24/7 News Coverage
April 06, 2018
SPACE MEDICINE
Nonsurgical neural interfaces could expand use of neurotechnology



Washington DC (SPX) Mar 29, 2018
Over the past two decades, the international biomedical research community has demonstrated increasingly sophisticated ways to allow a person's brain to communicate with a device, allowing breakthroughs aimed at improving quality of life, such as access to computers and the internet, and more recently control of a prosthetic limb. DARPA has been at the forefront of this research. The state of the art in brain-system communications has employed invasive techniques that allow precise, high-quality c ... read more

SPACE MEDICINE
Compact fiber optic sensor offers sensitive analysis in narrow spaces
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 21, 2018
Researchers have developed a new flexible sensor with high sensitivity that is designed to perform variety of chemical and biological analyses in very small spaces. The sensor's small size means tha ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Scientists mimic neural tissue in Army-funded research
Research Triangle Park NC (SPX) Mar 18, 2018
U.S. Army-funded researchers at Brandeis University have discovered a process for engineering next-generation soft materials with embedded chemical networks that mimic the behavior of neural tissue. ... more
EPIDEMICS
New model links yellow fever in Africa to climate, environment
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 19, 2018
The burden of yellow fever in any given area is known to be heavily dependent on climate, particularly rainfall and temperature which can impact both mosquito life cycle and viral replication. ... more
INTERN DAILY
Saving lives with platypus milk
Canberra, Australia (SPX) Mar 16, 2018
A breakthrough by Australian scientists has brought the introduction of an unlikely hero in the global fight against antibiotic resistance a step closer; the humble platypus. Due to its unique featu ... more


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SPACE MEDICINE
Changed Man With 'Space Genes': Alterations in US Astronaut's Body Startled NASA
Washington (Sputnik) Mar 15, 2018
After a year in space International Space Station (ISS) astronaut Scott Kelly returned home slimmer, taller and with younger cells. However, some changes were not for the better. NASA research ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
UH optometrist investigates changes in eye structure in astronauts
Houston TX (SPX) Mar 14, 2018
Astronauts who spend time aboard the International Space Station return to Earth with changes to the structure of their eyes which could impact their vision. NASA has studied the phenomenon, known a ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Researchers uncover way to restore movement sensation in upper limb amputation patients
Cleveland OH (SPX) Mar 15, 2018
A team of researchers led by Cleveland Clinic has published first-of-its-kind findings in Science Translational Medicine on a new method of restoring natural movement sensation in patients with pros ... more
SPACEMART
ESA Astronaut will test CIMON aboard the ISS Watson AI
Bremen, Germany (SPX) Mar 06, 2018
Airbus, in cooperation with IBM, is developing CIMON (Crew Interactive MObile CompanioN), an AI-based assistant for astronauts for the DLR Space Administration. The technology demonstrator, which is ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Culturing cheaper stem cells
Kyoto, Japan (SPX) Mar 07, 2018
Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) can infinitely self-renew and develop into all major cell types in the body, making them important for organ repair and replacement. But culturing them in large ... more
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SPACE MEDICINE
Slowing Biological Time to Extend the Golden Hour for Lifesaving Treatment
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 06, 2018
When a Service member suffers a traumatic injury or acute infection, the time from event to first medical treatment is usually the single most significant factor in determining the outcome between s ... more
TECH SPACE
Reaching new heights in laser-accelerated ion energy
Strathclyde UK (SPX) Mar 06, 2018
A laser-driven ion acceleration scheme, developed in research led at the University of Strathclyde, could lead to compact ion sources for established and innovative applications in science, medicine ... more
WAR REPORT
UN chief calls for access for further aid convoys in Syria
United Nations, United States (AFP) March 6, 2018
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called Tuesday for aid convoys to have immediate access in Syria a day after air strikes cut short deliveries of food and medicine to Eastern Ghouta. ... more
INTERNET SPACE
Mobile network equipment makers eye 5G windfall
Barcelona (AFP) March 1, 2018
Struggling mobile network equipment makers are eyeing a possible boom in business from the first rollout of super-fast 5G wireless networks. ... more
EPIDEMICS
DARPA Names Researchers Working to Halt Outbreaks in 60 Days or Less
Washington DC (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
The increasing threat of infectious diseases is intensifying the need for breakthrough technologies and capabilities to protect first responders and equip them with therapeutics that can halt the im ... more


New technology may protect troops from blast-induced brain injury

SPACE MEDICINE
How spacecraft testing enabled bone marrow research
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Feb 23, 2018
In the 1970s, a NASA employee stepped up to a challenge posed by the National Institutes of Health or NIH: to freeze bone marrow. "Most people don't know that NASA's work isn't just aerospace, ... more
INTERN DAILY



