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UBC scientists propose blueprint for 'universal translator' in quantum networks

2025-06-19
UBC researchers are proposing a solution to a key hurdle in quantum networking: a device that can “translate” microwave to optical signals and vice versa. The technology could serve as a universal translator for quantum computers—enabling them to talk to each other over long distances and converting up to 95 per cent of a signal with virtually no noise. And it all fits on a silicon chip, the same material found in everyday computers. "It's like finding a translator that gets nearly every word right, keeps ...

Some of your AI prompts could cause 50 times more CO2 emissions than others

2025-06-19
No matter which questions we ask an AI, the model will come up with an answer. To produce this information – regardless of whether than answer is correct or not – the model uses tokens. Tokens are words or parts of words that are converted into a string of numbers that can be processed by the LLM. This conversion, as well as other computing processes, produce CO2 emissions. Many users, however, are unaware of the substantial carbon footprint associated with these technologies. Now, researchers in Germany measured and compared CO2 emissions of different, already trained, LLMs using a set of standardized questions. “The environmental ...

Pandora’s microbes – The battle for iron in the lungs

2025-06-19
Bacteria of the genus Pandoraea have not been studied much to date. Their name is reminiscent of Pandora’s box from Greek mythology, which is a symbol of uncontrollable dangers. “We have been working with an antibiotic-resistant bacterium,” says Elena Herzog. She is the first author of the publication and works as a doctoral researcher in the team of Christian Hertweck, the head of the study at the Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology (Leibniz-HKI). However, like so many things in nature, these pathogenic bacteria do not only have negative properties. “Pandoraea bacteria not only harbor risks. They also produce ...

Unlocking the secrets of gene therapy delivery: New insights into genome ejection from AAV vectors

2025-06-19
Osaka, Japan - A research team at The University of Osaka has unveiled the molecular mechanism behind genome ejection from adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors, a crucial delivery vehicle in gene therapy. The study reveals that the N-terminal region of the VP1 protein, a component of the AAV capsid, undergoes structural changes upon heating, facilitating the release of the therapeutic genetic material. This discovery offers new guidelines for vector design and stability assessment, promising more efficient and safer gene therapies. AAV vectors are widely used in gene therapy to deliver therapeutic genes into target cells. However, the precise mechanism by which these vectors release ...

Scientists use AI to make green ammonia even greener

2025-06-19
Scientists and engineers at UNSW Sydney, who previously developed a method for making green ammonia, have now turned to artificial intelligence and machine learning to make the process even more efficient. Ammonia, a nitrogen-rich substance found in fertiliser, is often credited with saving much of the world from famine in the 20th century. But its benefit to humankind has come at a cost, with one of the largest carbon footprints of all industrial processes. To produce it, industrial plants need temperatures of more than 400°C and extremely high pressures – more than 200 times normal atmospheric pressure. Such energy-intensive requirements have made ammonia production ...

Remaking psychiatry with biological testing

2025-06-19
An international group of psychiatrists, patient associations, and pharmaceutical companies has unveiled plans to systematically include objective biological tests in the diagnosis of psychiatric conditions. This Precision Psychiatry Roadmap, which may radically change the practice of psychiatry, is published on 19 June in the journal Molecular Psychiatry. The project was coordinated by Martien Kas, Professor of Behavioral Neuroscience at the Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences (GELIFES), University of Groningen. ‘Many ...

Caution required when heading soccer balls

2025-06-19
Heading a soccer ball alters the brain, new research spearheaded by the University of Sydney has found, despite having no immediate impact on cognition.   The findings of a world-first experiment add to evidence suggesting heading a ball in the world’s most played sport can impact the brain, even when concussion doesn’t occur. The research was published today in the Sports Medicine - Open journal.   The results signal a need for further research into heading’s long-term effects, its authors say, as the ...

Intermittent fasting comparable to traditional diets for weight loss

2025-06-18
Intermittent fasting diets appear to have similar benefits to traditional calorie-restricted diets for weight loss, suggests an analysis of trial evidence published by The BMJ today. Alternate day fasting also demonstrates greater benefits compared with both calorie restriction and other intermittent fasting approaches, but the researchers say longer trials are needed to substantiate these findings. According to the World Health Organization in 2022, approximately 2.5 billion adults, 43% of the global adult population, were overweight, and about 890 million (16%) lived with obesity.  Weight loss can reduce cardiometabolic risk factors, such as high blood ...

