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Newswise: Introducing a Protocol for Using Robotic Pets in Memory Care
Released: 20-Jul-2022 4:40 PM EDT
Introducing a Protocol for Using Robotic Pets in Memory Care
University of Utah

University of Utah researchers developed a protocol for using robotic pets with older adults with dementia. The protocol uses a low-cost robotic pet, establishes ideal session lengths, and identifies common participant responses to the pets to aid in future research.

   
Released: 20-Jul-2022 4:30 PM EDT
Professional athletes perform better against former clubs, according to research
National Research University - Higher School of Economics (HSE)

A team of Russian researchers affiliated with the HSE University, RANEPA, and NES found professional athletes to perform better against their former clubs.

Newswise: Using Holograms to Illuminate De Sitter Space
Released: 19-Jul-2022 8:05 PM EDT
Using Holograms to Illuminate De Sitter Space
Kyoto University

The holographic principle is used to describe the expanding universe in de Sitter space. It provides a solution to Einstein's general relativity equation with a positive cosmological constant. The proposed model uses a negative cosmological constant to account for gravity on anti-de Sitter space.

Newswise: Three New Species of Black-Bellied Salamander Found in Southern Appalachian Mountains
Released: 19-Jul-2022 10:05 AM EDT
Three New Species of Black-Bellied Salamander Found in Southern Appalachian Mountains
George Washington University

Three new species of black-bellied salamander have been discovered by a research team led by R. Alexander Pyron, the Robert F. Griggs Associate Professor of Biology at the George Washington University. The new salamanders, which are found in the southern Appalachian Mountains of the eastern United States, stem from black-bellied populations that were long considered to be a single species.

Newswise: A Game-Changer for Young Children With Femur Fractures
Released: 19-Jul-2022 12:05 AM EDT
A Game-Changer for Young Children With Femur Fractures
Children's Hospital Los Angeles

For decades, the treatment for a young child with a broken femur has been the same: a surgically placed spica cast, commonly known as a body cast. But now, thanks to a new study led by Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, the days of casting these injuries may soon be over. The study, led by Lindsay Andras, MD, Vice Chief of the Jackie and Gene Autry Orthopedic Center at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, found that a pre-made functional brace provides equal healing to the cumbersome spica cast for young children with femur (thighbone) fractures. The braces also eliminate the need for anesthesia and are easier for parents to clean and care for.

Newswise: Ocean Warming Threatens Richest Marine Biodiversity
Released: 18-Jul-2022 11:05 PM EDT
Ocean Warming Threatens Richest Marine Biodiversity
University of Adelaide

An international team of scientists led by researchers from the University of Adelaide has revealed that rates of future warming threaten marine life in more than 70 per cent of the most biodiverse-rich areas of Earth’s oceans. 

Newswise: How nemo fits in his anemone: Study reveals how clown anemonefish adjust their growth to their environments
Released: 18-Jul-2022 2:30 PM EDT
How nemo fits in his anemone: Study reveals how clown anemonefish adjust their growth to their environments
Newcastle University

Research has shown how clown anemonefish control their growth to match the size of their anemone host.

Newswise:Video Embedded coastal-glacier-retreat-linked-to-climate-change
VIDEO
Released: 14-Jul-2022 2:15 PM EDT
Coastal Glacier Retreat Linked to Climate Change
University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin)

More of the world’s coastal glaciers are melting faster than ever, but exactly what’s triggering the large-scale retreat has been difficult to pin down because of natural fluctuations in the glaciers’ surroundings. Now, researchers have developed a methodology that they think cracks the code to why coastal glaciers are retreating, and in turn, how much can be attributed to human-caused climate change.

Released: 14-Jul-2022 2:05 PM EDT
As Globe Warms, Infected Pines Starve and Disease-Causing Fungi Thrive
Ohio State University

The high heat and low water conditions produced by global warming weaken pine trees’ resistance to disease by hindering their ability to mount an effective defense at the same time that pathogenic fungi in their tissues become more aggressive, new research suggests.

Newswise: Research probes how people control unwanted thoughts
7-Jul-2022 12:10 PM EDT
Research probes how people control unwanted thoughts
PLOS

While thinking an unwanted thought could make it more likely to recur, we can proactively control this process

   
7-Jul-2022 12:05 PM EDT
Moderate drinking linked to brain changes and cognitive decline
PLOS

Consumption of seven or more units of alcohol per week is associated with higher iron levels in the brain, according to a study of almost 21,000 people publishing July 14th in the open access journal PLOS Medicine. Iron accumulation in the brain has been linked with Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases and is a potential mechanism for alcohol-related cognitive decline.

