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Life Technology™ Medical News
Americans Drinking Less Coffee, Soda, Tea but More Caffeine
"Exploring UK's Chemical Defense Research Center"
Development of Brain Circuits After Birth: Biological Processes and Experiences
Post-Workout Fatigue: Legs Like Jelly, Lungs Burning
Measles Outbreak in Rural West Texas: 90 Cases, 16 Hospitalized
Personalized mRNA Vaccine Enhances Pancreatic Cancer Treatment
Study: SGLT-2is and GLP-1 RAs Lower COPD Risk
Study Links Higher Calcium Intake to Lower Colorectal Cancer Risk
NBA Rising Star Benched for 2024–2025 Season
Best Drink Choices for Kids and Teens: Cow's Milk, Water, Veggie Juice
Majority with Substance Use Disorder Never Seek Treatment
Navigating Pessimism During COVID-19: Fear and Anxiety
Texas Ranks High in Diabetes Rates
Study Links Excessive Screen Time to Future Psychological Distress
Engineered Cells Boost Islet Transplant Survival
Study Shows TRAIL and Focused Ultrasound Reduce Prostate Tumor Size
New Method for Deep Brain Stimulation Developed
Challenges in Roller Skiing Speed Variation
Global Study Identifies Novel Gene for Rare Disease
Diet Rich in Fruits and Vegetables Linked to Lower Psoriasis Severity
Novel PET Technique Reveals Spinal Cord Injury Insights
Preeclampsia Study Reveals Blood Sample Patterns
Scientists Investigate HIV Stigma Persistence
Impact of Common Language on Cardiovascular Health
Study Links Central Nervous System Stimulants to Opioid Escalation
Zika Virus in Pregnancy: Neurological Risks Unveiled
Study by American Cancer Society: Aggressive Care in Advanced Cancer
New Tool Identifies Older Adults at Risk of Health Emergencies
"Dietary Programs Overlook Risks of Ultra-Processed Foods"
Improving Poverty Metrics in Tuberculosis Research
Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Science News
Lead-208 Nucleus Not Spherical: Research Findings
Impact of Domestic Grazers on Ecosystems: Study in Himalayas
Marine Scientists Urge Strategic Management for South Australia's Ecosystems
Light-Triggered Process Breaks Polymers: ETH Zurich Study
Location of Thutmose II's Lost Tomb Confirmed in Luxor
Study Reveals Liquid-Liquid Critical Point in Water
European Skin, Eye, and Hair Evolution Over 45,000 Years
Elon Musk Urges Deorbiting Space Hammer
Parasitic Fly in Hawaii Eavesdrops on Pacific Field Crickets
Study Reveals Extreme Rainfall Surge in Arabia
Ingenious Fusion: Two Heads, Two Instruments, One Feat
Cornell Researchers Estimate North Atlantic Right Whale Population
Physicist Links Timelike and Spacelike Factors
Glass Fertilizer Beads: Sustainable Solution for Agriculture
"Experts: Earth's Defense Against City-Threatening Asteroid"
Exploring Flexible Micromachined Ultrasound Transducers
Groucho Marx's Insight on Community Membership
Virginia's Oyster Reef Restoration Yields Results in Rappahannock
Central Macedonia: Key Food Producer Faces Waste Issue
Revolutionizing Land Monitoring with CLAP Platform
Intensifying Research on Thunderstorm Weather in Beijing
Improving Tower-Based SIF Retrieval for Enhanced Photosynthesis Tracking
Global Climate Crisis: Drought Impact on 55 Million
Rare Blue Whale Births Puzzle Scientists
Researchers Show Light Self-Imaging in Cylindrical Systems
South Korean Consumers Spend More as Air Pollution Rises
Study Shows Streamlined Workflow Detects Listeria in Food
AI Detects Animal Emotions with 89.49% Accuracy
Researchers Explore Drug Delivery via Gas Bubbles
NUS Researchers Pioneer Fluorinated Oxetanes Transformation
Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Technology News
London Model Alexsandrah Gondora Utilizes AI Replica for Efficiency
Hong Kong and Singapore Lead Asian Crypto Hub Race
Toyota Plans Robotics and AI Testing in Woven City
Cryptocurrency Exchange Hit by $1.5 Billion Hack
