Big 'winners' may play a different game
University of Alabama HuntsvilleThe biggest winners in an investment market may be playing the game according to their own rules, rather the "rational" economic rules followed by most investors.
The biggest winners in an investment market may be playing the game according to their own rules, rather the "rational" economic rules followed by most investors.
Fourteen of the most widely used global climate models, which are used by scientists to predict global climate change and by policy makers to formulate appropriate environmental policy, were less prescient than expected in a major test designed to determine their accuracy in predicting global warming or cooling.
Researchers at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center have shined a bold new light on the future treatment of childhood leukemia. Results of a study published in the Jan. 30 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine not only refute a 30-year-old dogma universally held by the medical community, but also open new doors to a better understanding of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), the most common form of childhood cancer. Using two sensitive assays, M. D. Anderson researchers found that up to thousands of leukemia cells may remain in a patient long after successful treatment.
1) Kindergarten Behavior Can Predict Illegal Substance Abuse; 2) Anxiety and Depression May Signal Future High Blood Pressure; 3) Nonprescription Eyedrops Can Cause Conjunctivitis; 4) Freezing Technique May Change Early Breast Cancer Treatment; 5) Pertussis Costly, Preventable Disease
There are legal and scientific bases for the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) move to assert jurisdiction over cigarettes and smokeless tobacco, according to an article in this week's issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).
Physicians should pay special attention to women who miscarry, especially when the women are childless or have had a history of major depression, according to an article in this week's issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) will release the PresidentÃs Budget Request for Fiscal Year 1998 on the morning of February 6.
(Washington, D.C. February 3, 1997) -- The American Lung Association today said it would go to court to fight a polluter-inspired attempt to delay proposed new clean air standards. The Lung Association also called on President Clinton to fulfill his pledge to protect children's health from air pollution. "Millions of Americans -- including children with asthma and the elderly -- are suffering daily from dirty air," said Fran Du Melle, the Lung Association's Deputy Managing Director.
Small filamentous masses called Lewy bodies have long been observed in the neurons of people with Parkinson's disease. Many investigators consider the abnormal structures relatively unimportant in disease progression. Now, however, University of Pennsylvania Medical Center scientists have discovered that Lewy bodies may entrap life-sustaining cellular organelles in an important population of cerebellar cortex neurons called Purkinje cells, leading to their death with age.
A Cornell University rocket scientist, in cooperation with NASA and a local science museum, will be available online via the Internet to "chat" live with anyone who wants to learn about what they are up to in a remote part of Alaska blasting rockets into the upper atmosphere.
Global warming notwithstanding, the average temperature in Alabama has dropped by almost two degrees Fahrenheit over the past 65 years, according to a new analysis of daily temperature reports from about 50 spots around the state.
1) Nearly 30 Years of Research on Dental Sealants is summarized; 2) ADA Report Underscores Importance of Dental Sealant Use; 3) Sealants Beneficial for All Ages; 4) Sealants Are Good Way To Avoid Tooth Decay; 5) Fact Sheet on Dental Sealants; 6) A video news release "Sealing Out Tooth Decay in Children" will be distributed via satellite Feb 4
A transistor that stores a single electron to represent one bit of information and could revolutionize the way computers work has been designed and fabricated by University of Minnesota researchers. A transistor that stores a single electron to represent one bit of information and could revolutionize the way computers work has been designed and fabricated by University of Minnesota researchers.
University of Illinois at Chicago researchers have synthesized a new vitamin D-5 compound that may prevent cancer without the toxicity associated with most vitamin D-3 compounds. The UIC unit's findings will be published Feb. 5 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Johns Hopkins researchers studying the genetic changes underlying some cancers and genetic disorders have shown how a single gene can play a role in two very different and distinct inherited disorders, a heart rhythm disturbance and a rare growth ailment.
Thanks to a $25.5 million grant from the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation, the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences will establish the new Donald W. Reynolds Department of Geriatrics and construct the Donald W. Reynolds Geriatrics Center.
Government officials and experts from the business, environmental and research communities will gather at Resources for the Future on February 10, 1997, to discuss and debate the scientific basis, political and economic realities, and policy implications of the Environmental Protection Agency's proposals to revise the National Ambient Air Quality Standards for ground-level ozone and particulates.
