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Science News

Location American Science News for 29 June 2018

Applying Computing Power to Track the Spread of Cancer

Neuroscience News - 29 Jun 2018 22:25
A new computational model increases the ability to track the spread of cancer throughout the body, researchers report.
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Researchers have developed new neural implants that enable targeted delivery of drugs deep into brain structures.
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The Hidden Complexity Underlying a Common Cause of Autism

Neuroscience News - 29 Jun 2018 22:18
Researchers have uncovered genetic interactions that modulate variable symptoms associated with ASD.
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I Am Human, Hear Me Roar

Neuroscience News - 29 Jun 2018 21:11
According to a new study, humans can use nonverbal vocal cues, including roars, to judge the physical formidability of others.
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Researchers report on how specific neurons can process sensory information about temperature and facilitate a change in behavior to adapt to the climate.
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Mapping the Brain with Data Science

Neuroscience News - 29 Jun 2018 20:09
Researchers are using big data and artificial intelligence to map neural networks in the brain. The new technology could help to better understand the progression of neurodegenerative diseases.
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Social Media May Fade Memories

Neuroscience News - 29 Jun 2018 19:50
Researchers say using social media services like Instagram and Snapchat to document your life may come at the cost of you being able to fully remember the events you documented.
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Predicting Intelligence From Brain Scans

Neuroscience News - 29 Jun 2018 19:12
Researchers have developed a new machine learning algorithm that uses fMRI data to predict a person's intelligence.
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Human Sacrifices Surround Ancient Mesopotamian Tomb

Live Science - 29 Jun 2018 17:35
Human Sacrifices Surround Ancient Mesopotamian Tomb About 5,000 years ago, the Mesopotamians buried two 12-year-olds -- a boy and a girl -- and surrounded their slender bodies with hundreds of bronze spearheads and what appears to be eight human sacrifices, a new study fi...
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VR Fireside Chat: Inside a Virtual World Full of Surprises Two weeks ago, I gave my first virtual reality presentation--a virtual fireside chat with my friend Philip Rosedale, the CEO of High Fidelity and creator of Second Life. At the time, in conjunction with the event, my blo...
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A second-hand SpaceX rocket has just launched a spherical robot to the International Space Station, where it will assist astronauts in a variety of tasks
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Wave fronts and ant trails

Phys.org - 29 Jun 2018 15:09
Wave fronts and ant trails Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich physicists investigating spontaneous pattern formation in a model system that includes motile proteins have discovered hitherto unobserved phenomena. Their findings afford new insig...
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The Australian Space Agency, which officially launches this week, has a modest budget but hopes to encourage start-ups to get in on the space gold rush
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At This Lab, 'Mad Scientists' Are Making Outlandish Tech a Reality X, The Moonshot Factory tackles global problems with solutions so outlandish that they just might work.
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A study measuring labia and clitoris size in hundreds of women has found they vary widely, potentially helping to curb rising cosmetic surgery rates
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ORNL produces rare ruthenium isotope for atom smashing experiment A tiny vial of gray powder produced at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory is the backbone of a new experiment to study the intense magnetic fields created in nuclear collisions.
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Source of E. Coli in Deadly Romaine Lettuce Outbreak Finally Found The bacteria turned up in the waters of an irrigation canal in Yuma, Arizona.
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A new species of bigger and super-fertile all-female crayfish originated almost instantaneously because of a genetic accident
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Women who are overweight or smoke during pregnancy are more likely to have daughters who develop polycystic ovary syndrome, a nationwide study has found.
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Gold never loses its lustre because it is so chemically unreactive, and now microscopic gold crystals have been made that are even less reactive
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New form of gold is much golder than normal gold

New Scientist - 29 Jun 2018 13:06
Gold never loses its lustre because it is so chemically unreactive, and now microscopic gold crystals have been made that are even less reactive
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What's the Evidence for Einstein's Theory of Relativity? As good skeptics, we shouldn't immediately believe general relativity's tangle of mathematics at first blush. Instead, we need evidence. Good evidence.
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