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DR. MARIE-CLAUDE MORICE TO RECEIVE THE 2021 ANDREAS Dr. Marie-Claude Morice has shown great commitment to educating and training, with a special focus on young professionals. As part of her determination to help others learn and practice, she was involved in the creation of the PCR Clinical Research programme, which is open to all stakeholders of the clinical research process. THE PROBLEM WITH MICROWAVING TEA The problem with microwaving tea. WASHINGTON, August 4, 2020 — Tea drinkers have been saying it for years. Water heated in a microwave just isn’t the same. Typically, when a liquid is being warmed, the heating source — a stove, for example — heats the container from below. By a process called convection, as the liquid toward the bottom CELL REPROGRAMMING COULD AID SPINAL CORD INJURY RECOVERY Cell reprogramming could aid spinal cord injury recovery. Cells called astrocytes normally support our neurons, and now scientists are working to reprogram the star-shaped cells into neurons that help reconnect the brain and body after a spinal cord injury. “We are at the stage of optimization. We know this reprogramming is feasible andwe
GEOSCIENTISTS FIND THAT SHALLOW WASTEWATER INJECTION In a newly published paper, Virginia Tech geoscientists have found that shallow wastewater injection — not deep wastewater injections — can drive widespread deep earthquake activity in unconventional oil and gas production fields. STUDY DISCOVERS BAM15 AS A POTENTIAL TREATMENT FOR OBESITY Study discovers BAM15 as a potential treatment for obesity. BATON ROUGE, Louisiana – A new study offers the first evidence that a protein named BAM15 acts as an energy uncoupler and could be an effective drug for treating obesity and related diseases. Obesity affects more than 650 million people worldwide and drives a number ofdangerous
MASON SCIENTISTS EXPLORE HERBAL TREATMENT FOR COVID-19 Could an over-the-counter health “shot” help fight COVID-19? George Mason University researchers think it just might. Cell and Bioscience recently highlighted research led by Yuntao Wu and Ramin Hakami in which they examined the potential anti-coronavirus activities of an over-the-counter drink called Respiratory Detox Shot (RDS).. RDS is a remedy containing nine herbal ingredients IMMUNE GENETICS AND PREVIOUS COMMON COLD INFECTIONS MIGHT Protective immune memory–through B cells, which make antibodies, and/or T cells, which in the case of CD8 + T cells can kill virus-infected cells–can be induced by identical but also by related viruses. Related to the COVID-19 virus SARS-CoV-2, there are four common cold coronaviruses (CCCoVs) that together cause ~20% of common cold infections: OC43, HKU1, 229E, and NL63. FIRST TEST OF TROPICAL SEAWEED FARMING FOR BIOFUELS As the site is the first of its kind in the region, authorizations were required from numerous agencies including the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the U.S. Coast Guard, and the Puerto Rico Department of Natural and Environmental Resources. IMMUNITY BOOST IN THE GUT Immunity boost in the gut. Varying immune response to vaccinations could be countered with microbiota-targeted interventions helping infants, older people and others to take full advantage of the benefits of effective vaccines, Australian and US experts say. A comprehensive review in Nature Reviews Immunology concludes that evidence is mounting A HISTORY OF THE ANTI-VAXXER MOVEMENT A history of the Anti-vaxxer movement. Vaccines are a documented success story, one of the most successful public health interventions in history. Yet there is a vocal anti-vaccination movement, featuring celebrity activists (including actress Jenny McCarthy and British rapper M.I.A., who attracted attention for tweeting during thepandemic
DR. MARIE-CLAUDE MORICE TO RECEIVE THE 2021 ANDREAS Dr. Marie-Claude Morice has shown great commitment to educating and training, with a special focus on young professionals. As part of her determination to help others learn and practice, she was involved in the creation of the PCR Clinical Research programme, which is open to all stakeholders of the clinical research process. THE PROBLEM WITH MICROWAVING TEA The problem with microwaving tea. WASHINGTON, August 4, 2020 — Tea drinkers have been saying it for years. Water heated in a microwave just isn’t the same. Typically, when a liquid is being warmed, the heating source — a stove, for example — heats the container from below. By a process called convection, as the liquid toward the bottom CELL REPROGRAMMING COULD AID SPINAL CORD INJURY RECOVERY Cell reprogramming could aid spinal cord injury recovery. Cells called astrocytes normally support our neurons, and now scientists are working to reprogram the star-shaped cells into neurons that help reconnect the brain and body after a spinal cord injury. “We are at the stage of optimization. We know this reprogramming is feasible andwe
