24/7 News Coverage
November 10, 2016
EPIDEMICS
Ebola adapted to better infect humans during 2013-2016 epidemic
London, UK (SPX) Nov 08, 2016
Researchers have identified mutations in Ebola virus that emerged during the 2013-2016 Ebola virus epidemic in West Africa that increased the ability of the virus to infect human cells, two independent teams of researchers are reporting November 3 in Cell. "Ebola virus is thought to circulate in an unknown animal reservoir and to only rarely cross over into people. When the virus does cross over, the effect has been devastating to those people who are infected. Until recently, the human dise ... read more

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SPACE MEDICINE

Laser particles could provide sharper images of tissues
A new imaging technique developed by scientists at MIT, Harvard University, and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) aims to illuminate cellular structures in deep tissue and other dense and opaque ... more
INTERN DAILY

Towards better hip replacements
Some potentially good news for aging Baby Boomers: researchers believe that they have developed a hip replacement that will last longer and create fewer problems for the people who receive them than ... more
INTERNET SPACE

Rewritable material could help reduce paper waste
Even in today's digital age, the world still relies on paper and ink, most of which ends up in landfills or recycling centers. To reduce this waste, scientists have now developed a low-cost, environ ... more
INTERN DAILY


INTERN DAILY

New coating is too slippery for bacteria to grow on
It's hard for biofilm to develop on the surface of an object if bacteria can't latch on to it. Scientists believe a new, ultra-low adhesive coating could thwart bacterial growth before it starts by making medical implants and other devices extra slippery. ... more


SPACE MEDICINE

Restoring the sense of touch in amputees using natural signals of the nervous system
Scientists at the University of Chicago and Case Western Reserve University have found a way to produce realistic sensations of touch in two human amputees by directly stimulating the nervous system ... more

Cryogenic Buyer's Guide


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SPACE MEDICINE

For the first time, brain surface stimulation provides 'touch' feedback to direct movement
In the quest to restore movement to people with spinal cord injuries, researchers have focused on getting brain signals to disconnected nerves and muscles that no longer receive messages that would ... more
SPACE MEDICINE

How nanoscience will improve our health and lives in the coming years
Nanoscience research involves molecules that are only 1/100th the size of cancer cells and that have the potential to profoundly improve the quality of our health and our lives. Now nine prominent n ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
New MachLab rocket test site launches UK into next phase of space engineering
Ukraine's anti-graft body says new bill restores independence
Iran meets European powers amid threats of UN sanctions snapback
SPACE MEDICINE

Watching the brain in action
Watching millions of neurons in the brain interacting with each other is the ultimate dream of neuroscientists! A new imaging method now makes it possible to observe the activation of large neural c ... more
SPACE MEDICINE

Quantum leap in the reliability of mass spectrometry-based proteomics
Modern mass spectrometry systems enable scientists to routinely determine the quantitative composition of cells or tissue samples. However, different analysis software packages often produce differe ... more
SPACE MEDICINE

Feeling the Rhythm
Many astronauts play instruments, and some have even made music in space. Few have danced in space, though, perhaps because crew members find it difficult to tap their toes when weightless. Or it co ... more
Cryogenic Buyer's Guide
6th Annual Modular Construction Summit for Oil and Gas Agenda - December 7-9 - Houston Nuclear Plant Digitalization Conference - Nov 15-16 - Charlotte NC USA
SPACE MEDICINE

3D-printed organ-on-a-chip with integrated sensors
Harvard University researchers have made the first entirely 3D-printed organ-on-a-chip with integrated sensing. Built by a fully automated, digital manufacturing procedure, the 3D-printed heart-on-a ... more
EPIDEMICS

Driving mosquito evolution to fight malaria
One of the frustrations of fighting malaria is that mosquitoes evolve resistance to the insecticides used to kill them. Now researchers from Exeter University in the United Kingdom and the Universit ... more
24/7 News Coverage
Australia's mammal megafauna face long-term decline from extinctions and invasive species
Alien life clues may emerge from deep sea volcanic vents on Earth
Seismic signatures reveal fragmentation patterns of fireball meteoroids
EPIDEMICS

