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Burial Site challenges stereotypes of Stone Age women and children

2025-09-10
Study has revealed new insights into Stone Age life and death, showing that stone tools were just as likely to be buried with women and children as with men. The discovery, from Zvejnieki cemetery in northern Latvia, one of the largest Stone Age burial sites in Europe, challenges the idea that stone tools were strictly associated with men. The site was used for more than 5,000 years, and contains over 330 graves, but until now, stone artefacts found in burials had not been studied, with stone tools at Zvejnieki and ...

Protein found in the eye and blood significantly associated with cognition scores

2025-09-10
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, September 10, 2025 Contact: Gina DiGravio, 617-358-7838, ginad@bu.edu Protein Found in the Eye and Blood Significantly Associated with Cognition Scores May serve as a biomarker for the detection of mild cognitive impairment, early dementia (Boston)—Neurocognitive impairments are classified by pathological changes with potential for destruction of neural tissue. One change known to occur in neurodegenerative disorders is an accumulation of proteins causing pathological damage.   While prior reports have suggested a link between Slit Guidance Ligand 2 (SLIT2) protein levels and late-onset ...

USF study reveals how menopause impacts women’s voices – and why it matters

2025-09-10
Key takeaways: Hormones matter for the voice: Falling estrogen and progesterone during menopause can cause hoarseness, vocal fatigue and instability, with major impact on singers, teachers, actors and other voice professionals. An overlooked women’s health issue: Many women with vocal changes are dismissed or misdiagnosed, underscoring the need for stronger collaboration between gynecologists and voice specialists. Promising new solutions: From AI-powered voice biomarkers to hormone therapy and vocal fold injections, innovative approaches are emerging to detect and treat menopause-related ...

AI salespeople aren’t better than humans… yet

2025-09-10
Artificial intelligence is changing how we shop online, but when it comes to selling products through livestreams, humans still have the edge. A new study from the UBC Sauder School of Business shows that AI-powered “digital streamers”—virtual salespeople who appear in livestreams to promote products—don’t perform as well as human streamers. In fact, they barely outperform having no streamer at all. “People assume that if businesses are using digital streamers, they must be doing well. But they aren’t, at least not in their current incarnation,” said UBC Sauder associate professor Dr. Yanwen Wang, a co-author ...

Millions of men could benefit from faster scan to diagnose prostate cancer

2025-09-10
A quicker, cheaper MRI scan was just as accurate at diagnosing prostate cancer as the current 30-40 minute scan and should be rolled out to make MRI scans more accessible to men who need one, according to clinical trial results led by UCL, UCLH and the University of Birmingham. The PRIME trial, funded by the John Black Charitable Foundation and Prostate Cancer UK, and published in JAMA, confirms that a two-part MRI scan is just as effective at diagnosing prostate cancer, whilst cutting scan time to just 15-20 ...

Simulations solve centuries-old cosmic mystery – and discover new class of ancient star systems

2025-09-10
Strict embargo: not for publication or external distribution until 10 September 2025 at 16:00 (London time), 10 September 2025 at 11:00 (US Eastern Time)  For centuries, astronomers have puzzled over the origins of one of the universe’s oldest and densest stellar systems, known as globular clusters. Now, a University of Surrey-led study published in Nature has finally solved the mystery using detailed simulations – while also uncovering a new class of object that could already be in our own galaxy.   Globular ...

MIT study explains how a rare gene variant contributes to Alzheimer’s disease

2025-09-10
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- A new study from MIT neuroscientists reveals how rare variants of a gene called ABCA7 may contribute to the development of Alzheimer’s in some of the people who carry it. Dysfunctional versions of the ABCA7 gene, which are found in a very small proportion of the population, contribute strongly to Alzheimer’s risk. In the new study, the researchers discovered that these mutations can disrupt the metabolism of lipids that play an important role in cell membranes.  This disruption makes neurons hyperexcitable and ...

Race, ethnicity, insurance payer, and pediatric cardiac arrest survival

2025-09-10
About The Study: In this retrospective cohort study of pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest in a large, national, administrative dataset, children of racial and ethnic minority groups receiving cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) had higher odds of in-hospital mortality. In addition, the odds of in-hospital mortality among children receiving CPR were higher at hospitals with the highest proportion of Black patients. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Amanda J. O’Halloran, MD, MSHP, email ohallorana@chop.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this ...

