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Life Technology™ Medical News

French Indian Ocean Island Hospital Chief Urges Medical Aid for Chikungunya Outbreak

Parent's Alert: Child's Fall Raises Concerns of Brain Injury

The Power of Insight in Problem Solving

Hidden Cost of Growing Reliance on CT Scans

Infants on Acid-Suppressive Meds at Risk for Celiac Disease

Study Shows Opioid Policies Reduce Domestic Violence

White House Reveals Revamped Covid-19 Site, Emphasizes Chinese Lab Theory

Grocery Store Dilemma: Carrots, Potatoes, or Buffalo Wings?

Managing Everyday Stress: Tips for Work, Social Events, and Relationships

Measles Outbreak Spreads: 800 Cases Across U.S.

Study Reveals Overestimated BMI in Male Athletes

Targeting Enzyme PGM3 Halts Glioblastoma Growth

Study Reveals Hope for Bardet-Biedl Syndrome Patients

Study: Low-Income Diabetics Face Insurance Instability

Novel Disease Gene GPKOW Linked to Brain and Eye Development

Protein in Human Brain Boosts Neuron Growth

Impact of Public Health Strategies on Endemic vs. Outbreak Diseases

Study Reveals Alarming Trend in Women's Firearm Suicides

Government Health Researcher Retires, Accuses NIH of Censoring Food Findings

Study Reveals Link Between Pancreatic Cysts and Cancer

Kinesiology Method for Lower Back Pain: Research Findings

Women More Aware of Obesity Drugs at ECO 2025

Protein-Enriched Products Flood Grocery Shelves

AI Enhances Forensic Anthropology Identification

Living with Primary Progressive Aphasia: Ordering at Drive-Thru

Study: Lower Temperatures Increase Gastroenteritis Risk among Rohingya Refugees

New Radiolabeled Antibody Targets Cancer Antigen IL13Rα2

New Study: Dogs Offer Hope for ACL Injury Treatment

Pinworm Medication Potentially Halts Merkel Cell Carcinoma

Promising Results: New Pill for Weight Loss & Blood Sugar Control

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Life Technology™ Science News

Celebratory Cake and Gifts: A Low-Key 70th Birthday Celebration

Neutron Star Mergers: Generating Gravitational Waves

New Insights on Mars's Jezero Crater Geology

Mars Discovery: Ancient Carbon Cycle, Cat Origins, Magnetic Pole Shift

Researchers Develop Innovative Method to Focus Light on Small Scale

"Breakthrough: Molecular Machine in Mitochondria Revealed"

Protein Study Reveals Cell Blob Transformation

Penn State Study: Accidental Dictators in the Workplace

Nasa Prioritizes Astronaut Health for Moon Mission

Biologists Discover Caddisfly Larvae Using Microplastics

NASA Sends Mars Rover to Jezero Crater Delta

Cellular Proteins: DNA Blueprint Regulation for Functional Synthesis

"Nasa's Lucy Spacecraft to Encounter Small Asteroid En Route to Jupiter Swarms"

Grandparents in Charge: Kids Glued to Screens, Confirms Arizona Study

Space Race Ignites: Sputnik vs. Explorer I

Astronomers Utilize Magnetic Fields for Milky Way Mapping

Scientists Enhance Storm Forecasting Tools Amid West Coast Deluge

Next-Gen Anode Material for Ultra-Fast Charging Batteries

Astronomers Confirm Existence of Lone Black Hole

"New View of Eagle Nebula for NASA/ESA Hubble Anniversary"

University of Tsukuba Study: Environmental Variability Boosts Cooperation

Study Reveals Strategy to Combat Cyst Nematode Damage

1638 Earthquake in New Hampshire and Plymouth: Colonists' Midday Meal Disrupted

"Pirate Parasitism: Wasp Strategy for Successful Host Invasion"

Indigenous Peoples in NWT Warn of Rapid Arctic Warming

Squid Galaxy: NASA Captures Aquatic-Themed Image

Researchers Pose Question on Fault Width at Seismological Meeting

Guatemala Lakes Uncover 1976 Earthquake Shaking

Examining Inequality in College Admissions: The Overlooked Role of Extracurriculars

Avian Flu Impact: Poultry and Dairy Farms Hit in 2025

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Life Technology™ Technology News

Trump Administration's Chip Export Restrictions Could Boost Chinese Innovation

Humanoid Robots Run Alongside Humans in Chinese Capital's Half-Marathon

Federal Judge Rules Google Held Illegal Monopoly in Advertising

Ford Adjusts Exports Amid US-China Trade Conflict

Humanoid Robots Join Beijing Half Marathon

NASA Calibrates Shock-Sensing Probe for X-59 Test Flights

NASA's C-130 Hercules Begins New Mission in California

AI Models' Spurious Correlations: Tracing and Overcoming Them

Racing to Reinvent: Sustainable Innovations in Construction

Llm Technology Speeds Up Code Generation

Nasa Engineers Utilize Ground Sensors for Air Taxi Safety

Perovskite Photovoltaics: Stability Challenges in Commercialization

Tiny Semiconductor Particles: Key to Photovoltaic Advancements

Chinese Scientists Enhance Adhesion for Efficient Tandem Solar Cells

Anxious Companies Seek Rare Earths Amid China Export Limits

Netflix Outperforms Analyst Expectations in Q1

Challenges of Radiation in Outer Space

Europe Shifts to Dominant Renewable Energy Future

Adaptable Robots Transforming Electronic Waste Recycling

New Method Speeds Up Quantum Measurements

Smart Insole System Monitors Walking for Posture Improvement

AI Creativity: ChatGPT and LLMs Redefine Co-Creation

Study Reveals Gamers Stressed by Manipulative Designs

Maximizing Electronic Chip Efficiency with Advanced Cooling Technology

Thermoelectric Materials: Powering IoT Devices

New Wearable Sweat Sensor Helps Monitor Hydration Levels

Zhejiang University Develops Autonomous Quadcopter Navigation

Infosys Predicts Muted Annual Revenue Growth

Vietnam Boosts Wind and Solar Targets for 2030

Google's Monopoly Power Ruling Shakes Online Ad Market

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Tuesday, 10 September 2019

New bacterial strain linked to scarlet fever, sore throat and sepsis

A team of scientists led by Imperial College London have discovered a new strain of group A streptococcus bacteria.

