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Does screen time affect teens’ sleep and lifestyle habits?

2026-01-28
New research in Brain & Behavior found a link between screen time and adolescents’ sleep quality and beliefs about healthy lifestyles. In the study of 700 teens attending 2 high schools in the Black Sea region of Turkey, questionnaire responses revealed that participants who spent more time exposed to screens tended to have lower sleep quality. These adolescents were also less likely to have beliefs supporting the importance of maintaining a healthy lifestyle. Screen exposure appeared to play a mediating role in the relationship between sleep quality ...

How do native and non-native plants affect endangered plant species in cities?

2026-01-28
Research in the Journal of Applied Ecology has identified threats to endangered plants in an urban area, generating information that can be used to guide effective conservation strategies across major cities. For the study, investigators in Germany analyzed data on 1,231 populations of 201 endangered plant species within Berlin’s Flora Protection Program. Threats were categorized and their relative importance was quantified at both population and species levels, and across habitat types. Biological threats—especially ...

Men’s heart attack risk climbs by mid-30s, years before women

2026-01-28
Men reached 5% cardiovascular disease risk about seven years earlier than women Coronary heart disease drove most of the gap Risk started diverging around age 35 Earlier risk in men suggests factors beyond smoking, hypertension and diabetes alone CHICAGO --- Men begin developing coronary heart disease — which can lead to heart attacks — years earlier than women, with differences emerging as early as the mid-30s, according to a large, long-term study led by Northwestern Medicine. The findings, based on more than three decades of patient follow-up, suggest that heart disease prevention and screening ...

New study signals major advance in the future of precision cancer care

2026-01-28
A new paper in Biology Methods and Protocols, published by Oxford University Press, indicates that a new computational method may help researchers identify effective precision treatments for cancer more quickly and efficiently. Precision oncology is the promising, recently developed, approach to cancer treatment in which providers shape therapies to the unique molecular profile of a patient’s tumor. Current cancer therapy depends increasingly on matching the right drug to the right patient. Large-scale studies evaluate thousands of drugs on hundreds of cancer cell lines to find genetic biological markers to predict a drug’s effectiveness. In practice, however, this data is incredibly ...

Long COVID brain fog far more common in US than India, other nations

2026-01-28
Study of 3,100 patients is first to compare long COVID brain symptoms across continents Brain fog affected 86% of non-hospitalized U.S. patients, compared with 15% in India Symptom patterns clustered by income level, not geography Disparities likely reflect culture and healthcare access, not a different virus CHICAGO --- Patients with long COVID-19 in the U.S. report far higher rates of brain fog, depression and cognitive symptoms than patients in countries such as India and Nigeria, according to a large international study led ...

International differences exist in knowledge gaps and most common perimenopause symptoms

2026-01-28
CLEVELAND, Ohio (Jan 28, 2026)—Although perimenopause is experienced by all women regardless of race or nationality, it is not always experienced similarly. Studies comparing perimenopause symptoms across diverse cultures and geographic settings are lacking. A new study based on data from Flo, an international mobile health application, demonstrated inconsistency between perimenopause knowledge and actual symptoms experienced across diverse global populations. Study results are published online today in Menopause, the journal of The Menopause ...

Investigational blood biomarker panel may improve detection of pancreatic cancer

2026-01-28
Bottom Line: A four-biomarker blood panel of aminopeptidase N (ANPEP), polymeric immunoglobulin receptor (PIGR), CA19-9, and thrombospondin-2 (THBS2) enhanced the detection of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) compared to measuring CA19-9 levels alone. Journal in Which the Study was Published: Clinical Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR). Author: Kenneth S. Zaret, PhD, professor at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Background: ...

AAVLINK: Potent DNA-recombination method for large cargo delivery in gene therapy

2026-01-28
Delivery of therapeutic genes is essential for gene therapy. Adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) are a prime vector for carrying gene cargoes because of their superior gene segmentation flexibility and robust gene reconstitution efficiency. However, their limited packaging capacity is a major challenge for large gene transduction. In a study published in Cell on Jan. 27, Prof. LU Zhonghua's team from the Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and collaborators from Peking University First ...

Treatment initiation is possible with a positive liquid biopsy in primary central nervous lymphoma patients with difficult-to-access lesions

2026-01-28
Niigata, Japan – A group led by the Department of Neurosurgery at the Brain Research Institute, Niigata University, has successfully diagnosed ten primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) patients who had difficult-to-access lesions in or around the brainstem, or were too frail to receive surgical biopsies. Hotspot MYD88 L265P mutations were detected from circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) collected from lumbar taps in all patients. A team led by Dr. Manabu Natsumeda successfully treated the patients after diagnosis by ...

