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Science News

Location American Science News for 10 December 2019

Deep learning helps tease out gene interactions

Science Daily - 11 Dec 2019 01:26
Computer scientists have taken a deep learning method that has revolutionized face recognition and other image-based applications in recent years and redirected its power to explore the relationship between genes.
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Lower body mass index (BMI) is consistently associated with reduced type II diabetes risk, among people with varied family history, genetic risk factors and weight, according to a new study.
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Using a targeted gene epigenome editing approach in the developing mouse brain, researchers reversed one gene mutation that leads to the genetic disorder WAGR syndrome, which causes intellectual disability and obesity in...
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In mouse models of Alzheimer's disease, the investigational drug candidates known as CMS121 and J147 improve memory and slow the degeneration of brain cells. Now, researchers have shown how these compounds can also slow ...
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A recent study has found that the presence of and search for meaning in life are important for health and well-being, though the relationships differ in adults younger and older than age 60.
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Scientists have pioneered how to get very detailed transcriptomics data from gut organoids, and regulatory networks to analyse them -- establishing a pipeline that can be used to explore the causes of Inflammatory Bowel ...
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Side effects of pediatric medications for anxiety, OCD

Science Daily - 10 Dec 2019 21:24
New research specifically looks at side effects that impact children and adolescents being treated for anxiety disorders and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).
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What blocks bird flu in human cells?

Science Daily - 10 Dec 2019 20:18
Normally, bird flu viruses do not spread easily from person to person. But if this does happen, it could trigger a pandemic. Researchers have now explained what makes the leap from animals to humans less likely.
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New findings on satiety signaling from intestine

Science Daily - 10 Dec 2019 20:17
A previously unknown mechanism that suppresses satiety signals from the small intestine is the main finding of a new study. This may explain, first, satiety disorders in obesity and diabetes and, second, the prompt healt...
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New viral strategy to escape detection

Science Daily - 10 Dec 2019 20:17
Researchers have discovered how viruses that specifically kill bacteria can outwit bacteria by hiding from their defences, findings which are important for the development of new antimicrobials based on viruses and provi...
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Why doesn't deep-brain stimulation work for everyone?

Science Daily - 10 Dec 2019 20:17
Researchers have mapped nine functional networks in the deep-brain structures of 10 healthy people, an accomplishment that could lead to improvements in deep-brain stimulation therapy for severe cases of Parkinson's dise...
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Water births are as safe as land births for mom, baby

Science Daily - 10 Dec 2019 20:16
A new study found that water births are no more risky than land births, and that women in the water group sustain fewer first and second-degree tears.
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It's been 30 years since a pilot project in Miami-Dade County found that blasting wastewater with electrons could clean it up, removing all kinds of nasty stuff, from mircroorganisms to harsh chemicals.
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The X17 factor: A particle new to physics might solve the dark matter mystery A team of scientists in Hungary recently published a paper that hints at the existence of a previously unknown subatomic particle. The team first reported finding traces of the particle in 2016, and they now report more ...
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New understanding of charge transport reveals an exotic quantum mechanical regime In work that may have broad implications for the development of new materials for electronics, Caltech scientists for the first time have developed a way to predict how electrons interacting strongly with atomic motions ...
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Weird 'Tiger Stripes' on Icy Saturn Moon Enceladus Finally Explained New research solves some of the mysteries of the "tiger stripes" on Saturn's moon Enceladus.
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Europe Is Launching a Suicide Robot to 'Hug' Space Trash Out of Orbit Meta description: The ESA has announced a mission to launch a four-armed robot to grab a single piece of space junk and drag it into the atmosphere.
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Flu Season Is Off to an Early (and Weird) Start

Live Science - 10 Dec 2019 03:02
Flu Season Is Off to an Early (and Weird) Start Flu season has arrived in the United States, and it's off to a strange start.
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Can eating ice cream make you scream?

Neuroscience News - 11 Dec 2019 01:40
Study investigates how exposure to cold stimuli, such as eating an ice cream or drinking an icy drink, can cause headaches.
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It took billions of years for Earth's air to grow rich in oxygen, but it may have been destined to do so once photosynthetic bacteria began pumping out the gas
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Alzheimer's drug candidates reverse broader aging

Neuroscience News - 11 Dec 2019 00:50
CMS121 and J147, two drug candidates that improve memory and slow neurodegeneration associated with Alzheimer's disease, also slow aging in healthy, older mice. The compounds block damage to neurons caused by general agi...
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Me, me, me! How narcissism changes throughout life

Neuroscience News - 11 Dec 2019 00:16
Longitudinal study reveals for most people narcissistic traits such as sensitivity to criticism and imposing your opinion onto others, decreases as we age. However, having high aspirations for yourself increases over tim...
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