ScienceDaily: Most Popular News


Permeability of the blood-brain barrier in mice

Posted: 15 Mar 2022 08:30 AM PDT

The blood-brain barrier plays an essential role in protecting the central nervous system from harmful bacteria, toxins, and other blood-borne pathogens.

Vaccine protects against 'tough cookie' parasite found in the Americas

Posted: 15 Mar 2022 08:30 AM PDT

The parasites that cause a disfiguring skin disease affecting about 12 million people globally may have met their match in vaccines developed using CRISPR gene-editing technology, new research suggests.

Record-breaking, ultrafast devices step to protecting the grid from EMPs

Posted: 15 Mar 2022 08:30 AM PDT

Scientists have announced a tiny, electronic device that can shunt excess electricity within a few billionths of a second while operating at a record-breaking 6,400 volts -- a significant step towards protecting the nation's electric grid from an electromagnetic pulse.

Reduced inhibition of hippocampal neurons impairs long-term memory recall in Rett syndrome

Posted: 15 Mar 2022 08:30 AM PDT

Researchers have discovered that diminished memory recall in Rett syndrome mice can be restored by activating specific inhibitory cells in the hippocampus.

When it comes to sleep, it’s quality over quantity

Posted: 15 Mar 2022 08:29 AM PDT

Some people are gifted with genes that pack the benefits of slumber into an efficient time window, keeping them peppy on only four or six hours of sleep a night. In addition, the scientists said, these 'elite sleepers' show psychological resilience and resistance to neurodegenerative conditions that may point the way to fending off neurological disease.

Scientists find brain network that makes mice mingle

Posted: 15 Mar 2022 08:29 AM PDT

The difference between a social butterfly and a lone wolf is actually at least eight differences, according to new findings by a team of brain researchers. By simultaneously spying on the electrical activity of several brain regions, researchers can both identify how social or solitary an individual mouse is, and, by zapping nodes within this social brain network, can prompt mice to be even more gregarious.

Making green energy greener: Researchers propose method for wind turbine blades' recycling

Posted: 15 Mar 2022 08:29 AM PDT

Wind turbine blades made from glass fiber-reinforced polymer (GFRP) laminate composites can serve for up to 25 years. After that, they end up in landfills which has become a real challenge for the renewable energy industry. Researchers have proposed a method for wind turbine blades' recycling. Using pyrolysis, they broke the composite materials into their constituent parts. According to scientists, the extracted materials can be reused, and the process is virtually waste-free.

Gravitational wave mirror experiments can evolve into quantum entities

Posted: 15 Mar 2022 08:26 AM PDT

Scientists review research on gravitational wave detectors as a historical example of quantum technologies and examine the fundamental research on the connection between quantum physics and gravity. The team examined recent gravitational wave experiments, showing it is possible to shield large objects from strong influences from the thermal and seismic environment to allow them to evolve as one quantum object. This decoupling from the environment enables measurement sensitivities that would otherwise be impossible.

'Long COVID' linked to lasting airways disease

Posted: 15 Mar 2022 07:56 AM PDT

Disease of the small airways in the lungs is a potential long-lasting effect of COVID-19, according to a new study. The study found that small airways disease occurred independently of initial infection severity. The long-term consequences are unknown.

People with diabetes who eat less processed food at night may live longer

Posted: 15 Mar 2022 06:50 AM PDT

The time of day that people with diabetes eat certain foods may be just as important to their well-being as portion size and calories, according to a new study.

Elevated inflammation persists in immune cells months after mild COVID-19

Posted: 15 Mar 2022 06:50 AM PDT

There is a lack of understanding as to why some people suffer from long-lasting symptoms after COVID-19 infection. A new study now demonstrates that a certain type of immune cell called macrophages show altered inflammatory and metabolic expression several months after mild COVID-19.

