Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
More Annotations
A complete backup of tvn24.pl/polska/premier-mateusz-morawiecki-o-zarobkach-pielegniarek-w-polsce-on-w-ogole-nie-zna-zycia-nie-r
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of www.livehindustan.com/lifestyle/story-happy-valentine-day-2020-today-is-valentines-day-share-valentine-wish
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of www.businesstoday.in/trending/box-office/love-aaj-kal-box-office-prediction-sara-ali-khan-kartik-aryan-roma
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of www.news.com.au/national/nsw-act/courts-law/anthony-sampieri-to-be-sentenced-over-kogarah-dance-studio-rape
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of www.nba.com/cavaliers/features/keys-hawks-200212
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of www.foxsports.com.vn/bong-da/bong-da-chau-au/131861/knvb-cup-doan-van-hau-du-bi-sc-heerenveen-bi-dung-chan-
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Favourite Annotations
A complete backup of https://curtistimes.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://youthministry360.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://traveller.ee
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://labbulletin.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://azjobconnection.gov
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://humancapitalonline.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://androidstar.ir
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://beinmediagroup.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://wrocah.ac.uk
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://milestone.it
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://aceinna.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of https://retireinbranson.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Text
have grown
NEWS ARTICLES
European and African scientists have launched an ambitious project to review the current literature about useful plants of tropical Africa. From 2003 to 2013, researchers will examine and update all written documentation about approximately 7,000 commodity plants in 47 African countries and islands from the Tropic of C. Flower of a Find. NOBEL LAUREATE RICHARD ERNST DIES AT 87 ABOVE: Richard Ernst, circa 1990 ETH ZURICH. R ichard Ernst, a chemist whose Nobel Prize–winning work brought practical applications to nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, died June 4 at the age of 87 in his hometown in Switzerland, ETH Zurich announced.Ernst’s work refining NMR technology set the stage for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), which has been a mainstay of JOURNAL NEWS, ARTICLES Amanda Heidt | Jan 27, 2021. The journal Ethology is the first to adopt the guidelines, aimed at clarifying experimental design and the potential biases within. Scientists, Publishers Debate Paychecks for Peer Reviewers. Shawna Williams | Nov 1, 2020. ANATOMY, PHYSIOLOGY NEWS, ARTICLES anatomy, physiology. High Stress Hormone Levels Halt Mouse Fur Growth. Jef Akst | Apr 1, 2021. Corticosterone interferes with signaling in the skin that normally activates hair follicle stem cells, possibly explaining the link between stress and hair loss. Making IHC as Simpleas ABC.
WHO UPDATES THE NOMENCLATURE OF SARS-COV-2 VARIANTS The naming of variants of SARS-CoV-2 has been a bit slapdash. Different databases that share the sequences of the virus have different nomenclature norms. For instance, the variant that emerged in the United Kingdom is called B.1.1.7 on the PangoSTEM NEWS, ARTICLES
STEM. Pandemic May “Roll Back” Women’s Gains in STEMM: NASEM Report. Catherine Offord | Mar 10, 2021. A National Academies study of COVID-19’s effect on academic researchers adds to the evidence that women’s careers have been particularly damaged by the global disruption. Opinion: Peer Review Study Compromises Response to GenderBias.
BOTANY NEWS, ARTICLES botany. Seventeen “Extinct” European Plant Species Found Alive. Katarina Zimmer | Mar 11, 2021. Plant species officially reported to be lost are in fact persevering in the wild, in seed banks or botanical gardens, or as other species now recognized to DOCTORS INVESTIGATE SEVERAL STILLBIRTHS AMONG MOMS WITH O’Donoghue’s group first reported placental damage linked with COVID-19 in May 2020, before the B.1.1.7 variant emerged. The researchers published a single case study of a 26-year-old woman who screened positive for SARS-CoV-2 at 36 weeks’ gestation. She felt unwell and reported reduced fetal movements. PAPER PROPOSING COVID-19, MAGNETISM LINK TO BE RETRACTED A peer-reviewed paper suggesting that COVID-19 is caused not by SARS-CoV-2 but by magnetic anomalies will be retracted, the study’s first author and an editor from the journal that published it tell The Scientist. The study, “Can Traditional Chinese Medicine provide insights into controlling the COVID-19 pandemic: Serpentinization-induced THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE The Scientist Staff | Apr 7, 2020. Find the latest updates in this one-stop resource, including efficacy data and side effects of approved shots, as well as progress on new candidates entering human studies. Few Car Crashes with Deer in Wisconsin, Perhaps Thanks to Wolves. Jef Akst | May 25, 2021. In areas where gray wolf populationshave grown
NEWS ARTICLES
European and African scientists have launched an ambitious project to review the current literature about useful plants of tropical Africa. From 2003 to 2013, researchers will examine and update all written documentation about approximately 7,000 commodity plants in 47 African countries and islands from the Tropic of C. Flower of a Find. NOBEL LAUREATE RICHARD ERNST DIES AT 87 ABOVE: Richard Ernst, circa 1990 ETH ZURICH. R ichard Ernst, a chemist whose Nobel Prize–winning work brought practical applications to nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, died June 4 at the age of 87 in his hometown in Switzerland, ETH Zurich announced.Ernst’s work refining NMR technology set the stage for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), which has been a mainstay of JOURNAL NEWS, ARTICLES Amanda Heidt | Jan 27, 2021. The journal Ethology is the first to adopt the guidelines, aimed at clarifying experimental design and the potential biases within. Scientists, Publishers Debate Paychecks for Peer Reviewers. Shawna Williams | Nov 1, 2020. ANATOMY, PHYSIOLOGY NEWS, ARTICLES anatomy, physiology. High Stress Hormone Levels Halt Mouse Fur Growth. Jef Akst | Apr 1, 2021. Corticosterone interferes with signaling in the skin that normally activates hair follicle stem cells, possibly explaining the link between stress and hair loss. Making IHC as Simpleas ABC.
