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

Royal Ontario Museum scientist identifies Great Salt Lake as a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions

Royal Ontario Museum scientist identifies Great Salt Lake as a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions
2024-07-25
Newly announced research by Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) examining greenhouse gas emissions from the drying lake bed of Great Salt Lake, Utah, calculates that 4.1 million tons of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases were released in 2020. This research suggests that drying lake beds are an overlooked but potentially significant source of greenhouse gases, which may further increase due to climate change. These results were announced in the paper, “A desiccating saline lake bed is a significant source of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions,” published in the journal One Earth. “Human-caused ...

Provision of stroke care services by community disadvantage status

2024-07-25
About The Study: Hospitals in communities with the greatest level of socioeconomic disadvantage had the lowest likelihood of becoming stroke certified while hospitals in the most advantaged communities had the highest likelihood in this cohort study. These findings suggest that there is a need to support hospitals in disadvantaged communities to obtain stroke certification as a way to reduce stroke disparities. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Renee Y. Hsia, M.D., M.Sc., email renee.hsia@ucsf.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link ...

Bilateral mastectomy and breast cancer mortality

2024-07-25
About The Study: This cohort study indicates that the risk of dying of breast cancer increases substantially after experiencing a contralateral breast cancer. Women with breast cancer treated with bilateral mastectomy had a greatly diminished risk of contralateral breast cancer; however, they experienced similar mortality rates as patients treated with lumpectomy or unilateral mastectomy.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Steven A. Narod, M.D., email steven.narod@wchospital.ca. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/   (doi:10.1001/jamaoncol.2024.2212) Editor’s ...

Antisense oligonucleotide treatment shows promise in treating Parkinson's disease progression

Antisense oligonucleotide treatment shows promise in treating Parkinsons disease progression
2024-07-25
TMDU researchers demonstrate proof of concept of antisense nucleic acid therapy   to prevent the spread of α-synuclein pathologies in synucleinopathies. Tokyo, Japan – Parkinson’s disease (PD), as well as many other neurodegenerative disorders, has shown a link between  the abnormal aggregation of a protein called α-synuclein (aSyn) and neuronal death.  These aggregates, known as Lewy bodies and Lewy neurites depending on their subcellular localization, can spread  by continuously causing normal endogenous aSyn to misfold. The complex nature of this aggregation process poses significant challenges ...

Intelligent engineering: AI transforms spatial arrangement of hydropower underground facilities

Intelligent engineering: AI transforms spatial arrangement of hydropower underground facilities
2024-07-25
Designing the spatial arrangement of underground powerhouses involves numerous complex parameters and boundaries, requiring frequent reference to various cases and specifications. Traditional methods struggle to efficiently retrieve this information, leading to suboptimal designs and extended project timelines. Due to these challenges, there is a pressing need for a more intelligent and efficient approach to streamline the design process, enhance accuracy, and improve project management in hydropower engineering. Researchers from Tianjin University, in collaboration with PowerChina Kunming Engineering Corporation Limited and other ...

Unlocking new potential in solar tech: dimethyl acridine enhances perovskite solar cells

Unlocking new potential in solar tech: dimethyl acridine enhances perovskite solar cells
2024-07-25
Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) are highly regarded for their exceptional performance and straightforward fabrication. However, traditional hole transport layers (HTLs) like Poly (triarylamine) (PTAA), Nickel Oxide (NiOx), and poly (3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene)-poly (styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT) have inherent limitations that impede efficiency and stability. These materials often suffer from issues such as hydrophobicity, high reactivity, and acidity, which negatively affect the overall performance of PSCs. Due to these challenges, there is a pressing ...