Restoring tropical peatlands supports bird diversity and does not affect livelihoods of oil palm farmers, study suggests

Posted: 15 Mar 2022 06:50 AM PDT

A new study has found that oil palm can be farmed more sustainably on peatlands by re-wetting the land - conserving both biodiversity and livelihoods.

Discovery of novel brain fear mechanisms offers target for anxiety-reducing drugs

Posted: 15 Mar 2022 06:50 AM PDT

A new target in the brain which underpins the eliciting of anxiety and fear behaviors such as 'freezing' has been identified by neuroscientists. Researchers say the discovery of a key pathway in the brain offers a potential new drug target for treating anxiety and psychological disorders, which affect an estimated 264-million people worldwide.

Hoverfly brains mapped to detect the sound of distant drones

Posted: 15 Mar 2022 06:49 AM PDT

Researchers have reverse engineered the visual systems of hoverflies to detect drones' acoustic signatures from almost four kilometers away. The finding could help combat the growing use of IED-carrying drones, including those used in Ukraine.

Climate scientists reconsider the meaning and implications of drought in light of a changing world

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 03:15 PM PDT

Maps of the American West have featured ever darker shades of red over the past two decades. The colors illustrate the unprecedented drought blighting the region. In some areas, conditions have blown past severe and extreme drought into exceptional drought. But rather than add more superlatives to our descriptions, one group of scientists believes it's time to reconsider the very definition of drought.

Ready, set…GO! Scientists discover a brain circuit that triggers the execution of planned movement

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 03:15 PM PDT

Planned movement is essential to our daily lives, and it often requires delayed execution. As children, we stood crouched and ready but waited for the shout of 'GO!' before sprinting from the starting line. As adults, we wait until the traffic light turns green before making a turn. New research explores how cues in our environment can trigger planned movement.

Fast-melting alpine permafrost may contribute to rising global temperatures

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 03:14 PM PDT

Using lake sediment in the Tibetan Plateau, a team of researchers was able to show that permafrost at high elevations is more vulnerable than arctic permafrost under projected future climate conditions.

Cognitive decline key factor in predicting life expectancy in Alzheimer’s disease

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 03:14 PM PDT

Cognitive decline is the biggest factor in determining how long patients with Alzheimer's disease will live after being diagnosed, according to a new study.

Comet 67P’s abundant oxygen more of an illusion, new study suggests

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 12:44 PM PDT

When the European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft discovered abundant molecular oxygen bursting from comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (67P) in 2015, it puzzled scientists. They had never seen a comet emit oxygen, let alone in such abundance. But most alarming were the deeper implications: that researchers had to account for so much oxygen, which meant reconsidering everything they thought they already knew about the chemistry of the early solar system and how it formed. A new analysis, however, shows Rosetta's discovery may not be as strange as scientists first imagined. Instead, it suggests the comet has two internal reservoirs that make it seem like there's more oxygen than is actually there.

How a Massachusetts salt marsh is changing what we know about New England’s coast

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 12:44 PM PDT

New research into the life and times of a New England salt marsh fundamentally changes our understanding of how salt marshes acquire the sediment that keeps them viable. This research has wide-ranging implications for managing New England's coastline as it struggles to keep up with development, sea-level rise and other environmental impacts.

Model predicts cross-species contamination risk for livestock

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 12:44 PM PDT

Biosecurity efforts focused on the top 3% of farms in a particular contact network may significantly cut back cross-species disease dissemination.

Malaria drug could combat chemotherapy-resistant head and neck cancers, research suggests

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 12:44 PM PDT

A new study suggests that the malaria drug hydroxychloroquine inhibits pathways that drive resistance to the chemotherapy agent cisplatin in head and neck cancers and restores tumor-killing effects of cisplatin in animal models.

Rapid changes to the Arctic seafloor noted as submerged permafrost thaws

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 12:44 PM PDT

A new study has documented how the thawing of permafrost submerged underwater at the edge of the Arctic Ocean is affecting the seafloor.

