20-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Acquiring herpes late in pregnancy brings special dangers to the newborn
University of Washington

While there is never a good time to acquire a herpes infection, contracting the virus late in pregnancy can prove catastrophic for the newborn child, with a high risk of severe brain damage or death from neonatal herpes.

Released: 3-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
UW sensors take chemical analysis out of the lab and into the field
University of Washington

Doctors needing chemical analyses such as blood tests to make life-saving diagnosis and treatment decisions soon won't have to lose precious time waiting for results to come back from the lab. New hand-held sensor technology developed at the University of Washington will allow physicians to bring a sophisticated "laboratory" directly to their patients for instant, on-site chemical analysis.

   
6-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Fossils Show British Columbia Was Once 2,000 Miles South
University of Washington

Extinct sea creatures have provided evidence that about 80 million years ago the west began to wander. University of Washington paleontologist Peter Ward and his collaborators report in Science that the discovery of pearly fossil shells of ammonites on two islands off the coast of Vancouver Island indicate that British Columbia and southern Alaska were once where Baja California is today.

Released: 12-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
A new state of matter turns a solid world into a melting one
University of Washington

A new form of matter, clusters of atoms, has been found to have a previously unsuspected property: it can melt at different temperatures from "solid" matter. An experiment described in Science this week paints an exotic portrait of certain substances seemingly confounding nature by existing as a liquid, instead of a solid, at room temperature.

17-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Archaeologists identify oldest existing mound complex in New World
University of Washington

The earliest existing mound complex built by humans in the new world has been identified in Louisiana by a team of archaeologists and researchers from around the United States. Details of the discovery appear in tomorrowís (Sept. 19) issue of the journal Science. The complex of 11 mounds was built between 5,000 and 5,400 years ago and predates other known existent mound complexes by 1,900 years.

Released: 8-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
UW to help lead $20 million earthquake hazard prevention project
University of Washington

University of Washington researchers will play a leading role in a $20 million effort to identify and mitigate potential earthquake hazards in urban areas along the Pacific coast. The UW joins eight California universities in the Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research Center announced today by the National Science Foundation.

11-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Move over El Nino, a major new climate cycle has been discovered, and it lasts for decades
University of Washington

It looks like El NiÃ’o, it feels like El NiÃ’o, and if you are watching fish stocks or reservoir levels you would say it is El NiÃ’o. But it isn't. Researchers at the University of Washington are describing a decades-long climate shift, called the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, that seems to explain many of the changing environmental patterns seen across North America since the late 1970s, from disappearing salmon along the West Coast to wetter than average winters in the South.

21-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Overfeeding Normal Infant Rats Affects Three Generations
University of Washington

A new study of genetically normal rats indicates that the effects of overfeeding extends for at least three generations and may explain health trends beginning to be seen in human populations around the world, a University of Washington researcher told the Society of Neuroscience today.

22-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Portions of Male Sparrow Brains Grow when Birds Paired with Females
University of Washington

A new study indicating that portions of bird brains enlarge in response to social factors adds to the mounting evidence that the brains of higher animals change over time. A University of Washington researcher reported that parts of the brains of male sparrows housed with females enlarged 15 to 20 percent larger than brains of other birds housed with males or in isolation

28-Oct-1997 12:00 AM EST
Tree-ring study enables researchers to link massive American earthquake to Japanese tsunami in January 1700
University of Washington

Stumps of cedar trees are revealing details of a huge earthquake along North America's west coast more than 100 years before the arrival of the first European occupants. University of Washington researchers are reporting in Nature that evidence in the dead wood confirms that a great earthquake struck the Pacific Northwest coast in 1700 and set off a tsunami, a train of massive ocean waves, that flooded coastal Japan.

Released: 6-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
The world's most detailed weather system gives forecasters a close-up view of local conditions
University of Washington

A supercomputer is ushering in a new era of high-precision weather forecasting. The University of Washington has switched on the latest version of its MM5 weather forecasting system, the world's first to diagnose and forecast local weather on a scale of a few thousand yards. The four-kilometer system can follow a region's topography so accurately that it can "see" rain showers on one side of a mountain and the rain shadow on the other.

Released: 7-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
UW professor to coordinate National Science Foundation's external year 2000 efforts
University of Washington

The National Science Foundation has appointed University of Washington Professor Mark Haselkorn to coordinate its external efforts to address the year 2000 computer problem.

14-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
The Earth's mysterious inner core is turning independently, but more slowly than previously thought
University of Washington

The proposition that the Earth's little understood inner core is a frozen yet white hot globe of curiously laid out iron crystals, spinning independently of the rest of the planet, is confirmed by University of Washington geophysicist Kenneth Creager in tomorrow's Science.

