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Life Technology™ Medical News

Mental Health Hack for Teenagers: University Study Findings

Psychedelic Mushroom Compound Shows Antiaging Potential

Health System & Congregations Reduce Loneliness & ER Visits

Rare Hereditary Metabolic Disease Study Advances Knowledge

Novel LncRNA Network in Colorectal Cancer Progression

Balancing Excitatory and Inhibitory Signals in the Brain

Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1: Global Impact and Oral Symptoms

Biomarkers Panel for Early Alzheimer's Detection

Fungal Molecule Reprograms Lung Immune Cells

Rapid At-Home Tests: COVID-19 vs. Spring Allergies

Texas Measles Outbreak Ends in Gaines County

Israeli Study Reveals Home's Vital Role in Health

Study on Vector-Borne Chagas Transmission in Florida

Navigating Head and Neck Cancer Conversations

Global Collaboration Key in Fighting Antimicrobial Resistance

New Study: Multi-Contaminant Water Treatment Prevents 50K+ Cancer Cases

Study Links NRTIs to Higher Glaucoma Risk

Shoulder Instabilities: Challenges in Diagnosis

Longevity Linked to Cognitive Decline: Boost Memory with Brain Exercises

Importance of Implantable Bioelectronics in Neuroscience

Updated Guidelines for Managing WHO Grade 4 Glioma

Scientists Uncover Promising Drug Candidates for Tissue Stress Conditions

Boosting Skin-to-Skin Contact: Newborn Care Training Success

First Malaria Treatment for Newborns Approved by Swiss Health Regulators

Norwegian Policy Strains Family Caregivers

Human Stem Cells Prompted to Turn into Bone Cells by Squeezing

Study Reveals 1 in 10 Workers in Their 30s Use Drugs at Work

Prototype Imaging System Enhances Gastrointestinal Cancer Detection

Breakthrough Discovery: Adult Stem Cells Found in Non-Human Primate

New AI Diagnostic Approach for Neurodivergent Disorders

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Life Technology™ Science News

Deciphering Sun's Secrets: Space Solar Eclipses

Research Reveals Key Role of Groundwater in Lake Water Supply

U.K. Satellite Mission Enhances Space Weather Observation

Rare Meteorite Discovery in Africa Reveals Lunar Secrets

Astronomers Seek Secrets of Cosmic Dawn

Young, Female, Well-Educated in Rich EU City? High Life Satisfaction

South Korea Bucks Global Trend: Low-Income Households Thrive

Does Free Will Exist? Interdisciplinary Analysis by Eric Kerckhofs

Melting Glaciers Reshaping Landscapes: Satellite Data Insights

New Method Detects Radioactivity: Cryogenic Decay Energy Spectrometry

Researchers Explore Two-Dimensional Materials for Sustainable Energy

Ribosomes Unveil New Protein Backbone Skill

High Demand for Magnetic Materials in Energy Storage & Robotics

Photosystem II: Vital Role in Oxygen Production

False Claims Spread Amid Texas Flash Flood Tragedy

Climate Change Accelerates Heat Wave Lengthening

Study Shows Surge in Atmospheric Methane Not from Tropical Wetlands

Debunking Myths: Raccoons in Germany

New Method for Building Microscopic Robots

New Selective Biocatalyst Produces Useful Epoxides

UC San Diego Scholar Amy Eguchi on AI's Impact on Education

Impact of Heat Stress on Broiler Chicken Meat Quality

Scientists Discover Luminescent Complex in Organic Molecules

University of Adelaide's Optical Quantum Clocks Outperform GPS

Study Reveals Sex-Specific Genetic Loci in Cichlid Fish

Catching Invasive Nocturnal Fish: A Guide

Study Reveals Restoring Seabird Populations Benefits Coral Reefs

Spanish Firefighters Fight Massive Forest Fire

Wildfire Forces Marseille Airport Closure

Peter Jackson's Rare Moa Bones Collection Sparks Biotech Partnership

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Life Technology™ Technology News

Eco-friendly method enhances perovskite solar cell quality using camphor-based additive

Camphor-Derived Substance Boosts Perovskite Solar Cells

Can ChatGPT actually 'see' red? New study results are nuanced

How ChatGPT Analyzes Text for User Responses

Novel system turns quantum bottlenecks into breakthroughs

Quantum Computers: Overcoming Single Program Limitation

Indie Rock Band Revealed as AI Music Project

'We're AI,' popular indie rock band admits

Researcher Maxim Van De Wynckel Defends Ph.D. on Indoor Positioning Systems

Interoperable indoor positioning systems can determine locations of people and objects within buildings

Scientists unlock key manufacturing challenge for next-generation optical chips

University of Strathclyde Unveils Breakthrough in Light-Control Tech

Wood-based material can improve safety and lifespan of lithium-ion batteries

Wood-Based Solution Enhances Lithium-Ion Battery Safety

ANU Scientists Develop Eco-Friendly Brine Resource Extraction

Thermodiffusion method offers greener extraction of valuable materials from brine deposits

Metal 3D Printing Boosts Strength with Cellular Structures

Study quantifies how cellular structures enhance strength in 3D-printed metals

Impact of Weather on CO2 Capture Efficiency in Germany

Direct air capture—A lever for climate action, but not cost-effective everywhere

"Governments Pass New Cybersecurity Laws Amid Record Investments"

Your data privacy is slipping away. Here's why, and what you can do about it

Test-time training could lead to LLMs that are better at complex reasoning

Challenges Faced by Large Language Models

AI personal assistants could buy your groceries and book your plane tickets

Tech Industry Introduces Digital Personal Shopping Assistants

What makes a good AI prompt? Here are 4 expert tips

Working Harmoniously with AI: A Key to Success

AI-Generated Video Revolutionizes Creative Industry

AI video becomes more convincing, rattling creative industry

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Friday, 20 September 2019

Sheet roofs: Puerto Rico reels 2 years after Hurricane Maria

Sixto Marrero shivers every time the skies open in Puerto Rico.