Close the blinds during sleep to protect your health

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 12:43 PM PDT

Exposure to even moderate ambient lighting during nighttime sleep, compared to sleeping in a dimly lit room, harms your cardiovascular function during sleep and increases your insulin resistance the following morning, reports a new study. Just a single night of exposure to moderate room lighting during sleep can impair glucose and cardiovascular regulation, which are risk factors for heart disease, diabetes and metabolic syndrome.

‘Dancing’ laboratory rats show how the brain learns, perfects, then unconsciously performs a skillful movement

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 11:42 AM PDT

Scientists have shown in rats how several brain regions need to work together to acquire a skill and replicate it flawlessly with each rat adding their own personal flair in the form of a 'dance.'

Are conferences worth the time and money?

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 11:20 AM PDT

Scientists who interact with others during assigned sessions at conferences are more likely to form productive collaborations than scientists who do not, researchers found. And the kicker? It doesn't matter whether the conference is in person or virtual.

Researchers identify misperceptions surrounding breast density across race/ethnicity and health literacy levels

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 11:20 AM PDT

Having dense breasts (more fibroglandular tissue than fatty tissue, as visualized on a mammogram) reduces the sensitivity of mammography by masking breast cancers and carries a 1.6- to 2.0-fold increased independent risk for breast cancer. To inform women about these risks, 38 U.S. states and the federal government have enacted legislation requiring a written dense breast notification (DBN) of a patient's breast density after a mammogram, but there still is limited evidence about what breast density means, and what the implications are, to women. According to a new study, while women are receiving these notifications about their breast density, not all recipients are fully understanding what they mean in terms of future health implications. Boston University School of Medicine researchers suggest that knowledge about breast density and its associated risks is partly linked to women's race/ethnicity and health literacy.

Warning: Objects in driverless car sensors may be closer than they appear

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 11:20 AM PDT

Researchers have demonstrated the first attack strategy that can fool industry-standard autonomous vehicle sensor components into believing nearby objects are closer (or further) than they appear without being detected. The research suggests that adding optical 3D capabilities or the ability to share data with nearby cars may be necessary to fully protect autonomous cars from attacks.

A third of new moms during early COVID had postpartum depression

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 11:20 AM PDT

One in three new mothers during early COVID-19 screened positive for postpartum depression -- nearly triple pre-pandemic levels -- and 1 in 5 had major depressive symptoms, say researchers.

Smartphone app calculates genetic risk for heart attack

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 11:20 AM PDT

Researchers have developed a smartphone app that can calculate users' genetic risk for coronary artery disease (CAD)--and found that users at high risk sought out appropriate medication after using the app.

Physicist shed light on the darkness

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 09:07 AM PDT

Experimental physicists have succeeded for the first time in controlling protected quantum states - so-called dark states - in superconducting quantum bits. The entangled states are 500 times more robust and could be used, for example, in quantum simulations. The method could also be used on other technological platforms.

Surfing towards coastal ecosystem protection

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 09:07 AM PDT

Scientists believe a strategy used to protect popular surfing spots could now be more widely adopted to help preserve endangered coastal environments.

Deciphering gut microbiome ‘chatter’ to combat IBD

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 09:07 AM PDT

Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) is a life-long, chronic condition characterized by sporadic bouts of gut inflammation causing debilitating symptoms. Crohn's Disease and Ulcerative Colitis -- the latter affecting around 1 in 400 people - are the two most common types of IBD. Current treatments are ineffective and seriously impact the quality of life of the patients and those of their families.

Researchers ID sex pheromone of invasive giant hornet

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 09:07 AM PDT

Scientists have developed a method for tracking the Asian giant 'murder' hornet's presence and possibly accelerating its removal. The researchers identified the major components of the Asian giant hornet queen's sex pheromone, an achievement that could be used as bait to trap and track the insects.