Artificial nighttime lighting is suppressing moth activity

2026-01-28
Moths move significantly less when exposed to artificial nighttime light, new research shows. Moths’ attraction to artificial light, such as streetlights, is common knowledge and has been much studied. But, as many people will have observed, moths may also remain still if they land near a light, apparently “trapped”. To understand this behaviour, University of Exeter researchers caught more than 800 moths from 23 species and exposed them to LED lights (of various colours and brightness) or to natural night conditions. Moths were collected with light traps and butterfly nets on the Penryn ...

What causes chronic pain? New study identifies key culprit in the brain

2026-01-28
A neural circuit hidden in an understudied region of the brain plays a critical role in turning temporary pain into pain that can last months or years, according to new University of Colorado Boulder research. The animal study, published in the Journal of Neuroscience, found that silencing this pathway, known as the caudal granular insular cortex (CGIC), can prevent or halt chronic pain. “Our paper used a variety of state-of-the art methods to define the specific brain circuit crucial for deciding ...

Counting the carbon cost of E-waste

2026-01-28
As the world upgrades to the latest gadgets, our old smartphones, refrigerators, and televisions are fueling the fastest-growing waste stream on the planet: E-waste. While recycling is often seen as a purely "green" endeavor, a groundbreaking study published in Carbon Research reveals that the process of dismantling these electronics carries its own significant carbon price tag. Led by Dr. Mo Zhang from Nankai University, the research team provides the first comprehensive look at the carbon footprint of China’s E-waste dismantling industry. By meticulously tracking ...

Stanford research teams tackle environmental impacts of U.S. policy

2026-01-28
  Federal priorities related to environmental protection, climate change, energy development, wildfire risk reduction, and the federal workforce have shifted rapidly over the past year, with potentially far-reaching consequences for ecosystems and public health. These changes represent a marked departure in U.S. policy direction and create an urgent need for research that can track how new policies are implemented and how their impacts unfold in real time. To help meet that need, the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment has awarded special Environmental Venture ...

Grant to expand self-cloning crop technology for Indian farmers

2026-01-28
Venkatesan Sundaresan, a Distinguished Professor of plant biology and plant sciences at the University of California, Davis, has been awarded a Gates Foundation grant to develop self-cloning crops for Indian farmers. The five-year, $4.9 million project is a collaboration with researchers Myeong-Je Cho at UC Berkeley’s Innovative Genomics Institute (IGI), Viswanathan Chinnusamy at the ICAR-Indian Agricultural Research Institute (ICAR-IARI), New Delhi and Ravi Maruthachalam at the Indian Institutes of Science Education and Research (IISER-Thiruvananthapuram).  The ...

Atlantic nurse sharks show faster growth patterns in Biscayne Bay than nearby Bimini, Bahamas

2026-01-28
Atlantic nurse sharks show faster growth patterns in Biscayne Bay than nearby Bimini, Bahamas A new study based on long-term monitoring data demonstrates significant differences in growth between nurse sharks off the coast of Miami and those living just across the Gulf Stream. A new study from the University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric, and Earth Science shows that juvenile Atlantic nurse sharks (Ginglymostoma cirratum) grow more rapidly as juveniles and reach smaller maximum sizes than nurse sharks in Bimini, Bahamas—locations so close that these populations have historically ...

Tests uncover unexpected humpback sensitivity to high-frequency noise

2026-01-28
University of Queensland hearing tests conducted across kilometres of ocean off the Australian coast show humpback whales react to higher frequency sounds than expected. Associate Professor Rebecca Dunlop from UQ’s School of the Environment said the discovery has implications for the mitigation of noise-related human activity along whale migration routes. “Until our studies, estimates of humpback hearing sensitivity were inferred based on the anatomy of their ears,” Dr Dunlop said. “In a series of experiments off the Sunshine Coast, we exposed whales to upsweep sounds at a range of frequencies. “We looked for changes such ...

Paracetamol and ibuprofen safe in first year of life

2026-01-28
A new landmark study supports the safety of the common painkillers paracetamol and ibuprofen in the first year of life, and finds no link to eczema or bronchiolitis, a common respiratory illness. Previous research suggested a potential link between paracetamol use in the first year of life and later eczema, asthma and other diseases. “Our study found that paracetamol and ibuprofen are incredibly safe to use in young children,” says lead researcher Professor Stuart Dalziel, Cure Kids Chair of Child Health Research at Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland, and Paediatrician at Starship Children’s Hospital. Dalziel says paracetamol ...

