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Newswise: Study Identifies Strategy for AI Cost-Efficiency in Health Care Settings
15-Nov-2024 12:35 PM EST
Study Identifies Strategy for AI Cost-Efficiency in Health Care Settings
Mount Sinai Health System

A study by researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai has identified strategies for using large language models (LLMs), a type of artificial intelligence (AI), in health systems while maintaining cost efficiency and performance. The findings, published in the November 18 online issue of npj Digital Medicine, provide insights into how health systems can leverage advanced AI tools to automate tasks efficiently, saving time and reducing operational costs while ensuring these models remain reliable even under high task loads.

Newswise: How marine worms regenerate lost body parts
18-Nov-2024 5:00 AM EST
How marine worms regenerate lost body parts
University of Vienna

Many living organisms are able to regenerate damaged or lost tissue, but why some are particularly good at this and others are not is not fully understood. Molecular biologists Alexander Stockinger, Leonie Adelmann and Florian Raible from the Max Perutz Labs at the University of Vienna have now made an important contribution to clarifying this question in a new study. In it, they explain the molecular mechanism of regeneration in marine worms and thus create a better understanding of the natural reprogramming ability of cells. The study has just been published in the renowned journal Nature Communications.

Newswise: Cracking the Code of Performance Degradation in Solid Oxide Cells at the Atomic Level
Released: 18-Nov-2024 12:00 AM EST
Cracking the Code of Performance Degradation in Solid Oxide Cells at the Atomic Level
National Research Council of Science and Technology

Dr. Hye Jung Chang and Dr. Kyung Joong Yoon (Director) of the Hydrogen Energy Materials Research Center at the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) have announced that they have elucidated the mechanism of the initial degradation phenomenon that triggers the performance drop of high-temperature solid oxide electrolysis cell systems, using advanced transmission electron microscopy.

Not for public release

This news release is embargoed until 16-Nov-2024 2:30 PM EST Released to reporters: 14-Nov-2024 11:00 AM EST

A reporter's PressPass is required to access this story until the embargo expires on 16-Nov-2024 2:30 PM EST The Newswise PressPass gives verified journalists access to embargoed stories. Please log in to complete a presspass application. If you have not yet registered, please Register. When you fill out the registration form, please identify yourself as a reporter in order to advance to the presspass application form.

Released: 15-Nov-2024 4:30 PM EST
New Study Shows How Salmonella Tricks Gut Defenses to Cause Infection
UC Davis Health

A study led by UC Davis distinguished professor Andreas Bäumler uncovered how Salmonella, a major cause of food poisoning, can invade the gut despite the presence of protective bacteria.

Newswise:Video Embedded how-ecdna-fuels-cancer-by-breaking-the-laws-of-biology
VIDEO
Released: 15-Nov-2024 4:15 PM EST
How ecDNA Fuels Cancer by Breaking the Laws of Biology
Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)

How ecDNA Fuels Cancer by Breaking the Laws of Biology

Newswise: boats-8681763_1920.jpg?w=740&h=494&q=90&auto=format&fit=crop&crop=focalpoint&fp-x=0.605&fp-y=0.5234&dm=1729269612&s=bc903ee96be59984fff772f335014725
Released: 15-Nov-2024 4:05 PM EST
Creating a Spatial Map of the Sea
Wellesley College

Creating a spatial map of the sea

Newswise: Zinc Deficiency Promotes Acinetobacter Lung Infection: Study
Released: 15-Nov-2024 3:40 PM EST
Zinc Deficiency Promotes Acinetobacter Lung Infection: Study
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

The study findings point to the potential of interleukin-13 antibodies — approved for use in humans — as a treatment to protect against bacterial pneumonia in patients with zinc deficiency.

Newswise: Study Challenges Assumptions About How Tuberculosis Bacteria Grow
Released: 15-Nov-2024 2:50 PM EST
Study Challenges Assumptions About How Tuberculosis Bacteria Grow
Tufts University

The rod-shaped tuberculosis (TB) bacterium, which the World Health Organization has once again ranked as the top infectious disease killer globally, is the first single-celled organism ever observed to maintain a consistent growth rate throughout its life cycle. These findings, reported by researchers on November 15 in the journal Nature Microbiology, overturn core beliefs of bacterial cell biology and hint at why the deadly pathogen so readily outmaneuvers our immune system and antibiotics.

   
Released: 15-Nov-2024 2:20 PM EST
How Microbes Create the Most Toxic Form of Mercury
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

SLAC’s SSRL helps pin down key players in the microbial production of methylmercury, a poison that can accumulate in fish.


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