24/7 News Coverage
January 31, 2018
SPACE MEDICINE
Soft, self-healing devices mimic biological muscles



Boulder CO (SPX) Jan 31, 2018
In the basement of the Engineering Center at the University of Colorado Boulder, a group of researchers is working to create the next generation of robots. Instead of the metallic droids you may be imagining, they are developing robots made from soft materials that are more similar to biological systems. Such soft robots contain tremendous potential for future applications as they adapt to dynamic environments and are well-suited to closely interact with humans. A central challenge in this field k ... read more

SPACE MEDICINE
Human genome decoded with pocket-sized device
Paris (AFP) Jan 29, 2018
Scientists used a portable device no bigger than a cellphone to sequence the most complete human genome ever assembled with a single technology, according to a study published Monday. ... more
EPIDEMICS
Plague outbreak in Madagascar revived dread of a killer
Antananarivo (AFP) Jan 26, 2018
Most inhabitants of Madagascar thought the plague was a footnote of medical history until the disease dramatically returned last year, slaying more than 200 people. ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
First monkeys cloned by process that made Dolly the sheep
Beijing (AFP) Jan 24, 2018
Scientists in China have created the first monkeys cloned by the same process that produced Dolly the sheep more than 20 years ago, a breakthrough that could boost medical research into human diseases. ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
New robot can help treat rare birth defect
Sheffield UK (SPX) Jan 23, 2018
Researchers at the University of Sheffield and Boston's Children Hospital, Harvard Medical School have created a robot that can be implanted into the body to aid the treatment of oesophageal atresia ... more


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EPIDEMICS
Scientists find new clues about 'wave after wave' of germs that killed the Aztecs
Washington (UPI) Jan 18, 2018
Scientists have uncovered new clues to the germs responsible for killing millions of native people in 16th century Mexico. Still, unanswered questions remain. ... more
EPIDEMICS
'Mutant flu' could lead to more effective vaccine: study
Miami (AFP) Jan 18, 2018
Experiments in lab animals have shown signs of success for a newly engineered flu virus that may lead one day to a more effective vaccine, researchers said Thursday. ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Biodegradable sensor could help doctors monitor serious health conditions
Storrs CT (SPX) Jan 17, 2018
UConn engineers have created a biodegradable pressure sensor that could help doctors monitor chronic lung disease, swelling of the brain, and other medical conditions before dissolving harmlessly in ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Potential brain-machine interface for hand paralysis
Washington DC (SPX) Jan 16, 2018
A brain-machine interface that combines brain stimulation with a robotic device controlling hand movement increases the output of pathways connecting the brain and spinal cord, according to a study ... more
INTERN DAILY
Women who work nights face higher cancer risk: study
Miami (AFP) Jan 8, 2018
Women who regularly work the night shift in Europe and North America may face a 19 percent higher risk of cancer than those who work during the day, said a study Monday. ... more
ROBO SPACE
Stingray soft robot could lead to bio-inspired robotics
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Jan 15, 2018
UCLA bioengineering professor Ali Khademhosseini has led the development of a tissue-based soft robot that mimics the biomechanics of a stingray. The new technology could lead to advances in bio-ins ... more
SPACE TRAVEL
Life-saving NASA Communications System Turns 20
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jan 10, 2018
NASA's Tracking and Data Relay Satellites (TDRS) don't just enable data from spacecraft to reach Earth - they provide internet and even telemedicine to researchers at the South Pole. The South Pole ... more


