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Life Technology™ Medical News

Breakthrough Study: Bcr::Abl1 Digital PCR for CML Remission

Auburn University Scientists Discover Key Alzheimer's Link

Study: Menthol in E-Cigarettes Risks Baby Development

Study: Recovery Potential of Comatose Patients After WLST

Innovative CAR-T Cell Therapy Shows Promise for Myeloma

Medical Journal Editors Address Research Misconduct

Ph.D. Student to Defend Thesis on Thyroid Cancer Prognosis

Call for New National Strategy to Support Eating Disorder Services

Experts Suggest Simultaneous Screening for Hypertension and Heart Arrhythmia

New Study Links Single Virus to Kawasaki Disease

Scientists Develop AAV Vector to Repair GJB2 Mutation

Genetic Testing Reveals Cancer Risk Variants

Study Reveals Breast-Conserving Therapy Impact on Breast Size

Dublin Parks: Entrances Show Highest Roundworm Contamination

Unveiling the Mystery: Gut Bacteria and Nutrition

Study: Sociodemographic Factors Predict Desire for More Children Among LGB Parents

Updated Guidelines on Psychiatric Genetics for Mental Health Pros

Study Reveals Drug Combinations' Impact on Alzheimer's Progression

Study Reveals Genes Influence Drug Side Effects

Study Reveals Causes of Early Embryo Development Failures

Preventing Hepatitis A Infections: Disinfect Surfaces Regularly

Study Links Sodium Intake to Obesity Risk

Covid-19 Study: Gun Violence Surpasses Car Accidents

Managing Cancer-Related Fatigue: Challenges and Solutions

Cyanide's Surprising Role in Cell Function

The Psychology of Perseverance in Competitive Athletes

Study Reveals Kidney Changes in Hypertension Patients

Leg Muscles and Tendons: Secrets of Efficient Movement

23andMe Files for Bankruptcy Amid Financial Woes

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to Cut 10K Jobs in Health Department

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Life Technology™ Science News

Experts Argue Banning Tech Access Fails Children

Emerging Potential: Metamaterials' Unique Properties

Superconductivity: Metal Conducts Electricity Perfectly

"University of Melbourne Professors Discover Earth's Water Depletion"

Sea Turtles Rehabilitated in Missouri Released in Jacksonville

Trump Administration's Tariffs Spark Global Trade Tensions

Optical Interferometry for Real-Time Earthquake Damage Monitoring

Nanostructured Copper Alloy Redefining High-Temperature Materials

Ancient Fossil "Sue": Perfectly Preserved Discovery

Nasa's Near-Earth Object Surveyor Enclosure Test

Devastating Impact of Palmer Amaranth on Rice Production

Study Reveals Drastic Decline in Anuran Habitats

Gravity's Role in Spherical Ball Movement on Inclined Plane

Maintaining Subalpine and Boreal Moorlands for Climate Stability

Pandemic Impact: Shortages of Teachers' Aides in Illinois

Optimal Strains & Strategies for Producing 235 Chemicals

Antarctic Ocean Cooling Defies Global Climate Models

Study Reveals Impact of Classroom Discussion on Writing

New Technology Uses Large Language Models to Predict Material Synthesizability

Free Laser Tattoo Removal Service for Justice-Impacted Adults

Researchers Measure Water Vapor Above Greenland Ice Sheet

New Study Reveals Wheat Immunity Breakthrough

Smart Farming Revolutionizes Agricultural Research

Harnessing Light for Advanced Tech: Photonic Circuits Revolutionizing Computational Tasks

Extracting Uranium Efficiently from Oceans for Sustainable Nuclear Power

New Geospatial Intelligence Methodology for Land Use Management

Cell Membrane Proteins: Secret Gateways Modify Cell Behavior

New Method for Studying Protein Degradation in Immune Cells

Renting Clothes: Niche Markets Key to Environmental Success

Study Reveals Impact of Habitat Degradation on Bird Migration

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Life Technology™ Technology News

