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Scientists use climate, population changes to predict diseases Read More » Scientists use climate, population changes to predict diseases By Kate Kelland LONDON (Reuters) - British scientists say they have developed a model that can predict outbreaks of zoonotic diseases – those such as Ebola and Zika that jump from animals to humans – based on changes in climate. "Our model can help decision-makers assess the likely impact (on zoonotic disease) of any interventions or change in national or international government policies, such as the conversion of grasslands to agricultural lands," said Kate Jones, a professor who co-led the study at University College London's genetics, evolution and environment department. Around 60 to 75 percent of emerging infectious diseases are so-called "zoonotic events", where animal diseases jump into people. Read More »Genius: Can Anybody Be One? Read More » Filling the Periodic Table: New Names for the Newest Elements The new names were announced Wednesday (June 8) by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC), the organization that standardizes chemical element names. The endings of each of the proposed names (such as –ium) reflect the element's place in the periodic table. The rest of the name is specific to each element's discovery, according to a statement that IUPAC issued in recommending the new names. Read More »'Smart' Blocks Turn Lego Creations into Web-Connected Toys Read More » Shock and Awe: Eels Leap to Deliver Electrifying Attacks Read More » Long-Term Marijuana Use Linked to Changes in Brain's Reward System People who use marijuana for many years respond differently to natural rewards than people who don't use the drug, according to a new study. Researchers found that people who had used marijuana for 12 years, on average, showed greater activity in the brain's reward system when they looked at pictures of objects used for smoking marijuana than when they looked at pictures of a natural reward — their favorite fruits. "This study shows that marijuana disrupts the natural reward circuitry of the brain, making marijuana highly salient to those who use it heavily," study author Dr. Francesca Filbey, an associate professor of behavioral and brain science at the University of Texas at Dallas, said in a statement. Read More » | ||||
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Monday, June 13, 2016
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Saturday, June 11, 2016
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CO2 Gets Stoned: Method Turns Harmful Gas Into Solid Read More » Leading British scientists warn leaving EU will hurt funding Read More » Solar plane lands in New York City during bid to circle the globe Read More » | ||||
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Friday, June 10, 2016
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Private company wants U.S. clearance to fly to the moon Read More » In mapping eclipses, world's first computer maybe also told fortunes Read More » U.S. regulator says too many drugmakers chasing same cancer strategy Read More » No scientific basis for postponing Brazil Olympics due to Zika: minister Read More » 2 Teens Die After Drinking Racing Fuel & Soda Mix Two teens in Tennessee died in January after drinking a mixture of racing fuel and soda at a party, which appears to have been concocted as a substitute for alcohol, according to a new report. Before the party, one of the teens took a bottle of racing fuel from the home of a family friend and mixed an unknown amount of the fuel with soda in a 2-liter bottle, according to the report. Racing fuel is an additive that can be poured into a gas tank to increase the performance of a car or motorcycle. Read More »Cancer Clues in the Breath: Test Could Ease Screening A simple breath test can detect changes in people who have undergone surgery for lung cancer, a new study reports. Researchers found that three chemical markers known as carbonyl compounds, which are gases released when people exhale, were reduced in patients with lung cancer after they had an operation to remove their tumors, compared with before their operations. This study demonstrated that levels of certain chemical markers associated with a tumor went down in people after they had surgery for lung cancer, said Dr. Victor van Berkel, a thoracic surgeon at the University of Louisville School of Medicine in Kentucky, who was a co-author of the study. Read More »Food Labels Have You Confused? Try the No-Label Diet In May, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration finalized plans for a new Nutrition Facts label for packaged foods, with the hope that it will help Americans take better control of their health. If more Americans got back to buying single-ingredient food products, we'd be a far healthier country. Read More »Attorney: US using 'untested legal theory' against scientist The attorney for a nuclear engineer accused of helping a Chinese energy company build nuclear reactors with U.S. technology says the government's case involves "novel and untested legal theories." ... Read More »'Minecraft' Tree in 'Lost World' Forest May Be Tropics' Tallest Read More » Globalized economy more susceptible to weather extremes, scientists warn Read More » The bright side: global 'light pollution' obscures starry nights Read More » | ||||
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