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Checking Work Email at Night? Here's Why You Should Stop Using a smartphone to get more work done at night makes employees less productive the next day, new research suggests. Russell Johnson, a Michigan State University assistant professor of management and co-author of the study, said many smartphone owners consider the devices to be among the most important tools ever invented when it comes to increasing productivity of knowledge-based work. Yet, the National Sleep Foundation says only 40 percent of Americans get enough sleep on most nights and a commonly cited reason is smartphone usage for work. Both studies' surveys showed that nighttime smartphone usage for business purposes cut into sleep and sapped workers' energy the next day in the office. Read More »50 Job Interview Questions You Should Be Prepared to Answer The online career site Glassdoor believes one of the best ways for job seekers to get ready for an interview is to practice their responses to any questions that may be asked. To help those who are preparing for an upcoming interview put their best foot forward, Glassdoor sifted through tens of thousands of their interview reviews to find out some of the most common questions candidates are getting asked. Read More »3 Reasons to Interview for a Job You Don't Want In an economy in which full-time opportunities are scarce, many job seekers have adopted a "take what you can get" attitude, accepting any interview they're offered in the hopes of landing a position rather than holding out for their dream job. "Describe your strengths and what you bring to the table, but also ask a lot of questions about what the employer is looking for in a candidate to fill the position." Read More »Ancient Roman Infanticide Didn't Spare Either Sex, DNA Suggests Read More » Body's Response to Disease Has a Smell, Study Suggest Humans may be able to smell sickness, or at least detect a distinct odor in the sweat of people with highly active immune systems who are responding to infection, a new study from Sweden suggests. In the study, eight healthy people were injected with either lipopolysaccharide, a bacterial toxin that produces a strong immune response, or with salt water (which wasn't expected to have any effect). Read More »Cosmic Lens Caught Bending Bright Gamma-Ray Burst, a Space First Read More » NASA Flooded with Ideas for 2020 Mars Rover Science Gear Read More » Grand Canyon's Age? A Mix As Wild As the West Read More » | ||||
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Sunday, January 26, 2014
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Saturday, January 25, 2014
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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Mavericks Competition: Why Surf Spot Has Monster Waves The world's best surfers are gearing up for Mavericks International, an elite surf competition that pits big-wave riders against the monster swells at a Northern California Beach. The competition happens every year in the winter at Pillar Point in Half Moon Bay, Calif., at a time when the waves and weather align. Read More »Get Off the Couch! Even Light Exercise Has Health Benefits "These findings demonstrate the importance of minimizing sedentary activities, and replacing some of them with light-intensity activities, such as pacing back and forth when on the phone, standing at your desk periodically instead of sitting and having walking meetings instead of sit-down meetings," study researcher Paul Loprinzi, an assistant professor at Bellarmine University in Louisville, Ky., said in a statement. The new study was published online Dec. 25 in the journal Preventive Medicine. Read More »Stargazer Snaps Stunning View of Andromeda Galaxy (Photo)
New Night Sky Supernova: How to See It in Telescopes Read More » Why Wait? Career and Romance Woes Lead to Delayed Childbearing The new study, from researchers in Sweden, finds the most common reason that 36- to 40-year-old people cite for not having children is that they don't have a suitable partner. "The majority really wanted children, even [many] who were 36 or 40 years old," said study researcher Erica Schytt, who studies women and children's health at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm. "At minimum, they don't have the same possibilities of getting pregnant" as younger people, Schytt told LiveScience. Read More » | ||||
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Friday, January 24, 2014
