Science News
What made humans 'the fat primate'?
Science Daily - 27 Jun 2019 00:03
How did humans get to be so much fatter than our closest primate relatives, despite sharing 99% of the same DNA? A new study suggests that part of the answer may have to do with an ancient molecular shift in how DNA is p...
A hidden truth: Hospital faucets are often home to slime and biofilm
Science Daily - 27 Jun 2019 00:03
Hand hygiene is a critical component of infection prevention in hospitals, but the unintended consequences include water splashing out of a sink to spread contaminants from dirty faucets according to new research.
ALS patients may benefit from more glucose
Science Daily - 27 Jun 2019 01:12
A new study has uncovered a potential new way to treat patients with ALS, a debilitating neurodegenerative disease.
Scientists developing way to help premature babies breathe easier
Science Daily - 27 Jun 2019 00:03
Researchers suggest a possible cell-based therapy to stimulate lung development in fragile premature infants who suffer from a rare condition called Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia (BPD), which in the most severe cases can le...
New knowledge on the development of asthma
Science Daily - 27 Jun 2019 00:03
Researchers have studied which genes are expressed in overactive immune cells in mice with asthma-like inflammation of the airways. Their results suggest that the synthesis and breakdown of fats plays an important part i...
Newly defined cancer driver is fast, furious and loud
Science Daily - 26 Jun 2019 21:37
A new study finds that the gene FOXA1 overrides normal biology in three different ways to drive prostate cancer. They refer to the three classes as FAST, FURIOUS, and LOUD to reflect their unique features.
Widespread disease diabetes: Why do beta cells refuse to release insulin?
Science Daily - 26 Jun 2019 21:37
One in 11 adults worldwide suffers from diabetes, and the number of diabetes patients is rising rapidly. Diabetes is worldwide one of the most widespread diseases. In the most common form of diabetes, type 2 diabetes, th...
Are testosterone-boosting supplements effective? Not likely
Science Daily - 26 Jun 2019 20:50
Research points toward t-boosting supplements as having little or no known effect.
Diving into water treatment strategies for swimming pools
Science Daily - 26 Jun 2019 20:50
With summer in full swing, many people are cooling off in swimming pools. However, some of the substances that are made when chlorine in the water reacts with compounds in human sweat, urine or dirt aren't so refreshing....
Boosting amino acid derivative may be a treatment for schizophrenia
Science Daily - 26 Jun 2019 20:49
Many psychiatric drugs act on the receptors or transporters of certain neurotransmitters in the brain. However, there is a great need for alternatives, and research is looking at other targets along the brain's metabolic...
Understanding how tics are suppressed may help some at risk for tic disorders
Neuroscience News - 27 Jun 2019 00:41
Almost 20% of children develop facial or vocal tics by the time they are elementary school age. For many children, knowing others are watching them helps to reduce tic behaviors. A histor of anxiety disorder has been ass...
The fundamental physics of frequency combs sheds light on nature's problem-solving skills
Phys.org - 26 Jun 2019 23:36
Nature has a way of finding optimal solutions to complex problems. For example, despite the billions of ways for a single protein to fold, proteins always fold in a way that minimizes potential energy. Slime mold, a brai...
Is multiple sclerosis linked to childhood viral infections?
Neuroscience News - 26 Jun 2019 23:15
Exposure to viral infections in the brain during childhood has been linked to an increased risk of developing multiple sclerosis later in life.
Migraine increases the risk of complications during pregnancy and childbirth
Neuroscience News - 26 Jun 2019 22:29
Women who experience migraines while pregnant are at increased risk of miscarriage, caesarean sections, preterm labor and delivering babies with low birth weight.
Boosting amino acid derivative may be a treatment for schizophrenia
Neuroscience News - 26 Jun 2019 22:13
Reduced levels of an amino acid called betaine is associated with schizophrenia pathology. Supplementing betaine levels improved cognitive and behavioral deficits in mouse models of schizophrenia. The amino acid also red...
Neanderthals from Europe may have ousted their Siberian relatives
New Scientist - 26 Jun 2019 22:00
DNA from 120,000-year-old bones sheds light on the ancestry of Neanderthals in Europe, revealing a remarkable 80,000 years of genetic continuity, interbreeding with a mystery hominin and migrations
Ancient DNA reveals Neanderthal migration and interbreeding
New Scientist - 26 Jun 2019 22:00
DNA from 120,000-year-old bones sheds light on the ancestry of Neanderthals in Europe, revealing a remarkable 80,000 years of genetic continuity, interbreeding with a mystery hominin and migrations
Through Oscillating Chemicals, Your Brain Cells Might be Measuring Themselves
Physics Buzz - 26 Jun 2019 21:56
How does your right arm know to be as long as your left? What tells your body how tall you are? Why does a giraffe's neck grow tall, as its body stays the same size? As much as we have learned in biology, we still don't ...
Barefoot walkers have tough feet but sense the ground just as well
New Scientist - 26 Jun 2019 21:00
People who often go barefoot develop thicker skin on the soles of their feet for protection - but unlike cushioned shoes, thick skin can still sense vibrations
Tiny flying insect robot has four wings and weighs under a gram
New Scientist - 26 Jun 2019 21:00
This tiny insect-inspired robot weighs just 259 milligrams, has four wings that flap 170 times per second and is powered by six mini solar panels
Experimental physicists redefine ultrafast, coherent magnetism
Phys.org - 26 Jun 2019 21:00
Electronic properties of materials can be directly influenced via light absorption in under a femtosecond (10-15 seconds), which is regarded as the limit of the maximum achievable speed of electronic circuits. In contras...
Building a bridge to the quantum world
Phys.org - 26 Jun 2019 21:00
Entanglement is one of the main principles of quantum mechanics. Physicists from Professor Johannes Fink's research group at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (IST Austria) have found a way to use a mechani...