GEOSCIENTISTS FIND THAT SHALLOW WASTEWATER INJECTION In a newly published paper, Virginia Tech geoscientists have found that shallow wastewater injection — not deep wastewater injections — can drive widespread deep earthquake activity in unconventional oil and gas production fields. STUDY DISCOVERS BAM15 AS A POTENTIAL TREATMENT FOR OBESITY Study discovers BAM15 as a potential treatment for obesity. BATON ROUGE, Louisiana – A new study offers the first evidence that a protein named BAM15 acts as an energy uncoupler and could be an effective drug for treating obesity and related diseases. Obesity affects more than 650 million people worldwide and drives a number ofdangerous
LOW-WAGE EARNERS SPENT LESS TIME AT HOME DURING EARLY Low-wage earners spent less time at home during early pandemic lockdown. Researchers tracked data from millions of mobile phone users in major US metropolitan areas and compared the data to neighborhood demographic information. FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Fine-grained location data gleaned from mobile phones shows that people living in lessaffluent
THIS FOREST HAS STAYED WILD FOR 5,000 YEARS This forest has stayed wild for 5,000 years — we can tell because of the soil. We sometimes think of the Amazon rainforest as unaltered by humans, a peek into the planet’s past. In recent years, scientists have learned that many parts of the Amazon aren’t untouched at all–they’ve been cultivated by Indigenous peoples for thousands of BIG DATA: IPK RESEARCHERS DOUBLE ACCURACY IN PREDICTING 7 hours ago · The enormous potential of Big Data has already been demonstrated in areas such as financial services and telecommunications. An international team of researchers led by the IPK Leibniz Institute has now tapped the potential of big data for the first time on a large scale for plant research. MACHINE LEARNING MODEL DOUBLES ACCURACY OF GLOBAL 1 day ago · “The model processes all of this data and outputs a probabilistic estimate of landslide hazard in the form of an interactive map,” said Thomas Stanley, Universities Space Research Association scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, who led the research. BINDING OF A SECOND CO MOLECULE OBSERVED 1 day ago · Oliver Einsle serves as professor at the Institute of Biochemistry of the University of Freiburg and is a member of BIOSS Centre for Biological Signalling Studies of the University ofFreiburg.
HEALTH BENEFITS OF LOW PROTEIN-HIGH CARBOHYDRATE DIETS A low protein-high carbohydrate diet is a setting to gain maximum health benefits from the carbs that are accessible to bacteria in the colon (e.g., resistant starch) but can also be a means to maximise the adverse effects of highly processed carbs. “We found that the 50:50 mixture of glucose to fructose created the highest levels of obesity UTIA PROFESSOR RECEIVES COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT EARLY CAREER 1 day ago · KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Sreedhar Upendram, assistant professor in the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics at the University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture, has received the 2021 Bonnie Teater Community Development Early Career Achievement Award from the Southern Rural Development Center. DIAGNOSES WITH DEEPFLASH Freely available for researchers. deepflash2 is still an insider’s tip for researchers involved in bio-image analysis. However, Matthias Griebel wants to use the excellent results in the data science competition as an opportunity to promote his tool. YALE-NUS COLLEGE SCIENTIST DISCOVERS HOW LEAFBIRDS MAKE A recent study by a team of researchers led by Dr Vinod Kumar Saranathan from the Division of Science at Yale-NUS College has discovered a complex, three-dimensional crystal called the single gyroid within feathers of the blue-winged leafbird. INNOVATION PIONEERS SCORE WORLD FIRST FOR SUSTAINABLE Construction firm Nationwide Engineering will make a piece of history on Tuesday 25 May, as it completes the laying of the world’s first graphene concrete slab engineered for sustainability in a commercial setting – the new material is strengthened by around 30% compared to standard concrete and so significantly cutting material use. MASON SCIENTISTS EXPLORE HERBAL TREATMENT FOR COVID-19 Ramin Hakami, an associate professor in Mason’s School of Systems Biology and one of the authors of the study, said that the fact that RDS is a drinkable food supplement is helpful. “If it proves effective in vivo, it should be a treatment for COVID-19 that is easy to administer,” said Hakami, who also works at Mason’s NationalCenter
