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AI can deliver personalized learning at scale, study shows

2025-11-12
A new Dartmouth study finds that artificial intelligence has the potential to deliver educational support that meets the individual needs of large numbers of students. The researchers are the first to report that students may put more trust in AI platforms programmed to pull answers from only curated expert sources, rather than from massive data sets of general information. Professor Thomas Thesen and co-author Soo Hwan Park tracked how 190 medical students in Dartmouth's Geisel School of Medicine used an AI teaching assistant called NeuroBot TA, which provides around-the-clock individualized support for students in Thesen's Neuroscience and Neurology course. Thesen ...

Study: Plant-based diet can prevent, reverse form of heart disease in animals with hypertension

2025-11-12
ATLANTA — Eating a plant-based diet consisting of fruits, vegetables, nuts and legumes can help prevent and reverse heart disease in rats that have high blood pressure, according to a study published by researchers in the Institute for Biomedical Sciences at Georgia State University. The basic research study, published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, tested whether coronary microvascular dysfunction (CMD), a type of heart disease that occurs when there’s damage to the tiny blood vessels that regulate blood ...

Lower LRIG1 expression linked to aggressive gliomas

2025-11-12
“Our results reinforce suggestions that LRIG1-3 could function as diagnostic markers and therapeutic targets in the treatment of gliomas.” BUFFALO, NY – November 12, 2025 – A new research paper was published in Oncotarget (Volume 16) on November 6, 2025, titled “LRIG1-3 in gliomas: LRIG1 protein expression decreased in higher grade gliomas.” In this study by Marlene Happe, Saskia Kuhl, Lukas Görtz, Roland Goldbrunner and Marco Timmer, from the University of Cologne, researchers found that the LRIG1 protein, which may help suppress tumors, is present at lower levels in more aggressive gliomas, a type of brain tumor. The findings ...

National consortium project led by TU Delft receives huge grant from NWO to build world's largest research digital twins for energy systems

2025-11-12
A cutting-edge consortium project called Understanding large and cOmplex Power sYstems (UTOPYS) will enable researchers to build the world’s largest research cluster for real-time energy system studies. The project is led by Principal Investigator Prof. Peter Palensky of TU Delft, and is comprised of eight Dutch research organisations, and SURF - the IT cooperative of education and research. It has been awarded a huge grant of 16.5 million euros through the Large-Scale Research Infrastructure ...

Intranasal oxytocin and physical intimacy for dermatological wound healing and neuroendocrine stress

2025-11-12
About The Study: This study found that intimate physical contact can reduce cortisol responses and, along with oxytocin administration, promote wound healing. These findings provide a foundation for future interventions that integrate relationship dynamics and neurohormonal modulation to improve health and recovery from illness.  Corresponding Authors: To contact the corresponding authors, email Beate Ditzen, PhD (b.ditzen@psychologie.uzh.ch) and Ekaterina Schneider, PhD (e.schneider@psychologie.uzh.ch). To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2025.3705) Editor’s ...

JMIR Publications partners with Signals to strengthen research integrity across its portfolio

2025-11-12
(Toronto, November 12, 2025) JMIR Publications is pleased to announce an agreement with Signals Manuscript Checks to leverage their tool across their entire portfolio. JMIR Publications, a leading publisher in digital medicine, health technology and sciences, has begun evaluating article submissions with Signals Manuscript Checks — a tool that provides automated and transparent evaluations of manuscripts to identify research integrity issues, and enables AI-supported investigations of manuscripts through Sleuth AI, Signals’ AI-powered research integrity assistant. With Signals Manuscript Checks, JMIR Publications aims to increase the efficiency and ...

Scientists make dark exciton states shine, unlocking new frontiers for nanotechnology

2025-11-12
New York, November 12, 2025 — A research team at the City University of New York and the University of Texas at Austin has discovered a way to make previously hidden states of light, known as dark excitons, shine brightly, and control their emission at the nanoscale. Their findings, published today in Nature Photonics, open the door to faster, smaller, and more energy-efficient technologies. Dark excitons are exotic light-matter states in atomically thin semiconductors that typically remain invisible because they emit light very weakly. These states, however, are highly ...

Glenn Foundation for Medical Research grant programs provide $2.25 million in support for postdoctoral investigators and junior faculty

2025-11-12
NEW YORK, NY and SANTA BARBARA, CA — The American Federation for Aging Research (AFAR) and the Glenn Foundation for Medical Research (GFMR) are pleased to announce the 2025 recipients of the Grants for Junior Faculty, Postdoctoral Fellowships in Aging Research, and Postdoctoral Fellowship Continuation Awards. Selected through rigorous review processes led by scientific committees of esteemed leaders in aging ...

