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Newswise: A New Research Priority for Next-Generation Batteries
Released: 28-Apr-2022 11:55 AM EDT
A New Research Priority for Next-Generation Batteries
Argonne National Laboratory

Large ion clusters known as aggregates are an important emerging topic for research on electrolytes in batteries. The research indicates that aggregates can affect electrolyte properties, including stability and ion transport.

Released: 28-Apr-2022 11:05 AM EDT
Childhood Obesity Increases Risk of Type 1 Diabetes
University of Bristol

Being overweight in childhood increases the risk of developing type 1 diabetes in later life, according to the findings of a new study that analysed genetic data on over 400,000 individuals. The study, co-led by researchers from the Universities of Bristol and Oxford and published today in Nature Communications, also provides evidence that being overweight over many years from childhood influences the risk of other diseases including asthma, eczema and hypothyroidism.

Released: 28-Apr-2022 11:05 AM EDT
Grandmaternal Exercise Has Benefits for Grand Offspring, Researchers Find
Beth Israel Lahey Health

Scientists have demonstrated in mice that the benefits of exercise may also span generations.

Newswise: Skyrmions on the Rise – New 2D Material Advances Low-Power Computing
Released: 28-Apr-2022 11:00 AM EDT
Skyrmions on the Rise – New 2D Material Advances Low-Power Computing
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

A team co-led by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory has discovered a new ultrathin material with exotic magnetic features called skyrmions. The new material could enable the next generation of tiny, fast, energy-efficient electronic devices.

Newswise: Tufts University Researchers Discover New Function Performed by Nearly Half of Brain Cells
28-Apr-2022 8:45 AM EDT
Tufts University Researchers Discover New Function Performed by Nearly Half of Brain Cells
Tufts University

Researchers at Tufts University School of Medicine have discovered a previously unknown function performed by a type of cell that comprises nearly half of all cells in the brain. The scientists say this discovery in mice of a new function by cells known as astrocytes opens a whole new direction for neuroscience research that might one day lead to treatments for many disorders ranging from epilepsy to Alzheimer’s to traumatic brain injury.

   
27-Apr-2022 1:00 PM EDT
Researchers Share Insights about Mechanisms of Human Embryo and Create Method to Develop Transcriptionally Similar Cells in Tissue Culture
Mount Sinai Health System

Researchers share insights about the mechanisms of human embryo and create method to develop transcriptionally similar cells in tissue culture; latest discovery a step closer to finding alternative for bone marrow and other cancer treatments.

Newswise: Large Bodies Helped Extinct Marine Reptiles with Long Necks Swim, New Study Finds
27-Apr-2022 10:05 AM EDT
Large Bodies Helped Extinct Marine Reptiles with Long Necks Swim, New Study Finds
University of Bristol

Scientists at the University of Bristol have discovered that body size is more important than body shape in determining the energy economy of swimming for aquatic animals.

Released: 28-Apr-2022 10:05 AM EDT
Bird populations in eastern Canada declining due to forest ‘degradation,’ research shows
Oregon State University

Bird species that live in wooded areas are under stress from human-caused changes to forest composition, according to new research led by Oregon State University that quantifies the effects of forest “degradation” on bird habitat.

Released: 28-Apr-2022 10:05 AM EDT
Chicago Public Schools and Lurie Children’s Hospital Expand Partnership to Support Youth Mental Health
Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago

Chicago Public Schools (CPS) and the Center for Childhood Resilience (CCR) at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago are expanding a comprehensive and collaborative system to better identify and respond to Pre-K-12 students who need mental health support. The expansion from 200 CPS pilot schools to all District schools aims to strengthen the District’s response to an escalating national youth mental health crisis, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Newswise: Changing Guidelines for Treating Mild Chronic Hypertension in Pregnancy
Released: 28-Apr-2022 10:05 AM EDT
Changing Guidelines for Treating Mild Chronic Hypertension in Pregnancy
Ochsner Health

Based upon a clinical trial of pregnant women at more than 70 sites, including Ochsner Health, doctors are recommending that even mild forms of high blood pressure be treated with medication.

