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Continuous care from community-based midwives reduces risk of preterm birth by 45%

2026-01-21
Continuous care from community-based midwives reduces risk of preterm birth by 45% Women who receive continuous care from community-based midwives have a significantly reduced risk of preterm birth in comparison to those who receive standard care. This care model also significantly reduced risks of preterm births in women who are at greatest social risk of adverse outcomes. Researchers from King’s College London funded by the NIHR, published today in BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, looked at data from 6,600 pregnancies in South London. This is ...

Otago experts propose fiber as first new essential nutrient in 50 years

2026-01-20
University of Otago – Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka nutrition experts are calling for dietary fibre to be officially recognised internationally as an essential nutrient - the first ‘new’ essential nutrient in more than 50 years. The researchers say fibre should sit alongside nutrients already considered essential for humans, such as certain amino acids and vitamins. Co-author Associate Professor Andrew Reynolds says increasing our dietary fibre intakes would deliver greater health benefits in Aotearoa New Zealand than increasing any other essential nutrient, ...

Auburn Physics PhD student earns prestigious DOE Fellowship

2026-01-20
Auburn, AL — Jessica Eskew, a PhD student in the Department of Physics at Auburn University, has been awarded a highly competitive Department of Energy Office of Science Graduate Student Research (SCGSR) Fellowship to conduct fusion energy research at the DIII-D National Fusion Facility in San Diego. Eskew is advised at Auburn by Dr. Evdokiya Kostadinova, an assistant professor in the Department of Physics whose research focuses on plasma physics, magnetic confinement, and energetic particle transport. Her mentorship reflects Auburn Physics’ growing strength in plasma and fusion research, ...

AI tool helps you learn how autistic communication works

2026-01-20
People with autism have brains that are wired differently. This can make them especially strong in some areas—such as noticing patterns, remembering details, or thinking logically—while making other things like social cues or changes in routine more challenging.  There can also be stark differences in the way autistic and neurotypical people communicate, to the point where it may seem like each is using a different language, creating complications from social situations to the workplace. For example, while non-autistic ...

To show LGBTQ+ support, look beyond Pride Month

2026-01-20
ITHACA, N.Y. – Incorporating a rainbow flag into a company’s website logo during Pride Month seems less meaningful to LGBTQ+ employees and customers than gestures of solidarity at other times of the year, according to new Cornell University research. The paper, published in Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Process, found that timing – not just content – influences whether expressions of allyship are perceived as authentic. In six experiments of 3,000 people, LGBTQ+ participants consistently rated advocacy as more genuine when it was displayed outside of annual Pride Month celebrations in June, perceiving it ...

Using artificial intelligence to understand how emotions are formed

2026-01-20
Ikoma, Japan—Emotions are a fundamental part of human psychology—a complex process that has long distinguished us from machines. Even advanced artificial intelligence (AI) lacks the capacity to feel. However, researchers are now exploring whether the formation of emotions can be computationally modeled, providing machines with a deeper, more human-like understanding of emotional states. In this vein, Assistant Professor Chie Hieida from the Nara Institute of Science and Technology (NAIST), Japan, in collaboration with Assistant Professor Kazuki Miyazawa and ...

Exposure to wildfire smoke late in pregnancy may raise autism risk in children

2026-01-20
Exposure to wildfire smoke during the final months of pregnancy may raise the risk that a child is later diagnosed with autism, according to a new study led by Tulane University researchers. The study, published in Environmental Science & Technology, analyzed more than 200,000 births in Southern California from 2006 to 2014. Researchers found that children whose mothers were exposed to wildfire smoke during the third trimester were more likely to be diagnosed with autism by age 5. The strongest association was observed among mothers exposed to more than 10 days of wildfire smoke during the final three months of pregnancy. In that group, children ...

Breaking barriers in lymphatic imaging: Rice’s SynthX Center leads up to $18 million effort for ‘unprecedented resolution and safety’

2026-01-20
Rice University’s SynthX Center, directed by Han Xiao, has received an up to five-year, $18 million award from the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H) Lymphatic Imaging, Genomics and pHenotyping Technologies (LIGHT) program to develop innovative solutions for lymphatic diseases. This project award has the potential to transform the diagnosis and treatment of complex lymphatic anomalies (CLAs) and lymphedema, which are rare conditions that arise from abnormal growth of lymphatic vessels and can affect multiple organs.  LIGHT is led by ...

