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Released: 9-Oct-2024 3:05 PM EDT
In Studying the Mating Rituals of Fruit Flies, Scientists May Have Learned Something About How Brains Evolve
Rockefeller University

Researchers have identified how the architecture of brain circuits helps different species flexibly adapt to new mating signals across evolutionary timeframes.

Newswise:Video Embedded new-research-on-octopus-inspired-technology-successfully-maneuvers-underwater-objects
VIDEO
7-Oct-2024 3:00 PM EDT
New Research on Octopus-Inspired Technology Successfully Maneuvers Underwater Objects
Virginia Tech

Using mechanisms inspired by nature to create new technological innovations is a signature of one Virginia Tech research team. The group led by Associate Professor Michael Bartlett has created an octopus-inspired adhesive, inspired by the shape of octopus suckers, that can quickly grab and controllably release challenging underwater objects.

Newswise: NASA's Hubble, New Horizons Team Up for a Simultaneous Look at Uranus
Released: 9-Oct-2024 2:40 PM EDT
NASA's Hubble, New Horizons Team Up for a Simultaneous Look at Uranus
Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI)

Uranus, the planet second most distant from our Sun, has been described as mysterious, strange, and fairly unknown to those of us here on Earth. However, in astronomy, these terms are pretty relative. Compared to the remote, dark stretches of the early universe or oddball exoplanets dozens of light-years from our solar system, researchers actually know a lot about Uranus.

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VIDEO
9-Oct-2024 2:15 PM EDT
NASA's Hubble Watches Jupiter's Great Red Spot Behave Like a Stress Ball
Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI)

Using Hubble, astronomers have discovered that Jupiter's Great Red Spot (GRS) is not as stable as it might look. Hubble measurements of the GRS's size, shape, brightness, color, and vorticity showed it can change dimensions—looking like a slightly skinnier or fatter red oval over 90 days.

Newswise: Ordered Defects May Be Key for Solution-Deposited Semiconductors
Released: 9-Oct-2024 2:05 PM EDT
Ordered Defects May Be Key for Solution-Deposited Semiconductors
University Of Illinois Grainger College Of Engineering

A new solution deposition process for semiconductors yields high-performing transistors by introducing more defects, counterintuitively. Researchers used these devices to construct high-speed logic circuits and an operational high-resolution inorganic LED display.

Newswise: Rutgers Intern Finds Meaning in Art Museum's Accessibility Efforts
Released: 9-Oct-2024 2:05 PM EDT
Rutgers Intern Finds Meaning in Art Museum's Accessibility Efforts
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Rutgers University–New Brunswick senior Gabrielle Carmella is a unique student with a unique internship opportunity.  The 21-year-old, who attends the Mason Gross School of the Arts and is pursuing a fine arts degree with a concentration in photography and printmaking with a minor in women's and gender studies, has spent her summer interning at the Zimmerli Art Museum and will continue through December.

Newswise: Scientists Accelerate Uranium Beam with Record Power
Released: 9-Oct-2024 2:05 PM EDT
Scientists Accelerate Uranium Beam with Record Power
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Researchers at the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams reached a new milestone in isotope studies, accelerating a high-power beam of uranium ions to a record 10.4 kilowatts of continuous beam power to a target. The beam enabled scientists to produce and identify three new isotopes, gallium-88, arsenic-93, and selenium-96.

Released: 9-Oct-2024 2:05 PM EDT
Why People Think They’re Right, Even When They Are Wrong
Ohio State University

f you smugly believe you’re right in a disagreement with a friend or colleague, a new study suggests why you may actually be wrong. Researchers found that people naturally assume they have all the information they need to make a decision or support their position, even when they do not.

Newswise: New Technique Could Unlock Potential of Quantum Materials
Released: 9-Oct-2024 2:05 PM EDT
New Technique Could Unlock Potential of Quantum Materials
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

A research team led by the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory has devised a unique method to observe changes in materials at the atomic level. The technique opens new avenues for understanding and developing advanced materials for quantum computing and electronics.