Harnessing blue energy: advanced nanofluidic membranes boost aquatic energy conversion efficiency

Harnessing blue energy: advanced nanofluidic membranes boost aquatic energy conversion efficiency
2024-07-25
To achieve carbon neutrality, advancements in energy conversion and storage technologies are essential. Current aqueous energy devices suffer from performance limitations due to the trade-off between permeability and selectivity in permselective membranes. This trade-off hampers the efficiency of energy conversion and storage systems, necessitating the development of membranes that can balance these properties effectively. Due to these challenges, further research is required to explore innovative membrane structures that can enhance the performance of energy conversion and storage devices. A research team from Tsinghua University has published a study (DOI: 10.26599/EMD.2024.9370041) ...

Unlocking solar efficiency: a leap in perovskite solar cell technology

Unlocking solar efficiency: a leap in perovskite solar cell technology
2024-07-25
Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) are celebrated for their exceptional photovoltaic performance and affordability. However, the high cost of charge transport materials remains a major obstacle to their commercialization. Conventional materials like 2,2',7,7'-Tetrakis[N,N-di(4-methoxyphenyl)amino]-9,9'-spirobifluorene (Spiro-OMeTAD), are expensive and complex to produce. Therefore, developing low-cost, efficient alternatives is essential to make PSCs more economically viable. Addressing these issues is crucial for advancing solar technology and achieving broader adoption. Hence, this study focuses ...

An effective strategy to inhibit grain coarsening: Construction of multi-element co-segregated grain boundary complexion

An effective strategy to inhibit grain coarsening: Construction of multi-element co-segregated grain boundary complexion
2024-07-25
To date, ceramic scientists have devised various strategies to impede grain coarsening. The utilization of nano-sized precursor powder can not only facilitate the densification process, but also yields bulk ceramics with reduced grain sizes compared with micron-sized precursor powder. Rapid sintering by passes the low-temperature surface diffusion stage and directly enters the high-temperature sintering stage through rapid heating, rendering it an effective way to inhibit grain coarsening. However, these aforementioned strategies fail to prevent coarsening during the application of nano-ceramics in medium- ...

Insilico releases AI-powered hardware platform, PandaOmics Box for on-premise drug discovery and personalized medicine research

Insilico releases AI-powered hardware platform, PandaOmics Box for on-premise drug discovery and personalized medicine research
2024-07-25
The development of innovative medicines is an expensive, time-consuming and risky business. On average, it usually takes at least a decade and billions of dollars to bring a new drug from project initiation to approval. Identifying effective targets and conducting biological analysis is the first step in the process and remains a top priority in drug development. To facilitate for maximum data privacy and data security, Insilico Medicine ("Insilico"), developed a hardware platform, PandaOmics Box, that does not require Internet access and allows for on-premise biological analytics, target identification, biomarker ...

RSNA makes strides in narrowing radiology gender gap

2024-07-25
OAK BROOK, Ill. – The radiology gender gap is decreasing, but there remains work to be done, according to an editorial published today in RadioGraphics, a journal of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA). In 2022, nearly half of residents and fellows in Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)–accredited programs were female. However, less than 27% of active diagnostic radiologists and only 10% of active interventional radiologists are female. Within the 48 largest medical specialty groups, diagnostic radiology ranks 41st and ...

Vital support for early career researchers in aging boosted with Hearst Foundations gift to American Federation for Aging Research (AFAR)

2024-07-25
NEW YORK, NY– The American Federation for Aging Research (AFAR) is pleased to announce a $450,000 grant from The Hearst Foundations in support of the Grants for Junior Faculty program. The Grants for Junior Faculty provide early career investigators with up to $150,000 for one to two years to support research focused on aging processes and age-related diseases. The $450,000 grant from Hearst Foundations will fully underwrite three Grants for Junior Faculty over the next three years. Selected ...

Nonreciprocal interactions go nonlinear

Nonreciprocal interactions go nonlinear
2024-07-25
Using two optically trapped glass nanoparticles, researchers observed a novel collective Non-Hermitian and nonlinear dynamic driven by nonreciprocal interactions. This contribution expands traditional optical levitation with tweezer arrays by incorporating the so called non-conservative interactions. Their findings, supported by an analytical model developed by collaborators from Ulm University and the University of Duisburg-Essen, were recently published in Nature Physics. Fundamental forces like gravity and electromagnetism are reciprocal, meaning two ...

