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Life Technology™ Medical News

Study Reveals Higher Cardiovascular Risk in Adult-Onset Type 1 Diabetes

Long Working Hours Linked to Brain Structure Changes

Organized Sports in Early Childhood Linked to Mental Health Benefits

Lgbti+ Seniors Concealing Identities in Aged Care

Measles Outbreak Spreads to Dallas-Fort Worth

Boosting Immunity: Importance of Respiratory Vaccines

Psychedelic Drugs: Enhancing Empathy Through Brain Hemisphere Dominance

Study Recommends Testing for Protective Gene Variant in Frontotemporal Dementia Risk

Mindfulness Practice Reduces Stress for Autistic Adults

10 Hospitalized in U.S. Due to Listeria Infections

Brain Structure Variations Between Genders: Impact of Single Neuron Discovery

Cells' Splicing Trick: Boosting Protein Diversity in Brain

Black Patients in Labor Face Stigmatizing Language

19 Million US Children in Homes with Substance-Use Disorder

Study Reveals Patient Distress in Vulvovaginal Care

Mysterious Pox Cases Surge in Sierra Leone

Researchers Explore Lifestyle Impact on Alzheimer's in 6M Americans

Openai Unveils Dataset for Testing AI Health Care Answers

USPSTF Recommends Syphilis Screening During Pregnancy

Study Reveals Patient Satisfaction in US Pharmacies

Trump Administration Cuts Cancer Research Funding by 31%

Skin Microbiome: Bacteria Shield from UV Rays

Hormone Fgf21 Reverses Fatty Liver Disease in Mice

The Impact of Hormone Fluctuations on Brain Behavior

Rare Chronic Autoimmune Disorder: Myasthenia Gravis Symptoms

Rising Need for Assisted Reproduction Among Couples

Graduate Students Explore AI Impact on Basketball Coaching

Researchers Discover Hevin Molecule Reverses Cognitive Impairment

Contraceptive Support Gaps for Rural Teenagers

Severe Obesity in Children: GLP-1 Agonists Impact BMI

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Life Technology™ Science News

Chimpanzees in Budongo Forest Show Altruistic Healing

Study Shows Colleague Appreciation Boosts Workplace Resilience

Ancient Predator Unearthed in Canadian Burgess Shale

Nasa Applies Thermal Protection to SLS Rocket

Rising Methane Emissions: Climate Impact and Cost-effective Solutions

Ancient Amino Reaction Sparks Self-Replication

Netflix Drama "Adolescence" Sheds Light on Incel Culture

Study Finds Large Language Models Produce Inaccurate Conclusions

Unraveling OCD Mysteries: Genetics Insights in Nature

Hispanic Immigrants' Mental Health Challenges Unveiled

The Intricacies of RNA in Cellular Processes

Urban Areas Strengthen Civil Defense for Climate Change

The Vital Role of Bees in Ecosystem

Scientist Tracks Whales in Norwegian Fjord: Nature's 2025 Winners

Study: Impact of Social Media on European Women Soccer Players

Allied Democracies Navigate US-China Rivalry

Dual-Laser Brillouin System for Fiber Strain Detection

South African Student Dreams of Live Universe Feed

Study Reveals Diversity of Human Voice Patterns

New Enzyme Design Workflow for Efficient Chemistry

Urban Heat Island Effect: City Summers Uncomfortably Hot

Understanding Urban Walking Patterns: Key to City Sustainability

Novel Biosensor Detects Bladder Cancer Biomarkers

Protein Misplacement Linked to Diseases: Challenges in Identification

Study Reveals High Airborne Lead Exposures in Nigerian Artisanal Mining

US Government Plans 100% Tariff on Foreign Films

Artificial Intelligence Revolutionizing Journalistic Tasks

How Generative AI Creates Text, Video, Images

"Exploring the Missing Indo-Pacific Region on Maps"

Chemist Develops Diverse Sugars for Energy & Medicine

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Life Technology™ Technology News

Google Reveals Major Android Update Ahead of Apple Event

Google unveils major Android redesign ahead of iPhone overhaul

United States Bolsters Rare Earth Supply Chain

Optimizing the recovery of rare earth elements

Australian-Made Robotic Delivery Design Leads Global Market

Robot that keeps food hot or cold could change up food delivery

Nvidia to send 18,000 AI chips to Saudi Arabia

Nvidia Teams with Humain for 18,000 Chip Shipment

ESPN says its direct-to-consumer streaming service will debut in September at $29.99 a month