WHAT GUIDES HABITUAL SEEKING BEHAVIOR EXPLAINED Researchers have been investigating how the brain controls habitual seeking behaviors such as addiction. A recent study by Professor Sue-Hyun Lee from the Department of Bio and Brain Engineering revealed that a long-term value memory maintained in the ventral striatum in the brain is a neural basis of our habitual seeking behavior. IMMUNE GENETICS AND PREVIOUS COMMON COLD INFECTIONS MIGHT Protective immune memory–through B cells, which make antibodies, and/or T cells, which in the case of CD8 + T cells can kill virus-infected cells–can be induced by identical but also by related viruses. Related to the COVID-19 virus SARS-CoV-2, there are four common cold coronaviruses (CCCoVs) that together cause ~20% of common cold infections: OC43, HKU1, 229E, and NL63. LOW-WAGE EARNERS SPENT LESS TIME AT HOME DURING EARLY Low-wage earners spent less time at home during early pandemic lockdown. Researchers tracked data from millions of mobile phone users in major US metropolitan areas and compared the data to neighborhood demographic information. FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Fine-grained location data gleaned from mobile phones shows that people living in lessaffluent
IMMUNITY BOOST IN THE GUT Immunity boost in the gut. Varying immune response to vaccinations could be countered with microbiota-targeted interventions helping infants, older people and others to take full advantage of the benefits of effective vaccines, Australian and US experts say. A comprehensive review in Nature Reviews Immunology concludes that evidence is mounting WEARABLE ACCELEROMETER AND VIBRATOR ‘THIMBLE’ COULD REDUCE Researchers have developed a device using accelerometers and vibrators, similar to those found in mobile phones, that can be worn on the fingertips like a thimble to help reduce ‘postural sway’ and improve balance amongst seniors. Japanese researchers have developed and tested a prototype device — wearable on the fingertips— that
YALE-NUS COLLEGE SCIENTIST DISCOVERS HOW LEAFBIRDS MAKE A recent study by a team of researchers led by Dr Vinod Kumar Saranathan from the Division of Science at Yale-NUS College has discovered a complex, three-dimensional crystal called the single gyroid within feathers of the blue-winged leafbird. DR. MARIE-CLAUDE MORICE TO RECEIVE THE 2021 ANDREAS Dr. Marie-Claude Morice has shown great commitment to educating and training, with a special focus on young professionals. As part of her determination to help others learn and practice, she was involved in the creation of the PCR Clinical Research programme, which is open to all stakeholders of the clinical research process. GEOSCIENTISTS FIND THAT SHALLOW WASTEWATER INJECTION In a newly published paper, Virginia Tech geoscientists have found that shallow wastewater injection — not deep wastewater injections — can drive widespread deep earthquake activity in unconventional oil and gas production fields. CRACKING THE CODE OF THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS Cracking the code of the Dead Sea Scrolls. The Dead Sea Scrolls, discovered some seventy years ago, are famous for containing the oldest manuscripts of the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) and many hitherto unknown ancient Jewish texts. But the individual people behind the scrolls have eluded scientists, because the scribes areanonymous.
MASON SCIENTISTS EXPLORE HERBAL TREATMENT FOR COVID-19 Ramin Hakami, an associate professor in Mason’s School of Systems Biology and one of the authors of the study, said that the fact that RDS is a drinkable food supplement is helpful. “If it proves effective in vivo, it should be a treatment for COVID-19 that is easy to administer,” said Hakami, who also works at Mason’s NationalCenter
WHAT GUIDES HABITUAL SEEKING BEHAVIOR EXPLAINED Researchers have been investigating how the brain controls habitual seeking behaviors such as addiction. A recent study by Professor Sue-Hyun Lee from the Department of Bio and Brain Engineering revealed that a long-term value memory maintained in the ventral striatum in the brain is a neural basis of our habitual seeking behavior. IMMUNE GENETICS AND PREVIOUS COMMON COLD INFECTIONS MIGHT Protective immune memory–through B cells, which make antibodies, and/or T cells, which in the case of CD8 + T cells can kill virus-infected cells–can be induced by identical but also by related viruses. Related to the COVID-19 virus SARS-CoV-2, there are four common cold coronaviruses (CCCoVs) that together cause ~20% of common cold infections: OC43, HKU1, 229E, and NL63. LOW-WAGE EARNERS SPENT LESS TIME AT HOME DURING EARLY Low-wage earners spent less time at home during early pandemic lockdown. Researchers tracked data from millions of mobile phone users in major US metropolitan areas and compared the data to neighborhood demographic information. FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Fine-grained location data gleaned from mobile phones shows that people living in lessaffluent
