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Climate policies can backfire by eroding “green” values, study finds

2025-12-30
A popular vision of life after climate action looks like vegetarians riding bikes, city centers without cars, and people foregoing air travel. But a paper published in Nature Sustainability finds that climate policies targeting lifestyle changes (say, urban car bans) actually may weaken people’s green values, thereby undermining support for other needed environmental policies. “Policies don’t just spur a target behavior. We find that they can change people’s underlying values: leading to unintended negative effects, but also possibly cultivating green values,” says SFI Complexity Postdoctoral ...

Too much screen time too soon? A*STAR study links infant screen exposure to brain changes and teen anxiety

2025-12-30
SINGAPORE — Children exposed to high levels of screen time before age two showed changes in brain development that were linked to slower decision-making and increased anxiety by their teenage years, according to new research by Asst Prof Tan Ai Peng and her team from A*STAR Institute for Human Development and Potential (A*STAR IHDP) and National University of Singapore (NUS) Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, using data from the Growing Up in Singapore Towards healthy Outcomes (GUSTO) cohort. Published in eBioMedicine, the study tracked the same children over more than a decade, with brain imaging ...

Global psychiatry mourns Professor Dan Stein, visionary who transformed mental health science across Africa and beyond

2025-12-30
NEW YORK, New York, USA, 31 December 2025 — An obituary published today in Genomic Psychiatry pays tribute to Professor Dan Joseph Stein, the internationally acclaimed psychiatrist and neuroscientist who died on 6 December 2025 at age 63 after a brief illness. Professor Stein served as Chair of the Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health at the University of Cape Town, Director of the South African Medical Research Council Unit on Risk & Resilience in Mental Disorders, and Scientific Director of the UCT Neuroscience Institute. His death ...

KIST develops eco-friendly palladium recovery technology to safeguard resource security

2025-12-30
Palladium (Pd) is widely used in various industries and everyday products, including smartphones, semiconductor manufacturing processes, and hydrogen fuel cells. Palladium is an essential metal that acts as an excellent catalyst even in minute quantities, reducing pollutants and enhancing energy efficiency. However, palladium production is concentrated in a few countries, leading to unstable supply. While South Korea generates significant amounts of spent catalysts and electronic waste annually, a lack of eco-friendly and efficient recovery technologies means much is discarded or relies ...

Statins significantly reduce mortality risk for adults with diabetes, regardless of cardiovascular risk

2025-12-29
Embargoed for release until 5:00 p.m. ET on Monday 29 December 2025    Follow @Annalsofim on X, Facebook, Instagram, Bluesky, and LinkedIn         Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute for the full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms of the embargo not only on their ...

Brain immune cells may drive more damage in females than males with Alzheimer’s

2025-12-29
More than seven million Americans have Alzheimer’s disease, and two-thirds of them are women, according to the Alzheimer’s Association. The O’Banion Lab at the Del Monte Institute for Neuroscience at the University of Rochester has long been studying this disease and is looking more closely at the differences between male and female brains. “It is well documented that males and females are diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease at different rates,” said M. Kerry O’Banion, MD, PhD, professor of Neuroscience and Neurology. “But we still do ...

Evidence-based recommendations empower clinicians to manage epilepsy in pregnancy

2025-12-29
PITTSBURGH, Dec. 29, 2025 – For the first time, clinicians have access to a clear, evidence-based roadmap for adjusting antiseizure medication doses during pregnancy and after childbirth.   The strategies, practiced by a group of leading women’s neurology experts in the nationwide landmark Maternal Outcomes and Neurodevelopmental Effects of Antiepileptic Drugs (MONEAD) study, were published today in Neurology. They are expected to inform clinical ...

Fungus turns bark beetles’ defenses against them

2025-12-29
Spruce bark is rich in phenolic compounds that protect trees from pathogenic fungi. A research team at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology in Jena investigated how these plant defenses function within the food web, particularly in spruce bark beetles (Ips typographus), which ingest the compounds through their diet. Could the beetles use substances from the spruce's defenses to protect themselves against pathogenic fungi? Beetles convert plant defenses into even more toxic forms Using state-of-the-art analytical methods such ...

