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Science News

Location American Science News for 12 September 2018

New Sensor Tracks Dopamine in the Brain for More Than a Year

Neuroscience News - 12 Sep 2018 21:20
MIT researchers have developed a new sensor that is able to track and monitor dopamine in the brain for up to a year. The sensor could be a useful tool in monitoring dopamine levels in those with Parkinson's disease, dep...
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An antioxidant commonly sold as a food supplement has been found to limit joint damage in mice with osteoarthritis, and may lead to new treatments for people
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Cut marks on giant bird bones suggest humans reached Madagascar 10,000 years ago and may have coexisted with the island's now extinct megafauna for millennia
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Aging May Be As Old As Life Itself

Neuroscience News - 12 Sep 2018 20:45
Researchers report that, at the molecular levels, aging may have originated at the beginning of the evolution of life. They suggest when it comes to genes, aging may not always be a negative trait, and may help an organi...
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Researchers have identified the variables that lead the brain to apply specific defensive strategies while under the threat of danger, and implicate a specific pair of neurons in this process.
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Sugar Pills Provide Relief for Those with Chronic Pain

Neuroscience News - 12 Sep 2018 20:36
According to a new study, placebo sugar pills appear to relieve pain as effectively as medication for almost half of patients who suffer chronic pain. Researchers report those with chronic pain who received sugar pills f...
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We May Hear Others' Footsteps, but How Do We Ignore Our Own?

Neuroscience News - 12 Sep 2018 20:32
A new study reveals the neural processes we use to ignore the sound of our own footsteps and other self made noises. Researchers say the findings may shed new light on how we learn to speak and play music.
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A new instrument lets researchers use multiple laser beams and a microscope to trap and move cells and then analyze them in real-time with a sensitive analysis technique known as Raman spectroscopy. The instrument could ...
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Face recognition technology has rapidly found its way into modern society, from policing to shopping. Is it too late to hold back the tide?
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The governor of California has signed an executive order calling for state-wide carbon neutrality by 2045, followed by net negative emissions after that
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We are starting to learn more about how gene variants influence the risk of getting breast cancer, but deciding how to use the results raises ethical dilemmas
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Scientists discover a 'tuneable' novel quantum state of matter Quantum particles can be difficult to characterize, and almost impossible to control if they strongly interact with each other--until now.
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ADHD May Increase Parkinson's Risk

Neuroscience News - 12 Sep 2018 18:28
A new study reports those with ADHD are at an increased risk of developing Parkinson's disease. The study reveals people with ADHD are twice as likely to develop early onset Parkinson's between the ages of 21-66. Additio...
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Evolution is being dropped from school biology texts in Turkey. In Hungary, academic freedoms are increasingly threatened. Time to worry, says Rachael Jolley
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Here's How to Make the Sahara Desert Green Again

Live Science - 12 Sep 2018 17:31
Here's How to Make the Sahara Desert Green Again The Sahara is the world's largest hot desert, but parts of it could be made green if massive solar and wind farms set up shop there, a new study finds.
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A Model for the Future of Education, and the Tech Shaping It As kids worldwide head back to school, I'd like to share my thoughts on the future of education. Bottom line, how we educate our kids needs to radically change given the massive potential of exponential tech (e.g. artifi...
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Researchers looking to hydrogen as a next-generation clean energy source are developing hydrogen-sensing technologies capable of detecting leaks in hydrogen-powered vehicles and fueling stations before the gas turns into...
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UK politician Tom Watson has hailed a low-carb diet for his massive weight loss and "reversal" of type 2 diabetes, and now he wants to help tackle the country's obesity crisis
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Bismuth shows novel conducting properties

Phys.org - 12 Sep 2018 15:28
Bismuth shows novel conducting properties A team of international scientists including Maia G. Vergniory, Ikerbasque researcher at DIPC and UPV/EHU associate, has discovered a new class of materials, higher-order topological insulators. Theoretical physicists fi...
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Leidenfrost effect drops found to be self-propelled A team of researchers at Physique et Mécanique des Milieux Hétérogènes in France has found that Leidenfrost effect drops move around on a hot pan because they are self-propelled. In their paper published in the journ...
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Holy Space Rocks! The Vatican Is Hosting Its First Meteorite Convention Meteorites are key features of many natural history museum collections, but there's never been an international conference dedicated to taking care of these rocks that fall to Earth from space.
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Mysterious Light Flashes Discovered in Deep Space. But What Created Them? Astronomers used A.I. to find 72 more fast radio bursts, but they are still puzzled over what the flashes are.
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