| ||||
Drunk on YouTube: Funny Videos Don't Tell the Whole Story Videos of people falling over drunk are popular on YouTube, but such glimpses of inebriation do not show the negative consequences of drinking too much alcohol, a new study finds. In the study, the researchers watched 70 popular videos of drunkenness on YouTube, which had more than 300 million views combined. In addition, only 7 percent referred to alcohol dependence (such as withdrawal symptoms), but alcohol dependence is common among frequent heavy drinkers, the researchers said. "This is important because brand-name references are known to be particularly potent in terms of encouraging drinking," Dr. Brian Primack, a co-author of the study and an associate professor of medicine and pediatrics at the University of Pittsburgh, said in a statement. Read More »Swamps, Simulations and Mad Drone Skills: Filming 'LIGO: Generations' Read More » Planck Satellite Brings Early Universe into Focus (Kavli Hangout) Read More » Could This 'Thinking Cap' Help You Learn? Read More » Anthony Anderson on the Power of Portrayals (Video) Read More » It's Not Just Ice: 10 Tips to Avoid a Bad Fall Read More » Mars on Earth? What Life Is Like on the 'Red Planet' Read More » ADHD is the New Normal (Op-Ed) Read More » Throat-Closing Ailment EoE is a Mystery That Must Be Solved (Op-Ed) Read More » Space Station Astronauts Taking Spacewalk Today: Watch It Live Read More » Arctic Blast Blankets Eastern US in Ice and Snow (Photo)
Rise of the Fembots: Why Artificial Intelligence Is Often Female From Apple's iPhone assistant Siri to the mechanized attendants at Japan's first robot-staffed hotel, a seemingly disproportionate percentage of artificial intelligence systems have female personas. "I think there is a pattern here," said Karl Fredric MacDorman, a computer scientist and expert in human-computer interaction at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis. One reason for the glut of female artificial intelligences (AIs) and androids (robots designed to look or act like humans) may be that these machines tend to perform jobs that have traditionally been associated with women. For example, many robots are designed to function as maids, personal assistants or museum guides, MacDorman said. Read More »History Repeats Itself: Ancient Cities Grew Much Like Modern Ones Read More » Spacewalking astronauts rigging station for new U.S. space taxis By Irene Klotz CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (Reuters) - A pair of U.S. astronauts floated outside the International Space Station on Saturday to begin rigging parking spots for two commercial space taxis. Station commander Barry "Butch" Wilmore, 52, and flight engineer Terry Virts, 47, left the station's Quest airlock shortly before 8 a.m. EST to begin a planned 6-1/2-hour spacewalk, the first of three outings over the next eight days. The work will prepare docking ports for upcoming flights by Boeing Co and privately owned Space Exploration Technologies, or SpaceX, which are developing capsules to ferry crew to and from the station, which flies about 260 miles (418 km) above the Earth. The United States has been dependent on Russia for station crew transportation since the space shuttle were retired in 2011. Read More »Exclusive: Orbital explosion probe said to find debris in engine: sources By Andrea Shalal WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Last October's explosion of Orbital ATK Inc's Antares rocket may have been triggered when debris inadvertently left in a fuel tank traveled into the booster's main engine, two people familiar with investigations into the accident told Reuters. The sources said the preliminary findings suggest that a simple assembly mistake by Orbital ATK could have caused the explosion, which destroyed a cargo ship bound for the International Space Station. Orbital ATK on Friday acknowledged that so-called "foreign object debris" was one of more than a half dozen credible causes of the explosion, but said it was not "a leading candidate as the most probable cause of the failure." Orbital spokesman Barry Beneski said the company-led "accident investigation board," which includes officials from NASA and the Federal Aviation Administration, had not identified any evidence of mishandling of the flight hardware by Orbital. Read More » | ||||
| ||||
|
Saturday, February 21, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Friday, February 20, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
| ||||
