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Newswise: KRICT Develops New Lithium Composite Material to Enhance Performance and Safety of Next-Generation Lithium Rechargeable Battereis
Released: 20-Nov-2024 12:00 AM EST
KRICT Develops New Lithium Composite Material to Enhance Performance and Safety of Next-Generation Lithium Rechargeable Battereis
National Research Council of Science and Technology

Groundbreaking material technology from the Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology effectively prevents lithium dendrite growth, tackling the main cause of reduced lifespan in lithium-metal batteries. This innovative material, easily produced through a streamlined process, is set to become a game-changer for next-generation lithium rechargeable batteries.

Newswise: Breakthrough in noninvasive plant stress phenotyping: a multi-organ approach to combat abiotic stressors
Release date: 19-Nov-2024 10:35 PM EST
Breakthrough in noninvasive plant stress phenotyping: a multi-organ approach to combat abiotic stressors
Chinese Academy of Sciences

A research team has leveraged cutting-edge noninvasive phenotyping technologies to monitor plant stress across multiple vegetative organs.

Newswise: Low-cost phenotyping system unveils key insights into quantitative disease resistance in wild tomatoes
Release date: 19-Nov-2024 10:10 PM EST
Low-cost phenotyping system unveils key insights into quantitative disease resistance in wild tomatoes
Chinese Academy of Sciences

A research team reveals how a low-cost imaging phenotyping system successfully uncovers the mechanisms of quantitative disease resistance (QDR) in wild tomato species.

Newswise:Video Embedded new-desi-results-weigh-in-on-gravity
VIDEO
14-Nov-2024 8:00 AM EST
New DESI Results Weigh In On Gravity
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Researchers used the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument to map how nearly 6 million galaxies cluster across 11 billion years of cosmic history. Their observations line up with what Einstein's theory of general relativity predicts.

Newswise: Listening for Early Signs of Alzheimer’s Disease #ASA187
11-Nov-2024 9:20 AM EST
Listening for Early Signs of Alzheimer’s Disease #ASA187
Acoustical Society of America (ASA)

People with Alzheimer’s exhibit a loss of motor control along with cognitive decline, and one of the earliest signs of this decay can be spotted in involuntary eye movements known as saccades. These quick twitches of the eyes in Alzheimer’s patients are often slower, less accurate, or delayed compared to those in healthy individuals.

   
Released: 19-Nov-2024 3:35 PM EST
Roswell Park Experts to Showcase Groundbreaking Hematology Research at 66th ASH Annual Meeting
Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center

Roswell Park experts representing various specialties will highlight innovative research and advancements in hematology and hematologic cancers at the 66th annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology (ASH), to be held December 7-10 in San Diego, California.

Newswise: Tobacco-Related Health Inequities are a Social Justice Issue
Released: 19-Nov-2024 2:30 PM EST
Tobacco-Related Health Inequities are a Social Justice Issue
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Rutgers Institute for Nicotine & Tobacco Studies experts contribute to Surgeon General’s new report “Eliminating Tobacco-Related Disease and Death: Addressing Disparities” published on Nov. 19

Newswise: Nemours_Children_s_Health_Logo.jpg
Released: 19-Nov-2024 2:30 PM EST
Impaired Caregivers, Bed Sharing Raise Risk of Sudden Unexplained Infant Death in Infants Born with Prenatal Drug Exposure
Nemours Children’s Health

Study by Nemours Children's Health researcher finds 1 in 4 deaths of prenatally exposed infants involved caregivers who were both impaired and bed sharing at infant's time of death, suggests tailored messages to these caregivers are critical

Released: 19-Nov-2024 2:30 PM EST
How Colliding Genetic Processes Drive Aggressive Cancers
University of Chicago Medical Center

Mutations in certain genes can lead to the accumulation of DNA errors, resulting in a specific type of genetic change known as large tandem duplications (TDs) that can arise from the collision of two critical cellular processes: transcription and DNA replication.

Newswise: Wistar Institute and Cameroon Researchers Reveals HIV Latency Reversing Properties in African Plant
Released: 19-Nov-2024 1:55 PM EST
Wistar Institute and Cameroon Researchers Reveals HIV Latency Reversing Properties in African Plant
Wistar Institute

A collaboration between The Wistar Institute and the University of Buea in Cameroon has uncovered the mechanisms for a medicinal plant with anti-HIV potential in Croton oligandrus Pierre & Hutch, a species of African tree that has been used in traditional healing in Cameroon to treat a variety of diseases and conditions including cancers and diabetes.

   

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