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Medicine 2026-03-19

GLP-1 medications used to treat diabetes and obesity may also help alleviate symptoms of anxiety and depression

GLP-1 medications used to treat diabetes and obesity were associated with a reduced need for hospital care and sickness absence due to psychiatric reasons, a new study shows. The large register-based study was carried out in collaboration between the University of Eastern Finland, Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm and Griffith University in Australia. Diabetes and obesity are associated with an increased risk of mental health symptoms, and similarly, individuals with mental disorders have an elevated risk of metabolic diseases such as obesity and diabetes. Researchers have long been interested in the connections ...
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Medicine 2026-03-19

Innovative UC Health tool leads to better blood pressure control

A blood pressure program adopted across the University of California’s six academic medical centers has effectively lowered hypertension and prevented serious disease or death for thousands of patients, according to a new study led by UC San Francisco.   High blood pressure affects nearly half of Americans and is a leading cause of death, especially in underserved populations. It also can lead to heart disease, heart failure, stroke, kidney disease, and pregnancy complications.  The new tool, one of very few developed for an entire health system to control ...
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Science 2026-03-19

Study shows bombarding gamblers with offers greatly increases betting and gambling harm

Research has confirmed for the first time that people with active gambling accounts who receive regular ‘free bets’ and other direct marketing offers place a lot more bets, spend far more, and suffer greater related harms than gamblers who have opted out of such offers. The study, led by Central Queensland University in Australia in collaboration with the University of Bristol in the UK, found that participants who chose not to receive direct marketing, such as emails, push notifications and text messages, from their gambling account placed nearly a ...
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Social Science 2026-03-19

Some “designer” crossbreed dogs may have more problem behaviors than pure breeds

In a new, survey-based study of three kinds of “designer” crossbreed dogs, cocakpoos, cavapoos and labradoodles, all three showed more undesirable behaviors than at least one of their purebred progenitor breeds, with cockapoos displaying the most unwanted habits. Gina Bryson of the Royal Veterinary College, U.K., and colleagues present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS One on March 19, 2026. Cavapoos, labradoodles, and cockapoos are crosses between purebred poodles and cavalier King Charles spaniels, Labrador retrievers, and cocker spaniels, respectively. The popularity of these and other “designer” crossbreeds as pets is rapidly rising around the world, ...
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Science 2026-03-19

Medieval chess promoted racial harmony and mutual respect

Medieval manuscripts, paintings and chess sets reveal that the so-called ‘game of kings’ defied social structures and racial attitudes by celebrating the intellectual prowess of winners irrespective of their skin colour.   A 13th-century Black chess player is about to defeat his white opponent. He looks relaxed – he has a bottle of red wine within reach and a glass filled to the brim. He sits on a finely decorated bench as an equal to his light-skinned opponent: a cleric. This friendly, intellectual scene appears in a lavish treatise on chess completed in Seville in 1283 CE for King Alfonso X of Castile. This image is a world away from contemporary depictions of ...
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Science 2026-03-18

Global insect rescue plan needs new tech to ensure success

Cameras that photograph insects overnight and AI that identifies them are among a new generation of tools that could finally allow scientists to track whether the world's plan to save nature is working for its most overlooked creatures.  A global team of scientists have found that 23 biodiversity targets agreed by world governments to protect and restore nature by 2030 are well-designed and could, if met, help reverse falling insect numbers. However, the researchers highlight that dragonflies and damselflies are the only insect group to have been fully assessed for extinction risk globally, illustrating that very few measurements ...
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Science 2026-03-18

Being tall increases risk of atrial fibrillation and endometriosis in East Asian people

 A large-scale genetic analysis of East Asian individuals led by Fuu-Jen Tsai of the China Medical University Hospital, finds that people with greater height face a higher risk of endometriosis and atrial fibrillation. They report these findings in the journal PLOS Genetics.  A person’s height is the result of a complex mix of genetic and environmental factors. The genetics underlying height have been linked to multiple health conditions, but these stature-related health risks have not been well explored, especially in East Asian populations.  Researchers performed two genome-wide association studies to find genetic factors linked to a person’s height or to a ...
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Medicine 2026-03-18

Cell-inspired sensor delivers blood-monitoring breakthrough

A team led by La Trobe University has drawn inspiration from nature to develop a breakthrough sensor that can rapidly track tiny molecular changes in blood, paving the way to real-time, personalised medicine. The discovery overcomes one of the biggest barriers in blood testing: that blood quickly clogs most sensors, making accurate instant readings almost impossible over long periods of time. Working in collaboration with CSIRO, the team combined a natural protective coating called lubricin, fast-responding receptors and an ultra‑sensitive, light‑based detection method known as Surface‑Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS) to mimic the way real ...
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Science 2026-03-18