IMMUNITY BOOST IN THE GUT Immunity boost in the gut. Varying immune response to vaccinations could be countered with microbiota-targeted interventions helping infants, older people and others to take full advantage of the benefits of effective vaccines, Australian and US experts say. A comprehensive review in Nature Reviews Immunology concludes that evidence is mounting WEARABLE ACCELEROMETER AND VIBRATOR ‘THIMBLE’ COULD REDUCE Researchers have developed a device using accelerometers and vibrators, similar to those found in mobile phones, that can be worn on the fingertips like a thimble to help reduce ‘postural sway’ and improve balance amongst seniors. Japanese researchers have developed and tested a prototype device — wearable on the fingertips— that
YALE-NUS COLLEGE SCIENTIST DISCOVERS HOW LEAFBIRDS MAKE A recent study by a team of researchers led by Dr Vinod Kumar Saranathan from the Division of Science at Yale-NUS College has discovered a complex, three-dimensional crystal called the single gyroid within feathers of the blue-winged leafbird. DR. MARIE-CLAUDE MORICE TO RECEIVE THE 2021 ANDREAS Dr. Marie-Claude Morice has shown great commitment to educating and training, with a special focus on young professionals. As part of her determination to help others learn and practice, she was involved in the creation of the PCR Clinical Research programme, which is open to all stakeholders of the clinical research process. GEOSCIENTISTS FIND THAT SHALLOW WASTEWATER INJECTION In a newly published paper, Virginia Tech geoscientists have found that shallow wastewater injection — not deep wastewater injections — can drive widespread deep earthquake activity in unconventional oil and gas production fields. CRACKING THE CODE OF THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS Cracking the code of the Dead Sea Scrolls. The Dead Sea Scrolls, discovered some seventy years ago, are famous for containing the oldest manuscripts of the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) and many hitherto unknown ancient Jewish texts. But the individual people behind the scrolls have eluded scientists, because the scribes areanonymous.
UNDERGROUND STORAGE OF CARBON CAPTURED DIRECTLY FROM AIR Underground storage of carbon captured directly from air — green and economical. by Bioengineer. June 4, 2021. in Chemistry. 0. New study shows that geological storage of low-purity carbon dioxide mixed with oxygen and nitrogen from direct air capture is an environmentally friendly and economically viable approach to remove carbon from the LOW-WAGE EARNERS SPENT LESS TIME AT HOME DURING EARLY Low-wage earners spent less time at home during early pandemic lockdown. Researchers tracked data from millions of mobile phone users in major US metropolitan areas and compared the data to neighborhood demographic information. FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Fine-grained location data gleaned from mobile phones shows that people living in lessaffluent
PITT’S ALEKSANDAR STEVANOVIC RECEIVES FULBRIGHT SPECIALIST 32 minutes ago · WASHINGTON, D.C. (June 10, 2021) The U.S. Department of State and the Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board announced that Aleksandar Stevanovic of the University of Pittsburgh received a Fulbright Specialist Program award. DIAGNOSES WITH DEEPFLASH 23 hours ago · Freely available for researchers. deepflash2 is still an insider’s tip for researchers involved in bio-image analysis. However, Matthias Griebel wants to use the excellent results in the data science competition as an opportunity to promote his tool.BIOENGINEER.ORG
3 hours ago · The artificial womb exists. In Tokyo, researchers have developed a technique called EUFI -- extrauterine fetal incubation. They have taken goat fetuses, threaded catheters through NCI-DESIGNATED CANCER CENTERS CALL FOR ACTION TO GET HPV Today, doctors and scientists across America at National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated cancer centers and other organizations issued a joint statement urging the nation’s health care systems, physicians, parents and children, and young adults to get the RESEARCHERS FIND ASSOCIATION BETWEEN FINANCIAL STRAIN DUE Philadelphia, May 6, 2021–Researchers have found an independent association between COVID-19-related income loss and financial strain and depression, according to the latest study from the COVID-19 Resilience Project, run by the Lifespan Brain Institute (LiBI) of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) and Penn Medicine. UN URGES INTENSE RESTORATION OF NATURE TO ADDRESS CLIMATE The UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration 2021-2030 is a rallying call for the protection and revival of ecosystems all around the world, for the benefit of people and nature. It aims to halt the degradation of ecosystems and restore them to achieve global goals. The United Nations General Assembly has proclaimed the UN Decade and it is led bythe
CHARTING THE EXPANSION HISTORY OF THE UNIVERSE WITH Charting the expansion history of the universe with supernovae. An international research team analyzed a database of more than 1000 supernova explosions and found that models for the expansion of the Universe best match the data when a new time dependent variation is introduced. If proven correct with future, higher-quality data fromthe