WHO UPDATES THE NOMENCLATURE OF SARS-COV-2 VARIANTS The naming of variants of SARS-CoV-2 has been a bit slapdash. Different databases that share the sequences of the virus have different nomenclature norms. For instance, the variant that emerged in the United Kingdom is called B.1.1.7 on the PangoSTEM NEWS, ARTICLES
STEM. Pandemic May “Roll Back” Women’s Gains in STEMM: NASEM Report. Catherine Offord | Mar 10, 2021. A National Academies study of COVID-19’s effect on academic researchers adds to the evidence that women’s careers have been particularly damaged by the global disruption. Opinion: Peer Review Study Compromises Response to GenderBias.
BOTANY NEWS, ARTICLES botany. Seventeen “Extinct” European Plant Species Found Alive. Katarina Zimmer | Mar 11, 2021. Plant species officially reported to be lost are in fact persevering in the wild, in seed banks or botanical gardens, or as other species now recognized to DOCTORS INVESTIGATE SEVERAL STILLBIRTHS AMONG MOMS WITH O’Donoghue’s group first reported placental damage linked with COVID-19 in May 2020, before the B.1.1.7 variant emerged. The researchers published a single case study of a 26-year-old woman who screened positive for SARS-CoV-2 at 36 weeks’ gestation. She felt unwell and reported reduced fetal movements. PAPER PROPOSING COVID-19, MAGNETISM LINK TO BE RETRACTED A peer-reviewed paper suggesting that COVID-19 is caused not by SARS-CoV-2 but by magnetic anomalies will be retracted, the study’s first author and an editor from the journal that published it tell The Scientist. The study, “Can Traditional Chinese Medicine provide insights into controlling the COVID-19 pandemic: Serpentinization-inducedNEWS ARTICLES
European and African scientists have launched an ambitious project to review the current literature about useful plants of tropical Africa. From 2003 to 2013, researchers will examine and update all written documentation about approximately 7,000 commodity plants in 47 African countries and islands from the Tropic of C. Flower of a Find. THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE The Scientist Magazine Life Science News. After receiving an intraocular injection of the gene for a light-sensitive protein, a 58-year-old man diagnosed with the neurodegenerative eye disease retinitis pigmentosa was able to locate objects on a table usingengineered goggles.
ENTER OUR 2021 TOP 10 INNOVATIONS CONTEST 1 day ago · T he Scientist’s annual Top 10 Innovations competition showcases the most clever and useful advances in life science techniques and products. From disruptive sequencing technology to transformational tweaks on tried-and-true methods, each year’s winners represent the vanguard technologies poised to propel biomedical research forward. THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE The Scientist Magazine Life Science News. © 1986–2021 The Scientist.All rights reserved.STEM NEWS, ARTICLES
STEM. Pandemic May “Roll Back” Women’s Gains in STEMM: NASEM Report. Catherine Offord | Mar 10, 2021. A National Academies study of COVID-19’s effect on academic researchers adds to the evidence that women’s careers have been particularly damaged by the global disruption. Opinion: Peer Review Study Compromises Response to GenderBias.
BLOOD CLOT RISK FROM COVID-19 HIGHER THAN AFTER VACCINES A COVID-19 diagnosis is associated with a 39-in-1-million chance of developing a rare blood clot condition, compared with about a 4-in-1-million chance after receiving the Pfizer or Moderna mRNA vaccines against the disease, according to a data analysis led by researchers at the University of Oxford. The study, posted Wednesday(April 14), has
STEROID DRUGS ARE AN EFFECTIVE TREATMENT FOR SEVERE COVID D examethasone and other corticosteroid drugs are effective treatments for seriously ill COVID-19 patients, according to a meta-analysis of seven randomized controlled trials including a total of more than 1,700 participants. The analysis, conducted by a team at the World Health Organization (WHO) and published yesterday (September 2) inJAMA
COVID-19 VACCINE RESEARCHERS MINDFUL OF IMMUNE ENHANCEMENT It’s possible cellular immune enhancement is an artifact of the animal models or the experimental system. Of nearly 140 different COVID-19 vaccine candidates, 15 are already in human trials. “To date, I haven’t seen any clear evidence to support ADE or ERD, but it’s something you want to be aware of for sure,” Burton says. COVID-19 SYMPTOMS IN KIDS MOST OFTEN HEADACHE, FEVER: APP A symptom-tracking app indicates that children experience different COVID-19 symptoms than adults, The Guardian reports. While a persistent cough and a diminished sense of taste and smell are common among adults, the app has found, children with the virus most commonly experience symptoms such as headache, fatigue, and fever, amongothers.
THE PEOPLING OF SOUTH AMERICA Some studies point to an even earlier occupation of South America than that indicated by Dillehay’s most recent work at Monte Verde. For example, research on a site in Brazil yielded stone artifacts associated with charcoal remnants, suggesting the possibility of cooking fires, that researchers carbon dated to between 35,000 and 28,000 BP. And a site in Uruguay called Arroyo del Vizcaíno THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE Subjects. Careers Cell & Molecular Biology Clinical Research Coronavirus Disease & Medicine Ecology & Environment Evolution Genetics & Genomics History Immunology Microbiology Neuroscience Obituaries Paleontology Pharma & Biotech Policy Profiles Publishing Research Integrity Techniques. THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE The Scientist Staff | Apr 7, 2020. Find the latest updates in this one-stop resource, including efficacy data and side effects of approved shots, as well as progress on new candidates entering human studies. Few Car Crashes with Deer in Wisconsin, Perhaps Thanks to Wolves. Jef Akst | May 25, 2021. In areas where gray wolf populationshave grown
THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE The Scientist Magazine Life Science News. © 1986–2021 The Scientist.All rights reserved. ANATOMY, PHYSIOLOGY NEWS, ARTICLES anatomy, physiology. High Stress Hormone Levels Halt Mouse Fur Growth. Jef Akst | Apr 1, 2021. Corticosterone interferes with signaling in the skin that normally activates hair follicle stem cells, possibly explaining the link between stress and hair loss. Making IHC as Simpleas ABC.
