31 December, 2015

New study shows how the father's diet influences sperm via tsRNA, which affects the offspring's metabolism


Researchers captured the first recording of a free-moving animal brain: Stunning video shows a worm's neurons light up as it thinks about its next move


Japanese Physicists Win Naming Rights for Element 113


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Japanese Physicists Win Naming Rights for Element 113

Solar storm could spark New Year's Eve Northern Lights


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Solar storm could spark New Year's Eve Northern Lights

CRISPR treats genetic disorder in adult mammal


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CRISPR treats genetic disorder in adult mammal

Researchers have used CRISPR to treat an adult mouse model of Duchenne muscular dystrophy. This marks the first time that CRISPR has successfully treated a genetic disease inside a fully developed living mammal with a strategy that has the potential to be translated to human therapy.


While tensions between Tibet and China have been strained for centuries, the Chinese may never be able to fully populate Tibet because they, unlike the Tibetans, have difficulty reproducing at high altitudes


Freak storm pushes North Pole 50 degrees above normal to melting point


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Freak storm pushes North Pole 50 degrees above normal to melting point

ALS toxic protein study opens new door for drug discovery: A new study provides the first evidence-based description of a type of protein clump thought to play an important role in ALS, or Lou Gehrig's disease, by killing the nerve cells that control movement.


A fifth of cancer therapy trials fail to enlist enough participants


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A fifth of cancer therapy trials fail to enlist enough participants

Heatwave pushes North Pole's winter temperatures above freezing


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Heatwave pushes North Pole's winter temperatures above freezing

ADHD Meds May Raise Risk for Psychotic Side Effects in Some Kids


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ADHD Meds May Raise Risk for Psychotic Side Effects in Some Kids

'On the reception and detection of pseudo-profound bullshit': 'those more receptive to bullshit were less reflective, lower in cognitive ability, more likely to hold religious/paranormal beliefs and endorse complementary medicine'.


Are scientists a workforce? – Or, how Dr. Frankenstein made biomedical research sick


Women with a false positive mammogram or breast biopsy result have an increased risk of breast cancer over the next 10 years compared with those with a true negative result, a new report has found.


Researchers have identified hydrothermal vents in the deep sea of the Caribbean which are unlike any found before, formed largely of talc, rather than the more usual sulphide minerals.


Mysterious radio signals from space discovered to be a much better test of Einstein's General Relativity theory


30 December, 2015

Hunger promotes fear extinction by activation of an amygdala microcircuit


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Hunger promotes fear extinction by activation of an amygdala microcircuit

Flu virus in pigs shows worrisome pandemic profile, study finds


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Flu virus in pigs shows worrisome pandemic profile, study finds

Scientists propose an alternative to body mass index (BMI) that takes into account four key body measurements. The indicator, Surface-based Body Shape Index, outperforms BMI at predicting all-cause mortality.


Study: People four times more likely to order dessert and ordered 17.65% more alcoholic drinks when their server is overweight.


A new study has found that watching yourself eat something unhealthy, like a slice of chocolate cake, can make that food seem less tasty. And that, in turn, might make you eat less.


PTSD-related study finds a single dose of MDMA helps conditioned fear go extinct.


A study into "whether private research investments are distorted away from long-term projects." The "empirical context is cancer research, where clinical trials -- and hence, project durations -- are shorter for late-stage cancer treatments relative to early-stage treatments or cancer prevention."


Lab tests of e-cigarettes demonstrate cellular harm


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Lab tests of e-cigarettes demonstrate cellular harm

Modeling the ecologic niche of plague in sylvan and domestic animal hosts to delineate sources of human exposure in the western United States


PLOS Science Wednesday: Hi Reddit, my name is Jack L. Conrad and I published a paper in PLOS ONE about my discovery of a new fossil Babibasiliscus, which is the earliest known species of casquehead, also known as “Jesus lizard” – Ask Me Anything!