Unlocking Geothermal Energy Potential: Key Factors for Success
Improving Stability of Perovskite Solar Cells
Study Reveals Limits of AI Reasoning
Automated Web Application Scanner Utilizing Large Language Models
Robots Engineered as Smart Materials Mimic Living Systems
Apple Limits Encryption for UK iPhone Users
Chinese Tech Firms Confident Amid DeepSeek Scrutiny
The Impact of Photovoltaic Panel Design on Solar Adoption
Hydrogen: Reality Check on Green Wonder Fuel
Rise of Deepfake: Global Legal Scrutiny
Roboticists Develop Nature-Inspired Systems
Smartwatch Sale: 20% Off Coupon at Nearby Store
Challenges in Commercializing Flexible Perovskite Solar Cells
"Derecho Strikes Houston: Tall Buildings Damaged"
AI's Limitations in Transforming Organizational Processes
AI Plans Trip Itinerary, Books Flights, Arranges Transport
Small Cylindrical Parts: Deep Drawing Process Risks
New Technique Enhances Food-Delivery Efficiency
China Deploys Advanced Helicopter-Borne Detection System
Harnessing Untapped Potential in Homes and Vehicles to Strengthen Local Power Grids
Indian Institute of Technology Advances Bifacial Solar Cells
Efficient Heat Management for Electronics: Challenges and Solutions
New Technique Reduces Imperfections in 3D Printing
"U.S. Navy Employs Laser Tech for High-Speed Defense"
Dynamic Facial Projection Mapping: AR's Impact on Entertainment
UK's Ambitious Plan: Transitioning to Electric Transport
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSFriday, 11 October 2019
'Unacceptable' power cuts blasted as California fire risk spreads south
Hundreds of thousands of Californians were still without electricity due to pre-emptive blackouts Thursday as hot, windy conditions causing wildfires spread south toward Los Angeles, in a situation blasted as "unacceptable" by the state's governor.
Museum explores spooky science behind 'Frankenstein', 'The Mummy'
What is the spookiest thing about "Frankenstein," "The Mummy" and "Dracula"? The hideous monster? The ancient curse? The sharp fangs?
Indonesia's Lion air set to list shares
Indonesia's Lion Air is set to launch an initial public offering, according to a company spokesman, in a listing that could reportedly raise up to $1.0-billion—one of the country's biggest-ever share sales.
CEO of German business software group SAP steps down
Bill McDermott, the American chief executive of massive German business software maker SAP, will quit after a decade in charge, the company said Friday.
Tesla comes when called, but can fray nerves
Roddie Hasan loves his Tesla, but after a fright using a feature that lets him summon the car as he might a dog, he says he will be walking to get it.
James Murdoch takes stake in Vice Media: report
James Murdoch, one of the sons of mogul Rupert Murdoch, has taken a minority stake in the fast-growing millennial-focused Vice Media, the Financial Times reported Thursday.
Apple chief defends pulling app used by Hong Kong protestors
Apple chief Tim Cook on Thursday defended the decision to pull an app used by protesters in Hong Kong to track police, according to a leaked email to employees obtained by a tech news site.
WeWork founder Adam Neumann removed from Forbes' billionaire list
Forbes on Thursday lopped more than $3 billion from its estimated net worth of WeWork co-founder Adam Neumann as the company faced skepticism regarding its future.
Engineers solve 50-year-old puzzle in signal processing
Something called the fast Fourier transform is running on your cell phone right now. The FFT, as it is known, is a signal-processing algorithm that you use more than you realize. It is, according to the title of one research paper, "an algorithm the whole family can use."
NASA launches satellite to explore where air meets space
NASA launched a satellite on Thursday night to explore the mysterious, dynamic region where air meets space.