With headbands, sensor socks, wearable tech seeks medical inroads

EPIDEMICS
TSRI scientists discover workings of first promising Marburg virus treatment
La Jolla CA (SPX) Jan 11, 2018
With a mortality rate of up to 88 percent, Marburg virus can rip through a community in days. In 2005, an outbreak of Marburg virus struck a pediatric ward in the country of Angola. With no treatmen ... more
INTERN DAILY
Pharmaceuticals are triggering microbial resistance in urban streams
Washington (UPI) Jan 9, 2018
Microbial communities in urban streams are developing resistance to drugs as a result of pharmaceutical pollution. ... more
EPIDEMICS
MSF warns of mounting cholera cases in flood-hit Kinshasa
Kinshasa (AFP) Jan 9, 2018
Floods and mudslides in the Democratic Republic of Congo's chaotic capital Kinshasa have caused cholera cases to rise over five-fold to more than 100 a week, medical charity MSF said Tuesday. ... more
INTERN DAILY



SPACE MEDICINE
Weightlessness increases astronauts' body temperature
Berlin, Germany (SPX) Jan 08, 2018
Astronauts float weightlessly through space, and the condition of weightlessness is something many would love to experience. However, in addition to producing both physical and psychological stress, ... more
INTERN DAILY
Congress demands action from VA on allegations of doctors with revoked licenses
Washington (UPI) Jan 3, 2018
More than two dozen members of Congress sent a letter to the Department of Veterans Affairs before the Christmas break demanding the agency take swift action on allegations it has illegally hired doctors with revoked medical licenses. ... more
EPIDEMICS
DR Congo mourns flood victims as cholera fears mount
Kinshasa (AFP) Jan 8, 2018
DR Congo started two days of national mourning Monday for 48 people killed by floods and mudslides in the capital Kinshasa amid concerns of a cholera outbreak in the vast city of 10 million. ... more
EPIDEMICS
Preventing the next epidemic in Madagascar
Washington DC (SPX) Jan 05, 2018
The peak epidemic season for plague in Madagascar is fast approaching and the severity of these outbreaks could be significantly reduced with improvements to their public health system, argues Matth ... more
EPIDEMICS
Going to the Source to Prevent Viral Disease Outbreaks
Washington DC (SPX) Jan 05, 2018
Avian influenza (H7N9). MERS coronavirus. Ebola. Hepatitis E. Yellow Fever. Lassa. Zika. When you consider the viral infectious diseases that emerged and reemerged around the world in 2017 alone, wh ... more
EPIDEMICS
Supercharged antibiotics could turn tide against superbugs
Brisbane, Australia (SPX) Jan 08, 2018
An old drug supercharged by University of Queensland researchers has emerged as a new antibiotic that could destroy some of the world's most dangerous superbugs. The supercharge technique , le ... more


Silver nanoparticles take spectroscopy to new dimension

SPACE MEDICINE
Growing organs a few ink drops at a time
Osaka, Japan (SPX) Dec 28, 2017
Printed replacement human body parts might seem like science fiction, but this technology is rapidly becoming a reality with the potential to greatly contribute to regenerative medicine. Before any ... more
EPIDEMICS
Cholera hotspots found at Uganda's borders and lakes
Washington DC (SPX) Jan 02, 2018
Uganda is among the countries is sub-Saharan Africa where cholera remains a recurring problem, despite advances in science and technology for prevention, detection and treatment of the infectious di ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Scientists engineer 3D shapes from living tissue
Washington (UPI) Dec 28, 2017
Scientists at the University of California, San Francisco have developed a technique for creating 3D shapes out of living tissue. ... more
INTERN DAILY
A safer route to ultrasonic therapy
Durham NC (SPX) Jan 03, 2018
Researchers at Duke University have discovered a way to enhance the effectiveness and safety of sonogenetics or ultrasonic modulation, emerging techniques that use sound waves to control the behavio ... more





