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The premier online source for science news since 1996. A service of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Updated: 3 years 1 month ago

Poor sleep may impact academic achievement for children in disinvested neighborhoods

May 27 2021 - 00:05
A new longitudinal study examined the relation between sleep, classroom behavior, and academic achievement scores among primarily Black children growing up in historically disinvested neighborhoods. Disinvested refers to neighborhoods in which public and private funding, city services, or other necessary resources have been denied or withheld, and which are often segregated along racial and economic lines as a result. The findings showed that sleep is related to observed classroom behavior and may predict future academic achievement.
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Parents modify the home literacy environment according to their children's progress in learning to read

May 27 2021 - 00:05
A new longitudinal study examined bidirectional relationships between home literacy environment and children's progress in learning to read between grades 1 and 3. Results show that parents adjust their reading activities with their children over time, taking into account the level of difficulty the children are having in learning to read. These findings raise the important possibility that teachers could give more specific guidance to parents to help shape the home literacy environment according to children's progress in learning to read.
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Low on antibodies, blood cancer patients can fight off COVID-19 with T cells

May 26 2021 - 00:05
Antibodies aren't the only immune cells needed to fight off COVID-19 -- T cells are equally important and can step up to do the job when antibodies are depleted, suggests a new Penn Medicine study of blood cancer patients with COVID-19 published in Nature Medicine.
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Quantification of the internal OH- effects in upconversion nanocrystals

May 26 2021 - 00:05
The puzzle of how internal OH- impurities affect photon energy upconversion has been quantitatively disentangled through combining internal OH- content manipulation in nanocrystals, spectroscopy and Monte Carlo simulation. The exponential relationship between upconversion luminescence intensity and the quantity of internal OH- was discovered. The work not only paves the way to pursuit new structures and/or doping patterns for higher upconversion efficiency, but also provides a new method for studying the internal defects of phosphors.
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Fish adapt to ocean acidification by modifying gene expression

May 26 2021 - 00:05
To survive in a reduced pH environment, marine organisms have to adjust their physiology which, at the molecular level, is achieved by modifying the expression of genes. The study of such changes in gene expression can aid in revealing the adaptive mechanisms of life under predicted future ocean acidification conditions.
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Ionophobic electrode boosts energy storage performance

May 26 2021 - 00:05
A group led by Prof. ZHANG Suojiang from the Institute of Process Engineering (IPE) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) recently found that ionophobic electrodes can boost energy storage performance.
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'Shortcuts' to increase female enrollment in economics may backfire, OSU study cautions

May 26 2021 - 00:05
Current best practices for encouraging more female students to pursue degrees in economics may actually have the opposite effect and worsen gender disparities in the field, a recent study from Oregon State University found.
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Novel way by NUS scientists to predict chemotherapy resistance in ovarian cancer patients

May 26 2021 - 00:05
Researchers from the National University of Singapore have found a way to predict if ovarian cancer patients will be resistant to chemotherapy. By using "automated" microscopy, they identified a protein that indicates the resistance of ovarian cancer cells to platinum chemotherapy. This breakthrough could improve the survival rate of ovarian cancer patients, as other treatments may be administered early.
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New methods proposed to characterize polymer lamellar crystals

May 26 2021 - 00:05
Different from small molecules, polymer will fold into lamellar crystals during crystallization and further assemble into lamellar stacks.
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How New Zealand's cheeky kea and kākā will fare with climate change

May 26 2021 - 00:05
With global warming decreasing the size of New Zealand's alpine zone, a University of Otago study found out what this means for our altitude-loving kea.
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Poor sleep predicts long-term cognitive decline in Hispanics more so than in whites

May 26 2021 - 00:05
Poor sleep impacts the risk of long-term cognitive decline in Hispanic/Latino middle aged and older adults differently than it does in non-Hispanic adults, according to research led by University of Miami Miller School of Medicine neurology faculty and the largest long-term study of US Hispanic/Latinos to date.
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Global study finds each city has unique microbiome fingerprint of bacteria

May 26 2021 - 00:05
Each city has its own unique microbiome, a "fingerprint" of viruses and bacteria that uniquely identify it, according to a new study from an international consortium of researchers that included a team from the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM). The international project, which sequenced and analyzed samples collected from public transit systems and hospitals in 60 cities around the world, was published today in the journal Cell.
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Better peatland management could cut half a billion tons of carbon

May 26 2021 - 00:05
Half a billion tonnes of carbon emissions could be cut from Earth's atmosphere by improved management of peatlands, according to research partly undertaken at the University of Leicester.
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Disease of the smallest heart blood vessels is important global health problem

May 26 2021 - 00:05
For the first time, a prospective, international study has shown that chest pain caused by problems with the very small vessels supplying blood to the heart is an important health problem that increases the risk of heart attacks, stroke and death due to cardiovascular reasons. The study of microvascular angina is published in the European Heart Journal.
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Primates change their 'accent' to avoid conflict

May 26 2021 - 00:05
New research has discovered that monkeys will use the "accent" of another species when they enter its territory to help them better understand one another and potentially avoid conflict.The study is the first to show asymmetric call convergence in primates, meaning that one species chooses to adopt another species' call patterns to communicate.Co-authored by Dr Jacob Dunn of Anglia Ruskin University, the research investigated pied tamarins and red-handed tamarins in the Brazilian Amazon.
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Immediate skin-to-skin contact after birth improves survival of pre-term babies

May 26 2021 - 00:05
Continuous skin-to-skin contact starting immediately after delivery even before the baby has been stabilised can reduce mortality by 25 per cent in infants with a very low birth weight. This according to a study in low- and middle-income countries coordinated by the WHO on the initiative of researchers at Karolinska Institutet published in The New England Journal of Medicine.
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The first blood biomarker to distinguish between myocarditis and acute myocardial infarction

May 26 2021 - 00:05
Scientists at the Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares (CNIC) have identified the first blood biomarker for myocarditis, a cardiac disease that is often misdiagnosed as myocardial infarction. The study is published today in The New England Journal of Medicine.
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Lower rates of kidney transplant referrals at for- vs. non-profit dialysis facilities

May 26 2021 - 00:05
Among patients receiving dialysis in the Southeastern United States, those at for-profit dialysis facilities were less likely to be referred for kidney transplantation than those at non-profit facilities. Rates of starting medical evaluations soon after referral and placing patients on a waitlist after evaluations were similar between the groups.
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Keeping more ammonium in soil could decrease pollution, boost crops

May 26 2021 - 00:05
Modern-day agriculture faces two major dilemmas: how to produce enough food while minimizing environmental damage. Keeping more nitrogen in soil as ammonium may be one key way to address both challenges.
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Deep oceans dissolve the rocky shell of water-ice planets

May 26 2021 - 00:05
Laboratory experiments allow insights into the processes under the extreme pressure and temperature conditions of distant worlds
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