SPACE MEDICINE
Waterbeds simulate weightlessness to help Skinsuits combat back pain in space
Paris (ESA) Feb 22, 2018
Astronauts tend to become taller in weightlessness - causing back pain and making it difficult to fit into spacesuits. Astronauts may be more likely to suffer from 'slipped discs' after landing. ... more
INTERN DAILY
Zika virus could help combat brain cancer
Sao Paulo, Brazil (SPX) Feb 22, 2018
Zika virus, feared for causing microcephaly in babies whose mothers were infected during pregnancy by attacking the cells that will give rise to the fetus's cerebral cortex, could be an alternative ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Scientists develop biocompatible anti-burn nanofibers
Moscow, Russia (SPX) Feb 16, 2018
A group of NUST MISIS's young scientists, for the very first time in Russia, has presented a new therapeutic material based on nanofibers made of polycaprolactone modified with a thin-film antibacte ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Repetition key to self-healing, flexible medical devices
University Park PA (SPX) Feb 13, 2018
Medical devices powered by synthetic proteins created from repeated sequences of proteins may be possible, according to materials science and biotechnology experts, who looked at material inspired b ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
New malleable 'electronic skin' self-healable, recyclable
Boulder CO (SPX) Feb 12, 2018
University of Colorado Boulder researchers have developed a new type of malleable, self-healing and fully recyclable "electronic skin" that has applications ranging from robotics and prosthetic deve ... more
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24/7 War News Coverage



Trump to send thousands of troops to border as Mexico spat heats up
Washington (AFP) April 5, 2018
US President Donald Trump on Thursday said he would send thousands of National Guard troops to the southern border, amid a widening spat with his Mexican counterpart Enrique Pena Nieto. The anti-immigration president said the National Guard deployment would range from 2,000 to 4,000 troops, and he would "probably" keep many personnel on the border until his wall is built - spelling out a le ... more
+ After 'Trump Effect,' illegal Mexico border crossings rebound
+ Trump vows to deploy military to Mexican border
+ Army to withdraw from street patrols in Guatemala
+ Boat carrying Rohingya stops on Thai island: official
+ Where Chinese space station Tiangong falls to Earth still a mystery
+ In Fukushima ghost town, a factory on the road to rebirth
+ Fearing worst, French 'preppers' gear up for the Day After
China sends twin BeiDou-3 navigation satellites into space
Xichang (XNA) Apr 03, 2018
China on Friday sent twin satellites into space with a single carrier rocket, adding two more members for its domestic BeiDou Navigation Satellite System (BDS). The Long March-3B carrier rocket lifted off from Xichang Satellite Launch Center in southwest China's Sichuan Province at 1:56 a.m. The launch was the 269th mission for the Long March rocket family. The twin satellites are co ... more
+ Indra Expands With Four New Stations The Ground Segment Managing Galileo Satellites
+ GMV leads a project for application of EGNOS to maritime safety
+ Why Russia is one step ahead of US Army's plans for future GPS
+ Europe claims 100 million users for Galileo satnav system
+ Airbus selected by ESA for EGNOS V3 program
+ Pentagon probes fitness-app use after map shows sensitive sites
+ China sends twin BeiDou-3 navigation satellites into space


Inner ear provides clues to human dispersal
Zurich, Switzerland (SPX) Apr 06, 2018
The early migration of humans out of Africa and across the world can be proven using genetic and morphological analyses. However, morphological data from the skull and skeleton often only allow limited conclusions to be drawn about the geographical dispersal pattern, especially because of the many ways in which the human skeleton adapts to local environmental conditions. Now, an internatio ... more
+ Study explains Neanderthal's uniquely shaped face
+ Parts of the Amazon thought uninhabited were home to a million people
+ Scientists find 13,000-year-old footprints in Canada
+ Progress in quest to develop a human memory prosthesis
+ How infighting turns toxic for chimpanzees
+ Being human: Antony Gormley's new bodies
+ When the Mediteranean Sea flooded human settlements
First population-scale sequencing project explores platypus history
Oxford UK (SPX) Apr 05, 2018
The platypus is the ultimate evolutionary mashup of birds, reptiles and mammals. The iconic, egg-laying, venom producing, duck-billed platypus first had its genome sequenced in 2008, revealing its unique genetic makeup and its divergence from the rest of the mammals around 160 million years ago. Now, a greater effort to understand its ecological and population history has been made possibl ... more
+ Britain to ban ivory sales
+ Palaeontologists investigate the macabre science behind how animals decay and fossilize
+ What stops mass extinctions?
+ Mass extinction with prior warning
+ Take a walk on New York's wild side
+ Structure is decisive to algae
+ Spiders, scorpions use leg genes to grow their heads
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

