PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Big data confirms climate extremes are here to stay

2014-07-30
(Press-News.org) In a paper published online today in the journal Scientific Reports, published by Nature, Northeastern researchers Evan Kodra and Auroop Ganguly found that while global temperature is indeed increasing, so too is the variability in temperature extremes. For instance, while each year's average hottest and coldest temperatures will likely rise, those averages will also tend to fall within a wider range of potential high and low temperate extremes than are currently being observed. This means that even as overall temperatures rise, we may still continue to experience extreme cold snaps, said Kodra.

"Just because you have a year that's colder than the usual over the last decade isn't a rejection of the global warming hypothesis," Kodra explained.

With funding from a $10-million multi-university Expeditions in Computing grant, the duo used computational tools from big data science for the first time in order to extract nuanced insights about climate extremes.

The research also opens new areas of interest for future work, both in climate and data science. It suggests that the natural processes that drive weather anomalies today could continue to do so in a warming future. For instance, the team speculates that ice melt in hotter years may cause colder subsequent winters, but these hypotheses can only be confirmed in physics-based studies.

The study used simulations from the most recent climate models developed by groups around the world for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and "reanalysis data sets," which are generated by blending the best available weather observations with numerical weather models. The team combined a suite of methods in a relatively new way to characterize extremes and explain how their variability is influenced by things like the seasons, geographical region, and the land-sea interface. The analysis of multiple climate model runs and reanalysis data sets was necessary to account for uncertainties in the physics and model imperfections.

The new results provide important scientific as well as societal implications, Ganguly noted. For one thing, knowing that models project a wider range of extreme temperature behavior will allow sectors like agriculture, public health, and insurance planning to better prepare for the future. For example, Kodra said, "an agriculture insurance company wants to know next year what is the coldest snap we could see and hedge against that. So, if the range gets wider they have a broader array of policies to consider." INFORMATION:


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

A blood test for suicide?

2014-07-30
Johns Hopkins researchers say they have discovered a chemical alteration in a single human gene linked to stress reactions that, if confirmed in larger studies, could give doctors a simple blood test to reliably predict a person's risk of attempting suicide. The discovery, described online in The American Journal of Psychiatry, suggests that changes in a gene involved in the function of the brain's response to stress hormones plays a significant role in turning what might otherwise be an unremarkable reaction to the strain of everyday life into suicidal thoughts and behaviors. "Suicide ...

Acupuncture improves quality of life for breast cancer patients using aromatase inhibitors

2014-07-30
PHILADELPHIA – Use of electroacupuncture (EA) – a form of acupuncture where a small electric current is passed between pairs of acupuncture needles – produces significant improvements in fatigue, anxiety and depression in as little as eight weeks for early stage breast cancer patients experiencing joint pain related to the use of aromatase inhibitors (AIs) to treat breast cancer. The results of a randomized, placebo-controlled trial examining the intervention led by researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania are published online this ...

Soy may help women's hearts if they start early

2014-07-30
CLEVELAND, Ohio (Wednesday, July 30, 2014)—A diet rich in soy may help feminine hearts, but timing matters, finds a new study published online today in Menopause, the journal of The North American Menopause Society. Lifelong soy consumption, similar to the diet of women in Asia, produces the least atherosclerosis. Switching to a Western diet after menopause, similar to Asian migrants to North America, leads to just as much atherosclerosis as a lifelong Western diet, and switching to soy from a Western diet after menopause helps only if there isn't much atherosclerosis ...

Prehistoric dairy farming at the extremes

2014-07-30
Finland's love of milk has been traced back to 2500 BC thanks to high-tech techniques to analyse residues preserved in fragments of ancient pots. The Finns are the world's biggest milk drinkers today but experts had previously been unable to establish whether prehistoric dairy farming was possible in the harsh environment that far north, where there is snow for up to four months a year. Research by the Universities of Bristol and Helsinki, published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B today [30 July], is the first of its kind to identify that dairying took place at ...

Eating tree nuts results in 'modest decreases' in blood fats and sugars, survey finds

Eating tree nuts results in modest decreases in blood fats and sugars, survey finds
2014-07-30
TORONTO -- Eating tree nuts appears to help reduce two of the five markers for metabolic syndrome, a group of factors that raise the risk for heart disease and other health problems such as diabetes and strokes, a new research paper says. The paper found a "modest decrease" in blood fats known as triglycerides and blood sugars among people who added tree nuts to their diets compared to those who ate a control diet. The paper, by Dr. John Sievenpiper, a physician and researcher in the Clinical Nutrition and Risk Factor Modification Centre of St. Michael's Hospital, was ...

