| ||||
From Sputnik to Spock: Crowdsourced Names for Pluto Map Submitted Read More » 'Not Yet Explored' No More: New Horizons Flying Stamp to Pluto Read More » People Who Can Imagine Aromas Vividly Tend to Weigh More Previous research has shown that food cravings are associated with obesity, and that the intensity of people's food cravings is related to the vividness of their mental images of food, said the new study's lead researcher, Barkha Patel, a postdoctoral fellow in psychiatry at Yale University. To investigate, the researchers gave 25 people three questionnaires asking them to rate their mental-imagery abilities, including the vividness of their visual imagery, olfactory imagery and food imagery. In fact, olfactory imagery was the best predictor of BMI out of all the measures, the researchers considered, including visual imagery and food imagery, they found. Read More »Smartphone App Tells You When to Stop Drinking There are smartphone apps that can help you keep track of healthy habits, like how much exercise you do and the number of steps you take in a day. The app is aimed at helping drinkers better manage their alcohol intake, the researchers said. The developers noted that researchers have found that apps that promise to track users' blood alcohol content are highly unreliable. Read More »Spidey Senses Tingling! Arachnids Feel Sex Read More » Why Matisse's Vibrant Painting of Nudes Is Fading Read More » Starry Vortex Takes Top Spot in Nightscapes Photo Contest Read More » How Asteroid Mining Could Open Up the Solar System (Podcast Transcript) Read More » As Ancient Livestock Disappear, Frozen Embryos Restore Ancient Breeds Read More » Driving with a Marijuana High: How Dangerous Is It? Most Americans think that driving while high on marijuana isn't that dangerous, according to a recent Gallup poll. About 70 percent of people polled said that people who drive while impaired by marijuana are "not much of a problem" or only a "somewhat serious problem," whereas just 29 percent said it was a very serious problem. But is it really safe to drive while high on marijuana? Read More »The Illusion of Time: What's Real? Robert Lawrence Kuhn is the creator, writer and host of "Closer To Truth," a public television and multimedia program featuring the world's leading thinkers exploring humanity's deepest questions regarding the cosmos, consciousness and a search for meaning. Kuhn is co-editor (with John Leslie) of The Mystery of Existence: Why Is There Anything At All? Kuhn contributed this article, based on two recent "Closer To Truth" episodes (produced/directed by Peter Getzels), to Space.com's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights. Read More »Only Climate Action Can Save Polar Bears Read More » How to Find Pluto in the Night Sky: July 8 Read More » Israeli life science firms seek help to follow Teva's lead By Tova Cohen TEL AVIV (Reuters) - As Israel's biggest company Teva strives to get even bigger by swallowing up rival Mylan for more than $40 billion, further down the food chain a raft of upstart life science firms are struggling to climb onto the global ladder. Now the government is starting to take notice, urged on by influential advocates, including Teva Pharmaceutical Industries' own boss, who says the country's economic future depends on replicating his company's success. Israel has a burgeoning life science industry comprising around 1,380 mostly very small companies. Read More »Tar Balls from California Oil Spill Litter Beach in NASA Photo Read More » Neptune's Strange Magnetic Field Stretches Arms in New Model (Video) Read More » Futuristic Jetpack Will Go on Sale for $200,000 Next Year Read More » Technical solutions alone can't fix climate change - scientists By Laurie Goering PARIS (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Dealing with climate change and its risks will require not only technical responses like drought-resilient crops and higher sea walls but also reshaping economic and political incentives that are driving global warming, scientists said on Wednesday. "The biggest risk of all that we face is that we're addressing the wrong problem," University of Oslo sociologist Karen O'Brien told a week-long conference of climate researchers in Paris. Read More »Technical solutions alone can't fix climate change: scientists By Laurie Goering PARIS (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Dealing with climate change and its risks will require not only technical responses like drought-resilient crops and higher sea walls but also reshaping economic and political incentives that are driving global warming, scientists said on Wednesday. "The biggest risk of all that we face is that we're addressing the wrong problem," University of Oslo sociologist Karen O'Brien told a week-long conference of climate researchers in Paris. Read More »Gene therapy for deafness moves a few steps closer By Ben Hirschler LONDON (Reuters) - Gene therapy for deafness is moving closer to reality, with new research on Wednesday showing the technique for fixing faulty DNA can improve responses in mice with genetic hearing loss. Separately, a clinical trial backed by Novartis is under way to help a different group of people who have lost their hearing through damage or disease. After missteps in the late 1990s and early 