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
Scientists Uncover Insights on Early Brain Connections
New Study: Starting Healthy Eating for Brain Health
Novel ADC Pivekimab Sunirine Shows High Efficacy
Oral ER Degrader Vepdegestrant Boosts Survival
New Trial: CompassHER2 pCR Evaluates Reduced Chemo for HER2+ Breast Cancer
FDA Warns of Salmonella-Tainted Tomatoes in Southern States
Breastfeeding: Vital Child Health Investment
New Clinical Practice Guideline for Surgical Management of Chronic Rhinosinusitis
Physician Performance Ranking Impact on Motivation
Psoriasis Linked to Higher Sleep Disorder Risk
High-Fiber Plant-Based Diet Benefits Multiple Myeloma Risk
Clinicians Find HPV Vaccine Feasible at Age 9-10
Dental Patients Optimistic About AI in Health Care
Geographic Trends in Opioid Deaths: Study by Medical Experts
Plant-Based Portfolio Diet Reduces Cardiovascular Risk
Machine Learning Method for Prostate Cancer Survival
Study Reveals High Seizure Rates in Frontotemporal Dementia
Ochsner Health Study: Pharmacogenomics Implementation Guide
Salmonella Outbreak Linked to Cucumbers Sickens 45
Rising Trend: Older Americans Switching Medicare Plans
Challenges in Patient Empathy: Impact on Medical Education
Rutgers Study: Police Spending Linked to Black American Deaths
Medics Warn of Lifelong Consequences of Chronic Malnutrition
Decades of Neglect: Impact on Women's Health
AI Study Predicts Child Emotional Issues
Optimal Timing for Covid-19 Booster and Flu Shot
Benefits of eConsent in Stroke Studies: Higher Enrollment & Adherence
Key Driver of Breast Cancer: Inavolisib Combo Boosts Survival
Students Learn AI for Medical Diagnosis But Miss Data Flaws
Trump Administration's Termination of LGBTQ+ Health Grants
Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Science News
African Swine Fever Virus Presence in Europe Since 2007
Mystery of Extinct Megafauna: Clues for Future Extinctions
Rural Africa's Sanitation Crisis: Impact on Water Sources
Survey: UK Food Delivery & Ride-Hail Workers Fear Unfair Feedback
Zimbabwean Farmer Doubles Goat Prices with Crossbreeding
Oil and Gas Companies' Environmental Claims in 1962
How Anillin Controls Cell Asymmetry in Cancer
Subantarctic Mode Waters: Key Players in Ocean Climate
Key Immune Cell in Atherosclerosis: Promising Therapy Tested
Korean Researchers Develop Innovative Transparent Graphene Film
Ancient Stone Water Tanks Repurposed in Northern Portugal
Advanced Materials for Next-Gen Fusion Reactors: UHTCs Examined
Amphibians Face Extinction Threat Due to Climate Change
Fish at Marine Biological Lab Walk with Six Leg-Like Appendages
Navigating Authoritarianism: Jewish Professor's Identity in Tech Era
The Impact of Framing Social Issues as Civil Rights
Researchers Uncover PFAS Contamination at Holloman Lake
Soursop Ice Cream: A Taste of Grenada's Delight
How Workplace Tracking Apps Support Home Health Care Workers
Government Actions Against Free Speech: A Historical Overview
Virtual Reality Headsets Integration in Education: Costs and Benefits
Northern Lights Expected in Parts of U.S. After Solar Storms
"Exploring Life Beyond Earth: Challenges in Finding Biosignatures"
Empowering Children: Active Learning Boosts Motivation
Astronomers Explore Solar System Stability Amid Galactic Interactions
EU Imposes Seventeenth Sanctions Package on Russia
Mitigating Catastrophic Damage from Solar Storms
Ancient Chinese Astronomical Events: Millennia of Records
Exploring Human Space Advancement via Lunar Gateway
Shifting Focus: Exoplanet Search in Habitable Zones
Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Technology News
Access to Information Online: Vital for Democracy
Circumventing internet censorship in countries like China or Iran
Australia's latest emissions data reveal we still have a giant fossil fuel problem
Australia's Emissions Data: On Track for 2030 Targets
How Data Powers AI for Better Services
AI strategies promise smarter systems without sacrificing personal privacy
Research Team Explores Cement Reduction in Concrete
AI stirs up the optimal recipe for sustainable concrete
New prospects for green ammonia: Study provides blueprint for load-flexible production plant
Ammonia Production Shift: Climate-Friendly Challenge
Fraunhofer Institute Unveils Advanced Robot Capabilities
Cognitive robotics and new safety technologies for human-robot collaboration
Beyond translation: Multilingual benchmark makes AI multicultural
Language Model Misunderstanding: Legal Query on Greek Traffic Laws
Satellite Sensors for Early Missile Detection
Q&A: How electro-optical sensors can offer improved protection against missile attacks
PFAS-free seals work with water-based lubricants
Seals in Technical Systems: Impact of Plastic and Lubricants
Plastics: Versatile Materials Dominate Packaging in Germany
AI tools optimize plastic packaging design for recycling and sustainability goals
A novel, multimodal approach to automated speaking skill assessment
Mastering Spoken English: Key to Academic and Professional Success
Urban Fires Leave Unburned Green Amidst Devastation
California plan to ban plants within 5 feet of homes safety overlooks some important truths about flammability
The Quest to Simulate the Human Brain
Is AI sparking a cognitive revolution that will lead to mediocrity and conformity?
