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Location American Science News for 11 February 2020
To better understand the relationship between physical activity and Parkinson's Disease (PD) investigators in Sweden analyzed medical records of nearly 200,000 long-distance skiers who took part in the Vasaloppet cross-c...
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Neuromodulation Is the Secret Sauce for This Adaptive, Fast-Learning AI As obstinate and frustrating as we are sometimes, humans in general are pretty flexible when it comes to learning--especially compared to AI. Our ability to adapt is deeply rooted within our brain's chemical base code. A...
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Replacing animal testing with synthetic cell scaffolds

Science Daily - 12 Feb 2020 01:05
Electrospun synthetic cell scaffolds are not only more consistent than animal cells for cancer research, they hold the potential to replace animal testing.
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Addressing the widespread concern over transparency and reproducibility in biomedical research, one of the largest institutions in science has begun to provide a framework, interventions, and incentives for improving the...
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Researchers are moving closer to the start of clinical trials for a novel injectable drug that is targeted to heal broken bones faster and strengthen weak bones.
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Researchers look to fungus to shed light on cancer

Science Daily - 11 Feb 2020 22:45
Researchers found that a natural product from the fungus Fusicoccum amygdali stabilizes a family of proteins in the cell that mediate important signaling pathways involved in the pathology of cancer and neurological dise...
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Researchers reveal a new understanding of how our microbiomes change as we age, setting the stage for future research on the role microbes play in accelerating or decelerating the aging process and influencing age-relate...
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Researchers have identified a benign tumor found in a fossilized dinosaur tail as part of the pathology of LCH (Langerhans cell histiocytosis), a rare and sometimes painful disease that still afflicts humans, particularl...
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Mice fed a high-fat, high-protein diet were more likely to develop and die from antibiotic-driven Clostridioides difficile infections than mice fed a standard diet. In the same study, published in the journal mSystems, a...
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After helping develop a new approach for organic synthesis -- carbon-hydrogen functionalization -- scientists are now showing how this approach may apply to drug discovery. Recent work -- a streamlined process for making...
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Pedal to the metal: Speeding up treatments for ALS

Science Daily - 11 Feb 2020 21:15
Disease-prompting bundles of proteins found within cells are cleared by unexpected processes. That knowledge could lead to ALS therapeutic solutions.
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How the malaria parasite grows and multiplies

Science Daily - 11 Feb 2020 21:15
Scientists have made a major breakthrough in understanding how the parasite that causes malaria is able to multiply at such an alarming rate, which could be a vital clue in discovering how it has evolved, and how it can ...
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In order to provide the best medical care for newly diagnosed Parkinson's disease (PD) patients, a method of predicting their cognitive and motor progression, beyond using purely clinical parameters, would have major imp...
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A new technique may help scientists study the body's immune response to intestinal parasite infections one gut cell at a time.
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Taller young men may have lower dementia risk

Science Daily - 11 Feb 2020 19:38
Men who are taller in young adulthood, as an indicator of early-life circumstances, may have a lower risk of dementia in old age, suggests a new study.
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Inflammation can send the brain's immune cells into damaging hyperdrive, an effect that has been linked to neurodegenerative diseases that affect memory, like dementia. A new study finds these same immune cells can also ...
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'Women my age tend to drink -- it's normal'

Science Daily - 11 Feb 2020 19:37
New research has found that despite the potential health risks of exceeding national drinking guidelines, many middle-aged and young-old women who consume alcohol at high risk levels tend to perceive their drinking as no...
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Satellite 'license plates' and re-igniting rocket fuel could head off space junk crashes In low Earth orbit's growing "space junkyard," new technologies could reduce the risk of collisions.
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Genetics testing revealed those with a greater susceptibility to stress have at least one copy of a variation in the serotonin transporter gene. Additionally, changes to connections in the middle temporal gyrus related t...
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Read an excerpt from 'The Falcon Thief'

Live Science - 12 Feb 2020 00:53
Read an excerpt from 'The Falcon Thief' Over decades, a brazen thief stole hundreds of eggs from rare and endangered falcons' nests around the world, to sell to private collectors.
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'The Falcon Thief' exposes the high-flying life of a notorious rare-bird smuggler Wild falcons are highly prized by private collectors, who pay tens of thousands of dollars for the rare birds.
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Cannabis increases susceptibility to false memory

Neuroscience News - 12 Feb 2020 00:50
In comparison to a placebo group, test subjects exposed to marijuana were more likely to form false memories based on incorrect information.
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