Spider silk can stabilize cancer-suppressing protein

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 09:07 AM PDT

The p53 protein protects our cells from cancer and is an interesting target for cancer treatments. The problem is, however, that it breaks down rapidly in the cell. Researchers have now found an unusual way of stabilizing the protein and making it more potent. By adding a spider silk protein to p53, they show that it is possible to create a protein that is more stable and capable of killing cancer cells.

Link between high cholesterol and heart disease 'inconsistent', new study finds

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 09:07 AM PDT

New research has revealed that the link between 'bad' cholesterol (LDL-C) and poor health outcomes, such as heart attack and stroke, may not be as strong as previously thought.

Metastatic prostate cancer on the rise since decrease in cancer screenings

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 09:07 AM PDT

A new study finds that the incidence rate of metastatic prostate cancer has significantly increased for men 45 and older and coincides with recommendations against routine prostate cancer screenings.

Huge forest fires don't cause living trees to release much carbon, research shows

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 09:06 AM PDT

Research on the ground following two large wildfires in California's Sierra Nevada mountain range showed the vast majority of carbon stored in trees before the blazes was still there after the fires.

Laser flashes for cancer research

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 09:06 AM PDT

Irradiation with fast protons is a more effective and less invasive cancer treatment than X-rays. However, modern proton therapy requires large particle accelerators, which has experts investigating alternative accelerator concepts, such as laser systems to accelerate protons. Such systems are deployed in preclinical studies to pave the way for optimal radiation therapy. A research team has now successfully tested irradiation with laser protons on animals.

Precipitation trends determine how often droughts and heat waves will occur together

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 09:06 AM PDT

Prolonged droughts and heat waves have negative consequences both for people and the environment. If both of these extreme events occur at the same time, the impacts, in the form of wild fires, tree mortality or crop losses -- to name a few examples -- can be even more severe. Climate researchers have now discovered that, assuming a global temperature increase of two degrees in the course of global warming, the future frequency of these simultaneously occurring extreme events is primarily determined by local precipitation trends. Understanding this is important, since it enables us to improve our risk adaptation to climate change and our assessment of its consequences, according to the researchers.

New hope for treatment of infant cancer that has puzzled researchers for decades

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 09:06 AM PDT

New research has begun to unravel the mystery of why a particular form of leukaemia in infants has defied efforts to improve outcomes, despite significant improvements in treating older children. Scientists have now found subtle differences in the cell type that causes B acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (B-ALL) that may help to explain why some cases are more severe than others.

Permafrost peatlands approaching tipping point

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 09:06 AM PDT

Researchers warn that permafrost peatlands in Europe and Western Siberia are much closer to a climatic tipping point than previous believed. The frozen peatlands in these areas store up to 39 billion tons of carbon -- the equivalent to twice that stored in the whole of European forests.

Large, long-lived, and entirely molten magma chambers once existed in Earth’s crust

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 07:56 AM PDT

Geologists have come up with multiple lines of evidence indicating that the Bushveld Complex in South Africa functioned as a 'big magma tank' in the ancient Earth's crust.

Weight loss doesn't help pregnancy chances, study finds

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 07:56 AM PDT

Women who are obese and struggling to become pregnant are often advised to lose weight, but a new study finds no fertility benefits from weight loss.

Greenland ice sheet may halve in volume by year 3000

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 07:56 AM PDT

As a result of global warming in the 21st century, the Greenland ice sheet may contribute several meters to sea-level rise in the centuries to come; however, effective climate change mitigation measures will greatly reduce its decay.

Researchers discover new species in critically imperiled ecosystem

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 07:56 AM PDT

Researchers working in one of the world's most biodiverse and threatened ecosystems have discovered a new plant species, Castela senticosa, which they recommend be designated as endangered. The plant, which grows as a small bush sheathed in an imposing layer of spines, was found during a survey to catalog the flora of the Martín García mountain range in the Dominican Republic.