Monster Black Hole's Mighty Belch Could Transform Entire Galaxy A ravenous, giant black hole has belched up a bubble of cosmic wind so powerful that it could change the fate of an entire galaxy, according to new observations. The wind could have big implications for the future of the galaxy: It will cut down on the black hole's food supply, and slow star formation in the rest of the galaxy, the researchers said. The supermassive black hole at the center of PDS 456 is currently gobbling up a substantial amount of food: A smorgasbord of gas and dust surrounds the black hole and is falling into the gravitational sinkhole. The black hole at the center of PDS 456 is devouring so much matter, that the resulting radiation outshines every star in the galaxy. Read More »Google Doodle Rings in Chinese Lunar New Year Read More » Sunbathers take heed: skin damage continues hours after exposure Read More » Great White Sharks Are Late Bloomers Read More » See the Demon Star Algol 'Wink' in the Night Sky Read More » Why It's So Freakin' Cold: Here's the Science Read More » U.S. FDA approves 23andMe's genetic screening test for rare disorder By Toni Clarke WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Google-backed 23andMe won U.S. approval on Thursday to market the first direct-to-consumer genetic test for a mutation that can cause children to inherit Bloom syndrome, a rare disorder that leads to short height, an increased risk of cancer and unusual facial features. The Food and Drug Administration said it plans to issue a notice to exempt this and other carrier screening tests from the need to win FDA review before being sold. "This action creates the least burdensome regulatory path for autosomal recessive carrier screening tests with similar uses to enter the market," the agency said in a statement, referring to genetic mutations carried by two unaffected parents. The FDA previously barred Mountain View, California-based 23andMe from marketing a saliva collection kit and personal genome service designed to identify a range of health risks including cancer and heart disease, saying it had not received marketing clearance. Read More »U.S. FDA approves 23andMe's genetic screening test for rare disorder By Toni Clarke WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Google-backed 23andMe won U.S. approval on Thursday to market the first direct-to-consumer genetic test for a mutation that can cause children to inherit Bloom syndrome, a rare disorder that leads to short height, an increased risk of cancer and unusual facial features. The Food and Drug Administration said it plans to issue a notice to exempt this and other carrier screening tests from the need to win FDA review before being sold. "This action creates the least burdensome regulatory path for autosomal recessive carrier screening tests with similar uses to enter the market," the agency said in a statement, referring to genetic mutations carried by two unaffected parents. The FDA previously barred Mountain View, California-based 23andMe from marketing a saliva collection kit and personal genome service designed to identify a range of health risks including cancer and heart disease, saying it had not received marketing clearance. Read More »NASCAR effort focuses on math, science for kids
Ancient Shrines Used for Predicting the Future Discovered Read More » Bright and Stormy Night: Clouds Make Cities Lighter Read More » Out of the Sun? Ultraviolet Rays Can Harm Skin Hours Later Ultraviolet rays can continue to harm skin even in the dark, inflicting cancer-causing DNA damage hours after people have left the sunshine or tanning bed, researchers say. In experiments on skin cells from mice and humans, the researchers found that the cells experienced a certain type of DNA damage not only immediately after exposure to ultraviolet A rays, but for hours after the UVA lamps were turned off. UVA rays make up about 95 percent of the ultraviolet radiation that penetrates Earth's atmosphere. "The idea of damage occurring to DNA for hours after exposure to UV rays was an urban legend in the field of DNA damage and repair — people saw it occasionally, but no one could reproduce it, so they gave up on it," study co-author Douglas Brash, a biophysicist at the Yale University School of Medicine, told Live Science. To the researchers' surprise, they found that the reason for this continuing damage is that melanin — the pigment that gives skin and hair their color, and is usually thought of as a protective molecule because it blocks the ultraviolet rays that damage DNA — can itself cause damage to DNA. Read More »Hookah Myth Debunked: They Don't Filter Out Toxic Chemicals Read More » Hold the Sugar, US Nutrition Panel Recommends Americans should limit the amount of added sugar they consume to no more than 10 percent of their daily calories, or about 200 calories a day for most people, say new recommendations from a government-appointed panel of nutrition experts. If upcoming federal diet guidelines adopt this recommendation, it would be the first time those guidelines set a strict limit on the amount of added sugar that Americans are advised to consume. Previous versions of the guidelines have advised Americans to cut down on added sugar, but have not set a specific limit. Consuming too much added sugar has been linked with negative health outcomes, such as obesity and death from heart disease. Read More »Fire Ants Hitched Ride Around Globe on 16th-Century Ships Read More » US National Parks Set Attendance Record in 2014 Read More » Maya Mural Reveals Ancient 'Photobomb' Read More » | ||||
| ||||
|