Released: 19-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
New simulator technology to give surgeons 'feel' of really operating
University of Washington

Surgical students soon will be able hone their skills with simulators that for the first time present a realistic feel of performing surgery thanks to a research project under way at the University of Washington. The project also could improve patient care by leading to the development of instruments that enhance surgeons' sense of touch.

Released: 20-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
For street kids streets are mean, but they may be better than home
University of Washington

The picture of life on the streets for children in the late 20th century drawn from a University of Washington psychologist is a horrifying one. Violence in ;the form of physical and sexual abuse are rampant, as are suicide attempts, mental and emotional disorders, and drug and alcohol abuse. But those conditions may be an improvement over those found at home.

Released: 22-Nov-1997 12:00 AM EST
How little gray cells process sound: they're really a series of computers
University of Washington

Individual brain cells continually perfrom complex computational tasks to help humans, bats, gerbil, birds and other creatures distinguish what a sound ;is and where it is coming from. To do this, individual neurons do not just relay information from one point to another. Instead each neuron could be compared to a tiny computer that compiles ;information from many sources and makes a decision based on that information, say a group of neuroscientists who are beginning to unravel how brain cells continually perform complex computations what a sound is and where it's coming from.

Released: 4-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Student Evaluations don't get a passing grade: Easy-grading professors get too-high marks, new UW study shows
University of Washington

As millions of students are about to rate the teaching abilities of their professor, researchers say such evaluations are flawed and often misused. Science, math and engineering instructors, who teach demanding classes, are often penalized with undeservedly low ratings, while teachers of easier courses are often rewarded with unfairly high ratings.

Released: 9-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Researchers puzzle over the source of mysterious, high-energy X-rays recorded above the Earth
University of Washington

The flight of a balloon sent aloft by scientists over Kiruna, Sweden, seemed uneventful -- until researchers started examining the data. What was found by three graduate students has scientists scrambling for an explanation: an intense stream of X-rays, occurring in seven bursts, each separated by only a few minutes and lasting for a total of half an hour. The evidence is that the bursts came not from space, but from the Earth's upper atmosphere.

Released: 9-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Asian industrial smog: it's increasingly blowing in the wind across the U.S. West Coast
University of Washington

It seems that Americans are not entirely to blame for the chemical smog that hangs over cities along the U.S. West Coast. A new study indicates that about 10 percent of the ozone and other pollutants are arriving from the industrialized nations of East Asia. After measuring pollutants from a remote Olympic Peninsula research station, a researcher concludes that Asian pollution is affecting much of the U.S.West Coast, with Washington and Oregon affected slightly more because of wind patterns.

Released: 9-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Giant snowballs in space? No, says researcher, they're simply black snow on the TV screen
University of Washington

Last May University of Iowa space physicist Louis Frank claimed to have discovered 20- to 40-ton cosmic snowballs, the size of houses, pelting the Earth at the rate of 30,000 a day. Now University of Washington geophysicist George Parks has analyzed Frank's ultraviolet (UV) camera images and has concluded that the white snow in space is no more than black "snow" on the television screen. Parks and his collaborators are certain that Frank has been looking at "instrument noise."

Released: 24-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
How to keep up with those New Year's Resolutions
University of Washington

Health related pledges are the most common form of New Year's resolutions and researchers have found that a person's confidence that he or she can make a behavior change and the commitment to making that change are the keys to achieving resolutions.

Released: 29-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
In spite of computers, handwriting instruction is important because of carry-over to composition
University of Washington

Adults may have abandoned the pen for the keyboard, but until first-graders have laptops, it's crucial that children continue to be taught handwriting because of its link to composition. A University ofWashington study of children with writing problems shows that first-graders improved both their handwriting and their composition after being tutored.

Released: 31-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
How do I love thee? Instead of counting the ways, 'The Love Test' offers couples 32 scientific quizzes to measure their relationship
University of Washington

If Paul Simon had been a social scientist instead of a song writer he might have stopped counting those "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover" and focused on finding ways to keep his lover around. The result might have been like "The Love Test," a new book filled with 32 romance and relationship-oriented quizzes that has been compiled by two University of Washington sociologists.

Released: 3-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
It doesn't add up: First study of talented youg mathematicians shows boys out-perform girls
University of Washington

In the first long-term study of mathematically precocious young children, University of Washington researchers have found significantly more boys than girls with very high levels of math talents, and discovered that even when children are given an enrichment program math-talented girls don't catch up with boys in the first two years of school.