Ice sheet retreat and forest expansion turned ancient subtropical drylands into oases

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 07:56 AM PDT

Researchers focused on the climate of the Pliocene, over 3 million years ago, the last time Earth has seen concentrations of over 400 PPM CO2 in the atmosphere, similar to today's concentrations. The Pliocene prompts a long-standing question: despite the similarity to the present-day, why were dry areas like the Sahel in Africa and Northern China much wetter and greener in the Pliocene than they are today?

Scientists create novel genetic model of Down syndrome in rats

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 07:56 AM PDT

In pursuit of better ways to test new therapies and further explore the impacts of the unique genetics associated with Down syndrome, researchers have genetically engineered and characterized what is believed to be the first rat model of Down syndrome.

Endless forms most beautiful: Why evolution favors symmetry

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 06:57 AM PDT

An international team of researchers from biology, computer science and mathematics explains why evolution has a preference for symmetry.

Photo or the real thing? Mice can inherently recall and tell them apart

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 06:57 AM PDT

The ability to make perceptual and conceptual judgements such as knowing the difference between a picture of an object and the actual 3D object itself has been considered a defining capacity of primates, until now. A study provides the very first behavioral evidence that laboratory mice are capable of higher-order cognitive processes. Findings also provide strong support that the mouse's hippocampus, like that of humans, is required for this form of nonspatial visual recognition memory and picture-object equivalence.

Novel cell survival mechanisms through RNA regulation in the central nervous system

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 06:57 AM PDT

This study's findings will help congenital neurological disease (e.g. spinal muscular atrophy) specialists better understand the mechanisms and components involved in CNS development. Notably, the findings of this work demonstrate unequivocally that Ddx20 is a novel Olig2-interacting factor and a potent suppressor of the p53 pathway, contributing to the maintenance of neuronal and oligodendrocyte progenitor cells during CNS development. Therefore, Ddx20 and Olig2 are promising molecular targets for development of future therapeutic strategies.

Unleashing the tiger: Mapping the Aussie tiger prawn genome

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 06:57 AM PDT

Researchers have mapped the genome of an iconic Australian seafood species -- that of the Australian black tiger prawn - which may lead to bigger and more disease resistant farmed stock in the future.

Chemical reaction design goes virtual

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 06:57 AM PDT

Researchers aim to streamline the time- and resource-intensive process of screening ligands during catalyst design by using virtual ligands.

Scientists estimate invasive insects will kill 1.4 million US street trees by 2050

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 06:57 AM PDT

A new study estimates that over the next 30 years, 1.4 million street trees will be killed by invasive insects, costing over 900 million dollars to replace.

History of neurological or psychiatric conditions increases the likelihood of developing more

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 06:57 AM PDT

People living with neurological or psychiatric conditions may have an increased likelihood of having a second such condition in the future, and their sex influences their risk, according to new research.

'Sky is not the limit' for solar geoengineering

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 06:57 AM PDT

There are practical limits to the height at which aerosols may be deployed in the atmosphere to deflect incoming sunlight and countervail global warming. Very high-altitude injections might be more effective, but such climate intervention comes with substantially increased costs and safety risks, according to new research.

Maternal lead exposures correlated with sex ratios of offspring

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 06:57 AM PDT

Higher lead levels in a mother's blood can increase the chance of her bearing male offspring, according to new research.

Novel X-ray lens facilitates glimpse into the nanoworld

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 06:57 AM PDT

Scientists have developed a ground-breaking achromatic lens for X-rays. This allows the X-ray beams to be accurately focused on a single point even if they have different wavelengths. The new lens will make it much easier to study nanostructures using X-rays, according to a new article.

Microbes and minerals may have set off Earth’s oxygenation

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 06:57 AM PDT

Around 2.3 billion years ago, oxygen began building up in the atmosphere, eventually reaching the life-sustaining levels we breathe today. A new hypothesis suggests a mechanism for how this may have happened.

Anyone can be trained to be creative

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 06:57 AM PDT

Researchers have developed a new method for training people to be creative, one that shows promise of succeeding far better than current ways of sparking innovation.