All The News You Can Handle


All The News You Can Handle

Categories

Arts
Business
Computers
Games
Health
Home
Kids and Teens
News
Recreation
Reference
Science
Shopping
Society
Sports
World News

 

RSS Source- Link

ScienceDaily Magazine

ScienceDaily: Latest Science News

Feed Description- Breaking science news and articles on global warming, extrasolar planets, stem cells, bird flu, autism, nanotechnology, dinosaurs, evolution -- the latest discoveries in astronomy, anthropology, biology, chemistry, climate & environment, computers, engineering, health & medicine, math, physics, psychology, technology, and more -- from the world's leading universities and research organizations.

11/20/2008 Mysterious Source Of High-Energy Cosmic Radiation Discovered: Nearby Exotic Object?
Scientists have discovered a previously unidentified nearby source of high-energy cosmic rays. The finding was made with a NASA-funded balloon-borne instrument high over Antarctica.
11/20/2008 New Platinum-phosphate Compounds Kill Ovarian Cancer Cells, Other Cancer Cells
A new class of compounds called phosphaplatins can effectively kill ovarian, testicular, head and neck cancer cells with potentially less toxicity than conventional drugs, according to a new study in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
11/20/2008 Physicist Make Droplets Dance Above A Surface
Physicists can now make droplets dance, float and bounce above a surface, keeping small amounts of fluid free of contamination and ripe for testing.
11/20/2008 Genome-wide Association Scan For Genetic Determinants Of Warfarin Dose
A growing number of geneticists are using genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to systematically search for and identify single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), which are single base changes in the human DNA sequence that can cause differences in genetic characteristics. GWAS may also detect genes that are associated with a particular health condition, or with variation in patient response to prescribed drugs.
11/20/2008 New Gene-silencing Pathway Found In Plants
Biologists have made major headway in explaining a mechanism by which plant cells silence potentially harmful genes. New research in Cell explains how RNA polymerases work together to use the non-coding region of DNA to prevent destructive, virus-derived genes from being activated. This research adds to a growing body of evidence suggesting that "junk DNA" is in fact a functional part of the genome, since transcription of the intergenic regions is necessary to keep potentially harmful genes turned off.
11/20/2008 Drug-related Preference In Cocaine Addiction Extends To Images
When given a choice between viewing pictures of cocaine and a variety of other images, cocaine addicted individuals, as compared to healthy, non-addicted research subjects, show a clear preference for the drug-related images.
11/20/2008 Woolly-mammoth Genome Sequenced
Scientists have completed the genome-wide sequence of an extinct animal. The scientists sequenced the genome of the woolly mammoth, an extinct species of elephant that was adapted to living in the cold environment of the northern hemisphere. They sequenced four billion DNA bases using next-generation DNA-sequencing instruments and a novel approach that reads ancient DNA highly efficiently.
11/20/2008 Enzyme Discovery May Lead To Better Heart And Stroke Treatments
A new study sheds new light on the way one of our cell enzymes, implicated in causing tissue damage after heart attacks and strokes, is normally kept under control.
11/20/2008 Turtles Alter Nesting Dates Due To Temperature Change
Researchers say turtles nesting along the Mississippi River and other areas are altering their nesting dates in response to rising temperatures.
11/20/2008 Exercise Is Safe, Improves Outcomes For Patients With Heart Failure, Study Suggests
Working out on a stationary bicycle or walking on a treadmill just 25 to 30 minutes most days of the week is enough to modestly lower risk of hospitalization or death for patients with heart failure, say researchers.
11/20/2008 Most Efficient Silicon-based OLED Microdisplay In The World
Offering better comfort to users of point-and-shoot digital cameras, and new designs for video glasses with the highest resolution ever, Microoled and the CEA-Leti have targeted these and many other potential applications with the announcement of the most efficient silicon-based OLED microdisplay in the world.
11/20/2008 Psychological Interventions Associated With Breast Cancer Survival
A new study finds that breast cancer patients who participate in intervention sessions focusing on improving mood, coping effectively and altering health behaviors live longer than patients who do not receive such psychological support.
11/20/2008 Plastic Additives Leach Into Medical Experiments, Research Shows
Researchers have shown that using plastic lab equipment can skew or ruin the results of medical experiments. The researchers identified two classes of chemical compounds in commonly-used plastic lab ware that could leach into solutions. They further demonstrated that the compounds interacted biologically with, and changed the behavior of, human enzymes and brain receptors in different experiments.
11/20/2008 New Theory Of Visual Computation Reveals How Brain Makes Sense Of Natural Scenes
Computational neuroscientists have developed a computational model that provides insight into the function of the brain's visual cortex and the information processing that enables people to perceive contours and surfaces, and understand what they see in the world around them.
11/20/2008 Trouble In The Pipeline For Grey Whales