Community based mentoring in Sierra Leone for pregnant adolescents and their babies doubles survival rates

2025-06-18
An innovative community-based mentoring scheme for pregnant adolescent girls in Sierra Leone has been found to save lives, whilst also helping girls return to education. The pilot trial, published in The Lancet and led by researchers at King’s College London in collaboration with local NGO Lifeline Nehemiah Projects (LNP), reduced a combination of maternal and perinatal deaths by almost half (48%). For every 18 girls mentored, one baby’s life was saved. Between July 2022 and November ...

Positive life outlook may protect against middle-aged memory loss, 16-year study suggests

2025-06-18
Higher levels of wellbeing may help reduce the risk of memory loss in middle age, suggests new research, which tracked more than 10,000 over 50-year-olds across a 16-year span. Findings that are published today, in the peer-reviewed journal Aging & Mental Health, found those who said they had higher wellbeing were more likely to subsequently have better scores on memory tests. These people – all of whom were determined as having ‘healthy brains’ – also reported a greater sense of control, independence, and freedom to make choices.   This ...

Scientists find three years left of remaining carbon budget for 1.5°C

2025-06-18
Embargoed until 19 June 2025, 00:01 (CEST)    19 June 2025, Bonn – The central estimate of the remaining carbon budget for 1.5°C is 130 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO2) (from the beginning of 2025). This would be exhausted in a little more than three years at current levels of CO2 emissions, according to the latest Indicators of Global Climate Change study published today in the journal Earth System Science Data, and the budget for 1.6°C or 1.7°C could be exceeded within nine years.     Prof. Piers Forster, Director of the Priestley Centre for Climate Futures at the University of Leeds and lead ...

Anti-aging drug Rapamycin extends lifespan as effectively as eating less

2025-06-18
The anti-aging drug Rapamycin has the same life-extending effect as eating less, according to new research from the University of East Anglia and University of Glasgow. Dietary restriction has long been considered one of the most reliable methods for increasing lifespan across species. But if fasting for hours sounds unpleasant, science may suggest another route to achieving a longer and healthier life. A new study published today reveals compelling evidence that Rapamycin, a compound originally developed as an immunosuppressant, offers comparable life-extending benefits in eight species of vertebrates, not including humans. Co-lead researcher Dr Zahida Sultanova, from UEA’s ...

Babies can sense pain before they can understand it

2025-06-18
Brain networks responsible for sensing, understanding, and responding emotionally to pain develop at different rates in infants, with the conscious understanding of pain not fully developed until after birth, finds a new study led by UCL (University College London) researchers. The authors of the study, published in the journal Pain, investigated how different types of pain processing develop very early on, by scanning the brains of infants born prematurely. Lead author Professor Lorenzo Fabrizi (UCL Neuroscience, Physiology & Pharmacology) said: “Pain is a complex ...

Consensus statement on universal chemosensory testing calls for better standardization, infrastructure, and education in the field

2025-06-18
For immediate release Contact: Karen Kreeger, kkreeger@monell.org PHILADELPHIA (June 13, 2025) — To better understand the current barriers to including chemosensory testing as a regular part of healthcare, the conference Towards Universal Chemosensory Testing (TUCT) was convened November 5-7, 2023, in Philadelphia, bringing together scientists, clinicians, patients, and other experts for the first time. From that meeting, a new white paper, published recently in Chemical Senses, ...

Two-part vaccine strategy generates a stronger, longer-lasting immune boost against HIV

2025-06-18
LA JOLLA, CA—In the quest to develop an effective HIV vaccine, scientists from Scripps Research have made a significant leap forward. They found that a two-part delivery strategy can train the immune system to produce a stronger response to HIV, offering new hope in the fight against one of the world’s most elusive viruses. The approach, described in Science Translational Medicine on June 18, 2025, used a mouse model to test two types of adjuvants: immune-boosting molecules that improve vaccine response. One of the adjuvants helped the HIV protein persist longer in the body, and another amplified immune activation. ...

How lottery-style bottle returns could transform recycling

2025-06-18
Would you rather have 10 cents in your pocket or a 1-in-10,000 shot at $1,000? Many people would choose the latter, and that could be the key to getting people to recycle more, a new University of British Columbia psychology study has found. The researchers tested the idea of offering people who return used bottles a tiny chance to win a big cash prize, instead of the typical 10-cent deposit return. The result was that people recycled 47 per cent more bottles. “This small change in how we reward recycling made a big difference. People were more excited, more engaged, and they brought in more bottles,” ...

Researchers with UTHealth Houston School of Public Health awarded $5 million to study cancer risk among firefighters in Texas

2025-06-18
The state of Texas awarded UTHealth Houston School of Public Health $5 million over two years for early detection and research, led by principal investigator Jooyeon Hwang, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, on cancer risk among firefighters in Texas.  Repeated exposure to harmful chemicals in fire smoke, common in the work of firefighters, can cause long-term chronic health problems including cancer, according to previous work by Hwang. Firefighters have a 9% higher risk ...

