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Scientists identify first non-coding gene that controls cell size

2025-12-16
What keeps our cells the right size? Scientists have long puzzled over this fundamental question, since cells that are too large or too small are linked to many diseases. Until now, the genetic basis behind cell size has largely been a mystery. New research has, for the first time, identified a gene in the non-coding genome that can directly control cell size. In a study published in Nature Communications, a team at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) found that a gene called CISTR-ACT acts as a controller of ...

Demonstration of altermagnetism in RuO₂ thin films -- A new magnetic material for the AI era

2025-12-16
A joint research team from NIMS, The University of Tokyo, Kyoto Institute of Technology and Tohoku University has demonstrated that thin films of ruthenium dioxide (RuO₂) exhibit altermagnetism—the defining property of what is now recognized as the third fundamental class of magnetic materials. Altermagnets have the potential to overcome limitations associated with current magnetic random access memory using conventional ferromagnets and are attracting attention as promising materials for next-generation high-speed, high-density memory devices. In addition ...

Penn researchers awarded $25M to conduct trial using smartphones to fight heart disease

2025-12-16
PHILADELPHIA— The largest-ever study testing the effectiveness of an evidence-based approach to increasing physical activity using smartphone fitness trackers gamification to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease will launch at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and Ascension, one of the nation’s leading non-profit health systems , thanks to a $25 million award. The six-year study, funded by the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI), will build on the highly successful BE ACTIVE trial, published in 2024, which demonstrated sustained increases in daily step counts using a behavioral economics based approach ...

PCORI awards funding for new patient-centered healthcare research

2025-12-16
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Every day, Americans face health care decisions without the information needed to fully understand the potential benefits and risks of different treatment options. To help close these evidence gaps and empower individuals and their caregivers with the information needed to make more informed health care decisions, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) announced funding awards for new patient-centered comparative clinical effectiveness research (CER) studies addressing a range of adult and pediatric health concerns.   “Patient-centered comparative ...

Exploring the origins of the universe: 145 low-noise amplifiers complete ALMA telescopes

2025-12-16
The Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA) in the Chilean Andes is one of the most powerful radio telescope facilities in the world. Researchers use it to study dark and distant regions of the universe in order to better understand how stars, planets, galaxies and life itself are formed. To do this, ALMA measures the millimeter and submillimeter radiation emitted by cold molecular clouds, for example. Molecular clouds are interstellar gas clouds with a temperature of only a few tens of Kelvin, in which stars form when the density and temperature are right. ALMA has a total of 66 individual parabolic antennas with ...

Empress cicada wings help illuminate molecular structure

2025-12-16
WASHINGTON, Dec. 16, 2025 — Zoom in far enough on an empress cicada wing, and a strange landscape materializes. At the nanoscale, densely packed spires rise from the surface, covering the wing in an endless grove of bowling pins.  These spires, though, are more than just an eerie sight. The highly ordered, evenly spaced spikes can be modified to act as an optical metamaterial, using their tiny geometry to modify interactions between light waves and matter.  In AIP Advances, by AIP Publishing, researchers from China Medical University and National Taiwan University showed that these natural nanostructures can be tuned to amplify signals in molecular ...

Using sound waves to detect helium

2025-12-16
WASHINGTON, Dec. 16, 2025 — Helium leaks are hard to detect. Helium is odorless, colorless, tasteless, and does not react with other chemical substances.  Not only can we not see or smell it, but traditional gas sensors have trouble detecting the element because they rely on chemical reactions. Despite this, identifying a helium leak is still crucial, because excess helium can displace oxygen in a confined space, leaving less oxygen for people to breathe.  In Applied Physics Letters, by AIP Publishing, researchers from Nanjing University developed a device that utilizes ...

Time burden in patients with metastatic breast and ovarian cancer from clinic and home demands

2025-12-16
About The Study: With the use of a mobile app, this study captured detailed time use data among individuals with advanced ovarian and metastatic breast cancer receiving treatment. Half of participants spent approximately 7 hours per week on cancer-related tasks, with most reporting cancer-related tasks daily. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Rachel I. Vogel, PhD, email isak0023@umn.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.49957) Editor’s ...

Researchers discover bias in AI models that analyze pathology samples

2025-12-16
At a glance: A new study reveals that pathology AI models for cancer diagnosis perform unequally across demographic groups. The researchers identified three explanations for the bias and developed a tool that reduced it. The findings highlight the need to systematically check for bias in pathology AI to ensure equitable care for patients. Pathology has long been the cornerstone of cancer diagnosis and treatment. A pathologist carefully examines an ultrathin slice of human tissue under a microscope for clues that indicate the presence, type, and stage of cancer. To a human expert, looking at a swirly pink tissue sample ...

