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Life Technology™ Medical News
Vulnerability of LLMs to Medical Misinformation Test
Top Three Foods for Your Bushwalk Backpack
Urgent Need for Regulations on US Physician Strikes
AI Tool Helps Doctors Share Lab Results
Can Cognitive Testing Boost Lewy Body Dementia Detection?
Discover the Key Questions for Aging Balance
China Commemorates Fifth Anniversary of First Covid Death
Promising New Treatment for Intestinal Worms Unveiled
Unveiling the Secrets of CAR T Cells
Radon Exposure Raises Gestational Diabetes Risk
Study Reveals Most Kids on TikTok Break Rules
Aphasia Patients' Tense Woes: Language Encoding Impact
Study Reveals Mass Exodus from Abortion-Ban States
Study Reveals 15.4% of Infants Get Wrong Vaccine
Hip Fractures Boost Heart Failure Patients' Cardio Risk
Maternal Medications Reduce Breastmilk Nutrients
Paris Terror Attack Reveals Neuroplasticity's Role in PTSD
Medicare Advantage vs Traditional Medicare: Cancer Drug Cost Study
AI Boosts Cervical Cancer Detection in Medical Images
Surprising Link: Red Light Reduces Blood Clot Risk
Medicare Rules Cut Prescription Steering
Understanding the Impact of a Mental Health Crisis
Hearing Loss Linked to Early Parkinson's Sign
New Study Reveals Childhood Trauma Complexity
Exciting Clinical Trials: New Drug for Prostate Cancer
AI-Powered App Revolutionizes Infant Jaundice Screening
Precision Oncology Treatments Favor Certain Ancestries
New Technique Predicts Tumor Response in Breast Cancer
Orphanhood Surges in United States
Cambodian Man Succumbs to Bird Flu
Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Science News
Elusive Dark Matter: Physicists Hunt for Promising Candidates
Lead Pollution Linked to IQ Decline in Ancient Rome
Study: Limited Air Conditioning Linked to Higher Emergency Care Risk from Wildfire Smoke
Biofilm: The Sticky Bacterial Layer Making Infections Tough
Top Skills Employers Seek in Job Candidates
Physicists Unveil Breakthrough in Manipulating Weyl Fermions
Year of Climate Events: Droughts, Rainfall, Hurricanes
Scientists Uncover Evolution of Ventral Nerve Cord
Winds Calm in LA: Boosting Firefighting Effort
Unlocking the Secrets of Alloy Properties
Scientists Uncover Plants' Drought Survival Secret
Study Reveals Why People Consume Serial Killer Content
Magnesium in Mine Waste Recovered by Bacteria
Mystery of Night Sky Patch Solved
LMU, TUM, Oxford Team Reveals COF Excited State Diffusion
"Revolutionary Device Converts Polysaccharides to Monosaccharides!"
"World's Largest Music Experiment Reveals Stunning Results"
Renewable Energy Experts Analyze EPA's Final Standards
Early Humans' Stone Tool Selection Secrets Unveiled
Nanjing University Unveils Budget-Friendly Plant Health Tech
Discover the Fascinating Link Between Charge Ordering and Superconductivity
"Tokyo Researchers Achieve Unprecedented Spin Control!"
Earth's Record High Surface Temperature in 2024
Potential of Active Bubbles in Diverse Fields
Study Reveals How to Cut German Agriculture Emissions
"Study Reveals Surging Backing for Eco-Social Policies"
Subaru Telescope Unveils Revolutionary Compound Eye
Mind-Bending Stars and Galaxies in Hydra
The Impact of Cultural Diversity in Global Communication
NASA's Artemis Mission: Moon's Mare Crisium Exploration
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New Low-Cost Solution to Cut Cement Emissions
US Supreme Court Set to Decide Fate of TikTok
Meta Dismantles DEI Programs in Major Shift
West Virginia Internet Provider Settles Consumer Complaints
Los Angeles Rams Defense Foils San Francisco's Hail Mary
Producers of Hi-Tech Eyewear Innovate for Market Edge
Cryptocurrency Scammers Swindle Millions in Remote Work Scheme
Meta's Fact-Checking Program Battles False Info
"Tiktok: The Ultimate Entertainment Hub!"
Robots Enhance Safety, Quality, and Company in Industries
Study Shows Carbon-Based Solar Cells Beat Silicon in Space
The Challenge of Carbon Capture Technology
Unlock the Power of Group Activity Recognition
"French Video Game Maker Ubisoft: A Giant Since 1986!"
