New habitable zone super-Earth found in exosolar system
2012-11-08
Washington, D.C.—Astronomers have discovered a new super-Earth in the habitable zone, where liquid water and a stable atmosphere could reside, around the nearby star HD 40307. It is one of three new super-Earths found around the star that has three other low-mass planets orbiting it.
HD 40307 is a dwarf star that is somewhat smaller and less luminous than the Sun that is about 42 light years away (12.88 parsecs). The previously discovered planets around it are called hot super-Earths because they orbit too close to the star to support life.
The international team, including ...
Study: Education levels in Asian American neighborhoods affect residents' health
2012-11-08
WASHINGTON, DC, November 8, 2012 — Higher neighborhood education is associated with better self-rated health among Asian Americans who live in Asian ethnic neighborhoods, but this correlation between individual health and neighborhood education levels does not exist for Asian Americans living in non-Asian neighborhoods, according to a recent study in the Journal of Health and Social Behavior.
"When Asian Americans live in neighborhoods that are not Asian ethnic neighborhoods, the education level of the neighborhood doesn't affect their health," says Emily Walton, an ...
Making memories: Drexel researchers explore the anatomy of recollection
2012-11-08
What was your high school mascot? Where did you put your keys last night? Who was the first president of the United States?
Groups of neurons in your brain are currently sending electromagnetic rhythms through established pathways in order for you to recall the answers to each of these questions. Researchers in Drexel's School of Biomedical Engineering, Science and Health Systems are now getting a rare look inside the brain to discover the exact pattern of activity that produces a memory.
Dr. Joshua Jacobs, a professor in Drexel's School of Biomedical Engineering, ...
Going with your gut
2012-11-08
Decision-making is an inevitable part of the human experience, and one of the most mysterious. For centuries, scientists have studied how we go about the difficult task of choosing A or B, left or right, North or South — and how both instinct and intellect figure into the process. Now new research indicates that the old truism "look before you leap" may be less true than previously thought.
In a behavioral experiment, Prof. Marius Usher of Tel Aviv University's School of Psychological Sciences and his fellow researchers found that intuition was a surprisingly powerful ...
Inpatient brain injury education increases bike helmet use, study finds
2012-11-08
AUGUSTA, Ga. – A 30-minute brain injury education program taught in the hospital may increase children's use of bicycle helmets, Georgia Health Sciences University researchers report.
The researchers provided bicycle helmet safety and brain injury prevention information to 120 patients age 5 to 18 at Georgia Health Sciences Children's Medical Center and found that helmet usage increased by 72.5 percent within the first month following the program – from only 11 children reporting wearing a bicycle helmet on every ride to 98 always wearing helmets.
"This is a big step ...
Feel-good hormone helps to jog the memory
2012-11-08
This press release is available in German.
The feel-good hormone dopamine improves long-term memory. This is the finding of a team lead by Emrah Düzel, neuroscientist at the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases and the University of Magdeburg. The researchers investigated test subjects ranging in age from 65 to 75 years, who were given a precursor of dopamine. Treated subjects performed better in a memory test than a comparison group, who had taken a placebo. The study provides new insights into the formation of long lasting memories and also has implications ...
Capnography training video by BMC published in New England Journal of Medicine
2012-11-08
(Boston) – Physicians at Boston Medical Center (BMC) have developed a training video for health care providers about how to effectively use capnography to monitor ventilation and carbon dioxide levels for patients under anesthesia or conscious sedation. This is the sixth video published in the New England Journal of Medicine's Videos in Clinical Medicine section produced by BMC. It highlights the importance of using capnography to increase patient safety.
Capnography, which graphically monitors carbon dioxide concentration and measures ventilation and respiration, is ...
New cells found that could help save people's sight
2012-11-08
Eye experts and scientists at the University of Southampton have discovered specific cells in the eye which could lead to a new procedure to treat and cure blinding eye conditions.
Led by Professor Andrew Lotery, the study found that cells called corneal limbal stromal cells, taken from the front surface of the eye have stem cell properties and could be cultured to create retinal cells.
This could lead to new treatments for eye conditions such as retinitis pigmentosa or wet age-related macular degeneration, a condition which is a common cause of loss of vision in older ...