Released: 5-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
Dissolved organic matter in oceans may mitigate greenhouse effect
University of Washington

Vast amounts of dissolved organic matter in the ocean, once thought to be inert, may play a surprising role in mitigating the greenhouse effect, according to bioengineering researchers at the University of Washington, reporting in this week's (Feb. 5) issue of Nature.

Released: 11-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
New low-waste chemical processing technique being studied at UW
University of Washington

A new technique for reducing waste from chemical processes involved in everything from petroleum refining to pharmaceutical manufacturing also may hold the key to cleaning up radioactive remains at eastern Washington's Hanford nuclear site, according to University of Washington researchers studying the new process.

20-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
A Husband's willingness to be influenced by wife, share power are key predictors of newlywed happiness, stability
University of Washington

Active listening techniques tuaght by many marriage counselors do not work when couples are in conflict. Instead a new study shows that "olnly those newlywed men who are acceptingof influence from their wives are winding up in happy, stable marriages, says John Gottman, University of Washington psychology professor

Released: 27-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
It's emotional abuse, not vicious beatings, that often spurs women to leave battering husbands
University of Washington

It's the scarring left by an emotional abuse not the pain and bruises left by a violent that is more likely to trigger a battered wife's decision to leave her spouse, according to University of Washington psychologists who studied marriage marked by domestic violence.

Released: 26-Mar-1998 12:00 AM EST
Stone 'jigsaw' puzzles yield clues about mysterious Saharan nomads
University of Washington

A faint image of mysterious ancient Egyptian nomads living in the Sahara Desert has emerged from thousands of stone artifacts painstakingly collected and reassembled by a University of Washington archaeologist. The stone tools and fragments offer clues to a people who lived 5,500 to 8,000 years ago and harvested wild grass seed.

Released: 1-Apr-1998 12:00 AM EST
Walking with Lucy: Short-legged human ancestors were very efficient at strolling through their world
University of Washington

She wasn't faster than a speeding bullet, but new research seems to indicate that Lucy and other early human ancestors walked with greater ease and efficiency than previously believed, despite their short leg, says a University of Washington anthropologist.

Released: 8-Apr-1998 12:00 AM EDT
New test identifies people who can handle high-pressure jobs requiring rapid decision making, large amounts of information
University of Washington

Few people are cut out for pressure-cooker jobs such as being a 911 operator or an air traffic controller. University of Washington psychologist have determined that certain people seem to possess a common trait that enables them to handle these kinds of jobs, sometimes involving life and death, and have developed a new test that identifies these individuals.

Released: 23-Apr-1998 12:00 AM EDT
High-tech Unmanned Airplanes for Remote Weather Reconnaissance
University of Washington

The fog may be lifting for Northwest weather prognosticators who struggle to make forecasts without critical data on conditions over the Pacific Ocean. Aeronautical engineers at the University of Washington are launching high-tech unmanned airplanes to gather this missing weather data.

Released: 2-May-1998 12:00 AM EDT
New test identifies people who can handle high-pressure jobs requiring rapid decision making, large amounts of information
University of Washington

Few people are cut out for pressure-cooker jobs such as being a 911 operator or an air traffic controller. University of Washington psychologist have determined that certain people seem to possess a common trait that enables them to handle these kinds of jobs, sometimes involving life and death, and have developed a new test that identifies these individuals.

Released: 12-May-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Transgenic Mouse with Human Eye Pigment Gene
University of Washington

Researchers have created transgenic mice with the widest known spectral range of vision of any mammal by introducing a gene that produces a human photopigment into mice embryos. The researchers plan to use the new mice as a tool for studying the evolution of sight and human vision problems.

Released: 27-May-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Increasing frequency of El Nino takes toll on Northern Hemisphere's only penguins
University of Washington

El Nino has cut the Galapagos penguin population in half since 1970, says Dee Boersma, a University of Washington zoology professor whose latest study was published this month in the journal Condor. The penguins had shown recent signs of recovery, she says, but that was before the current El Nino.

Released: 27-May-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Move over Weather Channel: Traffic TV to cover local commuting conditions
University of Washington

Traffic TV, to be launched June 1 by the University of Washington, is the first traffic information system in the nation offering both live video footage of traffic choke points and estimated highway travel speeds. The broadcast is part of an $18 million public-private initiative using the information superhighway to ease congestion on old-fashioned asphalt highways.

Released: 4-Jun-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Physics experiment produces highest-energy electrons and positrons ever created in man-made accelerator
University of Washington

Physicists at the European Laboratory for Paticle Physics (CERN) in Geneva have created the highest-energy electrons and positrons ever produced in a man-made particle accelerator. A University of Washington team is participating in one of four experiments studying the collisions of these elementary particles.

