Latest Diabetes News FRIDAY, Nov. 23, 2018 (HealthDay News) — Type 2 diabetes has reached alarming numbers in the United
Month: November 2018
Undergraduate biology textbooks fail to teach how science can improve industry practice
IMAGE: While most undergraduates will work in non-STEM, business occupations, biology textbooks predominantly describe business in negative terms. This may impair
Restaurant ‘Health Grade’ Posters Could Mean Safer Dining
Post a restaurant’s “health grade” at the door and you may lower the chances its patrons will get sick with
Using fine-tuning for record-breaking performance
Materials scientists at Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU) have achieved a new record in the performance of organic non-fullerene based single-junction solar
Is your office messy? If so, you may be seen as uncaring, neurotic
An extremely messy personal space seems to lead people to believe the owner of that space is more neurotic and
Music Therapy Helps Kids With Autism Connect to Others
Latest Neurology News FRIDAY, Nov. 23, 2018 (HealthDay News) — When a child with autism can play the piano or
Touch can produce detailed, lasting memories
Exploring objects through touch can generate detailed, durable memories for those objects, even when we don’t intend to memorize the
Hacking the aging code: Big data to the rescue
IMAGE: Big medical data combined with physics of dynamic systems could be the key ingredient in the anti-aging drug recipe. view
Role of circulating tumor DNA to detect early melanoma growth
Researchers at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center say they have added to evidence that measuring and monitoring tumor DNA
Scientists unveil promising new HIV vaccine strategy
A new candidate HIV vaccine from Scripps Research surmounts technical hurdles that stymied previous vaccine efforts, and stimulates a powerful