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Three factors may predict college students' loss of self-control, WVU study finds

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
Researchers at West Virginia University determined willingness to try new things along with parental attachment could be indicators of self-control among first-year students.
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Depression in old age: Smoking and other risk factors less decisive

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
Smoking, high blood pressure, diabetes, and other risk factors for cardiovascular diseases also increase the likelihood of suffering from depressive mood or depression. Until now, however, it was unclear whether this influence changes over the course of life or is independent of age. A study by the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences shows: Among those over 65, these risk factors play a smaller role in relation to depression than among younger.
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Institutional environments trap disabled geoscientists between a rock and a workplace

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
Inaccessible workplaces, normative departmental cultures and 'ableist' academic systems have all contributed to the continued underrepresentation and exclusion of disabled researchers in the Geosciences, according to an article published today in Nature Geosciences.
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Dinosaurs lived in greenhouse climate with hot summers

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
Paleoclimatologist Niels de Winter and colleagues developed an innovative way to use the clumped isotope method to reconstruct climate in the geological past on the seasonal scale. They show that dinosaurs had to deal with hotter summers than previously thought. The results suggest that in the mid latitudes, seasonal temperatures will likely rise along with climate warming, while seasonal difference is maintained. This results in very high summer temperatures.
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As a decade of ecosystem restoration kicks off, don't forget the people

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
Global ecosystem restoration efforts are often measured by billions of trees planted or square kilometers of land restored. But there is a critical void in the agenda: the social and political dimensions that make restoration a success.
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The rocky road to accurate sea-level predictions

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
The type of material present under glaciers has a big impact on how fast they slide towards the ocean. Scientists face a challenging task to acquire data of this under-ice landscape. Choosing the wrong equations for the under-ice landscape can have the same effect on the predicted contribution to sea-level rise as a warming of several degrees, says Henning Åkesson, who led a new published study on Petermann Glacier in Greenland.
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Molecular coating enhances organic solar cells

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
A single-molecule layer that helps to channel electrical charge into an electrode can outperform the best conventional material.
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Headphones, earbuds impact younger generations' future audio health

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
As more people are taking advantage of music on the go, personal audio systems are pumping up the volume to the detriment of the listener's hearing. During the 180th ASA Meeting, Daniel Fink from The Quiet Coalition and Jan Mayes will talk about current research into personal audio system usage and the need for public health hearing conservation policies. Their session, "Personal audio system use can harm auditory health," will take place Thursday, June 10.
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Discovery of ray sperms' unique swimming motion and demonstration with bio-inspired robot

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
It is generally agreed that sperms 'swim' by beating or rotating their soft tails. However, a research team led by scientists from City University of Hong Kong (CityU) has discovered that ray sperms move by rotating both the tail and the head. The team further investigated the motion pattern and demonstrated it with a robot. Their study has expanded the knowledge on the microorganisms' motion and provided inspiration for robot engineering design.
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Soot from heaters and traffic is not just a local problem

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
Soot particles from oil and wood heating systems as well as road traffic can pollute the air in Europe on a much larger scale than previously assumed. The evaluation of the sources during a measuring campaign in Germany showed that about half of the soot particles came from the surrounding area and the other half from long distances. This underlines the need to further reduce emissions of soot that is harmful to health and climate.
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RUDN University chemist proposed eco-friendly synthesis of fluorescent compounds for medicine

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
RUDN and Shahid Beheshti University(SBU) chemist proposed an eco-friendly method for the synthesis of pyrrole and pyrazole derivatives with a wide range of applications in medicine: from antidepressants to anticancer. Moreover, the synthesized compounds possess interesting fluorescence features, and the bioactive scaffolds might attract great interest in the fields of clinical diagnostics and biomedical research in the future.
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Tuning the energy gap: A novel approach for organic semiconductors

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
What is already established for inorganic semiconductors stays a challenge for their organic counterparts: Tuning the energy gap by blending different semiconducting molecules to optimize device performance. Now, scientists from TU Dresden, in cooperation with researchers at TU Munich, as well as University of Würzburg, HU Berlin, and Ulm University demonstrated how to reach this goal.
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Could neutrophils be the secret to cancer's Achilles' heel?

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
A study published in the June 10, 2021 issue of Cell describes a remarkable new mechanism by which the body's own immune system can eliminate cancer cells without damaging host cells. The findings have the potential to develop first-in-class medicines that are designed to be selective for cancer cells and non-toxic to normal cells and tissues.
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Microscopic imaging without a microscope?

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
A new technique uses high-throughput sequencing, instead of a microscope, to obtain ultra-high-resolution images of gene expression from a tissue slide.
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Combination targeted therapy provides durable remission for patients with CLL

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
A combination of ibrutinib and venetoclax was found to provide lasting disease remission in patients with newly diagnosed chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), according to researchers at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. Findings from the single-institution Phase II study were published today in JAMA Oncology and provide the longest follow-up data on patients treated with this drug regimen.
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Hush little baby don't say a word...

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
Children with documented child protection concerns are four times as likely to die before they reach their 16th birthday, according to confronting new research from the University of South Australia.
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Incidence of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children among people with SARS-CoV-2 infection in US

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
The incidence of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) among people with SARS-CoV-2 infection in the United States was estimated in this study.
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COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy among patients with breast cancer

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
This survey study among women with breast cancer in Mexico evaluates their specific concerns about and high hesitancy rate toward COVID-19 vaccination.
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Declining growth rates of global coral reef ecosystems

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
If the trend of declining coral growth continues at the current rate, the world's coral reefs may cease calcifying around 2054, a new Southern Cross University study has found.Drawing on research from the late 1960s until now, the paper published in Communications & Environment reveals the global spatiotemporal trends and drivers of coral reef ecosystem growth (known as calcification). 116 studies from 53 published papers were analyzed.
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NYUAD study offers new insight into one of the mysteries of natural immunity to malaria

Eurekalert - Jun 10 2021 - 00:06
The team studied blood samples from children from two ethnic groups in remote rural areas of Burkina Faso, Gouin and Fulani, to see how they responded to the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. The team discovered an elevation of immune-dampening steroid molecules and a strong immunosuppressive signature in Gouin children. Studying the enigmatic less malaria-susceptible Fulani ethnic group revealed opposing steroid profiles and stronger immune reactivity to infection.
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