Released: 14-Jul-2022 11:05 AM EDT
Webb Telescope Rewrites Cosmic History with Images of Universe
University of Miami

A time travel machine, the $10 billion space observatory is being considered well worth the price tag because it will help answer long-held questions about the big bang and search for signs of alien life, University of Miami astrophysicists maintain.

Released: 14-Jul-2022 9:45 AM EDT
Women Already Live Longer. They Can Live Better with an Improved Diet
University of Georgia

Women tend to live longer than men but typically have higher rates of illness. Now, new research from University of Georgia suggests these higher rates of illness can be improved by a better diet, one that is high in pigmented carotenoids such as yams, kale, spinach, watermelon, bell peppers, tomatoes, oranges and carrots. These bright-colored fruits and vegetables are particularly important in preventing visual and cognitive loss.

Newswise: Genomic research supports recognizing new scrub jay species in Texas and Mexico
Released: 13-Jul-2022 5:05 PM EDT
Genomic research supports recognizing new scrub jay species in Texas and Mexico
University of Kansas

A comprehensive new genetic and statistical study from researchers at the University of Kansas reveals two groups of scrub jays — one in Mexico and one in Texas — deserve status as independent species.

Newswise: What a Martian Meteorite Can Teach US About Earth’s Origins
Released: 12-Jul-2022 4:35 PM EDT
What a Martian Meteorite Can Teach US About Earth’s Origins
Northern Arizona University

Astronomy postdoc Valerie Payré is on an international team that discovered the origin of the martian meteorite known as Black Beauty, one of the most-studied meteorites in the world. It may hold clues to the development of Earth and other terrestrial planets and help explain why Earth sustains life when its closest neighbor does not.

Released: 12-Jul-2022 4:30 PM EDT
Emotional Patterns a Factor in Children's Food Choices
Elsevier

The emotional context in which eating occurs has been thought to influence eating patterns and diet, with studies finding negative emotions predict excessive calorie intake and poor diet quality.

Newswise: NASA’s Webb Reveals Cosmic Cliffs, Glittering Landscape of Star Birth
12-Jul-2022 11:25 AM EDT
NASA’s Webb Reveals Cosmic Cliffs, Glittering Landscape of Star Birth
Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI)

The seemingly three-dimensional “Cosmic Cliffs” showcases Webb’s capabilities to peer through obscuring dust and shed new light on how stars form. Webb reveals emerging stellar nurseries and individual stars that are completely hidden in visible-light pictures. This landscape of “mountains” and “valleys” is actually the edge of a nearby stellar nursery called NGC 3324 at the northwest corner of the Carina Nebula. So-called mountains — some towering about 7 light-years high — are speckled with glittering, young stars imaged in infrared light. A cavernous area has been carved from the nebula by the intense ultraviolet radiation and stellar winds from extremely massive, hot, young stars located above the area shown in this image. The blistering, ultraviolet radiation from these stars is sculpting the nebula’s wall by slowly eroding it away. Dramatic pillars rise above the glowing wall of gas, resisting this radiation. The “steam” that appears to rise from the celestial “mountains” is

Newswise: NASA’s Webb Produces the Most Detailed Image of the Early Universe to Date
Released: 11-Jul-2022 6:05 PM EDT
NASA’s Webb Produces the Most Detailed Image of the Early Universe to Date
Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI)

President Biden unveiled the image of galaxy cluster SMACS 0723, known as Webb’s First Deep Field, during a White House event on Monday, July 11. NASA and its partners will release a series of Webb's first full-color images and data, known as spectra, Tuesday, July 12th during a live NASA TV broadcast.

Newswise: Undead Planets: The Unusual Conditions of the First Exoplanet Detection
Released: 11-Jul-2022 3:10 PM EDT
Undead Planets: The Unusual Conditions of the First Exoplanet Detection
Royal Astronomical Society

The first ever exoplanets were discovered 30 years ago around a rapidly rotating star, called a pulsar. Now, astronomers have revealed that these planets may be incredibly rare.

Newswise: UTSW researchers show effectiveness of migraine drug in weight loss
Released: 11-Jul-2022 3:05 PM EDT
UTSW researchers show effectiveness of migraine drug in weight loss
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Triptans, a commonly prescribed class of migraine drugs, may also be useful in treating obesity, a new study by scientists at UT Southwestern suggests. In studies on obese mice, a daily dose of a triptan led animals to eat less food and lose weight over the course of a month, the team reported in the Journal of Experimental Medicine.



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