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Location American Science News for 27 November 2019
Some of the same mutations allowing humans to fend off deadly infections also make us more prone to certain inflammatory and autoimmune diseases, such as Crohn's disease. Researchers describe how ancestral origins impact...
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A study shows stem cell therapy helps hearts recover from a heart attack, although not for the biological reasons originally proposed two decades ago that today are the basis of ongoing clinical trials. The study reports...
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An AI Debated Its Own Potential for Harm vs. Good. Here's What It Came up With Artificial intelligence is going to overhaul the way we live and work. But will the changes it brings be for the better? As the technology slowly develops (let's remember that right now, we're still very much in the narr...
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Helper protein worsens diabetic eye disease

Science Daily - 27 Nov 2019 18:02
In a recent study using mice, lab-grown human retinal cells and patient samples, scientists say they found evidence of a new pathway that may contribute to degeneration of the light sensitive tissue at the back of the ey...
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Three-year trial comparing three treatment strategies for tooth decay in children's teeth finds no evidence to suggest that conventional fillings are more successful than sealing decay into teeth, or using preventive met...
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Ultraprecise Measurement Pinpoints the Proton's Size

Scientific American - 27 Nov 2019 15:45
Ultraprecise Measurement Pinpoints the Proton's Size Scientists are finally approaching a consensus on the decades-old question --
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(The Zuckerman Institute at Columbia University) A Columbia University study in fruit flies has identified serotonin as a chemical that triggers the body's startle response, the automatic deer-in-the-headlights reflex th...
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Two-Horned 'Rook' Might Be the Oldest Chess Piece on Earth Archaeologists think they may have discovered the oldest chess piece in the world, excavated from a seventh-century trading site in Jordan.
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WHEN IT COMESto sexual behaviour, the animal kingdom is a broad church. Its members indulge in a wide variety of activities, including with creatures of the same sex. Flying foxes gather in all-male clusters to lick each...
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When fruit flies experience an unexpected change in its surroundings, serotonin produced in the ventral nerve cord slows the insect down. The findings may shed light on the neurobiological mechanisms of human startle res...
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There Might Be Cracks in the Universe -- But We Can't See Them from Earth The cracks, if they exist, are old, remnants of a time shortly after the Big Bang.
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Man in China Contracts Brain Parasite After Eating Hot Pot The man was discovered to have tapeworm larvae in his brain.
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The Placenta 'Invades' the Uterus in the Same Way Cancer Invades the Body The way human pregnancy works may make us more prone to malignant cancer than cows or horses.
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Neanderthals may have died out due to sheer bad luck

New Scientist - 27 Nov 2019 23:00
Modern humans have long been in the frame for driving our Neanderthal cousins to extinction, but random chance may explain their downfall
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Unchecked climate change could mean that by 2100, 90 per cent of the world's population will live in a country where food production is falling
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Newborns given HIV treatment quickly after birth had fewer infected cells in their blood and had less damaged immune systems that those given the treatment later.
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Scientists find new way to identify, manipulate topological metals for spintronics Topological materials have become a hot topic in quantum materials research, as they have potential applications for quantum information and spintronics. This is because topological materials have strange electronic stat...
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There is mounting evidence that key environmental tipping points are likely to be breached, but the global danger is still unclear
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The cosmos is stranger than we ever imagined and new bubbles of space-time may pop up and grow continuously with no beginning or end, writes Chanda Prescod-Weinstein
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Mercury is so tiny and close to the sun it can be tricky to see. But now it's at its greatest "angular separation" - so grab your binoculars and train them on the east
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Rejection of science is rampant, but scientists can do better at countering doubt and there are grounds for optimism every day, says Naomi Oreskes, author of Why Trust Science?
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Their unique blend of electric and magnetic properties was long thought impossible. Now multiferroics are shaking up fields from dark matter hunting to finding cancer
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