Neat News - Neat things do happen

    2019

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    May

  1. Malaria
  2. Recycling
  3. Biodiversity
  4. Prostate
  5. Origami
  6. Memory
  7. Contact
  8. Heart
  9. Cool
  10. Aspirin
  11. Paid
  12. Coffee
  13. Brain
  14. Cave
  15. Broccoli
  16. Cancer
  17. Flu
  18. Dementia
  19. Therapy
  20. Heat
  21. Heart
  22. Chocolate
  23. Broccoli
  24. Desalination
  25. Free
  26. Leadership
  27. Burnout
  28. Solar
  29. HIV
  30. Seats
  31. Antidote

About


Neat News 2019-151 (added 2019-05-31)

Fungus to kill 99 percent of malaria mosquitoes

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A fungus has genetically been modified to carry the venom of the funnel-web spider. In a field trial in Burkina Faso, the fungus killed 99 percent of the population of malaria mosquitoes within 45 days. This approach offers an alternative to insecticides in the fight against malaria. This is important since the mosquitoes are becoming resistant against the insecticides.

News seen at: BBC - Health

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-150 (added 2019-05-30)

Recycling 400000 years ago

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Early humans reused flints when they broke to create tiny sharp tools. This has been found out from 400,000 year old material found at the Qesem Cave in Israel.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Top Environment

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-149 (added 2019-05-29)

Learning from indigenous communities

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In a UN report it has been found that conservation efforts can learn from indigenous communities. The land of these communities is less effected by degradation due to the biodiversity maintained.

News seen at: Scientific American - Conservation

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-148 (added 2019-05-28)

Gel to reduce side effects in radiotherapy

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A gel can be applied to patients who need radiotherapy in their treatment of prostate cancer. The gel increases the distance between the prostate and other organs, in particular the bladder and the bowel. This way the side effects can be reduced by 70 percent, potentially making a big difference in the quality of life of a patient.

News seen at: BBC - Health

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-147 (added 2019-05-27)

Origami to soften the blow

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Origami-inspired devices have been built that can soften the blow on impact of spacecrafts, cars, or gymnasts. The material folds on impact and absorbs part of the force.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Top Physical/Tech

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-146 (added 2019-05-26)

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In experiments with mice, it has been found that stimulating particular regions of the brain's hippocampus can have an influence on the memory. This could result in a treatment for posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, and anxiety.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Top Science News

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-145 (added 2019-05-25)

Volunteering to overcome loneliness

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Loneliness is a major problem for many in many western societies. Volunteering is one way to overcome this and produce a sense of community.

News seen at: Scientific American - Behavior & Society

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-144 (added 2019-05-24)

Stem cells to regenerate heart

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In experiments, stem cells taken from the placenta regrew into heart cells. This opens the possibility that stem cells can be used to repair hearts damaged in a heart attack.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Top Health

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-143 (added 2019-05-23)

Superconductor high temperature record

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Scientists managed to build a superconductor that works at a temperature of -23o Celsius, a temperature around 50 degrees higher than the previous record. However, the material must be put under extreme pressure.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Top Science News

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-142 (added 2019-05-22)

Aspirin against strokes

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Aspirin thins the blood and as such is a medication against strokes. However, if there is bleeding it may increase it. New research suggests that still a low daily dose dose is beneficial to prevent new strokes for patients who had a stroke caused by bleeding in the brain. More research is needed.

News seen at: BBC - Health

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-141 (added 2019-05-21)

Billionaire pays study debt for whole class

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A 56 year old American philanthropist promised to pay the study debt of 400 students, the whole 2019 class of a college, at a cost of around 40 million dollars.

News seen at: BBC - World US & Canada

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-140 (added 2019-05-20)

Coffee for digestion

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In experiments with rats it has been found that coffee helps the gut to digest the food, in particular to contract. The effect seems not to be linked to the caffeine.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Health & Medicine

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-139 (added 2019-05-19)

Brain - use it or lose it

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Regularly solving crossword and number puzzles keeps the brain fit in later life. This has been found in a big study with more than 19000 participants.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Education & Learning

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-138 (added 2019-05-18)

Cave in South Africa with oldest grilled food remains

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In a cave in South Africa remains of the oldest known grilled meat and remains of starch have been found. The remains are about 120,000 years old.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Top Science News

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-137 (added 2019-05-17)

Broccoli against cancer

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In experiments with animals, it has been found that a molecule found in broccoli can reactivate a dormant gene that normally suppresses the growth of some cancers.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Top Science News

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-136 (added 2019-05-16)

New approach to cancer research

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Following the success with a combination of drugs in the fight against AIDS, scientists try to find related approaches to combat cancer. This way they want to avoid the current effect that sometimes the nastiest cancer cells survive a chemotherapy. A new therapy may be ready in a decade.