Displaced Iraqi women turn to handicrafts for survival
Samarra, Iraq (AFP) Jan 26, 2018
Threading beads onto a fishing line to make a sparkling ornament, Lamia Rahim is one of dozens of Iraqi women displaced by violence who have turned to handicrafts to support their families. "It has been some time since we were displaced and my husband can't find work," the mother-of-four told AFP. "It was down to me to take care of the family." Rahim, 41, is part of a local initiativ ... more
+ Nuclear concerns push 'Doomsday Clock' closer to midnight
+ Mammals and birds could have best shot at surviving climate change
+ As Paris mops up, warning of more floods in Europe's future
+ US 'cautiously optimistic' on Philippine drug war rights record
+ Stressed-out Dhaka to get 'Anger Management Park'
+ Climate engineering, once started, would have severe impacts if stopped
+ Jihadist corpses poison life in Iraq's Mosul
Pentagon probes fitness-app use after map shows sensitive sites
Washington (AFP) Jan 29, 2018
The US military is reviewing how troops use fitness trackers and other devices, the Pentagon said Monday after an exercise-logging company published a map revealing potentially sensitive information about US and allied forces in places including the Middle East. The map, made by Strava Labs, shows the movements of its app users around the world, indicating the intensity of travel along a giv ... more
+ China sends twin BeiDou-3 navigation satellites into space
+ 18 satellites in exactEarth's real-time constellation now in service
+ 'Quantum radio' may aid communications and mapping indoors, underground and underwater
+ Raytheon to provide GPS-guided artillery shells
+ DARPA Subterranean Challenge Aims to Revolutionize Underground Capabilities
+ New satellite tracking of in-flight aircraft to improve safety
+ US military imagines war without GPS


Modern human brain organization emerged only recently
Leipzig, Germany (SPX) Jan 29, 2018
Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, reveal how and when the typical globular brain shape of modern humans evolved. Their analyses based on changes in endocranial size and shape in Homo sapiens fossils show that brain organization, and possibly brain function, evolved gradually within our species and unexpectedly reached modern conditions o ... more
+ First came Homo sapiens, then came the modern brain
+ Evolving sets of gene regulators explain some of our differences from other primates
+ Fossil found in Israel suggests Homo sapiens left Africa 180,000 years ago
+ Cultural evolution has not freed hunter-gatherers from environmental forcing
+ Bonobos prefer jerks
+ Unlike people, bonobos don't 'look for the helpers'
+ Study: When the going gets tough, women are more resilient than men
Breakthrough study shows how plants sense the world
Birmingham AL (SPX) Jan 23, 2018
Plants lack eyes and ears, but they can still see, hear, smell and respond to environmental cues and dangers - especially to virulent pathogens. They do this with the aid of hundreds of membrane proteins that can sense microbes or other stresses. Only a small portion of these sensing proteins have been studied through classical genetics, and knowledge on how these sensors function by formi ... more
+ Humans get in the way of mammal movement
+ Bacteria under your feet
+ How did we evolve to live longer?
+ Why don't turtles still have tail spikes?
+ Facebook top choice for Philippines wildlife traders: monitor
+ Expert unlocks mechanics of how snakes move in a straight line
+ New technology will create brain wiring diagrams
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Plague outbreak in Madagascar revived dread of a killer
Antananarivo (AFP) Jan 26, 2018
Most inhabitants of Madagascar thought the plague was a footnote of medical history until the disease dramatically returned last year, slaying more than 200 people. Fear and anxiety rippled across the Indian Ocean island nation. "People were afraid to come to hospital - they were afraid of catching the plague," recalled Professor Mamy Randria, head of the infectious diseases service at ... more
+ 'Mutant flu' could lead to more effective vaccine: study
+ Scientists find new clues about 'wave after wave' of germs that killed the Aztecs
+ TSRI scientists discover workings of first promising Marburg virus treatment
+ MSF warns of mounting cholera cases in flood-hit Kinshasa
+ DR Congo mourns flood victims as cholera fears mount
+ Supercharged antibiotics could turn tide against superbugs
+ Preventing the next epidemic in Madagascar
EU envoy urges China to release Swedish book publisher
Beijing (AFP) Jan 24, 2018
The European Union's ambassador to China urged Beijing on Wednesday to immediately release a book publisher after the Swedish citizen was snatched for a second time, this time while accompanied by Swedish diplomats. The case of Hong Kong-based Gui Minhai, 53, has sparked a diplomatic row between Stockholm and Beijing, with Chinese authorities declining to give any details about his whereabou ... more
+ Hong Kong democracy candidate cleared to run in fraught vote
+ Leading Hong Kong democracy activist banned from vote
+ China's #MeToo movement emerges, testing censors' limits
+ China rights lawyer charged with 'inciting subversion'
+ Ex-governor urges British PM to speak out on Hong Kong in China visit
+ Chinese officials staging 'takeover' of Tibetan Buddhist academy: HRW
+ Anger over second 'snatching' of bookseller in China