Dhaval Jadav joins the SETI Institute Board to help spearhead novel science and technology approaches in the search for extraterrestrial life

2026-01-20
January 20, 2026, Mountain View, CA and Houston, TX  — The SETI Institute announced that alliant Global CEO, Dhaval Jadav, joined its Board of Directors. Dhaval brings a deep lifelong passion for space science, a strong commitment to STEM education, and a shared belief in the SETI Institute’s mission to explore one of humanity’s most profound questions: Are we alone in the universe? This marks the beginning of a strategic partnership that gives the SETI Institute the ability to leverage alliant’s resources ...

Political writing retains an important and complex role in the national conversation, new book shows

2026-01-20
Political published writing retains an “important and complex role” in the national conversation – despite huge social and technological changes this century, a new book shows.  Books and magazines have been so fundamental and intrinsic to the political process, and, hidden in plain sight, they are in danger of being overlooked, experts demonstrate.  The persistence of long-form political writing, through the advent of TV and radio, and then through the internet age, is a phenomenon that cannot be taken for granted.  Writing Politics in Modern Britain: Genre and Cultures of Publishing since 1900, is edited by Professor Gary Love, from the Norwegian University ...

Weill Cornell Medicine receives funding to develop diagnostic toolbox for lymphatic disease

2026-01-20
Weill Cornell Medicine has received a $5.2 million, initial two-year award  from the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H) Lymphatic Imaging, Genomics, and pHenotyping Technologies (LIGHT) program to develop a comprehensive and innovative approach to diagnosing lymphatic disease. LIGHT is led by ARPA-H Program Manager Kimberley Steele, M.D., Ph.D. The lymphatic system is a network of vessels, nodes and organs that drains excess fluid from tissues, filtering out waste and ...

It started with a cat: How 100 years of quantum weirdness powers today’s tech

2026-01-20
A hundred years ago, quantum mechanics was a radical theory that baffled even the brightest minds. Today, it’s the backbone of technologies that shape our lives, from lasers and microchips to quantum computers and secure communications. In a sweeping new perspective published in Science, Dr. Marlan Scully, a university distinguished professor at Texas A&M University, traces the journey of quantum mechanics from its quirky beginnings to its role in solving some of science’s toughest challenges. “Quantum mechanics started as a way to explain the behavior of tiny particles,” said Scully, who is also affiliated with Princeton University. “Now ...

McGill researchers identify a range of unexpected chemical contaminants in human milk

2026-01-20
An interdisciplinary team including researchers at McGill University has found a range of unexpected chemical contaminants in human milk samples from Canada and South Africa. The chemicals include traces of pesticides, antimicrobials and additives used in plastics and personal-care products. The findings were published across five papers. “It is important to note that these chemicals were detected at low concentrations, and we do not fully understand the health effects of many of them. So, despite these findings, breast milk remains ideal for infants, as it has the nutrients infants need ...

Physical therapy research highlights arthritis’ toll on the workforce — and the path forward

2026-01-20
According to new research from the University of Delaware, nearly 40% of American adults ages 18 to 64 with arthritis — almost 10 million people — say the medical condition is limiting their ability to work.  Co-author Daniel White, associate professor of physical therapy at UD, analyzed findings from the 2023 National Health Interview Survey, which was recently published in the journal Arthritis Care & Research. White says the number is likely much higher than 40%. “We ...

Biomedical and life science articles by female researchers spend longer under review

2026-01-20
Women are underrepresented in academia, especially in STEMM fields, at top institutions, and in senior positions. This study analyzes millions of biomedical and life science articles, revealing that female-authored articles spend longer under review than comparable male-authored articles, across most fields. In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Biology: https://plos.io/3KIf8CF Article title: Biomedical and life science articles by female researchers spend longer under review Author countries: United States Funding: This work was partially funded by a Data Analytics grant (to ...

Forgetting in infants can be prevented in mice by blocking their brain’s immune cells

2026-01-20
Babies of every species from mouse to human rapidly forget things that happen to them—an effect called infantile amnesia. A type of brain immune cell called microglia might control this type of forgetting in young mice, according to a study published January 20th in the open-access journal PLOS Biology by Erika Stewart, from Trinity College Dublin in Ireland, and colleagues. Infants and young children are growing rapidly and taking in vast amounts of information as they grow. However, there is a lack of episodic memory from this early period of development ...

Blocking immune cells in the brain can prevent infant forgetting

2026-01-20
Scientists have found that blocking microglia (specialist immune cells in the brain) prevents infant forgetting (“infantile amnesia”) and improves memory in mice, suggesting that microglia may actively manage memory formation and dictate what, and when, we forget. Infants of many species from mouse to human rapidly forget things that happen to them—a phenomenon called infantile amnesia -- but until now we have known little about how this happens. The new discovery, just published in leading international journal PLOS Biology, now offers strong support ...