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Midwest Earthquake Risk Still Looms Read More » LA Earthquakes Could Be Amplified, Models Show Read More » Frogs' 'Love Ripples' Bring Death from Above Read More » Ancient Mars May Have Been Habitable for Hundreds of Millions of Years Read More » World's Oldest Cancer Arose in a Dog 11,000 Years Ago Read More » Fever Treatments May Cause More Flu Deaths People sick with the flu often take medication to alleviate the accompanying fever. But their relief may come at a price for others: New findings suggest that suppressing fever can result in the infection of tens of thousands of additional people each flu season. The condition can lower the amounts of virus in a sick person's body, because viruses replicate less efficiently in higher temperatures. They found that in a typical flu season, fever-reducing drugs such as ibuprofen and acetaminophen may lead to tens of thousands of additional influenza cases, along with more than a thousand deaths attributable to influenza, across North America. Read More »First-Time C-Sections Declining in Many US States The report is based on data about primary cesarean deliveries from places where this information is recorded on birth certificates, including 28 states and New York City. Email Bahar Gholipour or follow her @alterwired. Read More »Rare Disease Linked to Dengue Virus Caused Texas Woman's Death A woman in Texas who died in 2012 succumbed to a rare blood cell disease, which was caused by the mosquito-borne dengue virus infection, according to a report of her case published today. The case shows that while dengue remains rare in the United States, vigilance for the disease is important, and health professionals should be aware of the complications the virus can cause. The woman died after her dengue infection brought on another condition called hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH), in which white blood cells build up in the skin, spleen and liver, and destroy other blood cells. HLH is most frequently associated with Epstein Barr virus infection, but also has been linked to dengue, according to the researchers, from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Read More »NASA Launches Next-Generation Relay Satellite Into Orbit Read More » Rocket blasts off with NASA communications satellite Read More » NASA rover Opportunity finds signs Mars once had fresh water Read More » British scientists seek go-ahead for GM 'Omega-3' crop trial By Kate Kelland LONDON (Reuters) - British scientists have applied for permission to run an open-air field trial of a genetically modified (GM) crop they hope may one day become a sustainable and environmentally friendly source of healthy Omega-3 fats. The proposed trial - likely to generate controversy in a nation where GM foods have little public support - could start as early as May and will use Camelina plants engineered to produce seeds high in Omega-3 long chain fatty acids. No GM crops are currently grown commercially in Britain and only two - a pest-resistant type of maize and a potato with enhanced starch content - are licensed for cultivation in the European Union (EU). But scientists at Britain's agricultural lab Rothamsted Research have developed Camelina plants to produce Omega-3 fats that are known to be beneficial to health but normally found only in oils in increasingly limited fish stocks. Read More »British scientists seek go-ahead for GM 'Omega-3' crop trial By Kate Kelland LONDON (Reuters) - British scientists have applied for permission to run an open-air field trial of a genetically modified (GM) crop they hope may one day become a sustainable and environmentally friendly source of healthy Omega-3 fats. The proposed trial - likely to generate controversy in a nation where GM foods have little public support - could start as early as May and will use Camelina plants engineered to produce seeds high in Omega-3 long chain fatty acids. No GM crops are currently grown commercially in Britain and only two - a pest-resistant type of maize and a potato with enhanced starch content - are licensed for cultivation in the European Union (EU). But scientists at Britain's agricultural lab Rothamsted Research have developed Camelina plants to produce Omega-3 fats that are known to be beneficial to health but normally found only in oils in increasingly limited fish stocks. Read More »Artificial Bone Marrow Could Be Used to Treat Leukemia Read More » Mars Rover Photos as Art: Red Planet Wonders Star in Smithsonian Exhibit Read More » New Supernova in Night Sky Captivates Amateur Astronomers (Photos) Read More » Stethoscopes Could Become Extinct, Doctors Say The image of a doctor with a stethoscope hanging around the neck may seem iconic, but in fact, this image may not last much longer, as hand-held ultrasound devices are predicted to replace 200-year-old stethoscopes in near future, doctors say. "With ultrasound devices, one can not only look at the heart, but all of the organs in the body," said Dr. Jagat Narula, professor of cardiology at Mount Sinai School of Medicine and one of the authors of the editorial. The ability to get a better look inside the body could prevent misdiagnoses, and help doctors detect abnormalities that need to be followed up with other tests. "As a matter of fact, stethoscope is a misnomer," Narula said. Read More »Trailblazing Mars Rover Celebrates 10 Years on Red Planet Read More » River Roulette: Randomness Controls Erosion Read More » Polar Bears Hunt on Land as Ice Shrinks Read More » Squarks & Neutralinos Lurk in the Universe, Physicist Says Read More » | ||||
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