NASA and SpaceX hope for manned mission to ISS in early 2020
SpaceX could launch US astronauts to the International Space Station as early as next year if tests on the company's long-delayed Crew Dragon capsule prove conclusive, NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said Thursday.
Artificial meat is now made in space, coming to a supermarket near you
Creating meat from cells is no longer the realm of science fiction: a Russian cosmonaut did it aboard the International Space Station, and it is just a matter of time before these products arrive in supermarkets.
In Nairobi, recycling poo is cleaning up the slums
"When I started, there was poop in bags everywhere," said Ricky Ojwang, skillfully navigating a rubbish-strewn canal in Mukuru, a Nairobi slum where he's worked to improve sanitation since 2012.
NASA administrator explains Twitter spat with SpaceX
NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said Thursday that a recent Twitter statement critical of SpaceX was a signal to all the space agency's contractors about realistic development timelines.
New research says changes in driver shifts and pick-up choices for food delivery services can boost profits
The food delivery business, popularized by mobile online services such as Grubhub, OrderUp, and DoorDash, has become a $200 billion industry, which is expected to grow by more than 15% annually over the next five years. New research published in the INFORMS journal Transportation Science reveals how food delivery businesses can implement changes in driver shifts and order delivery structures that can decrease costs and contribute to higher profits.
Taking RTKI drugs during radiotherapy may not aid survival, worsens side effects
Taking certain cancer-fighting drugs while undergoing radiation therapy may not increase survival for patients, but may, instead, increase side effects, according to a team of researchers. The drugs, however, may be beneficial for patients who are not undergoing radiation therapy.
Researcher uses sweat monitors to predict behavioral issues in adolescents severely affected with autism
When people become stressed, their bodies can respond by sweating. Now, researchers at the University of Missouri are monitoring how much adolescents severely affected by autism sweat in order to better understand when behavioral issues, such as aggression, are likely to occur.
Physicists look to navigational 'rhumb lines' to study polymer's unique spindle structure
From the intricate patterns of pollen grains to the logarithmic spirals of nautilus shells, biology is full of complex patterns, shapes, and geometries. Many of these intricate structures play important roles in biological function, but can be difficult to create in a lab without state-of-the-art equipment or expensive and energy-consuming processes and materials.
Combination of techniques could improve security for IoT devices
A multi-pronged data analysis approach that can strengthen the security of Internet of Things (IoT) devices—such as smart TVs, home video cameras and baby monitors—against current risks and threats has created by a team of Penn State World Campus students pursuing master of professional studies degrees in information sciences.
When studying immune cells, environment matters
For years, scientists have used cells grown in petri dishes to study the metabolic processes that fuel the immune system. But a new report in Immunity suggests looking outside the dish and into living organisms gives a drastically different view of the way immune cells process and use energy.
Beyond the 'replication crisis,' does research face an 'inference crisis'?
For the past decade, social scientists have been unpacking a "replication crisis" that has revealed how findings of an alarming number of scientific studies are difficult or impossible to repeat. Efforts are underway to improve the reliability of findings, but cognitive psychology researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst say that not enough attention has been paid to the validity of theoretical inferences made from research findings.
CF patients experience improved lung health with lumacaftor-ivacaftor but with caveats
In adolescent and adult patients with cystic fibrosis taking lumacaftor-ivacaftor (ORKAMBI), the combination drug appears to improve lung function and body weight and reduce the need for intravenous antibiotic treatment, according to a French study published online in the American Thoracic Society's American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.
Skin cancer above the neck more likely to spread, research shows
New results from a descriptive, 6-month clinical study suggest that malignant melanoma (MM) that develops on the neck has a higher chance of spreading beyond the skin compared with MM that develops below the neck. However, even though significantly more of these study patients had below neck MM tumors at an advanced disease stage, none of them were found to have distant metastases, in which MM spreads to other distant parts of the body. Furthermore, only one of these below neck MM patients was diagnosed with positive lymph nodes. The study findings were presented today at the 28th EADV Congress in Madrid, Spain.
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