WHO UPDATES THE NOMENCLATURE OF SARS-COV-2 VARIANTS The naming of variants of SARS-CoV-2 has been a bit slapdash. Different databases that share the sequences of the virus have different nomenclature norms. For instance, the variant that emerged in the United Kingdom is called B.1.1.7 on the Pango SCIENTISTS REVERSE ENGINEER MRNA SEQUENCE OF MODERNA L eftover drops in vials of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine allowed a group of researchers from Stanford University to determine the sequence of the mRNA for SARS-CoV-2’s spike protein that is used in the immunization, Motherboard reported March 29. The sequence has beenposted on
FRONTIERS REMOVES CONTROVERSIAL IVERMECTIN PAPER PRE The NIH, which last updated its advice on ivermectin in COVID-19 patients on February 11, 2021, states that most of the studies claiming to show benefits of ivermectin contain “incomplete information and significant methodological limitations, which make it difficult to exclude common causes of bias.”. The agency concludes that “there are insufficient data . . . to recommend either for PAIN RESEARCHER QUITS ACADEMIA, TAKES LAB HOME WITH HIM Jef Akst. May 1, 2021. ABOVE: Geoffrey Bove’s home lab is fitted with a rack for rat cages and an electrophysiology rig for recording from neurons in the muscles of anesthetized animals. COURTESY OF GEOFFREY BOVE. O n a video call from his home in Maine, Geoffrey Bove gives me a tour of his animal facility. In a small room off hisgarage, he
NIH CANCELS FUNDING FOR BAT CORONAVIRUS RESEARCH PROJECT The grant, first awarded in fiscal year 2014 and most recently renewed last year, went to EcoHealth Alliance, which describes itself as “a global environmental health nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting wildlife and public health from the emergence of disease.”The aims of the funded project included characterizing coronaviruses present in bat populations in southern China and ELISABETH BIK FACES LEGAL ACTION AFTER CRITICIZING STUDIES An independent researcher who pointed out possible issues in more than 60 studies by microbiologist Didier Raoult of Aix-Marseille Université faces a legal complaint alleging harassment and blackmail, The Guardian reported May 22. An open letter by THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE Subjects. Careers Cell & Molecular Biology Clinical Research Coronavirus Disease & Medicine Ecology & Environment Evolution Genetics & Genomics History Immunology Microbiology Neuroscience Obituaries Paleontology Pharma & Biotech Policy Profiles Publishing Research Integrity Techniques. THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE The Scientist Staff | Apr 7, 2020. Find the latest updates in this one-stop resource, including efficacy data and side effects of approved shots, as well as progress on new candidates entering human studies. Few Car Crashes with Deer in Wisconsin, Perhaps Thanks to Wolves. Jef Akst | May 25, 2021. In areas where gray wolf populationshave grown
THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE The Scientist Magazine Life Science News. © 1986–2021 The Scientist.All rights reserved. ANATOMY, PHYSIOLOGY NEWS, ARTICLES anatomy, physiology. High Stress Hormone Levels Halt Mouse Fur Growth. Jef Akst | Apr 1, 2021. Corticosterone interferes with signaling in the skin that normally activates hair follicle stem cells, possibly explaining the link between stress and hair loss. Making IHC as Simpleas ABC.
WHO UPDATES THE NOMENCLATURE OF SARS-COV-2 VARIANTS The naming of variants of SARS-CoV-2 has been a bit slapdash. Different databases that share the sequences of the virus have different nomenclature norms. For instance, the variant that emerged in the United Kingdom is called B.1.1.7 on the Pango SCIENTISTS REVERSE ENGINEER MRNA SEQUENCE OF MODERNA L eftover drops in vials of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine allowed a group of researchers from Stanford University to determine the sequence of the mRNA for SARS-CoV-2’s spike protein that is used in the immunization, Motherboard reported March 29. The sequence has beenposted on
ELISABETH BIK FACES LEGAL ACTION AFTER CRITICIZING STUDIES An independent researcher who pointed out possible issues in more than 60 studies by microbiologist Didier Raoult of Aix-Marseille Université faces a legal complaint alleging harassment and blackmail, The Guardian reported May 22. An open letter by PAIN RESEARCHER QUITS ACADEMIA, TAKES LAB HOME WITH HIM Jef Akst. May 1, 2021. ABOVE: Geoffrey Bove’s home lab is fitted with a rack for rat cages and an electrophysiology rig for recording from neurons in the muscles of anesthetized animals. COURTESY OF GEOFFREY BOVE. O n a video call from his home in Maine, Geoffrey Bove gives me a tour of his animal facility. In a small room off hisgarage, he
NIH CANCELS FUNDING FOR BAT CORONAVIRUS RESEARCH PROJECT The grant, first awarded in fiscal year 2014 and most recently renewed last year, went to EcoHealth Alliance, which describes itself as “a global environmental health nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting wildlife and public health from the emergence of disease.”The aims of the funded project included characterizing coronaviruses present in bat populations in southern China and FRONTIERS REMOVES CONTROVERSIAL IVERMECTIN PAPER PRE The NIH, which last updated its advice on ivermectin in COVID-19 patients on February 11, 2021, states that most of the studies claiming to show benefits of ivermectin contain “incomplete information and significant methodological limitations, which make it difficult to exclude common causes of bias.”. The agency concludes that “there are insufficient data . . . to recommend either for THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE The Scientist Staff | Apr 7, 2020. Find the latest updates in this one-stop resource, including efficacy data and side effects of approved shots, as well as progress on new candidates entering human studies. Few Car Crashes with Deer in Wisconsin, Perhaps Thanks to Wolves. Jef Akst | May 25, 2021. In areas where gray wolf populationshave grown
