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'Cave of the Skulls' Robbers Get Prison Term in Israel Read More » Dinosaur fossils preserve apparent red blood cells, collagen Read More » Oh, You Deer: Newborn Mini Fawn Is Seriously Cute Read More » Huge Supersonic Parachute Ripped to Shreds in NASA 'Flying Saucer' Test Read More » China's big biotech bet starting to pay off Read More » Brain-computer interface reverses paralysis in stroke victims By Ben Gruber St. Louis, Missouri - After three strokes that left the right side of his body paralyzed, Rick Arnold told his wife Kim that he had just one wish. In the very beginning, it was to hold her hand," said Arnold, a paramedic firefighter from Missouri who suffered the first of three paralyzing strokes in 2009. These days Arnold can hold his wife's hand again thanks in part to a new device that could potentially change the rules on how well stroke victims recover. Arnold is using brain-machine interface technology developed by Eric Leuthardt, a neurosurgeon at Washington University in St. Louis. Read More »Chimps Get Drunk on Palm Wine Read More » Frozen Ovarian Tissue Works a Decade Later: Woman Gives Birth A 27-year-old woman in Belgium is now a mom after giving birth to a baby more than a decade after her ovarian tissue was removed and frozen, according to a new study. The woman had her ovarian tissue frozen in her early teens, before she underwent a bone marrow transplant to treat her sickle cell anemia. Such transplants involve drugs that can destroy the ovaries. Read More »Spinal Injuries Increasing Among Older Adults Although the rate of traumatic spinal cord injuries has remained relatively stable in the United States for nearly two decades, there has been a significant increase in these injuries among people ages 65 and older, according to a new study. The study included more than 63,000 patients ages 16 and older who suffered acute traumatic spinal cord injuries between 1993 and 2012. Read More »Can a Pill Increase a Woman's Libido? 5 Things That Affect Female Sex Drive Last week, an expert panel voted to recommend that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approve a drug called flibanserin, which is touted as boosting women's desire for sex. If the FDA decides the drug is safe and effective, it could soon find its way into bedrooms across the United States. However, sexual desire is complicated, and some experts aren't sure that a pill is really the cure for an ailing female mojo. Read More »Marijuana Exposure Among Kids Under 6 Rises Sharply The rich aromas of freshly baked chocolate brownies may lead children to inadvertently consume marijuana, researchers say. In a new study, the researchers found that the rate of marijuana exposure in young children increased significantly from 2003 to 2013. As more states look to legalize marijuana, the risk for exposure to the drug can rise among children, the researchers said. Read More »NASA Aiming for Multiple Missions to Jupiter Moon Europa Read More » Showering in Space: Astronaut Home Video Shows Off 'Hygiene Corner' Read More » Woman's Tattoos Mistaken for Cancer on Imaging Test When a California woman with cervical cancer underwent a body image scan, doctors noticed bright areas in her lymph nodes, suggesting her cancer had spread. The 32-year-old woman with four children had recently been diagnosed with cervical cancer. In November 2012, her doctors requested the imaging scan to check to see if the cancer had spread (metastasized) to other parts of her body. Read More »Biggest Ring Around Saturn Just Got Supersized Read More » 'Celestial Butterfly' Nebula Spreads Its Wings in Photos, Video Read More » Will Dreadnoughtus Dinosaur Lose Its Heavyweight Title? Read More » Your Birth Month May Predict Your Risk for Certain Diseases In the study, researchers found that people's birth months were linked with the risk of getting one or more of 55 different diseases. Overall, people in the study who were born in May were least likely to get a birth-month-related disease, whereas people born in October were most likely to get one. "This data could help scientists uncover new disease risk factors," Nicholas Tatonetti, the senior author of the study and an assistant professor of biomedical informatics at Columbia University, said in a statement. Read More » | ||||
