Month: March 2021

  • Long-Term Weightlessness May Impair Emotional Recognition

    Long-Term Weightlessness May Impair Emotional Recognition

    Astronauts who go on long voyages in space in the future may suffer impairment in their emotional recognition. A study showed that prolonged weightlessness slowed down a person’s ability to recognize facial expressions. The findings were published in the journal Frontiers in Physiology. Reading Emotional Expressions “Astronauts on long space missions, very much like our…

  • Reading Fiction for Fun Can Improve Language Skills

    Reading Fiction for Fun Can Improve Language Skills

    Reading fiction for fun and leisure can help improve your language skills, according to a study from Concordia University. It also turns out it can be any kind of fiction, from classic to even pulp fiction. The results of this study was published in the journal Reading and Writing. Reading for Leisure The paper was…

  • Women With More Fat Less Likely to Die From Heart Disease

    Women With More Fat Less Likely to Die From Heart Disease

    If you’re a woman with more body fat, you may be less likely to die from heart disease than your skinnier counterpart. The findings were made by researchers at UCLA. The study was published in the Journal of the American Heart Association. The researchers analyzed national health survey data collected over a 15-year period and…

  • Tweens Learn Values From Watching Popular TV Shows

    Tweens Learn Values From Watching Popular TV Shows

    Tweens learn values from TV show that can affect their development, influence their attitudes and behaviors as they grow into their teenage years and beyond. Moreover, these values may rise or fall over time. The findings were made by researchers at UCLA’s Center for Scholars and Storytellers. Values Can Change in Importance Over Time The…

  • Scientists Get Lemurs to Hibernate in Captivity

    Scientists Get Lemurs to Hibernate in Captivity

    Lemurs rarely hibernate in captivity. Scientist at the Duke Lemur Center has been able to get the fat-tailed dwarf lemur by mimicking seasonal changes in the lemurs’ indoor enclosures. By studying hibernating animals like these lemurs, researchers may unlock the secrets of hibernation and apply them to to humans. Fat-Tailed Dwarf Lemur The fat-tailed dwarf…

  • Healthy Eating Based on Plant-Based Diets Can Decrease Stroke Risk

    Healthy Eating Based on Plant-Based Diets Can Decrease Stroke Risk

    Eating health meals based on healthy plant-based diets that have lots of leafy greens, whole grains, and beans, can lower the risk of stroke. The finding was based on research from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The decrease in risk of stroke can be up to 10 per cent. “Our findings have…

  • Protein in Mosquitos Can Help Develop Treatments Vs. Deadly Viruses

    Protein in Mosquitos Can Help Develop Treatments Vs. Deadly Viruses

    A protein called AEG12 found in mosquitos can strongly inhibit the deadly viruses that are responsible for yellow fever, dengue, West Nile, and Zika. AEG12 can even inhibit coronaviruses, although more weakly. The findings were made by scientists at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and their collaborators. Breaking the Envelop The researchers found that…

  • Cancer Cells Can Hibernate to Avoid Chemotherapy

    Cancer Cells Can Hibernate to Avoid Chemotherapy

    Cancer cells can go into hibernation to avoid effects of chemotherapy. This finding was made by scientists at Weill Cornell Medicine. These findings have implications for developing new drug combinations that could block senescence and make chemotherapy more effective. In a study published Jan. 26 in Cancer Discovery, a journal of the American Association for…

  • Men Experiencing Vital Exhaustion May Have Increased Risk of Heart Attack

    Men Experiencing Vital Exhaustion May Have Increased Risk of Heart Attack

    Exhaustion can lead to the likelihood of having a heart attack in men, according to researchers from the European Society of Cardiology.

  • Alexa Skills May Have Privacy and Security Risks

    Alexa Skills May Have Privacy and Security Risks

    Skills are what Amazon calls programs that run on their popular voice-activated assistant called Alexa. People can buy these skills on skills stores, just like you can buy apps for your smartphone. However, there are privacy risks and security concerns for these skills. Researchers at North Carolina State University collected over 90,000 skills from seven…