Science 2.0

More AI In Health Care Could Save Lives

Science 2.0 - 10 hours 10 min ago

Imagine walking into your doctor’s office feeling sick – and rather than flipping through pages of your medical history or running tests that take days, your doctor instantly pulls together data from your health records, genetic profile and wearable devices to help decipher what’s wrong.

This kind of rapid diagnosis is one of the big promises of artificial intelligence for use in health care. Proponents of the technology say that over the coming decades, AI has the potential to save hundreds of thousands, even millions of lives.

What’s more, a 2023 study found that if the health care industry significantly increased its use of AI, up to US$360 billion annually could be saved.

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Forget Political Posturing, It's Hard To Warn People About Dangers Like Floods

Science 2.0 - Jul 11 2025 - 13:07

Flash floods like the one that swept down the Guadalupe River in Texas on July 4, 2025, can be highly unpredictable. While there are sophisticated flood prediction models and different types of warning systems in some places, effective flood protection requires extensive preparedness and awareness.

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Ohio State Endorses Probiotic Yogurt - Using Mouse Studies

Science 2.0 - Jul 10 2025 - 13:07
A new paper from Ohio State University can be considered a giant endorsement for yogurt that makes you poop - but unfortunately for giddy food corporations hoping to gain some scientific credibility it is only in mice, and therefore EXPLORATORY.

Because mice are not little people.

You just wouldn't know that from the school's press release, which alleges pesticides are ruining your microbiome and probiotics may save us, a leap so far beyond the scope of the study we have to wonder if the academics involved are about to launch a new line of supplements.

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UC Davis Epidemiologists Out To Scare New Mothers Again

Science 2.0 - Jul 09 2025 - 11:07
In the modern era we can detect anything in anything. Being able to detect in parts per billion, trillion and even quadrillion means that if an epidemiologist can "correlate" a chemical to harm in a spreadsheet, someone raising money opposing science can weaponize the result.

A new paper finding that they can detect chemicals linked to harm in rats with the urine of 201 preschool kids is a new battle in the War on Moms that activists continually wage, but there is no reason for parental concern. Unless you believe in homeopathy.

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Highlights From MODE And EUCAIF

Science 2.0 - Jul 06 2025 - 05:07
After a month of intense travel, which among other things included attendance to the MODE Workshop in Crete and the EUCAIF conference in Sardinia, I am back to northern Sweden. Besides significantly improving my well-being, given the horrible heat wave that hit Southern and Central Europe in the past few weeks, the move north allows me to finally give a relaxed look back at the most relevant information I gathered at those events, and other relevant things.

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The Right Of Return Is Complicated

Science 2.0 - Jul 05 2025 - 09:07

My June 28 column on the Middle East drew a comment concerning Palestinians ejected from their homes by the post-WWII influx of European Jewish refugees to what’s now Israel. Eighty years after the fact, descendants of those displaced still feel much anger.

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The Right Of Return Is Complicated

Science 2.0 - Jul 03 2025 - 21:07

My June 28 column on the Middle East drew a comment concerning Palestinians ejected from their homes by the post-WWII influx of European Jewish refugees to what’s now Israel. Eighty years after the fact, descendants of those displaced still feel much anger.

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You Don't Need Government Food Bans For Health, Provide Structure And Choice For Kids

Science 2.0 - Jul 01 2025 - 14:07
If you need any new evidence that science is just another arm of politics, look to the switch in the Republican party once President Donald Trump embraced former Natural Resources Defense Council lawyer, friend of Obama, and anti-science zealot Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.(1)

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The College Major Is A Recent Invention, It May Be Time To Get Rid Of It

Science 2.0 - Jul 01 2025 - 05:07

Colleges and universities are struggling to stay afloat.

The reasons are numerous: declining numbers of college-age students in much of the country, rising tuition at public institutions as state funding shrinks, and a growing skepticism about the value of a college degree.

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Ray-Ban Meta Wayfarers - Bulky, Beautiful, Limited

Science 2.0 - Jun 30 2025 - 13:06
Once a decade, I buy a pair of good sunglasses. I didn't know I was doing that, it wasn't intentional, I only realized it when I bought a pair of Persol sunglasses in 2005 that my wife mentioned it seemed to be a pattern. It really wasn't. I still had a pair of Aviators from the 1980s and she bought me a pair of sunglasses in the 1990s so it wasn't really a trend, it was coincidence. In 2015 or 2016, while living in New York City due to running a nonprofit there, I was tired of my old glasses and walked into a Sunglass Hut on Fifth Avenue and bought a new pair.

