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Released: 25-Oct-2024 6:05 AM EDT
Complex Sound Patterns Are Recognized by Newborn Brains
University of Vienna

A team of researchers, including psycholinguist Jutta Mueller from the University of Vienna, has discovered that newborns are capable of learning complex sound sequences that follow language-like rules. This groundbreaking study provides long-sought evidence that the ability to perceive dependencies between non-adjacent acoustic signals is innate.

Newswise: Lymph Node-Like Structures May Trigger the Demise of Cancer Tumors
24-Oct-2024 10:30 AM EDT
Lymph Node-Like Structures May Trigger the Demise of Cancer Tumors
Johns Hopkins Medicine

A newly described stage of a lymph node-like structure seen in liver tumors after presurgical immunotherapy may be vital to successfully treating patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, according to a study by researchers from the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center.

Newswise: UCLA Researchers Uncover Novel Role of Protein GPNMB in Heart Repair
24-Oct-2024 8:00 AM EDT
UCLA Researchers Uncover Novel Role of Protein GPNMB in Heart Repair
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

UCLA scientists have identified the protein GPNMB as a critical regulator in the heart’s healing process after a heart attack.

Newswise: Study: Invasive Silver Carp Reduce Movement in Chicago-Area Water
22-Oct-2024 9:45 AM EDT
Study: Invasive Silver Carp Reduce Movement in Chicago-Area Water
College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Invasive silver carp have been spreading throughout the Mississippi River Basin since their introduction a half-century ago. Yet, try as they might, the fish have not advanced beyond a particular stretch of the Illinois River north of Kankakee.

Newswise: Watershed Moment: Engineers Invent High-Yield Atmospheric Water Capture Device for Arid Regions
Released: 24-Oct-2024 7:30 PM EDT
Watershed Moment: Engineers Invent High-Yield Atmospheric Water Capture Device for Arid Regions
University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV)

As a megadrought stresses the water supply throughout the Southwest, revolutionary research out of UNLV is answering this problem with a groundbreaking technology that pulls large amounts of water from the air in low humidity.

18-Oct-2024 3:25 PM EDT
The Clinical Significance of Microvascular Inflammation after Kidney Transplantation
American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Investigators recently uncovered key insights into newly defined rejection entities in kidney transplantation that may offer improved patient risk categorization post-transplant. The research will be presented at ASN Kidney Week 2024 October 23– 27.

Newswise: Children’s Research Institute at UT Southwestern Scientists Discover Ancient Viral Dna Activates Blood Cell Production During Pregnancy, After Bleeding
Released: 24-Oct-2024 3:50 PM EDT
Children’s Research Institute at UT Southwestern Scientists Discover Ancient Viral Dna Activates Blood Cell Production During Pregnancy, After Bleeding
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Ancient viral remnants in the human genome are activated during pregnancy and after significant bleeding in order to increase blood cell production, an important step toward defining the purpose of “junk DNA” in humans, according to new research from Children’s Medical Center Research Institute at UT Southwestern (CRI) published in Science.

Newswise: Rocky Planets Orbiting Small Stars Could Have Stable Atmospheres Needed to Support Life
Released: 24-Oct-2024 3:15 PM EDT
Rocky Planets Orbiting Small Stars Could Have Stable Atmospheres Needed to Support Life
University of Washington

A new study finds that rocky planets orbiting small stars do have the potential for stable, life-supporting atmospheres. The finding supports continued study of the TRAPPIST-1 system and other top candidates in the search for life outside our solar system.

Newswise: UTEP Researchers Develop Low-Cost Device that Detects Cancer in an Hour
Released: 24-Oct-2024 3:05 PM EDT
UTEP Researchers Develop Low-Cost Device that Detects Cancer in an Hour
University of Texas at El Paso

Researchers at The University of Texas at El Paso have created a portable device that can detect colorectal and prostate cancer more cheaply and quickly than prevailing methods. The team believes the device may be especially helpful in developing countries, which experience higher cancer mortality rates due in part to barriers to medical diagnosis.

Newswise: Johns Hopkins Children’s Center Research in Mice Suggests Zinc Supplements Have Potential Value to Directly Treat Short Bowel Syndrome
Released: 24-Oct-2024 2:30 PM EDT
Johns Hopkins Children’s Center Research in Mice Suggests Zinc Supplements Have Potential Value to Directly Treat Short Bowel Syndrome
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Researchers from Johns Hopkins Children’s Center say they have identified a gene pathway involving the mineral zinc in mice that may someday point the way to using zinc-based supplements to directly help people with a rare disorder called short bowel syndrome (SBS).


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