New model links yellow fever in Africa to climate, environment
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 19, 2018
The burden of yellow fever in any given area is known to be heavily dependent on climate, particularly rainfall and temperature which can impact both mosquito life cycle and viral replication. Now, researchers from Imperial College London and the World Health Organization (WHO) have developed a new model to quantify yellow fever dynamics across Africa using not only annual averages of thes ... more
+ DARPA Names Researchers Working to Halt Outbreaks in 60 Days or Less
+ China confirms first human case of H7N4 bird flu
+ UV light can kill airborne flu virus, study finds
+ Playing 20 Questions with Bacteria to Distinguish Harmless Organisms from Pathogens
+ Scientists report big improvements in HIV vaccine production
+ Plague outbreak in Madagascar revived dread of a killer
+ 'Mutant flu' could lead to more effective vaccine: study
Wife of 'vanished' Chinese lawyer marches for answers
Beijing (AFP) April 5, 2018
The wife of a detained Chinese human rights lawyer who has embarked on a 100-kilometre (60-mile) march to highlight his plight said Thursday she did not even know if he was still alive. Attorney Wang Quanzhang, who defended political activists and victims of land seizures, has had no contact with the outside world since he disappeared in a 2015 police sweep aimed at courtroom critics of Comm ... more
+ Tearful reunion highlights plight of China's missing children
+ China cracks down on spoofs of 'Communist heroes'
+ Vatican-affiliated Chinese bishop arrested: report
+ China court accuses Anbang boss of stealing billions as trial opens
+ Street art makes a splash in Hong Kong
+ China to reorganise propaganda efforts at home and abroad
+ Xi gets second term with powerful ally as VP


S. Korea deploys warship to Ghana after pirates kidnap sailors
Seoul (AFP) April 1, 2018
South Korea has deployed an anti-piracy warship to the sea off Ghana after three South Korean sailors were kidnapped by pirates, Seoul's foreign ministry said late Saturday. The 500-tonne Marine 711 with about 40 Ghanaian and three South Korean sailors was boarded by unidentified pirates last Monday. The pirates seized the three South Koreans and escaped on a separate speedboat, with th ... more
+ Spain arrests 155 over Chinese human trafficking ring
+ Off West Africa, navies team up in fight against piracy
+ India seeks custody of fugitive arrested in Hong Kong
+ Vietnam cops seize $2.5 mn heroin in China border drug bust
+ The roots of Italian mafia lie in the lemon industry, new research suggests
+ Thai navy says 11 million pill haul a record from Laos
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Pentagon readies for National Guard deployment to Mexican border
Washington (AFP) April 5, 2018
The Pentagon said Thursday it has established a new body to support President Donald Trump's order to send the military to the southern border, but questions remain about what the deployment will actually look like. The so-called "border security support cell" will channel information between the Pentagon and the Department of Homeland Security, which is responsible for border security. ... more
+ Pentagon hustles to jump in line with Trump's border directive
+ China denies detaining underground bishop
+ Greece urges Turkey 'goodwill gesture' on detained soldiers
+ Washington, Beijing flexing muscles in trade dispute
+ US gives boats to Vietnam amid South China Sea tensions
+ Beijing, Hanoi promise to keep peace in South China Sea
+ US defense chief Mattis says 'no reservations' about Bolton
Feature: Every second counts to trace a gravitational wave
Beijing (XNA) Mar 23, 2018
When a gravitational wave reaches Earth, every second counts. The data processing speed will have a crucial impact on how much astronomers can learn from these space-time ripples, says computer scientist Cao Junwei. "In an era of multi-messenger astronomy, we have to shorten the time as much as possible so as to trigger the alert quickly enough for follow-up observations," says Cao, who le ... more
+ Astronomers discover galaxies spin like clockwork
+ New method enables high-resolution measurements of magnetism
+ ESA Creates Quietest Place In Space
+ Bursting with Excitement - A Look at Bubbles and Fluids in Space
+ NASA Technology to Help Locate Electromagnetic Counterparts of Gravitational Waves
+ Transportable optical clock used to measure gravitation for the first time
+ Acoustic tractor beam could pave the way for levitating humans