Zuckerberg meets Trump, senators; nixes breaking up Facebook

Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg met Thursday with US President Donald Trump and members of Congress on a political reconnaissance mission to Washington, where he rejected calls to break up the world's biggest social network.

GM's offer to UAW would add lower-paying jobs

A General Motors offer to invest $7 billion in U.S. facilities includes $2 billion from joint ventures and suppliers for new plants that would pay workers less than the top union wage, a person briefed on the matter said.

US fines Hyundai $47 mn over dirty diesel engines

South Korean shipbuilding and industrial firm Hyundai Heavy Industries will pay a $47 million fine for illegally importing and selling dirty diesel engines in violation of American environmental rules, US authorities announced Thursday.

Google green energy buys boost 'carbon-free' portfolio

Google on Thursday announced a record-high boost to its green electricity purchases, saying the deals will spur construction of millions of solar panels and hundreds of wind turbines.

FAA chief meets Boeing officials, tries out Max simulator

The chief of the Federal Aviation Administration tested the Boeing 737 Max in a flight simulator Thursday, but the FAA declined to say how its updated anti-stall software performed.

Scientists prepare for year-long expedition to Arctic center

Researchers from more than a dozen nations prepared Friday to launch the biggest and most complex expedition ever attempted in the central Arctic—a yearlong journey through the ice they hope will improve the scientific models that underpin our understanding of climate change.

Introducing 'mesh,' a memory-saving plug-in that could boost phone and computer performance

Applications like web browsers or smartphone apps often use a lot of memory. To address this, a research group co-led by Emery Berger, a professor of computer science at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, has developed a system they call Mesh that can automatically reduce such memory demands. Berger is presenting this work today at Cppcon, the C++ conference in Aurora, Colorado.

Where to park your car, according to math

Just as mathematics reveals the motions of the stars and the rhythms of nature, it can also shed light on the more mundane decisions of everyday life. Where to park your car, for example, is the subject of a new look at a classic optimization problem by physicists Paul Krapivsky (Boston University) and Sidney Redner (Santa Fe Institute) published in this week's Journal of Statistical Mechanics.

The next agricultural revolution is here

As a growing population and climate change threaten food security, researchers around the world are working to overcome the challenges that threaten the dietary needs of humans and livestock. A pair of scientists is now making the case that the knowledge and tools exist to facilitate the next agricultural revolution we so desperately need.

New study questions value of fluoride varnish

Fluoride varnish has become a popular anti-cavity treatment for children, and it isn't hard to see why. It's relatively easy to apply, and not just for dentists or dental hygienists. Pediatricians can do it as well, with minimal instruction. The sticky varnish goes on with a brush and then dries in a few hours. There's little risk of children swallowing the fluoride, as they might with other topical treatments such as gels.

Smoking abstinence has little impact on the motivation for food

It's sometimes thought that smokers who can't light up are likely to reach for food in lieu of cigarettes. But new research from the University at Buffalo suggests that smoking abstinence doesn't greatly affect the motivation for food.

Pathway found for treatment-resistant lung cancer

A big way chemotherapy works is by prompting cancer cells to commit suicide, and scientists have found a pathway the most common lung cancer walks to avoid death.

Scientists identify a personality feature that could predict how often you exercise

Individuals who make concrete plans to meet their goals may engage in more physical activity, including visits to the gym, compared to those who don't plan quite so far ahead, research shows. These research findings, published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, suggest that self-reported levels of a trait called 'planfulness' may translate into real world differences in behavior.

A bathroom scale could monitor millions with heart failure

Millions of heart failure patients are readmitted to hospitals every few months to adjust medications. It sends medical costs sky-high and patients suffer unnecessarily. A new bathroom scale could give clinicians the data they need to cut hospitalizations and treat patients remotely before they suffer too much.

Alzheimer's drug also treats parasitic Chagas disease

The drugs currently used to treat Chagas disease, a neglected tropical disease, have serious side effects and limited use in those with chronic disease. Now, researchers have reported in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases that memantine, a drug currently used to treat Alzheimer's disease, can diminish the number of parasites in mice with Chagas disease, and increase the survival rate of the animals.

Ketoacidosis and high-blood sugar comas in patients with type 1 diabetes linked to increased risk of suicide attempt

New research presented at this year's Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 September) shows that in patients with type 1 diabetes, hospitalization for either ketoacidosis or a hyperglycaemic (high blood sugar) coma are both linked to a subsequent increase in the risk of attempting suicide. The study is by Dr. Jean Michel Petit, CHU (University Hospital) Dijon, France, and colleagues.

New study reveals a strong link between vitamin D deficiency and increased mortality, especially diabetes-related deaths

New research presented at this year's Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 Sept) reveals that vitamin D deficiency is strongly linked to increased mortality, especially in younger and middle-aged people, and is particularly associated with diabetes-related deaths.

Both natural variation in ACE concentrations and lowering BP with ACE inhibitors associated with lower risk of T2D

New research presented at this year's Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 September) shows that usage of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors to lower blood pressure, is associated with a 24% reduced risk of developing type 2 diabetes (T2D) when compared with placebo.