This Blog Is Powered By Life Technology™. Visit Life Technology™ At www.lifetechnology.com Subscribe To This Blog Via Feedburner / Atom 1.0 / RSS 2.0.
News
Life Technology™ Medical News
Ai Chatbots: Should They Replace Therapists? Recent Study Answers No
Improved Survival Outcomes for Dementia Patients
CDC Ends Emergency Response for Bird Flu Outbreak
Hpvs: Skin and Mucous Membrane Infections Linked to Cancer
Study Suggests Mood Disorder Boosts PA Medical Marijuana
Alzheimer's Puzzle: Why Women Twice as Likely to Develop Disease
Risk of Death Higher in Older Women with Larger Waist Circumference
Understanding the Brain: Neurons and Glia in Focus
Australian Scientists Develop Biological AI for Molecule Evolution
Detecting Cancer: Liquid Biopsies vs. Traditional Methods
Decline in Hospital Obstetric Care Across States
Global Surge in Early-Onset Gastrointestinal Cancer
Challenges in Finding Exercise Motivation
Comparing Efficacy of HS Medications: Systematic Review
German Institute Analyzes Biomarker Tests for Breast Cancer Chemotherapy
Unconscious Food Decisions: Examining the 200-Decision Myth
Plasma Biomarker P-Tau217 Predicts Alzheimer's Progression
University of Tartu Study Reveals Antidepressant Side Effect Factors
Pennsylvania's New Cannabis Trend: Anxiety Tops Certifications
New Study: Obesity Levels and Death Risk Analysis
Florida Sees Rise in Adolescent Handgun-Carrying
Study: Cannabis Use Lowers Risk in Retinal Detachment Repair
Frail Handgrip Linked to Health Issues in Older Adults
Study Reveals Running Injuries Occur Suddenly
Oregon Babies Sick from Target Baby Food Recall
Rsv Vaccine Eligibility Expanded for Adults Over 50
Effects of Fatty Diets on Astrocytes in Brain
Yale Study: Neuron Guides Fruit Flies to Rotting Fruit
Atrial Fibrillation: Catheter Ablation vs. Surgical Ablation
Novel Deep Learning Framework Enhances Neurological Disorder Detection
Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Science News
Biomechanics of Explosive Seed Dispersal in Squirting Cucumbers
Challenges in Weather Forecasting: Nature's Chaos
Ancient Manitoba Fossils: Beyond Mosasaurs & Tyndall Stone
Soil Bacterium Turns Gas into Stone
Novel Fluorescent Probe SLY Identifies Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Texas Flooding Death Toll Hits 95, Storm Chantal Rescues: Memories of 2023 Rain Bomb
Insects Utilize Wax Layer for Water Loss Prevention
Unveiling the Origins of Cosmic Dust
Revival of Tulare Lake: Historic Reappearance Amid Farmland
European Rabbit: From Domestication to Global Invasion
NASA Veteran Surprised by New Satellite Tech
Impact of Illegally Manufactured Fentanyl on North America
Astronomers Discover Pulsar PSR J1930+1852
Study Reveals Year-Round Killer Whale Presence in Australia
Impact of Human Decision-Making on Well-Being
New Discoveries on Reptile Sentience by Lincoln Experts
Phenomenon of Light Dragging in Mediums
Impact of Environmental Change on Bee Buzzing
Physicists Achieve Record Qubit Coherence in Nature
New Research Reveals Potential Severity of 2017 German Floods
University of Cincinnati Cancer Center Explores Precision Medicine Origins
Multilingual Moroccan Warns of Climate Risks
Optimizing Watering Regimes for Home Gardening
Researchers Develop AiCE Method for Protein Engineering
Residents Don Masks Amid Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki Eruption
Chimpanzees at Zambia Sanctuary Display Unusual Grass Behavior
Sound and Sight Influence Perception of Biodiversity
Mysterious Giant Hole Accelerates Cosmic Expansion
Melting Glaciers Linked to Future Volcanic Eruptions
AI Boosts Enterprise Productivity: Study of 27k Chinese Firms
Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Technology News
AI-Generated Video Revolutionizes Creative Industry
AI video becomes more convincing, rattling creative industry
Georgia Tech Researchers Develop Carbon Dioxide Removal Method
Low-cost method can remove CO₂ from air using cold temperatures and common materials
Unist Research Team Reveals Next-Gen 6G Semiconductor