Scientists ID potential way to prevent brain injuries from triggering Alzheimer's

2025-12-16
University of Virginia School of Medicine researchers have uncovered how and why traumatic brain injury (TBI) increases the risk for Alzheimer’s disease, and their work suggests a potential way to prevent that increased risk.   John Lukens, PhD, director of UVA's Harrison Family Translational Research Center in Alzheimer's and Neurodegenerative Diseases, and his collaborators found that a single mild TBI brings about harmful changes in the brain that facilitate the onset of Alzheimer’s. But they also were able to prevent those changes in lab mice by using a hollowed-out virus to deliver repair supplies into the brain’s ...

MASTER 2nd Open Call: Execution period kick-off

2025-12-16
In April 2025, the MASTER project launched its 2nd Open Call, inviting educational institutions, content creation services engaging students in XR application testing, and SMEs or large companies (as challenge providers only) from EU Member States, associated overseas countries and territories, and third countries linked to Horizon Europe. Applicants were asked to address specific challenges and submit proposals for evaluation. Following a rigorous assessment process conducted by both internal and external experts, 24 projects were selected for funding, ...

​Algae for health in food and pharma ​

2025-12-16
​Cyanobacteria, micro- and macroalgae produce an infinite number of molecules, many of which have properties beneficial to health. They can relieve pain, alleviate inflammation, or boost our microbiome. Although there is much to uncover, the algae-based health and nutrition sector is growing.   ​The two-day summit will bring together scientists, innovators and industry leaders to explore the latest developments in algae cultivation and processing, food innovation, small molecules in pharma, and regulatory aspects. The goal is to advance the understanding of algae’s health potential and highlight ...

Advanced microrobots driven by acoustic and magnetic fields for biomedical applications

2025-12-16
Microrobots span dimensions from nanometers to sub-millimeters, can navigate biological fluids/tissues and localize to specific targets, and—owing to their miniaturization, untethered actuation, and multimodal locomotion—can access deep, narrow, and complex regions (e.g., vasculature and brain tissue) with minimal invasiveness, enabling broad prospects in targeted drug delivery, minimally invasive surgery, cell manipulation, and imaging. Yet propulsion and motion control at low Reynolds number remain fundamental challenges, motivating diverse external-field actuation schemes; while electric and optical approaches are constrained by potential cellular ...

Chicago health information leader recognized for raising CPR readiness and blood pressure awareness

2025-12-16
DALLAS, Dec. 16, 2025 — In the United States, more than 350,000 sudden cardiac arrests occur outside of the hospital every year, and 90% of them are fatal.[1] In an effort to save more lives, Laura Merrick, winner of the American Heart Association’s 2025 national Leaders of Impact™ campaign and Chicago health information leader, dedicated her campaign to preventing cardiac arrest deaths after her mom was one of the lucky 10% to survive. “My mother survived cardiac arrest because a bystander knew CPR,” said Merrick. “I kept asking myself: What can we do ...

The Intimate Animal, a new book from Kinsey Institute Executive Director Dr. Justin Garcia

2025-12-16
Why do we love who we love? Why do we stay in unfulfilling relationships and stray from rewarding ones? Is it ever a good idea to open a relationship? How has the digital age affected courtship? And why do some longtime couples crash and burn while others stay madly in love? These are just some of the questions Kinsey Institute Executive Director Dr. Justin Garcia explores in his highly anticipated new book, The Intimate Animal.   Drawing on decades of interdisciplinary research in evolutionary biology, psychology, neuroscience, anthropology, and social science, Dr. Garcia reveals the surprising science ...

When blue-collar workers lose union protection, they try self-employment

2025-12-16
In U.S. states with anti-union labor environments, workers are up to 53% more likely to start their own businesses—and blue-collar workers are more likely to do it out of necessity. A study in Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal examines how the labor environment in states with “right-to-work” (RTW) laws compared with that in neighboring states with stronger union bargaining power. “We found that the enactment of stringent anti-union laws reduces employees’ incentives to stay ...

New video dataset to advance AI for health care

2025-12-16
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have launched Observer, the first multimodal medical dataset to capture anonymized, real-time interactions between patients and clinicians. Much like the medical drama The Pitt, which portrays life in the emergency room, Observer lets outsiders peer inside primary care clinics — only, in this case, none of the filmed interactions are fictional.  Until now, the data available to health care researchers has been limited to traces left behind after a visit: qualitative information like clinician notes and quantitative measurements like patient vital signs. None of these sources ...

