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Cold Air Could Help You Lose Weight New evidence suggests that regular exposure to mildly cold air may help people lose weight by increasing the amount of energy their bodies have to expend to keep their core temperature up, researchers say. In fact, being able to control the ambient temperature might be partly responsible for the rise in obesity rates in industrial societies, said researchers from the Netherlands in a study published today (Jan. 22) in the journal Trends in Endocrinology & Metabolism. "Since most of us are exposed to indoor conditions 90 percent of the time, it is worth exploring health aspects of ambient temperatures," said study researcher Wouter van Marken Lichtenbelt of Maastricht University Medical Center. "What would it mean if we let our bodies work again to control body temperature?" Read More »Scotland Surprisingly Had Glaciers 400 Years Ago Read More » Bare Mount Shasta Reveals California Drought Severity Read More » Around the World: Atlantic Warming Melts Antarctic Ice Read More » Number of Kids with Autism May Drop Under New Criteria The number of U.S. children estimated to have autism could decline as a result of new criteria to diagnose the condition, a new study suggests. The findings show that 81 percent of children in the study diagnosed with autism under the old criteria would still be classified as having the condition under the new criteria, which were released last year in the new edition of the psychiatric handbook called the DSM-5. The new findings should be reassuring to parents, said Dr. Andrew Adesman, chief of developmental and behavioral pediatrics at Steven and Alexandra Cohen Children's Medical Center of New York, who was not involved in the study. "The overwhelming majority of children" who met the old criteria will continue to meet the new ones, Adesman told LiveScience. Read More »Electrical Burn Causes Man's Star-Shaped Cataract Read More » Texting Makes You Walk Like a Clumsy Robot Texting makes people walk funny, which could make them more prone to accidents, new research suggests. When texting, walkers change their posture to keep their upper body fairly rigid in order to keep the screen in their field of view, a new study published today (Jan. 22) in the journal PLOS ONE reveals. "Obviously deviating from a straight line is very bad if you're walking close to traffic," said study co-author Siobhan Schabrun, a physical therapy researcher at the University of Western Sydney in Australia. Read More »Water vapor plumes raise question about life on dwarf planet Ceres Read More » Flies with brothers make gentler lovers The study found that unrelated male flies compete more fiercely for female attention than related flies, pestering them more often for sex and leaving them little time to sleep or eat. "Brothers don't need to compete so much with each other for female attention since their genes will get passed on if their sibling mates successfully anyway," said Dr Tommaso Pizzari of Oxford University's zoology department, who led the study. Read More »Sound Waves Make Droplets Dance in Midair Read More » Exploding Star: New Supernova Discovery Is Closest in Years Read More » Mock Mars Mission: Farewell to a Simulated Red Planet Read More » Sci-Fi Spaceship Helps Launch NYC Art Museum Exhibit Read More » NASA to Launch Next-Generation Relay Satellite Today: Watch It Live Read More » No More Eye Drops? Contact Lens Protoype Delivers Glaucoma Meds Read More » Sea Anemones Found Clinging to Underside of Antarctic Ice Read More » Rare Borneo Bay Cat Captured in Stunning Photo Read More » See the Moon Dance with Planets, Stars This Week Read More » Rocket Renovations Will End Public Tours of NASA's Vehicle Assembly Building Read More » Ancient Church Mosaic With Symbol of Jesus Uncovered in Israel Read More » 2013 Was Record Year for Rhino Poaching in South Africa Read More » | ||||
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Thursday, January 23, 2014
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Wednesday, January 22, 2014