ENTER OUR 2021 TOP 10 INNOVATIONS CONTEST 23 hours ago · T he Scientist’s annual Top 10 Innovations competition showcases the most clever and useful advances in life science techniques and products. From disruptive sequencing technology to transformational tweaks on tried-and-true methods, each year’s winners represent the vanguard technologies poised to propel biomedical research forward. WHY TURKEY'S SEA OF MARMARA IS FULL OF MARINE SNOT 22 minutes ago · The Scientist: What exactly is sea snot? Alice Alldredge: Sea snot is a colloquial term for the mucus that is exuded by a lot of different phytoplankton species.It also can include the mucousy material that is secreted by bacteria, and it could even include cells that have broken open from, say, a virus attack or something, and released their protoplasm. A PROTIST HOSTS BOTH GREEN ALGAE AND PURPLE BACTERIA 2 hours ago · ABOVE: The ciliate Pseudoblepharisma tenue harbors both green algae and purple bacteria as symbionts. SEBASTIAN HESS. M ore than a century ago, a German schoolteacher named Alfred Kahl made a career change, becoming a student of protozoologist Eduard Reichenow. In 1926, when he was almost 50, Kahl published a paper in which he identified, classified, and described hundreds of new WOLBACHIA-INFECTED MOSQUITOES STYMIE DENGUE'S SPREAD 22 hours ago · Wolbachia is present in numerous arthropod species, where it manipulates reproduction in its hosts to ensure it becomes widespread in the population. Lab experiments indicated that once in mosquitos, Wolbachia competes for resources with the virus that causes dengue, preventing the virus from taking hold in the host. (This principle also holds with other viruses, such as Zika.) DOCTORS INVESTIGATE SEVERAL STILLBIRTHS AMONG MOMS WITH O’Donoghue’s group first reported placental damage linked with COVID-19 in May 2020, before the B.1.1.7 variant emerged. The researchers published a single case study of a 26-year-old woman who screened positive for SARS-CoV-2 at 36 weeks’ gestation. She felt unwell and reported reduced fetal movements. CHINESE OFFICIALS BLAME US ARMY FOR CORONAVIRUS The statements might simply be a distraction from criticisms about how China has handled the outbreak. Li Wenliang, a Chinese doctor who had tried to raise awareness about the virus in the early stages, was punished by the government and forced to say his concerns were an “illegal rumor.”Li contracted the virus himself while treating a patient in January and died on February 7. FRONTIERS PULLS SPECIAL COVID-19 ISSUE AFTER CONTENT The ivermectin paper was officially rejected on March 1. Frontiers removed the paper’s abstract from the website, and Fenter and colleagues began an audit of other papers in the issue. By then, one of Malone’s papers, a discussion of the possible mechanisms of famotidine against COVID-19, had been accepted. (It was published onMarch 23.)
BLOOD CLOT RISK FROM COVID-19 HIGHER THAN AFTER VACCINES A COVID-19 diagnosis is associated with a 39-in-1-million chance of developing a rare blood clot condition, compared with about a 4-in-1-million chance after receiving the Pfizer or Moderna mRNA vaccines against the disease, according to a data analysis led by researchers at the University of Oxford. The study, posted Wednesday(April 14), has
FRONTIERS REMOVES CONTROVERSIAL IVERMECTIN PAPER PRE The NIH, which last updated its advice on ivermectin in COVID-19 patients on February 11, 2021, states that most of the studies claiming to show benefits of ivermectin contain “incomplete information and significant methodological limitations, which make it difficult to exclude common causes of bias.”. The agency concludes that “there are insufficient data . . . to recommend either for THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE Subjects. Careers Cell & Molecular Biology Clinical Research Coronavirus Disease & Medicine Ecology & Environment Evolution Genetics & Genomics History Immunology Microbiology Neuroscience Obituaries Paleontology Pharma & Biotech Policy Profiles Publishing Research Integrity Techniques. THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE The Scientist Staff | Apr 7, 2020. Find the latest updates in this one-stop resource, including efficacy data and side effects of approved shots, as well as progress on new candidates entering human studies. Few Car Crashes with Deer in Wisconsin, Perhaps Thanks to Wolves. Jef Akst | May 25, 2021. In areas where gray wolf populationshave grown
THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE The Scientist Magazine Life Science News. © 1986–2021 The Scientist.All rights reserved. ANATOMY, PHYSIOLOGY NEWS, ARTICLES anatomy, physiology. High Stress Hormone Levels Halt Mouse Fur Growth. Jef Akst | Apr 1, 2021. Corticosterone interferes with signaling in the skin that normally activates hair follicle stem cells, possibly explaining the link between stress and hair loss. Making IHC as Simpleas ABC.
