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Daydreaming Your Stress Away Will Probably Backfire Read More » Utah Suicides Linked to Air Pollution Altogether, the findings suggest that suicide "is a preventable outcome, and air pollution could be a modifiable risk factor," said Amanda Bakian, an epidemiologist at the University of Utah and the leader of the new study. Unsurprisingly, mental illness plays a huge role — at least 90 percent of people who die by suicide have a diagnosable mental disorder, according to the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP). Read More »Whole Diet Approach to Child Nutrition Urged by Pediatricians New guidelines released today by a leading U.S. pediatrician's group urge a more practical, commonsense approach toward nutrition to help improve children's diets and health, both in school and at home. In the paper, the doctors focus on promoting a healthy overall diet, and using only a little bit of sugar, fat and salt to make healthy foods more appealing to kids. "Parents should look for every opportunity to make small, simple improvements in the nutritional value of the foods and drinks they provide children, in school and out," said Dr. Robert Murray, one of the statement's lead authors and a professor of nutrition at The Ohio State University. 1.Choose a mix of foods from the five food groups: fruits, vegetables, whole grains, lower-fat dairy products and quality proteins, such as lean meats, fish, eggs, beans, nuts and seeds. Read More »Children Have Fewer Allergies When Families Do Dishes by Hand Doing dishes the old-fashioned way — by hand — might help curb a modern-day problem: rising rates of childhood allergies, a new study suggests. Researchers in Sweden found that children living in families that hand-washed their dishes were about 40 percent less likely to develop allergies compared with kids in homes that used a dishwasher, said study researcher Dr. Bill Hesselmar, an allergist at the University of Gothenburg Department of Pediatrics. The researchers said they suspect that hand-washing dishes doesn't get them as clean as the dishwasher does, which is actually a good thing because it can help protect against allergies by exposing family members to more bacteria. Under an idea known as the "hygiene hypothesis," some health researchers think that increased exposure to microbes during early life may stimulate children's immune systems, and that this stimulation may help reduce the risk that a child will develop allergies, the researchers wrote in their study, published online today (Feb. 23) in the journal Pediatrics. Read More »Cities Birth More Thunderstorms Than Rural Areas Read More » 5 Things a Man's Finger Length Says About Him Is your index finger shorter than your ring finger? Men with short index fingers and long ring fingers tend to be nicer toward women, according to a new study, to be published in the March issue of the journal Personality and Individual Differences. Men with small digit-ratios (shorter index fingers relative to ring fingers) engaged in roughly a third more agreeable behaviors toward women, and a third fewer quarrelsome ones, than men with large digit-ratios, the reports showed. Previous research has found that this "2D:4D" ratio — the ratio of the length of the second digit (the index finger) to that of the fourth digit (the ring finger) — reveals the amount of male hormones, mainly testosterone, a person is exposed to in the womb. Read More »Penguins Are Well Dressed, But Have Poor Taste Read More » Mexican Wolf Population Now Tops 100 in US Read More » New Sea Dragon Species Flaunts Ruby-Red Skin Read More » New Residents: Dolphins Swam into Mediterranean 18,000 Years Ago Read More » Line of Cocoa: Is Chocolate Snorting Safe? Read More » World View Makes Record-Setting Parafoil Flight from Near Edge of Space Read More » Stephen Hawking Praises 'Theory of Everything' Oscar Winner Read More » Predawn Military Rocket Launches Visible from US East Coast Tuesday Read More » | ||||
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Monday, February 23, 2015
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Sunday, February 22, 2015
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Astronauts Complete First of Three Spacewalks Read More » Attention Bradley Cooper: Oscar-Nominated Guys Face Divorce Risk Sure, it's the most prestigious award that Hollywood has to offer, but that coveted Oscar statue might also be a bad omen for some of the actors who receive it, a new study suggests. Male Oscar winners are three times as likely as other actors to get a divorce during their first year of marriage, the study found. "We always think about status and moving up as something good, but we also observed all the misery that comes with certain dramatic increases in status," Michael Jensen, a strategy professor at the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business and the study's lead author, told Live Science. For decades, there's been a superstition circulating around Hollywood that winning an Oscar can actually destroy an actor or actress's career. Read More » | ||||
