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Lockheed enables Apache helicopter pilots to see targets in color By Andrea Shalal HUNTSVILLE, Alabama (Reuters) - The U.S. Army has unveiled new technology that will for the first time allow AH-64 Apache helicopter pilots to see targeting and surveillance data in full, high-resolution color, instead of the fuzzy black and white images they get now. An Army official said new sensors developed by Lockheed Martin Corp over the past four years could help avoid mistakes such as the 2007 attack by two U.S. Apache helicopters that killed 12 people in Baghdad, including two Reuters news staff, after they were mistaken for armed insurgents. U.S. Central Command has said an investigation of the incident found that U.S. forces were not aware of the presence of the news staffers and believed a camera held by one of the men was a rocket-propelled grenade launcher. "This additional situational awareness ... will give soldiers what they need to make the right decisions on the battlefield," Army Lieutenant Colonel Steven Van Riper, the Army's product manager for the Apache sensors, told reporters when asked if the new technology help avert such mistakes. Read More »Stress Causes Headaches, Scientists Confirm Perhaps it's no surprise to anyone who has had a splitting migraine after a miserable day, but doctors have solidified the link between stress and headaches. Although headaches can be triggered by many factors, ranging from muscle strain to exposure to noxious gases, stress clearly plays a major role, according to a study released today (Feb. 19) which will be presented at a neurology research meeting in April. Conversely, participants who reported little stress in their lives had few, if any, headaches. For the study, the researchers grouped headaches into four categories: tension headaches, which are the most common, and involve intense pressure or muscle ache anywhere from the neck to the forehead; Read More »The Odd Ways Pregnancy Can Cause Vision Problems Read More » As Olympics Inspires Your 'Inner Athlete', Beware Common Injuries (Op-Ed) Dr. Jason Lipetz is a physician with the department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation in the North Shore-LIJ Health System. The combination of New Year's resolutions and the media surrounding the Winter Olympics in Sochi might encourage many people to embark upon fitness regimens, participation in exercise, and sports which they have not played in some time — and a re-evaluation of diet. For some, this might involve beginning a gym membership. Others might introduce an outdoor or indoor aerobic exercise regimen in the form of running or cycling, although this winter those in the northeast might find particular difficulty finding a clean track or pavement. During this introduction of exercise and athletics, it is essential to start gradually and with proper instruction and technique. Read More »NASA Seeks Targets For Asteroid-Capture Mission Read More » Cosmonaut Valery Kubasov, Apollo-Soyuz Crewmember, Dies at 79 Read More » Australian scientists discover new marsupial known for fatal sex Australian scientists have discovered a new species of marsupial, about the size of a mouse, which conduct marathon mating sessions that often prove fatal for the male. The Black-Tailed Antechinus has been found in the high-altitude, wet areas of far southeast Queensland and northeast New South Wales. "It's frenetic, there's no courtship, the males will just grab the females and both will mate promiscuously," Andrew Baker, head of the research team from the Queensland University of Technology who made the discovery, told Reuters. Read More »This State Bumps Hawaii as Happiest Place to Live Read More » 23% in US Use Online Doctor Ratings, Others Don't Trust Them Researchers surveyed more than 2,000 U.S. adults in 2012 about their knowledge and use of online physician ratings sites. "The use of the sites does not seem to be decreasing, and therefore it might be time to come up with better approaches to provide what the public is looking for in a more open, transparent and trustworthy manner," Hanauer said. Read More »Man Has Skin Reaction to Tattoo — 20 Years Later Read More » Northern Lights Dance Over New England (Photos) Read More » Famous Star Explosion Lit by Ultrafast Mach 1,000 Shock Wave Read More » Stars Sparkle Like Diamonds in Space Scorpion Tail (Photo, Video) Read More » The New Yoga? Sadomasochism Leads to Altered States, Study Finds Consensual sadomasochism was long considered pathological, but psychologists studying people interested in BDSM (bondage, discipline, sadism and masochism) have failed to find evidence that these sexual practices are harmful. If sadomasochism is not a pathology as once believed, the question is why some people engage in these painful sexual behaviors, said James Ambler, a graduate student in psychology at Northern Illinois University. "It seems, on the surface, very paradoxical," Ambler told Live Science. Read More »Pooperoni? Baby-Poop Bacteria Help Make Healthy Sausages Read More » New Website Tracks Deforestation in Near Real-Time Read More » Dead Landsat Satellite Photobombs Successor Read More » Alaska Sets New Wind Chill Record Read More » Europe Picks Planet-Hunting Space Telescope for 2024 Launch Read More » 6 Types of Twitter Conversations Revealed Twitter amplifies political echo chambers, hobbyists live in isolated bubbles, and a few trusted information sources still set the conversational agenda for breaking news. Surprisingly, conversations on Twitter tend to take one of only six different trajectories, said study co-author Marc Smith, the director of the Social Media Research Foundation, which conducted the study along with the Pew Research Center. "We think we're bringing the first aerial photographs of crowds in social media," Smith told Live Science. "Now people are gathering in the hashtags and fan pages and chat rooms of social media; Read More »Flu Hitting Young & Middle-Age Adults Hard So far this flu season, 61 percent of all flu hospitalizations have been among adults ages 18 to 64 — an usually high percentage for this age group compared with previous seasons. During the last three flu seasons, adults in this age group have accounted for about 35 to 40 percent of flu hospitalizations, according to the CDC. Deaths in this age group are also up: This flu season, about 60 percent of flu deaths have been among those ages 25 to 64. "Younger people may feel that influenza is not a threat to them, but this season underscores that flu can be a serious disease for anyone," Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the CDC, told reporters today (Feb. 20). Read More » | ||||
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Thursday, February 20, 2014
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Wednesday, February 19, 2014
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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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