Not 'patient zero': the origins of US AIDS epidemic
A labelling error and reckless media hype in the 1980s led to unjustly branding a gay airline employee as "Patient Zero" in the US AIDS epidemic, scientific and historical sleuthing detailed Wednesday. ... more
EPIDEMICS

Tobacco plants engineered to manufacture high yields of malaria drug
In 2015, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded in part for the discovery of artemisinin, a plant-derived compound that's proven to be a lifesaver in treating malaria. Yet many people ... more
SPACE MEDICINE

In a first, brain computer interface helps paralyzed man feel again
Imagine being in an accident that leaves you unable to feel any sensation in your arms and fingers. Now imagine regaining that sensation, a decade later, through a mind-controlled robotic arm that i ... more
SPACE MEDICINE

Brand-new cochlear implant technology born from frictional electricity
DGIST Professor Hongsoo Choi(Department of Robotics Engineering) and his research team developed the world's first artificial basilar membrane that mimics the cochlear function by application of the ... more
EPIDEMICS

Haiti sees 800 new cholera cases after hurricane
Haiti recorded nearly 800 cases of cholera the week after it was ravaged by Hurricane Matthew, the World Health Organization (WHO) said Wednesday, as health officials grapple to contain the disease. ... more

EPIDEMICS

A promising step toward controlling Zika virus and dengue fever
Five UCLA researchers were part of an international team that has used X-rays to reveal the structure of a molecule that is toxic to disease-carrying mosquitoes. The findings move the scientific wor ... more
SPACE MEDICINE

DARPA Helps Paralyzed Man Feel Again Using a Brain-Controlled Robotic Arm
A DARPA-funded research team has demonstrated for the first time in a human a technology that allows an individual to experience the sensation of touch directly in the brain through a neural interfa ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
NASA's X-59 moves under its own power
Sri Lanka orders Singapore shipowner to pay US$1 bn over marine disaster
More than 80% of Tuvalu seeks Australian climate visa




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EPIDEMICS

Indian capital's zoo closes over bird flu scare

EPIDEMICS

Devils' milk could fight superbugs: Australia scientists

DISASTER MANAGEMENT

UN worried over attacks on aid convoys in hurricane-hit Haiti

SPACE MEDICINE

New smart textile is the muscle behind next generation devices

EPIDEMICS

Tuberculosis epidemic larger than previously thought

EPIDEMICS

WHO to send 1 mln cholera vaccine doses to hurricane-hit Haiti

SPACE MEDICINE

Sensor material could enable more sensitive readings of biological signals

EPIDEMICS

After hurricane, Haiti confronts cholera outbreak

SPACE MEDICINE

Samsung's bio-drug unit to raise $2 bn in upcoming IPO

FLORA AND FAUNA

Scientists discover mechanisms of shape-shifting sea cucumbers

Deakin builds world-first robotic surgical system with sense of touch

X-ray free-electron laser is aiding the fight against Zika-carrying mosquitoes

To produce biopharmaceuticals on demand, just add water

All global trade banned in endangered pangolins

Aerial pesticide 'key driver' of Zika's end in Miami: US

One Billion Base Pairs Sequenced on the Space Station

New Research Collaboration Explores Microbiome of the Space Station

UN mobilizes to stop super-bugs

Bill Gates: Disease fight is tough but progress is 'incredible'

Global Fund collects almost $13 bn to fight AIDS, malaria and TB

Antarctica Provides ICE to Study Behavior Effects in Astronauts

Cold plasma will heal non-healing wounds

Brain-sensing technology enables typing at 12 words per minute

World must ready for global microcephaly 'epidemic': study

Setting a Safe Course for Gene Editing Research

Engineers battle superbugs with star-shaped 'peptide polymers'

Life-altering science moves fast, sparking debate

Millions of US bees die from spray to fight Zika mosquitoes

New chemistry technique simplifies drug-making

Reconstructing the 6th century plague from a victim



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