1.5 bn sensitive documents on open internet: researchers
Washington (AFP) April 5, 2018
Some 1.5 billion sensitive online files, from pay stubs to medical scans to patent applications, are visible on the open internet, security researchers said Thursday. Researchers from the cybersecurity firm Digital Shadows said a scanning tool used in the first three months of 2018 found mountains of private data online from people and companies across the world. The unprotected data amo ... more
+ Twitter: 1 million accounts suspended for 'terrorism promotion'
+ German Digital Army: 'We Need Norms of Behavior in Cyber Space'
+ Foreign companies in China brace for VPN crackdown
+ China activists fear high-tech crackdown in Xi's 'new era'
+ Tumblr says Russians used its platform for disinformation in 2016
+ New US law changes rules for cross-border data requests
+ US charges Iranians in massive hacking scheme
Five ways Iraq has changed since fall of Saddam
Baghdad (AFP) April 6, 2018
On April 9, 2003, the US-led coalition overthrew Saddam Hussein. Fifteen years after the invasion, life in Iraq has been transformed. Here is an overview of what has changed in Iraq's economy, politics, diplomacy, demographics and the Kurdish question. - Embargo over - The fall of Saddam's regime effectively ended a 12-year embargo imposed by the United Nations on Iraq after its in ... more
+ The three weeks that ousted Saddam Hussein
+ 15 years after Saddam's fall, Iraqi hopes fade
+ Iraq condemns 6 Turkish women to death for IS membership
+ Iraqi monument destroyed by IS recreated in London
+ Mother Courage: Iraqi widow saved recruits from slaughter
+ Iraqi enthusiasts search for relics of royal past
+ Direct foreign air links restored with Iraqi Kurdistan
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Taliban vows 'serious revenge' over Afghan airstrike
Kunduz, Afghanistan (AFP) April 5, 2018
The Taliban has vowed to "take serious revenge" after an Afghan airstrike in an area controlled by the militant group killed or wounded dozens of people, many of them children. The government and military have said the Afghan Air Force (AAF) hit a Taliban base in the northeastern province of Kunduz on Monday where senior commanders were meeting to plan attacks. But Afghan security sourc ... more
+ UN probes reports of 'serious harm to civilians' in Afghan airstrike
+ Afghan Air Force in the spotlight after madrassa bombing
+ Civilian casualties in Afghan airstrike on madrassa
+ Malala makes first trip to Pakistan since Taliban attack
+ Malala makes first trip to Pakistan since Taliban attack
+ PKK says to quit northwest Iraq after Turkish warning
+ Pakistanis distressed as Uighur wives vanish in China dragnet
BHP confirms exit from world coal body over climate stance
Sydney (AFP) April 5, 2018
The world's biggest miner BHP said Thursday it was following through on a decision to leave the World Coal Association over climate change policy differences, but would remain a member of the US Chamber of Commerce. The Anglo-Australian giant announced in December it was reviewing industry group memberships to ensure they aligned with its climate and energy stance, which includes tackling gl ... more
+ Michigan utility company to go zero coal
+ Australia won't fund mega Adani mine rail link
+ New York unveils plans for fossil fuel divestment
+ 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


Satellites, supercomputers, and machine learning provide real-time crop type data
Urbana IL (SPX) Apr 06, 2018
Corn and soybean fields look similar from space - at least they used to. But now, scientists have proven a new technique for distinguishing the two crops using satellite data and the processing power of supercomputers. "If we want to predict corn or soybean production for Illinois or the entire United States, we have to know where they are being grown," says Kaiyu Guan, assistant professor ... more
+ Bats to blame for pig-killer virus in China: study
+ US soybean growers in crosshairs of US-China trade spat
+ UN food agency urges 'agroecology' to fight famine
+ Treating women subsistence farmers for intestinal worms will boost food production
+ Animals rights groups scent blood as fashion labels go fur-free
+ Silk Road nomads were the original foodies
+ Environmentally friendly cattle production
Here, There and Everywhere: Across the Universe with the Beatles
Liverpool UK (SPX) Apr 04, 2018
The Beatles are one of the greatest cultural phenomena to come from the 20th Century, yet many people are unaware of their impact on science. In 'Here, There and Everywhere', inspired by the book 'La scienza dei Beatles' ('The science of the Beatles'), Viviana Ambrosi shows how the Fab Four can bring the study of celestial objects and the exploration of the universe closer to a large publi ... more
+ A star disturbed the comets of the solar system in prehistory
+ Russian scientists use lasers to destroy mini asteroids
+ NASA plans giant spacecraft to defend Earth by nuking deadly asteroids
+ NASA Dawn Reveals Recent Changes in Ceres' Surface
+ Russian physicists make toy asteroids and blast them with a laser
+ Lessons from the Tunguska event
+ Comet Chury formed by a catastrophic collision
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