The fate of the world's few remaining western grey whales now rests on the outcome of appeals to Russian authorities and courts following the refusal of an oil consortium to consider alternatives to a proposal to lay an oil pipeline through a shallow lagoon crucial to the whales' food supplies.
11/20/2008 Rural Women Are At Higher Risk Of Blood Pressure Disorders During Pregnancy
Several factors, such as older age and high weight gain, are known risk factors for pre-eclampsia and other pregnancy-related blood pressure disorders. Now a new report suggests that social factors -- including living in a rural county -- may also increase the risk of pre-eclampsia and pregnancy-induced hypertension, according to new research.
11/20/2008 Sonography In Space
Astronauts on extended space missions can get injured or develop diseases, necessitating immediate diagnosis and treatment. Research conducted on the International Space Station ensuring that astronauts could accurately perform remotely-guided sonograms was published in the Journal of Diagnostic Medical Sonography.
11/20/2008 Media Violence Cited As 'Critical Risk Factor' For Aggression
You are what you watch, when it comes to violence in the media and its influence on violent behavior in young people, and an article provides new evidence that violent media does indeed impact adolescent behavior.
11/20/2008 How Do Bacteria Swim? Physicists Explain
Physicists have completed the most detailed study of the swimming patterns of a microbe, showing for the first time how its movement is affected by drag and a phenomenon called Brownian motion.
11/20/2008 ADHD Medications Do Not Cause Genetic Damage In Children, Study Shows
In contrast to recent findings, two of the most common medications used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder do not appear to cause genetic damage in children who take them as prescribed, according to a new study by researchers at the National Institutes of Health and Duke University Medical Center.
11/20/2008 Gene That Regulates Mold's Resistance To Drugs Identified
Researchers have found a gene that regulates mold's resistance to anti-mold drugs.
11/20/2008 General Anesthesia For Hernia Surgery In Children And Risk Of Later Developmental Problems
Children under the age of three who had hernia surgery showed almost twice the risk of behavioral or developmental problems later compared to children who had not undergone the surgery.
11/20/2008 Second Life: 'Second China' Offers Foreign Service Workers First Impression
Diplomats or military envoys making their first trip to China may soon have a chance to visit a Chinese office building, stop in at a traditional teahouse or hop a cab -- all before they board a plane.
11/20/2008 Extensive Use Of Illicit Alcohol Found
The consumption of illicit or noncommercial alcohol is widespread in many countries worldwide and contributes significantly to the global burden of disease, according to a new report.
11/20/2008 New Bacteria Discovered In Raw Milk
Raw milk is illegal in many countries as it can be contaminated with potentially harmful microbes. Contamination can also spoil the milk, making it taste bitter and turn thick and sticky. Now scientists have discovered new species of bacteria that can grow at low temperatures, spoiling raw milk even when it is refrigerated. It seems the microbial population of raw milk is much more complex than previously thought.
11/20/2008 Rhesus Factor Controls Renal Function And Male Fertility
The "Rhesus" blood group is well-known from the public for its importance in the field of transfusion medicine. New observations have implications in human medicine. They suggest that in man, mutations affecting the RHCG gene could cause some forms of renal pathologies and/or a loss of male fertility.
11/20/2008 Consumers Influence Christmas Tree Styles
The Fraser fir is gaining popularity among American consumers looking for beautiful, long-lasting Christmas trees. Consumers favor Fraser fir for its conical shape, dark green foliage, pleasant aroma and excellent needle retention.
11/20/2008 Jumonjd3: A Key For Unlocking Neuronal Stem Cell Fate
A novel role for the protein, Jumonjd3, as an epigenetic modulator in the neuronal differentiation of embryonic stem cells, has recently been uncovered -- a step forward in the understanding of cellular reprogramming and in the development of innovative cancer therapies.
11/20/2008 Hops Extract May Reduce Clostridium In Chickens
Hops contain substances that control pathogenic bacteria in the intestines of chickens, Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists and cooperators have reported.
11/20/2008 African-Americans With Depression And Heart Attack Have Greater Risk Of Death
African-American patients with acute myocardial infarction and previously treated depression that persists at their MI hospitalization have an increased risk of post-MI death, according to new research.
11/19/2008 'New' Penguin Species In New Zealand Found Using Ancient DNA From Fossils
Australian and New Zealand researchers have used ancient DNA from penguin fossils to make a startling discovery that may change the way we view species extinctions.
11/19/2008 Gut Check Reveals Vast Multicultural Community Of Bugs In Bowels
Mention the phrase "diverse ecosystem," and it conjures images of tropical rainforests and endangered coral reefs. It also describes the human colon. A new study reveals in greater detail than ever before the full extent of the bacterial community inhabiting the human bowel -- 10 times more diverse than previous research had suggested.
11/19/2008 Over-stressing Already Taxed Cancer Cells May Kill Them