Low-power, nonvolatile RF switch promises energy-efficient 6G and autonomous vehicle communications
AI cloud infrastructure gets faster and greener: NPU core improves inference performance by over 60%
Generative AI Models Demand High Memory Capacity
Mass timber could elevate hospital construction: Study shows engineered wood is more microbe-resistant than plastic
University of Oregon Researchers Promote Wood in Healthcare
Optimizing Water Transportation: Key Strategies for Efficiency
Predictive model uses pressure data to help reduce water leaks in pipes
Potassium-Ion Batteries Outperform Sodium-Ion: Energy Storage Boost
Potassium-ion batteries may offer higher energy density than sodium-ion batteries
AI Enhances Basketball Foul Detection
AI system brings new precision to basketball foul detection and analysis
Decoupled electrolysis method paves way for industrial-scale green hydrogen production
Pathway for Scaling Up Decoupled Water Electrolysis Technology
AI model transforms blurry, choppy videos into clear, seamless footage
Advanced AI Model Enhances Video Resolution and Frame Rate
A system for embedding invisible digital information in printed documents
Researchers Unveil Imprinto: Invisible Digital Info in Printed Docs
Undersea cables are vulnerable to sabotage, but this takes skill and specialist equipment
Undersea Cables and Pipes: Concerns Rise Over Disruptions
Innovative Construction: Rice Blocks Used in Kyrgyzstan House
Houses made from rice: Kyrgyzstan's eco-friendly revolution
Underwater turbine spinning for 6 years off Scotland's coast is a breakthrough for tidal energy
Tidal Turbine Spins for 6+ Years Off Scotland Coast
Controversy Erupts Over New Electricity Pylon Expansion
'Pylon wars' show why big energy plans need locals on board
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSTuesday, 8 October 2019
Focus on employability boosts universities' success in the Teaching Excellence Framework
Universities' Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF) grades—designed to help students choose where to study—are being boosted for the institutions that highlight employability post-university and student outcomes in their TEF submission reports, according to a new study published in Educational Review.
New evidence on the mistreatment of women during childbirth
New evidence from a World Health Organization (WHO)-led study in four countries shows more than one-third of women experience mistreatment during childbirth in health facilities.
Lions kill cattle, so people kill lions. Can the cycle end?
Saitoti Petro scans a dirt road in northern Tanzania for recent signs of the top predator on the African savannah. "If you see a lion," he warns, "stop and look it straight in the eyes—you must never run."
Adobe cuts off Venezuela clients, citing US sanctions
The software company Adobe says it is cutting off its accounts in Venezuela, the latest repercussions of U.S. financial sanctions targeting President Nicolás Maduro.
India on the frontline of the fight against tuberculosis
All the symptoms were there but it still took four doctors and several months of waiting before Bharti Kapar's cough and stomach pains were diagnosed as tuberculosis.
US official: Research finds uranium in Navajo women, babies
About a quarter of Navajo women and some infants who were part of a federally funded study on uranium exposure had high levels of the radioactive metal in their systems, decades after mining for Cold War weaponry ended on their reservation, a U.S. health official Monday.
Our Amazon: Brazilians who live in the world's biggest rainforest
Cattle breeders, indigenous teachers and loggers are among the more than 20 million people living in the Amazon in northern Brazil, carving out a living from the world's largest rainforest.
Samsung Electronics flags 56% fall in Q3 operating profit
Samsung Electronics said on Tuesday it expected operating profits to drop more than 50 percent in the third quarter as it struggles with a long-running slump in the global chip market.
