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Life Technology™ Medical News

Scientists Discover Key Window for Blood Stem Cell Gene Therapy

Parental Warmth Boosts Child Health: UCLA Study

Long-Term Effects of COVID on Children

Autism Diagnosis Linked to Early Parkinson's Risk

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Sparks Controversy with Autism Comments

New COVID Variant NB.1.8.1 Emerges in Australia

Teenage Girls: Uterine Contractions Cause Severe Period Pain

Rizatriptan Trial Fails to Relieve Vestibular Migraine

Rising Trend: Over 50s Embrace Physical Exercise

Billy Joel Cancels Tour for Health Reasons

Rising Trend: Wild Swimming & Forest Bathing for Health

Study Reveals Rising Work Fatigue in Cargo Seafarers

Experts at University of Rochester: Strengthening Pelvic Floor

Kava-Talanoa Sessions for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Peer Group Support Enhances Mental Health Nurses' Well-Being

AI Study Suggests More Women to Benefit from Targeted Breast Cancer Treatment

Revised Guidelines: Rare Skin Condition Screening Update

Health Effects of Wildfire Smoke Exposure Last Up to 3 Months

Impact of Obesity on Antibiotic Absorption and Guidelines

Research Reveals Challenges in Compensation for Indigenous Road Injuries

Skin Cancer: Key Facts and Treatments

Study Reveals Positive Attitudes Towards AI in General Practice

University Researchers Study Effects of Painkillers on Elite Cyclists

100 Children Presenting with Suspected Medicine Poisoning: Australian Study

Study Reveals Lengthy Cancer Diagnosis in Young Patients

Rural Communities Struggle with Access to Cutting-Edge Therapies

KFF Report: 14 States Cover GLP-1s for Medicaid Obesity

Unraveling the Complexity of Chronic Pain

Summer Campfire Safety Tips for Families with Young Children

Fda Approves Arcutis Biotherapeutics' Zoryve for Psoriasis

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Life Technology™ Science News

Alpine Tree Frog Resilience: Breeding Boosts Amid Disease

Compassion Boosts Workplace Resilience

Astronomers Uncover New Cosmic Phenomenon

Study Reveals Blueprint for High-Temperature Quantum States

Understanding the Fundamental Particle Types

Biologists Discover Gender Disparity in Frog Call Studies

Kazakhstan Authorizes Saiga Antelope Hunting

UK Records Sunniest Spring in History

How Organic Particles on Seabed Impact CO2 Locking

Chemists Show RNA Self-Replication on Early Earth

Unveiling the Enigmatic Origins of Lithium

Researchers Develop Human-Made Molecules Mimicking Plant Photosynthesis

Colorado River Reservoirs Decline, Groundwater Depletion Surges

North Coast of New South Wales Hit by Severe River Flooding

Canadian Interest Peaks in Self-Reliance Amid US Tensions

Devastating Loss: World's Forests Decimated, EU Bans Key Imports

Neanderthal Symbolic Cognition Revealed in Spanish Rock-Shelter

Rise in Northern Lights Sightings: Here's Why

Earth's Fate as Sun Swells: End of Life Looms

"Nuclear Thermal Propulsion: High Thrust and Efficiency"

Women in Prison: As Good as It Gets?

Authorities Seize 5 Million Smuggled Seahorses Worth CAD$29M

Australian Employers Monitor Employees Without Consent

EU Commission Prioritizes Deregulation for Economic Boost

Western U.S. Wildfires: Trees Dying, Regeneration Struggles

Novel eDNA Technique Uncovers NSW Waterway Contents

Astronauts to Land on Moon in High-Definition

Crystal Strains Influence Electron Behavior: RIKEN Study

Astronomers Find 25 New Quasars at Redshifts > 4.6

Study by Dr. Angelina Locker: Bioarchaeology of Late Preclassic Burial

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Life Technology™ Technology News

AI Encourages Music Creation: Spotify CEO

AI to spur more music creativity, not a threat: Spotify CEO

Five things to do in virtual reality—and five to avoid

Virtual Reality's Limits in Solving Real-World Challenges

Regulating AI seems like an impossible task, but ethically and economically, it's a vital one

Rapid Evolution: AI Impact on Safety, Privacy, Ethics

Can Large Language Models Collaborate Like Humans?