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Saturday, February 21, 2015
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Drunk on YouTube: Funny Videos Don't Tell the Whole Story Videos of people falling over drunk are popular on YouTube, but such glimpses of inebriation do not show the negative consequences of drinking too much alcohol, a new study finds. In the study, the researchers watched 70 popular videos of drunkenness on YouTube, which had more than 300 million views combined. In addition, only 7 percent referred to alcohol dependence (such as withdrawal symptoms), but alcohol dependence is common among frequent heavy drinkers, the researchers said. "This is important because brand-name references are known to be particularly potent in terms of encouraging drinking," Dr. Brian Primack, a co-author of the study and an associate professor of medicine and pediatrics at the University of Pittsburgh, said in a statement. Read More »Swamps, Simulations and Mad Drone Skills: Filming 'LIGO: Generations' Read More » Planck Satellite Brings Early Universe into Focus (Kavli Hangout) Read More » Could This 'Thinking Cap' Help You Learn? Read More » Anthony Anderson on the Power of Portrayals (Video) Read More » It's Not Just Ice: 10 Tips to Avoid a Bad Fall Read More » Mars on Earth? What Life Is Like on the 'Red Planet' Read More » ADHD is the New Normal (Op-Ed) Read More » Throat-Closing Ailment EoE is a Mystery That Must Be Solved (Op-Ed) Read More » Space Station Astronauts Taking Spacewalk Today: Watch It Live Read More » Arctic Blast Blankets Eastern US in Ice and Snow (Photo)
Rise of the Fembots: Why Artificial Intelligence Is Often Female From Apple's iPhone assistant Siri to the mechanized attendants at Japan's first robot-staffed hotel, a seemingly disproportionate percentage of artificial intelligence systems have female personas. "I think there is a pattern here," said Karl Fredric MacDorman, a computer scientist and expert in human-computer interaction at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis. One reason for the glut of female artificial intelligences (AIs) and androids (robots designed to look or act like humans) may be that these machines tend to perform jobs that have traditionally been associated with women. For example, many robots are designed to function as maids, personal assistants or museum guides, MacDorman said. Read More »History Repeats Itself: Ancient Cities Grew Much Like Modern Ones Read More » Spacewalking astronauts rigging station for new U.S. space taxis By Irene Klotz CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (Reuters) - A pair of U.S. astronauts floated outside the International Space Station on Saturday to begin rigging parking spots for two commercial space taxis. Station commander Barry "Butch" Wilmore, 52, and flight engineer Terry Virts, 47, left the station's Quest airlock shortly before 8 a.m. EST to begin a planned 6-1/2-hour spacewalk, the first of three outings over the next eight days. The work will prepare docking ports for upcoming flights by Boeing Co and privately owned Space Exploration Technologies, or SpaceX, which are developing capsules to ferry crew to and from the station, which flies about 260 miles (418 km) above the Earth. The United States has been dependent on Russia for station crew transportation since the space shuttle were retired in 2011. Read More »Exclusive: Orbital explosion probe said to find debris in engine: sources By Andrea Shalal WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Last October's explosion of Orbital ATK Inc's Antares rocket may have been triggered when debris inadvertently left in a fuel tank traveled into the booster's main engine, two people familiar with investigations into the accident told Reuters. The sources said the preliminary findings suggest that a simple assembly mistake by Orbital ATK could have caused the explosion, which destroyed a cargo ship bound for the International Space Station. Orbital ATK on Friday acknowledged that so-called "foreign object debris" was one of more than a half dozen credible causes of the explosion, but said it was not "a leading candidate as the most probable cause of the failure." Orbital spokesman Barry Beneski said the company-led "accident investigation board," which includes officials from NASA and the Federal Aviation Administration, had not identified any evidence of mishandling of the flight hardware by Orbital. Read More » | ||||
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