Science News
Acute itching in eczema patients linked to environmental allergens
Science Daily - 15 Jan 2021 03:06
New research indicates that allergens in the environment often are to blame for episodes of acute itch in eczema patients, and that the itching often doesn't respond to antihistamines because the itch signals are being c...
RNA's mysterious folding process
Science Daily - 15 Jan 2021 20:52
Using data from RNA-folding experiments, the researchers generated the first-ever data-driven movies of how RNA folds as it is made by cellular machinery. By watching their videos of this folding occur, the researchers d...
Researchers Find NTRK fusions more common than expected in pediatric tumors
Science Daily - 15 Jan 2021 20:02
Researchers have found that NTRK fusions are more common in pediatric tumors and also involve a wider range of tumors than adult cancers, information that could help prioritize screening for NTRK fusions in pediatric can...
Designer cytokine makes paralyzed mice walk again
Science Daily - 15 Jan 2021 20:03
Using gene therapy, a research team has succeeded in getting mice to walk again after a complete cross-sectional injury. The nerve cells produced the curative protein themselves.
Designer Cytokine Makes Paralyzed Mice Walk Again
Neuroscience News - 16 Jan 2021 01:14
Protein hyper-interleukin-6, a "designer protein" that has to be produced via genetic engineering, enabled a paralyzed mouse to walk again.
UK coronavirus variant could become dominant US strain by March, CDC says
Live Science - 15 Jan 2021 23:42
Strict measures will be needed to prevent it from taking over.
Tool to distribute limited vaccines equitably
Science Daily - 15 Jan 2021 22:53
Researchers have developed a tool that incorporates a person's age and socioeconomic status to prioritize vaccine distribution among people who otherwise share similar risks due to their jobs.
Scientists identify nutrient that helps prevent bacterial infection
Science Daily - 15 Jan 2021 22:53
Scientists studying the body's natural defenses against bacterial infection have identified a nutrient -- taurine -- that helps the gut recall prior infections and kill invading bacteria, such as Klebsiella pneumoniae (K...
Towards applications: ultra-low-loss on-chip zero-index materials
Phys.org - 15 Jan 2021 22:42
A refractive index of zero induces a wave vector with zero amplitude and undefined direction. Therefore, light propagating inside a zero-index medium does not accumulate any spatial phase advance, resulting in perfect sp...
How Many Galaxies Are in the Universe? A New Answer From the Darkest Sky Ever Observed
Singularity Hub - 15 Jan 2021 22:30
Ordinarily, we point telescopes at some object we want to see in greater detail. In the 1990s astronomers did the opposite. They pointed the most powerful telescope in history, the Hubble Space Telescope, at a dark patch...
2 infants inhaled cancer cells from mothers during birth
Live Science - 15 Jan 2021 22:08
The infants who were born to mothers with cervical cancer may have developed lung cancer after "aspirating" tumor cells
Lizzie Borden's home, site of brutal axe murders, could be yours for $2 million
Live Science - 15 Jan 2021 21:49
The home where Lizzie Borden's father and stepmother were murdered is now a bed and breakfast, and a museum. Its retiring owner just put it on the market.
We must start publishing ethnicity data for covid-19 vaccinations
New Scientist - 15 Jan 2021 21:20
The race to vaccinate as many people as possible against covid-19 is under way, but unless countries track who receives the vaccine we won't be able to ensure the benefits are spread equitably, says Layal Liverpool
Martin Luther King Jr.: The iconic civil rights leader
Live Science - 15 Jan 2021 21:06
Martin Luther King Jr. was a civil rights leader who fought for racial and economic justice. His oft-quoted "I Have a Dream" speech made an incredible impact on the country's racial, cultural and intellectual landscape.
Physicists propose a new theory to explain one dimensional quantum liquids formation
Phys.org - 15 Jan 2021 21:06
Liquids are ubiquitous in Nature: from the water that we consume daily to superfluid helium which is a quantum liquid appearing at temperatures as low as only a few degrees above the absolute zero. A common feature of th...
Target discovered that halts osteoarthritis-type knee cartilage degeneration
Science Daily - 15 Jan 2021 20:52
In a mouse study, researchers used nanotechnology and previous knowledge of a protein pathway to significantly reduce knee cartilage degeneration and pain.
Breathing easier with a better tracheal stent
Science Daily - 15 Jan 2021 20:52
New research is poised to drastically improve the use of tracheal stents for children with airway obstruction. Researchers demonstrate for the first time the successful use of a completely biodegradable magnesium-alloy t...
New delivery method promises relief from antipsychotic medication's adverse side effects
Science Daily - 15 Jan 2021 20:52
A team of neuroscientists and engineers has created a nasal spray to deliver antipsychotic medication directly to the brain instead of having it pass through the body.
Understanding how sound waves travel through disordered materials
Phys.org - 15 Jan 2021 20:31
A team of researchers lead by the University of Tsukuba have created a new theoretical model to understand the spread of vibrations through disordered materials, such as glass. They found that as the degree of disorder i...
Scientists' discovery is paving the way for novel ultrafast quantum computers
Phys.org - 15 Jan 2021 20:31
Scientists at the Institute of Physics of the University of Tartu have found a way to develop optical quantum computers of a new type. Central to the discovery are rare earth ions that have certain characteristics and ca...
Precise measurements of cluster formation in outer neutron 'skin' of a range of tin isotopes
Phys.org - 15 Jan 2021 20:27
A large international team of researchers has developed a way to measure cluster formations in the outer neutron 'skin' of a range of tin isotopes rich in neutrons. In their paper published in the journal Science, the gr...
Artificial intelligence beats us in chess, but not in memory
Phys.org - 15 Jan 2021 20:27
In the last decades, artificial intelligence has shown to be very good at achieving exceptional goals in several fields. Chess is one of them: in 1996, for the first time, the computer Deep Blue beat a human player, ches...