There are new antivirals being tested for herpesviruses. Scientists now know how they work

2025-12-29
At a glance:   Study uncovers key insights about how a new class of antiviral drugs works. Cryo-EM images showed the drugs bound to herpes simplex virus (HSV) protein at nearly atomic detail, while optical tweezers experiments showed how the drug-bound protein behaved in real time. Findings could open doors to additional drugs for herpesviruses and other DNA viruses.   Harvard Medical School researchers have uncovered crucial insights into how an emerging class of antiviral drugs works. The discovery sheds light on an important tool for fighting drug-resistant strains of herpes simplex virus, or HSV, and points to new pathways for treating herpesviruses ...

CDI scientist, colleagues author review of global burden of fungus Candida auris

2025-12-29
The fungal species Candida auris is spreading across the globe, and gaining in virulence, according to a new review by a Hackensack Meridian Center for Discovery and Innovation (CDI) scientist and colleagues.    But there are strategies available and underway to combat the invasive and drug resistant germ, according to the new review in the American Society of Microbiology journal Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews.    The paper summarizes and analyzes the latest developments - and needs - in mycology in 2025. Neeraj Chauhan, Ph.D., of ...

How does stroke influence speech comprehension?

2025-12-29
Following stroke, some people experience a language disorder that hinders their ability to process speech sounds. How do their brains change from stroke? Researchers led by Laura Gwilliams, faculty scholar at the Wu Tsai Neuroscience Institute and Stanford Data Science and assistant professor at the Stanford School of Humanities and Sciences, and Maaike Vandermosten, associate professor at the Department of Neurosciences at KU Leuven, compared the brains of 39 patients following stroke and ...

B cells transiently unlock their plasticity, risking lymphoma development

2025-12-29
Immune cells called B cells make antibodies that fight off invading bacteria, viruses and other foreign substances. During their preparation for this battle, B cells transiently revert to a more flexible, or plastic, stem-cell-like state in the lymph nodes, according to a new preclinical study from Weill Cornell Medicine investigators. The results could help explain how many lymphomas develop from mature B cells rather than from stem cells, as many other cancers do, and guide researchers in developing better treatments. The study, published Dec. 29 in Nature Cell Biology, reveals a paradox: as mature B cells get prepped to make antibodies, a highly specialized ...

Advanced AI dodel predicts spoken language outcomes in deaf children after cochlear implants

2025-12-29
AI model using deep transfer learning – the most advanced form of machine learning – predicted with 92% accuracy spoken language outcomes at one-to-three years after cochlear implants (implanted electronic hearing device), according to a large international study published in JAMA Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery. Although cochlear implantation is the only effective treatment to improve hearing and enable spoken language for children with severe to profound hearing loss, spoken language development after early implantation is more variable in comparison to children born with typical hearing. If children who are likely to have more ...

Multimodal imaging-based cerebral blood flow prediction model development in simulated microgravity

2025-12-29
“Maintaining adequate CBF is crucial for astronauts’ cognitive function during long-duration microgravity, but real-time monitoring in space is constrained by MRI’s complexity and payload limits,” explained study corresponding author Lijun Yuan from Air Force Medical University. The core innovations include (a) using −6° head-down tilt bed rest (HDTBR) to simulate microgravity, (b) integrating carotid ultrasound and brain MRI data to establish ML-based CBF prediction models, and (c) developing an interpretable web application for in-orbit ...

Accelerated streaming subgraph matching framework is faster, more robust, and scalable

2025-12-29
Graphs are widely used to represent complex relationships in everyday applications such as social networks, bioinformatics, and recommendation systems, where they model how people or things (nodes) are connected through interactions (edges). Subgraph matching—the task of finding a smaller pattern, or query subgraph, within a larger graph—is crucial for detecting fraud, recognizing patterns, and performing semantic searches. However, current research on streaming subgraph, a similar task where timing is important, matching faces major challenges in scalability and latency, including difficulties in handling large graphs, low cache efficiency, limited query result reuse, and ...

Gestational diabetes rose every year in the US since 2016

2025-12-29
Gestational diabetes raises health risks for both mother and baby From 2016 to 2024, rates rose in every racial and ethnic group Highest rates seen in American Indian/Alaska Native, Asian and Pacific Islander women CHICAGO --- Gestational diabetes rose every single year in the U.S. from 2016 through 2024, according to a new Northwestern Medicine analysis of more than 12 million U.S. births. The condition, which raises health risks for both mother and baby, shot up 36% over the nine-year period (from 58 to 79 cases per 1,000 births) and increased across every racial and ethnic group. “Gestational diabetes ...

