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UK scientists win funding for new kind of anticoagulant drug LONDON (Reuters) - British scientists have won early financial backing for a new kind of anticoagulant drug they believe may prevent dangerous blood clots without causing bleeding - a previously unachievable goal. Index Ventures, working with GlaxoSmithKline and Johnson & Johnson via an early-stage biotech fund, said on Monday it was investing $11 million in XO1, a new company set up to develop the experimental medicine. ... Read More »Solar plane lands at Washington on journey across U.S. Read More » Sibling Bullying Is Under-Recognized, Study Finds Across the U.S., parents, educators, doctors and other experts have rallied to protect children from bullies. However, bullying by brothers and sisters is often chalked up to normal sibling behavior. Now a new study finds that sibling aggression, like peer aggression, causes mental distress, which can lead to anger, depression and anxiety in the child who is being targeted. Read More »Normal or Not? When Temper Tantrums Become a Disorder Angry kids who throw excessive, explosive tantrums now have their own disorder: disruptive mood dysregulation disorder. Read More »4 Government Conspiracies That Make PRISM Look Pedestrian As far as government schemes come, the NSA's super-surveillance PRISM program sounds like something straight out of dystopian science fiction. Read More »Past Mega-Quakes Left Mark on Canadian Coast
Canadian Astronomers Battle Funding Cuts and Perceptions Read More » Smarter Than C3P0: Future Robots Will Work in Teams, Scientist Says Read More » Smarter Than C-3PO: Future Robots Will Work in Teams, Scientist Says Read More » NASA Unveils New Astronaut Class for Deep-Space Exploration Read More » Heroism: The Bright Side of Psychopathy? Heroes and psychopaths may have something in common, according to new research that links psychopathic personality traits to selfless behavior. Read More »Are You Protected Against Whooping Cough? Most Adults Don't Know Rates of whooping cough in the United States are at their highest level in decades, yet most adults don't know whether they are adequately protected against the disease, results from a new poll suggest. Read More »Protected Against Whooping Cough? Most Adults Don't Know Rates of whooping cough in the United States are at their highest level in decades, yet most adults don't know whether they are adequately protected against the disease, results from a new poll suggest. Read More »Ancient Chinese Murals Saved From Tomb Robbers
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Monday, June 17, 2013
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Sunday, June 16, 2013
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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Body-Double: Lifelike Android Demoed at Futuristic Conference Read More » Obese Black-Hole Galaxies Could Reveal Quasar Secrets
Scientists moving 15-ton magnet from NY to Chicago New York to Chicago, in five weeks? Scientists on Long Island are preparing to move a 50-foot-wide electromagnet 3,200 miles over land and sea to its new home at the U.S. Department of Energy's Fermi National ... Read More »Scientists moving 15-ton magnet from NY to Chicago
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Saturday, June 15, 2013
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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Why the Supercomputing Arms Race Benefits Everyone (Op-Ed)
Ailing NASA Telescope Spots 503 New Alien Planet Candidates
Atomic Weights Tweaked for 5 Elements
Darwin's Frogs Are in Steep Decline
Vibrating Navigators Shake Up Devices
Tiny Submersible Could Search for Life in Europa's Ocean Read More » James Cameron Gives Record-Breaking Sub to Science Read More » Dad Deserves More Credit ... Good and Bad (Op-Ed) Society for Personality and Social Psychology Center for the Study of Interpersonal Acceptance and Rejection at the University of Connecticut Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights Read More »The One Type of Online Ads Consumers Actually Like While shoppers appreciate the personal touch they get from some online retailers, the majority aren't willing to share too much personal information to get it, new research shows. Read More »Moonlighting Entrepreneurs Take the Night Shift A growing number of workers aren't letting their current jobs get in the way of their entrepreneurial aspirations. New research has found that workers with part- or full-time jobs are turning to e-commerce as a way to launch their entrepreneurial careers. Read More »50 Years Ago, 1st Woman to Fly in Space Wore World's 1st Mission Patch Read More » Another 1930s Dust Bowl Drought Possible This Century (Op-Ed)
Atomic Clocks to Become Even More Accurate Read More » Lego Figures: No More Mr. Nice Toy
6 Ways Dads Win at Parenting From paper towel commercials to PTA meetings, let's face it: Moms are assumed to be the default parents. Read More »Snowflake the Albino Gorilla Was Inbred, Study Finds
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