Robot Completes Beijing Half-Marathon in Impressive Time
Robots run out of energy long before they run out of work to do. Feeding them could change that
Set it and forget it: Autonomous structures can be programmed to jump, days in advance
Innovative Metashells: Dynamic Structures Leap on Schedule
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSThursday, 3 October 2019
Should you keep eating red meat? Controversial study says well-known health risks are just bad science
Should you stop eating red meat for health reasons?
Louisiana hopes to fight coast erosion by mimicking nature
Back when the Mississippi River flowed wild, its ever-shifting waters acted as a continent-sized earth mover, picking up sand and dirt from the North, depositing it in the Delta region and eventually creating the land that is now south Louisiana.
Tesla shares fall after 3Q deliveries miss estimates
Tesla reported lower-than-expected third quarter auto deliveries Wednesday, pushing shares lower in after-hours trading.
Vice Media to buy women's focused rival Refinery29
Vice Media said Wednesday it was acquiring rival Refinery29, an online outlet that targets young female readers, claiming the deal creates "the world's largest digital media business."
Killer Japanese fungus found in Australia
One of the world's deadliest fungi has been discovered in Australia's far north for the first time—thousands of miles from its native habitat in the mountains of Japan and Korea.
Bacteria-infected Brazilian mosquitoes pack a punch in dengue fight
Dengue-resistant mosquitoes breed in a Rio de Janeiro laboratory, producing offspring infected with bacteria packing a punch in the fight against the deadly virus, which is exploding across Brazil this year.
First Arab on ISS set for Earth return
An Emirati who made history as the first Arab to reach the International Space Station is set to return to Earth on Thursday following an eight-day mission that sparked euphoria in his homeland.
Six killed as typhoon lashes South Korea
At least six people were killed and several others missing after Typhoon Mitag lashed South Korea with heavy rain and strong winds, authorities said Thursday.
EPA issues violation notice to San Francisco
The Trump administration ratcheted up its feud with California on Wednesday as the Environmental Protection Agency issued a notice accusing San Francisco of violating the federal Clean Water Act.
Google to commit to White House job training initiative
Google is committing to a White House initiative designed to get private companies to expand job training for American workers.
Fathers-to-be should avoid alcohol six months before conception
Aspiring parents should both avoid drinking alcohol prior to conception to protect against congenital heart defects, according to research published today in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, a journal of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC).
Machine learning predicts behavior of biological circuits
Biomedical engineers at Duke University have devised a machine learning approach to modeling the interactions between complex variables in engineered bacteria that would otherwise be too cumbersome to predict. Their algorithms are generalizable to many kinds of biological systems.
New guide offers support and advice to researchers experiencing online harassment
A newly redeveloped guide is setting out to help researchers across academia tackle the online harassment some face as they share their findings with the public on some of the world's most controversial, and vital, topics.
A tool to understand how ecosystems are responding to a changing climate
As climate change accelerates, recording shifts in plant flowering times is critical to understanding how changes in climate will impact ecosystem interactions. Currently, when researchers reconstruct historical flowering times using dried herbarium specimens, they estimate first or peak flowering time using the day of the year (DOY) of plant collection as a proxy. Because herbarium specimens are collected at many different stages of flowering and fruiting (called "phenological" stages), this practice of using the day of collection creates shaky data that limits our ability to estimate how ecosystems will respond to a shifting climate.
University Hospitals completes first Evolut™ PRO+ case in the world
Physicians at University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center completed the first procedure in the world using Medtronic's new Evolut PRO+ TAVR System.
Grouping 'smart cities' into types may help aspiring city planners find a path
A comparative analysis of "smart cities" worldwide reveals four distinct types, according to an international team of researchers. The categories may help city planners to identify and emulate models that are close to their own socio-economic circumstances and policy aspirations.
Aspirin may prevent air pollution harms
A new study is the first to report evidence that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) like aspirin may lessen the adverse effects of air pollution exposure on lung function. The team of researchers from the Columbia Mailman School of Public Health, Harvard Chan School of Public Health, Boston University School of Medicine published their findings in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.
A filament fit for space—silk is proven to thrive in outer space temperatures
Their initial discovery had seemed like a contradiction because most other polymer fibres embrittle in the cold. But after many years of working on the problem, the group of researchers have discovered that silk's cryogenic toughness is based on its nano-scale fibrills. Sub-microscopic order and hierarchy allows a silk to withstand temperatures of down to -200 C. And possibly even lower, which would make these classic natural luxury fibres ideal for applications in the depths of chilly outer-space.
In Russia, declines in alcohol consumption and mortality have gone hand in hand
Since the early 2000s, Russia has seen significant declines in overall alcohol consumption, and a new review shows that there has been a parallel, steep decline in the country's mortality rates as well.
High fiber diet associated with reduced CV risk in hypertension, type 2 diabetes patients
Patients with hypertension and Type 2 diabetes who consume a high fiber diet had improvement in their blood pressure, cholesterol and fasting glucose, according to a study presented at the American College of Cardiology (ACC) Middle East Conference 2019 together with the 10th Emirates Cardiac Society Congress. The conference is Oct. 3-5 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Tooth loss associated with higher risk of heart disease
Adults who have lost teeth due to nontraumatic reasons may have a higher risk of developing cardiovascular disease according to a presentation at the American College of Cardiology Middle East Conference 2019 together with the 10th Emirates Cardiac Society Congress. The conference is Oct. 3-5 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)