AI-driven ultrafast spectrometer-on-a-chip: A revolution in real-time sensing

2026-01-20
For decades, the ability to visualize the chemical composition of materials, whether for diagnosing a disease, assessing food quality, or analyzing pollution, depended on large, expensive laboratory instruments called spectrometers. These devices work by taking light, spreading it out into a rainbow using a prism or grating, and measuring the intensity of each color. The problem is that spreading light requires a long physical path, making the device inherently bulky. A recent study from the University of California Davis (UC Davis), reported in Advanced Photonics, tackles the challenge of miniaturization, aiming to shrink a lab-grade ...

World enters “era of global water bankruptcy”; UN scientists formally define new post-crisis reality for billions

2026-01-20
UN Headquarters, New York – Amid chronic groundwater depletion, water overallocation, land and soil degradation, deforestation, and pollution, all compounded by global heating, a UN report today declared the dawn of an era of global water bankruptcy, inviting world leaders to facilitate “honest, science-based adaptation to a new reality.” “Global Water Bankruptcy: Living Beyond Our Hydrological Means in the Post-Crisis Era,” argues that the familiar terms “water stressed” and “water crisis” fail to reflect today’s reality in many places: a post-crisis condition marked by irreversible losses of natural ...

Innovations in spatial imaging could unlock higher wheat yields

2026-01-20
Researchers at the John Innes Centre and the Earlham Institute are pioneering powerful single-cell visualisation techniques that could unlock higher yields of global wheat.   Firmly in their sights is the longstanding question that has perplexed the wheat research community: Why do grains at the bottom of the spike fail to achieve full size compared to those higher up?    Previous studies have analysed wheat tissue in bulk (taking dissected tissue pieces in their entirety), limiting image resolution, and increasing the likelihood of unclear results.   In ...

A twitch in time? Quantum collapse models hint at tiny time fluctuations

2026-01-20
Quantum mechanics is rich with paradoxes and contradictions. It describes a microscopic world in which particles exist in a superposition of states—being in multiple places and configurations all at once, defined mathematically by what physicists call a ‘wavefunction.’ But this runs counter to our everyday experience of objects that are either here or there, never both at the same time. Typically, physicists manage this conflict by arguing that, when a quantum system comes into contact with a measuring ...

Community water fluoridation not linked to lower birth weight, large US study finds

2026-01-20
January 20, 2026 -- A new study from Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health finds that community water fluoridation (CWF) is not associated with significant changes in birth weight—a widely accepted indicator of infant health and a predictor of later-life outcomes. The findings provide reassurance about the safety of fluoridated drinking water during pregnancy. The results are published in JAMA Network Open. Community water fluoridation is one of the most widely implemented public health interventions in the United States and has long been promoted ...

Stanford University’s Guosong Hong announced as inaugural recipient of the SPIE Biophotonics Discovery’s Impact of the Year Award

2026-01-20
BELLINGHAM, WA, USA – January 19, 2026 – SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics, is celebrating the inaugural Biophotonics Discovery's Impact of the Year Award as well as its first recipient, Stanford University Associate Professor of materials science and engineering, Guosong Hong. Hong was officially honored at the Biophotonics Focus: Light-Based Technologies for Reproductive, Maternal, and Neonatal Health plenary during SPIE Photonics West on Sunday evening. Hong is being honored in the technology development category for “significantly advancing the field of biophotonics,” ...

Ice, ice, maybe: There’s always a thin layer of water on ice — or is there?

2026-01-20
WASHINGTON, Jan. 20, 2026 — The ice in your freezer is remarkably different from the single crystals that form in snow clouds, or even those formed on a frozen pond. As temperatures drop, ice crystals can grow in a variety of shapes: from stocky hexagonal prisms to flat plates, to Grecian columns. Why this structural roller coaster happens, though, is a mystery. When first observed, researchers thought it must relate to a hypothesis proposed by famed physicist Michael Faraday — ice below its melting point has a microscopically thin liquid layer of water across its surface. This “premelting ...

Machine learning lends a helping ‘hand’ to prosthetics

2026-01-20
WASHINGTON, Jan. 20, 2026 — Holding an egg requires a gentle touch. Squeeze too hard, and you’ll make a mess. Opening a water bottle, on the other hand, needs a little more grip strength. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there are approximately 50,000 new amputations in the United States each year. The loss of a hand can be particularly debilitating, affecting patients’ ability to perform standard daily tasks. One of the primary challenges with prosthetic hands is the ability to properly tune the appropriate grip based on the object being handled. In ...
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