Major US tobacco brands flouting platform + federal policies to restrict young people’s access to their content on Instagram

2026-01-28
Leading US tobacco brands are flouting platform and federal marketing policies designed to restrict young people’s access to their content on the popular social media platform Instagram, indicates research published online in the journal Tobacco Control.   Violations include lax or missing age verification, disclosure on brand-influencer relationships, and health warnings, the findings show.   In 2024, around 2.25 million middle and high school students reported having used a tobacco or nicotine product in the past 30 days. That’s nearly 550,000 fewer than in 2023, but still leaves millions of teen nicotine users, underscoring the ongoing need for policy and prevention ...

Sleeping without pillows may lower harmful high internal eye pressure in people with glaucoma

2026-01-28
Sleeping without pillows may help lower high internal eye pressure, build-up of which causes optic nerve damage and glaucoma—the leading cause of irreversible blindness worldwide–in people with the condition, suggests preliminary research, published online in the British Journal of Ophthalmology.   Stacked pillows alter neck position, which may compress the jugular vein, thereby preventing the natural drainage of aqueous humor, explain the researchers. This fluid nourishes eye tissues without a blood supply like the cornea and lens and helps maintain eye shape and pressure.   Internal eye pressure, formally ...

More than just ‘daydreaming’ – dissociation is the mind’s survival tactic

2026-01-28
The word ‘dissociation’ has grown in popularity and become embedded in everyday language, but while the term has gained traction in popular culture and mental health advocacy, misconceptions persist – including some which are harmful, experts say. Some of the myths – that it happens all the time and is the same as daydreaming or zoning out, or on the other hand, is really rare or fictitious – can be particularly damaging. Dissociation, explain the editors of Working with Dissociation in Clinical Practice, is far more complex. The editors, Helena Crockford, Melanie Goodwin and Paul Langthorne, ...

Researchers identify genetic blueprint of mania in bipolar disorder

2026-01-28
Under Embargo until 00.01 GMT Wednesday 28 January 2026 Researchers at King’s College London and the University of Florence have, for the first time, identified the specific genetic blueprint of mania, the defining feature of bipolar disorder. Bipolar disorder is one of the most severe and complex psychiatric conditions, affecting around 2% of people worldwide. While episodes of depression, psychosis and other symptoms are common, mania is what distinguishes bipolar disorder from other mental illnesses. Mania is a state of persistently elevated or irritable mood ...

Delivery of magnetic energy to the brain is a cost-effective treatment option for patients with depression, finds a new study

2026-01-28
A major new study has found that transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), which applies magnetic energy to the brain, can be a cost-effective treatment option for the NHS in treating moderate and severe forms of depression that have not responded to other treatments. The economic analysis, which is published in BMJ Mental Health, compared TMS to usual care in specialist mental health services, and found that TMS reduces depressive symptoms, eases pressures on informal carers and on NHS resources, and helps people get back to work. TMS represents an investment in care that recovers its costs over time, primarily from savings to the wider health service and from ...

Pennington Biomedical’s Dr. Candida Rebello secures $3. 7 million NIH grant to study muscle retention in older adults

2026-01-27
Pennington Biomedical Research Center scientist Dr. Candida Rebello recently secured a $3.7 million, five-year grant from NIH’s National Institute on Aging to explore lifestyle-focused care strategies to reduce excess body fat and declining muscle mass in older adults with obesity, also known as sarcopenic obesity. The grant will facilitate the planning and structure of the clinical trial laid out in her project “Lifestyle intervention to improve muscle function in older adults.” Older adults with obesity face a combined challenge of excess weight and declining muscle mass and strength. To date, the ...

Badged up for success

2026-01-27
What if earning a Ph.D. also came with proof of strong communication skills, not just research expertise? Graduate students and postdoctoral fellows in the South Carolina Science Writing Initiative for Trainees (SC-SWIFT) at the MUSC College of Graduate Studies (CGS) are gaining exactly that. Along with their degrees, they are earning digital badges that show they can clearly explain science to people outside of the lab. Established in 2016, SC-SWIFT offers interns the opportunity to write and publish news stories and releases on recent, high-impact MUSC research. In 2023, it also began offering a tiered digital badge program in science communications, ...

FAU leaps ahead as state’s first university to host an onsite quantum computer

2026-01-27
Florida Atlantic University will be the first university in Florida to publicly host a large, dedicated quantum computer on site. Today, FAU signed an agreement with D-Wave Quantum Inc. (NYSE: QBTS), to acquire and install an Advantage2 annealing quantum computer on the university’s Boca Raton campus, aiming to accelerate and solidify the state of Florida’s position as a leader in quantum computing. The Advantage2 system deployment, expected later this year, will serve as the foundation of a new partnership with D-Wave, the only dual-platform quantum computing company, providing annealing ...
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