Cancer cells are already stressed by the fast pace they require to grow and spread and scientists believe a little more stress just may kill them.
11/19/2008 Genetics For Personalized Coronary Heart Disease Treatment
Identifying a single, common variation in a person's genetic information improves prediction of his or her risk of a heart attack or other heart disease events and thus, choice of the best treatment accordingly, said researchers at Baylor College of Medicine.
11/19/2008 Quicker, Easier Way To Make Coal Cleaner
Construction of new coal-fired power plants in the United States is in danger of coming to a standstill, partly due to the high cost of the requirement -- whether existing or anticipated -- to capture all emissions of carbon dioxide, an important greenhouse gas. But an MIT analysis suggests an intermediate step that could get construction moving again, allowing the nation to fend off growing electricity shortages using our most-abundant, least-expensive fuel while reducing emissions.
11/19/2008 Improving Long-term Learning Through Spacing Of Lessons
Combine the aphorisms that "practice makes perfect" and "timing is everything" into one and you might get something resembling findings published in this month's issue of Psychological Science. Proper spacing of lessons, the researchers report, can dramatically enhance learning. And larger gaps between study sessions result in better recall of facts. Conversely: Cramming is ineffective in the long haul.
11/19/2008 Floppy-footed Gibbons Help Us Understand How Early Humans May Have Walked
Early humans roamed the plains long before we evolved our modern inflexible feet. So how did they walk on floppy feet? New research shows how a close relative, the gibbon, manages perfectly well despite their 'floppy' feet. They even use the same energy saving mechanisms when pushing off, despite the foot's different architecture.
11/19/2008 Gene Associated With Epilepsy Discovered
Scientists have found a new gene associated with the brain disorder epilepsy. While the PRICKLE1 gene mutation was specific to a rare form of epilepsy, the study results could help lead to new ideas for overall epilepsy treatment.
11/19/2008 Speeding Antarctic Glacier: Scientists Discover Another Reason For Glacial Acceleration
New satellite data have helped scientists crack the case of a speeding Antarctic glacier -- a finding that promises to help improve sea level forecasts.
11/19/2008 Cellular Safety Shelters Allow TB Agent To Survive In Infected Individuals
"Foamy" macrophage formation may be the key to persistence of infection by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the causative agent of tuberculosis, explains a new study in PLoS Pathogens. These immunity-related cells are shown to be a safety reservoir where the bacterium can hide for years in infected individuals, before inducing an active disease.
11/19/2008 Hybrid Cars Too Quiet For Pedestrian Safety? Add Engine Noise, Say Researchers
Hybrid and electric vehicles do not emit the sounds pedestrians and bicyclists are accustomed to hearing as a vehicle approaches them. Human factors/ergonomics researchers examined participants' preferences for sounds that could be added to quiet vehicles to make them easier to detect.
11/19/2008 Men With Facial Scars Are More Attractive To Women Seeking Short-term Relationships
Men with facial scars are more attractive to women seeking short-term relationships, scientists at the University of Liverpool have found.
11/19/2008 Garlic Chemical Tablet Treats Diabetes I And II, Study Suggests
A drug based on a chemical found in garlic can treat diabetes types I and II when taken as a tablet, a new study shows.
11/19/2008 First Detailed 3-D Glimpse Of Bacterial Cell-wall Architecture
The bacterial cell wall that is the target of potent antibiotics such as penicillin is actually made up of a thin single layer of carbohydrate chains, linked together by peptides, which wrap around the bacterium like a belt around a person, according to scientists at the California Institute of Technology. This first-ever glimpse of the cell-wall structure in three dimensions was made possible by new high-tech microscopy techniques.
11/19/2008 Individuals With HIV Have Higher Risk Of Non-AIDS Cancers
The risk of non-AIDS cancer is higher for individuals infected with HIV than for the general population, according to a meta-analysis presented at the American Association for Cancer Research's Seventh Annual International Conference on Frontiers in Cancer Prevention Research.
11/19/2008 How Household Bleach Kills Bacteria
Developed more than 200 years ago and found in households around the world, chlorine bleach is among the most widely used disinfectants, yet scientists never have understood exactly how the familiar product kills bacteria.
11/19/2008 Kids From Juvenile Justice System 7 Times More Likely To Commit Criminal Acts, Study Finds
A new study shows that juvenile delinquents sentenced to either a juvenile retreat, probation or unsupervised community service were seven times more likely to commit criminal acts as adults than youngsters from the control group who managed to avoid the juvenile justice system.
11/19/2008 Black Holes Are The Rhythm At The Heart Of Galaxies
The powerful black holes at the center of massive galaxies and galaxy clusters act as hearts to the systems, pumping energy out at regular intervals to regulate the growth of the black holes themselves, as well as star formation, according to new data from NASA's Chandra X-Ray Observatory.

Partner Sites



TrustedWriters.com is not responsible for articles and content which we syndicate.
Direct all inquiries to: webmaster@trustedwriters.com

Partner Sites: Unexplainable.Net NewsFeed   Mooker.Com Free Blogs   Cable Advice