Advancements in 6D Object Pose Estimation for Robotics

TikTok Unveils TikTok Shop for Direct Purchases

Ubisoft Forms New Subsidiary with Tencent for Popular Franchises

"Shanghai Jiao Tong University Introduces BAFT Autosave System"

Saarland University Professors Enhance VR Gaming with Thin Film

23andMe Files for Bankruptcy: Genetic Database Sale Sparks Privacy Concerns

Advanced Filter-Free Technology Enhances Public Spaces

Robots Enhancing Independence Amid Human Aging

Breakthrough in Control Engineering: Accurate Modeling for LPTV Systems

Study Reveals Impact of AI on Anxiety and Motivation

New Technology Mimics Skin's Complex Sensations

White House Leaders Discuss Yemen Attack on Signal

App Developed by MSU Researchers to Improve Emergency Wireless Calls

Graduate Student Transforms Beaverbrook Park in Northwest Atlanta

Robotic Dog Affection Boosts Leadership Dynamics

OpenAI's ChatGPT Sparks Studio Ghibli-Inspired Memes

Unveiling the Potential of Human as Ultimate Computational Tool

"Furby Rewired: Creepy AI Toy's Dystopian World Domination Plan"

Innovative E-Skins: Virtual Reality with Contact Lenses

23andMe Genetic Data Collection Raises Concerns

New Ai-Powered Framework Enhances Real-Time Analysis of Hand Manipulation

New Energy-Efficient Computer for Autonomous Vehicles

Francis Scott Key Bridge Collapse Prompts Global Infrastructure Safety Assessment

Scientists Develop Quadruped Robot Running Like Dog

Advancements in Solar Energy Technology

Roboticists Innovate Safe Navigation in Dynamic Environments

Maryland Engineering Innovations: Robotics, Automation, AI

Tesla Faces Turbulence Amid Trump Ties & EV Competition

Ad Revenue at X Set to Surge Amid Elon Musk Concerns

Provocative Sign at AI Conference Sparks Concern

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Tuesday, 23 July 2019

Finding one's way in the rainforest

Knowing which direction to go in order to reach food or home is important for many animal species, including humans. For human foragers who travel long distances every day for hunting and gathering, orientation skills are essential. Haneul Jang and her colleagues from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology set out to study how the Mbendjele BaYaka people in Republic of the Congo orient themselves in the dense rainforest. The researchers conducted more than 600 pointing tests with 54 Mbendjele BaYaka men, women and children aged between six and 76 years, in which the participants were asked to point to an out-of-sight target in more than 60 different rainforest locations (including the camp).

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/finding-ones-way-in-the-rainforest

Scientists map our underappreciated 'little brain'

Scientists at UC Berkeley and Western University in Canada have used brain imaging to map the cerebellum, a formerly underappreciated neural region that contains the vast majority of the brain's neurons, hence its Latin moniker "little brain."

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/scientists-map-our-underappreciated-little-brain

Reducing farm greenhouse gas emissions may plant the seed for a cooler planet

By adopting a few beneficial management practices, farms—and particularly dairy farms—can play a key role in reducing greenhouse gas emissions that are warming the planet, according to a team of researchers.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/reducing-farm-greenhouse-gas-emissions-may-plant-the-seed-for-a-cooler-planet

Archaeology student finds exceptionally rare fragment from Roman bottle

Peter Moore discovered a fragment from a 1,800 year-old glass fish at the National Trust's Chedworth Roman Villa in Gloucestershire.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/archaeology-student-finds-exceptionally-rare-fragment-from-roman-bottle

Modeling exoplanet atmospheres

All atoms and molecules emit distinctive spectral lines across the spectrum, the details of which depend on the internal structures of the species (for example, the vibration and rotation properties of molecules) and how they are excited by their environments. Measurements of the features' brightnesses, relative intensities, and shapes enable astronomers, at least in principle, to reconstruct most of the essential properties of these environments, including species abundances, temperatures, densities, and motions. But in order to be successful, scientists need to know quantitatively exactly how the temperature, density, and so forth, affect the excitation of each atom or molecule, and then how each species emits light in response. A collision between oxygen and nitrogen molecules, for example, will affect an oxygen molecule differently than its collision with hydrogen.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/modeling-exoplanet-atmospheres

