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Kate Upton Goes Zero-G for Sports Illustrated's 2014 Swimsuit Issue Read More » Flying Bat-Inspired Robots May Take to the Skies Researchers studied how fruit bats use their wings to manipulate the air around them. "Bats have different wing shapes and sizes, depending on their evolutionary function," Danesh Tafti, a professor in the department of mechanical engineering and director of the High Performance Computational Fluid Thermal Science and Engineering Lab at Virginia Tech, said in a statement. Fruit bats, and more than 1,000 other species of bats, have wings made of flexible, "webbed" membranes that connect their fingers, the researchers said. Fruit bats typically weigh about an ounce (30 grams), and their fully extended wings can each measure roughly 6.7 inches (17 centimeters) in length, Tafti said. Read More »Genetic Process Behind Calico Kitty Coats Visualized Read More » Air Turbulence: How Dangerous Is It? Read More » Sochi Slopes Seen from Space (Photo) Read More » San Francisco's Deadly 1906 Earthquake Was Last of Three Read More » 'Acne Bacteria' Hopped from Humans to Grapevines Grapevines can't grow zits, but they do carry bacteria related to the acne-causing pathogen found on human skin, according to a new report describing the first known case of a bacterium transferring from a human to a plant. So when researchers based at the Research and Innovation Center – Fondazione Edmund Mach in Italy analyzed bacterial colonies growing on the common grapevine Vitis vinifera in Northeast Italy, they were surprised to find a previously unknown relative of P. acnes living in the bark of the plant. Based on the genetic makeup of the new bacterium, as compared to other related strains, and the evolutionary history of those other strains, the researchers estimate farmers transferred the pathogen to the plants roughly 7,000 years ago. Since then, the bacterium has become entirely plant-adapted, and it can no longer return to its original human host, the team reports today (Feb. 18) in the journal Molecular Biology and Evolution. Read More »Bears Use Wildlife Crossings to Find New Mates As more and more roads cut across the territories of wild animals, wildlife crossings are being built to bridge these barriers. Now, a team of researchers at Montana State University has compared the genetics of grizzly bears and black bears at road crossings in the Canadian Rockies, finding the bears do indeed move across the Trans-Canada Highway, and breed with mates on the other side. The study provides the first proof that wildlife crossings maintain genetic diversity, the researchers say. "Roads connect human populations, but fragment wildlife populations," wrote the authors of the study, detailed today (Feb. 18) in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. Read More »Cats and Dogs May See in Ultraviolet Read More » NASA Teaches Humanoid Robonaut 2 Medical Skills for Space Emergencies (Video) Read More » Great Pyramid at Giza Vandalized to 'Prove' Conspiracy Theory Read More » 12-Year-Old Invents Braille Printer Using Lego Set Read More » Moon, Mars and Star Form Celestial Triangle Wednesday Night Read More » New Maps Show How Habitats May Shift with Climate Change Read More » Money, Sleep and Love: What Makes a Happy Parent? Who is happier: Parents or non-parents? Social psychologists are moving past the simple yes-or-no question of whether kids make people happy, as studies have failed to find strong differences in happiness between parents and non-parents. "Overall, there's not much difference between parents and non-parents, but when you start to take a more detailed approach, you see some differences emerge," said Katie Nelson, a doctoral candidate in psychology at the University of California, Riverside. Studies attempting to compare parents and non-parents have variously found that kids make people happier; Read More »Lettuce-Based Electric Wires Sprout in the Lab Read More » Countries with the Deadliest Roads Revealed Read More » Get Up! Prolonged Sitting May Raise Risk of Disability Older adults who spend a lot of time sitting may be at increased risk of having a disability, regardless of how much they exercise, a new study suggests. The study is published today (Feb. 19) in the Journal of Physical Activity & Health. Read More »Squeak! Ancient Helium Escaping from Yellowstone Read More » Big Discovery: Tiny Electron's Mass More Precisely Measured Scientists have made the most precise measurement yet of the electron's atomic mass. "It is a major technical improvement," said Edmund Myers, a physicist at Florida State University, who wrote an accompanying News & Views article today (Feb. 19) in the journal Nature, where the new measurement is detailed. The new measurement could one day be used in experiments to test the Standard Model, the reigning physics theory that describes the tiny particles that make up the universe. But before the new value can be used to test the basic physics theory, other fundamental constants need to be measured at higher precision, Myers said. Read More »Fecal Transplant Regulations Too Strict, Some Say Physicians use fecal transplants to treat certain intestinal infections, but the procedures recently came under strict regulations, with the Food and Drug Administration managing the transplants as though they were a drug treatment. This regulation has made it harder for patients to receive fecal transplants, and in a new paper, some researchers are calling for the transplants to instead be regulated as a tissue, akin to blood donations. The raw material for fecal transplants isn't hard to come by, and so in the face of what some see as current over-regulation, an underground market for the transplants will likely spring up, the researchers argued today (Feb. 19) in the journal Nature. At the same time, they said, more research is needed on the long-term effects of fecal transplants. Read More »How Stars Die: Lopsided Nature of Supernovas Revealed Read More » 5 Private Moon-Race Teams Compete for Bonus $6 Million Read More » | ||||
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Wednesday, February 19, 2014
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Tuesday, February 18, 2014