MEA-based graph deviation network for early autism syndrome signatures in human forebrain organoids

2025-12-16
Multi-electrode arrays (MEAs) provide a noninvasive interface with sub-millisecond temporal resolution and long-term, multi-site recordings, enabling mechanistic investigations of in vitro human brain development and disease-related dysfunction; nevertheless, conventional MEA pipelines largely rely on firing/burst statistics or channel-/waveform-level features, which can be insufficient to systematically characterize and interpret network-level organization and its subtle pathological deviations. Accordingly, representing ...

New modeling approach sheds light on rare gut disease

2025-12-16
During development of the digestive system, a complex network of nerves forms around it, creating a “second brain” — the enteric nervous system (ENS) — which controls the movement of food and waste through the gut. But a combination of changes in the molecular letters making up certain genetic instructions can prevent these nerves from developing properly, leading to Hirschsprung disease (HSCR), a painful and often dangerous condition in which babies develop intestinal blockage and are unable to pass stool. A study led by NYU Langone Health researchers reveals a new strategy to ...

Study documents potentially hazardous flame retardants in firefighter gear

2025-12-16
Some firefighter gear is manufactured with chemicals called brominated flame retardants that could pose a risk to firefighter health, according to a new study published in Environmental Science & Technology Letters on Dec. 16. The study is the first published research in the U.S. to investigate and document the use of brominated flame retardants in firefighter turnout gear, worn for protection on the job. The findings could inform fire department decision-making when it comes to keeping or replacing gear. Structural firefighters — those working in the built environment — wear turnout gear consisting of three layers: a flame-resistant outer shell; a ...

Can certain bacteria regulate aging of the immune system and its related alterations?

2025-12-16
The process of aging is associated with a decline in immune functions and persistent low-level inflammation. Now, researchers from Japan have discovered a strain of Lentilactobacillus capable of preventing and even reversing aging-related immune alterations. Feeding aged mice with heat-inactivated YRC2606 resulted in lowered levels of inflammatory cytokines and signaling proteins. These findings point to the possibility of a functional food intervention that has the potential to benefit an increasingly aging population. The health benefits of consuming fermented milk products have been passed down through generations, without clearly understanding ...

AI model helps diagnose often undetected heart disease from simple EKG

2025-12-16
Doctors may soon be able to diagnose an elusive form of heart disease within seconds by using an AI model developed at University of Michigan, according to a recent study. Researchers trained the model to detect coronary microvascular dysfunction, a complex condition that requires advanced imaging techniques to diagnose, using a common electrocardiogram. Their prediction tool significantly outperformed earlier AI models in nearly every diagnostic task, including predicting myocardial flow reserve, the gold standard for ...

There are fewer online trolls than people think

2025-12-16
Americans overestimate online toxicity, believing 43% of Reddit users post severely toxic comments when only 3% actually do, and this misperception inculcates pessimism about society. Angela Y. Lee, Eric Neumann, and colleagues surveyed 1,090 American adults via the online platform CloudResearch Connect to compare people’s perceptions of harmful online behavior with platform-level data from past research. Participants overestimated the prevalence of Reddit users posting toxic content by 13-fold and overestimated the prevalence of Facebook users sharing false news by 5-fold, guessing 47% of users post false news while only 8.5% actually do. Even when participants ...

Cell membrane fluctuations produce electricity

2025-12-16
Researchers develop a theoretical framework that shows how living cell membranes can generate electricity from molecular fluctuations. Pradeep Sharma and colleagues created a model demonstrating that active biological processes, such as protein dynamics and ATP hydrolysis, create membrane fluctuations that could produce transmembrane voltages via flexoelectricity. Such transmembrane voltages can reach 90 millivolts. Voltage changes can happen on millisecond timescales, matching typical action potential curves for neurons. The authors’ framework predicts that active membrane ...

Jeonbuk National University study shows positive parenting can protect adolescents against self-harm

2025-12-16
Self-harm refers to intentionally injuring one’s own body as a coping mechanism to emotional distress. It manifests in many forms and has serious consequences not only on physical health but also on mental health. Self-harm among adolescents is becoming a significant public issue. It is more common in adolescence than any other age group, and adolescent self-harm experiences can increase the likelihood of repeated self-harm, suicide risk, substance use in adulthood, and long-term mental health difficulties. Among ...
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