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Medical Xpress / How income may shape risk of dementia

People with lower incomes and people from racial and ethnic historically underrepresented groups in clinical studies are more likely to have modifiable risk factors for dementia, factors that could be changed to lower their ...

15 minutes ago in Alzheimer's disease & dementia
Phys.org / Dissolved organic matter molecular communities change predictably with spatial distance, study reveals

A research team led by Prof. Wang Jianjun from the Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, has produced a global map depicting the distribution and variation of dissolved organic matter ...

14 minutes ago in Earth
Medical Xpress / Six strategies to reinvigorate the doctor-patient bedside encounter

Today's doctor visits look and feel a lot different than they did even just a couple decades ago.

11 minutes ago in Medical research
Tech Xplore / Stirling engine generates mechanical power by linking Earth's warmth to space

Engineers at the University of California, Davis, have invented a device that can generate mechanical power at night by linking the natural warmth around us to the cold depths of space. The invention could be used, for example, ...

11 hours ago in Energy & Green Tech
Phys.org / Predator was a precursor of the crocodile—and although it lived before the early dinosaurs, it looked just like one

A newly discovered, carnivorous lizard ostensibly represents what most casual onlookers would perhaps perceive to be a dinosaur; however, it is in fact a precursor of the modern crocodile.

6 hours ago in Biology
Medical Xpress / Scientists tie lupus to a virus nearly all of us carry

One of humanity's most ubiquitous infectious pathogens bears the blame for the chronic autoimmune condition called systemic lupus erythematosus (lupus), Stanford Medicine investigators and their colleagues have found.

Phys.org / Q&A: The future of corals and what X-rays can tell us

This summer, it was all over the media. Driven by the climate crisis, the oceans have now also passed a critical point: The absorption of CO2 is making the oceans increasingly acidic.

7 hours ago in Biology
Phys.org / Gut microbes pass down behavioral traits in mice offspring independent of genes

Gut microbes are essential partners that help digest food, produce vitamins and train the immune system. They can also pass on behavioral traits to their host's offspring, at least in mice. Scientists at the Max Planck Institute ...

15 hours ago in Biology
Phys.org / Fossil fuel CO₂ emissions hit record high in 2025

Global carbon emissions from fossil fuels are projected to rise by 1.1% in 2025—reaching a record high, according to new research by the Global Carbon Project.

9 hours ago in Earth
Medical Xpress / Cellular protein FGD3 boosts breast cancer chemotherapy and immunotherapy, study finds

A naturally-occurring protein that tends to be expressed at higher levels in breast cancer cells boosts the effectiveness of some anticancer agents, including doxorubicin, one of the most widely used chemotherapies, and a ...

8 hours ago in Oncology & Cancer
Phys.org / How campus climate affects students' attitudes to people of different religions

This year's new university students are settling into life on campuses often notable for their diversity—and that includes in religion. More than 33,000 Buddhist students started university in the UK in 2023–24, for instance, ...

4 hours ago in Other Sciences
Phys.org / Scientists discover caves carved by water on Mars that may have once harbored life

If there is, or ever has been, life on Mars, the chances are it would exist in caves protected from the severe dust storms, extreme temperatures, and high radiation present on its surface. One place to focus our attention ...

17 hours ago in Astronomy & Space