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Ban Left Turns And Traffic Congestion Goes Down

Science 2.0 - Jun 30 2025 - 10:06

More than 60% of traffic collisions at intersections involve left turns. Some U.S. cities – including San Francisco, Salt Lake City and Birmingham, Alabama – are restricting left turns.

Dr. Vikash Gayah, a professor of civil engineering at Penn State University and the interim director of the Larson Transportation Institute, discusses how left turns at intersections cause accidents, make traffic worse and use more gas.

How dangerous are left turns at intersections?

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The Year Is 2028

Science 2.0 - Jun 29 2025 - 12:06

The year is 2028. Donald J. Trump declared himself king a few months ago. After denouncing as fake news the perfectly true fact that he shat himself at his coronation ceremony, he spiraled into a rant so incoherent that he was admitted to a care institution. He is visited on alternate days by Hope Hicks and Karoline Leavitt. He directs vile, copulatory remarks at both of them.

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For July 4th Grilling, Are You Really Buying The US Grown Charcoal You Think You Are?

Science 2.0 - Jun 28 2025 - 05:06

People dedicated to the art of grilling often choose lump charcoal – actual pieces of wood that have been turned into charcoal – over briquettes, which are compressed charcoal dust with other ingredients to keep the dust together and help it burn better.

The kinds of wood used to make lump charcoal affect how it burns and how the food tastes when grilled. Dedicated grillers are often willing to pay a premium for higher heat, no additives, particular flavors and the cleaner burn they get from particular wood species in lump charcoal.

Buyers probably expect the label to accurately report how much charcoal they are getting, what kind of wood it is, and where the wood was grown.

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Like Food Coloring Now, Cultural Mullahs Once Claimed Mexican Food Was A Gateway To Disease

Science 2.0 - Jun 27 2025 - 17:06
In 1915's The Temperance Program, Thomas F. Hubbard et al. laid out the progressive case for why alcohol needed to be banned so convincingly that in 1917, with Democratic control of both houses of Congress and the White House, they got the 18th Amendment to the Constitution out of Washington, D.C. and into voting by the states.(1) Because people irrationally sided with elites then as they do now, Democratic states immediately ratified it and it raced to the 36 needed so quickly that the two Republican-controlled states that voted it down, Connecticut and Rhode Island, were irrelevant.

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Obama Invented Prediabetes And Kennedy's Wearable Health Monitors Are The Next Evolution

Science 2.0 - Jun 25 2025 - 15:06
Former Natural Resources Defense Council Attorney Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. didn't get more pro-science by becoming Secretary of Health and Human Services, he instead acts like his beliefs in The Ancient Ways - no cell phones, no vaccines, food scarcity - have been validated.

He has proposed "wellness farms" to combat various problems he insists are lifestyle issues only government can fix. Basically, he is piling onto beliefs he advocated when his friend and fellow Democrat President Barack Obama was in office.(1) By his second term, President Obama wanted government so desperately in the lives of people he manufactured two things that "Obamacare" could fix; a prediabetes and a vaping epidemic.

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French Cigarette Ban Will Eventually Improve Public Health, But Pollution Right Now

Science 2.0 - Jun 24 2025 - 14:06
In less than a week, France is implementing a ban on cigarettes in some public spaces, like near schools or on beaches. While this may not be a public health win right away, any more than boycotting Exxon on Tuesday changes gas prices, it could be a pollution victory sooner rather than later.

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Trump Ending Carbon Capture Mandates Attached To Grants Could Spark A New Industrial Revolution

Science 2.0 - Jun 23 2025 - 10:06

The U.S. Department of Energy’s decision to claw back US$3.7 billion in grants from industrial demonstration projects may create an unexpected opening for American manufacturing.

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The Largest Camera In The World Reveals Its First Image

Science 2.0 - Jun 23 2025 - 10:06
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile has released the first image using the largest camera in the world. The 3200-megapixel resolution wide field of view Legacy Survey of Space and Time camera.

Its high-definition images use six different color filters can photograph 45 times the area of the full moon in the sky with each exposure. So wide it can capture the entire southern sky in just three nights of shooting.  

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Lottery Bottle Bill Could Improve Recycling

Science 2.0 - Jun 19 2025 - 15:06
In the 1980s, there was a conflict raging about recycling. Governments were starting to do it while states that had a 'bottle bill' - a deposit on bottles you got refunded upon return - wanted to keep their success.

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Bubbles In Ice Could Be A Future Medium For Secret Codes

Science 2.0 - Jun 18 2025 - 14:06
Scholars have developed a method to encode binary and Morse code messages in ice.

A 'message in a bubble' has limited practical utility, information storage in Antarctica and the Arctic is expensive but less challenging than storing message in ice, but they are more covert than paper documents and can easily be carried.

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