The mechanisms behind thrombocytopenia in patients with portal hypertension and chronic liver disease

2025-11-12
Chronic liver disease (CLD) and its advanced stage, cirrhosis, represent a significant global health burden, with portal hypertension (PH) being a primary driver of disease progression and decompensation. A hallmark of this condition is thrombocytopenia, defined as a platelet count ≤150,000/μL, which is present in 64–77% of cirrhotic patients. This hematological abnormality is not merely a laboratory finding but a distinctive sign of PH and a component of prognostic risk scores for adverse liver outcomes. This essay elucidates the multifactorial ...

SwRI uses machine learning to calibrate emissions control systems faster, more efficiently

2025-11-12
SAN ANTONIO — November 12, 2025 — Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) has developed a method to automate the calibration of heavy-duty diesel truck emissions control systems using machine learning and algorithm-based optimization. The latest diesel aftertreatment systems often take weeks to calibrate. SwRI’s new method can calibrate them in as little as two hours. “Manually calibrating selective catalytic reduction (SCR) systems is labor-intensive, often taking six or more weeks of testing and work,” said Venkata Chundru, senior research engineer in SwRI’s Advanced ...

Blood test offers hope for more effective ovarian cancer treatment

2025-11-12
More than 300,000 women are diagnosed with ovarian cancer globally each year. The four-year clinical trial across 15 Australian hospitals – known as SOLACE2 – was co-led by the University of Sydney NHMRC Clinical Trials Centre, RMIT University and WEHI, and coordinated by the Australia New Zealand Gynaecological Oncology Group (ANZGOG).  The Phase II trial tested strategies for priming the immune system to enhance the effectiveness of PARP inhibitor therapy, which stops cancer cells from repairing their own damaged DNA by blocking the PARP enzyme.   It was during this trial that a new companion blood test for women with ovarian cancer was also ...

Pain during a C-section? New study challenges fears about general anesthesia

2025-11-12
PHILADELPHIA—Regional anesthesia—typically with a spinal or epidural block—has long been favored for cesarean births due in part to concerns about the effects that general anesthesia may have on newborns during labor and delivery. Powerful societal pressures also push the idea that mothers need to be awake during delivery to witness the first cry and capture the ‘perfect’ birth moment. But for some women who undergo a cesarean birth, the pain can become excruciating, even after they received a spinal or epidural block. Now, new research from a team at the Perelman School of Medicine at the ...

New study identifies overlooked tool for menopause symptom relief

2025-11-12
A new study from the Kinsey Institute at Indiana University, published in journal Menopause, finds self-pleasure is a valuable care strategy for managing menopause symptoms, especially mood and sleep changes. Most women are open to trying it, yet few say their doctors have ever mentioned it. Researchers surveyed a demographically representative sample of 1,178 women ages 40 to 65 in the United States about their experiences with menopause and the effectiveness of their current symptom management strategies including hormone therapy, supplements, lifestyle factors, and sexual pleasure, among others.  Almost 14% of perimenopausal women reported using regular masturbation ...

City of Hope to present breakthroughs in blood cancer, microbiome research and cellular therapies at ASH 2025

2025-11-12
LOS ANGELES — City of Hope®, one of the largest and most advanced cancer research and treatment organizations in the United States with its National Medical Center ranked among the nation’s top cancer centers by U.S. News & World Report, will present leading-edge findings at the 2025 American Society of Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting and Exposition happening Dec. 6-9 in Orlando and online.  Across 105 sessions, City of Hope experts will highlight advances in blood cancer research, cellular therapies and precision ...

‘Cool’ signs based on a new colorful, flexible electronic display technology

2025-11-12
Electronic signs are all around us, giving directions or advertising the latest gadget. In ACS Energy Letters, researchers report that they’ve developed a dynamic display technology that dissipates heat instead of generating it when the color changes, cooling the surface underneath. They also showed the display could be attached to flexible backings and wrapped over skin. The passive cooling mechanism could usher in the next generation of sustainable, flexible outdoor signs and smart devices. “The technology could be used on building billboards to show ads and also help passively cool a building’s ...

Bees thrive in overlooked pockets of Puget Sound

2025-11-12
PULLMAN, Wash. -- To the casual observer, it’s nothing more than an abandoned golf course. But the land, along with other weedy, minimally maintained “marginal lands” in the Puget Sound area, is home to scores of wild bee species, including many never found before in Snohomish and King counties, according to a seven-year study by Washington State University researchers and others. The survey of bees at three plots of land near airports and beneath power lines adds to the evidence that small corners of largely untended land can sustain bee populations amid the concrete and asphalt landscape of cities ...