ELISABETH BIK FACES LEGAL ACTION AFTER CRITICIZING STUDIES An independent researcher who pointed out possible issues in more than 60 studies by microbiologist Didier Raoult of Aix-Marseille Université faces a legal complaint alleging harassment and blackmail, The Guardian reported May 22. An open letter by SCIENTISTS REVERSE ENGINEER MRNA SEQUENCE OF MODERNA L eftover drops in vials of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine allowed a group of researchers from Stanford University to determine the sequence of the mRNA for SARS-CoV-2’s spike protein that is used in the immunization, Motherboard reported March 29. The sequence has beenposted on
BLOOD CLOT RISK FROM COVID-19 HIGHER THAN AFTER VACCINES A COVID-19 diagnosis is associated with a 39-in-1-million chance of developing a rare blood clot condition, compared with about a 4-in-1-million chance after receiving the Pfizer or Moderna mRNA vaccines against the disease, according to a data analysis led by researchers at the University of Oxford. The study, posted Wednesday(April 14), has
NIH CANCELS FUNDING FOR BAT CORONAVIRUS RESEARCH PROJECT Days later, NIH notified EcoHealth Alliance that future funding for the project was canceled, and that it must immediately “stop spending the $369,819 remaining from its 2020 grant”—an unusual move generally reserved for cases of scientific misconduct or financial improprieties, according to Politico. In a statement aboutthe cancellation
FRONTIERS REMOVES CONTROVERSIAL IVERMECTIN PAPER PRE The NIH, which last updated its advice on ivermectin in COVID-19 patients on February 11, 2021, states that most of the studies claiming to show benefits of ivermectin contain “incomplete information and significant methodological limitations, which make it difficult to exclude common causes of bias.”. The agency concludes that “there are insufficient data . . . to recommend either for WILL DELAYING VACCINE DOSES CAUSE A CORONAVIRUS ESCAPE It’s impossible to predict whether that will occur because the clinical trials of COVID-19 vaccines do not provide data on how the efficacy of vaccines changes when a second dose is administered six weeks or later following the first dose. “Beyond that, it’s just really hard to say, it’s anybody’s guess,” says Rasmussen. THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE Subjects. Careers Cell & Molecular Biology Clinical Research Coronavirus Disease & Medicine Ecology & Environment Evolution Genetics & Genomics History Immunology Microbiology Neuroscience Obituaries Paleontology Pharma & Biotech Policy Profiles Publishing Research Integrity Techniques. THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE The Scientist Staff | Apr 7, 2020. Find the latest updates in this one-stop resource, including efficacy data and side effects of approved shots, as well as progress on new candidates entering human studies. Few Car Crashes with Deer in Wisconsin, Perhaps Thanks to Wolves. Jef Akst | May 25, 2021. In areas where gray wolf populationshave grown
THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE The Scientist Magazine Life Science News. © 1986–2021 The Scientist.All rights reserved. ANATOMY, PHYSIOLOGY NEWS, ARTICLES anatomy, physiology. High Stress Hormone Levels Halt Mouse Fur Growth. Jef Akst | Apr 1, 2021. Corticosterone interferes with signaling in the skin that normally activates hair follicle stem cells, possibly explaining the link between stress and hair loss. Making IHC as Simpleas ABC.
ELISABETH BIK FACES LEGAL ACTION AFTER CRITICIZING STUDIES An independent researcher who pointed out possible issues in more than 60 studies by microbiologist Didier Raoult of Aix-Marseille Université faces a legal complaint alleging harassment and blackmail, The Guardian reported May 22. An open letter by BLOOD CLOT RISK FROM COVID-19 HIGHER THAN AFTER VACCINES A COVID-19 diagnosis is associated with a 39-in-1-million chance of developing a rare blood clot condition, compared with about a 4-in-1-million chance after receiving the Pfizer or Moderna mRNA vaccines against the disease, according to a data analysis led by researchers at the University of Oxford. The study, posted Wednesday(April 14), has
SCIENTISTS REVERSE ENGINEER MRNA SEQUENCE OF MODERNA L eftover drops in vials of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine allowed a group of researchers from Stanford University to determine the sequence of the mRNA for SARS-CoV-2’s spike protein that is used in the immunization, Motherboard reported March 29. The sequence has beenposted on
NIH CANCELS FUNDING FOR BAT CORONAVIRUS RESEARCH PROJECT Days later, NIH notified EcoHealth Alliance that future funding for the project was canceled, and that it must immediately “stop spending the $369,819 remaining from its 2020 grant”—an unusual move generally reserved for cases of scientific misconduct or financial improprieties, according to Politico. In a statement aboutthe cancellation
FRONTIERS REMOVES CONTROVERSIAL IVERMECTIN PAPER PRE The NIH, which last updated its advice on ivermectin in COVID-19 patients on February 11, 2021, states that most of the studies claiming to show benefits of ivermectin contain “incomplete information and significant methodological limitations, which make it difficult to exclude common causes of bias.”. The agency concludes that “there are insufficient data . . . to recommend either for WILL DELAYING VACCINE DOSES CAUSE A CORONAVIRUS ESCAPE It’s impossible to predict whether that will occur because the clinical trials of COVID-19 vaccines do not provide data on how the efficacy of vaccines changes when a second dose is administered six weeks or later following the first dose. “Beyond that, it’s just really hard to say, it’s anybody’s guess,” says Rasmussen. THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE The Scientist Staff | Apr 7, 2020. Find the latest updates in this one-stop resource, including efficacy data and side effects of approved shots, as well as progress on new candidates entering human studies. Few Car Crashes with Deer in Wisconsin, Perhaps Thanks to Wolves. Jef Akst | May 25, 2021. In areas where gray wolf populationshave grown
HOW STEM CAN BE MORE INCLUSIVE OF SCIENTISTS WITH A ccording to a 2019 National Science Foundation report, only 10 percent of employed scientists and engineers self-identify as having at least one disability, despite that fact that almost 20 percent of all undergraduates self-report the same, with disabled undergraduates enrolling in STEM programs at roughly the same rate as those without.These statistics are likely an underestimate of the ROTIFERS BOUNCE BACK AFTER BEING FROZEN FOR 24,000 YEARS T ardigrades might be the most well-known quasi-indestructible animals, but their incredible resilience is not exclusive.In a June 7 paper in Current Biology, researchers from the Soil Cryology Lab at the Institute of Physicochemical and Biological Problems in Soil Science in Russia document the revival and reproduction of microscopic bdelloid rotifers from permafrost samples that, according RESEARCHER SANCTIONED BY PNAS FOR NOT SHARING ALGA 1 day ago · See “The Open Data Explosion” Hu and colleagues published their paper, which described the use of Chlamydomonas to study flagellar assembly, in 2018. The sanction was issued to Hu because the other corresponding author on the paper told the journal that the algal strain in question had been made in Hu’s lab, according to Retraction Watch.. The paper now carries an editorialexpression of