FIRST TEST OF TROPICAL SEAWEED FARMING FOR BIOFUELS As the site is the first of its kind in the region, authorizations were required from numerous agencies including the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the U.S. Coast Guard, and the Puerto Rico Department of Natural and Environmental Resources. MASON SCIENTISTS EXPLORE HERBAL TREATMENT FOR COVID-19 Could an over-the-counter health “shot” help fight COVID-19? George Mason University researchers think it just might. Cell and Bioscience recently highlighted research led by Yuntao Wu and Ramin Hakami in which they examined the potential anti-coronavirus activities of an over-the-counter drink called Respiratory Detox Shot (RDS).. RDS is a remedy containing nine herbal ingredients IMMUNE GENETICS AND PREVIOUS COMMON COLD INFECTIONS MIGHT Protective immune memory–through B cells, which make antibodies, and/or T cells, which in the case of CD8 + T cells can kill virus-infected cells–can be induced by identical but also by related viruses. Related to the COVID-19 virus SARS-CoV-2, there are four common cold coronaviruses (CCCoVs) that together cause ~20% of common cold infections: OC43, HKU1, 229E, and NL63. SARS-COV-2 SPIKE PROTEIN ALONE MAY CAUSE LUNG DAMAGE SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, is covered in tiny spike proteins. These proteins bind with receptors on our cells, starting a process that allows the virus to release its genetic material into ahealthy cell.
A HISTORY OF THE ANTI-VAXXER MOVEMENT Vaccines are a documented success story, one of the most successful public health interventions in history. Yet there is a vocal anti-vaccination movement, featuring celebrity activists (including actress Jenny McCarthy and British rapper M.I.A., who attracted attention for tweeting during the pandemic “If I have to choose the vaccine or chip I’m gonna choose death”) and the propagation WHAT GUIDES HABITUAL SEEKING BEHAVIOR EXPLAINED Researchers have been investigating how the brain controls habitual seeking behaviors such as addiction. A recent study by Professor Sue-Hyun Lee from the Department of Bio and Brain Engineering revealed that a long-term value memory maintained in the ventral striatum in the brain is a neural basis of our habitual seeking behavior. THE CLIMATE CRISIS, DEMOCRACY AND GOVERNANCE The book is an urgent call to governments to reform their way of deciding and implementing climate policies. It is also a call to the citizen, including youth, to be informed, engage and create a majority for enthusiastic and responsible action – a majority which can also recognise the concerns and fears of the minority. GEOSCIENTISTS FIND THAT SHALLOW WASTEWATER INJECTION In a newly published paper, Virginia Tech geoscientists have found that shallow wastewater injection — not deep wastewater injections — can drive widespread deep earthquake activity in unconventional oil and gas production fields. RELEASE OF DRUGS FROM A SUPRAMOLECULAR CAGE How can a highly effective drug be transported to the precise location in the body where it is needed? In the journal Angewandte Chemie, chemists at Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf (HHU) together with colleagues in Aachen present a solution using a CELL REPROGRAMMING COULD AID SPINAL CORD INJURY RECOVERY “Right now the state of really the entire field is: How do we make this a feasible approach?” he says. “How do we make this optimal in order to translate this into a clinic so it can lead to functional recovery following a spinal cord injury, brain injury, Alzheimer’s, and all kinds of neurodegenerative disease,” he says. STUDY DISCOVERS BAM15 AS A POTENTIAL TREATMENT FOR OBESITY BATON ROUGE, Louisiana – A new study offers the first evidence that a protein named BAM15 acts as an energy uncoupler and could be aneffective
MASON SCIENTISTS EXPLORE HERBAL TREATMENT FOR COVID-19 Could an over-the-counter health “shot” help fight COVID-19? George Mason University researchers think it just might. Cell and Bioscience recently highlighted research led by Yuntao Wu and Ramin Hakami in which they examined the potential anti-coronavirus activities of an over-the-counter drink called Respiratory Detox Shot (RDS).. RDS is a remedy containing nine herbal ingredients IMMUNE GENETICS AND PREVIOUS COMMON COLD INFECTIONS MIGHT Protective immune memory–through B cells, which make antibodies, and/or T cells, which in the case of CD8 + T cells can kill virus-infected cells–can be induced by identical but also by related viruses. Related to the COVID-19 virus SARS-CoV-2, there are four common cold coronaviruses (CCCoVs) that together cause ~20% of common cold infections: OC43, HKU1, 229E, and NL63. SARS-COV-2 SPIKE PROTEIN ALONE MAY CAUSE LUNG DAMAGE SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, is covered in tiny spike proteins. These proteins bind with receptors on our cells, starting a process that allows the virus to release its genetic material into ahealthy cell.
