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Science News

Location American Science News for 30 November 2020

How Humans Use Objects in Novel Ways to Solve Problems

Neuroscience News - 30 Nov 2020 02:15
How Humans Use Objects in Novel Ways to Solve Problems Study provides a new framework for investigating and formalizing the cognitive processes behind how humans use tools.
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Dangerous 'naked' black holes could be hiding in the universe Black holes shorn of event horizons could lurk throughout the universe.
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Antibiotics have revolutionized medicine by providing effective treatments for infectious diseases such as cholera. But the pathogens that cause disease are increasingly developing resistance to the antibiotics that are ...
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Hitting the quantum 'sweet spot': Researchers find best position for atom qubits in silicon Researchers from the Centre of Excellence for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology (CQC2T) working with Silicon Quantum Computing (SQC) have located the 'sweet spot' for positioning qubits in silicon to scale...
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An experimental vaccine developed in Europe to prevent infection by Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) has protected cynomolgus macaques in a new collaborative study. The study comes about three years after th...
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Air-filled fiber cables capable of outperforming standard optical fibers The next generation of optical fiber could be a step closer as a new study has shown that fibers with a hollowed out center, created in Southampton, could reduce loss of power currently experienced in standard glass fibe...
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(University of California - Riverside) A team co-led by a scientist at the University of California, Riverside, has developed a method to study how HIV mutates to escape the immune system in multiple individuals, which c...
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(University of Houston) Researchers from the University of Houston and the Toyota Research Institute of North America have reported a breakthrough in the development of magnesium batteries, allowing them to operate at ro...
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(Princeton University, Engineering School) Princeton University researchers have developed a new way to examine, predict and engineer interactions between multiple liquid phases, including arrangements of mixtures with a...
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Researching on-chip erbium-doped lithium niobate microcavity lasers As a complement to silicon-based photonic chips, lithium niobate thin film (LNOI) has become a research hotspot in the field of optoelectronic integration due to its outstanding nonlinear, electro-optic, acousto-optic, p...
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To develop effective therapeutics against pathogens, scientists need to first uncover how they attack host cells. An efficient way to conduct these investigations on an extensive scale is through high-speed screening tes...
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If you made a wish on every star in the universe, you'd need to make about a trillion trillion wishes--that's a 1 followed by 24 zeros. Of course, you can't see all of those stars from your bedroom window. You can't even...
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Infant Language Exposure Shapes Brain Circuitry

Neuroscience News - 1 Dec 2020 00:45
Infant Language Exposure Shapes Brain Circuitry Taking turns in "conversations" with adult caregivers synchronizes activity in language areas of the infant brain.
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Having children doesn't just make you feel like you've aged overnight -- a new study found that the number of times a person gives birth may also affect the body's physical aging process.
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Researchers report that low-income Black households experienced greater job loss, more food and medicine insecurity, and higher indebtedness in the early months of COVID-19 compared to white or Latinx low-income househol...
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Risk-averse teens sway peers to make safer choices

Science Daily - 1 Dec 2020 00:03
Prior studies have shown adolescents are likely to experiment along with friends who use drugs and alcohol. But do friends who avoid risks have similar influential power? In a new study neuroscientists show that observin...
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Moderna's coronavirus vaccine is highly effective, final analysis shows New data from Moderna's phase 3 trial confirm that the vaccine is highly effective and protects against severe disease.
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Escaped mink could spread the coronavirus to wild animals More than 100 SARS-CoV-2 infected mink may have escaped from Danish farms, raising the risk that these escapees could spread the novel coronavirus to wild animals.
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Esports: Fit gamers challenge 'fat' stereotype

Science Daily - 30 Nov 2020 22:15
A new survey of 1400 participants from 65 countries has found esports players are up to 21 per cent healthier weight than the general population, hardly smoke and also drink less.
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Smell loss is a prominent symptom of Covid-19 and the pandemic is leaving many people with long-term smell loss or smell distortions such as parosmia. Parosmia happens when people experience strange and often unpleasant ...
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How SARS-CoV-2 reaches the brain

Science Daily - 30 Nov 2020 22:15
Researchers have studied the mechanisms by which the novel coronavirus can reach the brains of patients with COVID-19. The results show that SARS-CoV-2 enters the brain via nerve cells in the olfactory mucosa.
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A mass screening program of 10 million Wuhan residents identified 300 asymptomatic cases in May, but none were infectious, according to a new study. Researchers found no 'viable' virus in the asymptomatic cases and the c...
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