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Many Mental Disorders Affect Same Brain Regions In the study, researchers compared the results of hundreds of brain imaging studies covering six major psychiatric disorders. They found that most of the disorders were linked to gray matter loss in a network of three brain regions involved in higher cognitive functions, such as self-control and certain types of memory. Given these similarities in brain structure, treatments for one mental-health condition may be effective in others, the researchers said. For the past four decades, psychiatrists have diagnosed mental disorders according to a checklist of symptoms specified in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), said Dr. Amit Etkin, a psychiatrist and neuroscientist at Stanford University and senior author of the study, published today (Feb. 4) in the Journal of the American Medical Association Psychiatry. Read More »Sky River to Bust Northern California Drought This Week Read More » LEGO Mini Space Shuttle Toy Soars Out of Stores in Giveaway Read More » New Views of Pluto Captured By NASA Spacecraft (Photos) Read More » Hidden Molten Channel Beneath Earth Discovered with a Blast Read More » World's Biggest Trove of Gold Built by Ancient 'Secret Agents' Read More » Prehistoric Grave May Be Earliest Example of Death During Childbirth Read More » Newfound 'Gospel of the Lots of Mary' Discovered in Ancient Text Anne Marie Luijendijk, a professor of religion at Princeton University, discovered that this newfound gospel is like no other. The text would have been used for divination, Luijendijk said. Read More »Ancient Earth Had Weird Chemistry: Vanilla Rocks, Lemon-Juice Soil During the worst mass extinction in Earth's history, acid rain may have at times made the ground as acidic as lemon juice, new research shows. The mass extinction at the end of the Permian period, about 250 million years ago, was the most extreme die-off in Earth's history. The highly level of acidity in the soil at the time of the extinction was revealed in the new study when researchers looked at levels of a compound called vanillin in rocks that date to that time. Normally, bacteria in the soil convert vanillin into vanillic acid, but acidic conditions hinder this process. Read More »Thin 'Bubble' Coatings Could Hide Submarines from Sonar Read More » Samsung Gear VR: Virtual Reality Tech May Have Nasty Side Effects Read More » How Much Sleep Should You Get? New Recommendations Released The new guidelines, released by the National Sleep Foundation, include small changes to the recommended ranges for the amount of sleep that children and teens should get. Now, there are also specific sleep ranges for young and older adults, as well as for middle-age adults. Read More »Babies Understand Friendship, Bullies and Bystanders Babies who are just over a year old already comprehend complex social interactions — they understand what other people know and don't know, and expect them to behave accordingly, new research shows. In the new study, 13-month-olds who watched a puppet show in which one character witnessed another behaving badly expected the witness to shun the villain. Even at this young age, the babies were mostly very intrigued by the drama, said Yuyan Luo a psychologist at the University of Missouri and co-author of the study. Read More »Chimps joining new troop learn its 'words': study By Sharon Begley NEW YORK (Reuters) - Just as Bostonians moving to Tokyo ditch "grapefruit" and adopt "pamplemousse," so chimps joining a new troop change their calls to match those of their new troop, scientists reported on Thursday in the journal Current Biology. One expert on chimp vocalizations, Bill Hopkins of Yerkes National Primate Research Center in Atlanta, who was not involved in the study, questioned some of its methodology, such as how the scientists elicited and recorded the chimps' calls, but called it "interesting work." Chimps have specific grunts, barks, hoots and other vocalizations for particular foods, for predators and for requests such as "look at me," which members of their troop understand. Read More »Chimps joining new troop learn its "words" - study Read More » Haunting Space Bubbles Shine in Amazing Hubble Telescope Photo Read More » Emotions, not science, rule U.S. climate change debate: study Read More » What Stresses Americans Out the Most? Read More » Waking Beasts: Underwater Volcanoes Roused by Ice Ages Read More » | ||||
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Thursday, February 5, 2015
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Wednesday, February 4, 2015
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Jupiter and the Moon Shine Together Tonight: How to See It Read More » Some People Would Rather Have a Shorter Life Than Take Meds One in three people would rather live a slightly shorter life than take a daily pill to prevent cardiovascular disease, a new study suggests. In the study, researchers surveyed 1,000 people whose average age was 50, and asked how much time the participants would be willing to subtract from their lives to avoid taking daily medication for cardiovascular disease. More than 8 percent of the people surveyed said they would be willing to forfeit two years of their life, while about 21 percent said they would sacrifice between one week and one year of their lives to avoid taking a daily pill for cardiovascular disease. The study "reinforces the idea that many people do not like taking pills, for whatever reason," said study author Dr. Robert Hutchins, a physician at the University of California, San Francisco Department of Medicine. Read More »Spring Will Come, Despite What the Groundhog Says Read More » How Your Brain Ignores Distractions From the feeling of clothes against the skin, to the sounds of cocktail party chatter, the human brain is constantly blocking out information that could be distracting. "Moment by moment, we're really only doing one thing: We have to block things in the sensory and internal world," said Stephanie Jones, a neuroscientist at Brown University and senior author of the study published today (Feb. 3) in the Journal of Neuroscience. In addition to helping scientists understand how the brain works, the findings have the potential to help people with chronic pain. Read More »Britain votes to allow world's first 'three-parent' IVF babies Read More » Both Monogamy and Polygamy May Be Natural for Humans Read More » Amazing New Nebula Photo Uncovers 2 New Stars (Video) Read More » Monkey Mustaches and Beards Help Algorithm Recognize Faces Read More » Chef Bot? Robot Learns Cooking from YouTube Videos Read More » Taj Mahal Gardens Found to Align with the Solstice Sun If you arrived at the Taj Mahal in India before the sun rises on the day of the summer solstice (which usually occurs June 21), and walked up to the north-central portion of the garden where two pathways intersect with the waterway, and if you could step into that waterway and turn your gaze toward a pavilion to the northeast — you would see the sun rise directly over it. Although standing in the waterway is impractical (and not allowed), the dawn and dusk would be sights to behold, and these alignments are just two among several that a physics researcher recently discovered between the solstice sun and the waterways, pavilions and pathways in the gardens of the Taj Mahal. The Taj Mahal is a mausoleum built by Mughal Dynasty emperor Shah Jahan (who lived from 1592 to 1666) for his favorite wife Mumtaz Mahal (who lived 1592-1631). Amelia Carolina Sparavigna, a physics professor at the Polytechnic University of Turin in Italy, reported the alignments in an article published recently in the journal Philica. Read More »2 Billion Years Unchanged, Bacteria Pose an Evolutionary Puzzle Read More » Elon Musk Names SpaceX Drone Ships in Honor of Sci-Fi Legend Read More » Newfound Frog Has Strange Breeding Habits Read More » HIV, Syphilis Tests? There's an App for That Now you can add "run an HIV test" to the list. A device invented by biomedical engineers at Columbia University turns a smartphone into a lab that can test human blood for the virus that causes AIDS or the bacteria that cause syphilis. Once the blood is inside the device, it meets chemicals that react with markers for HIV and syphilis. This kind of test is called an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and is considered one of the best methods for diagnosing diseases, said Samuel Sia, an associate professor of biomedical engineering at Columbia, who led the research. Read More » | ||||
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