Svalbard: Non-native species are threatening vulnerable plant life

Svalbard: Non-native species are threatening vulnerable plant life
2024-07-25
New, non-native plant species are constantly being discovered in Svalbard, and researchers are working to ascertain what threat these species pose to the native plants. So far, the Arctic has managed to avoid one of the most serious threats to biodiversity on Earth. This is also true for Svalbard, but things could change very quickly, and researchers want to find out how to counteract this threat. “Increased human activity heightens the risk of new plant species being introduced. And climate change increases the risk of invasive species establishing themselves,” says Kristine Bakke Westergaard. She is an associate ...

Cultivating better leadership: KLU and partners create Texl.org - a free, scientific evidence-based 360-degree assessment tool

Cultivating better leadership: KLU and partners create Texl.org - a free, scientific evidence-based 360-degree assessment tool
2024-07-25
Available to anyone, anywhere, at anytime, Texl.org allows individuals and organizations to create scientifically valid surveys in less than five minutes. In drag-and-drop fashion, survey creators can choose from an ever-growing list of 50 validated scales, measuring aspects ranging from team conflict to personal initiative and transformational leadership. “The point of science is to develop knowledge that ultimately is to the benefit of society. Unfortunately, we are not always great in translating our knowledge so that it is usable for practitioners out there. With Texl we’re changing that,” explains Professor Niels Van Quaquebeke, ...

FAU researcher receives grant to personalize radiation therapy for cancer

FAU researcher receives grant to personalize radiation therapy for cancer
2024-07-25
While chemotherapy has advanced in personalization, personalized radiation therapy for cancer remains underdeveloped. Current cancer treatment methods – including radiation therapy – are intricate, lack personalization, and rely heavily on the expertise of medical teams. Medical image analysis and machine learning hold great promise for enhancing personalized oncology. However, challenges persist such as limited high-quality data and data complexity. Wazir Muhammad, Ph.D., principal investigator and ...

MD Anderson and Summit Therapeutics announce strategic collaboration to accelerate development of ivonescimab

2024-07-25
HOUSTON and MIAMI ― The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and Summit Therapeutics, Inc. today announced a strategic five-year collaboration agreement for the purpose of accelerating the development of ivonescimab. Leveraging MD Anderson’s clinical infrastructure and research expertise together with Summit’s innovative, investigational, potential first-in-class PD-1/VEGF bispecific antibody, the collaboration is designed to quickly discover additional opportunities for ivonescimab, including several tumors outside of its current development plan. MD Anderson will lead multiple clinical trials in several tumor types to evaluate the safety and potential clinical ...

Warming has more impact than cooling on Greenland's "firn"

Warming has more impact than cooling on Greenlands firn
2024-07-25
Scientists have known from ice core research that it's easier to melt an ice sheet than to freeze it up again. Now, they know at least part of the reason why, and it has to do with ice's "sponginess," according to a new study published July 24 in The Cryosphere. The study uses a physics-based numerical model to assess the impacts of warming and cooling on firn, the porous layer between snow and glacial ice, over the entire Greenland Ice Sheet. Megan Thompson-Munson, a CIRES and ATOC PhD student, led the study alongside ...

The Texas Heart Institute implants BiVACOR® Total Artificial Heart

The Texas Heart Institute implants BiVACOR® Total Artificial Heart
2024-07-25
Houston, Texas, July 25, 2024 – The Texas Heart Institute (THI) and BiVACOR®, a clinical-stage medical device company, announced today the successful first-in-human implantation of the BiVACOR Total Artificial Heart (TAH) as part of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Early Feasibility Study (EFS) on July 9, 2024. BiVACOR’s TAH is a titanium-constructed biventricular rotary blood pump with a single moving part that utilizes a magnetically levitated rotor that pumps the blood and replaces both ventricles of a failing heart. The first-in-human clinical ...