1) Mayo gastroenterologists have begun testing a drug called urso (ursodeoxycholate) in treatment of colon cancer. 2) Sometimes women with heart disease need therapy different from men. 3) In 1990 Mayo set up a special hospital unit to help wean people on ventilators, an effort which has produced excellent results.
A drug that stops overproduction of nitric oxide, a chemical normally involved in many body functions, may reduce the risk of brain damage that sometimes occurs when the body is cooled during heart surgery, a Johns Hopkins animal study suggests.
1) Combined Daily Regimen Effective for Treating Mild-to-Moderate Asthma; 2) Most Long-Term Survivors of Bone Marrow Transplantation in Good Health and Functional; 3) Recommendations for Managing Nonpalpable Nodules Discovered Through Thyroid Imaging
Ten national otolaryngological societies will convene at the Scottsdale Princess, Scottsdale, AZ, on May 10-16, 1997, for the Combined Otolaryngological Spring Meetings (COSM.) Approximately 1,700 otolaryngologist-head and neck surgeons are participating in these meetings. More than 350 physicians are presenting the newest medical and surgical findings and technologies in the treatment of disorders involving the ears, nose, throat, and related structures of the head and neck.
Latinos have high levels of unmet health needs or encounter many barriers in gaining access to the health-care system, and once they enter the system, at times they do not receive the full benefits of medical care. Those are some of the findings of a new series of studies conducted by the University of Illinois at Chicago's Midwest Latino Health Research Center and School of Public Health.
The 1997 International Joint Power Generation Conference and Exposition will be held Nov. 3-5, at the Adams Mark Hotel in Denver, Colo., it is announced by ASME International (American Society of Mechanical Engineers).
Using a genetically engineered toxin that is delivered directly into a patient's brain tumor, physicians at Temple University Hospital hope to shrink or eradicate malignant brain tumors that return after standard treatment. The drug consists of two parts: (1) a binding protein that attaches to tumor cells and (2) a modified diphtheria toxin. The complete compound can selectively kill tumor cells.
UI researchers report that mutations in a gene located on chromosome 1 are responsible for primary open angle glaucoma. "These study results point to the potential availability of a blood test that can identify people at risk for primary open angle glaucoma," says Dr. Thomas Weingeist, UI professor and head of ophthalmology.
Researchers across the country rely on PRIME Lab in a wide variety of investigations, from studying soil erosion and weather patterns to tracking aluminum absorption in humans to dating ancient glaciers, archaeological artifacts and meteorite falls.
Although the giddy laughter produced by "Tickle-Me-Elmo" can be traced to electronic gadgetry in the doll itself, little is known about why humans smil, laugh and otherwise squirm when tickled.
The latest in fuzzy logic, intelligent systems, remote sensing, global positioning systems, robotic space exploraton and other technologies developed for use in future space missions will be the focus of the 1997 NASA University Research Centers' Technical Conference on Education, Aeronautics, Space, Autonomy Earth and Environment scheduled for Feb. 16-19 at the Sheraton Uptown in Albuquerque, NM.
The National Institute of Justice announced this week that it has signed an agreement with Sandia National Laboratories to research and develop security technologies. In the past 20 years, Sandia has developed state-of-the- art physical security technologies-- design, and implementation of detection, entry control, delay, and response technologies-- as well as explosives detection and bomb disablement.
Parents of adopted children in New York are overwhelmingly in favor of laws that allow adult adoptees access to information in their birth certificates about their birth parents, according to a new Cornell University study.
The resentment public officials feared would prevent a watershed agreement between New York City and municipalities along the Hudson River watershed was not very deep, a Cornell University study has found.
The 1959 Ford and Carnegie reports on business schools caused severe and probably permanent damage to business education, forcing it into a narrow and overly-theoretical mold, says dr. Carter Daniel, of Rutgers Graduate School of Management, in his forthcoming book "MBA: The First Century."
Black women managers exhibit characteristics that give them exceptional strength, says Assistant Professor DT Ogilvie of Rutgers Graduate School of Management. They are more likely to have male-associated traits as well as female ones, to sense gender inequality strongly, to be able to handle several roles at once, and to break down traditional constraints.
Changes in the magnetic structure of minerals at high pressures might have significant implications for the structure and evolution of the Earth, and may have a significant impact on the planetÃs magnetic field.
