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Science News

Location American Science News for 12 October 2020
Work is set to begin within months on building "digital twins" of Earth to better predict the future of climate change, extreme weather and the environment
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Female moles grow testicles to fight through their brutal underground existence To help moles fight in the brutal underground world, evolution has granted the female mole a generous dose of 'roid rage' by tacking some testicles onto her ovaries.
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(University of Maryland) It's been three years since the landmark detection of a neutron star merger from gravitational waves. Since that day, an international team of researchers led by University of Maryland astronomer...
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Psychologists Reveal How to Build Rap-Paw With Your Cat

Neuroscience News - 12 Oct 2020 21:12
Psychologists Reveal How to Build Rap-Paw With Your Cat Researchers report it is possible to build up a rapport with a cat by simply using an eye narrowing technique.
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Improvements in Stroke Treatment Could Save More Lives

Neuroscience News - 12 Oct 2020 20:41
Improvements in Stroke Treatment Could Save More Lives Direct carotid puncture is a safe and effective alternative to thrombectomy for stroke patients.
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Brain Regions With Impaired Blood Flow Have Higher Tau Levels Impaired blood flow to specific areas of the brain coincides with Tau buildup in Alzheimer's patients. As cognition declines, the relationship between vascular dysfunction and Tau accumulation strengthens.
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The latest coronavirus news updated every day including coronavirus cases, the latest news, features and interviews from New Scientist and essential information about the covid-19 pandemic
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Mosquitoes' Taste for Blood Traced to Four Types of Neurons

Neuroscience News - 12 Oct 2020 19:30
Mosquitoes' Taste for Blood Traced to Four Types of Neurons The sense of taste in female mosquitoes is specially tuned to detect at least four different substances in blood.
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Dopamine and Serotonin Play a Role in Human Perception and Decision-Making Researchers recorded alterations in levels of both dopamine and serotonin in the brain when people perform perception and decision making based tasks.
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Cameras mounted on earphones can monitor your facial expressions by the contours of your cheeks alone, which could be useful for importing facial expressions into virtual reality or lip reading
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Pandemic will cause 400,000 extra deaths in the US this year, study suggests A staggering 400,000-plus excess deaths may occur in the U.S. by the end of the year as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, a new study suggests. That estimate includes people who died from COVID-19, as well as those who ...
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Drone warns surfer of very close encounter with 5-foot shark in Australia A program that uses drones to warn surfers of nearby sharks recorded a very close encounter off the coast in New South Wales.
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The US Is Trying to Hijack Space Mining, and There Could Be Disastrous Consequences Exploiting the resources of outer space might be key to the future expansion of the human species. But researchers argue that the US is trying to skew the game in its favor, with potentially disastrous consequences. The ...
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Machine-learning technique could improve fusion energy outputs Machine-learning techniques, best known for teaching self-driving cars to stop at red lights, may soon help researchers around the world improve their control over the most complicated reaction known to science: nuclear ...
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Direct visualization of electromagnetic wave dynamics by laser-free ultrafast electron microscopy Femtosecond lasers can be integrated with electron microscopes to directly image transient structures and morphologies in materials in real time and space. In a new report, Xuewen Fu and a team of scientists in condensed...
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Revealing the reason behind jet formation at the tip of laser optical fiber When an optical fiber is immersed in liquid, a high-temperature, high-speed jet is discharged. Researchers expect this to be applied to medical treatment in the future. Now, a research team from Russia and Japan has expl...
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Pipsqueak animals show off Marvel-like superpowers in 'Tiny World' docuseries Small wildlife do big things in the new docuseries "Tiny World," narrated by Paul Rudd.
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Primates aren't quite frogs

EurekAlert! - 12 Oct 2020 06:00
(Kyoto University) Researchers in Japan demonstrated for the first time the 'spinal motor module hypothesis' in the primate arm, wherein the brain recruits interneuronal modules in the spinal cord rather than individual ...
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(Peter the Great Saint-Petersburg Polytechnic University) Dendritic spines are small protrusions from a neuron's dendrite membrane, where contact with neighboring axons is formed to receive synaptic input. Changes in the...
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(University of Vaasa) The doctoral dissertation by Beatrice Obule-Abila (University of Vaasa, Finland) focuses on changing the paradigm of waste management by exploring the adoption of knowledge management framework, dev...
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(Virginia Tech) In first-of-their-kind observations in the human brain, an international team of researchers has revealed two well-known neurochemicals -- dopamine and serotonin -- are at work at sub-second speeds to sha...
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The grand finale to the expedition of a century

EurekAlert! - 12 Oct 2020 06:00
(Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research) After more than a year in the Central Arctic, this Monday, 12 October, the research icebreaker Polarstern returned to her homeport in Bremerhaven...
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