C-Path’s translational therapeutics accelerator announces new grant award for drug development project in type 1 diabetes

2025-06-18
TUCSON, Ariz., June 18, 2025 — Critical Path Institute’s® (C-Path) Translational Therapeutics Accelerator (TRxA) proudly announced today a $250,000 grant award aimed at developing a novel treatment for type 1 diabetes (T1D). Kyle Apley, Ph.D., Cory Berkland, Ph.D., and Peggy Kendall M.D., at Washington University in St. Louis, have received this TRxA award to advance their work on a CD22 bidentate therapeutic designed for patients at risk of developing T1D. “We are honored to receive this support from TRxA, which will enable us to accelerate the ...

What is a brain age gap, and how may it affect thinking and memory skills?

2025-06-18
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4:00 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 2025 What is a brain age gap, and how may it affect thinking and memory skills? MINNEAPOLIS — The difference between the brain’s predicted age and actual chronological age, called a brain age gap, may influence the relationship between cognitive impairment risk factors, like high blood pressure and diabetes, and a person’s cognitive performance, also known as thinking and memory skills, according to a study published June 18, 2025, in Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Advances in neuroimaging have led to the development ...

Food insecurity, neighborhood, lack of social support, linked to worse stroke recovery

2025-06-18
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4:00 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 2025 Highlights: Having at least one social factor affecting health, like food insecurity or not having a safe place to live or enough social support, was linked to worse recovery after stroke. Food insecurity, the most common factor, was linked to having trouble moving, needing a breathing or feeding tube or hospice care. Even though they had worse recovery rates, people with these factors had better survival rates up to one year after stroke compared to those without negative social factors. This unexpected finding suggests worse recovery does not necessarily translate to poorer ...

Scientists discover new approach to gene therapy

2025-06-18
Researchers have found a promising new method for gene therapy. They successfully restarted inactive genes by bringing them closer to genetic switches on the DNA called enhancers. The intermediate piece of DNA was cut out using CRISPR-Cas9 technology. This strategy opens up new possibilities for treating genetic diseases. The team specifically shows the technology’s potential for the treatment of sickle cell disease and beta-thalassemia, two genetic blood diseases. In these conditions, a faulty gene could potentially be compensated by reactivating a helpful but normally inactive one. This ‘delete-to-recruit’ ...

A statement on the Supreme Court decision

2025-06-18
As experts dedicated to providing patients with compassionate, evidence-based care every day, we are disappointed in the United States vs. Skrmetti decision, which increases the likelihood that other states will limit or eliminate families’ and patients’ ability to access medical care. As doctors, nurse practitioners, and nurses, we believe that every patient is different. Decisions about medical care must be based on individualized assessments by qualified professionals in consultation with the patient and their parents or legal guardians and guided by well-designed medical evidence. This Supreme Court decision strips patients and families of the choice ...

Low social support and a tendency to compare yourself to others may be associated with problematic social media use, per study of 403 Italian adolescents

2025-06-18
Low social support and a tendency to compare yourself to others may be associated with problematic social media use, per study of 403 Italian adolescents Article URL: https://plos.io/4kMA1J8 Article title: Social support and social comparison tendencies predict trajectories of adolescents’ problematic social media use: A longitudinal study Author countries: Italy, Germany Funding: The author(s) received no specific funding for this work. END ...

Which therapy works best for knee arthritis?

2025-06-18
Knee braces, water therapy and exercise are the most promising non-drug therapies for treating knee osteoarthritis, according to a new meta-analysis publishing June 18, 2025 in the open-access journal PLOS One by Yuan Luo of the First People’s Hospital of Neijiang, China. Knee osteoarthritis (KOA) is a common and often debilitating condition that affects millions of older adults, causing pain and stiffening of the knee joint. Treatment often includes anti-inflammatory drugs, which are linked to gastrointestinal and cardiovascular adverse events. In ...

Seeing through a new LENS allows brain-like navigation in robots

2025-06-18
QUT robotics researchers have developed a new robot navigation system that mimics neural processes of the human brain and uses less than 10 per cent of the energy required by traditional systems. In a study published in the journal Science Robotics, the researchers detail a new system which they call LENS – Locational Encoding with Neuromorphic Systems. LENS uses brain-inspired computing to set a new, low-energy benchmark for robotic place recognition. The research, conducted by first author neuroscientist Dr Adam Hines along with Professor Michael Milford and Dr Tobias Fischer, all from the QUT Centre of Robotics and the QUT School of Electrical Engineering and Robotics, uses ...
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