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Life Technology™ Medical News

New Antibody Medications and Diagnostic Tests Revolutionize Alzheimer's Treatment

Hospital Staffing Impact on Patient Outcomes Post Private Equity Acquisition

New PET Tracer Reveals Overexpressed Proteins in Cancers

Study: Dental Checkups Linked to Better Overall Health

Us Congressional Budget Office Forecasts $186B Cut to SNAP

Study: Limb Movements in Epilepsy vs. Sleep Apnea

Human Gut Microbes Influence Health: New Research Findings

Alzheimer's Disease: Women Face Faster Cognitive Decline

Life-Saving Device for New Mothers: BAMBI Project Breakthrough

Bacteria Drive Stem Cell Regeneration in Gut Injury

Study Reveals Dried Fish: Vital Superfood in Africa

Antidepressant Fluoxetine Enhances Brain Cell Energy

Study Finds Regular Phone Support Key for Weight Maintenance

Research Team Identifies FGFR1 as Key Target for Cardiac Fibrosis

Breakthrough Cancer Gene Therapy Method Unveiled

Study Links Severe Obesity to Lower Cancer Screening Rate

Rising West Nile Virus Cases in Europe: Clinical Insight

Florida Becomes First State to End Vaccine Mandates

National Strategy to Boost US Breastfeeding Rates

End of Annual Government Report on American Food Insecurity

Study Reveals Mental Health Diagnosis Strengthens Relationships

Supporting Young Children's Development Through Healthy Movement

Unraveling the Mystery of Human Consciousness

Federal Vaccine Panel Recommends Stricter COVID-19 Shot Rules

Northwestern Medicine Study Challenges COPD Assumptions

Pregnant People Warned: Avoid Cannabis, Doctors to Inquire

Diverse Factors Influence Body Aging Speed

Trump Expected to Address Autism Concerns

Norway's Liver Transplantation: Ensuring Long-Term Health

Insufficient Sleep Linked to Adolescent Neighborhood Violence

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Life Technology™ Science News

Survey: Majority of US Music Fans Report Live Gig Harassment

Indoor Surfaces Retain Harmful Chemicals: UC Irvine Study

Mystery of Mercury's Formation Unraveled

Scientists Use DNA to Track Species Evolution

Study Links Old-Fashioned Economic Views to Biodiversity Decline

Hong Kong Braces for Super Typhoon Ragasa

Korean Researchers Develop Innovative Gene Control System

St. Jude Study Reveals Lipids' Role in LAP Mechanism

AI System Detects Abnormalities in Zebrafish Embryo Development

Role of Plant Diversity in Nitrogen Cycle in Wetlands

"Nasa Unveils 10 New Astronauts for Moon and Mars Missions"

Novel Criterion Unlocks Particle Sorting Potential

Poinsettia Production: Bacterial Infection Challenges

Global Food System's Role in Planetary Crises

Advanced Space Travel: Key Role of Restricted Three-Body Problem

Financial Early Warning System Using Artificial Jellyfish Algorithm

Political Parties Engage in Sinister Language Escalation

Heat Waves Surge, Rivers Mirror: U.S. Faces Intensifying Trends

Conifers' Diterpenes: Natural Protection Against Pests

Finnish Institute Researcher Advances Chemical Forensics

Mountain Plant Species Shift Accelerates Amid Climate Change

European Governments Invest Heavily in Sea Border Militarization

Oil Pipeline Controversy in Native American Reservation

New Insights on Catalyst Systems in Ammonia Production

The Persistence of Microplastics: Threat to Ecosystems

AI Chatbot Relationships: Redefining Emotional Bonds

Duke Engineers Use AI for Nanoparticle Drug Delivery

Global Wildfire Season Extended by Human Activity

Croatia Initiates Culling 12,000 Pigs to Prevent Swine Fever

Decline of Rhino Population in Africa and Asia

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Life Technology™ Technology News

Patterned electrodes reveal how bubble spacing affects hydrogen production efficiency

UT Team Reveals Bubble Behavior in Hydrogen Production

Origami-Inspired 3D Devices for Medical, Agricultural, and Space Tech

Portable printer developed for fabrication of origami devices

Nvidia to Invest $100 Billion in OpenAI Partnership

Nvidia to invest $100 billion in OpenAI to help expand the ChatGPT maker's computing power

New aluminum alloy can boost U.S. auto supply chain

Innovative RidgeAlloy Transforms Aluminum Scrap into High-Value Supply

TikTok sale puts app's algorithm in the spotlight

Trump Announces Preliminary TikTok Sale to US Investors

WPI Battery Technology Studies Tackle Key Challenges

Researchers pioneer advances to make next-generation lithium batteries safer

Montreal's bike infrastructure hardly takes up any space from cars on city roads

Montreal: Limited Bike Infrastructure, Dominated by Cars

Jaguar Land Rover Hit by Cyber Attack

Cyber-attackers slammed the brakes on Jaguar Land Rover's manufacturing. Why the UK government should step in

£150 Billion Technology Prosperity Deal Between US and UK Announced

Q&A: How US–UK tech deal could yield significant benefits for the British public

Miniaturized ion traps show promise of 3D printing for quantum-computing hardware

Researchers Miniaturize Quadrupole Ion Traps with 3D Printing

Exploring Online Suicide Discussion Groups on Google

Suicide-by-chatbot puts Big Tech in the product liability hot seat

Challenges in Training AI Language Models

Doing a lot with a little: New AI system helps explain laser welding defects

When every second counts: How AI can speed up disaster response decisions

AI's Role in Disaster Response: Balancing Speed and Risks

Predictive AI could prevent crowd crush disasters

New AI Crowd Prediction Tech for Preventing Tragedies

Banks that identify fraudsters increase loyalty, retain more defrauded customers than others who never were compromised

Banks' Ongoing Battle Against Account Fraud

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Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Rise in testosterone level boosts young women's running capacity

A rise in the level of the male hormone testosterone significantly boosts young physically active women's capacity to run for longer, reveals the first study of its kind, published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

Climate change concerns have largely ignored role of access to effective contraception

Climate change concerns have largely ignored the importance of universal access to effective contraception, despite the impact of population growth on greenhouse gas emissions, argue experts in the journal BMJ Sexual & Reproductive Health.

