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New Horizons Glitch Won't Affect Pluto Flyby, NASA Says Read More » Low-Flying Science: How 2 Pilots Pulled Off Amazing Stunt
Cats Are City Slickers Cats may be city slickers that rarely venture out into the wilderness, a new study suggests. In fact, the new study shows that feral cats roam in urban and suburban parks and yards, but they rarely set their paws down in wilder green spaces. The new finding is good news for wildlife, especially birds, in more rural settings, said study author George Hess, an urban conservation scientist at North Carolina State University. Read More »5 Odd Facts About Lewis Carroll Read More » Why Conservatives Have Better Self-Control Conservatives may have more self-control than liberals, a new study suggests. The study researchers posit that the differences in self-control may stem from beliefs about free will, or the concept of being "responsible for your outcomes," as the study's lead author, Joshua Clarkson of the University of Cincinnati, told Live Science. "Effective self-control comes down to the extent to which you believe that you can control your behavior," Clarkson said. Read More »Universal Rhythm: People Dance to Same Beat Across the Globe Read More » Overweight Colorectal Cancer Patients Survive Longer People with advanced colorectal cancer who are overweight or obese may survive longer than their thinner counterparts, a new study suggests. "These results are surprising," Dr. Yousuf Zafar, the study's lead researcher and an associate professor of medicine at Duke University, said in a statement. Obesity has long been considered a risk factor for both the development of colorectal cancer and the recurrence of the disease among those who have had it previously. Read More »Cancer Forecast: Why More People Will Die, Even As Death Rates Fall Cancer death rates will continue to decline in the United States through 2020, including death rates from some of the most common cancers in both men and women, a new study says. However, because the population is growing and getting older, the total number of cancer deaths will increase during that same period, the researchers said. The increases will be most pronounced among black and white men and black women, they said. Read More »Should Placebos Be Used to 'Treat' Patients? Placebos offer real therapeutic value: Although they cannot cure an illness, they can make patients feel better. In a provocative essay published today (July 1) in The New England Journal of Medicine, Harvard Medical School professor Ted Kaptchuk proposes that placebos should be considered valuable components of medical care and important tools in relieving patients' symptoms — and not simply an inconvenient baseline that "real medicines" are compared to within medical studies. A placebo — the word comes from the Latin phrase meaning "I shall please" — is a fake pill or procedure that can provide a psychological benefit because the patient thinks he or she is getting real treatment. Read More »Teaching old dogs new tricks with 'smart harness' North Carolina State University researchers have developed new technology designed to improve communication between dogs and humans. Researchers at North Carolina State University are combining their love for dogs with their love of technology. A joint project between the computer science and electrical and computer engineering departments and the College of Veterinary Medicine has developed new technology designed to improve communication between dogs and humans. Read More »Spiders, Ahoy! 8-Legged Critters Can 'Sail' Over Water Read More » Company Aims to Offer On-Demand Meteor Showers Read More » Guns Don't Deter Crime, Study Finds "The one thing that would have at least ameliorated the horrible situation in Charleston would have been that if somebody in that prayer meeting had a conceal carry or there had been either an off-duty policeman or an on-duty policeman, somebody with the legal authority to carry a firearm and could have stopped the shooter," presidential candidate Mike Huckabee said in a Fox News interview on June 19. "We found no support for the hypothesis that owning more guns leads to a drop or a reduction in violent crime," said study researcher Michael Monuteaux, an epidemiologist and professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School. Numerous studies have found that gun ownership correlates with gun homicide, and homicide by gun is the most common type of homicide in the United States. Read More »Historic flyby of Pluto on track despite probe glitch, NASA says Read More » Wheel Worries: Mars Rover Curiosity Dealing With Damage Read More » New Brain-Like Computer May Solve World's Most Complex Math Problems A new computer prototype called a "memcomputer" works by mimicking the human brain, and could one day perform notoriously complex tasks like breaking codes, scientists say. These new, brain-inspired computing devices also could help neuroscientists better understand the workings of the human brain, researchers say. In contrast, Massimiliano Di Ventra, a theoretical physicist at the University of California, San Diego, and his colleagues are building "memcomputers," made up of "memprocessors," that both process and store data. Read More » | ||||
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Monday, July 6, 2015
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Sunday, July 5, 2015
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Russian Cargo Spacecraft Arrives at Space Station
Pluto Probe Suffers Glitch 10 Days Before Epic Flyby Read More » New Horizons space probe suffers glitch on approach to Pluto Read More » New Horizons space probe suffers glitch on approach to Pluto Read More » | ||||
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Saturday, July 4, 2015
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Ebola Returns to Liberia: Where Did It Come From, and Could It Spread? The return of Ebola in Liberia — with three new cases reported this week in the previously Ebola-free country — is worrisome, and raises questions about whether Liberia was really free of the disease to begin with, experts say. Liberian health officials reported the death of a 17-year-old boy from Ebola on Sunday, and two other cases of Ebola in people who were with the boy when he died, according to ABC News. The new cases are the first in Liberia since the country was declared free of the disease on May 9. Read More »Colorful Arctic Animals Revealed in Thousands of Undersea Images Read More » Solar-Powered Plane Soars to New World Records Read More » Red, White & Blue! Stars Cluster in Festive Cosmic Portrait Read More » NASA Slammed a Probe Into a Comet 10 Years Ago Today Read More » | ||||
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