of motor activity after spinal cord injury.
PPPL physicists essential to new campaign on world's most powerful stellarator
Phys.org - 28 Aug 2017 21:08
Physicists from the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) are providing critical expertise for the first full campaign of the world's largest and most powerful stellarator, a magnet...
Anti-inflammatory drugs can inhibit muscle growth
Science Daily - 28 Aug 2017 20:51
The long-term use of over-the-counter (OTC) anti-inflammatory drugs can inhibit muscle growth in young, healthy individuals engaging in weight training, according to a new study.
Brain's defense cells live longer than expected
Science Daily - 28 Aug 2017 20:51
In mice, microglia may persist the entire lifespan of the animal. The cells' lifetime may be linked to their role in immune memory and neurodegenerative diseases.
Combination of conventional and new drugs enhances tumor cell death
Science Daily - 28 Aug 2017 20:45
A group of researchers tested the therapeutic effect of a combination of conventional -- common anti-cancer agents -- and new drugs -- under clinical trials.
Preventing overcrowding in emergency rooms
Science Daily - 28 Aug 2017 20:45
A new study identifies four key strategies to reduce overcrowding in emergency rooms. The study concludes that engaged executive leadership can alleviate the problem when combined with a data-driven approach and coordina...
Relative risk of Alzheimer's between men and women: Record corrected
Science Daily - 28 Aug 2017 20:45
White women whose genetic makeup puts them at higher risk for Alzheimer's disease are more likely than white men to develop the disease during a critical 10-year span in their lives. The findings from one of the world's ...
Do estrogen therapies affect sexual function in early postmenopause?
Science Daily - 28 Aug 2017 20:45
Transdermal estrogen therapy delivered through the skin modestly improved sexual function in early postmenopausal women, according to an article.
Repetitive elements shape embryonic chromatin landscape
Science Daily - 28 Aug 2017 20:45
Retrotransposons are repetitive elements that form almost half of the mammalian genome. Even though they are so common, they have previously been considered to be fairly insignificant. Scientists have now shown in that r...