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Polar Vortex, Part II? Nah, It's Just Winter Read More » Strange Metal Asteroid Targeted in Far-Out NASA Mission Concept Read More » Night Sky Comes Alive in Breathtaking Time-Lapse Video 'Ancients' Read More » Ancient 'Big Freeze' Rapidly Wiped Out European Forests Read More » Strange Ball Lightning Caught on High-Speed Video Read More » SpaceX Tests Parachutes for Manned Dragon Space Capsule (Video) Read More » Blood Test Has Potential to Catch Pancreatic Cancer Early Pancreatic cancer could be identified in its early stages with a test that looks for genetic material in the blood, according to preliminary research from Denmark. Because patients in the study already had pancreatic cancer, it's not known if the test is accurate enough to detect cancer in its early stages, before it has been diagnosed. And the test had a high false-positive rate, meaning that the test incorrectly identified many healthy patients as having cancer. "The test could thereby [help us] diagnose more patients with pancreatic cancer, some of them at an early stage, and thus have a potential to increase the number of patients that can be operated on and possibly cured of pancreatic cancer," the researchers from Herlev Hospital in Copenhagen wrote in the Jan. 22 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. Read More »Analysis - Syngenta risks fresh China corn dispute with unapproved trait Read More » Why Sloths Leave the Trees to Poop Read More » Neutrino Telescopes Launch New Era of Astronomy Read More » Mysterious Mars Rock Looks Like 'Jelly Donut,' Defies Explanation (Photos) Read More » Elephant Mystery at Ancient Syrian Battle Solved Read More » Fewer Women Seeking Help for Infertility Among women who are having trouble becoming pregnant, a smaller percentage are now getting medical help for infertility compared with three decades ago, according to a new government report. Studies have found that the use of assisted reproduction techniques, such as in vitro fertilization, has increased dramatically over the last decade, giving the impression that infertility services in general are on the rise, said study researcher Anjani Chandra, a demographer at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But infertility services, as defined in the study, also includes less costly and complex options, such as asking a doctor about the best days to have intercourse, and using drugs to stimulate ovulation. "Our data come from surveys asking women about their experience with infertility services, and it tells us a somewhat different story," Chandra told LiveScience. Read More »World's Largest Offshore Wind Farm Seen From Space Read More » Marijuana vs. Alcohol: Which Is Really Worse for Your Health? The question of whether alcohol or marijuana is worse for health is being debated once again, this time, sparked by comments that President Barack Obama made in a recent interview with The New Yorker magazine. Both alcohol consumption and pot smoking can take a toll on the body, showing both short- and long-term health effects, though alcohol has been linked to some 88,000 deaths per year, according to the CDC, while for a number of reasons those associated with marijuana use are harder to come by. That isn't going to happen with marijuana," said Ruben Baler, a health scientist at the National Institute on Drug Abuse. "The impact of marijuana use is much subtler." Read More »2013 Ties for 4th Hottest Year on Record Read More » Tasty Life: Leopard Teeth, Calf Bones Found in Ruins Near Pyramids Read More » Matter of Mystery: Antimatter Beam Could Help Solve Physics Puzzle Read More » Snowy Super Bowl? Too Early to Make the Call Read More » Cosmic Lagoon Shines in Spectacular Views from Very Large Telescope (Video) Read More » Starry Night: The Seven Sisters Shine Brilliantly in New Pleiades Photo
Mystery white rock inexplicably appears near NASA Mars rover Read More » Love Really Is Sweet, Science Reveals Jealousy fails to bring out bitter or sour tastes, despite metaphors that suggest it might, researchers report in the December 2013 issue of the journal Emotion. That love alters one's sensory perceptions and jealousy does not is important to psychologists who study what are called "embodied" metaphors, or linguistic flourishes people quite literally feel in their bones. But "just because there is a metaphor does not necessarily imply that we will get these kind of sensations and perception effects," said study researcher Kai Qin Chan, a doctoral candidate at Radboud University Nijmegen in the Netherlands. After seeing previous research on emotional metaphors, like the studies linking loneliness to coldness and heaviness to importance, Chan and his colleagues wanted to expand the question. Read More »Water Found on Dwarf Planet Ceres, May Erupt from Ice Volcanoes Read More » | ||||
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