NEARLY COMPLETE HUMAN GENOME SEQUENCED The Human Genome Project was a tour de force that resulted in the first draft human genome sequence in 2000, but it wasn’t actually complete. The work left sequence gaps that genomicist Karen Miga of the University of California, Santa Cruz, calls the “final unknown” in remarks to STAT. In BIOHUB NETWORK AIMS TO ADVANCE SHARING OF PATHOGENS FOR L ast month, the World Health Organization announced that it had signed a memorandum of understanding with the Swiss government to base the first facility in its BioHub network at a lab in Spiez, Switzerland. The BioHub initiative is intended to facilitate the sharing of pathogen samples among laboratories around the world for research. During its pilot phase, it will only share SARS-CoV-2 OXYGEN LEVELS DROPPING IN US AND EUROPEAN LAKES: STUDY Nearly 400 lakes, primarily in the US and Europe, now have drastically lower oxygen saturation levels than they did in 1941, according to a study published June 2 in Nature. The authors report that as the climate continues to warm, the size of “dead zones,” low-oxygenareas of
INFOGRAPHIC: PATHWAYS FROM NOISE TO CARDIOVASCULAR DAMAGE E pidemiological data have long linked exposure to noise such as aircraft, railway, or traffic sounds to increased risks of cardiovascular disease. And in recent years, experimental work has been revealing the biological mechanisms underlying that link. Specifically, researchers are finding that noise activates the brain’s limbic system, which plays a role in emotional regulation,the
BIOGEN'S ALZHEIMER'S DRUG GETS FDA APPROVAL, MIXED REVIEWS The agency nevertheless went ahead with approval, but with strings attached. As STAT notes, the approval is based on aducanumab’s ability to clear amyloid plagues, and the companies will need to continue testing and demonstrate clinical benefit to keep the drug on the market. “In approving the drug on a conditional basis, the agency departed from decades of regulatory precedent,” STAT USING AUTOMATED 2D ELECTROPHORESIS FOR PROTEIN SEPARATION 2-dimensional electrophoresis (2-DE) is a powerful technique for separating proteins by isoelectric point and molecular weight. 2-DE offers fine-scale resolution of thousands of proteins and, unlike traditional SDS-PAGE, allows researchers to distinguish and characterize different protein isoforms and post-translational modifications (PTMs).* Subscribe
Menu
* Subscribe
* News & Opinion
* Magazine
* Current Issue
* Archives
* Features
* Infographics
* Top 10 Innovations* Subjects
* Cancer Biology
* Careers
* Cell & Molecular Biology* Clinical Research
* Developmental Biology * Disease & Medicine * Ecology & Environment* Evolution
* Genetics & Genomics* History
* Immunology
* Microbiology
* Neuroscience
* Obituaries
* Paleontology
* Pharma & Biotech
* Policy
* Profile
* Publishing
* Research Integrity* Techniques
* Multimedia
* Infographics
* _Sponsored Videos_* Image of the Day
* _Sponsored Webinars_* Crossword Puzzles
* _Sponsored Quizzes_* Videos
* _Sponsored eBooks_* _TechEdge_
* _Sponsored Infographics_* Careers
* Articles
* Job Listings
* Salary Survey
* News & Opinion
* Magazine
* Current Issue
* Archives
* Features
* Infographics
* Top 10 Innovations* Subjects
* Cancer Biology
* Careers
* Cell & Molecular Biology* Clinical Research
* Developmental Biology * Disease & Medicine * Ecology & Environment* Evolution
* Genetics & Genomics* History
* Immunology
* Microbiology
* Neuroscience
* Obituaries
* Paleontology
* Pharma & Biotech
* Policy
* Profile
* Publishing
* Research Integrity* Techniques
* Multimedia
* Infographics
* _Sponsored Videos_* Image of the Day
* _Sponsored Webinars_* Crossword Puzzles
* _Sponsored Quizzes_* Videos
* _Sponsored eBooks_* _TechEdge_
* _Sponsored Infographics_* Careers
* Articles
* Job Listings
* Salary Survey
* Subscribe
\n \n \n \n \n \n ","startDate":"2019-10-07 12:00:11","endDate":"2019-10-09 12:00:11","orderNo":1,"siteNo":1,"createdDate":"2019-10-04 18:56:35","lastUpdated":"2019-10-04 18:56:35","isDeleted":false,"targetURL":"https://www.the-scientist.com/notebook/when-humans-hear-music--monkeys-may-hear-noise-66481","summary":"The auditory cortices of humans and rhesus monkeys respond very differently to harmonic tones. "},{"slideNo":943,"name":"Arsenic-Resistant Nematodes Found in Mono Lake","label":"","content":"\n \n \n \n \n \n ","startDate":"2019-10-07 12:00:38","endDate":"2019-10-09 12:00:38","orderNo":2,"siteNo":1,"createdDate":"2019-10-04 18:55:06","lastUpdated":"2019-10-04 18:55:06","isDeleted":false,"targetURL":"https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/arsenic-resistant-nematodes-found-in-mono-lake-66493","summary":"Researchers recovered eight species from the salty, alkaline environment."},{"slideNo":946,"name":"Caught on Camera","label":"","content":"\n \n \n \n \n \n ","startDate":"2019-10-07 12:00:43","endDate":"2019-10-09 12:00:43","orderNo":3,"siteNo":1,"createdDate":"2019-10-04 18:57:18","lastUpdated":"2019-10-04 18:57:18","isDeleted":false,"targetURL":"https://www.the-scientist.com/freeze-frame/caught-on-camera-66466","summary":"Selected Images of the Day from the-scientist.com"},{"slideNo":944,"name":"Replication Refutes Study Linking Neuroimaging to Genetics","label":"","content":"\n \n \n \n \n \n ","startDate":"2019-10-07 12:00:25","endDate":"2019-10-09 12:00:25","orderNo":4,"siteNo":1,"createdDate":"2019-10-04 18:55:51","lastUpdated":"2019-10-04 18:55:51","isDeleted":false,"targetURL":"https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/replication-refutes-study-linking-neuroimaging-to-genetics-66503","summary":"The original experiment found brain activity as measured by fMRI was tied to particular genetic variants."},{"slideNo":947,"name":"Remote Control of Peripheral Nerves","label":"","content":"\n \n \n \n \n \n ","startDate":"2019-10-07 12:00:55","endDate":"2019-10-09 12:00:55","orderNo":5,"siteNo":1,"createdDate":"2019-10-04 18:58:22","lastUpdated":"2019-10-04 18:58:22","isDeleted":false,"targetURL":"https://www.the-scientist.com/modus-operandi/remote-control-of-peripheral-nerves-66461","summary":"An implantable wireless device with microfluidic and optical components allows manipulation of individual nerve fibers in mice’sextremities."}]">
Remote Control of Peripheral Nerves An implantable wireless device with microfluidic and optical components allows manipulation of individual nerve fibers in mice’sextremities.