A HISTORY OF THE ANTI-VAXXER MOVEMENT Vaccines are a documented success story, one of the most successful public health interventions in history. Yet there is a vocal anti-vaccination movement, featuring celebrity activists (including actress Jenny McCarthy and British rapper M.I.A., who attracted attention for tweeting during the pandemic “If I have to choose the vaccine or chip I’m gonna choose death”) and the propagation WHAT GUIDES HABITUAL SEEKING BEHAVIOR EXPLAINED Researchers have been investigating how the brain controls habitual seeking behaviors such as addiction. A recent study by Professor Sue-Hyun Lee from the Department of Bio and Brain Engineering revealed that a long-term value memory maintained in the ventral striatum in the brain is a neural basis of our habitual seeking behavior. THE CLIMATE CRISIS, DEMOCRACY AND GOVERNANCE The book is an urgent call to governments to reform their way of deciding and implementing climate policies. It is also a call to the citizen, including youth, to be informed, engage and create a majority for enthusiastic and responsible action – a majority which can also recognise the concerns and fears of the minority. GEOSCIENTISTS FIND THAT SHALLOW WASTEWATER INJECTION In a newly published paper, Virginia Tech geoscientists have found that shallow wastewater injection — not deep wastewater injections — can drive widespread deep earthquake activity in unconventional oil and gas production fields. RELEASE OF DRUGS FROM A SUPRAMOLECULAR CAGE How can a highly effective drug be transported to the precise location in the body where it is needed? In the journal Angewandte Chemie, chemists at Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf (HHU) together with colleagues in Aachen present a solution using a CELL REPROGRAMMING COULD AID SPINAL CORD INJURY RECOVERY “Right now the state of really the entire field is: How do we make this a feasible approach?” he says. “How do we make this optimal in order to translate this into a clinic so it can lead to functional recovery following a spinal cord injury, brain injury, Alzheimer’s, and all kinds of neurodegenerative disease,” he says. STUDY DISCOVERS BAM15 AS A POTENTIAL TREATMENT FOR OBESITY BATON ROUGE, Louisiana – A new study offers the first evidence that a protein named BAM15 acts as an energy uncoupler and could be aneffective
LOW-WAGE EARNERS SPENT LESS TIME AT HOME DURING EARLY FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Fine-grained location data gleaned from mobile phones shows that people living in less affluent neighborhoods spent less time at home during the early lockdown and first several months of the coronavirus pandemic. CORALS’ NATURAL ‘SUNSCREEN’ MAY HELP THEM WEATHER CLIMATE 8 hours ago · Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute scientists are one step closer to understanding why some corals can weather climate change better than others, and the secret could be in a specific protein that produces a natural sunscreen. HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE JOURNAL CHEST®, JUNE 2021 1 day ago · Published monthly, the journal CHEST® features peer-reviewed, cutting-edge original research in chest medicine: Pulmonary, critical care, sleep medicine and related disciplines. Journal topics include asthma, chest infections, COPD, critical care, diffuse lung disease, education and clinical practice, pulmonology and cardiology, sleep and thoracic oncology. MAMMALS IN THE TIME OF DINOSAURS HELD EACH OTHER BACK A new study led by researchers from the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, University of Oxford and the University of Birmingham for Current Biology has used new methods to analyse the variability of mammal fossils, revealing extraordinary results: it was not dinosaurs, but possibly other mammals, that were the main competitors of modern mammals before and after the ENDANGERED BLUE WHALES RECORDED OFF SOUTHWEST COAST OF 3 hours ago · Research from the University of Washington shows that endangered blue whales are present and singing off the southwest coast of India. The results suggest that conservation measures should include this region, which is considering expanding tourism. DIAGNOSES WITH DEEPFLASH 7 hours ago · Freely available for researchers. deepflash2 is still an insider’s tip for researchers involved in bio-image analysis. However, Matthias Griebel wants to use the excellent results in the data science competition as an opportunity to promote his tool.BIOENGINEER.ORG
