ScienceDaily: Science & Society News


Caribou herd rebounds as Indigenous stewards lead conservation efforts

Posted: 28 Mar 2022 01:06 PM PDT

Despite recovery efforts from federal and provincial governments, caribou populations across Canada continue to decline, largely due to human activity. But as a new study finds, in central British Columbia there is one herd of mountain caribou, the Klinse-Za, whose numbers are going in the opposite direction -- all thanks to a collaborative recovery effort led by West Moberly First Nations and Saulteau First Nations.

Spirituality can improve quality of life for heart failure patients, study finds

Posted: 28 Mar 2022 11:10 AM PDT

Numerous studies have shown that spirituality can help improve quality of life for people with chronic diseases like cancer. According to a literature review, spirituality can also have a positive impact on quality of life for heart failure patients.

Black patients with cancer fare worse with COVID-19, study shows

Posted: 28 Mar 2022 10:38 AM PDT

Lack of access to health care, social determinants of health, preexisting comorbidities and reduced access to clinical research are common to both cancer and COVID-19 in Black individuals. Together these two diseases create a perfect storm in this population, a new study indicates.

Layover or nonstop? Unique pattern of connectivity lets highly creative people's brains take road less traveled to their destination

Posted: 28 Mar 2022 08:23 AM PDT

A new study shows highly creative people's brains appear to work differently than others, with an atypical approach that makes distant connections more quickly by bypassing the 'hubs' seen in non-creative brains.

Scientists find that the impact of social media on wellbeing varies across adolescence

Posted: 28 Mar 2022 06:00 AM PDT

Girls and boys might be more vulnerable to the negative effects of social media use at different times during their adolescence, say an international team of scientists. The researchers show that, in UK data, girls experience a negative link between social media use and life satisfaction when they are 11-13 years old and boys when they are 14-15 years old. Increased social media use again predicts lower life satisfaction at age 19 years. At other times the link was not statistically significant.