Thai navy says 11 million pill haul a record from Laos
Bangkok (AFP) Jan 25, 2018
Thailand's navy has seized 11 million meth pills from traffickers crossing from Laos via the Mekong River, a record bust from a communist state that is emerging as a key Asian drug route. Authorities pounced as the boat landed in Nakhon Phanom on the Thai side of the Mekong, which acts as a natural border with Laos. Poor and remote, Nakhon Phanom is a notorious hub for smuggling of peopl ... more
+ Huge Australia-bound cocaine haul siezed by French navy
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Japan, China talks end with friendship vows but no breakthrough
Beijing (AFP) Jan 28, 2018
Japan's foreign minister met China's top leadership Sunday for rare diplomatic talks that ended with mutual vows to improve their chilly ties but little in the way of concrete proposals. The world's second and third largest economies have a fraught relationship, held back by longstanding disputes over maritime claims and Japan's wartime legacy. Taro Kono's visit to China was the first by ... more
+ NATO takes Russian meddling in polls 'very seriously'
+ Moscow says UK defence minister worthy 'of Monty Python'
+ Russia doing 'absolutely nothing' to end Ukraine conflict: US envoy
+ Trump touts 'America First' to sceptical Davos elite
+ South Korea demands Japan close museum on disputed islands
+ Exiled Maldives leader warns over China, radical Islam
+ Mattis heads to Asia to draw a contrast with assertive China
Scientists unveil world's most powerful tractor beam
Washington (UPI) Jan 22, 2018
For the first time, scientists have developed a tractor beam capable for levitating objects larger than an acoustic wavelength. Scientists believe the breakthrough could pave the way for tractor beams powerful enough to levitate humans. Until now, larger objects trapped in acoustic tractor beams proved unstable. Acoustic waves tend to transfer some of their rotational energy to objects, ... more
+ Acoustic tractor beam could pave the way for levitating humans
+ Students design and build augmented-reality 'sandbox' to show how gravity works
+ Next-Generation GRACE Satellites Arrive at Launch Site
+ A New Window on the Universe
+ Sierras lost water weight, grew taller during drought
+ Researchers measure magnetic moment with greatest possible precision
+ Physicists make most precise measurement ever of a proton's magnetic moment