FASEB lauds Air India for transporting research animals
2012-11-08
Bethesda, MD – The Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) commends Air India for continuing to transport research animals. In a letter to the company, FASEB expressed its appreciation for Air India's perseverance in the face of considerable pressure from animal rights groups to discontinue shipping laboratory animals. "Animals are crucial for the advancement of biomedical research, and scientists around the world are dependent upon their safe and humane shipment," stated FASEB President Judith S. Bond. "The inability of scientists to access research ...
Driven by friendship
2012-11-08
For the first time, the dynamics of how Facebook user communities are formed have been identified, revealing surprisingly few large communities and innumerable highly connected small-size communities. These findings are about to be published in EPJ Data Science by Italian scientist Emilio Ferrara, affiliated with both Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana, USA and his home University of Messina. This work could ultimately help identify the most efficient way to spread information, such as advertising, or ideas over large networks.
No previous work has attempted to ...
Are 'hookups' replacing romantic relationships on college campuses?
2012-11-08
PROVIDENCE, R.I. – "Hooking up" has become such a trend on college campuses that some believe these casual, no-strings-attached sexual encounters may be replacing traditional romantic relationships. However, a new study by researchers with The Miriam Hospital's Centers for Behavioral and Preventive Medicine suggests college students are not actually hooking up as frequently as one might think.
According to their study, published online by the Journal of Adolescent Health, romantic relationships are still the most common context for sexual behavior, at least among women ...
'Read my lips' – it’s easier when they're your own
2012-11-08
People can lip-read themselves better than they can lip-read others, according to a new study by Nancy Tye-Murray and colleagues from Washington University. Their work, which explores the link between speech perception and speech production, is published online in Springer's Psychonomic Bulletin & Review.
Most people cannot read lips - just try watching television with the sound turned off and see how much of a news item you understand. If you see someone speak a sentence without the accompanying sounds, you are unlikely to recognize many words.
Tye-Murray and her team ...
Report: Cleanup of some contaminated groundwater sites unlikely for decades
2012-11-08
WASHINGTON — At least 126,000 sites across the U.S. have contaminated groundwater that requires remediation, and about 10 percent of these sites are considered "complex," meaning restoration is unlikely to be achieved in the next 50 to 100 years due to technological limitations, says a new report from the National Research Council. The report adds that the estimated cost of complete cleanup at these sites ranges from $110 billion to $127 billion, but the figures for both the number of sites and costs are likely underestimates.
Several national and state groundwater cleanup ...
Learning who's the top dog: Study reveals how the brain stores information about social rank
2012-11-08
Researchers supported by the Wellcome Trust have discovered that we use a different part of our brain to learn about social hierarchies than we do to learn ordinary information. The study provides clues as to how this information is stored in memory and also reveals that you can tell a lot about how good somebody is likely to be at judging social rank by looking at the structure of their brain.
Primates (and people) are remarkably good at ranking each other within social hierarchies, a survival technique that helps us to avoid conflict and select advantageous allies. ...
Teleconcussion--A new, innovative strategy for assessing young athletes
2012-11-08
New Rochelle, NY, November 8, 2012—Concussion is a common disorder estimated to affect no fewer than 1.7-3.8 million people in the U.S. each year. Many more people with concussion likely do not seek medical care for symptoms of concussion and may suffer long-lasting, progressive, and profoundcognitive, psychiatric, and neurologic effects. The first use of teleconcussion, a novel solution for management and follow-up of a concussed athlete with remote access technology, is described in an article published in Telemedicine and e-Health, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann ...
Parents talking to their teens about being overweight
2012-11-08
Philadelphia, PA, November 8, 2012 – According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 28% of adolescents are overweight. This means that about 1 in every 5 parents is thinking about how to discuss this with their child. Creating a healthful home environment, modeling healthful behaviors, and providing encouragement and support to adolescents for positive behavior changes may be more effective than communicating with adolescents about weight-related topics, according to a new study released in the November/December 2012 issue of the Journal of Nutrition ...
Testing pain killers on humans could save money and speed the arrival of new drugs
2012-11-08
Deliberately inflicting carefully controlled painful stimuli on human volunteers and seeing how well specific drugs reduce the feeling of pain can be an effective way of testing new drugs. So conclude two researchers who reviewed the available literature on these types of tests in a paper published in the British Journal of Pharmacology.