Computer scientists discover new security vulnerability in Intel processors

Boost Your Reaction Time: How Speculative Technologies Speed Up Processing

Espn Unveils All-Encompassing Streaming Service

Massages, chefs and trainers: Airbnb adds in-home services

Atmospheric water harvesting: Optimization of a hygroscopic hydrogel device improves efficiency

Microsoft Initiates Largest Workforce Reduction in Two Years

Engineers Extract More Water from Dry Air in Atacama

Airbnb Introduces In-Home Massages and More

Microsoft to lay off about 3% of its workforce

EU Calls for Public Input to Enhance Child Online Safety

EU seeks to better protect children from online dangers

Europe's biggest 'green' methanol plant opens in Denmark

Europe's Largest Green Methanol Plant Boosts Emissions Reduction

Giving small satellites a bigger impact with an advanced wireless chip

Challenges in Small Satellite Communication

Hardening the grid: Research team focuses on quake-proofing transformer bushings

Challenges of Power Transformer Maintenance

3-D printed smart fabrics maintain flexibility and sensing ability after repeated washes

Smart Fabric Breakthrough: 3D Ink Printing for Enhanced Durability

Kumamoto University Enhances Subgraph Matching Accuracy

Deep learning model dramatically improves subgraph matching accuracy by eliminating noise

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Monday, 5 August 2019

Larger blood transfusions could halve deaths of children with severe anaemia

Giving larger volumes of blood transfusions to children with severe anaemia in sub-Saharan Africa could halve the number of deaths.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/larger-blood-transfusions-could-halve-deaths-of-children-with-severe-anaemia

Family influence key in spread of opioid use

Introducing an opioid painkiller into a home can double the chances someone else living in the home seeks out the addictive drugs on his or her own, according to a new paper from two UC Berkeley researchers.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/family-influence-key-in-spread-of-opioid-use

To understand how people think, look to their actions, not their words

Actions not only speak louder than words, they also happen first and faster, Stanford psychologist Barbara Tversky says. Catching a falling cup, rolling one's eyes at a bad joke—responses like these happen before people find the words to describe their actions and emotions.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/to-understand-how-people-think-look-to-their-actions-not-their-words

CBD risks and the chance to rein in supplements

With medical and recreational marijuana being legalized in states across the country, cannabis and related products are hitting an eager market, but often without scientific studies to back up product claims.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/cbd-risks-and-the-chance-to-rein-in-supplements

Antineutrino detection could help remotely monitor nuclear reactors

Technology to measure the flow of subatomic particles known as antineutrinos from nuclear reactors could allow continuous remote monitoring designed to detect fueling changes that might indicate the diversion of nuclear materials. The monitoring could be done from outside the reactor vessel, and the technology may be sensitive enough to detect substitution of a single fuel assembly.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/antineutrino-detection-could-help-remotely-monitor-nuclear-reactors

Team uses AI to detect fast radio bursts

A Swinburne Ph.D. student has built an automated system that uses artificial intelligence (AI) to revolutionise our ability to detect and capture fast radio bursts (FRBs) in real-time.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/team-uses-ai-to-detect-fast-radio-bursts

Eye-controlled soft lens paves way to soft human-machine interfaces

A research team led by the University of California San Diego has developed a soft robotic lens whose movements are controlled by the eyes—blink twice and the lens zooms in and out; look left, right, up or down and the lens will follow.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/eye-controlled-soft-lens-paves-way-to-soft-human-machine-interfaces

Setting the stage for fuel-efficient fertilizer

Ammonia, the primary ingredient in nitrogen-based fertilizers, has helped feed the world since World War I. But making ammonia at an industrial scale takes a lot of energy, and it accounts for more than one percent of the world's total energy-related carbon emissions.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/setting-the-stage-for-fuel-efficient-fertilizer

For the presidential race, 'electability' could decide who wins and who loses

In 2016, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was deemed "electable" by analysts just four years after former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney carried the same label in the race against President Barack Obama, a contest that Romney lost. This election, pundits have dubbed former Vice President Joe Biden as the most "electable" Democrat among a field of more than 20 candidates, in large part because early polls, including the USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll, indicate he is the favorite so far.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/for-the-presidential-race-electability-could-decide-who-wins-and-who-loses

Archaeologist works with tribe to explore its history and to repair historic injustices

Archaeology Professor Matthew Liebmann has been collaborating with the Pueblo of Jemez in New Mexico for two decades, having served as tribal archaeologist and Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act program director for the Jemez Department of Natural Resources. Author of "Revolt: An Archaeological History of Pueblo Resistance and Revitalization in 17th Century New Mexico," Liebmann took a group of undergraduate and graduate students to Jemez this summer to help members of the tribe excavate the site of two mission churches. Liebmann sat down with the Gazette to talk about his research, how his field has reckoned with the past, and how both influence his teaching.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/archaeologist-works-with-tribe-to-explore-its-history-and-to-repair-historic-injustices

