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Science News

Location American Science News for 27 June 2019
Handlers Thought This Owl Was Male for 23 Years --Then He Laid an Egg Everyone, possibly even the owl, was surprised.
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Mysterious 'Fast Radio Burst' Traced Back to Its Home Galaxy for First Time Ever For the first time, astronomers tracked an incredibly fast, insanely bright radio wave back to its source -- 3.6 billion light-years away.
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Dementia study links gene with damage to brain connections

Neuroscience News - 27 Jun 2019 21:52
Post mortem examinations of brain tissue from Alzheimer's patients revealed synapses contained clumps of clusterin, in addition to amyloid beta. The clumps were more abundant in those with genetic risk factors from Alzhe...
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Functional hair follicles grown from stem cells

Science Daily - 28 Jun 2019 01:15
Scientists have created natural-looking hair that grows through the skin using human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), a major scientific achievement that could revolutionize the hair growth industry.
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Scientists have discovered a pathway that functions like a car wash to prevent the buildup of a toxic protein associated with Alzheimer's disease.
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How well TB antibiotics reach their targets

Science Daily - 27 Jun 2019 22:39
Scientists have developed a new technique that enables them to visualise how well antibiotics against tuberculosis (TB) reach their pathogenic targets inside human hosts.
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Until now, researchers believed recurrent mutations (hotspot mutations) in cancer tumors were the important mutations (driver mutations) that promoted cancer progression. A new study indicates this is not always true.
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Higher salt intake can cause gastrointestinal bloating

Science Daily - 27 Jun 2019 22:39
A new study found that individuals reported more gastrointestinal bloating when they ate a diet high in salt.
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A new computational modeling method uses snapshots of which types of microbes are found in a person's gut to predict how the microbial community will change over time.
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Fleeting differences in gene expression between individuals that occur at different points in time during cell development may have consequences on the ultimate risk for disease in mature tissues and cell types.
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Lung cancer cells use antioxidants, endogenous or dietary, to spread in the body by activating a protein called BACH1 and increasing the uptake and use of sugar, researchers report in two independent studies. The studies...
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Goat milk formula could benefit infant gut health

Science Daily - 27 Jun 2019 19:40
Research suggests goat milk infant formula has similar prebiotic properties to breast milk and could play a role in supporting healthy gut function in infants.
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Infant mortality is higher for low-skilled parents

Science Daily - 27 Jun 2019 19:40
Infants of women with a short-term education are more likely to die within the first year of life. In more than half of cases, the cause of death is premature childbirth and low fetal weight.
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New cuprate superconductor may challenge classical wisdom Superconductivity is one of the most mysterious phenomena in nature in that materials can conduct electrical current without any resistance. Cuprates hold the record high superconducting temperature at ambient pressure s...
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The often-heard complaint that motorcycles can influence the outcome of races is justified In professional cycling, in-race motorcycles such as TV motorcycles drive in between the riders. In the slipstream behind the motorcycle, cyclists can gain time. For the first time, the exact extent of this advantage has...
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Proposed set of conservation laws find order in the chaos of turbulence Turbulence can be found in places large and small, from exploding supernovae and sprawling ocean currents, to the unstable plasmas that form within tiny fusion fuel cells bombarded with lasers.
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Researchers grow active mini-brain-networks

EurekAlert! - 27 Jun 2019 08:00
(Cell Press) Cerebral organoids are artificially grown, 3D tissue cultures that resemble the human brain. Now, researchers from Japan report functional neural networks derived from these organoids in a study publishing J...
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A new study explores the relationship between problem behaviors associated with autism and gastrointestinal symptoms. Findings suggest younger children on the autism spectrum with aggressive problem behaviors are 11.2% m...
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Researchers detected brain waves indicative of 'hidden' consciousness in 15% of patients with TBI four days after the injury occurred. Among those patients, 50% improved and were able to follow verbal commands before bei...
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The Dragonfly mission, a quadcopter that will flit around Saturn's hazy moon Titan to look for evidence of life, has been selected by NASA to launch in 2026
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Deciphering how the brain encodes color and shape

Neuroscience News - 27 Jun 2019 23:40
Visual neurons selectively respond to color and shape along a continuum. While some neurons are only activated by either a specific color or shape, others are responsive to color and shape simultaneously. The findings co...
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A small scale pilot study reveals adults with mild cognitive impairment may have improved brain function and memory when they switch to a high-fat, low-carb diet.
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