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An easy-to-use platform is a gateway to AI in microscopy

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
A new, freely available platform helps non-experts use artificial intelligence to analyse microscopy images. The platform has been developed at Åbo Akademi University in Finland and Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência, Portugal, and will be of big help in research and diagnostics using modern day microscopes.
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VR visualization supports research on molecular networks

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
Networks offer a powerful way to visualize and analyze complex systems. However, many visualizations are limited. Protein interactions in the human body constitute such a complex system that can hardly be visualized. Scientists at CeMM and Max Perutz Labs developed an immersive virtual reality (VR) platform that solves this problem. With the help of VR visualization of protein interactions, it will be possible in the future to better recognize correlations and identify those genetic aberrations that are responsible for rare diseases.
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Heartbeat can help detect signs of consciousness in patients after a coma

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
A new study conducted jointly by the University of Liège (Belgium) and the École normale supérieure - PSL (France) shows that heart brain interactions, measured using electroencephalography (EEG), provide a novel diagnostic method for patients with disorders of consciousness. This study is published in the Journal of Neuroscience.
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Researchers realize high-efficiency frequency conversion on integrated photonic chip

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
Researchers realized efficient frequency conversion in microresonators via a degenerate sum-frequency process, and achieved cross-band frequency conversion and amplification of converted signal through observing the cascaded nonlinear optical effects inside the microresonator.
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How philosophy can change the understanding of pain

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
Dr. Sabrina Coninx from Ruhr-Universität Bochum and Dr. Peter Stilwell from McGill University, Canada, have investigated how philosophical approaches can be used to think in new ways about pain and its management. The researchers advocate not merely reducing chronic pain management to searching and treating underlying physical changes but instead adopting an approach that focuses on the person as a whole. Their work was published online in the journal "Synthese" on 15 April 2021.
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Inhibitory effect of strawberry geranium on inflammatory response in skin keratinocytes

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
Strawberry geranium (Saxifraga stolonifera) has been used in Japan as a herbal medicine to treat wounds and swelling, and continues to be an ingredient in food and cosmetics. Pharmacological studies have shown that extracts of strawberry geranium have antioxidant and antitumor activities. However, the anti-inflammatory effect of strawberry geranium on the skin had not been well characterized.
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Engineering single-molecule fluorescence with asymmetric nano-antennas

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
NIR fluorescence has shown great potential in bioscience, but low quantum-yield has largely impeded the research on most NIR fluorophores. Here, scientists in China use asymmetric plasmonic nano-antenna to drastically enhance NIR dye's single-molecule fluorescence intensity. The asymmetry provides an additional tuning parameter that offers new possibilities to modulate near-field and far-field properties of the plasmonic modes, thereby improving fluorescence without compromising molecule's photostability. This work provides a universal scheme for engineering NIR single-molecule fluorescence.
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The type of blood vessel damage determines its path to regeneration

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
Researchers from the University of Tsukuba discovered how cells marked by platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha (PDGFRa+) residing predominantly in the outermost layer of blood vessels (adventitia) respond to vascular injury and contribute to neointima formation. By inducing various forms of vessel injury and tracking PDGFRa+ cells, they found that PDGFRa+ cells respond differently to vessel injury depending on the type of injury. This study may help develop a novel treatment option for patients affected by neointima formation and vessel occlusion.
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Red Sea is no longer a baby ocean

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
The Red Sea is a fascinating and still puzzling area of investigation for geoscientists. Controversial questions include its age and whether it represents a special case in ocean basin formation or if it has evolved similarly to other, larger ocean basins. Researchers from Germany, Saudi Arabia and Iceland have now published a new tectonic model that suggests that the Red Sea is not only a typical ocean, but more mature than thought before.
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Finding clues to nephronophthisis in adults

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
Researchers at Tokyo Medical and Dental University (TMDU) have studied a number of adults with nephronophthisis for the first time with a view to identifying clinical, genetic and histopathological characteristics. This kidney disease, usually presenting in children, is challenging to diagnose in adults. The research findings suggest that older patients are less likely to have an underlying genetic defect, and highlight histopathological changes in tubular basement membrane that may serve as a diagnostic marker.
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Bacteria and viruses infect our cells through sugars: Now researchers want to know how they do it

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
Most infectious bacteria and viruses bind to sugars on the surface of our cells. Now researchers from the University of Copenhagen have created a library of tens of thousands of natural cells containing all the sugars found on the surface of our cells. The library may help us understand the role played by sugars and their receptors in the immune system and the brain, the researchers behind the study explain.
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US asbestos sites made risky by some remediation strategies

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
Efforts to prevent human exposure to asbestos may be mobilizing the cancer-causing mineral so that it can reach water supplies, based on new findings about how the fibers move through soil.
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TPU scientists first study composition of pore waters in methane cold seep of eastern Arctic seas

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
Young scientists of Tomsk Polytechnic University as a part of the team of Arctic researchers have studied pore waters in three areas of methane release on the surface. They first managed to define in details the composition of pore waters in the cold methane seeps of the Eastern Arctic seas. The research findings are published in the Water academic journal.
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People with heart rhythm disorders warned over cannabis use

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
: A study of 2.4 million hospitalised cannabis users has found that those with an arrhythmia were 4.5 times more likely to die while in hospital than those without. The research is presented at EHRA 2021, an online scientific congress of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC). "People should be aware of this devastating outcome and be careful when using cannabis if they have a concomitant heart problem," said study author Dr. Sittinun Thangjui of Bassett Healthcare Network, Cooperstown, US.
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Climate-friendly microbes chomp dead plants without releasing heat-trapping methane

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
Scientists have identified a new phylum of microbes found around the world that appear to be playing an important (and surprising) role in the global carbon cycle by helping break down decaying plants without producing the greenhouse gas methane. The phylum is named Brockarchaeota after Thomas Brock, a pioneer in the study of microbes that live in extreme environments who died on April 4.
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3D motion tracking system could streamline vision for autonomous tech

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
A new real-time, 3D motion tracking system developed at the University of Michigan combines transparent light detectors with advanced neural network methods to create a system that could one day replace LiDAR and cameras in autonomous technologies.
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Quantum steering for more precise measurements

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
Quantum systems consisting of several particles can be used to measure magnetic or electric fields more precisely. A young physicist at the University of Basel has now proposed a new scheme for such measurements that uses a particular kind of correlation between quantum particles.
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With new optical device, engineers can fine tune the color of light

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
A new sort of optical device allows engineers to change the frequencies of individual photons, putting new capabilities in engineers' hands.
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Patching up your health

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
Researchers from Osaka University and JOANNEUM RESEARCH develop ultrathin piezoelectric flexible patches that harvest the body's energy to monitor the patient's pulse and blood pressure. This work may lead to novel biosensors and self-powered wearable electronics.
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New blood markers may reveal heart attack in chest pain patients

Eurekalert - Apr 23 2021 - 00:04
When a patient with chest pain arrives at hospital, time is of the essence. Doctors must quickly rule heart attack in or out and start treatment as soon as possible. A new study reveals blood biomarkers that could help. By analyzing blood samples from patients with chest pain, researchers found a unique fingerprint of heart attack in the form of blood biomarkers. The results could help doctors to quickly diagnose and treat heart attack patients.
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