2000s, when safety scares set back research, gene therapy is enjoying a renaissance, with positive clinical results recently in conditions ranging from blood diseases to blindness. Read More »Massive 'Magnet' May Have Powered Monster Cosmic Explosion Read More » Frills and Whistles: Triceratops Relative Had Bizarre Head of Horns Read More » Pluto's 'Heart' Spied by New Horizons Spacecraft (Photo) Read More » Who is Wendy and why is this dinosaur named after her? Read More » Staying in School Would Help People Live Longer, Study Suggests Staying in school has not only financial advantages, but also health benefits: A new study estimates that more than 145,000 deaths per year could be averted in the United States if everyone who didn't finish high school had earned their high school degrees. People with higher levels of education may live longer for many reasons, including that they tend to have higher incomes, healthier behaviors and better psychological well-being, the researchers said. Read More » | ||||
| ||||
|
Wednesday, July 8, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Tuesday, July 7, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
| ||||
Pluto's Odd Dark Spots Continue to Puzzle Scientists (Photos) Read More » How to See The Scorpion in July's Night Sky Read More » Is Mars Humid Enough to Support Life? Read More » What's Inside Saturn Moon Enceladus? Geyser Timing Gives Hints Read More » Mean Machines: US & Japan Mega-Robots to Battle Read More » The future of travel? A tube called Hyperloop This was originally the brainchild of billionaire U.S. entrepreneur Elon Musk, who envisioned being able to whisk passengers between San Francisco and Los Angeles in under half an hour. Two years after unveiling plans for a futuristic, high-speed Hyperloop transportation system, Musk has now announced plans for building a test track in southern California and a competition for prototype pods. Several companies subsequently announced plans for pilot projects in California, Texas and other locations, but Musk and his companies, which include privately owned Space Exploration Technologies, or SpaceX, and Tesla Motors Inc electric car company, were not involved. Read More »Cause of Falcon rocket accident still eludes SpaceX, CEO says By Irene Klotz CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (Reuters) - SpaceX is still homing in on why its Falcon 9 rocket exploded after liftoff last week, unable to resolve conflicting data radioed back to the ground before the explosion, CEO Elon Musk said on Tuesday. SpaceX plans to take its findings to the Federal Aviation Administration, which oversees U.S. commercial launches, NASA and some customers to see if an outside eye can help resolve the conundrum. Read More »Teaching old dogs new tricks with 'smart harness' (This July 6 story is refiled to correct name in paragraph 12) 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 »US scientists: Warm oceans cause concern of coral bleaching HONOLULU (AP) — Abnormally warm ocean temperatures are creating conditions that threaten to kill coral across the equatorial Pacific, north Pacific and western Atlantic oceans, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Monday. Read More »When Did Women Start to Outlive Men? Read More » Low Testosterone May Raise Depression Risk Men with lower levels of testosterone may be at increased risk of depression, a new study finds. Researchers found that more than half of the men in the study who had lower levels of testosterone had a diagnosis of depression, or showed symptoms of the condition, while a quarter of participants were taking medication for the disease. The vast majority of male participants in the new George Washington University study also were found to be overweight or obese, and so for comparison, the researchers pointed to a recent survey of U.S. adults finding that 6 percent of those overweight or obese were depressed. Read More »Child's Mysterious Paralysis Tied to New Virus So far, more than 100 children in 34 states have suddenly developed muscle weakness or paralysis in their arms or legs, a condition known as acute flaccid myelitis, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Previously, researchers linked a virus called enterovirus D68 (EV-D68), which can cause respiratory illness similar to the common cold, with some of these cases. In the new study, researchers say that one case of paralysis, in a 6-year-old girl, is linked with another strain of enterovirus, called enterovirus C105. Read More »'Direct From Pluto': Science Channel to Air New Horizons' Flyby Images Read More » Painkiller Abuse Tied to Skyrocketing Heroin Use in US People who are addicted to opioids are 40 times more likely than others to abuse heroin, making the abuse of prescription opioid painkillers the strongest risk factor for heroin use, according to a new report. "Heroin use is increasing at an alarming rate in many parts of society, driven by both the prescription opioid epidemic and cheaper, more available heroin," said Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. People who are addicted to opioids are primed for heroin addiction because opioids are essentially "the same chemical, with the same impact on the brain, as heroin," Frieden said at a news conference today. Read More » | ||||
| ||||
|