University of Washington researchers take flight with new insights on bat evolution

University of Washington researchers take flight with new insights on bat evolution
2024-07-25
University of Washington Researchers Take Flight with New Insights on Bat Evolution Video Interview with Authors - https://youtu.be/6rogrh2_HN0 In new research published in PeerJ Life & Environment, researchers from the University of Washington, University of Texas at Austin and Oregon Institute of Technology, led by undergraduate student Abby Burtner, have advanced our understanding of the evolutionary origins of flight in bats. The study, titled "Gliding toward an Understanding of the Origin of Flight in Bats," employs phylogenetic comparative methods to explore the evolutionary transition from gliding to powered flight in these unique mammals. Bats ...

Tanzanian officials praise NEST360 contribution to newborn care

Tanzanian officials praise NEST360 contribution to newborn care
2024-07-25
HOUSTON – (June 25, 2024) – Rice University President Reginald DesRoches joined Rice360 Institute for Global Health Technologies Co-Director Maria Oden and Rice360 supporters on a trip to Africa this summer marking significant milestones on the road to ending preventable newborn deaths in the sub-Saharan region. Rice360 is one of 22 organizations in the Newborn Essential Solutions and Technologies (NEST360) international alliance, and this trip signified Rice’s continued collaboration ...

4D Medicine raises £3.4 million for unique biomaterial platform

2024-07-25
4D Medicine, a spin-out from the Universities of Birmingham and Warwick has raised £3.4m ($4.4m) in a Series A investment.  The funding round was backed by Oshen Holdings, DSW Ventures, SFC Capital, Boundary Capital and private investors including several leading scientists and surgeons. It will enable the company to complete pre-clinical testing of its first product range and seek FDA clearance for entry into the US market. 4D is a UK-based company whose innovative biomaterial has potential to be used for a wide range of 3D printed implants and surgical devices.  Its product 4Degra is a resorbable biomaterial that is being used to develop ...

Ancient marine animal had inventive past despite being represented by few species, new study finds

Ancient marine animal had inventive past despite being represented by few species, new study finds
2024-07-25
The findings, published today in Nature Ecology & Evolution, sheds light on some core principles of the evolution of modern biodiversity. In current oceans, molluscs such as clams, oysters, and snails are hugely diverse, with over 50,000 species, whereas brachiopods are rare by comparison with only 394 species known. But this was not always the case. The team have found that brachiopods were evolving new shell shapes and ecological behaviours following the end-Permian mass extinction which compromised their numbers. “In the Palaeozoic, from 540 to 250 million years ago, brachiopods ruled the seabed,” ...

Quantum sensor for the atomic world developed through international scientific collaboration

Quantum sensor for the atomic world developed through international scientific collaboration
2024-07-25
In a scientific breakthrough, an international research team from Germany's Forschungszentrum Jülich and Korea's IBS Center for Quantum Nanoscience (QNS) developed a quantum sensor capable of detecting minute magnetic fields at the atomic length scale. This pioneering work realizes a long-held dream of scientists: an MRI-like tool for quantum materials. The research team utilized the expertise of bottom up single-molecule fabrication from the Jülich group while conducting experiments at QNS, utilizing the Korean team’s leading-edge ...

The research was wrong: study shows moderate drinking won’t lengthen your life

The research was wrong: study shows moderate drinking won’t lengthen your life
2024-07-25
PISCATAWAY, NJ – Probably everyone has heard the conventional wisdom that a glass of wine a day is good for you--or you’ve heard some variation of it. The problem is that it’s based on flawed scientific research, according to a new report in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs. Over the years, many studies have suggested that moderate drinkers enjoy longer lives with lower risks of heart disease and other chronic ills than abstainers do. That spurred the widespread belief that alcohol, in moderation, can be a health tonic. However, not all studies have painted such a rosy picture--and the ...
Previous
Site 5 from 7793
Next
[1] [2] [3] [4] 5 [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] ... [7793]

Press-News.org - Free Press Release Distribution service.