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Hi Reddit,

My name is Jack L. Conrad and I am an Assistant Professor at NYIT College of Osteopathic Medicine and a Research Associate at the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH). My research focuses on the evolution, morphology, and paleontology of modern and living snakes, amphisbaenians, mosasaurs, and other 'lizards' (Squamata). Squamates first appeared around 245 million years ago, have a good fossil record for the last 155 million years, and today include more than 9700 living species; that's alotta Squamata!

One of the most difficult problems in understanding squamate evolution is snake origins. We know that many branches of the lizard family tree lost their limbs -- there are limbess geckoes, limbless skinks, limbless cousins to the Komodo Dragon, etc. -- but we don't know from which branch of the lizard family tree snakes come. It's really become quite a headache, but also a fun area for investigation.

Studying this problem, and other areas of squamate evolution, leads scientists like myself to understanding other natural science questions and phenomena, including (but certainly not limited to): What was Earth like at various times in the past? Are there physical constraints on how big a lizard can be on land? In the seas? How did lizards move across the planet as they evolved over time?

I recently published a study titled "A new Eocene casquehead lizard (Reptliia, Corytophanidae) from North America” in PLOS ONE. This study described the earliest known species of casquehead, or Jesus lizard, known. Importantly, this animal lived in Wyoming when the planet was much warmer than it is now and because its modern relatives live only in the tropics, it raises questions about what might happen if our planet warmed up a few degrees.

I will be answering your questions at 1pm ET. Ask Me Anything! I love everything about reptiles and evolution. I may not have all of your answers, but I will certainly enjoy talking with you about all of your questions!

Don’t forget to follow me on Twitter @ammoskius.

">PLOS Science Wednesday: Hi Reddit, my name is Jack L. Conrad and I published a paper in PLOS ONE about my discovery of a new fossil Babibasiliscus, which is the earliest known species of casquehead, also known as “Jesus lizard” – Ask Me Anything!

Chinese scientists genetically modify human embryos for the first time


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Chinese scientists genetically modify human embryos for the first time

Seafloor Features Are Revealed by the Gravity Field : Image of the Day


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Seafloor Features Are Revealed by the Gravity Field : Image of the Day

Giant Squid finally captured on Camera


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Giant Squid finally captured on Camera

29 December, 2015

Solving the mystery of dog domestication


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Solving the mystery of dog domestication

Arterial Tortuosity Syndrome reveals function of dehydroascorbic acid in collagen and elastin synthesis: Implications for skin care


Carbon doped with nitrogen dramatically improves storage capacity of supercapacitors


Immunology and Cell Biology - The epigenetic mechanisms that underlie health and disease


Fish could have emotions and consciousness, biologists find


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Fish could have emotions and consciousness, biologists find

No easy answers in study of legal marijuana's impact on alcohol use


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No easy answers in study of legal marijuana's impact on alcohol use

Cartilage growing to rebuild body parts 'within three years'


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Cartilage growing to rebuild body parts 'within three years'

Liver hormone may be the off-switch for sweet-tooth, cocktail cravings


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Liver hormone may be the off-switch for sweet-tooth, cocktail cravings

Early-life exercise alters gut microbes, promotes healthy brain and metabolism


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Early-life exercise alters gut microbes, promotes healthy brain and metabolism

USC-led study finds link between anxiety and dementia


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USC-led study finds link between anxiety and dementia

Extremely premature babies run a much higher risk of developing autism in later childhood, and even during the neonate period differences are seen in the brains of those who do. The findings, which are published in the journal Cerebral Cortex, suggest that environmental factors can lead to autism.


New Study: The stress California's forests are under could be the beginnings of a long-term collapse.


Scientists from Imperial College London have identified for the first time two clusters of genes linked to human intelligence - Called M1 and M3, these so-called gene networks appear to influence cognitive function – which includes memory, attention, processing speed and reasoning.


Doctor invents $1 voice prosthesis to enable cancer patients to speak again


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Doctor invents $1 voice prosthesis to enable cancer patients to speak again

In a study of the brains of 55 people who died suddenly, researchers found a timestamp of the moment of their death.


World's smelliest 'corpse flower', which blooms once in 10 years but lasts only for 48 hours, blooms in Australia


DNA nanobots will target cancer cells in the first human trial using a terminally ill patient