RESEARCH

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Nov 21 2024HEALTH

Breast Cancer: How Organoids Are Revolutionizing Treatments

Breast cancer is one of the most common and varied cancers globally. Different treatments are prescribed based on the unique gene expressions and clinical features of various cancer subtypes. However, even with advanced tumor assessments, treatments don't work equally well for everyone. This is wher

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Nov 21 2024HEALTH

How Heat Can Help Heal: A Warm Approach to Anorexia Treatment

More than a century ago, a physician named William Gull made a notable suggestion. He proposed applying heat to patients with anorexia nervosa (AN), a serious eating disorder. Gull was inspired by the work of Charles Chossat, a Swiss physiologist who accidentally discovered that heat had therapeutic

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Nov 21 2024ENVIRONMENT

Oil in the Cold: Arctic Spills and What We Know

Canada's Arctic, a region of diverse ecosystems, is facing a new challenge: increased marine traffic. This boosts the risk of oil spills, which are particularly tough to handle in the Arctic's harsh conditions. What happens when oil spills in extreme cold? It behaves differently, interacts uniquely

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Nov 20 2024HEALTH

Living with Hidden Pain: A Personal Journey

Ever wondered what it's like to live with chronic pain that doctors can't pin down? One person explored this exact experience in a unique type of research called autoethnography. This approach offers a deep dive into personal stories while connecting them to wider cultural and social themes. The goa

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Nov 20 2024HEALTH

AI in Medical Writing: A Double-Edged Sword

Artificial intelligence (AI) is on the rise, making its way into various industries, including academic publishing. AI can do tasks we usually do with our brains, like learning, solving problems, and making decisions. In medical writing, AI is becoming more common. Experts don't agree if this is a g

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Nov 20 2024POLITICS

Why Do We Shun Neutral Things Just Because the 'Other Side' Likes Them?

Have you ever avoided something you normally like just because someone from the "other side" of the political spectrum enjoys it too? This study shows that people in Sweden often distance themselves from simple things like clothes and chocolates when they find out these items are favored by politica

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Nov 19 2024SCIENCE

Unlocking Human Nutrition Secrets with the Rhesus Macaque

Nutrition research is no walk in the park. Scientists often turn to animals that resemble us closely, like the rhesus macaque. These clever monkeys can help us understand human health issues better, but we rarely consider their environment and history. Let's dive into the world of the rhesus macaque

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Nov 18 2024CRIME

Why People Get Trapped in Human Trafficking in Africa

Human trafficking is a big problem everywhere, including Africa. Every year, millions of people face serious health issues and social challenges because of it. The problem is, we don't know enough about what causes people to be trafficked within their own countries. This makes it hard for groups fig

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Nov 17 2024TECHNOLOGY

What Sites You Share Reveal More Than What You Speak

Ever thought about how researchers dig deeper into social media user behaviors? They don't just count friends or read posts. A fresh study shows that looking at the websites people share on Twitter can provide a quicker and more precise insight. This method, nicknamed "domain-based user embedding, "

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Nov 16 2024SCIENCE

Exploring LmRaC: A Tool to Boost LLM Accuracy in Science

Large Language Models (LLMs) have revolutionized many fields, but they also bring concerns about made-up information, especially in science. One way to tackle this is with Retrieval-augmented Generation (RAG). RAG lets LLMs access data and documents they weren't trained on, helping them reason bette

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