SCIENCE

Nov 21 2024SCIENCE

Livestock Trading: Welfare Wins, Health Losses

Imagine you're a farmer with a sick cow. Should you sell it? That's the question researchers tackled, using a mix of models and simulations to figure out the welfare impacts of trading sick livestock. They started by building a theoretical model to understand when and why trading sick animals could

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Nov 21 2024SCIENCE

Fish Spoilage Detectors: A New Way to Spot Biogenic Amines

Biogenic amines (BAs) are harmful substances found in fish products. They're linked to fish spoilage and pose a threat to food safety. Traditional methods to detect BAs are costly, complicated, and time-consuming. In a recent study, scientists created a new tool called a nanozyme-based sensor array.

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Nov 21 2024SCIENCE

A Smart Way to Detect Cancer Early with a Cool Nanoparticle Mix

You know how it's super important to catch cancer early? Well, scientists have found a clever way to do that by combining two different detection methods into one tiny particle. This particle, which looks like a rambutan fruit, is made of iron oxide, copper sulfide, and gold, wrapped in a special co

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Nov 20 2024SCIENCE

The Neural Dance: How Your Thoughts and Personality Shape Brain Connections

Brain activity during quiet time reveals a lot about how our brains work and who we are as individuals. It's tough to separate brain features linked to personality traits from those connected to thoughts happening at rest. Researchers looked at three brain networks - the ventral and dorsal attention

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Nov 20 2024SCIENCE

Brain's Gamma Waves: More Than Just a Buzz

For over eight decades, scientists have been curious about the brain's gamma waves, which oscillate between 30 to 150 times per second. Despite recent advances, we're still puzzled about their exact role in how we perceive, think, and act. Let's dive into what we know so far. First, let's chat abou

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Nov 20 2024SCIENCE

Why Do Closer Objects Seem to Move Faster?

Have you ever noticed that objects moving towards or away from you seem to speed up as they get closer? Scientists have long known that the speed at which we perceive things moving on a flat plane can be affected by how fast they appear to be moving at our eyes and where they start from. But what ab

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Nov 20 2024SCIENCE

Exercise and FTIR: Unlocking Molecular Secrets

Physical activity is no secret weapon for health and performance. But recently, scientists are digging deeper. They're not just looking at the sweat or the pumped muscles, but at the tiny changes happening inside our bodies during exercise. Enter Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) Spectroscopy, a fan

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Nov 20 2024SCIENCE

Halide Additives in Lithium Thiophosphate: Boosting Battery Performance

Lithium thiophosphate solids are great for lithium-ion batteries, but they have a drawback: they can degrade when used with certain parts of the battery, like the lithium anode and oxide cathode. So, scientists added different halides (such as chloride, bromide, and iodide) to these solids to see if

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Nov 20 2024SCIENCE

Light's Magic Trick: Turning Common Chemicals into Something New

Imagine using light to transform everyday chemicals into something extraordinary! Scientists have found a clever way to do just that. They're using visible light to change common compounds called 1, 3-enynes into allenes. This process, called photoredox catalysis, is like a magic trick in the lab. I

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Nov 20 2024SCIENCE

Seeing the Invisible: Scientists Model a Photon's Shape

Imagine trying to see the face of a single flash of light. That's what scientists from the University of Birmingham in the UK have practically done. They've created a clever computer model to understand how light and matter interact. Light, as we know, acts like both a wave and a particle. Understan

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