ExoMars radio science instrument readied for Red Planet

An ambitious instrument for ESA's ExoMars 2020 mission has passed its testing in conditions resembling those on the Red Planet. It will now be transported to Russia for its acceptance review, followed by integration onto the Kazachok Surface Platform, scheduled for launch this time next year.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/exomars-radio-science-instrument-readied-for-red-planet

Microfluidics device helps diagnose sepsis in minutes

A novel sensor designed by MIT researchers could dramatically accelerate the process of diagnosing sepsis, a leading cause of death in U.S. hospitals that kills nearly 250,000 patients annually.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/microfluidics-device-helps-diagnose-sepsis-in-minutes

How stimulant treatment prevents serious outcomes of ADHD

An analysis of three previous studies of children and young adults with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) quantifies for the first time the extent to which stimulant treatment reduces the development of mood disorders, school problems, conduct disorders, substance use disorders and other problems. The study led by Massachusetts General Hospital investigators is being published online in the Journal of Adolescent Health.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/how-stimulant-treatment-prevents-serious-outcomes-of-adhd

Rise of Candida auris blamed on global warming

Global warming may have played a pivotal role in the emergence of Candida auris, according to a new study published in mBio, an open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology. C. auris, which is often multi-drug resistant and is a serious public health threat, may be the first example of a new fungal disease emerging from climate change.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/rise-of-candida-auris-blamed-on-global-warming

The properties of composites for constructing reliable trains

Composite materials are increasingly popular. One of the primary composite materials for modern structures is glass fiber reinforced plastic (GFRP), which is commonly used in aviation, modern transport and wind power plants. Scientists of South Ural State University have carried out extensive studies of ballistic properties of GFRP to improve the efficiency of its use.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/the-properties-of-composites-for-constructing-reliable-trains

How did Africa's grasslands get started?

Between 10 million and 6 million years ago, vegetation across much of the world underwent a transformation, as warmth-adapted grasses displaced previously dominant plants, shrubs and trees. The new grasses carried out the chemical reactions required for photosynthesis in a distinct new way. Scientists have labeled this new process the C4 pathway. In East Africa, the changeover coincided with the evolution of mammal lineages that we recognize today, including early human ancestors. Today, C4 plants comprise about one-quarter of the Earth's vegetation, from the Great Plains of North America to western China, Australia and much of sub-Saharan Africa.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/how-did-africas-grasslands-get-started

Scientists discover new chemistry that may help explain the origins of cellular life

Before life began on Earth, the environment likely contained a massive number of chemicals that reacted with each other more or less randomly, and it is unclear how the complexity of cells could have emerged from such chemical chaos. Now, a team led by Tony Z. Jia at the Tokyo Institute of Technology and Kuhan Chandru of the National University of Malaysia has shown that simple α-hydroxy acids, like glycolic and lactic acid, spontaneously polymerize and self-assemble into polyester microdroplets when dried at moderate temperatures followed by rehydration. This could be what happened along primitive beaches and river banks, or in drying puddles. These form a new type of cell-like compartment that can trap and concentrate biomolecules like nucleic acids and proteins. These droplets, unlike most modern cells, are able to merge and reform easily, and thus could have hosted versatile early genetic and metabolic systems potentially critical for the origins of life.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/scientists-discover-new-chemistry-that-may-help-explain-the-origins-of-cellular-life

Garlic on broccoli: A smelly approach to repel a major pest

Agricultural insect pests seek out familiar scents to find their plant hosts. However, they can also be repelled by odors from other plant species.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/garlic-on-broccoli-a-smelly-approach-to-repel-a-major-pest