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It's never too early to begin healthy eating habits

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Researchers found that when health workers were trained to promote infant healthy feeding practices to pregnant women their children consumed less fats and carbohydrates at 3 years of age and had lower measures of body fat at the age of 6. The study is the first to show that the roots for obesity start in the first year of life, after mothers stop breastfeeding.
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Deep impact of superficial skin inking: Acoustic analysis of underlying tissue

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Deep impact of superficial skin inking: acoustic analysis of underlying tissuehttps://doi.org/10.15212/bioi-2021-0004Announcing a new article publication for BIO Integration journal. In this article the authors Craig S. Carlson and Michiel Postema, from University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa and Tampere University, Tampere, Finland discuss deep impact of superficial skin inking: acoustic analysis of underlying tissue.
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Novel nano-encapsulation approach for efficient dopamine delivery in Parkinson's treatment

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
In a study just published in the American Chemical Society's Journal "ACS Nano", polymeric nanoparticles inspired by natural neuromelanin were used to encapsulate dopamine and to be administered via intranasal to reach the brain for Parkinson's disease treatment. The effectiveness of this technique was tested in rats.
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Junk food game helps people eat less and lose weight

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Using a brain-training app helps people eat less junk food and lose weight, new research suggests.
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Alternatives to plastic straws: Which materials are suitable?

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Drinking straws are single use plastic products which will be subjected to a Europe-wide sales ban from 2021 onwards. This is stated in EU Directive 2019/904 from June 5, 2019. Consequently, alternative materials have to be established for the production of drinking straws as well as other frequently used products which predominantly were made of plastic so far.
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Clinical-level emotional/behavioral problems in schoolchildren during the lockdown

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Efforts to contain the novel coronavirus have caused lockdowns and school closures around the world. These efforts and policies have unfortunately cut off many children from valuable resources such as the opportunity for exercise, access to clean water and food, learning, and socialization. Therefore, the effects on mental health and behavior may be found not just in adults but children.
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Air quality improved during India lockdown, study shows

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Research by scientists from University of Southampton (UK) and the Central University of Jharkhand (India) and has shown the first COVID-19 lockdown in India led to an improvement in air quality and a reduction in land surface temperature in major urban areas across the country.
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How do plants hedge their bets?

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
In some environments there is no way for a seed to know for sure when the best time to germinate is. So how does a plant make sure that all of its offspring are not killed at once by an ill-timed environmental stress following germination?
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Antibodies produced in the lung can prevent respiratory infections from becoming severe

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Researchers have discovered that after recovering from a respiratory infection, new cells get deposited in lung tissue, persist there and then become antibody secreting cells very quickly if the lungs later get re-infected by something similar.
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Is the U.S. Understating Climate Emissions from Meat and Dairy Production?

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Methane emissions from North American livestock may be routinely undercounted, a new analysis finds. The work also notes that in developing countries, where animal agriculture is becoming increasingly industrialized, methane emissions could rise more than expected.
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Sick bats also employ 'social distancing' which prevents the outbreak of epidemics

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
it appears that bats also maintain social distancing which might help prevent the spread of contagious diseases in their colonies
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Study pinpoints key causes of ocean circulation change

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Researchers have identified the key factors that influence a vital pattern of ocean currents.
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Safe distance: How to make sure our outdoor activities don't harm wildlife

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Outdoor recreation is a popular activity, but it's been known to have negative behavioural and physiological effects on wildlife. A new scholarly article in the open-access, peer-reviewed journal Nature Conservation from researchers at the Wildlife Conservation Society looked at nearly 40 years of research on recreation impacts on wildlife to try to find the point where recreation starts to impact the wildlife around us.
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Solar energy-driven sustainable process for synthesis of ethylene glycol from methanol

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Direct photocatalytic coupling of methanol to ethylene glycol (EG) is highly attractive. The first metal oxide photocatalyst, tantalum-based semiconductor, is reported for preferential activation of C-H bond within methanol to form hydroxymethyl radical (* CH2OH) and subsequent C-C coupling to EG. The nitrogen doped tantalum oxide (N-Ta2O5) photocatalyst is an environmentally friendly and highly stable candidate for photocatalytic coupling of methanol to EG.
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A novel nanometer-scale proximity labeling method targeting histidine residues

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Researchers have created a new nanometer-scale proximity labeling system that targets histidine residues quickly, providing a new chemical tool in protein chemical modification.
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ALS development could be triggered by loss of network connections in the spinal cord

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
The network connection between nerve cells in the spinal cord seems to play a critical role in the development of the severe disease ALS, a new study from the University of Copenhagen suggests. The study, which is based on a mouse model, may change the way we think about the disease, says researchers.
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Protecting the intellectual abilities of people at risk for psychosis

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Psychotic disorders comes with a progressive decline in IQ. If current drug treatments are successful in containing psychotic symptoms, nothing can be done to prevent the deterioration of intellectual skills that leads to loss of autonomy. Researchers (UNIGE) have discovered that prescription of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) in late childhood can reduce the deterioration of intellectual abilities and have a neuroprotective effect on some of the brain regions affected by the psychotic illness.
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Curtin study finds WA's natural 'museums of biodiversity' at risk

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Up to three quarters of the biodiversity living on Western Australia's iconic ironstone mountains in the State's Mid West (known as Banded Iron Formations) could be difficult or impossible to return quickly to its previous state after the landscape has been mined, a Curtin University study has found.
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No space wasted: Embedding capacitors into interposers to increase miniaturization

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
Scientists at Tokyo Institute of Technology develop a 3D functional interposer -- the interface between a chip and the package substrate -- containing an embedded capacitor. This compact design saves a lot of package area and greatly reduces the wiring length between the chip's terminals and the capacitor, allowing for less noise and power consumption. Their approach paves the way to new semiconductor package structures with greater miniaturization.
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Study reveals diverse magnetic fields in solar-type star-forming cores

Eurekalert - Jun 01 2021 - 00:06
A new study led by Dr. Eswaraiah Chakali from Prof. LI Di's research group at the National Astronomical Observatories reveals the diverse magnetic field morphologies in Solar-type star forming cores in the Taurus B213 region.
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