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312 articles from TUESDAY 1.5.2012
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TUESDAY 1. MAY, 2012
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The former Tory minister responsible for the 1985 Fisheries Act is openly criticizing the current minister over proposed changes to the legislation.
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The terror group used the science of security through obscurity and hid messages in easy-to-ship porn.
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Plan seeks to involve institutions in identifying studies that could be used for both good and harm
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Microsoft Research presents "HomeOS."
You’ve got a lot of smart things in your home. There’s your smartphone, of course. There’s your
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Besides James Bond, that is.
At the
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What gives you the motivation to go the extra mile for a promotion or a perfect test score? It may be your levels of a brain chemical called dopamine. Researchers have found amounts of this chemical in three brain regions determine if a person is a go-getter or a procrastinator.
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Earth is under constant bombardment by space rocks. When they crash and burn through the atmosphere, most of the debris gets lost to the oceans, while some is buried or gradually weathered away. Nonetheless, plenty of chunks of fallen meteors, or meteorites, are strewn across the accessible parts of the planet. So far, more than 40,000 meteorites have been found and catalogued, and countless more are still out there, waiting to be chanced upon.
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The United States government would get a better bang for its health-care buck in managing the country's most prevalent childhood disabilities if it invested more in eliminating socioenvironmental risk factors than in developing medicines. That's the key conclusion of a new article.
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It takes a gutsy insect to sneak up on a huge dinosaur while it sleeps, crawl onto its soft underbelly and give it a bite that might have felt like a needle going in -- but giant "flea-like" animals, possibly the oldest of their type ever discovered, probably did just that.
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The largest comprehensive analysis of ClinicalTrials.gov finds that clinical trials are falling short of producing high-quality evidence needed to guide medical decision-making. The analysis found the majority of clinical trials is small, and there are significant differences among methodical approaches, including randomizing, blinding and the use of data monitoring committees.
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In a post-Solyndra, budget-constrained world, the transition to a decarbonized energy system faces great hurdles. Overcoming these hurdles will require smarter and more focused policies. Two writers outline their visions in a pair of high-profile analyses.
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To better understand the signaling pathways active in sarcomas, researchers at Moffitt Cancer Center used state-of-the-art mass spectrometry-based proteomics to characterize a family of protein enzymes that act as “on” or “off” switches important in the biology of cancer. The tyrosine kinases they identified, the researchers said, could act as “drivers” for the growth and survival of sarcomas.
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Researchers are exploring an increasingly versatile class of materials known as metal-organic frameworks (MOF). An emerging technology in the scientific community, MOF are porous crystalline polymers made up of metal ions or metal-containing components and organic ligands. Chemists are assembling MOF materials with a profound potential for providing for cleaner energy around the globe.
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With nearly one-third of American children being overweight or obese, doctors agree that there is an acute need for more effective treatments. In many weight management programs, the dropout rate can be as high as 73 percent, and even in successful programs, the benefits are usually short term.
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America's approach to clean energy needs to be reformed if it is to meaningfully affect energy security or the environment, according to two new articles by Stanford writers.
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Google's Android system has grabbed more than 50 percent of the US smartphone market, while Samsung cemented its leadership as the top device maker, a survey showed Tuesday.
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Conservationists with the Wildlife Conservation Society and the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology have found that larger male gorillas living in the rainforests of Congo seem to be more successful than smaller ones at attracting mates and even raising young.
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Research In Motion (RIM) on Tuesday unveiled a revamped BlackBerry platform that discards the smartphone's trademark keyboard to embrace apps, touchscreens and other trendy features.
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It's a message no one wants to hear: To slow down global warming, we'll either have to put the brakes on economic growth or transform the way the world's economies work.
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(Phys.org) -- It takes a gutsy insect to sneak up on a huge dinosaur while it sleeps, crawl onto its soft underbelly and give it a bite that might have felt like a needle going in but giant flea-like animals, possibly the oldest of their type ever discovered, probably did just that.
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A senior researcher in computer science at the Ohio Supercomputer Center has been designated a Campus Champion charged with empowering researchers and educators to advance scientific discovery by serving as their local source of knowledge about national high performance computing opportunities and resources.
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Scientists at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) and other organizations are targeting thunderstorms in Alabama, Colorado, and Oklahoma this spring to discover what happens when clouds suck air up from Earth's surface many miles into the atmosphere.
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In the last 10 years, cryptography researchers have demonstrated that even the most secure-seeming computer is shockingly vulnerable to attack. The time it takes a computer to store data in memory, fluctuations in its power consumption and even the noises it emits can betray information to a savvy assailant.
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What might happen if droughts were predicted months ahead of time? Food aid and other humanitarian efforts could be put together sooner and executed better, say UC Santa Barbara geographers Chris Funk, Greg Husak, and Joel Michaelsen. After over a decade of gathering and analyzing climate and vegetation data from East Africa, the researchers, who are part of the U.S. Agency for International Development's Famine Early Warning System Network (FEWS NET), say there is enough evidence to associate climate conditions in the region with projected rainfall deficits that could lead to food shortages.
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Judge temporarily halts university from giving 9000-year-old human bones to Native Americans
Naposledy aktualizované zdroje
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National Geographic News (dnes, 14:09)
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PhysOrg (dnes, 13:25)
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Yahoo! (dnes, 12:51)
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Guardian Unlimited Science (dnes, 12:02)
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Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories (dnes, 06:29)
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EurekAlert (dnes, 06:00)
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BBC Science/Nature (dnes, 03:27)
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ScienceNOW (dnes, 00:23)
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Sci-Tech Today (17. 5, 22:50)
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CBC - Technology & Science News (17. 5, 21:43)
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ScienceDaily (17. 5, 21:24)
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NYT > Science (17. 5, 20:49)
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NASA (17. 5, 02:56)
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Discovery (7. 3, 18:11)
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TIME (27. 7, 08:30)