Microsoft Asia Unveils Revolutionary Math-solving Language Model
Meta Shocks Media: Fact-Checking Future Uncertain
The Challenge of Spotting Contraband: A 3D Solution
"Discover How Your City's Future Depends on Your Survey Responses"
Physicist Aims to Mimic Human Brain with Neuromorphic Chips
How Humanoid Robots Understand Emotion: Key Findings
Study Reveals Automated Systems Fail to Detect Pedestrians
"UCLA Unveils TeamCraft: AI Training in Minecraft"
Global Network Warns of Real-World Harm from Meta's Fact-Checking Decision
US Supreme Court to Hear TikTok's Appeal on Friday
Lithium-Ion Batteries: Explosive Growth, Fiery Risks
Why Do Public Spaces Feel So Humid?
Tsmc Reports Surge in Net Sales
AI Technology Expands Beyond Data Centers
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg's False Claim About Fact-Checking Program
Airbus Boosts Aircraft Deliveries Amid Production Struggles
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSThursday, 10 October 2019
2 Nobel literature prizes to be awarded after 2018 scandal
Two Nobel Prizes in literature will be announced Thursday after the 2018 literature award was postponed following sex abuse allegations that rocked the Swedish Academy.
Social networks face quandary on politics in misinformation fight
As social media firms ramp up their fight against misinformation, politicians have been largely left exempt. To some, that's a huge problem.
Auto suppliers hit as GM strike in US grinds on
As the General Motors strike grinds on, more auto suppliers and contractors are sending workers home, adding to the economic drag on Michigan and other US midwestern car manufacturing hubs.
Apple removes Hong Kong map app after Chinese criticism
Apple removed a smartphone app that allows Hong Kong activists to report police movements from its online store Thursday after an official Chinese newspaper accused the company of facilitating illegal behavior.
Super typhoon on track to drench Japan's main island
Japan is bracing for a super typhoon on track to hit central and eastern regions over the three-day weekend with potential damage from torrential rains and strong winds.
'Flash drought' brings dust and dread to southern farmers
In a vast expanse of the South stretching from Texas to Maryland, there are growing concerns for the cattle, cotton and corn amid a worsening drought fueled this past summer by record high temperatures.
Illegal urban off-road vehicles as risky as motorcycles in cities
People who illegally ride off-road vehicles, such as dirt bikes and all-terrain vehicles, on city streets suffer similar crash injuries as motorcyclists, but are less likely to die even though many riders don't wear helmets, according to a Rutgers researcher.
Political parties with less interest in an issue more likely to take radical stance
Political parties who care less about an issue will take more extreme stances on it when drawing up policies to appeal to the electorate—and it can pay off at the ballot box.
New science on cracking leads to self-healing materials
Cracks in the desert floor appear random to the untrained eye, even beautifully so, but the mathematics governing patterns of dried clay turn out to be predictable—and useful in designing advanced materials.
Study shows brain mechanisms have potential to block arthritis pain
Millions of people around the world are affected by pain, a multidimensional experience characterized by interactions between our emotional, cognitive, sensory and motor functions. Because pain is a complex condition, treating it efficiently continues to pose challenge for physicians.
System can minimize damage when self-driving vehicles crash
Engineers have developed decision-making and motion-planning technology to limit injuries and damage when self-driving vehicles are involved in unavoidable crashes.
New study supports nervous system's role in age-related weakness
A study recently published by researchers from the Ohio Musculoskeletal and Neurological Institute (OMNI) at the Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, in collaboration with a colleague from outside Ohio University, finds new evidence to support the belief that the nervous system plays an important role in age-related weakness.
For sea creatures, baseline shows disease as sentinel of change
The health of Earth's oceans is rapidly worsening, and newly published Cornell-led research has examined changes in reported diseases across undersea species at a global scale over a 44-year period.
More patients with cardiovascular disease now die at home than in the hospital
Despite their wishes, many patients die in hospitals or other facilities. Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death both globally and in the U.S., yet little is known about where patients with CVD die. In a new study, Haider Warraich, MD, of Brigham and Women's Hospital, and colleagues assessed place of death for CVD patients from 2003 to 2017, finding that home has surpassed the hospital as the most common place of death for these patients. The results of their analysis are published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
Social determinant screening useful for families with pediatric sickle cell disease
Individuals with sickle cell disease (SCD) face the burdens of chronic illness and often racial disparities, both of which may increase vulnerability to adverse social determinants of health (SDoH). For children with SCD, living in poverty is associated with lower quality of life, higher healthcare utilization and higher complication rates. However, a new study from Boston Medical Center (BMC) demonstrates that hematologists can uncover the needs of families and connect them to local resources within a clinic visit with the hope of improving quality of life and clinical outcomes for their patients.
Children associate white, but not black, men with 'brilliant' stereotype, new study finds
The stereotype that associates being "brilliant" with White men more than White women is shared by children regardless of their own race, finds a team of psychology researchers. By contrast, its study shows, children do not apply this stereotype to Black men and women.
One in five cardiac rehab patients are depressed, anxious, or stressed
Patients with depression, anxiety or stress are more likely to drop out of cardiac rehabilitation, reports a study published on World Mental Health Day in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, a journal of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC).
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