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330 articles from THURSDAY 12.7.2012
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THURSDAY 12. JULY, 2012
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Canada's first cargo airship is being prevented from getting off the ground by red tape and a lack of helium, according to the people behind the project.
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Even the world's largest snake, Titanoboa, could probably not have swallowed this new, very round fossil turtle species from Colombia.
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Researchers have found evidence of the earliest known instance of domesticated caprines (sheep and goats) in southern Africa, dated to the end of the first millennium BC, providing new data to the ongoing debate about the origins of domestication and herding practices in this region.
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Scientists are reporting new evidence that a white rot fungus shows promise in the search for a way to use waste corn stalks, cobs and leaves -- rather than corn itself -- to produce ethanol to extend supplies of gasoline. Their study is on using the fungus to break down the tough cellulose and related material in this so-called "corn stover" to free up sugars for ethanol fermentation.
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People are being exposed to higher levels of the substitute for BPA in cash register thermal paper receipts and many of the other products that engendered concerns about the health effects of bisphenol A, according to a new study. Bisphenol S (BPS) is now frequently found in thermal and recycled paper and paper currency. BPS is closely related to BPA, with some of the same estrogen-mimicking effects, and unanswered questions exist about whether it is safer.
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Among patients with mild or no cognitive impairment, brain scans using a new radioactive dye can detect early evidence of Alzheimer's disease that may predict future decline, according to new research.
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A common form of anxiety, known as phobic anxiety, was associated with shorter telomeres in middle-aged and older women. The study suggests that phobic anxiety is a possible risk factor for accelerated aging.
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Researchers have discovered that measuring HDL particles as opposed to HDL cholesterol is a much better indicator of coronary heart disease.
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A new study shows that taking part in a stress management program may help people with multiple sclerosis (MS) prevent new disease activity.
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Widely held beliefs about Neuro-Linguistic Programming and lying are unfounded. Proponents of Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) have long claimed that it is possible to tell whether a person is lying from their eye movements. New research reveals that this claim is unfounded, with the authors calling on the public and organizations to abandon this approach to lie detection.
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A change in the formula of the frequently abused prescription painkiller OxyContin has many abusers switching to a drug that is potentially more dangerous, according to researchers. The formula change makes inhaling or injecting the opioid drug more difficult, so many users are switching to heroin.
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Scientists have assembled the most detailed chronology to date of the human brain’s long, slow slide into full-blown Alzheimer’s disease.
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Health experts warn homeowners to take measures to prevent "huge numbers" of rats flushed out by the floods re-establishing themselves.
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A new charity taking over responsibility for canals and rivers in England and Wales is being officially launched.
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(AP) Apple's withdrawal from an environmental ratings registry has prompted at least one city San Francisco to stop buying its computers.
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(Phys.org) -- A robotics team from the University of Pisa in Italy has a challenge for the Uncanny Valley theory made famous by the 1970 essay of that name. Masahiro Mori had said when robots get too realistic they turn people off with a feeling of eerie distaste. The team from Pisa are intent on showing that robots with human expressions can be, well, liked. They would like to generate a new chapter of human like robots that do not churn up a sense of unease. They are focused on research that can demonstrate how manipulated expressions on robots can be made more attractive so that the human can cross over Moris dips of feelings of unease and creepiness.
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Worldwide sales of personal computers fell 0.1 percent in the second quarter of the year as consumers turned their attention to newer gadgets like tablets, a survey showed Wednesday.
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Nominations are open for the world's first Cannes for cats. The al fresco Internet Cat Video Film Festival will unspool -- in the space of an hour or so, given how short cat videos can be -- on August 30 on the grounds of the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
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(AP) Pay phone kiosks the remnants of days gone by are set to get a new lease on life in New York City. They'll serve as the hosts of wireless Internet hotspots.
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Strange, dark galaxies nearly devoid of stars have been spotted 11 billion light-years away, according to a new study.
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Has Waterloo met its Waterloo?
These aren’t the easiest times for Research in Motion, the Waterloo, Ontario-based makers of the BlackBerry. Its head of Australian and New Zealand operations
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High levels of anxiety might really make you age faster, a new study suggests.
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A new form of the prescription painkiller OxyContin that makes the tablets more difficult to crush into powder — and therefore harder to inhale or inject — may be responsible for a decline in its abuse, but may also be fueling an increase in heroin use, researchers say.
Naposledy aktualizované zdroje
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PhysOrg (dnes, 20:25)
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ScienceNOW (dnes, 20:24)
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CBC - Technology & Science News (dnes, 20:02)
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Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories (dnes, 19:30)
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ScienceDaily (dnes, 19:17)
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Guardian Unlimited Science (dnes, 19:10)
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Yahoo! (dnes, 18:46)
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National Geographic News (dnes, 18:04)
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Sci-Tech Today (dnes, 17:47)
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BBC Science/Nature (dnes, 11:20)
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EurekAlert (dnes, 06:00)
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NYT > Science (23. 5, 20:04)
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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)


