RIA

Nov 25 2024HEALTH

Can AI Pick the Best Meds for Your Blood Pressure?

Picture this: you keep checking your blood pressure, but it's always too high. It's a major risk for heart disease, even if you're taking meds. But here’s the thing, some blood pressure meds might not be the best for you. They might not make your blood vessels as flexible as they should be, which ca

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Nov 25 2024SCIENCE

Chemical Oscillations in Motion: Unveiling Nonlinear Wonders

Imagine a world where chemicals dance to a rhythm not of their own making, but one dictated by their environment. We're talking about chemical oscillators, fascinating systems where the concentration of chemical species fluctuates over time due to transport processes. These aren't your average chemi

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Nov 25 2024SCIENCE

Watching Bacteria Dance: The Rhythm of E. coli in Tiny Pools

Bacteria, like E. coli, have their own rhythm. They move in a pattern, and when placed in tiny circular pools, they swim along the edges. Connect these pools with small channels, and something amazing happens – the bacteria start to move together, in sync! This is what scientists call synchronizatio

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Nov 25 2024HEALTH

New Hope for BTC Patients: The Durvalumab + Chemo Combination in Action

Biliary tract cancer (BTC), a tough cancer that starts in the bile ducts or gallbladder, has been a serious challenge due to its poor outlook. A big trial called TOPAZ-1 showed that adding durvalumab to the standard first-line chemo (gemcitabine and cisplatin) helped patients live longer than chemo

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Nov 25 2024HEALTH

Deadly Listeria Outbreak: What You Need to Know

A recent outbreak of listeria, a serious foodborne illness, has led to the death of a California infant and sickened ten other people. The source of the outbreak has been traced back to ready-to-eat meat and poultry products from Yu Shang Food, Inc. , based in South Carolina. These products, includi

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Nov 25 2024SCIENCE

Mitochondria: The Cell's Protectors Against Infection

Mitochondria, often thought of as the cell's powerhouses, are actually much more than that. They play a crucial role in keeping cells safe from infections. You see, these tiny organelles can sense when something harmful, like a virus or bacteria, is inside the cell. This ability has been around sinc

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Nov 24 2024ENTERTAINMENT

Director Wants Loud ‘Wicked’ Movie Experience

The director of the ‘Wicked’ movie, Jon M. Chu, has a simple request for theatergoers: crank up the volume! On the film’s opening night, he shared on X (formerly Twitter) that the ideal audio level should be set to a 7. Chu, who has seen a few screenings, noticed that many theaters play it at around

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Nov 24 2024HEALTH

Nose to Brain: How Sinus Differences Impact Surgeries

The sphenoid sinus, a small cavity in the brain's base, varies greatly among people worldwide. Surgeons need to comprehend these variations when planning surgeries accessed through the nose. This review aims to gather and analyze studies that explore how these differences affect endoscopic endonasal

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Nov 24 2024SCIENCE

Unlocking Bacterial Termination: A New Way to Analyze 3'-End Sequencing Data

You might have heard about the drop in the cost of short-read sequencing over the past decade. This has led to a boom in experimental techniques that use sequencing to solve specific biological puzzles. The catch? These methods often outrun the standardized ways of analyzing the data they generate.

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Nov 24 2024TECHNOLOGY

Machine Whisperers: How AI Diagnoses Machinery Problems

Ever faced an issue where machines acted up, but the data didn't give clear answers? Researchers have come up with a clever method called multi-adversarial domain adaptation. This system uses three networks to tackle machine problems. The first network grabs features from the data, while the second

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