Johns Hopkins researchers have resolved a longstanding controversy by showing that allergy shots add little or no benefit to standard drug treatment for children with year-round moderate to severe asthma.
The Agency for Health Care Policy and Research today announced the availability of its Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) Release 3, containing 1994 data on hospital inpatient care, conditions, services and costs.
A satellite-based positioning system used by hikers, farmers, pilots and scientists could double in size if Alfred Leick, University of Maine professor of spatial information science and engineering, can solve a problem stemming from the Cold War.
ATHENS, Ga. -- The Southern Ocean -- that vast expanse of water that surrounds the frozen continent of Antarctica -- has been reluctant to give up it wealth of scientific secrets. But new information gathered from a voyage to the bottom of the world could have a major impact on how scientists view the role oceans play in the global carbon and nitrogen cycle. Dr. Deborah Bronk, a biological oceanographer from the University of Georgia, undertook a six-week voyage to the Southern Ocean and to Antarctica's Ross Sea.
Students are becoming ëscientific consultantsà to the Indonesian government, working together to help track down rare plants that may hold a cure for cancer or discover why a vital cash crop is refusing to produce fruit.
The Council for Responsible Nutrition (CRN), backed by medical experts, reaffirmed today that calcium products and supplements which meet current federal standards are a safe and highly beneficial source of calcium.
A roundup of NC State University research, teaching and outreach activities. For use by the media as briefs or as background for stories. Stories include: From Fish, Come Clues on Sexual Behavior; Paper From Cornstalks; Better Housing for Migrant Workers; Nanotubes May Pave Way for Space Elevator; Edible Film Fights Food-Borne Disease; and more.
Testing a new aircraft can be costly and risk. But a new scale-model, remote-piloted test plane developed at NC State University with funding from the U.S. Navy may help reduce those risks and costs by letting researchers identify potential problems before they occur in manned flights. The test plane, a 17.5 percent scale version of the U.S. Navy's newly updated F/A-18 E/F Super Hornet strike fighter, was developed by a team of NC State researchers led by Drs. Charles Hall and John Perkins.
Scientists are rethinking what they know about bacteria: it turns out that the organisms tell time. Scientists affiliated with the NSFÃs H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest Long-Term Ecological Research site in Oregon may have found part of the answer for how deforestation affects global carbon cycles. A Memorandum of Agreement between the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Department of Defense (DOD) designates the Air National Guard to provide air logistics support to the U.S. Antarctic Program, which is run by NSF.
There has been a remarkable rise in the number of triplet and other higher-order multiple births over the past two decades.Yet, babies born in triplet and other higher-order multiple deliveries arrive smaller and earlier than single births and are at greater risk of infant death and life-long health problems.
Dramatic changes in the nursing home industry have taken place over the past decade, especially because of growth in home health care, according to findings from the latest survey of nursing homes in A merica.
Frequent phone calls from specially trained nurses significantly improved the health of heart failure patients in a study reported this month in the American Journal of Cardiology.
A nutritionally-balanced diet benefits people at risk for cardiovascular disease and also improves quality of life, according to an article in the January 27 issue of The AMA's Archives of Internal Medicine. EMBARGOED: 3 p.m. (CT) 1-26-1997
Exercising beyond current minimum guidelines (30 minutes a day most days of the week) can provide substantial health benefits, according to an article in the January 27 issue of the AMA's Archives of Internal Medicine. EMBARGOED: 3 p.m. (CT) 1-26-1997
APA Online Tipsheet for Feb. 97: 1.) Psychotherapy cost-effective in treatmnt of severe mental illness; 2.) High intelligence resists Alzheimer's; 3.) Near-death terminally ill no more likely to become depressed than other terminally ill; 4.) Irrational fears of being watched/humiliated linked to brain abnormality; 5.) Managed care and mental hlth; 6.) States' definitions of parity for mental hlth vary widely; 7.) APA annual mtg, 5/17-22, San Diego; 8.) '97 APA media award winners, and deadline for '98 awards; 9.) New, controv.
The federal Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR) today announced a simple and accurate method to predict which patients with pneumonia may be treated at home rather than in a hospital. The prediction method--a clinical model used to help doctors assess the need for hospitalization--also could help reduce the over $4 billion spent annually for inpatient care. This model is described in the January 23 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.