AI meets game theory: How language models perform in human-like social scenarios

AI-powered manufacturing cuts battery defects and costs

Researchers at UNIST Integrate AI in Lithium-Ion Battery Production

Hands-on with 'Street Fighter 6' on the Nintendo Switch 2

Capcom Unveils Stellar Titles for Nintendo Switch 2 Launch

Hollywood Directors Portray AI as Deadly Villain

Inside Google's plan to have Hollywood make AI look less doomsday

University of Osaka Develops Energy-Efficient Measurement System

An energy-efficient, high-precision measurement system using waveform similarity

"UK Government Urges Industry Self-Regulation on Loot Boxes"

UK loot box self-regulation fails: New study finds rampant non-compliance and no enforcement

Governments Reconsider Controversial Energy Legislation

Ban fossil fuel heating systems? A way out of the war of beliefs

Smart measures to reduce your electricity bill

Mobile Notifications Influence Electricity Consumption

Antoine Bosselut Tracks AI Evolution: Past and Future

Q&A: Multimodality as the next big leap for AI

Dehydration warning at your fingertips: Touchscreen tech tracks body water levels

Ramadan Health Risks: Dehydration Dangers During Fasting

Breakthrough in High-Ni Cathode for EV Batteries

Next-generation EV batteries: Scientists solve high-nickel cathode challenge, reducing residual lithium

Salesforce Acquires Informatica in $8 Billion Deal

Salesforce is buying Informatica in deal worth approximately $8 billion

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Friday, October 16, 2020

Conquering CHD, Children's Hospital Colorado encourage others to provide cardiac outcomes

Congenital Heart Disease (CHD) is the most common birth defect in the United States, occurring in approximately one in every 100 babies. However, hospital data regarding short- and long-term outcomes for patients has been limited and oftentimes difficult to access and/or interpret.

A promising new tool in the fight against melanoma

An Edith Cowan University (ECU) study has revealed that a key blood marker of cancer could be used to select the most effective treatment for melanoma.

Preliminary results find COVID-19 vaccine candidate based on inactivated SARS-CoV-2 virus is safe

A Chinese COVID-19 vaccine candidate based on the inactivated whole SARS-CoV-2 virus (BBIBP-CorV) is safe and elicits an antibody response, findings from a small early-phase randomised clinical trial published today in The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal have found.

Study reveals the influence of race correction in kidney disease care

A new study examines whether the "race multiplier" correction factor for Black patients, used when estimating kidney function, may contribute to disparities in care for these patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Black patients with CKD have worse outcomes than other racial groups, including higher rates of anemia and hypertension, longer waits for referral to nephrology, and poorer access to transplantation. A research team led by investigators from Brigham and Women's Hospital examined whether removing the race multiplier from calculations that estimate kidney function would change the way Black patients were classified. They found that up to one in every three Black patients would be reclassified as having a more severe stage of CKD, with one-quarter of Black patients going from stage 3 to stage 4—an important jump that could lead to more advanced kidney care and in some cases, key conversations about dialysis. Results of the study are published in The Journal of General Internal Medicine.

Chronic disease and public health failures fuel COVID-19 pandemic

Australia was not spared as a 30-year global rise in chronic illness and related risk factors such as obesity, high blood sugar, and outdoor air pollution created a perfect storm to fuel coronavirus (COVID-19) deaths, new research shows.

During COVID, scientists turn to computers to understand C4 photosynthesis

When COVID closed down their lab in March, a team from the University of Essex turned to computational approaches to understand what makes some plants better adapted to transform light and carbon dioxide into yield through photosynthesis. They published their findings in the journal Frontiers of Plant Science.

Supergene discovery leads to new knowledge of fire ants

A unique study conducted by University of Georgia entomologists led to the discovery of a distinctive supergene in fire ant colonies that determines whether young queen ants will leave their birth colony to start their own new colony or if they will join one with multiple queens.

Researchers find diverse communities comprise bacterial mats threatening coral reefs

Researchers are learning more about the brightly colored bacterial mats threatening the ecological health of coral reefs worldwide. In new research released this month, a Florida State University team revealed that these mats are more complex than scientists previously knew, opening the door for many questions about how to best protect reef ecosystems in the future.

More US Adults want the government to have a bigger role in improving peoples' lives than before the pandemic

The share of U.S. adults who support an active government role in society increased by more than 40 percent during the initial pandemic response—up from 24 percent in September 2019 to 34 percent in April 2020—according to a new national public opinion survey conducted by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the Johns Hopkins University SNF Agora Institute.

History shows that societies collapse when leaders undermine social contracts

All good things must come to an end. Whether societies are ruled by ruthless dictators or more well-meaning representatives, they fall apart in time, with different degrees of severity. In a new paper, anthropologists examined a broad, global sample of 30 pre-modern societies. They found that when "good" governments—ones that provided goods and services for their people and did not starkly concentrate wealth and power—fell apart, they broke down more intensely than collapsing despotic regimes. And the researchers found a common thread in the collapse of good governments: leaders who undermined and broke from upholding core societal principles, morals, and ideals.

Supergiant star Betelgeuse smaller, closer than first thought

It may be another 100,000 years until the giant red star Betelgeuse dies in a fiery explosion, according to a new study by an international team of researchers.

Immunotherapy combo halts rare, stage 4 sarcoma in teen

A patient with end-stage and rapidly progressing soft-tissue cancer whose tumor did not respond to standard treatment, had a "rapid and complete response" to a novel combination of immunotherapy, according to new research published by a team of scientists from John Theurer Cancer Center at Hackensack University Medical Center and the Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, both of whom are part of the Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center Consortium.