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Newswise: New AI defense method shields models from adversarial attacks
Release date: 5-Mar-2025 6:35 PM EST
New AI defense method shields models from adversarial attacks
Los Alamos National Laboratory

New AI defense method shields models from adversarial attacks

Released: 5-Mar-2025 6:30 PM EST
Olfactory Reference Syndrome: When You're Obsessed with Your BO
Universite de Montreal

Exploring a condition in which people falsely believe they emit bad body odour, Ph.D. student Morganne Masse highlights the significance of smell in psychiatry.

Release date: 5-Mar-2025 5:50 PM EST
Does getting ADHD drugs via telehealth increase addiction risk?
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Teens and adults who started on stimulant medications for ADHD during via telehealth were on the whole no more likely to develop substance use disorders a year later, but young adults age 26-34 did have a higher risk. The findings could inform telehealth policy.

Newswise: Tufts Scientists Develop Open-Source Software for Modeling Soft Materials
Release date: 5-Mar-2025 5:15 PM EST
Tufts Scientists Develop Open-Source Software for Modeling Soft Materials
Tufts University

A team of Tufts University researchers created Morpho, an open-source programmable environment that enables researchers and engineers to conduct shape optimization and design for soft materials. Applications can be for anything from artificial hearts to robot materials that mimic flesh and soft tissue.

Newswise: Repurposed ALS drug becomes imaging probe to help diagnose neurodegeneration
Release date: 5-Mar-2025 5:10 PM EST
Repurposed ALS drug becomes imaging probe to help diagnose neurodegeneration
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Scientists at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital used positron emission tomography (PET) with edaravone, a drug used to treat ALS, to detect oxidative stress, which leads to brain damage, offering a clear path to detecting neurological conditions.

Newswise: Future drugs may snap supply chain fueling breast cancer
Release date: 5-Mar-2025 4:35 PM EST
Future drugs may snap supply chain fueling breast cancer
Sanford Burnham Prebys

Cancer cells have an insatiable appetite for energy as they multiply more rapidly than normal cells. Greedy cancer cells hijack various cellular functions to find and exploit energy and other resources, including a group of enzymes that help normal cells maintain a balance of energy. These enzymes, called creatine kinases (CK), allow cells to transport energy produced at the mitochondria to where it is needed throughout the cell. Studies of breast cancer cells have highlighted the importance of a type of CK called ubiquitous mitochondrial creatine kinase (uMtCK). New research published in Structure will serve as the foundation for a collaborative team of Sanford Burnham Prebys and Mayo Clinic investigators to design and develop novel small molecules that selectively inhibit uMtCK to treat breast cancer.

Newswise: Feeling Is Believing: Bionic Hand 'Knows' What It’s Touching, Grasps Like a Human
Release date: 5-Mar-2025 4:15 PM EST
Feeling Is Believing: Bionic Hand 'Knows' What It’s Touching, Grasps Like a Human
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins University engineers have developed a pioneering prosthetic hand that can grip plush toys, water bottles, and other everyday objects like a human, carefully conforming and adjusting its grasp to avoid damaging or mishandling whatever it holds.

27-Feb-2025 7:30 PM EST
Stressed Out? It May Increase the Risk of Stroke
American Academy of Neurology (AAN)

Some people living with chronic stress have a higher risk of stroke, according to a study published on March 5, 2025, online in Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. The study looked at younger adults and found an association between stress and stroke, with no known cause, in female participants, but not male participants. This study does not prove that stress causes stroke; it only shows an association.

24-Feb-2025 8:00 PM EST
Over-the-Counter Pain Relievers Linked to Improved Recovery From Concussion
American Academy of Neurology (AAN)

People who take over-the-counter pain relievers after a concussion may recover faster than those who do not take pain relievers, according to a preliminary study released today, March 5, 2025, that will be presented at the American Academy of Neurology’s 77th Annual Meeting taking place April 5–9, 2025, in San Diego and online.


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