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Medical Xpress / Overtraining: Expert explains warning signs that the body sends

When you're training for a race, it is tempting to go to extremes. But that makes this a prime time to watch for warning signs of overtraining, advises Corey Wencl, who supervises athletic training services in sports medicine ...

5 hours ago in Health
Medical Xpress / Most people with a genetic condition that causes significantly high cholesterol go undiagnosed, study finds

Current genetic screening guidelines fail to identify most people with an inherited condition known as familial hypercholesterolemia that can cause dangerously high cholesterol and early heart disease, a Mayo Clinic study ...

5 hours ago in Genetics
Medical Xpress / Colorectal cancer screenings remain low for people ages 45 to 49 despite guideline change

UCLA research finds that fewer than one in four eligible younger adults completed colorectal cancer screenings after the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) lowered the recommended screening age to 45 from ...

5 hours ago in Oncology & Cancer
Phys.org / Video catches wild wolf pulling in crab trap to get to food—but is it tool use?

Many animals have been observed using tools. For example, chimps tear leaves off of branches and stick them into holes to pull out termites, and wild dingoes have been observed moving objects to stand on to get to another ...

23 hours ago in Biology
Phys.org / Using social media to clarify the threat domestic cats pose to insect and spider populations

In research published in Insect Conservation and Diversity, investigators analyzed records from social media to explore which arthropods—including insects and spiders—are most preyed upon by domestic cats in urban environments.

6 hours ago in Biology
Phys.org / How dark energy changed cosmology forever

Let's rewind the clock back…oh, I don't know, let's say a hundred years. It was 1917, and Einstein had just developed his general theory of relativity. It was a masterpiece, giving us our modern-day view of the gravitational ...

11 hours ago in Astronomy & Space
Tech Xplore / Germany hopes new data center can help bring 'digital sovereignty'

A new mega data center is slated to rise in a rural stretch of eastern Germany in what backers hope is a starting point for a European AI sector that can compete with the United States and China.

3 hours ago in Hardware
Medical Xpress / Type 1 diabetes cured in mice with gentle blood stem-cell and pancreatic islet transplant

A combination of blood stem cell and pancreatic islet cell transplant from an immunologically mismatched donor completely prevented or cured type 1 diabetes in mice in a study by Stanford Medicine researchers. Type 1 diabetes ...

20 hours ago in Diabetes
Phys.org / Social media use soars as kids drop sports, reading and the arts

In striking new statistics, experts warn of social media's growing grip on young people, with use among children and teens soaring by more than 200% since before COVID and showing no sign of decline.

13 hours ago in Other Sciences
Phys.org / Without US satellites, 'we go dark', tells climate monitor

US budget cuts risk creating blind spots in Earth monitoring systems that would imperil weather forecasting and climate research for years to come, the deputy chair of a key UN-backed climate monitoring body warned in an ...

4 hours ago in Earth
Phys.org / Winter-active spiders use unique antifreeze proteins to survive the cold

Spiders of the Clubiona genus, which are among the most important natural enemies of pests found in orchards, are active during the winter. New research in The FEBS Journal reveals the characteristics of antifreeze proteins ...

6 hours ago in Biology
Phys.org / Too much or too little AI adoption may lower workers' job satisfaction

In research based on 2009–2020 data from 509 publicly listed US firms, lower and higher levels of adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) were associated with reduced job satisfaction, whereas moderate levels were linked ...

6 hours ago in Other Sciences