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On Twitter, Astronaut Scott Kelly Chronicles His Yearlong Space Voyage Read More » 'Guevedoces': Rare Medical Condition Hides Child's Sex Until Age 12 Some children with a rare genetic condition appear female at birth but later develop a penis and testes around the time puberty begins. A new article in BBC Magazine tells the story of some children in the Dominican Republic with this condition, who are known in the country as Guevedoces, which roughly translates to "penis at 12." One child named Johnny was raised as a girl, but when he matured and neared puberty, he grew a penis and his testicles descended, according to the BBC. Because DHT is responsible for the development of male sex organs, the lack of DHT means the male organs don't develop properly, according to the National Institutes of Health. Read More »Doctors to FDA: Don't Call Them 'Breakthrough' Drugs The U.S. Food and Drug Administration should avoid using words like "breakthrough" and "promising" to describe new drugs when making announcements aimed at the public, some researchers argue. These researchers contend that the general public may not understand the FDA's usage of these words. "Unless patients understand the FDA's usage of 'breakthrough,' they may have unwarranted confidence in the evidence supporting drug claims," researchers wrote in the Sept. 21 issue of the journal JAMA Internal Medicine. Read More »AstraZeneca taps crowd sourcing to find cancer drug cocktails Read More » Craig Venter's company in deal for whole exome tests at new low cost Read More » Craig Venter's company in deal for whole exome tests at new low cost A company formed by genome pioneer Craig Venter will offer clients of a South Africa-based insurance company whole exome sequencing - sequencing all protein-making genes in the human genome - at a price that marks yet another dramatic decline in the cost of gene sequencing, the two companies said on Tuesday. Venter's company, Human Longevity Inc, will provide the tests at a cost of $250 each through a special incentive program offered by Discovery Ltd, an insurer with clients in South Africa and the United Kingdom. Venter, the U.S. scientist who raced the U.S. government to map the human genome 15 years ago for a cost of $100,000, said the $250 price point per whole exome marks a new low in the price of gene sequencing. Read More »Forget Fingerprints: You Can Be Identified by Your 'Microbial Cloud' The results "demonstrate for the first time that individuals release their own personalized microbial cloud," James Meadow, the lead author of the study, said in a statement. Together, these bacteria make up what researchers call the human microbiome. Read More »Long-Lost Tomb of Jewish 'Maccabee' Rebels Possibly Found Read More » Welcome to Pluto! Dramatic Flyover Video Takes You There Read More » Space Twins: Genetic Science Meets Space Travel on One-Year Mission Read More » 3D Computer Chips Could Be 1,000 Times Faster Than Existing Ones Read More » Walk with Elephants: Explore African Sanctuary on Google Street View Read More » Psychology of Immigration: Why Responses to Migrant Crisis Vary There's also a gulf of difference between how European citizens and their governments are responding to the influx of asylum seekers from Syria, North Africa and other Middle Eastern nations. "One of the first things to appreciate is that the anti-immigrant reactions are really natural, and in some ways fundamental to who we are," said Steven Neuberg, a psychologist at Arizona State University who researches prejudice and in-group/out-group relations. Evolutionarily, the brain is primed for specific threats that would have loomed over our earliest relatives, such as dangers to physical safety, infectious disease and threats to resources, Neuberg told Live Science. Read More »Sainthood for Missionary Priest Is Disputed by Native Tribes Pope Francis is set to canonize the Rev. Junípero Serra, a Franciscan priest who founded the first missions in the state of California, on Sept. 23. Several American Indian tribes oppose the canonization, saying that Serra was responsible for the enslavement and death of tens of thousands of indigenous tribespeople and the destruction of their culture. Some tribes are circulating petitions to protest the canonization. Read More »Shades of 'Star Trek'? Quantum Teleportation Sets Distance Record Read More » Common Pregnancy Complications Tied to Heart Disease Deaths Later On Pregnant women who experience certain complications related to their pregnancies may have an increased risk of dying from heart disease later in life, a new study suggests. Researchers found that the women in the study who had high levels of sugar in the urine during pregnancy were about four times more likely to die from heart disease over the 50-year study, compared with the women who did not have high levels of sugar in their urine when they were pregnant. The investigators also found that the women who experienced a decline in their levels of hemoglobin during pregnancy were about twice as likely to die from heart disease later in life, compared with the pregnant women who did not experience the decline. Read More »Sex After a Heart Attack? Doctors Give the All Clear Sex does not increase heart attack survivors' risk of having another attack, except in rare cases, a new study finds. The finding may provide comfort for countless heart attack survivors. Many are unsure whether the vigorous activity of sex can trigger another heart attack, and there is limited and some contradictory data on the issue, the researchers said. Read More »Eyes in the Sky: How Satellite Images Help People on the Ground Read More » Sunday's 'Supermoon' Total Lunar Eclipse: When and Where to See It Read More » | ||||
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Tuesday, September 22, 2015
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Monday, September 21, 2015
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Board Game Pieces Found in Settlement Built on Roman Military Fort Read More » Giant Radio Telescope Could Detect E.T.'s Call Read More » Are We Alone? Survey Finds No Sign of Advanced Alien Civilizations Read More » Eavesdropping on Arches: Rock's Internal 'Hum' Reveals Its Health Read More » Nature's GMOs: Parasites Alter Butterfly Genomes Using Viruses Genetically modified organisms may usually be thought of as human creations, but scientists now find that monarch butterflies, silkworms, and many other butterflies and moths naturally possess genes from parasitic wasps. Butterflies and moths may have kept these wasp genes because they protect against other viruses, the researchers added. Parasitic insects known as braconid wasps lay their eggs inside the caterpillars of butterflies and moths. Read More »World's Oldest Sea Turtle Fossil Discovered Read More » Flexible Robo-Legs Could Help Helicopters Stick Tricky Landings Read More » Tiny 'Jellyfish' Team Up for Multi-Jetpack Swimming Read More » Design the Jet Engine of the Future, Win $2 Million Read More » Marijuana Study Reveals Teens' 'Surprising' Views of the Drug Marijuana use continues to become legal in more places, but that doesn't mean the drug's popularity among adolescents is growing, a new study finds. Although disapproval of marijuana use has decreased dramatically among young adults — suggesting that this age group is viewing the drug less negatively — that's not the case for younger adolescents, according to the study. The researchers found that disapproval of marijuana use has actually increased among adolescents ages 12 to 14. Read More »Hair-Raising Experience: Baldness Drug Causes Man's Fainting The medication minoxidil (sold under the brand name Rogaine), which is used by men and women to stop their hair from thinning further, may trigger fainting in rare instances, according to a new report of the man's case. His doctors determined that the high-strength, 12.5-percent minoxidil formulation the man had been applying to his scalp once a day was responsible for the fainting and dizziness he was experiencing, according to the report published online Sept. 7 in the journal BMJ Case Reports. This formulation is a higher concentration than men typically use, said Dr. Simon Dubrey, the cardiologist who treated the man at Hillingdon Hospital in Uxbridge, England, and the co-author of the report. Read More »Body parts floating in 3D space to give medicine virtual shape By Ben and Gruber Mountain View, CA (Reuters) - New imaging technology that processes hundreds of medical scans to generate a perfect virtual 3D model of the human body will allow doctors to more accurately diagnose disease and prepare for complex surgical procedures, according to its developers. ... Read More »Rare Supermoon Lunar Eclipse Is Just One Week Away Read More » | ||||
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