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Life Technology™ Medical News

Study Reveals Alarming Teen Distracted Driving Trends

Prevent Injuries While Biking: Expert Tips from Dr. Sanj Kakar

Covid Disruption Spurs Rise in Non-Covid Illnesses

Study Reveals Serum Calcitonin Predicts Lymph Node Metastasis

Forensic Pathologists' Vital Role in Public Health

Child Tax Credit Boost Reduces Child Poverty, Reversal Looms

Medical Community Turns to Bacteriophages for Superbug Fight

Protein Linked to Alzheimer's Aids Lung Cancer Brain Metastasis

Study Reveals High Granzyme Levels in Early Rheumatoid Arthritis

Gender's Influence on Alcohol's Decision-Making Impact

Breakthrough: Mouse Models for Testing Childhood Neurological Disorder

Neuroscientists Struggle with Building Simple Models

Speckle Contrast Optical Spectroscopy for Blood Pressure Monitoring

Antibodies and Soil Microbe Compound Fight Blood Cancer

Researchers Uncover Process Behind Barrett's Esophagus

Male Patients with Hidradenitis Suppurativa Report Improved Physician Communication

Bowel Preparation Costs Impact Colonoscopy Screening

Obesity Linked to Financial Hardship & Food Insecurity

Genetic Link Found Between Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia

Dyslexia Study: Motor Activities Boost Reading Speed

Study Reveals Health Care Disparities for Adults with Disabilities

UCLA Researchers Develop AI System for EHR Transformation

Effects of Overtraining on Human Body: Risks & Symptoms

Theater Intervention Boosts Parkinson's Patients' Well-Being

Researchers at Lund University Track Aneurysm Formation in Mice

Confusion Persists: When to Start Regular Mammograms

Study Reveals Link Between Expressing Love and Well-Being

WHO Declares Second Public Health Emergency for Mpox

New Funding Approach for ALS Clinical Trials Introduced

Secret Revealed: Cheek Wound Healing Discovery

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Life Technology™ Science News

Cherry Tomato Farms Thrive in Morocco's Chtouka Amid Drought

Gigablue Sells 200,000 Carbon Credits for Climate Tech

Swiss Pine Forest: Testing Treetop Survival in Mist

University of East Anglia Report Raises Global Democracy Concerns

Promising Candidates for Sustainable Aviation Fuel

Green Transition Boosts Productivity in UK Economy, Reveals Climate Policy Study

Revealing Hidden Coral Life Processes with New Microscope

Vanilla Flavoring: Climate Threats to Wild Vanilla Crop

AI's Promise Falters for Marginalized Americans

Astronomers at University of Toronto Use AI to Determine Stellar Ages

Earth's Energy Balance: Satellite Measurements Since the 1960s

Innovative 3D-Printed Food from Drought-Tolerant Sorghum

Scientists Achieve Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking Milestone

Know Your Money: Key to Retirement Readiness

Heat Wave Scorches Europe, Extends to Germany

Decline of Global Shellfish Beds: Countering the Trend

"Carbon Credits Impact: Credibility Concerns in Offset Projects"

New Study Reveals Potential Drug Families for Tuberculosis

Astronomers Monitor Object Approaching from Another Star

Study Reveals Group Work Boosts Math Confidence

NASA's Lucy Mission Analyzes Data from Encounter with Asteroid

Fascinating Ways Snakes Move: Undulating, Sidewinding, Crawling

Enzymatic Recycling: Greener Alternative to Plastic Processing

Mining the Moon and Asteroids: Fiction to Reality

Global Review: Half World Endures 30 Extra Hot Days

The Impact of Education on Mental Sharpness

Harvard Researchers Explore Biological Solution for Space Habitats

Study Suggests Early Childhood Education Favors Individual Efforts

Emojis Boost Relationship Satisfaction: Study

Great Barrier Reef Corals: Parental Distance Crucial for Protection

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Life Technology™ Technology News