China tightens screws on social media
Beijing (AFP) Jan 28, 2018
Chinese authorities have ordered a major social media platform to curb "harmful content" more effectively as they intensify oversight of online expression - even taking aim at rap music, crude cartoons, dirty jokes and celebrity gossip. The campaign is intended not just to stamp out dissent but to ensure that all media "serves the direction of socialism". Sina Weibo has failed to comply ... more
+ Data doom: 5 steps from Davos to digital dystopia
+ China calls AU spying report 'preposterous'
+ 97 Taiwanese arrested in eastern Europe for telecom fraud
+ Russia infrastructure spying could cause 'total chaos': UK defence minister
+ Canadian professor suspected of spying for China
+ Lockheed contracted for national cyber range management
+ Lebanon must investigate claims of mass spying: rights groups
Interpol returns ex-minister wanted for corruption to Iraq
Baghdad (AFP) Jan 25, 2018
Interpol Thursday handed over to Iraq a former minister arrested in Beirut over a conviction for corruption, in a first such collaboration with the international police body, a government source said. "Former trade minister Abdel Falah al-Sudani has landed in Baghdad after having been handed over by Interpol," the source told AFP. "It's the first time that Interpol responds to a governme ... more
+ Eight dead as US-led strike hits Iraq forces
+ Iraqis maimed in battle struggle to survive as amputees
+ Facing death in Iraq, European jihadists won't get help from home
+ Three French female jihadists risk death sentence in Iraq
+ Tribal feuds spread fear in Iraq's Basra
+ IS poses threat to Iraq one month after 'liberation'
+ IS poses threat to Iraq one month after 'liberation'
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Pentagon hushes up data on Taliban in Afghan war: watchdog
Washington (AFP) Jan 30, 2018
A US government watchdog said Tuesday the Pentagon has barred it from disclosing how much of Afghanistan is under Taliban control - a significant break from past accountability that comes amid mounting security woes in the war-torn nation. At issue are the number of Afghan districts, and the populations living in them, considered to be held or influenced by the Kabul government by insurgent ... more
+ Scores dead as Turkey pursues Syria campaign; Regime air raids kill 33
+ Afrin urges Syria to intervene to stop Turkish planes overhead
+ Erdogan vows no let-up in Syria campaign as US tensions rise
+ Turkish air strikes pound Kurdish fighters in Syria
+ NATO's Afghan mission backtracks after classifying Taliban data
+ AAI Corp. to provide intelligence services in Afghanistan
+ 'Warthogs' to join air campaign in Afghanistan this month
New York unveils plans for fossil fuel divestment
New York (AFP) Jan 10, 2018
New York announced plans Wednesday to sell off $5 billion in fossil fuel investments from city pension funds after suing for billions of dollars in damages from oil companies to help fund protection against climate change. While other cities in Europe and the United States have already taken similar steps, New York hailed its move as significant as it is the biggest metropolis in the country ... more
+ French energy company EDF to replace coal in China
+ Poland opens Europe's largest coal-fired power unit
+ BHP to exit global coal body over climate change policy
+ Coal demand falling, IEA says
+ Adani drops contractor for contentious Australia mega mine
+ Scientists develop new mode of energy generation from bituminous coal
+ Battle lines drawn over coal at UN climate talks


Dairy sector trembles at EU powdered milk mountain
Herstal, Belgium (AFP) Jan 25, 2018
Hundreds of thousands of sacks of powdered milk lie stacked on pallets in a warehouse on a nondescript industrial estate in eastern Belgium: part of a vast EU stockpile that is causing dairy producers sleepless nights. The European Union, through its member states, bought up hundreds of millions of tonnes of powder from 2015 onwards in a bid to stabilise milk prices that were in freefall as ... more
+ Researchers reveal how microbes cope in phosphorus-deficient tropical soil
+ Root discovery may lead to crops that need less fertilizer
+ Ancient rice heralds a new future for rice production
+ New 'Buck' naked barley: Food, feed, brew
+ In sweet corn, workhorses win
+ New process could slash energy needs of fertilizer, nitrogen-based chemicals
+ Setback for Romanian farmer's bid to graze sheep near NATO base
Asteroid to pass by Earth in Feb.
Washington (UPI) Jan 22, 2018
A half-mile-wide asteroid is scheduled to make a close pass by Earth next month. According to NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, asteroid 2002 AJ129 will make its closest approach to Earth on Feb. 4 at 4:30 p.m. ET. The intermediate-sized space rock will fly within 2.6 million miles of Earth, roughly 10 times the distance between Earth and the moon. The asteroid was first spotted ... more
+ Asteroid 2002 AJ129 to Fly Safely Past Earth February 4
+ NASA, USGS confirm Michigan meteorite strike
+ Study identifies processes of rock formed by meteors or nuclear blasts
+ NASA's newly renamed Swift mission spies a comet slowdown
+ NASA image showcases Ceres mountain named for Kwanzaa
+ Development on muon beam analysis of organic matter in samples from space
+ Arecibo radar returns with asteroid Phaethon images
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