Asteroid's surprise close approach illustrates need for more eyes on the sky

On 25 July, an asteroid the size of a football field flew by Earth, coming within 65 000 km of our planet's surface during its closest approach—about one fifth of the distance to the Moon.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/asteroids-surprise-close-approach-illustrates-need-for-more-eyes-on-the-sky

Looking for warm dark matter

In the last century, astronomers studying the motions of galaxies and the character of the cosmic microwave background radiation came to realize that most of the matter in the universe was not visible. About 84% of the matter in the cosmos is dark, emitting neither light nor any other known kind of radiation. Hence it is called dark matter. One of its other primary qualities is that it only interacts with other matter via gravity: it carries no electromagnetic charge, for example. Dark matter is also "dark" because it is mysterious: it is not composed of atoms or their usual constituents like electrons and protons. Particle physicists have imagined new kinds of matter, consistent with the known laws of the universe, but so far none has been detected or its existence confirmed. The Large Hadron Collider's discovery of the Higgs boson in 2012 prompted a burst of optimism that dark matter particles would soon be discovered, but so far none has been seen and previously promising classes of particles now seem to be long-shots.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/looking-for-warm-dark-matter

500 years on, how Magellan's voyage changed the world

Ferdinand Magellan set off from Spain 500 years ago on an epoch-making voyage to sail all the way around the globe for the first time.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/500-years-on-how-magellans-voyage-changed-the-world

Australia cancer sufferer first to use new assisted dying law

A 61-year-old cancer patient has become the first person in over two decades to die under controversial assisted dying laws in Australia, a charity said.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/australia-cancer-sufferer-first-to-use-new-assisted-dying-law

In French mountains, bear attacks leave shepherds skittish

As day breaks over the Pyrenees mountains, hundreds of sheep scuttle up a valley, the clanging of their neck bells echoing around the hills that fringe the French-Spanish border.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/in-french-mountains-bear-attacks-leave-shepherds-skittish

Ecological land grab: food vs fuel vs forests

The overlapping crises of climate change, mass species extinction, and an unsustainable global food system are on a collision course towards what might best be called an ecological land grab.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/ecological-land-grab-food-vs-fuel-vs-forests

New Zealand government plans to ease abortion restrictions

New Zealand's government announced Monday that it plans changes to the country's abortion laws that would treat the procedure as a health issue rather than a crime.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/new-zealand-government-plans-to-ease-abortion-restrictions

Long-term declines in heart disease and stroke deaths are stalling, research finds

Heart disease and stroke mortality rates have almost stopped declining in many high-income countries, including Australia, and are even increasing in some countries, according to new research.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/long-term-declines-in-heart-disease-and-stroke-deaths-are-stalling-research-finds

MSI detection via liquid biopsy shows high concordance with results from tissue samples

Bottom Line: Incorporation of pan-cancer microsatellite instability (MSI) detection into the 74-gene panel Guardant360 liquid biopsy assay showed high concordance with matched tissue samples in nearly 1,000 patients.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/msi-detection-via-liquid-biopsy-shows-high-concordance-with-results-from-tissue-samples

Transgender women case study shows sperm production is possible but not certain

Scientists at Magee-Womens Research Institute (MWRI), collaborating with clinicians at UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital and UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh report two cases in which young transgender women attempted to recover their fertility after starting and stopping gender-affirming medications.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/transgender-women-case-study-shows-sperm-production-is-possible-but-not-certain

Recursive language and modern imagination were acquired simultaneously 70,000 years ago

A genetic mutation that slowed down the development of the prefrontal cortex (PFC) in two or more children may have triggered a cascade of events leading to acquisition of recursive language and modern imagination 70,000 years ago.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/recursive-language-and-modern-imagination-were-acquired-simultaneously-70-000-years-ago

Whole body vibration shakes up microbiome, reduces inflammation in diabetes

In the face of diabetes, a common condition in which glucose and levels of destructive inflammation soar, whole body vibration appears to improve how well our body uses glucose as an energy source and adjust our microbiome and immune cells to deter inflammation, investigators report.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/whole-body-vibration-shakes-up-microbiome-reduces-inflammation-in-diabetes

TV crews capture first evidence of leopard seals sharing food

Drone footage captured by crews filming the Netflix series Our Planet—narrated by Sir David Attenborough—has shown never-before seen behaviour of two leopard seals sharing food.

source https://www.lifetechnology.com/blogs/life-technology-news-blog/tv-crews-capture-first-evidence-of-leopard-seals-sharing-food