Pain is important. It acts as an alarm mechanism, warning us that something is about to cause physical damage. It could be triggered by something physical like a cut or bruise, or a temperature driven stimulus such as extreme heat or ...
New, improved mouse model of human Alzheimer's may enable drug discovery
2012-11-08
Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine have developed a transgenic mouse that carries a human gene known to increase risk of Alzheimer's 15-fold. This new mouse mimics the genetics of the human disease more closely than any of the dozen existing mouse models and may prove more useful in the development of candidate drugs to prevent or treat the disease.
The new mouse model provides new evidence for the earliest cause of Alzheimer's, researchers report in a study to be published in the December issue of the Journal of Biological Chemistry ...
MicroRNAs in plants: Regulation of the regulator
2012-11-08
This press release is available in German.
MicroRNAs are essential regulators of the genetic program in multicellular organisms. Because of their potent effects, the production of these small regulators has itself to be tightly controlled. That is the key finding of a new study performed by Tübingen scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology. They identified a new component that modulates the production of micro RNAs in thale cress, Arabidopsis thaliana, by the removal of phosphate residues from a micro RNA-biogenesis enzyme. This can be as ...
Examining Debt in Florida
2012-11-08
Florida residents know firsthand how devastating this most recent recession has been. While the economy is showing some positive signs, many Floridians are still not seeing these benefits. With unemployment remaining high, and home values struggling to rebound, many individuals throughout the state are experiencing debt problems.
In fact, the debt that some residents are experiencing is actually much higher than the national average. A recent study by Credit Karma, a consumer website, examined the debt of South Floridians to learn more about the extent of debt within ...
New Florida Drug Scheduling Laws Target Synthetics
2012-11-08
Synthetic drugs such as bath salts, K2, spice, incense and potpourri have been gaining popularity in recent years. Authorities have responded by cracking down on the production and sale of such substances. On March 23, 2012, Florida Gov. Rick Scott signed H.B. 1175 into law, greatly expanding the number of controlled substances under state law. Local governments have also enacted bans of the sale of synthetic drugs. Some say that the laws do not go far enough, but others are highly critical of the laws.
New Substances Made Illegal
The new law adds 90 substances to ...
Filing Pennsylvania Workplace Discrimination Complaints Just Got Easier
2012-11-08
The federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) recently revealed several modifications to the process of submitting workplace discrimination complaints. The revamped process is designed to be more user-friendly, flexible and efficient than the former method. The more efficient process will make all aspects of a complaint easier, including everything from filing to processing and from determinations to appeals.
How does the process work now?
Under the current system, an EEOC complaint begins when an employee or applicant asserts discrimination and contacts ...
Bank of America Withdraws Lawsuit Against Tennessee Bankruptcy Trustee
2012-11-08
In a move that implied it was out of its depth, Bank of America has dropped its lawsuit against a Tennessee Chapter 13 bankruptcy trustee. The bank had claimed the trustee was improperly dispersing money when administering Chapter 13 bankruptcy payments.
To understand the significance of Bank of America's lawsuit withdrawal, consumers must first understand the role of a bankruptcy trustee and how Tennessee handles foreclosures.
Role of the Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Trustee & the Tennessee Foreclosure Process
At heart of Bank of America's lawsuit was the responsibility ...
Timelines for Seeking Relief for DePuy Hip Replacement Injuries
2012-11-08
As our population ages, and people are active into later years the demand for joint replacement surgeries has increased. Medical device manufacturers have sought to find ways to extend the lives of various implants, such as hip and knee replacements.
In the mid-2000s, DePuy, a division of Johnson & Johnson, marketed and sold a hip replacement system that claimed to outlast other models. The new system used metal components rather than plastic. In the United States, 37,000 patients received the DePuy ASR Hip Resurfacing System or the ASR Acetabular System.
Unfortunately, ...
Helpful Tips for Financial Stability after a Divorce
2012-11-08
Minnesota residents who are going through a divorce know what a painful experience it is. The early stages of a divorce come with a variety of emotions.
Anger, loss, shock, confusion and panic are common feelings during a divorce. It is often an emotional rollercoaster with individuals feeling up one minute and down the next.
Dividing marital property is one of the most difficult steps of a divorce. Because the process is so emotionally charged, an individual may feel they may be more deserving of some assets than their former spouse may. It is important to not only ...
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