OHSU researchers find breast cancer drug boosts leukemia treatment

2025-12-29
A research team at Oregon Health & Science University has discovered a promising new drug combination that may help people with acute myeloid leukemia overcome resistance to one of the most common frontline therapies. In a study published today in Cell Reports Medicine, researchers analyzed more than 300 acute myeloid leukemia, or AML, patient samples and found that pairing venetoclax, a standard AML drug, with palbociclib, a cell-cycle inhibitor currently approved for breast cancer, produced significantly stronger and more durable ...

Fear and medical misinformation regarding risk of progression or recurrence among patients with breast cancer

2025-12-29
About The Study: In this survey study of patients with breast cancer, exposure to medical misinformation was common, underscoring the need for better survivorship communication with patients; fear of recurrence was not associated with exposure to misinformation. Further research on how patients process medical misinformation is essential, especially in populations at highest risk for misinformation spread. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Kaitlyn Lapen, MD, email lapenk@mskcc.org. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.49809) Editor’s ...

Glucagonlike peptide-1 receptor agonists and asthma risk in adolescents with obesity

2025-12-29
About The Study: This study found an association between glucagonlike peptide-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1RA) use and a lower risk of acute asthma exacerbations in adolescents with overweight or obesity. The findings suggest a potential dual benefit for this population, where a single class of medication could address both weight management and lower risk for asthma exacerbation, thereby potentially reducing the burden of 2 common and interconnected chronic conditions. Corresponding Authors: To contact the corresponding ...

Reviving dormant immunity: Millimeter waves reprogram the immunosuppressive microenvironment to potentiate immunotherapy without obvious side effects

2025-12-29
MMWs, a form of non-ionizing, non-thermal electromagnetic radiation, have emerged as a promising solution. Operating at a frequency of 35 GHz with an energy density of ≤10 mW/cm², MMWs do not raise tissue temperatures or cause cellular damage. Instead, they interact with biological macromolecules (e.g., proteins, DNA) through resonance absorption, inducing conformational changes that modulate their function. In preclinical studies using 4T1 breast cancer and CT26 colorectal cancer models—both classic "cold tumors"—researchers found that MMW irradiation alone inhibited ...

Safety decision-making for autonomous vehicles integrating passenger physiological states by fNIRS

2025-12-29
In recent years, several serious traffic accidents have exposed the shortcomings of current autonomous driving systems in making safe decisions. Traditional decision-making methods, due to functional deficiencies or machine performance limitations, struggle to address potential risky behaviors, leading to a continued need for human intervention in complex driving scenarios. To address this, researchers have begun exploring the use of human physiological states as an information source to improve the safety decision-making of autonomous vehicles. “Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS), as a non-invasive real-time brain activity monitoring method, can provide cognitive ...

Fires could emit more air pollution than previously estimated

2025-12-29
As fires burn the landscape, they spew airborne gases and particles, though their impact on air pollution might be underestimated. A study in ACS’ Environmental Science & Technology reports that, around the world, wildfires and prescribed burns (i.e., wildland fires) could emit substantially more gases, including ones that contribute to air pollution, than previously thought. The researchers identified several regions with high wildland fire and human activity emissions, which may pose complex air-quality challenges. “Our new estimates increase the organic compound emissions from ...

A new way to map how cells choose their fate

2025-12-29
Fukuoka, Japan—Researchers from Kyushu University have developed an innovative computational method, called ddHodge, that can reconstruct the complex dynamics of how cells decide their fate. As reported in Nature Communications, this approach paves the way for a deeper understanding of the biological processes involved in development, regeneration, and disease. Understanding how a developing cell chooses its destiny, such as differentiating into a nerve cell or a muscle cell, is a central challenge in biology and medicine. To study ...

Numbers in our sights affect how we perceive space

2025-12-27
Tokyo, Japan – Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University have studied the relationship between numerical information in our vision, and how it affects our perception of space. Volunteers were asked to identify the center of lines and squares filled with numbers; how far they were from the true center revealed unexpected biases. Crucially, their work with squares showed how our perception of space is a complex interplay between “object-based” processing and our processing of numerical ...

SIMJ announces global collaborative book project in commemoration of its 75th anniversary

2025-12-27
The Society of Inorganic Materials, Japan (SIMJ) has announced a prestigious international book initiative entitled “Sustainable Materials for a Better Environment: Advances in Gypsum, Lime, Cement, and Other Inorganic Materials” to commemorate the 75th anniversary of its founding. The initiative was officially announced at the Board of Directors’ executive meeting held on November 26th, 2025. The project aims to bring together leading researchers and experts from Japan and around the world within industry and academia ...
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