Remote Control of Peripheral Nerves Remote Control of Peripheral Nerves An implantable wireless device with microfluidic and optical components allows manipulation of individual nerve fibers in mice’sextremities.
An implantable wireless device with microfluidic and optical components allows manipulation of individual nerve fibers in mice’sextremities.
When Humans Hear Music, Monkeys May Hear Noise The auditory cortices of humans and rhesus monkeys respond very differently to harmonic tones. When Humans Hear Music, Monkeys May Hear Noise When Humans Hear Music, Monkeys May Hear Noise The auditory cortices of humans and rhesus monkeys respond very differently to harmonic tones. The auditory cortices of humans and rhesus monkeys respond very differently to harmonic tones. Arsenic-Resistant Nematodes Found in Mono Lake Researchers recovered eight species from the salty, alkalineenvironment.
Arsenic-Resistant Nematodes Found in Mono Lake Arsenic-Resistant Nematodes Found in Mono Lake Researchers recovered eight species from the salty, alkalineenvironment.
Researchers recovered eight species from the salty, alkalineenvironment.
Caught on Camera
Selected Images of the Day from the-scientist.comCaught on Camera
Caught on Camera
Selected Images of the Day from the-scientist.com Selected Images of the Day from the-scientist.com Replication Refutes Study Linking Neuroimaging to Genetics The original experiment found brain activity as measured by fMRI was tied to particular genetic variants. Replication Refutes Study Linking Neuroimaging to Genetics Replication Refutes Study Linking Neuroimaging to Genetics The original experiment found brain activity as measured by fMRI was tied to particular genetic variants. The original experiment found brain activity as measured by fMRI was tied to particular genetic variants. Remote Control of Peripheral Nerves An implantable wireless device with microfluidic and optical components allows manipulation of individual nerve fibers in mice’sextremities.
Remote Control of Peripheral Nerves Remote Control of Peripheral Nerves An implantable wireless device with microfluidic and optical components allows manipulation of individual nerve fibers in mice’sextremities.
An implantable wireless device with microfluidic and optical components allows manipulation of individual nerve fibers in mice’sextremities.
When Humans Hear Music, Monkeys May Hear Noise The auditory cortices of humans and rhesus monkeys respond very differently to harmonic tones. When Humans Hear Music, Monkeys May Hear Noise When Humans Hear Music, Monkeys May Hear Noise The auditory cortices of humans and rhesus monkeys respond very differently to harmonic tones. The auditory cortices of humans and rhesus monkeys respond very differently to harmonic tones. Arsenic-Resistant Nematodes Found in Mono Lake Researchers recovered eight species from the salty, alkalineenvironment.
Arsenic-Resistant Nematodes Found in Mono Lake Arsenic-Resistant Nematodes Found in Mono Lake Researchers recovered eight species from the salty, alkalineenvironment.
Researchers recovered eight species from the salty, alkalineenvironment.
Caught on Camera
Selected Images of the Day from the-scientist.comCaught on Camera
Caught on Camera
Selected Images of the Day from the-scientist.com Selected Images of the Day from the-scientist.com Replication Refutes Study Linking Neuroimaging to Genetics The original experiment found brain activity as measured by fMRI was tied to particular genetic variants. Replication Refutes Study Linking Neuroimaging to Genetics Replication Refutes Study Linking Neuroimaging to Genetics The original experiment found brain activity as measured by fMRI was tied to particular genetic variants. The original experiment found brain activity as measured by fMRI was tied to particular genetic variants. Remote Control of Peripheral Nerves An implantable wireless device with microfluidic and optical components allows manipulation of individual nerve fibers in mice’sextremities.
Remote Control of Peripheral Nerves Remote Control of Peripheral Nerves An implantable wireless device with microfluidic and optical components allows manipulation of individual nerve fibers in mice’sextremities.
An implantable wireless device with microfluidic and optical components allows manipulation of individual nerve fibers in mice’sextremities.
* 1
* 2
* 3
* 4
* 5
Latest
Cells’ Oxygen Sensing Discovery Earns Nobel Prize EMILY MAKOWSKI | OCT 7, 2019 For the Physiology or Medicine award, Peter Ratcliffe, William Kaelin, and Gregg Semenza are credited with figuring out molecular and genetic responses to oxygen levels. Glycans May Bind to RNA, Initial Findings Suggest EMILY MAKOWSKI | OCT 7, 2019 This is the first time sugars have been found connected to RNA molecules, suggesting a new role for RNA. Microscopy and Imaging Leader Shinya Inoué Dies JEF AKST | OCT 7, 2019 The long-time Marine Biological Laboratory scientist was known for using his own hand-built microscopes to image the dynamics of livecells.
Brain-Controlled Exoskeleton Enables Paralyzed Patient to Walk EMILY MAKOWSKI | OCT 4, 2019 The machine cannot be used outside of the lab yet, but the results arepromising.
Researchers Implant Memories in Zebra Finch Brains ABBY OLENA | OCT 3, 2019 Juvenile birds learn the length of the sounds in a song from a false memory introduced via optogenetics, instead of from real interactionswith a tutor bird.