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Regret This Year Could Spur Romance Next Year (Op-Ed) Amy Summerville is an assistant professor of social psychology at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. This article was originally published on the blog of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. Summerville contributed this article to Live Science's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights. For some, Valentine's Day was less a day of flowers and chocolate and more a reminder of the ways that Cupid's arrow has missed the mark. Read More »First biomarker could help boys at risk of major depression By Kate Kelland LONDON (Reuters) - British brain scientists have identified the first biomarker, or biological signpost, for clinical depression and say it could help find boys in particular who are at risk of developing the debilitating mental illness. In a study in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Science (PNAS) journal, the team found that teenage boys who have a combination of depressive symptoms and raised levels of the stress hormone cortisol are up to 14 times more likely to develop major depression than those who show neither trait. "We're very bad about looking after our mental health, and yet the problems of mental health are extremely common," said Barbara Sahakian, a Cambridge University professor of Clinical neuropsychology who worked on the study. "(And) we now have a very real way of identifying those teenage boys most likely to develop clinical depression." He said armed with such knowledge, doctors and other carers could target prevention strategies at depression-vulnerable boys and "hopefully help reduce their risk of serious episodes of depression and their consequences in adult life". Read More »Monday night viewing: close encounter with enormous asteroid (Reuters) - An asteroid estimated to be the size of three football fields is set for its close-up on a live webcast as it whizzes by Earth on Monday, roughly a year after one exploded over Russia and injured 1,200 people. Slooh Space Camera plans to track the close approach of Asteroid 2000 EM26 as it races past the planet at approximately 27,000 miles per hour (43,000 km/h), starting at 9 p.m. EST (2 a.m. GMT, February 18), the robotic telescope service said in a statement on Slooh.com. The 295-yard (270-meter) asteroid was expected to streak by Earth little more than a year after another asteroid exploded on February 15, 2013 over Chelyabinsk, Russia, injuring 1,200 people following a massive shock wave that shattered windows and damaged buildings. However, the International Olympic Committee at the last minute said it could be done only after the games and separately. Read More »Warming from Arctic Sea Ice Melting More Dramatic than Thought Read More » Prostate's Early Growth May Reveal Cures for Later Illnesses (Op-Ed) Read More » In Appalachia, Even Miners Want to Leave Coal Behind (Video) Read More » A Conservative's Middle-Ground Solution for Climate Change (Video) Read More » Why a Climate Scientist's Libel Case Matters (Op-Ed) Read More » Cosmic Creativity: A NASA Resident Artist's View of Space Read More » First biomarker could help boys at risk of major depression By Kate Kelland LONDON (Reuters) - British brain scientists have identified the first biomarker, or biological signpost, for clinical depression and say it could help find boys in particular who are at risk of developing the debilitating mental illness. In a study in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Science (PNAS) journal, the team found that teenage boys who have a combination of depressive symptoms and raised levels of the stress hormone cortisol are up to 14 times more likely to develop major depression than those who show neither trait. "We're very bad about looking after our mental health, and yet the problems of mental health are extremely common," said Barbara Sahakian, a Cambridge University professor of clinical neuropsychology who worked on the study. "(And) we now have a very real way of identifying those teenage boys most likely to develop clinical depression." He said armed with such knowledge, doctors and other carers could target prevention strategies at depression-vulnerable boys and "hopefully help reduce their risk of serious episodes of depression and their consequences in adult life". Read More »Monday night viewing: close encounter with enormous asteroid (Reuters) - An asteroid estimated to be the size of three football fields is set for its close-up on a live webcast as it whizzes by Earth on Monday, roughly a year after one exploded over Russia and injured 1,200 people. Slooh Space Camera plans to track the close approach of Asteroid 2000 EM26 as it races past the planet at approximately 27,000 miles per hour (43,000 km/h), starting at 9 p.m. EST (2 a.m. GMT, February 18), the robotic telescope service said in a statement on Slooh.com. The 295-yard (270-meter) asteroid was expected to streak by Earth little more than a year after another asteroid exploded on February 15, 2013 over Chelyabinsk, Russia, injuring 1,200 people following a massive shock wave that shattered windows and damaged buildings. However, the International Olympic Committee at the last minute said it could be done only after the games and separately. Read More »Ticks May Help Detect Lyme-Disease Bacteria in People Read More » How Nuclear Bombs Could Save Earth from Killer Asteroids Read More » Space Dust Is Filled with Building Blocks for Life Read More » Ancient Rural Town Uncovered in Israel Read More » Brain Implant Lets One Monkey Control Another Read More » Asian Elephants Console Each Other When in Distress Asian elephants reassure other distressed elephants by touching them and "talking" to them, which suggests they are capable of empathy and reassurance, according to new research. "There is 50 years of behavioral observational research out of Africa that elephants are highly social, they have empathy and they can think about their social relationships and make specific social decisions that impact themselves and others," said study researcher Josh Plotnik, of the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom. Read More » | ||||
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