3 hours ago · The artificial womb exists. In Tokyo, researchers have developed a technique called EUFI -- extrauterine fetal incubation. They have taken goat fetuses, threaded catheters through INNOVATION PIONEERS SCORE WORLD FIRST FOR SUSTAINABLE Construction firm Nationwide Engineering will make a piece of history on Tuesday 25 May, as it completes the laying of the world’s first graphene concrete slab engineered for sustainability in a commercial setting – the new material is strengthened by around 30% compared to standard concrete and so significantly cutting material use. YALE-NUS COLLEGE SCIENTIST DISCOVERS HOW LEAFBIRDS MAKE A recent study by a team of researchers led by Dr Vinod Kumar Saranathan from the Division of Science at Yale-NUS College has discovered a complex, three-dimensional crystal called the single gyroid within feathers of the blue-winged leafbird. WEARABLE ACCELEROMETER AND VIBRATOR ‘THIMBLE’ COULD REDUCE The first step was a basic VLT system that incorporated a small device that fits over a fingertip of a subject–much like wearing a thimble–and delivers a* Scienmag
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Trauma relapse in a novel context may be preventableMarch 19, 2020
Chip-based devices improve practicality of quantum-securedcommunication
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Sea otters, opossums and the surprising ways pathogens move from landto sea
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Open sesame: Micro RNAs regulate plant poresMarch 19, 2020
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Biology
INVESTIGATION REVEALS £21 MILLION NHS BILL FOR AVOIDABLE DEFICIENCIES IN HEART FAILUREby Bioengineer
__ March 19, 2020
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Inadequate management of iron deficiency (ID) and iron deficiency anaemia (IDA) in heart failure (HF) costs the NHS an extra £21.5 million per year due to lengthier and costlier hospital stays,real-world...
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‘SUSHI PARASITES’ HAVE INCREASED 283-FOLD IN PAST 40 YEARS NEW RESEARCH SHOWS PROMISE TO TREAT FEMALE GROUP A STREPTOCOCCUS GENITAL TRACT INFECTIONS PUBLISHED CONSENSUS STATEMENT OFFERS UTI TREATMENT RECOMMENDATIONS AN ADVANCE IN MOLECULAR MOVIEMAKING SHOWS HOW MOLECULES RESPOND TO TWO PHOTONS OF LIGHTHIGHLIGHTS
Biology
TRAUMA RELAPSE IN A NOVEL CONTEXT MAY BE PREVENTABLE__ March 19, 2020
Chemistry
CHIP-BASED DEVICES IMPROVE PRACTICALITY OF QUANTUM-SECUREDCOMMUNICATION
__ March 19, 2020
Biology
SEA OTTERS, OPOSSUMS AND THE SURPRISING WAYS PATHOGENS MOVE FROM LANDTO SEA
__ March 19, 2020
OPEN SESAME: MICRO RNAS REGULATE PLANT PORESby Bioengineer
__ March 19, 2020
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Environmental changes trigger tiny RNA segments to modify plant pores involved in photosynthesis.Credit: DGIST Environmental cues prompt small RNA segments... BUILDING A BETTER COLOR VISION TEST FOR ANIMALSby Bioengineer
__ March 19, 2020
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UC biologists create a novel device to determine how well animals discern colorCredit: Andrew Higley/UC Creative Services Fiddler crabshave...
NEW TECHNOLOGY HELPS IN HUNT FOR NEW CANCER DRUG COMBINATIONSby Bioengineer
__ March 19, 2020
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Credit: Walter and Eliza Hall Institute, Australia A revolutionary new technology has been applied to reveal the inner workings of... TRAUMA RELAPSE IN A NOVEL CONTEXT MAY BE PREVENTABLE__ March 19, 2020
CHIP-BASED DEVICES IMPROVE PRACTICALITY OF QUANTUM-SECUREDCOMMUNICATION
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DRUG REVERSES SIGNS OF LIVER DISEASE IN PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV__ 51 shares
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HEPATITIS B: NEW THERAPEUTIC APPROACH MAY HELP TO CURE CHRONIC HEPATITIS B INFECTION__ 46 shares
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