US Government Considers Collecting Detained Immigrants’ DNA ASHLEY YEAGER | OCT 3, 2019 The Department of Justice plans to require cheek swabs at the border, with the data then entered in a national criminal database. When Is an Endosymbiont an Organelle? RUTH WILLIAMS | OCT 3, 2019 The finding that a bacterium within a bacterium within an animal cell cooperates with the host on a biosynthetic pathway suggests the endosymbiont is, practically speaking, an organelle. What Your DNA Can’t Tell You DIANA KWON | OCT 2, 2019 Companies are selling reports about a wide range of physical, cognitive, and behavioral traits to consumers based on their genomic data, but such tests have a number of limitations. Trump Administration Drops Two Advisory Boards on Environment EMILY MAKOWSKI | OCT 2, 2019 Two panels devoted to reviewing/recommending policy on marine protected areas and invasive species were eliminated. Opinion: Can Prizes Help Women Shatter Science’s Glass Ceiling? MARJA MAKAROW | OCT 2, 2019 As we await the announcement of the 2019 Nobel Prize winners, it’s time to question why female scientists still lag behind their malecolleagues.
Page 1 of 1124
123456789
Trending
Is It Time to Rethink Parkinson’s Pathology? Is It Time to Rethink Parkinson’s Pathology? Shuping Wang, Public Health Whistleblower, Dies Shuping Wang, Public Health Whistleblower, Dies Researchers Implant Memories in Zebra Finch Brains Researchers Implant Memories in Zebra Finch Brains Air Pollution May Damage People’s Brains Air Pollution May Damage People’s BrainsMultimedia
INFOGRAPHIC: HOW NETS WORK IMAGE OF THE DAY: CORAL DISEASEOCTOBER 2019
Brain Fog
Air Pollution May Cause Cognitive DeclineSUBSCRIBE TODAY
Air Pollution May Damage People’s Brains Air Pollution May Damage People’s Brains Contaminants in the atmosphere appear to have harmful effects on neurodevelopment and cognitive function. Is It Time to Rethink Parkinson’s Pathology? Is It Time to Rethink Parkinson’s Pathology? New evidence points to a waste-clearing problem in patients’ cells, rather than the accumulation of protein tangles, as the root cause of the neurodegenerative disease. Why Immune Cells Extrude Webs of DNA and Protein Why Immune Cells Extrude Webs of DNA and Protein Extracellular webs expelled by neutrophils trap invading pathogens, but these newly discovered structures also have ties to autoimmunityand cancer.
Sponsored Content
LABQUIZZES
WEBINARS
VIDEOS
INFOGRAPHICS
EBOOKS
TECHEDGE
RayBiotech: Cancer Arrays RayBiotech: Cancer Arrays What does it take to understand cancer? And how do you probe the molecular landscape of your experimental model? Mouse Models for Disease Research Mouse Models for Disease Research Genetically modified mice have revolutionized the biological sciences, helping to uncover countless mechanisms of physiological and pathological function, as well as being instrumental for testing potential intervention possibilities. Understanding how mouse models work goes a long way in helping each scientist find a model that can help them answer their own research questions. Rare Genetic Disease: Models and Mechanisms Rare Genetic Disease: Models and Mechanisms The Scientist is bringing together a panel of experts to share their research, and to highlight the challenges and advantages in utilizing specific model organisms. Mining the Epigenome: Microarrays for DNA Methylation Mining the Epigenome: Microarrays for DNA Methylation Learn about how microarray technology offers a high-throughput, cost-effective route to examining DNA methylation with this poster from The Scientist's Creative Services Division and Brooks LifeSciences!
Marketplace
SPONSORED PRODUCT UPDATES Understanding T-cell polyfunctionality: How single cell proteomics data drive CAR-T cell therapy research and development Understanding T-cell polyfunctionality: How single cell proteomics data drive CAR-T cell therapy research and development Vladimir Senyukov, Director of BioAnalytical Development at Precision Biosciences, talks about investigating T-cell cytokine production using single cell proteomics in order to unlock the therapeutic potential of allogenic CAR-T cells. Zymo Research launches new RNA-Seq library prep kit Zymo Research launches new RNA-Seq library prep kit Zymo Research is excited to announce the fastest and easiest total RNA-Seq library prep kit that allows users to go from sample to sequencer in a single day! IsoPlexis' New Software & Applications Pave the Way for Novel Functional Understanding of Single-Cell Immune Activation and Further Application Expansion IsoPlexis' New Software & Applications Pave the Way for Novel Functional Understanding of Single-Cell Immune Activation and Further Application Expansion IsoPlexis expands visualizations for single-cell mapping and targeting in their new IsoSpeak software suite, as well as new Chip applicationson the IsoLight
Touchscreen Motorized Repeating Pipette from BrandTech® Scientific Touchscreen Motorized Repeating Pipette from BrandTech® Scientific The BRAND® HandyStep® touch motorized repeating pipette features a touchscreen interface for intuitive operation.Stay Connected with
E-NEWSLETTER SIGN-UP Subscribe to receive _The Scientist_ Daily E-Newsletter in your inbox!FACEBOOK PAGES
* The Scientist
* The Scientist Careers * The Genome Scientist * The EnviroScientist * The Cell Scientist * The Micro Scientist * The Cancer Scientist * The NeuroScientist* About & Contact
* Privacy Policy
* Job Listings
* Subscribe
* Advertise
Now part of the LabX Media Group:Lab Manager Magazine|LabX
|LabWrench
1986–2019 _The Scientist_. All rights reserved. We’ve updated our Privacy Policy to make it clearer how we use your personal data. Please read our Cookie Policy to learn how we use cookies to provide you with a better experience.I UNDERSTANDDetails
Copyright © 2024 ArchiveBay.com. All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | DMCA | 2021 | Feedback | Advertising | RSS 2.0