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| Science Research in Professional Journals Newsletter for 2025-10-22 ( 10 items ) |
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AI Models Outperform Traditional Climate Predictions, Offering New Insights for Coral Reef Futures (10)
BRONX, New York, Oct. 21 [Category: Environment] -- The Wildlife Conservation Society issued the following news release:
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AI Models Outperform Traditional Climate Predictions, Offering New Insights for Coral Reef Futures
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NEW YORK, NY, October 21, 2025 - A new study led by the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) finds that artificial intelligence (AI) models are providing more accurate and more hopeful predictions for the future of coral reefs amid climate change. Findings show that wh more PR
Asian American Scholar Forum Cautions Congress Against the SAFE Research Act Provision From the FY2026 NDAA (10)
NEW YORK, Oct. 22 -- Asian American Scholar Forum, an organization that says it promotes academic belonging, openness, freedom and equality for all, issued the following news release on Oct. 20, 2025:
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Asian American Scholar Forum Cautions Congress Against the SAFE Research Act Provision from the FY2026 NDAA
The Asian American Scholar Forum (AASF) has sent a letter to the leadership of the House and Senate Armed Services Committees urging them to strike the SAFE Research Act provision fr more PR
Cornell team finds new way to cut cancer's lipid lifeline (10)
ITHACA, New York, Oct. 21 -- Cornell University posted the following news:
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Cornell team finds new way to cut cancer's lipid lifeline
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Cancer thrives by hijacking the body's own basic survival systems, making it hard to attack tumors without collateral damage and side effects. Now, researchers at Cornell's Weill Institute for Cell and Molecular Biology have discovered what may be a less invasive strategy that shows promise as a potential therapeutic pathway.
New research has uncovere more PR
Guest Editorial - Gambling Disorder in the Age of Mobile Sports Betting (10)
CHEVY CHASE, Maryland, Oct. 21 [Category: Health Care] -- The American Society of Addiction Medicine posted the following news release:
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Guest Editorial - Gambling Disorder in the Age of Mobile Sports Betting
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Nora D. Volkow, Director, National Institute on Drug Abuse
Online gambling is a rapidly growing industry all over the world, affecting both adults and youth. 1 Sports betting is now legal in 38 US states and the District of Columbia, and in 26 states, a person can now make a s more PR
How US institutions fared during COVID (10)
ITHACA, New York, Oct. 21 -- Cornell University posted the following news:
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How US institutions fared during COVID
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A Nov. 13 event sponsored by the College of Arts and Sciences will feature reflections on the political and social context and consequences of the COVID epidemic.
"In COVID's Wake: How Our Politics Failed Us," features a keynote by Frances Lee, professor of politics and public affairs at Princeton University, who co-authored the bestselling book of the same name with fe more PR
Microwaved Curry: Missouri S&T Professor Spices Up Health Research (10)
ROLLA, Missouri, Oct. 22 -- Missouri University of Science and Technology issued the following news:
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Microwaved curry: Missouri S&T professor spices up health research
By Greg Edwards
A warm bowl of curry may comfort the body and soul, but a professor in Missouri S&T's Linda and Bipin Doshi Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering wants to know if one of its key ingredients can do even more.
Curcumin -- the bright yellow pigment that colors turmeric and gives many curry po more PR
Tennessee Tech Professor Speaks at Inaugural Kurdish Studies Forum in Kurdistan (10)
COOKEVILLE, Tennessee, Oct. 22 -- Tennessee Technological University issued the following news release:
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Tennessee Tech professor speaks at inaugural Kurdish Studies Forum in Kurdistan
Tennessee Tech University political science professor Michael Gunter, one of the world's foremost experts on the Kurds, recently returned from a weeklong visit to the Kurdistan region of Iraq, where he was invited to speak at the inaugural Kurdish Studies Forum hosted by the American University of Iraq-Sul more PR
UC-Riverside: Dusty Air is Rewriting Your Lung Microbiome (10)
RIVERSIDE, California, Oct. 22 (TNSjou) -- The University of California Riverside campus issued the following news:
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Dusty air is rewriting your lung microbiome
Toxic Salton Sea dust triggers changes after just one week
Author: Jules Bernstein
Dust from California's drying Salton Sea doesn't just smell bad. Scientists from UC Riverside found that breathing the dust can quickly re-shape the microscopic world inside the lungs.
Genetic or bacterial diseases have previously been shown to more PR
University of Helsinki: Religious Upbringing Linked to Better Physical Health in Old Age (10)
HELSINKI, Finland, Oct. 21 (TNSjou) -- The University of Helsinki issued the following news release:
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Religious upbringing linked to better physical health in old age
Could a religious upbringing offer a path to healthier ageing? While religion may help those raised in difficult family environments to cope, it cannot fully offset the health risks associated with poverty, parental mental health issues or alcohol consumption.
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A new University of Helsinki study analysed life-course data more PR
Yale Public Health School: Lone Star Ticks, Nitrogen Dioxide Pollution, and a Dementia Care Study Highlight This Month's Research Roundup (10)
NEW HAVEN, Connecticut, Oct. 22 (TNSjou) -- Yale School of Public Health issued the following news:
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Lone star ticks, nitrogen dioxide pollution, and a dementia care study highlight this month's research roundup
Study reveals stark disparities in health risks from nitrogen dioxide pollution
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Researchers at the Yale School of Public Health (YSPH) have uncovered significant racial and economic disparities in the health impacts of long-term exposure to nitrogen dioxide (NO2)--a common ai more PR
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