Our galaxy is way smaller than previous estimates, study shows

2014-07-30
The Milky Way is smaller than astronomers previously thought, according to new research. For the first time, scientists have been able to precisely measure the mass of the galaxy that contains our solar system. Researchers have found that the Milky Way is approximately half the weight of a neighbouring galaxy – known as Andromeda – which has a similar structure to our own. The Milky Way and Andromeda are the two largest in a region of galaxies which astronomers call the Local Group. Scientists say that Andromeda's extra weight must be present in the form of ...

Improve peer review by making the reviewers better suited to the task

2014-07-30
A 'kitemark' that identifies randomized-controlled trials reviewed by specially trained peer reviewers would improve public trust in the robustness of clinical trials, according to an opinion piece in the open access journal BMC Medicine. Jigisha Patel, BioMed Central's Medical Editor argues that peer review should be recognized as a professional skill in the clinical medical field. The article was openly peer reviewed and the reports published alongside, as is the case for all BMC Medicine articles. Peer review and its effectiveness is the subject of much heated debate ...

Astronomers measure weight of galaxies, expansion of universe

2014-07-30
Astronomers at the University of British Columbia have collaborated with international researchers to calculate the precise mass of the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies, dispelling the notion that the two galaxies have similar masses. While it was previously thought that the two galaxies weighed the same because of their similar size and structure, researchers found that neighboring Andromeda is about twice as heavy as our own Milky Way. "Most of the weight of these galaxies is present in the form of invisible dark matter," says Yin-Zhe Ma, a postdoctoral fellow in ...

Weighing the Milky Way

2014-07-30
PITTSBURGH—Does the Milky Way look fat in this picture? Has Andromeda been taking skinny selfies? It turns out the way some astrophysicists have been studying our galaxy made it appear that the Milky Way might be more massive than it's neighbor down the street, Andromeda. Not true, says a study published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society by an international group of researchers, including Matthew Walker of Carnegie Mellon University's McWilliams Center for Cosmology. In the paper, they demonstrate a new, more accurate method for measuring ...

Five daily portions of fruit and vegetables may be enough to lower risk of death

2014-07-30
These results conflict with a recent study published in BMJ's Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health suggesting that seven or more daily portions of fruits and vegetables were linked to lowest risk of death. There is growing evidence that increasing fruit and vegetable consumption is related to a lower risk of death from cardiovascular disease and cancer. However, the results are not entirely consistent. So a team of researchers based in China and the United States decided to examine the association between fruit and vegetable intake and risk of all-cause, cardiovascular, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New study redefines our understanding of how memory works

The most prominent trend in Holocaust commemoration worldwide is a growing focus on the rescuers of Jews

Prenatal exposure to air pollution is associated with lower cognitive performance in early childhood

AI learns better when it talks to itself

96% accurate footprint tracker for tiny mammals could help reveal ecosystem health

Balancing comfort and sustainability with climate-tailored housing

Not just sweet: the sugar branches that shape the brain

Spectral slimming for single-nanoparticle plasmons

Exploring the scientific connotation of the medicinal properties of toad venom (Chansu) — 'dispersing fire stagnation and opening orifices to awaken the spirit' — from the microscopic world of 5-HTR d

How early-career English language teachers can grow professionally, despite all odds

Achieving Ah‑level Zn–MnO2 pouch cells via interfacial solvation structure engineering

Rational electrolyte structure engineering for highly reversible zinc metal anode in aqueous batteries

Common environmental chemical found to disrupt hormones and implantation

Nitrate in drinking water linked to increased dementia risk while nitrate from vegetables is linked to a lower risk, researchers find  

Smoke from wildfires linked to 17,000 strokes in the US alone

Air frying fatty food better for air quality than alternatives – if you clean it, study says

Most common methods of inducing labour similarly effective

Global health impacts of plastics systems could double by 2040

Low-cost system turns smartphones into emergency radiation detectors

Menopause linked to loss of grey matter in the brain, poorer mental health and sleep disturbance

New expert guidelines standardize diagnosis and monitoring of canine dementia

Study links salty drinking water to higher blood pressure, especially in coastal areas

Study reveals struggles precede psychosis risk by years, suggesting prevention opportunities

Nearly half of CDC surveillance databases have halted updates, raising concerns about health data gaps

Study compares ways to support opioid deprescribing in primary care

Primary care home visits for older adults declined after payment policy changes and COVID-19 in Ontario, Canada

Linking financial incentives to improved blood sugar levels may support type 2 diabetes management

Care continuity linked to fewer hospital visits for older adults receiving home-based care

Produce prescriptions improve nutrition for medicaid patients with diabetes

CRISP translation guide enables translating research-reporting guidelines across languages

[Press-News.org] Big data confirms climate extremes are here to stay