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Science News

Location American Science News for 18 May 2018
Magnonic interferometer paves way toward energy-efficient information processing devices Researchers have designed an interferometer that works with magnetic quasiparticles called magnons, rather than photons as in conventional interferometers. Although magnon signals have discrete phases that normally canno...
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Ghostly 'Lightning' Waves Discovered Inside a Nuclear Reactor Whistler waves are normally produced in the atmosphere by lightning. They could help protect nuclear fusion reactors from runaway electrons.
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Diamond 'spin-off' tech could lead to low-cost medical imaging and drug discovery tools It may sound contradictory, but diamonds are the key to a new technique that could provide a very-low-cost alternative to multimillion-dollar medical imaging and drug-discovery devices.
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Using brain simulations, researchers report emergency cooling techniques could help to minimize long term damage that arises as a result of birth complications and limit the effects of stroke.
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Someday you might buy wine in a plastic bottle made from the same grapes. Their skins, stems, and seeds can be used to make plastic that lasts longer
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Robotic Assembly of the World's Smallest House

Neuroscience News - 18 May 2018 21:20
Using a system dubbed μRobotex system, researchers have created a microhouse so small a mite can not fit through the front door. Researchers say the creation pushes forward the frontiers of optical nanotechnologies.
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The beauty of the skies is on display in this incredible image, the first sent back by NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite on its way past the moon
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Researchers Operate Lab Grown Heart Cells By Remote Control

Neuroscience News - 18 May 2018 20:38
Researchers have developed a new technique that combines graphene based biointerfaces with light to control the behavior of lab grown heart cells.
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Cognitive Training Reduces Gait Freezing in Parkinson's

Neuroscience News - 18 May 2018 20:15
Researchers report Parkinson's patients who received a combination of cognitive training and dopaminergic medication showed a significant reduction in the severity of their freezing of gait, a symptom associated with PD.
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Add Language to Math to Help Kids Succeed at School

Neuroscience News - 18 May 2018 19:35
Reading ability in kindergarten predicted later reading, math and language skills in children. Researchers say adding language to 'kindergarten readiness' skills can help to improve academic success in other subject area...
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Is It Rational to Trust Your Gut Feelings?

Neuroscience News - 18 May 2018 18:51
Researchers report intuition is the result of information processing in the brain that results in prediction based on previous experience.
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A company in Kenya has devised a system that uses artificial intelligence to detect a child's level of malnutrition from a photo, without bulky equipment or examinations
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Physicists Introduce "Quantum Fraud" Detection Tests

Physics Buzz - 18 May 2018 17:58
It's hard enough to identify a knockoff Louis Vuitton bag. When quantum computers hit the market, how will buyers know they're not getting duped...or settling for something that isn't quite as "quantum" as they think? Im...
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The latest outbreak of the deadly virus has spread to a city of a million people in the Democratic Republic of Congo. But hopes are high disaster can be avoided
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These 4 Tech Trends Are Driving Us Toward Food Abundance

Singularity Hub - 18 May 2018 17:30
These 4 Tech Trends Are Driving Us Toward Food Abundance From a first-principles perspective, the task of feeding eight billion people boils down to converting energy from the sun into chemical energy in our bodies. Traditionally, solar energy is converted by photosynthesis in...
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Robotic assembly of the world's smallest house--even a mite doesn't fit through the door A French nanorobotics team from the Femto-ST Institute in Besançon, France, assembled a new microrobotics system that pushes forward the frontiers of optical nanotechnologies. Combining several existing technologies, th...
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COPD: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment

Live Science - 18 May 2018 15:39
COPD: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a chronic lung disease that makes breathing progressively more difficult. It affects about 11 million people in the United States.
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Parkinson-related protein is 'tunable'

Phys.org - 18 May 2018 14:39
Parkinson-related protein is 'tunable' Fibrils of the protein alpha-synuclein, that plays a role in Parkinson's disease, form a stiffer and stronger network in water, when temperature is increased. Researchers of the University of Twente show that this has to...
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Faked pictures can make very powerful propaganda if they get widely shared. A new algorithm aims to weed out doctored images before they spread
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Why Are Sweaty-Armpit Stains So Dark?

Live Science - 18 May 2018 12:48
Why Are Sweaty-Armpit Stains So Dark? When we spill water down our front, or sweat profusely, our clothes get darker. Why? The fabric isn't actually changing colors in real time. Rather, our perception of the fabric's color is changing.
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Here's Why Mosquito Bites Itch for Such a Long Time

Live Science - 18 May 2018 12:47
Here's Why Mosquito Bites Itch for Such a Long Time Mosquito spit makes you itch, and it probably also helps viruses invade
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When female bonobos went into labour, other females gathered around to keep them safe, swatting away flies and even seemingly trying to catch the baby as it emerged
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