Newswise: Underwater Caves Yield New Clues About Sicily’s First Residents
3-Oct-2024 6:05 AM EDT
Underwater Caves Yield New Clues About Sicily’s First Residents
Washington University in St. Louis

Archaeological surveys led by scientists at Washington University in St. Louis suggest that coastal and underwater cave sites in southern Sicily contain important new clues about the path and fate of early human migrants to the island.

Released: 9-Oct-2024 1:05 PM EDT
Argonne Technology Converts Waste Streams Into Biofuel That Dramatically Reduces Carbon Emissions From Jets
Argonne National Laboratory

Research highlights Argonne’s new technology for creating cost-effective sustainable aviation fuel.

Newswise: Hackensack Meridian Children’s Health Hospitals Earn Top Ranking for Fourth Straight Year on U.S. News & World Report’s 2024-25 Best Children’s Hospitals List
Released: 9-Oct-2024 1:05 PM EDT
Hackensack Meridian Children’s Health Hospitals Earn Top Ranking for Fourth Straight Year on U.S. News & World Report’s 2024-25 Best Children’s Hospitals List
Hackensack Meridian Health

Joseph M. Sanzari Children’s Hospital at Hackensack Meridian Hackensack University Medical Center, and K. Hovnanian Children’s Hospital at Jersey Shore University Medical Center are nationally ranked in three specialties - behavioral health, endocrinology and urology - more than any other children’s hospital in New Jersey.

Newswise: The Leading Edge: New Directions for Treatment of Hearing Loss
Released: 9-Oct-2024 12:05 PM EDT
The Leading Edge: New Directions for Treatment of Hearing Loss
University of Miami Health System, Miller School of Medicine

For the fifth year in a row, Dr. Adrien Eshraghi and Dr. Ronna Hertzano lectured on the year’s most important hearing loss research at the annual AAO-HNSF meeting.

Newswise: Eastern-Shore-campus.jpg
Released: 9-Oct-2024 12:05 PM EDT
UMSOM Launches New Rural Health Initiative to Address Physician Shortage on Maryland's Eastern Shore
University of Maryland School of Medicine

With a commitment to addressing rural health disparities and the challenges faced by Maryland’s rural Eastern Shore residents, the University of Maryland School of Medicine has launched the Rural Health Equity and Access Longitudinal Elective (R-HEALE).

Released: 9-Oct-2024 12:05 PM EDT
Polling in a Divided Political Climate: What to Expect in the Upcoming Election
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

As the Nov. 5 general election draws near, polls are poised to take center stage once again, sparking critical conversations about their role in shaping public opinion and electoral outcomes.

 
Newswise: In Double Breakthrough, Mathematician Solves Two Long-Standing Problems
Released: 9-Oct-2024 12:05 PM EDT
In Double Breakthrough, Mathematician Solves Two Long-Standing Problems
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

A Rutgers University-New Brunswick professor who has devoted his career to resolving the mysteries of higher mathematics has solved two separate, fundamental problems that have perplexed mathematicians for decades. The solutions to these long-standing problems could further enhance our understanding of symmetries of structures and objects in nature and science, and of long-term behavior of various random processes arising in fields ranging from chemistry and physics to engineering, computer science and economics.

Released: 9-Oct-2024 12:05 PM EDT
NYU Tandon School of Engineering Study Maps Pedestrian Crosswalks Across Entire Cities, Helping Improve Road Safety and Increase Walkability
NYU Tandon School of Engineering

As pedestrian fatalities in the United States reach a 40-year high, a novel approach to measuring crosswalk lengths across entire cities could provide urban planners with crucial data to improve safety interventions. NYU Tandon School of Engineering researchers Marcel Moran and Debra F. Laefer published the first comprehensive, city-wide analysis of crosswalk distances.

Newswise: Study Shows Use of a Gene Could Halt Diabetic Kidney Disease
Released: 9-Oct-2024 12:05 PM EDT
Study Shows Use of a Gene Could Halt Diabetic Kidney Disease
Stony Brook University

New research by Stony Brook Medicine nephrology specialists that centers on targeting key cellular signaling between two types of kidney cells, and inducing a certain gene within those processes, may help prevent or reduce the progression of diabetic kidney disease (DKD), the leading cause of chronic kidney disease worldwide.



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