High-intensity exercise and hippocampal integrity in adults with cannabis use disorder

2025-09-10
About The Study: This trial found that a 12-week high-intensity interval training intervention did not improve hippocampal integrity or associated cognitive or mental health impairments while people continued to consume cannabis. However, results indicated that people with cannabis use disorder can engage in regular physical exercise programs and highlighted exercise as a potential strategy to reduce cannabis craving.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Murat Yücel, PhD, email murat.yucel@qimrb.edu.au. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2025.2319) Editor’s ...

“Brain dial” for consumption found in mice

2025-09-10
NEW YORK — It’s natural to crave sugar when you feel tired and want a boost of energy. Now scientists at Columbia University’s Zuckerman Institute have linked a brain area in mice to the drive to consume not just sweets, but fats, salt and food. The findings show this area serves as a kind of dial that can amplify or repress consumption.  This discovery, detailed today in Cell, may inform novel treatments for both overeating and undereating. For instance, the results suggest that finding ways to modulate this brain circuit may help treat people suffering from the severe loss of appetite and muscle wasting often seen in large numbers of chemotherapy patients. “The ...

Lung cancer rewires immune cells in the bone marrow to weaken body’s defenses

2025-09-10
New York, NY [September 10, 2025]—Lung tumors don’t just evade the immune system. They reshape it at its source. Researchers from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and collaborators report in the September 10 online issue of Nature [10.1038/s41586-025-09493-y] that tumors rewire immune cells in the bone marrow before they even reach the cancer, suggesting a new target to enhance the durability of current immunotherapy. Immunotherapies, which rally the body’s defenses against cancer, have transformed care for many ...

Researchers find key to Antarctic ice loss blowing in the north wind

2025-09-10
Most of the Earth’s fresh water is locked in the ice that covers Antarctica. As the ocean and atmosphere grow warmer, that ice is melting at a startling pace with sea levels and global currents changing in response. To understand the potential implications, researchers need to know just how fast the ice is disappearing, and what is driving it back. The West Antarctic ice sheet, an unstable expanse bordering the Amundsen Sea, is one of the greatest sources of uncertainty in climate projections. Records indicate that it has been steadily shrinking since the 1940s, but key details are missing. Using environmental data gathered from ice samples, tree rings and corals, ...

Ten years after the discovery, gravitational waves verify Stephen Hawking's Black Hole Area Theorem

2025-09-10
EMBARGOED UNTIL 8AM PACIFIC TIME/11AM EASTERN TIME, SEPTEMBER 10   On September 14, 2015, a signal arrived on Earth, carrying information about a pair of remote black holes that had spiraled together and merged. The signal had traveled about 1.3 billion years to reach us at the speed of light—but it was not made of light. It was a different kind of signal: a quivering of space-time called gravitational waves, first predicted by Albert Einstein 100 years prior. On that day 10 years ago, the twin detectors of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory ...

Researchers uncover potential biosignatures on Mars

2025-09-10
A new study co-authored by Texas A&M University geologist Dr. Michael Tice has revealed potential chemical signatures of ancient Martian microbial life in rocks examined by NASA’s Perseverance rover. The findings, published by a large international team of scientists, focus on a region of Jezero Crater known as the Bright Angel formation — a name chosen from locations in Grand Canyon National Park because of the light-colored Martian rocks. This area in Mars’ Neretva Vallis channel contains fine-grained mudstones rich in oxidized iron (rust), phosphorus, sulfur and ...

Built to learn: how early brain structure primes the brain to learn efficiently

2025-09-10
Vision happens when patterns of light entering the eye are converted into reliable patterns of brain activity. This reliability allows the brain to recognize the same object each time it is seen. Our brains, however, are not born with this ability; instead, we develop it through visual experience. Collaborating scientists at MPFI and the Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies have recently discovered key circuit changes that lead to the maturation of reliable brain activity patterns. Their findings, published in Neuron this week, are likely generalizable beyond vision, providing a ...

Cells use electricity to eliminate their ‘weakest’ neighbours to maintain healthy protective barriers

2025-09-10
Researchers have uncovered a surprising role for electricity in keeping our body’s protective cell layers healthy. Cells bumping against one another use electricity to identify which of their neighbours has the least energy to kill them. The King’s College London study in partnership with the Francis Crick Institute provides insight into diseases including cancer and stroke, where cellular energy levels can be disrupted, preventing the maintenance of healthy cell numbers. Epithelial cells, which line all organs in the body, turnover rapidly to maintain a tightly packed protective layer. They undergo a process called ‘extrusion’ ...

New motion-compensation approach delivers sharper single-pixel imaging for dynamic scenes

2025-09-10
WASHINGTON — Researchers have developed a motion-compensation method that allows single-pixel imaging to capture sharp images of complex dynamic scenes. The new approach could expand the practical utility of this computational imaging method by enabling clearer images of moving targets and improving the quality of surveillance images. Single-pixel imaging uses a single detector, rather than the traditional array of pixels, to acquire images. Although it offers several advantages, such as high sensitivity ...

Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience now officially part of the Canadian Science Publishing portfolio

2025-09-10
Canadian Science Publishing (CSP) is pleased to announce that the Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience (JPN) is now officially part of our journal portfolio, following the completed acquisition from CMA Impact Inc. on September 2, 2025.  This marks a significant milestone for CSP, as JPN becomes the 23rd journal in our portfolio and our first in the fields of psychiatry and neuroscience. As the official journal of the Canadian College of Neuropsychopharmacology, JPN holds a leading position in its ...

What motivates runners? Focusing on the “how” rather than the “why”

2025-09-10
As attention turns to this year’s New York City Marathon, observers will again ask a long-standing question: What do athletes draw upon when trying to complete this 26.2-mile run, especially at those stretches when finishing seems impossible?  Many might think that when fatigue sets in, the key to perseverance is reminding oneself why the effort is worth it or focusing on reasons why they set the goal—intuition that lines up with motivational posters, sports psychology clichés, and coaching advice. ...

Researchers capture new antibiotic resistance mechanisms with trace amounts of DNA

2025-09-10
URBANA, Ill. — Scientists from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have developed a method to isolate genes from amounts of microbial DNA so tiny that it would take 20,000 samples to weigh as much as a single grain of sugar. In a new paper, the researchers discovered previously unknown antibiotic resistance genes in bacterial DNA isolated from human stool and from fish tanks at Chicago’s Shedd Aquarium. “With antibiotic resistance on the rise, it’s more important than ever to understand the full diversity of mechanisms bacteria may ...

New research in JNCCN offers a simplified way to identify harmful medications in older adults with cancer

2025-09-10
PLYMOUTH MEETING, PA [September 10, 2025] — New research published in the September 2025 issue of JNCCN—Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network validates the use of a specifically-curated tool for determining which medications may be causing harm for older patients with cancer. Researchers affiliated with the Veterans Affairs (VA) Healthcare System in Boston evaluated a tool based on information from the NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (NCCN Guidelines®) for Older Adult Oncology, called the “Geriatric ...

State school finance reforms increased racial and ethnic funding inequities, new study finds

2025-09-10
Washington, September 10, 2025—State school finance reforms designed to close funding gaps between high- and low-income districts did not reduce racial and ethnic funding inequities and in some cases increased them, according to new research. As school desegregation efforts slowed in the decades following the 1980s, these findings highlight the limitations of income-based approaches in addressing racial funding disparities in education. The study, by Emily Rauscher of Brown University and Jeremy E. Fiel of Rice ...

Endocrine Society honors endocrinology field’s leaders with 2026 Laureate Awards    

2025-09-10
WASHINGTON—The Endocrine Society today announced it has chosen 12 leading endocrinologists as winners of its prestigious 2026 Laureate Awards, the top honors in the field.    Endocrinologists are scientists and medical doctors who specialize in unraveling the mysteries of hormone disorders to care for patients and treat diseases. These professionals have achieved breakthroughs in scientific discoveries and clinical care benefiting people with hundreds of conditions, including diabetes, thyroid disorders, obesity, hormone-related cancers, growth problems, osteoporosis and infertility.    Established in 1944, the Society’s ...

Decoding high-grade endometrial cancer: a molecular-histologic integration using the Cancer Genome Atlas framework

2025-09-10
Endometrial cancer is a major gynecologic malignancy, with HGEC comprising aggressive variants such as Grade 3 endometrioid, serous, clear cell, undifferentiated/dedifferentiated carcinomas, carcinosarcoma, and mesonephric-like adenocarcinoma. These tumors are characterized by poor prognosis and resistance to conventional therapies. The limitations of traditional histopathological diagnosis underscore the need for molecular refinement to guide clinical management. Histopathological Subtypes of HGEC FIGO Grade 3 Endometrioid Carcinoma (HG-EEC): Characterized ...

An exploding black hole could reveal the foundations of the universe

2025-09-10
AMHERST, Mass. — Physicists have long believed that black holes explode at the end of their lives, and that such explosions happen—at most—only once every 100,000 years. But new research published in Physical Review Letters by physicists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst has found a more than 90% probability that one of these black-hole explosions might be seen within the decade, and that, if we are prepared, our current fleet of space and earthbound telescopes could witness the event. Such an explosion would be strong evidence of a theorized but never observed kind of black hole, called a “primordial black hole,” ...
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