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Kevin Makice

Blocking carbon dioxide fixation in bacteria increases biofuel production - 0 views

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    Reducing the ability of certain bacteria to fix carbon dioxide can greatly increase their production of hydrogen gas that can be used as a biofuel. Researchers from the University of Washington, Seattle, report their findings in the current issue of online journal mBio.
Kevin Makice

Biological nanowires expedite future fuel production - 0 views

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    Scientists in the UK and US, including researchers at Arizona State University, have been awarded funding to improve the photosynthetic process as a means of producing renewable fuel.
Kevin Makice

Is chicken fat biofuel an eco-friendly jet fuel alternative? - 0 views

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    Researchers are testing the biofuel on a NASA DC-8 to measure its performance and emissions as part of the Alternative Aviation Fuel Experiment II, or AAFEX II. The fuel is called Hydrotreated Renewable Jet Fuel.
Kevin Makice

'Bionic eye' implant offers hope to the blind - 0 views

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    Elias Konstantopoulus runs through an optics test with his "bionic" eye glasses during a session at the Lions Vision Research and Rehabilation Center at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. Konstantopoulus is blind but working with Johns Hopkins University he has been implanted with a microchip and given a set of glasses that enable him to distinguish between light and dark.
Kevin Makice

Demystifying meditation -- brain imaging illustrates how meditation reduces pain - 0 views

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    Meditation produces powerful pain-relieving effects in the brain, according to new research published in the April 6 edition of the Journal of Neuroscience.
Kevin Makice

Your Next Computer May Be Made of...Blood! - 0 views

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    We're stumbling through a science fiction wonderland of not just high-flying communications software and tools but of the basic building blocks for the devices we use to do that communicating. The latest contender for radically-improved memory in a computer? Blood. Researchers in Gujarat, India have created a "memristor" -- a portmanteau of memory and resistor -- made of human blood. A resistor is the part of a computer chip that regulates the flow of electricity. Unlike most resistors, a memristor remembers previous levels of voltage and allows for a repeat of that flow.
Kevin Makice

Study says media reports about uncommon acts of goodness can make good people even better - 1 views

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    People with a strong moral identity are measurably inspired to do good after being exposed to media stories about uncommon acts of human goodness, according to research at the University of British Columbia's Sauder School of Business.
Kevin Makice

In an emergency, word spreads fast and far - 0 views

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    Large-scale emergencies, such as bombings and plane crashes, trigger a sharp spike in the number of phone calls and text messages sent by eyewitnesses in the vicinity of the disaster, according to a research study by network scientists at Northeastern University.
Kevin Makice

Overturned scientific explanation may be good news for nuclear fusion - 0 views

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    Flat out wrong. That's what a team of Duke researchers has discovered, much to its surprise, about a long-accepted explanation of how nuclei collide to produce charged particles for electricity - a process receiving intense interest lately from scientists, entrepreneurs and policy makers in the wake of Japan's nuclear crisis.
Kevin Makice

The wetter the better for daddy longlegs - and birds - 0 views

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    Keeping moorland soils wet could prove vital in conserving some of Britain's important upland breeding bird species - by protecting the humble daddy longlegs, according to new research.
Kevin Makice

Air pollution exposure affects chances of developing premenopausal breast cancer - 0 views

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    Exposure to air pollution early in life and when a woman gives birth to her first child may alter her DNA and may be associated with premenopausal breast cancer later in life, researchers at the University at Buffalo have shown.
Kevin Makice

Aalien mining - 0 views

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    In what is starting to become a familiar theme, researchers have speculated on what types of observational data from distant planetary systems might indicate the presence of an alien civilization, in this case asteroid mining - but end up concluding that most of the effects of such activity would be difficult to distinguish from natural phenomena.
Kevin Makice

Seafloor recovery from fishing gear impacts in Stellwagen Bank Marine Sanctuary slow, u... - 0 views

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    The University of Connecticut and California State University researchers found that seafloor communities in a restricted fishing area in NOAA's Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary showed indications of recovery from chronic fishing gear impacts but is not fully stable. The finding is significant because bottom trawlers, dredges and certain gillnets, for example, can alter the ocean floor and benthic ecosystems that provide food and shelter for fish and other marine species.
Kevin Makice

Long-term poverty but not family instability affects children's cognitive development - 1 views

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    Children from homes that experience persistent poverty are more likely to have their cognitive development affected than children in better off homes, reveals research published ahead of print in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.
Kevin Makice

Bionic leg undergoing clinical trials - 0 views

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    A "bionic" leg designed for people who have lost a lower leg is undergoing clinical trials sponsored by the US Army. The researchers hope the leg will be able to learn the patient's nerve signal patterns and be able to move in response to the patient's own muscles and nerves.
Kevin Makice

Timid and shy or bold and welcoming, water behaves in unexpected ways on surfaces - 0 views

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    It's ubiquitous. It's universal. And it's understood-not! Water's choices in a given situation often defy scientific predictions. When expected to bond with other water molecules, it shuns them. When expected to ignore a surface, it becomes deeply attached. However, research at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory has revealed why one of the simplest and most important molecules on the planet makes some of the decisions it does.
Kevin Makice

Amazon forest and the price of gold - 0 views

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    Ellen Silbergeld keeps the price of gold posted on the door to her office at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore. The price is now at a record high (better than $1,500 an ounce) and Silbergeld, professor at Hopkins and editor-in-chief of the journal Environmental Research knows that is really bad news for the Amazon.
Kevin Makice

'Smart' power grid needed for electric vehicles - 1 views

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    While an upcoming Electric Vehicle Grand Prix may reflect a growing popularity of electric vehicles, their widespread adoption will require innovations to the power grid, say researchers at Purdue University.
Kevin Makice

Batteries for the future - 0 views

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    One of the most important decisions facing designers of plug-in electric or hybrid vehicles is related to battery choice. Now, researchers at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) have used a life cycle analysis to examine three vehicle battery types to determine which does the best job of powering the vehicle while causing the least amount of environmental impact during its production.
Kevin Makice

Mercury converted to its most toxic form in ocean waters: study - 0 views

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    University of Alberta-led research has confirmed that a relatively harmless inorganic form of mercury found worldwide in ocean water is transformed into a potent neurotoxin in the seawater itself.
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