News seen at: BBC - Health

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-135 (added 2019-05-15)

Low humidity and the flu

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There is better understanding why low humidity makes it hard for the immune system to fight influenza, the virus can more easily get into the body and the repair mechanism of the body is impaired.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Top Health

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-134 (added 2019-05-14)

Tips for reducing the risk of dementia

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There are WHO guidelines to reduce the risk of dementia by a healthy lifestyle. This means primarily to exercise (at least 150 minutes per week), stop smoking, avoid drinking too much alcohol, be social, keep a healthy diet, and avoid high blood pressure and high cholesterol values.

News seen at: BBC - Health

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-133 (added 2019-05-13)

Bacterial infection treated by phage therapy

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A bacterial infection that was life threatening since the bacteria did not react to antibiotics. By genetic engineering viruses that can infect and kill bacteria it was possible to save the patient.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Top Health

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-132 (added 2019-05-12)

Cooling and CO2

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There is an idea to use the airflow in air conditioning systems to extract the CO2 from the air and generate hydrocarbon from it. The hydrocarbon can then be used as fuel.

News seen at: Scientific American - Climate

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-131 (added 2019-05-11)

Healing the heart

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Patients surviving a heart attack may have to live with severe damage to their hearts. However, a new tightly controlled therapy with microRNA may repair some of the damage.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Top Health

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-130 (added 2019-05-10)

What makes chocolate taste good?

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Scientists have now understood why chocolate mixed according to a 140 year old method has a particularly smooth texture. The several hour long process of mixing breaks the ingredients into finer grains.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Top Environment

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-129 (added 2019-05-09)

Broccoli chemical against schizophrenia

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Schizophrenia seems linked in a bad way to glutamate. However, a certain compound (sulforaphane) from broccoli sprouts can counterbalance the negative effects.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Top Health

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-128 (added 2019-05-08)

Desalination without evaporation

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A new method of desalination has been developed that extracts the salt from the water. It does not make use of distillation which is energy intensive. It uses a solvent that extracts the salt from the water and that operates at a temperature of less than 70 Celsius.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Top Physical/Tech

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-127 (added 2019-05-07)

Journalists freed

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Two Reuters journalists who had been convicted to seven years in jail in Myanmar after collecting evidence about the murders of ten Rohingya men by the army have been freed after more than 500 days in prison.

News seen at: BBC - World - Asia

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-126 (added 2019-05-06)

Extroverted leaders

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Leaders are more accepted when they show the right level of assertiveness and warmth. While the properties are considered as important for leadership, too much can be seen as being pushy.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Mind & Brain

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-125 (added 2019-05-05)

How to avoid burnout

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There are obvious causes to burnout such as too much work and stress. But there are five possibly less obvious ways to avoid burnout: not applying pressure to achieve, optimism, support by co-workers and supervisors, meaningful social media contact, and income equality.

News seen at: Scientific American - Mental Health

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-124 (added 2019-05-04)

Schools going solar

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When schools put solar cells on their roofs it has several advantages, it cuts the energy bills of the school and the air around the school becomes cleaner. The carbon footprint of the education sector can be cut this way by more than a quarter.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Matter & Energy

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-123 (added 2019-05-03)

No HIV transmission risk with antiretroviral therapy

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In an eight year study of almost 1000 gay male couples of which one is infected with HIV and the other not, it was found that there is zero risk of HIV transmission when the infected man is in antiretroviral therapy.

News seen at: BBC - Health

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-122 (added 2019-05-02)

Seats at crossings

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In South Korea, a city council had seats installed for elderly people who wait at pedestrian lights. This way pedestrians can take it easy and do not have to rush to cross the road thus avoiding accidents.

News seen at: BBC - News from elsewhere

Further Info (click to expand)


Neat News 2019-121 (added 2019-05-01)

Antidote against box jellyfish detected

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A new powerful antidote against the deadly box jellyfish has been discovered by genome editing.

News seen at: ScienceDaily - Top Health

Further Info (click to expand)

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