PLOS launches two journals to address critical real-world challenges

2025-11-12
SAN FRANCISCO — The Public Library of Science (PLOS) today announced the launch of two journals, PLOS Aging and Health and PLOS Ecosystems. Both journals are grounded in our commitment to rigor and research integrity of the highest standard and our open science principles, which facilitates greater reproducibility, faster scientific progress, and broader access to knowledge. In addition, both journals are underpinned by our Flat Fee model that is designed to shift the cost from researchers to an institutional annual fee, which enables institutions to provide unlimited publishing opportunities ...

Year-round edamame: hydroponic LED plant factories redefine sustainable cultivation

2025-11-12
Artificial light-type plant factories are an emerging agricultural innovation that enable crops to be grown year-round in precisely controlled environments. By adjusting factors such as light, temperature, humidity, carbon dioxide concentration, and nutrient delivery, these facilities can produce stable yields independent of climate conditions. They offer a promising way to reduce pesticide use and minimize the impacts of climate change. However, legumes like edamame have long been considered difficult to cultivate in such settings because of their long growth periods, short storage periods, complex flowering, and pod-setting processes.  Against this backdrop, the research ...

Pusan National University researchers explore smart nanomaterials that detect and treat traumatic brain injuries simultaneously

2025-11-12
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) remains one of the most pressing public health challenges, leaving millions with lasting disabilities each year. When the brain suffers a sudden impact, from a fall, vehicle accident, or sports collision, it triggers inflammation, oxidative stress, and nerve damage that continue long after the initial trauma. Despite decades of research, the traditional diagnosis and treatment strategies often face limitations such as poor detection and inefficient drug delivery. In a ...

Advanced imaging reveals new fungus species in 407-million-year-old plant fossil from Scotland

2025-11-12
Researchers from the Natural History Museum and Sainsbury Laboratory Cambridge University (SLCU) have identified a new species of ancient symbiotic fungus preserved within a 407-million-year-old plant fossil from Scotland. The discovery provides unprecedented three-dimensional insight into one of the earliest known plant–fungus partnerships, known as mycorrhiza. Beyond this discovery, the advanced microscopy techniques used to distinguish the fungus from the surrounding plant cells open a powerful new way to identify fossilised life forms. By analysing their unique ...

Study reveals that flu vaccine performance varies by age

2025-11-12
New research comparing four different flu vaccines found that the ability of the vaccines to activate cells of the immune system that help to protect against infection varied greatly depending on the vaccine type and age of the patient. Researchers say these findings have the potential to guide vaccine recommendations, especially for older adults. The 2024-2025 flu season was considered highly severe, causing at least 47 million illnesses, 610,000 hospitalizations, and 27,000 deaths. A new study, published in The Journal of Immunology, found that while all four seasonal influenza vaccines produced similar antibody levels, their ability to activate cellular immunity varied greatly depending ...

Narwhals hit moorings—questioning safety assumptions of oceanographic monitoring in the Arctic

2025-11-12
Underwater passive acoustic recording is vital for researchers to monitor and study marine animals in their natural environment with minimal disturbance. “Using passive acoustic monitoring to detect acoustically active animals helps to census biodiversity, understand animal behavior and habitat use, and reduce the negative impacts of human-made noise,” said Associate Professor Evgeny A. Podolskiy of the Arctic Research Center at Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan. “For these reasons, scientists increasingly rely on passive acoustic monitoring to answer fundamental ecological questions and manage conservation.” Endemic Arctic whales, ...

The silent threat to our planet that’s easily solved: Light pollution

2025-11-12
New research has revealed for the first time the full extent of how Artificial Light At Night (ALAN) is increasing carbon released by plants and animals across continents – without any increase in the carbon they absorb. The result is reduced carbon storage in ecosystems – which has major implications for climate models and global carbon budgets. Artificial light at night is reshaping carbon balance of whole ecosystems Published in Nature Climate Change, the study from researchers at Cranfield University is the first to demonstrate how ALAN is silently reshaping the carbon balance of ecosystems across ...

Stevens researchers bring hypersonic flight one step closer to take off

2025-11-12
Hoboken, N.J., November 12, 2025 — If it were to become a reality, hypersonic flight, long the realm of science fiction, could revolutionize global travel, transforming day-long international flights into brief commutes no longer than a feature length movie. The duration of a long-haul route, such as Sydney to Los Angeles, might drop from 15 hours to just one.  “It really shrinks the planet,” says Professor Nicholaus Parziale, whose research focuses on making such hypersonic flight a reality, and who is a recent recipient of the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists ...

Researchers uncover natural seepage of oil and gas off Northeast Greenland

2025-11-12
A large research study by an international team of scientists led by Christoph Böttner from Aarhus University shows clear evidence of extensive natural hydrocarbon seepage along the Northeast Greenland margin — one of the least explored continental margins on Earth.  The new discoveries of widespread natural seepage and gas hydrates in NE Greenland represent a significant advance in our understanding of natural seepage across the Arctic. This is important in the light of rapidly changing ...
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