Casting cancer as a 'war' or 'battle' may harm health, study finds

Cancer is often cast as a "battle" or a "war" that should be fought and won to motivate patients to overcome the disease, or encourage people to make healthy choices that could prevent it.

Modeling airborne disease diffusion

With outbreaks of airborne diseases such as measles occurring with growing frequency, modeling how the diffusion process works in dynamic contact networks is an increasingly important research area for epidemiology. A team including Macquarie University researchers Mohammad Shahzamal, Raja Jurdak, and Bernard Mans has developed a computational diffusion model that overcomes previous limitations in capturing an accurate view of the possible spread of infection. The research has been published in Royal Society Open Science.

Blind people have increased opportunities, but employers' perceptions are still a barrier

Communities across the world observe White Cane Day on Oct. 15 to recognize the contributions of people with blindness and low vision and to promote equal opportunities. The day was first observed in the U.S. in 1964, when Congress passed a law to increase awareness about the white cane's role in promoting independent, safe travel for people with blindness or low vision.

Taming the wild cheese fungus

The flavors of fermented foods are heavily shaped by the fungi that grow on them, but the evolutionary origins of those fungi aren't well understood. Experimental findings published this week in mBio offer microbiologists a new view on how those molds evolve from wild strains into the domesticated ones used in food production.

Spy chip planting said to be easy to do and tough to spot

Much too easy: Planting a two-dollar spy chip on hardware with a technique that can be pulled off on a less than $200 budget? Yet that was the work of a proof in concept investigation by a security researcher and tech-watching sites were discussing the story on Monday.

Scientists aim for new weapons in fight against superbugs

New weapons are needed to fight drug-resistant bacteria, one of the biggest threats to global health. By working on new antibiotics or finding ways to revive existing ones in our medical arsenal, scientists aim to avoid a return to a world where even everyday infections may mean death.

Facebook chief hosts conservative guests amid bias debate

Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg on Monday confirmed reports that he had hosted a series of dinners with right-wing figures, as the social media platform stands accused of stifling conservative voices.

Group behind Facebook's Libra coin announces 21 founding members

The Libra Association, created by Facebook to launch its new cryptocurrency, has announced its 21 founding members after defections by previous supporters including Visa and Mastercard.

China wants centralised digital currency after bitcoin crackdown

As Facebook readies to launch its answer to bitcoin, China is set to introduce its own digital currency—one that could allow the government and the central bank to see what people spend their money on, according to analysts.

1-in-3 young children undernourished or overweight: UNICEF

A third of the world's nearly 700 million children under five years old are undernourished or overweight and face lifelong health problems as a consequence, according to a grim UN assessment of childhood nutrition released Tuesday.

School lunches keep Japan's kids topping nutrition lists

Japan manages a rare feat for a developed country when it comes to feeding its children—high scores for nutrition but very low obesity rates. One major key? School lunches.

High on ease, low on nutrition: instant-noodle diet harms Asian kids

A diet heavy on cheap, modern food like instant noodles that fills bellies but lacks key nutrients has left millions of children unhealthily thin or overweight in southeast Asia, experts say.

58 dead, rescuers in 'day and night' hunt for missing after Japan typhoon

Fresh rain threatened to hamper efforts by tens of thousands of Japanese rescuers searching for survivors after a powerful typhoon that by early Tuesday had killed 58 people.

Harley-Davidson suspends production of electric motorcycle

Harley-Davidson announced on Monday that it had suspended production and delivery of its LiveWire electric motorcycle, which the brand had rolled out as part of a diversification push.

Will 737 MAX crisis take down Boeing CEO?

The crisis over the 737 MAX that has tarnished Boeing's image has finally cost Dennis Muilenburg his title as chairman.

Owl killings spur moral questions about human intervention

As he stood amid the thick old-growth forests in the coastal range of Oregon, Dave Wiens was nervous. Before he trained to shoot his first barred owl, he had never fired a gun.

Four-metre king cobra wrestled from sewer in Thailand

A feisty four-metre (13-foot) king cobra was pulled from a sewer in southern Thailand in an hour-long operation, a rescue foundation said Tuesday, describing the reptile as one of the largest they had ever captured.

Sleep apnea linked to blinding eye disease in people with diabetes

New research from Taiwan shows that severe sleep apnea is a risk factor for developing diabetic macular edema, a complication of diabetes that can cause vision loss or blindness. Diabetic macular edema was also more difficult to treat in patients with severe sleep apnea. While earlier research showed a weak connection between the two conditions, evidence is mounting that sleep apnea exacerbates underlying eye disease. The researchers present their study today at AAO 2019, the 123rd Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Ophthalmology.

Polyamorous families face stigma during pregnancy and birth

Polyamorous families experience marginalization during pregnancy and birth, but with open, nonjudgmental attitudes from health care providers and changes to hospital policies, this can be reduced, found new research in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).

CMAJ practice article: E-cigarettes: Five things to know

A practice article about e-cigarettes provides a quick reference on the use of these electronic nicotine delivery systems published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal):