Science News
The first computer chip with a trillion transistors
The Economist - 5 Dec 2019 20:16
SILICON CHIPS have lonely lives. They are born together, often as tens of thousands of identical siblings a few millimetres across, on a single wafer the size of an old-fashioned vinyl record. They are then broken from t...
Open source EEG visualization tool
Science Daily - 6 Dec 2019 00:53
Researchers have developed a free open source computer program that can be used to create visual and quantitative representations of brain electrical activity in laboratory animals in hopes of developing countermeasures ...
Behavioral interventions may be as effective at reducing food intake as anorectic drugs
Science Daily - 5 Dec 2019 23:18
Simulations predict that behavioral interventions such as imposing strict no-food restrictions after meals can be as effective as strong anorectic drugs in reducing food intake in rodents, according to a study.
Nervous system doesn't merely detect Salmonella, it defends the body against it
Science Daily - 5 Dec 2019 23:17
Study in mice shows the nervous system not only detects the presence of Salmonella in the gut but actively stops the organism from infecting the body.
Clinical study finds eating within 10-hour window may help stave off diabetes, heart disease
Science Daily - 5 Dec 2019 23:17
Researchers have found that a 10-hour time-restricted eating intervention, when combined with traditional medications, resulted in weight loss, reduced abdominal fat, lower blood pressure and cholesterol for participants...
Technique shows how individual cancer cells react to drugs
Science Daily - 5 Dec 2019 23:17
sci-Plex, a new cell-response screening method, pools genetically different cells and shows what happens to individual cells when the sample is treated, such as with cancer drugs. The technology collects information on c...
Immune system can be coaxed into selecting key antibodies to fight HIV
Science Daily - 5 Dec 2019 23:16
Researchers have cleared a major obstacle in the development of an HIV vaccine, proving in animal models that effective, yet short-lasting antibodies can be coaxed into multiplying as a fighting force against the virus.
Imaging of conjunctival goblet cells helps diagnosis of dry eyes
Science Daily - 5 Dec 2019 20:31
Researchers have developed a biometric imaging of conjunctival goblet cells with high definition.
New instrument extends LIGO's reach
Phys.org - 5 Dec 2019 20:00
Just a year ago, the National Science Foundation-funded Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory, or LIGO, was picking up whispers of gravitational waves every month or so. Now, a new addition to the system is...
Rats use same brain area as humans to empathize with others
Neuroscience News - 6 Dec 2019 01:35
Reducing activity in the anterior cingulate decreases empathetic responses in rats. The data suggests an observer shares the emotions of others as it enables them to prepare for danger.
Brain differences detected in children with depressed parents
Neuroscience News - 6 Dec 2019 01:07
The right putamen, a brain area linked to reward, motivation, and feelings of pleasure, is smaller in children with a genetic risk factor for depression. Previous studies implicated reduced putamen volume with anhedonia,...
Controlling attention with brain waves
Neuroscience News - 6 Dec 2019 00:46
Attention can be boosted by using neurofeedback to increase alpha brainwaves.
Student Solves a Decades-Old Physics Mystery
Live Science - 6 Dec 2019 00:14
Why do gas bubbles appear to get stuck inside narrow vertical tubes?
Cretaceous fossils are missing link in mammal ear evolution
New Scientist - 5 Dec 2019 23:00
Newly discovered mammal fossils reveal the crucial evolutionary step when the bones for hearing and chewing finally separated
A platform for stable quantum computing, a playground for exotic physics
Phys.org - 5 Dec 2019 22:39
Move over Godzilla vs. King Kong--this is the crossover event you've been waiting for. Well, at least if you're a condensed matter physicist. Harvard University researchers have demonstrated the first material that can h...
A momentous view on the birth of photoelectrons
Phys.org - 5 Dec 2019 22:35
The creation of photoelectrons through ionisation is one of the most fundamental processes in the interaction between light and matter. Yet, deep questions remain about just how photons transfer their linear momentum to ...
Fusion by strong lasers
Phys.org - 5 Dec 2019 21:02
Nuclear physics usually involves high energies, as illustrated by experiments to master controlled nuclear fusion. One of the problems is how to overcome the strong electrical repulsion between atomic nuclei which requir...
Humans of physics
Symmetry Magazine - 5 Dec 2019 20:34
Enormous scientific collaborations are made up of hundreds upon thousands of individuals, each with their own story. Denyz Melchor, an undergraduate studying physics at California State University, Fullerton, traveled to...
America seeks faster ways to launch military satellites
The Economist - 5 Dec 2019 20:16
BY SHOOTING A missile into one of its own satellites in March, India upped the ante. The immediate intention, suggests Jeffrey Caton, a retired American air-force colonel who teaches at the Army War College, was to fire ...
Even aggressive centipedes will co-operate if they have to
The Economist - 5 Dec 2019 20:16
CENTIPEDES DO NOT generally get on well together. Even members of the same species may attack one another when they meet. So it is a surprise to find mother centipedes sharing nests and a double surprise to find that tho...
Malaria infections have stopped falling
The Economist - 5 Dec 2019 20:16
AFEW YEARS ago it looked as if malaria might be on the way out. From 2000 to 2014 the number of cases and deaths fell. As the World Health Organisation's annual report on the disease shows, though, the decline in cases h...
Some planks from ancient Rome started life in eastern France
The Economist - 5 Dec 2019 20:16
THESE OAKplanks, once part of the portico of a property just outside Imperial Rome, travelled a long way before the builders got their hands on them. The science of dating trees by looking at their growth rings is now so...