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Marine Life Stirs Ocean Enough To Affect Climate, Study Says Oceanographers worldwide pay close attention to phytoplankton and with good reason. The microscopic plants that form the vast foundation of the marine food chain generate a staggering amount of power, and now a groundbreaking study led by Florida State University in Tallahassee, Fla., has calculated just how much --- about five times the annual total power consumption of the human world. Sperm's Immune-protection Properties Could Provide Link To How Cancers Sugar-based markers on human sperm cells which may prevent them from being attacked by the female immune system could provide a vital clue to how some cancers spread in the human body. The new research analyzed these markers which are believed to tell the female immune system that the sperm are not dangerous pathogens, and therefore should not be attacked by the woman's white blood cells during the reproductive process. Software Helps Doctors Calculate Heart Attack Risk Pioneering computer software is helping doctors to decide how best to treat patients admitted to hospital with suspected heart attacks. SpiralFrog Startup Takes on ITunes With Free, Ad-Supported Service Is the time right for Madison Avenue to pick up the tab for digital music? Listening Post columnist Eliot Van Buskirk takes a look at SpiralFrog. Shift In Brain's Language-control Site Offers Rehab Hope; Language Cen Neuroimaging researchers at the University of Cincinnat document shift in location of language activity in the brain.
Computer Simulator Allows Visually-impaired To Drive Scientists have created a device which improves the vision of sight-impaired patients. This reconfigurable platform, which can be updated via the Internet, is especially useful for pathologies that can lead to blindness, such as macular degeneration, cataracts, etc. Can An Ugly Toenail Predict Amputation? Nearly three in four people with diabetes at high risk for amputation have diseased toenails. These are the findings of a recent study presented at the Council of Nail Disorders last week in Washington, D.C. The study, coauthored by Drs. Stephanie Wu and David G. Armstrong of Scholl's Center for Lower Extremity Ambulatory Research at Rosalind Franklin University, was the first to rigidly evaluate a controlled group such as this. Latest Fuel Cell Material Advance Overcomes Low Humidity Conductivity James McGrath, University Distinguished Professor of Chemistry at Virginia Tech, will announce his research group's latest development, a PEM material that retains conductivity during low humidity, during his plenary lecture at the Challenges for the Hydrogen Economy symposium during the 232nd National Meeting of the American Chemical Society in San Francisco. Mitochondria Defects Linked To Social Behavior And Spatial Memory Respiration deficiencies in mitochondria, the cell's powerhouses, are associated with changed social behavior and spatial memory in laboratory mice. This research may open the door to understanding the connection in humans between mitochondrial breakdowns and mental illness. Sperm Abnormalities Seen In Male Lupus Patients A new study examined gonad function in male SLE patients and found that they have a high frequency of sperm abnormalities associated with reduced testicular volume.
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