Topology Optimization Revolutionizing Engineering Structures

Faster topology optimization: An emerging industrial design technique gets a speed boost

West Virginia University Engineers Develop Flexible Energy Grid

Tough fuel cell can stabilize power grid by making and storing energy in extreme industrial conditions

Robots could one day crawl across the moon, and undergrads are laying the groundwork

Future Moon Exploration: Robot Rolling at CU Boulder

Tesla reports lower car sales, extending slump

Tesla Reports Hefty Drop in Auto Sales Amid Electric Vehicle Competition

Impact of AI Integration in Wearable Devices

AI-powered assistive technologies are changing how we experience and imagine public space

Researchers develop first hull-attached sensor system for predicting underwater radiated noise

South Korea Unveils Hull-Attached Sensor System for Underwater Noise Prediction

"Stretchable Foam Sensor Developed for Wide Range Sensing"

Stretchable polymer foam sensor detects wide range of motion with high sensitivity

Centaur: AI that thinks like us—and could help explain how we think

Innovative ternary alloy films pave the way for ultra-low-power memory devices

Helmholtz Munich AI Model Centaur Mimics Human Behavior

Record-High Scandium Levels in (Al,Ga,Sc)N Thin Films

Decoding Implicit Messages in Written Communication

AI might now be as good as humans at detecting emotion, political leaning and sarcasm in online conversations

Study Suggests Diesel Car Exhaust Positioning Cuts UK Air Pollution

Shifting UK car exhausts to the right could dramatically cut roadside air pollution

UCLA Study: Biological Brains and AI Share Neural Patterns

Striking parallels between biological brains and AI during social interaction suggest fundamental principles

Cheaper energy bills: AI-created materials could cool cities and spacecraft

New Materials Developed with Machine Learning for Energy Efficiency

Accountants Utilize AI to Boost Efficiency

How AI is improving accounting efficiency—without replacing jobs

Distrust in AI is on the rise—but along with healthy skepticism comes the risk of harm

Video Game Cover Art Criticized for AI Generation

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Tuesday, 8 October 2019

Focus on employability boosts universities' success in the Teaching Excellence Framework

Universities' Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF) grades—designed to help students choose where to study—are being boosted for the institutions that highlight employability post-university and student outcomes in their TEF submission reports, according to a new study published in Educational Review.

New evidence on the mistreatment of women during childbirth

New evidence from a World Health Organization (WHO)-led study in four countries shows more than one-third of women experience mistreatment during childbirth in health facilities.

Lions kill cattle, so people kill lions. Can the cycle end?

Saitoti Petro scans a dirt road in northern Tanzania for recent signs of the top predator on the African savannah. "If you see a lion," he warns, "stop and look it straight in the eyes—you must never run."

Adobe cuts off Venezuela clients, citing US sanctions

The software company Adobe says it is cutting off its accounts in Venezuela, the latest repercussions of U.S. financial sanctions targeting President Nicolás Maduro.

India on the frontline of the fight against tuberculosis

All the symptoms were there but it still took four doctors and several months of waiting before Bharti Kapar's cough and stomach pains were diagnosed as tuberculosis.

US official: Research finds uranium in Navajo women, babies

About a quarter of Navajo women and some infants who were part of a federally funded study on uranium exposure had high levels of the radioactive metal in their systems, decades after mining for Cold War weaponry ended on their reservation, a U.S. health official Monday.

Our Amazon: Brazilians who live in the world's biggest rainforest

Cattle breeders, indigenous teachers and loggers are among the more than 20 million people living in the Amazon in northern Brazil, carving out a living from the world's largest rainforest.

Samsung Electronics flags 56% fall in Q3 operating profit

Samsung Electronics said on Tuesday it expected operating profits to drop more than 50 percent in the third quarter as it struggles with a long-running slump in the global chip market.

Daring to dream: Nobel winner's nervous night

When US scientist William Kaelin's phone began ringing at 5:00 am, he wasn't sure whether he was dreaming: Winning the Nobel Medicine Prize had long been a goal, but he also thought it was a long shot.