New approach improves precipitation accuracy for hydrological models

URBANA, Ill. – Hydrological models represent water movement in natural systems, and they are important for water resource planning and management. But the models depend on reliable input data for weather factors, and precipitation can be very difficult to measure and represent accurately. A new study from an international research team describes a novel method to better represent precipitation uncertainty in hydrological models, thereby improving their performance.  “Precipitation is very variable in space and time. There may be a single weather station collecting data in a large area, but turbulent ...
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Science 2026-03-18

Financial decline linked to faster memory aging in older adults

March 18, 2026--Worse financial well-being in midlife and older age —and especially declines over time—are associated with lower memory scores and faster cognitive decline, reports a new study at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. The population experiencing significant financial deterioration showed memory decline equivalent to roughly five additional months of aging per year. The study is among the first to examine the cognitive consequences of poor financial well-being. The findings are published in the American Journal of Epidemiology. Lower average financial well-being ...
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Medicine 2026-03-18

MSU scientists uncover how HPV-positive cancers hide from the immune system — and how to make them visible again

Why this matters: HPV-positive head and neck cancer cases have increased at epidemic rates in the United States over the past few decades.   The study solves a major mystery in cancer immunology by uncovering how HPV hides cancer cells from the immune system by using MARCHF8 to destroy MHC-I, which serves as a warning flag for the immune system.   The discovery opens a potential path to new cancer therapies, pointing to the development of drugs that block MARCHF8 to treat patients who currently have no effective ...
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Medicine 2026-03-18

Type 1 diabetes associated with higher risk of dementia

Highlights: Type 1 diabetes is associated with a higher risk of dementia. This study shows an association and does not prove that diabetes causes dementia.  Type 1 diabetes is rare, accounting for about 5% of diabetes cases. People with type 1 diabetes were nearly three times as likely to develop dementia as those without diabetes. People with type 2 diabetes were twice as likely to develop dementia as people without diabetes. MINNEAPOLIS — Having type 1 diabetes is associated with a higher risk of developing dementia, according to a study published March 18, 2026, in Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Type 2 diabetes ...
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Technology 2026-03-18

For humans and AI to work well together, they must form a cognitive alignment, according to Stevens researchers

Hoboken, NJ., March 18, 2026— In the iconic Star Wars series, captain Han Solo and humanoid droid C-3PO boast drastically contrasting personalities. Driven by emotions and swashbuckling confidence, Han Solo often ignores C-3PO’slogic-driven caution. That human-droid relationship is exemplified in Solo’s famous statement, "Never tell me the odds!” as he dismisses C-3PO’s advice against navigating an asteroid field with a 3,720-to-1 chances of survival, odds that had been painstakingly calculated by the ...
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Medicine 2026-03-18

Michelle Gong, M.D., M.S., appointed Chair of Montefiore Einstein Department of Medicine

Michelle Ng Gong, M.D., M.S., has been appointed chair of the Montefiore Einstein Department of Medicine. Dr. Gong, who was selected after a national search, has served as interim chair since May 2025. “It’s a privilege to lead this department and its outstanding community of clinicians, researchers, educators, trainees, and staff,” said Dr. Gong, a professor of medicine and of epidemiology & health at Albert Einstein College of Medicine. “I look forward to advancing our exceptional clinical care, research discoveries, ...
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Medicine 2026-03-18

As World Tuberculosis Day 2026 approaches, an international group of authors describe how ending tuberculosis requires a whole-of-society approach

As World Tuberculosis Day 2026 approaches, an international group of authors describe how ending tuberculosis requires a whole-of-society approach, more effectively engaging policymakers, funding bodies and affected communities along with doctors and researchers.   ### Article URL: https://plos.io/46U4Mrb Article Title: Pursuing policymakers, payors and public – expanding the beginning and end of the tuberculosis care cascade to reflect whole-of-society ambitions  Author Countries: India, Kenya, Nigeria, ...
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Science 2026-03-18

New study shows democracy has deep global roots—not just Greece and Rome

A new study on ancient societies from around the world is rewriting what we thought we knew about democracy. A team of researchers analyzed archaeological and historical evidence from 31 ancient societies across Europe, Asia, and the Americas and found that shared, inclusive governance was far more common than was once believed. “People often assume that democratic practices started in Greece and Rome,” said Gary Feinman, the study’s lead author and the MacArthur Curator of Mesoamerican ...
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Science 2026-03-18

15,000 years ago, children shaped clay, long before pottery or farming new discovery reveals

