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Crop Failure and Fading Food Supplies: Climate Change's Lasting Impact (Op-Ed) Now, scientists have assessed the global scale of food crop disasters for the first time — and the news is not good. Studies from Bangladesh, Ethiopia and Niger have shown that children have increased wasting and stunting rates after a flood or drought, according to the United Nations World Food Programme. For example, children in Niger born during a drought are more than twice as likely to be malnourished between the ages of 1 and 2. Read More »What Are the Odds? Temperature Records Keep Falling (Op-Ed) Read More » Crowdsourcing the Universe: How Citizen Scientists are Driving Discovery (Kavli Roundtable) Read More » Wearable Sweat Sensors Could Track Your Health Read More » Autism App? iPhone Tool Could One Day Spot the Disorder Read More » Great Wall of White: Epic Snowfall Visible from Space Read More » Proton rocket blasts off with part of European space 'data highway' FRANKFURT (Reuters) - A Russian Proton rocket blasted off in Kazakhstan on Friday night to put into orbit both the first part of Europe's new space "data highway" and a Eutelsat communications satellite. The 19-story tall Russian-built rocket lifted off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome at 1720 ET (4:20 a.m. local time). The EDRS-A node that it is carrying is the first building block of the European Data Relay Satellite (EDRS), a "big data" highway costing nearly 500 million euros ($545 million) that will harness new laser-based communications technology. ... Read More »Obama wants $4B to help students learn computer science
Mantis at the Movies: Tiny Specs Reveal Bugs' 3D Vision Read More » Stone Age Horror! Pit Filled with Severed Limbs Uncovered Read More » | ||||
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Saturday, January 30, 2016
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Friday, January 29, 2016
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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Mysterious Sonic Boom Reported Over New Jersey Read More » Knowing all the angles: Ancient Babylonians used tricky geometry Read More » Mexican researchers fit dog with 3D printed prosthetic leg A six-year-old dog named Romina, who was injured in a lawnmower accident, is fitted with an articulated prosthetic leg made with 3D printing technology. Santiago Garcia, UVM's great species coordinator and specialist in prosthetics, said being able to print out the model in 3D made the process easier and enabled him to adjust it quickly. Read More »Publisher Zuckerman announces US-Israel science initiative NEW YORK (AP) — Real estate magnate and publisher Mortimer Zuckerman has announced a scholarship program to pay for American graduate students in the sciences to study in Israel. Read More »Europe to launch first part of space-based data highway Europe plans to launch on Friday night the first part of a new space data highway that will pave the way for faster than ever monitoring of natural disasters such as earthquakes and floods. The EDRS-A node is the first building block of the European Data Relay Satellite (EDRS), a "big data" highway costing nearly 500 million euros ($545 million) that will harness new laser-based communications technology. The EDRS will considerably improve transmission of large amounts of data, such as pictures and radar images, from satellites in orbit to Earth as they will no longer have to wait for a ground station on Earth to come into view. Read More »The Real 'X-Files'? CIA Reveals Weirdest UFO Stories The real-life stories of UFOs would be enough for the fictional "X-Files" FBI agents Mulder and Scully to spend a lifetime investigating. With a nod to the new "X-Files" reboot (which airs on Fox on Mondays at 8 p.m. ET), the Central Intelligence Agency has released a trove of once classified documents on several real-life unidentified flying objects. The space race was on, the Cold War fears had reached a fever pitch, and science-fiction movies like "The Flying Saucer" (1950) catapulted schlocky depictions of aliens and their flying machines into the popular consciousness. Read More »Octopuses Are Surprisingly Social — and Confrontational, Scientists Find Read More » Babylonians Tracked Jupiter with Fancy Math, Tablet Reveals Read More » Decapitated Gladiators Reveal Roman Empire's Genetic Influence Read More » Limited Zika Virus Outbreaks 'Likely' in US Read More » Important First-Aid Move: What to Do If a Child Loses Consciousness If a child passes out, parents can help them by performing a simple first-aid technique known as putting them in "the recovery position," a new study suggests. Children in the study who became unconscious because they fainted or had a seizure — but were still breathing — and were placed in the recovery position were almost 30 percent less likely to be hospitalized compared with children whose parents did not perform this first-aid method, researchers in Europe found. The finding shows that putting kids on their sides during a seizure really does help, and it works to keep kids from needing to be hospitalized, said Dr. David Mandelbaum, a pediatric neurologist at Hasbro Children's Hospital in Providence, Rhode Island, who was not involved in the research. Read More »F-35 Fighter Jet Likely Caused Sonic Booms That Rocked New Jersey Read More » | ||||
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Thursday, January 28, 2016
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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Artificial Intelligence Beats 'Most Complex Game Devised by Humans' An artificial intelligence system has defeated a professional Go player, cracking one of the longstanding grand challenges in the field. What's more, the new system, called AlphaGo, defeated the human player by learning the game from scratch using an approach known as "deep learning," the researchers involved say. Ever since IBM's Deep Blue defeated Gary Kasparov in their iconic chess match in 1997, AI researchers have been quietly crafting robots that can master more and more human pastimes. Read More »Go figure! Game victory seen as artificial intelligence milestone Read More » Challenger accident shapes new wave of passenger spaceships Read More » How to Tell If Conspiracy Theories Are Real: Here's the Math Read More » Ice-Age Mammoth Bones Found Under Oregon Football Field Read More » Addiction Changes Brain Biology in 3 Stages, Experts Say Experts who research addiction have long argued that it is a disease of the brain. Now, in a new paper, they present a model of addiction, broken down into three key stages, to illustrate how the condition changes human neurobiology. Understanding what's going on in the brain of someone with an addiction is essential for medical professionals to better treat people with this disease, said Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the lead author of the new review. Read More »'Schizophrenia Gene' Discovery Sheds Light on Possible Cause Researchers have identified a gene that increases the risk of schizophrenia, and they say they have a plausible theory as to how this gene may cause the devastating mental illness. After conducting studies in both humans and mice, the researchers said this new schizophrenia risk gene, called C4, appears to be involved in eliminating the connections between neurons — a process called "synaptic pruning," which, in humans, happens naturally in the teen years. It's possible that excessive or inappropriate "pruning" of neural connections could lead to the development of schizophrenia, the researchers speculated. Read More »Young Women's Cancer Risk Linked to Tanning Beds Young women who use tanning beds or booths have up to a sixfold increase in their likelihood of developing melanoma, a new study found. The study also suggests that indoor tanning has likely played a role in the rise in melanoma rates among young U.S. women in recent years. The findings indicate that the "melanoma epidemic … seems likely to continue unabated, especially among young women, unless exposure to indoor tanning is further restricted and reduced," the researchers, from the University of Minnesota, wrote in the Jan. 27 issue of the journal JAMA Dermatology. Read More » | ||||
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