Daring to dream: Nobel winner's nervous night
When US scientist William Kaelin's phone began ringing at 5:00 am, he wasn't sure whether he was dreaming: Winning the Nobel Medicine Prize had long been a goal, but he also thought it was a long shot.
Published studies may exaggerate the effect of burnout on quality of patient care
Published studies have shown an association between burnout among health care professionals and quality of patient care, but those studies may exaggerate the magnitude of the effect. A systematic review is published in Annals of Internal Medicine.
Scientists use machine-learning algorithms to help automate plant studies
Father of genetics Gregor Mendel spent years tediously observing and measuring pea plant traits by hand in the 1800s to uncover the basics of genetic inheritance. Today, botanists can track the traits, or phenotypes, of hundreds or thousands of plants much more quickly, with automated camera systems. Now, Salk researchers have helped speed up plant phenotyping even more, with machine-learning algorithms that teach a computer system to analyze three-dimensional shapes of the branches and leaves of a plant. The study, published in Plant Physiology on October 7, 2019, may help scientists better quantify how plants respond to climate change, genetic mutations or other factors.
Initiating breastfeeding in vulnerable infants
The benefits of breastfeeding for both mother and child are well-recognized, including for late preterm infants (LPI). But because LPI do not have fully developed brains, they may experience difficulties latching and/or sustaining a latch on the breast to have milk transfer occur. This means that these infants are at high risk for formula supplementation and/or discontinuation of breastfeeding. Without human milk, these infants lose a critical component for protection and optimal development of their brains.
Heat waves could increase substantially in size by mid-century, says new study
Our planet has been baking under the sun this summer as temperatures reached the hottest ever recorded and heat waves spread across the globe. While the climate continues to warm, scientists expect the frequency and intensity of heat waves to increase. However, a commonly overlooked aspect is the spatial size of heat waves, despite its important implications.
Weight stigma affects gay men on dating apps
Weight stigma is an issue for queer men using dating apps, says a new University of Waterloo study.
Engineers develop thin, lightweight lens that could produce slimmer camera phones, longer-flying drones
The new wave of smartphones to hit the market all come with incredible cameras that produce brilliant photos. There's only one complaint—the thick camera lenses on the back that jet out like ugly bumps on a sheet of glass.
New research furthers understanding about what shapes human gut microbiome
A new Northwestern University study finds that despite human's close genetic relationship to apes, the human gut microbiome is more similar to that of Old World monkeys like baboons than to that of apes like chimpanzees.
Study shows Housing First program significantly reduces homelessness over long term
The longest running study of its kind on the "Housing First" model has found that it significantly reduces homelessness over the long term compared to treatment as usual, according to a study published in The Lancet Psychiatry by scientists at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) and St. Michael's Hospital.
Urban, home gardens could help curb food insecurity, health problems
Food deserts are an increasingly recognized problem in the United States, but a new study from the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior indicates urban and home gardens—combined with nutrition education—could be a path toward correcting that disadvantage.
Modified quantum dots capture more energy from light and lose less to heat
Los Alamos National Laboratory scientists have synthesized magnetically-doped quantum dots that capture the kinetic energy of electrons created by ultraviolet light before it's wasted as heat.
Meningioma molecular profile reliably predicts tumor recurrence
Although typically benign, about one-fifth of meningiomas, the most common primary brain tumors, recur despite complete surgical removal. The current meningioma classification does not consistently predict whether the tumor will recur, but researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and the Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute at Texas Children's Hospital report today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that using molecular profiles that might better predict meningioma recurrence.
Violence linked to social isolation, hypervigilance and chronic health problems
Exposure to violence can negatively impact a person's physical and psychosocial health, according to two new studies co-authored by University of Chicago Medicine social epidemiologist Elizabeth L. Tung, MD.
The effectiveness of electrical stimulation in producing spinal fusion
Researchers from The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of published data on the effect of electrical stimulation therapies on spinal fusion. They found significant improvement overall in the rates of bone fusion following a course of electrical stimulation in both preclinical (animal) and clinical (human) studies.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)