Long before pottery, before agriculture, when the first villages took shape, people in the Levant were already molding clay with their hands, carefully, deliberately, and sometimes playfully. Some of those hands belonged to children. Link to pictures:  https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/17O5vHUq6flnwqxNFzYejs0PqDB6JmBUz?usp=sharing An international team of archaeologist led by Laurent Davin, a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute of Archaeology at Hebrew University of Jerusalem under the supervision of Prof. Leore Grosman, has uncovered the earliest known clay ornaments in Southwest Asia, revealing a forgotten chapter in the story of ...
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Science 2026-03-18

Why mosquitoes swarm your head: They’re following signals, not each other

After watching hundreds of mosquitoes buzzing around one of their colleagues and collecting 20 million data points, Georgia Tech and Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers have created a mathematical model that predicts how and where female mosquitoes will fly to feast on humans. The new study is the first to visualize mosquito flight patterns and provides hard data for improving capture and control strategies. In addition to being a nuisance, mosquitoes transmit diseases such as malaria, yellow fever, and Zika, which cause more than 700,000 deaths every year. The researchers also designed an interactive, public website to show the paths and ...
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Medicine 2026-03-18

Study suggests mental health policy is emerging as a key voting issue for Americans

A new University of Missouri study suggests mental health policies can play a significant role in how Americans choose political candidates. Past scholarly research has found that most Americans say they support mental health policies. Jake Haselswerdt, an associate professor of political science in Mizzou’s College of Arts and Science, wanted to take the topic a step further by asking whether mental health policies actually matter when people choose to vote for a political candidate. Drawing on a nationally representative sample ...
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Science 2026-03-18

New model predicts how mosquitoes will fly

A mosquito finds its target with the help of certain cues in its environment, such as a person’s silhouette and the carbon dioxide they exhale.  Now researchers at MIT and Georgia Tech have found that these visual and chemical cues help determine the insects’ flight paths. The team has developed the first three-dimensional model of mosquito flight, based on experiments with mosquitoes flying in the presence of different sensory cues.  Their model, reported in the journal Science Advances, identifies three flight patterns that mosquitoes ...
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Medicine 2026-03-18

Researchers at Åbo Akademi University discover a new mechanism driving breast cancer progression

A research group led by Professor Cecilia Sahlgren at Åbo Akademi University (Finland) and the InFLAMES Research Flagship has identified a new mechanism directing the adverse remodeling of tumor tissue during breast cancer progression. This discovery could offer new treatment opportunities against aggressive forms of breast cancer which currently lack targeted therapy options. Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women worldwide. Localized, early-stage breast cancer has a good prognosis, ...
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Medicine 2026-03-18

Discovery might inform new approach to Huntington's disease

Treatments that target a fragment of the mutant protein that causes Huntington's disease might be more effective than treatments, now in clinical trials, that target the whole protein but leave this fragment intact, a new study in mice suggests. "I hope we're wrong, but the science behind our findings is solid," said senior author Jeffrey Carroll, an associate professor of neurology at the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle. "To succeed, we may need to design new treatments that also target this specific region of ...
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Technology 2026-03-18

SNU researchers develop wearable thermoelectric technology using thin films to generate electricity from body heat

Seoul National University College of Engineering has announced that a research team led by Prof. Jeonghun Kwak of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, with co-first authors Dr. Juhyung Park and Dr. Sun Hong Kim, has developed a flexible and thin “pseudo-transverse thermoelectric generator” capable of producing electricity from body heat.   The research findings were published on March 18 (ET) in Science Advances, a leading international journal published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).   Thermoelectric ...
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Medicine 2026-03-18

Facile pretreatment that activates cellulose for saccharification

Utilization of biomass as a chemical resource is a promising strategy for establishing a circular economy. Cellulose, a polymer composed of glucose units, is the most abundant form of biomass, and glucose is a versatile feedstock for chemicals. However, cellulose is a highly recalcitrant material due to its extensive hydrogen-bond (H-bond) network. Kobayashi, Nishimura, and their colleagues discovered that simply dipping cellulose in an aqueous NaOH solution below −28 ℃ makes it more reactive. Thereby, the efficiency of saccharification (the process of breaking down cellulose into sugars) ...
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Environment 2026-03-18

Pike eat more as water warms, threatening native species

Rising temperatures in a Southcentral Alaska river have led to a hungrier population of invasive northern pike, a trend that could imperil native salmon and other fish species. A University of Alaska Fairbanks-led research team analyzed the stomach contents of northern pike caught by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in the Deshka River during the summers of 2021 and 2022. The team compared the contents to samples from pike collected a decade earlier. Pike of every age class ate more fish as temperatures increased, including a huge 63 percent rise among year-old pike. The study was published in the journal Biological Invasions. “We ...
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