Newswise: Researchers Design Simpler Magnets for Twisty Facilities That Could Lead to Steady-State Fusion Operation
Released: 28-Apr-2022 10:05 AM EDT
Researchers Design Simpler Magnets for Twisty Facilities That Could Lead to Steady-State Fusion Operation
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

Harnessing the power that makes the sun and stars shine could be made easier by powerful magnets with straighter shapes than have been made before. Researchers linked to the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory have found a way to create such magnets for fusion facilities known as stellarators.

Newswise:Video Embedded from-blurry-to-bright-ai-tech-helps-researchers-peer-into-the-brains-of-mice
VIDEO
Released: 28-Apr-2022 10:00 AM EDT
From Blurry To Bright: AI Tech Helps Researchers Peer Into The Brains Of Mice
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins biomedical engineers have developed an artificial intelligence (AI) training strategy to capture images of mouse brain cells in action. The researchers say the AI system, in concert with specialized ultra-small microscopes, make it possible to find precisely where and when cells are activated during movement, learning and memory.

Newswise: New study finds climate change could spark the next pandemic
Released: 28-Apr-2022 9:55 AM EDT
New study finds climate change could spark the next pandemic
Georgetown University Medical Center

As the earth’s climate continues to warm, researchers predict wild animals will be forced to relocate their habitats – likely to regions with large human populations – dramatically increasing the risk of a viral jump to humans that could lead to the next pandemic.

   
Released: 28-Apr-2022 9:50 AM EDT
Pediatric Transplant Patients May Not Be Keeping Their Adult Doctor Appointments
University of Georgia

Young adults who received organ transplants as children may not be regularly attending their doctor appointments after leaving their pediatric providers. Missing these appointments is associated with longer and more frequent hospitalizations and poorer medication adherence, according to a new study.

Newswise: AI Could Predict Ideal Chronic Pain Patients for Spinal Cord Stimulation
Released: 28-Apr-2022 8:30 AM EDT
AI Could Predict Ideal Chronic Pain Patients for Spinal Cord Stimulation
Florida Atlantic University

Spinal cord stimulation is a minimally invasive FDA-approved treatment to manage chronic pain such as back and neck pain. The ability to accurately predict which patients will benefit from this treatment in the long term is unclear and currently relies on the subjective experience of the implanting physician. A study is the first to use machine-learning algorithms in the neuromodulation field to predict long-term patient response to spinal cord stimulation.

Newswise: Conservation on a Budget: Study Shows How to Balance Economic Development Goals with Environmental Conservation Using Freely Available Data
Released: 28-Apr-2022 8:05 AM EDT
Conservation on a Budget: Study Shows How to Balance Economic Development Goals with Environmental Conservation Using Freely Available Data
Wildlife Conservation Society

An international study published in the journal Conservation Science and Practice gives fast-growing nations a simple, inexpensive guide to inform planning and decision-making to help balance economic development goals with environmental conservation and human well-being.

Released: 28-Apr-2022 8:05 AM EDT
New Report Highlights U.S. 2020 Gun-Related Deaths: Highest Number Ever Recorded By CDC, Gun Homicides Increase By More Than One-Third
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

A new report from the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions analyzes Centers for Disease Control and Prevention firearm fatality data for 2020—a year that saw the highest number of gun-related deaths ever recorded by the CDC and a sharp increase in gun homicides.

Newswise: New Study Could Help Reduce Agricultural Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Released: 28-Apr-2022 7:00 AM EDT
New Study Could Help Reduce Agricultural Greenhouse Gas Emissions
University of Minnesota College of Science and Engineering

A team of researchers led by the University of Minnesota has significantly improved the performance of numerical predictions for agricultural nitrous oxide emissions. The first-of-its-kind knowledge-guided machine learning model is 1,000 times faster than current systems and could significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture.

Newswise: Montefiore Einstein Cancer Center Finds CAR-T Therapy Effective in Black and Hispanic Patients
27-Apr-2022 3:40 PM EDT
Montefiore Einstein Cancer Center Finds CAR-T Therapy Effective in Black and Hispanic Patients
Albert Einstein College of Medicine

CAR-T therapy, a form of immunotherapy that revs up T-cells to recognize and destroy cancer cells, has revolutionized the treatment of blood cancers, including certain leukemias, lymphomas, and most recently, multiple myeloma. However, Black and Hispanic people were largely absent from the major clinical trials that led to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval of CAR-T cell therapies.



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