Mosquito trials raise hopes of defeating dengue

Hundreds dead in the Philippines; a threefold increase of cases in Vietnam; hospitals overrun in Malaysia, Myanmar and Cambodia—dengue is ravaging Southeast Asia this year due in part to rising temperatures and low immunity to new strains.

NASA pioneers malaria-predicting tech in Myanmar

NASA is developing a new technique to forecast malaria outbreaks in Myanmar from space, as the emergence of new drug-resistant strains in Southeast Asia threatens efforts to wipe out the deadly disease globally.

What is dengue, and why is it so widespread this year?

Dubbed "breakbone fever", dengue is one of the world's leading mosquito-borne illnesses and infects tens of millions across the globe annually.

Following Neanderthals' footsteps to learn how they lived

Like modern humans and primates, Neanderthals—our closest evolutionary cousins—are thought to have lived in groups, but their size and composition have been difficult to infer from archeological and fossil remains.

Climate change, trade woes reshape Frankfurt auto show

The headwinds buffeting the auto industry are making themselves felt at the Frankfurt Motor Show, with companies confronting a slowdown in sales due to global trade uncertainty and pressure from governments to lower emissions of air pollutants and greenhouse gases.

Experts say adapting to climate change can pay off manifold

A group of leaders from business, politics and science called Monday for a massive investment in adapting to climate change over the next decade, arguing it would reap significant returns as countries avoid catastrophic losses and boost their economies.

Five scientists honored for cancer therapy, immune system work

Five scientists have won prestigious medical awards for creating an innovative breast cancer treatment and discovering key players of the disease-fighting immune system.

New iPhones to share limelight as Apple revs up services

Along with its new iPhones, Apple is stepping up on content and services for its devices for its big media event Tuesday.

Genetic mutation linked to flu-related heart complications

People with severe flu sometimes develop life-threatening heart problems, even when their hearts have been previously healthy, but the reason for that has been poorly understood.

How we make decisions depends on how uncertain we are

A new Dartmouth study on how we use reward information for making choices shows how humans and monkeys adopt their decision-making strategies depending on the uncertainty of information present. The results of this study illustrated that for a simple gamble to obtain a reward, when the magnitude or amount of the reward is known but the probability of the reward is unknown and must be learned, both species will switch their strategy from combining reward information in a multiplicative way (in which functions of reward probability and magnitude are multiplied to obtain the so-called subjective value) to comparing the attributes in an additive way to make a decision.

Success of gene therapy for a form of inherited blindness depends on timing

Nearly two decades ago, a gene therapy restored vision to Lancelot, a Briard dog who was born with a blinding disease. This ushered in a period of hope and progress for the field of gene therapy aimed at curing blindness, which culminated in the 2017 approval of a gene therapy that improved vision in people with Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA), a rare, inherited form of blindness closely related to the condition seen in Lancelot. It represents the first FDA-approved gene therapy for an inherited genetic disease.

Study: Children are interested in politics but need better education from parents and schools

The 2020 election is approaching—how should we talk with children about this election and about politics more broadly? The findings of a new multisite study of children's reactions to the 2016 U.S. presidential election might inform these conversations.

ADHD medication: How much is too much for a hyperactive child?

When children with ADHD don't respond well to Methylphenidate (MPH, also known as Ritalin) doctors often increase the dose. Now a new review shows that increasing the dose may not always be the best option, as it may have no effect on some of the functional impairments associated with ADHD. The researchers caution against increasing the doses is based on findings that this effect may only be observed for behavioral factors (such as reduction in attention and/or hyperactivity/impulsivity) and not for the child's ability to control their impulses. This work is presented at the ECNP Conference in Copenhagen.

Researchers propose the 'Alzheimer's Disease Exposome' to address environmental risks

Against a backdrop of disappointing Alzheimer's disease clinical trial outcomes, two researchers are proposing a new approach for future study of the disease.

Why don't the drugs work? Controlling inflammation can make antidepressants more effective

Research shows that controlling inflammation may be key to helping the brain develop the flexibility to respond to antidepressant drugs, potentially opening the way for treatment for many millions of people who do not respond to the drugs. This is experimental work on mice, and has not yet been confirmed in humans. It is presented together for the first time at the ECNP Congress in Copenhagen, after a series of publications in peer-reviewed journals.

Study: Adults' actions, successes, failures, and words affect young children's persistence

Children's persistence in the face of challenges is key to learning and academic success. However, we know little about how parents and educators can help foster persistent behavior in children before they begin formal schooling. A new U.S. study looked at the interactions of preschool-age children with adults to determine how they affected the children's persistence. It found that the efforts adults put into their actions, successes and failures, and words affected children's persistent behavior to differing degrees.

Caregiver stress: The crucial, often unrecognized byproduct of chronic disease

There is growing evidence that caregivers of patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD) are vulnerable to developing their own poor cardiovascular health. Investigators report in the Canadian Journal of Cardiology, published by Elsevier, on a proof-of-concept couples-based intervention in a cardiac rehabilitation setting. This intervention has shown potential for reducing caregiver distress, and future studies are evaluating its impact on both caregivers' and patients' cardiovascular health.