Published studies may exaggerate the effect of burnout on quality of patient care

Published studies have shown an association between burnout among health care professionals and quality of patient care, but those studies may exaggerate the magnitude of the effect. A systematic review is published in Annals of Internal Medicine.

Scientists use machine-learning algorithms to help automate plant studies

Father of genetics Gregor Mendel spent years tediously observing and measuring pea plant traits by hand in the 1800s to uncover the basics of genetic inheritance. Today, botanists can track the traits, or phenotypes, of hundreds or thousands of plants much more quickly, with automated camera systems. Now, Salk researchers have helped speed up plant phenotyping even more, with machine-learning algorithms that teach a computer system to analyze three-dimensional shapes of the branches and leaves of a plant. The study, published in Plant Physiology on October 7, 2019, may help scientists better quantify how plants respond to climate change, genetic mutations or other factors.

Initiating breastfeeding in vulnerable infants

The benefits of breastfeeding for both mother and child are well-recognized, including for late preterm infants (LPI). But because LPI do not have fully developed brains, they may experience difficulties latching and/or sustaining a latch on the breast to have milk transfer occur. This means that these infants are at high risk for formula supplementation and/or discontinuation of breastfeeding. Without human milk, these infants lose a critical component for protection and optimal development of their brains.

Heat waves could increase substantially in size by mid-century, says new study

Our planet has been baking under the sun this summer as temperatures reached the hottest ever recorded and heat waves spread across the globe. While the climate continues to warm, scientists expect the frequency and intensity of heat waves to increase. However, a commonly overlooked aspect is the spatial size of heat waves, despite its important implications.

Weight stigma affects gay men on dating apps

Weight stigma is an issue for queer men using dating apps, says a new University of Waterloo study.

Engineers develop thin, lightweight lens that could produce slimmer camera phones, longer-flying drones

The new wave of smartphones to hit the market all come with incredible cameras that produce brilliant photos. There's only one complaint—the thick camera lenses on the back that jet out like ugly bumps on a sheet of glass.

New research furthers understanding about what shapes human gut microbiome

A new Northwestern University study finds that despite human's close genetic relationship to apes, the human gut microbiome is more similar to that of Old World monkeys like baboons than to that of apes like chimpanzees.

Study shows Housing First program significantly reduces homelessness over long term

The longest running study of its kind on the "Housing First" model has found that it significantly reduces homelessness over the long term compared to treatment as usual, according to a study published in The Lancet Psychiatry by scientists at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) and St. Michael's Hospital.

Urban, home gardens could help curb food insecurity, health problems

Food deserts are an increasingly recognized problem in the United States, but a new study from the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior indicates urban and home gardens—combined with nutrition education—could be a path toward correcting that disadvantage.

Modified quantum dots capture more energy from light and lose less to heat

Los Alamos National Laboratory scientists have synthesized magnetically-doped quantum dots that capture the kinetic energy of electrons created by ultraviolet light before it's wasted as heat.

Meningioma molecular profile reliably predicts tumor recurrence

Although typically benign, about one-fifth of meningiomas, the most common primary brain tumors, recur despite complete surgical removal. The current meningioma classification does not consistently predict whether the tumor will recur, but researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and the Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute at Texas Children's Hospital report today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that using molecular profiles that might better predict meningioma recurrence.

Violence linked to social isolation, hypervigilance and chronic health problems

Exposure to violence can negatively impact a person's physical and psychosocial health, according to two new studies co-authored by University of Chicago Medicine social epidemiologist Elizabeth L. Tung, MD.

The effectiveness of electrical stimulation in producing spinal fusion

Researchers from The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of published data on the effect of electrical stimulation therapies on spinal fusion. They found significant improvement overall in the rates of bone fusion following a course of electrical stimulation in both preclinical (animal) and clinical (human) studies.