Monday, March 20, 2017

Autism predicted by infant brain changes, study says and other top stories.

  • Autism predicted by infant brain changes, study says

    Autism predicted by infant brain changes, study says
    This new diagnostic method requires MRI brain scans to look for the features of autism, a developmental disability with behavioral symptoms that usually become obvious between ages 2 and 4. Further research is needed before it can be developed into a tool for diagnosing infants at high risk of developing autism, said Heather Cody Hazlett, lead author of the study and a psychologist at the Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.Measur..
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  • Scientific Panel Says Editing Heritable Human Genes Could Be OK In The Future

    Scientific Panel Says Editing Heritable Human Genes Could Be OK In The Future
    Scientists could be allowed to make modifications in human DNA that can be passed down through subsequent generations, the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Medicine say.Such a groundbreaking step should only be considered after more research and then only be conducted under tight restrictions, the academies write in a highly anticipated report released Tuesday. Such work should be reserved to prevent serious diseases and disabilities, it says.The academies determined that..
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  • SpaceX Launching Lightning Tracker, 'Three-Eyed' Raven, Deadly Superbug for NASA

    SpaceX Launching Lightning Tracker, 'Three-Eyed' Raven, Deadly Superbug for NASA
    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — SpaceX is gearing up to launch its 10th commercial cargo mission on Saturday morning (Feb. 18), ferrying supplies and an assortment of science investigations to the International Space Station — including a deadly superbug, an advanced lightning sensor, a tool for new autonomous rendezvous capabilities and more. Perched atop an upgraded Falcon 9 booster, the Dragon spacecraft will lift off from Kennedy Space Center's Launch Pad 39A — marking the first time a vehicle..
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  • In recently unearthed essay, Winston Churchill anticipated space travel and extraterrestrial life

    In recently unearthed essay, Winston Churchill anticipated space travel and extraterrestrial life
    Winston Churchill addressing the crowd outside The City of London Recruiting Centre for the Territorial Army at Mansion House, London on April 24, 1939. (AP Photo/Staff/Putnam) Quoting Winston Churchill has always been something of a national pastime. If you’re going through hell, keep going.  History will be kind to me for I intend to write it. Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few. What hasn’t often been quoted is the essay he penned in 1939 titled “Are..
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  • The UAE's ambitious plan to build a new city — on Mars

    The UAE's ambitious plan to build a new city — on Mars
      The project, to be named "Mars 2117", integrates a vision to create a mini-city and community on Mars involving international cooperation. pic.twitter.com/v27jA3K3pS — HH Sheikh Mohammed (@HHShkMohd) February 14, 2017 Over the past few decades, oil and gas revenue has helped the United Arab Emirates develop at a breakneck pace. It's glistening megacity Dubai is now home to the world's tallest building and countless other accolades, while just last year there were new plans announced to bu..
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  • UC Berkeley suffers big loss in CRISPR patent fight: What's next?

    UC Berkeley suffers big loss in CRISPR patent fight: What's next?
    The scientists who first harnessed the powerful gene-editing technology known as CRISPR suffered a major defeat Wednesday in their long-running quest to control the rights to their invention.UC Berkeley biochemist Jennifer Doudna and her European collaborator, Emmanuelle Charpentier, have racked up a slew of awards for their work, which makes it very easy to alter the DNA of living things. But their efforts to patent their discovery have been hung up by a competing claim from Feng Zhang at the ..
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  • Where no man has gone before: NASA awards Space Poop Challenge champs, plans 2019 Orion crew mission

    Where no man has gone before: NASA awards Space Poop Challenge champs, plans 2019 Orion crew mission
    The top three designers of NASA’s Space Poop Challenge won a total $30,000 in prizes, and now the agency may use the designs in a newly revised Orion mission that will include a crew. Last year, NASA launched the challenge on the HeroX crowdsourcing site, looking for "solutions to human waste management inside a spacesuit.” The competition called for a design that would replace the current in-suit waste-management system, a diaper.NASA was seeking a design that could collect all ..
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  • Ocean oxygen levels drop 2% in 50 years, Nature study finds

    Ocean oxygen levels drop 2% in 50 years, Nature study finds
    Scientists have long warned about the potentially deadly consequences of the ocean's declining oxygen levels on marine life, and its resulting impact on humans.The study came from the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research in Kiel, Germany, where the three co-authors -- Sunke Schmidtko, Lothar Stramma and Martin Visbeck -- pulled data dating back to 1960. Using information on oxygen, temperature and other factors relating to the world's oceans, they mapped it around the globe and estimated t..
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  • Nasty chemicals abound in what was thought an untouched environment

    Nasty chemicals abound in what was thought an untouched environment
    NOT far off the coast of Guam lies the deepest point on Earth’s surface, the Mariana trench. Its floor is 10,994 metres below sea level. If Mount Everest were flipped upside down into it, there would still be more than 2km of clear water between the mountain’s base and the top of the ocean. Such isolation has led many to assume that it and similar seabed trenches will be among the few remaining pristine places on the planet. However, a study led by Alan Jamieson of Newcastle University, in Engla..
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  • Astronomers Snap Supernova's Baby Pictures

    Astronomers Snap Supernova's Baby Pictures
    Baby pictures of a newborn supernova have captured this stellar explosion after the first half-dozen hours of its life, shedding light on how these giant explosions happen, a new study finds. This newly discovered cosmic baby is the type of supernova that occurs when a giant star runs out of fuel and explodes. Supernovas are so bright that they can briefly outshine all of the other stars in their home galaxy. Astronomers have previously seen glimpses of supernovas within the first minutes after ..
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Could Gene Editing Help Avoid Disease? Maybe .Secret Service agent who suggested she won't take bullet for Trump on paid leave, report says .
Jimmy Butler Becomes Record-Tying Eighth Player To Hit 50-Point Mark This Season .World's oldest known killer whale Granny dies .

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