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Wednesday, June 10, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Tuesday, June 9, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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The Surprising Reason Why Some People Smile More It turns out, whether you're quick to laugh and smile may be partly in the genes. "One of these big mysteries is why do some people laugh a lot, and smile a lot, and other people keep their cool," said study co-author Claudia Haase, a psychology researcher at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. The gene was previously tied to depression and other negative states, but the new study suggests it may be linked to people experiencing more emotional highs and lows, Haase added. Read More »Supersonic Parachute on NASA 'Flying Saucer' Apparently Fails in Test (Video) Read More » Does MERS Pose a Threat in the US? Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) is spreading in South Korea, with dozens of people there infected and thousands more under quarantine because they have had contact with an infected person, according to news reports. That's because it's fairly easy to prevent MERS transmission, once doctors realize they are dealing with the virus, said Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious-disease physician at the Center for Health Security at the University of Pittsburgh. Most doctors in the United States know to take a travel history and isolate people who may harbor a dangerous virus, which are key steps in stopping transmission in its tracks, he said. Read More »Incredible Surgery Gives Man New Lease on Life Read More » 50 US Hospitals That Mark Up Prices the Most Yet a combination of a lack of regulation, competition and clarity in billing practices enables many hospitals to routinely charge fees to patients that are more than 1,000 percent of the amount that is reimbursable by Medicare, a new study has found. The researchers claim that these markups are largely motivated by profit, not service quality, and that this price-gouging trickles down to nearly all consumers, whether they have health insurance or not, contributing soundly to the high level of U.S. health spending. Topping the list is North Okaloosa Medical Center in Florida, which charges more than 1,200 percent of what Medicare will reimburse for procedures, on average. Read More »Talking Spaceships & Sci-Fi Awesomeness Rule in 2 New SyFy Channel Shows Read More » Italian Astronaut Sets New Record for Longest Space Mission by a Woman Read More » Then There Were 5: Inside the Race to Save the Northern White Rhino Read More » Gangnam Style! Robots Dance & Slither at DARPA Challenge Read More » Life on the Serengeti: Thousands of Wild Images Captured by Hidden Cameras Read More » Creativity May Be Genetically Linked with Psychiatric Disorders There may be an overlap between the genetic components of creativity and those of some psychiatric disorders, according to a new study. In the study, researchers looked at genetic material from more than 86,000 people in Iceland and identified genetic variants that were linked with an increased risk of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. The investigators then looked for these variants in a group of more than 1,000 people who were members of national societies of artists, including visual artists, writers, actors, dancers and musicians in Iceland. Read More »Bird Migrants Offer a Glimpse of the Planet's Health Read More » How a Cell Knows Friend From Foe Read More » Predicting El Niño Devastation, Weeks in Advance Read More » Neuron Probes are Exposing the Brain as Never Before (Kavli Roundtable) Read More » The Three Reasons So Many People are Getting Cancer (Op-Ed) Dr. Bhavesh Balar is a board-certified hematologist and oncologist on staff at CentraState Medical Center in Freehold, NJ, where he serves as chairman of the hospital's Cancer Committee. As an oncologist, I'm frequently asked why so many people these days are being diagnosed with cancer. Considering the significant inroads we've made over the past 50 years in terms of cancer research, prevention, diagnosis and treatment, it doesn't seem to make sense. Read More »Ox Urine to Olive Oil: Fighting Garden Pests Like the Colonists
Scientists solve mystery of milky rain in U.S. Pacific Northwest A multi-disciplinary Washington State University team said they had determined that dust from the dry bed of a shallow lake some 480 miles (772 km) from where the rain fell was to blame for the unusual precipitation. The rain left a trail of powdery residue across a nearly 200-mile (322-km) stretch of eastern parts of Oregon and Washington state earlier this year, leaving scientists and residents perplexed about its origins. All three theories were proven wrong when a Washington State University hydrochemist teamed up with a meteorologist and two geologists at the school to test the chemical composition of rainwater samples and analyze February wind pattern data. Read More »Why Pluto Is a Planet, and Eris Is Too (Op-Ed) Read More » NASA's 'Pluto Time' Shows You How Bright It Is on Dwarf Planet Read More » | ||||
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