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Science Research in Professional Journals Newsletter for 2025-07-31 ( 13 items )  
Award-winning cinematographer, journalists, sports media executive and veteran editor join Vanderbilt Student Media Hall of Fame (10)
NASHVILLE, Tennessee, July 30 -- Vanderbilt University posted the following news: * * * Award-winning cinematographer, journalists, sports media executive and veteran editor join Vanderbilt Student Media Hall of Fame * A Netflix cinematographer who pioneered COVID-19-safe filming techniques, investigative journalists whose work has sparked international reforms, a sports media executive at the forefront of digital innovation, and veteran editors whose careers span five decades are among the  more PR

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Researchers Show Eye Tracking Metrics Help Identify Concussion-Related Vision Disorders (10)
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, July 31 (TNSjou) -- Children's Hospital of Philadelphia issued the following news release: * * * Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Researchers Show Eye Tracking Metrics Help Identify Concussion-Related Vision Disorders Eye tracking could more quickly identify which patients would benefit from specialist referrals and more targeted treatment interventions * In a new study led by Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP), researchers found that novel eye-trackin more PR

Forged by the Sea: Cedarville University's Pathway to Naval Careers (10)
CEDARVILLE, Ohio, July 31 -- Cedarville University issued the following news on July 30, 2025: * * * Forged by the Sea: Cedarville University's Pathway to Naval Careers By Benjamin Konuch, Student Public Relations Writer Hard work, discipline and a commitment to national service have long defined careers in the United States Navy and Department of Defense. At Cedarville University, a growing number of students are answering that call -- and earning prestigious scholarships along the way. S more PR

ICYMI: EPA Launches the Largest Deregulatory Actions in U.S. History with Proposal to Rescind Obama-Era Endangerment Finding (10)
WASHINGTON, July 30 -- The Environmental Protection Agency issued the following news release: * * * ICYMI: EPA Launches the Largest Deregulatory Actions in U.S. History with Proposal to Rescind Obama-Era Endangerment Finding * WASHINGTON -- Yesterday in Indianapolis, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lee Zeldin released the agency's proposal to rescind the 2009 Endangerment Finding, which has been used to justify over $1 trillion in regulations, including the Biden-Har more PR

Johns Hopkins Medicine: Scientists Say Protein Separates Message-Bearing 'Bubbles' at Intersection Between Brain Cells, Deepening Understanding of Cognition (10)
BALTIMORE, Maryland, July 31 (TNSjou) -- Johns Hopkins Medicine issued the following news release on July 30, 2025: * * * Scientists Say Protein Separates Message-Bearing 'Bubbles' at Intersection Between Brain Cells, Deepening Understanding of Cognition Researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine say they unexpectedly found new information about a protein's special role in getting brain cells to communicate at the right time and place in experiments with genetically engineered mice. The finding a more PR

Northeastern Ph.D. Student Awarded a Fellowship to Study US Foreign Policy on the Korean Peninsula (10)
BOSTON, Massachusetts, July 31 -- Northeastern University issued the following news: * * * Northeastern Ph.D. student awarded a fellowship to study US foreign policy on the Korean Peninsula By Alena Kuzub Matthew Fleming, a Northeastern Ph.D. student studying political science, will research U.S. policy and ties with the Korean Peninsula at the Pacific Forum. Matthew Fleming's fascination with Northeast Asia began at an early age, when his father returned from a work trip to Japan with exot more PR

Safety Considerations for Automated Passenger Vehicles Topic of CRS Report (Part 1 of 2) (10)
WASHINGTON, July 30 (TNSLrpt) -- The Congressional Research Service issued the following report (No. R48605) on July 22, 2025, entitled "Safety Considerations for Automated Passenger Vehicles" by transportation policy analyst Naseeb A. Souweidane. Here are excerpts: * * * SUMMARY Automated vehicle technologies offer a range of driver support functions that some stakeholders assert may improve traffic safety. These technologies vary in their capabilities and current stages of development. Sel more PR

Smithsonian Institution National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute: New DNA Analysis Allows Scientists to Identify Specific Animals by Their Feces (10)
WASHINGTON, July 31 (TNSjou) -- The Smithsonian Institution National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute issued the following news release: * * * New DNA Analysis Allows Scientists to Identify Specific Animals by Their Feces Scientists from the Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute (NZCBI) have successfully used swift fox droppings to identify individuals and collect other data vital to monitoring a reintroduced population in Montana. The now-validated technique cou more PR

Spinning up new flexible material for self-powered wearable sensors (10)
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pennsylvania, July 30 -- Pennsylvania State University posted the following news: * * * Spinning up new flexible material for self-powered wearable sensors * UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -- Could clothing monitor a person's health in real time, because the clothing itself is a self-powered sensor? A new material created through electrospinning, which is a process that draws out fibers using electricity, brings this possibility one step closer. A team led by researchers at Penn Sta more PR

STRI: Hamlet Evolution (10)
PANAMA CITY, Panama, July 31 (TNSjou) -- The Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute issued the following news: * * * Hamlet Evolution A comparison of colorful hamlets from the Caribbean challenges ideas about how species arise * By Beth King Scientists have been thinking about how new species evolve since Darwin wrote On The Origin of Species in 1859. The results presented here call into question some of the most common explanations of how species originate. Toddlers can name a few anima more PR

Sun dogs, other celestial effects could appear in alien skies (10)
ITHACA, New York, July 30 -- Cornell University posted the following news: * * * Sun dogs, other celestial effects could appear in alien skies * Ice crystals in Earth's atmosphere sometimes align just right to create various striking visual effects, from a halo around the moon, to bright spots called sun dogs on either side of the sun in a winter sky, or a rainbowed pillar, called a crown flash, above a storm cloud. Similar phenomena can appear in the skies over some exoplanets of the "hot more PR

The ASAM Weekly for July 29th, 2025 (10)
CHEVY CHASE, Maryland, July 30 [Category: Health Care] -- The American Society of Addiction Medicine posted the following news release: * * * The ASAM Weekly for July 29th, 2025 * This Week in the ASAM Weekly We have a mantra at the ASAM Weekly--"52 weeks-a-year"--and for the last year and a half, the 3 ASAM Weekly co-editors have been pulling their weight plus one to keep this publication going. It's a rewarding role but an unrelenting schedule (at times) to search, evaluate, and summariz more PR

Treating Hypertension With Single Pill Combinations Saves Lives and Money (10)
NEWTON, New South Wales, July 31 -- The George Institute for Global Health issued the following news release: * * * Treating hypertension with single pill combinations saves lives and money A new Australian study published in the latest issue of Journal of Hypertension shows that treating hypertension first-line with single pills combining two or more medications provides effective control and also delivers substantial cost savings to both consumers and payers, when compared with equivalent d more PR