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Science News

Location American Science News for 26 November 2019
An international team of data scientists and rare disease specialists write that they've come up with a way to characterize and define diseases so that they eventually would be sharable among physicians across the globe.
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Using fungi to search for medical drugs

Science Daily - 26 Nov 2019 16:52
An enormous library of products derived from more than 10,000 fungi could help us find new drugs. Researchers have set up this library and screened it for biologically active compounds. The researchers identified various...
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Life, liberty -- and access to microbes?

Science Daily - 27 Nov 2019 00:55
Poverty increases the risk for numerous diseases by limiting people's access to healthy food, environments and stress-free conditions. Researchers argue that poverty also compromises health by creating unequal access to ...
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Building a better flu shot

Science Daily - 26 Nov 2019 23:04
Getting the flu shot can reduce the chances of infection. But, at best, the vaccine is only effective 40% to 60% of the time, according to the CDC. Now researchers have data that show how cellular RNA levels change follo...
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Space travel can make the gut leaky

Science Daily - 26 Nov 2019 23:03
Bacteria, fungi, and viruses can enter our gut through the food we eat. Fortunately, the epithelial cells that line our intestines serve as a robust barrier to prevent these microorganisms from invading the rest of our b...
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Half as many diagnosed with depression, a delayed manifestation of Parkinson's, a reduced risk of developing vascular dementia -- but not Alzheimer's. These connections were discovered by researchers when they compared 2...
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Insights into versatile molecular death switch

Science Daily - 26 Nov 2019 21:12
The enzyme caspase-8 regulates different modes of cell death, according to new research.
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The health of cells is maintained, in part, by two types of movement of their nucleoli. This dual motion within surrounding fluid, it reports, adds to our understanding of what contributes to healthy cellular function an...
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A new framework could aid the search for heavy thermal dark matter Astrophysicists have been searching for dark matter for several decades, but these searches have so far yielded disappointing results. In a recent study, two researchers at Weizmann Institute of Science and the Hebrew Un...
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Korean research team made up of Dr. Hyung-Jun Kim and Shinrye Lee of KBRI, and professor Kiyoung Kim of Soonchunhyang University, found a new molecular mechanism of suppressing neuronal toxicity associateded dementia and...
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We Won't Be Designing Our Babies Anytime Soon, Study Shows Roughly a year ago, the creation of CRISPRed twins reignited fierce debate and trepidation about our oncoming era of designer babies. The experiment, designed to protect the babies against HIV, failed miserably. But He J...
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Scientists may have proven how much people love coffee, tea, chocolate, soda and energy drinks as they validated their new method for studying how different drugs interact in the body.
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MS linked to variant of common herpes virus

Science Daily - 26 Nov 2019 16:52
Researchers have developed a new method to separate between two different types of a common herpes virus (HHV-6) that has been linked to multiple sclerosis. By analyzing antibodies in the blood against the most divergent...
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Fossils reveal swimming patterns of long extinct cephalopod Computational fluid dynamics can be used to study how extinct animals used to swim. Scientists studied 65 million-year-old cephalopod fossils to gain deeper understanding of modern-day cephalopod ecosystems.
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Prenatal opioid exposure may alter brain function in babies

Neuroscience News - 26 Nov 2019 03:08
Prenatal opioid use significantly alters the way the amygdala connects to different brain regions in children.
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Approaching the perception of touch in the brain

Neuroscience News - 26 Nov 2019 02:26
Parts of the prefrontal cortex and posterior parietal lobe, in addition to the somatosensory cortex, play critical roles in touch perception.
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Get to know 10 early-career experimentalists

Symmetry Magazine - 27 Nov 2019 01:32
Get to know 10 early-career experimentalists Junior faculty in experimental particle physics and astrophysics talk about how they got into physics, their favorite parts of the experimental process and how they spend their time outside the lab. " Learn More Zeeshan ...
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Identity of Fourth Soviet Spy Who Stole US Atomic Bomb Secrets Finally Revealed Historians recently uncovered the name of a fourth spy who delivered U.S. atomic secrets to the Soviets in the 1940s.
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What Is St. Elmo's Fire?

Live Science - 26 Nov 2019 23:20
What Is St. Elmo's Fire? A fire that doesn't burn and a lightning bolt that doesn't strike, St. Elmo's fire has intrigued explorers for millennia. Only recently did scientists come to see the phenomenon for what it is: the workings of the subato...
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7 Tips for a Safe (and Non-Explosive) Turkey Day

Live Science - 26 Nov 2019 22:29
7 Tips for a Safe (and Non-Explosive) Turkey Day Have a fun Thanksgiving free of exploding turkeys or Salmonella.
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Declining Life Expectancy in America 'May Be the New Norm' U.S. life expectancy is declining mostly among "working age" Americans.
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New study shows unique magnetic transitions in quasicrystal-like structures In the world of materials science, many have heard of crystals--highly ordered structures in which atoms are arranged in a tight and periodic manner (in which the atomic arrangement is repeated). But, not many people kno...
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