Released: 5-Jun-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Too much exercise may put some young women at risk for bulimia
University of Washington

Too much of a good thing, even exercise may be dangerous for some people. Young women who are compelled to exercise at excessive levels are at risk for developing eating disorders and general psychological unhappiness, according to the first study focusing on the role of exercise as a way bulimic women avoid gaining weight.

Released: 6-Jun-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Physicists find evidence that neutrinos have mass
University of Washington

A Japan-U.S. physics collaboration that includes a team from the University of Washington has found evidence indicating that subatomic particles known as neutrinos have mass. The findings counter assumptions in the Standard Model of particle physics, which has held that the electrically neutral, weakly interacting particles have no mass.

Released: 11-Jun-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Brightest object in universe observed by University of Washington astronomer
University of Washington

The brightest object yet observed in the universe has been discovered by a University of Washington astronomer and his colleagues. The quasar is 4 million-billion to 5 million-billion times brighter than the Sun and outshines the brightest galaxy by more than 100 times

Released: 23-Jun-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Remembering and Foregetting Childhood Sexual Abuse: It's Not Repression
University of Washington

Researchers probing people's memories of sexual abuse report two ordinary mechanisms may be responsible for temporarily forgetting and later remembering genuine instances of childhood sexual abuse. The findings by University of Washington psychologists suggest that it is possible to explain such forgetting without repression.

Released: 30-Jun-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Launch Date Near for UW Mission to Collect Samples of Comet Dust
University of Washington

A University of Washington astronomy professor's nearly two-decade dream of launching an unmanned spacecraft to collect interstellar dust from a comet is close to coming true.

Released: 16-Jul-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Virtual Retinal Display Wins 1998 Discover Magazine Technological Innovation Award
University of Washington

The Human Interface Technology Laboratory at the University of Washington has received the 1998 Discover Magazine Award for Technological Innovation in the sight category. Developed in collaboration with the Seattle firm, Microvision, the virtual retinal display scans a low-power beam of light that "paints" an image directly onto a user's retina rather than a screen.

Released: 17-Jul-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Trans-Atlantic crossing attempt by Aerosonde aims to prove viability of unmanned aircraft
University of Washington

Following Charles Lindbergh and the Concorde on the well-traveled path to aviation history, researchers from the University of Washington and The Insitu Group next month will attempt the first trans-Atlantic crossing by an autonomous aircraft.

Released: 30-Jul-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Mentoring Curriculum Shares Lessons from Award-Winning UW program
University of Washington

To help bridge the widening gap between industry's demand for a diverse, well-trained work force and the available labor supply, the University of Washington's nationally recognized Women in Science & Engineering Center has developed the first comprehensive curriculum for mentoring training in science and engineering.

Released: 5-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Ultrasound imaging and prostate cancer treatment
University of Washington

Assessing whether prostate cancer patients are eligible for radioactive seed implantation therapy, a preferred new treatment, can now be made in minutes rather than days, and at a fraction of the cost, using a new ultrasound imaging technology developed by researchers at the University of Washington and Seattle Prostate Institute.

Released: 11-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Aerosonde Transatlantic Crossing Attempt: New Itinerary
University of Washington

Aviation authorities from the United Kingdom have given final approval to The Insitu Group of Bingen, Wash., and the University of Washington to attempt the first transatlantic crossing by an autonomous aircraft. The flight attempts will be made at the first fair-weather day beginning Aug. 16 from St. John's, Newfoundland to the Outer Hebrides Islands of Scotland.

Released: 13-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
If You Have a Real Hankering for the Taste of Salt, It May Stem From Your Mother's Morning Sickness
University of Washington

People's preference for salt may have been imprinted while they were still in their mothers womb. University of Washington researchers have found a link between people's salt preference and the level of morning sickness experienced by their mothers when they were pregnant.

Released: 18-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Faith Flourishes in Face of Competition. Study of Catholic Dioceses Shows
University of Washington

Competiton makes faith grow stronger and encourages chruch innovation, according to a study exploring the composition of all 171 Roman Catholic dioceses in the continguous 48 states.

Released: 22-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Aerosonde Robotic Airplane completes Trans-Atlantic Flight
University of Washington

A 29-pound robotic airplane Friday completed the first trans-Atlantic crossing by an autonomous aircraft. The 2,000 mile flight from Bell Island, Newfoundland, to the Hebrides Islands of Scotland was completed in 26 hours and demonstrated the Aerosonde plane's potential to gather remote weather data over the oceans to improve forecasting.


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