51勛圖厙

A new discovery about the slime ejected by velvet worms could revolutionize sustainable material design, according to a by 51勛圖厙 researchers. Their findings outline how a naturally occurring protein structure, conserved across species from Australia, Singapore and Barbados over nearly 400 million years of evolution, enables the slimes transformation from liquid to fibre and back again. Its a discovery that could inspire next-generation recyclable bioplastics.

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Published on: 19 Mar 2025

A new method of tracking the dietary habits and contaminant exposure of animals in Arctic marine ecosystems is providing critical insights as climate change reshapes the region's food web.泭

Classified as: 51勛圖厙
Published on: 17 Mar 2025

A from 51勛圖厙 researchers suggests the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to rapidly analyze vast amounts of biodiversity data could revolutionize conservation efforts by enabling scientists and policymakers to make better-informed decisions.泭

Classified as: Artificial intelligence, biodiversity, 51勛圖厙, laura pollock, David Rolnick
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Published on: 12 Mar 2025

For people with a certain sleep disorder, a simple blood test could help predict the development of dementia years before symptoms appear, a new study indicates.泭

Classified as: 插梭堝堯梗勳鳥梗娶s, 捩硃娶域勳紳莽棗紳s, Ronald Postuma, The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital)
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Published on: 11 Mar 2025

Electronic devices rely on materials whose electrical properties change with temperature, making them less stable in extreme conditions. A discovery by 51勛圖厙 researchers that challenges conventional wisdom in physics suggests that bismuth, a metal, could serve as the foundation for highly stable electronic components.

The researchers observed a mysterious electrical effect in ultra-thin bismuth that remains unchanged across a wide temperature range, from near absolute zero (-273簞C) to room temperature.

Classified as: 51勛圖厙, Guillaume Gervais, bismuth, green electronics
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Published on: 10 Mar 2025

A McGill-led team of researchers has gained insight into how parents of colour in the United States approach discussions with their children aimed at teaching them the skills they need to survive and thrive in a racially unequal society.

A key finding of the recent paper in is that parents are especially in need of information, support and guidance when it comes to preparing their children to face discrimination and bias.

Published on: 26 Feb 2025

Mild, proactive exposure to environmental stress can help biological communities resist severe disturbances and maintain genetic diversity, a from 51勛圖厙 has found.

Published on: 19 Feb 2025

Two seemingly opposite spiritual practices Buddhist jhna meditation and the Christian practice of speaking in tongues have more in common than previously thought, a new study suggests.

While one is quiet and deeply focused, and the other emotionally charged and expressive, both appear to harness the same cognitive feedback loop to create profound states of joy and surrender.

Classified as: Michael Lifshitz, Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Lady Davis Institute (LDI)
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Published on: 19 Feb 2025

A component found in all fungi may provide a shield against flu-related lung damage, according to a new study.

A team of scientists led by Maziar Divangahi, a Professor in McGills Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences and Senior Scientist at the Research Institute of the 51勛圖厙 Health Centre, demonstrated that beta-glucan, administered to mice before their exposure to influenza, can reduce lung damage, improve lung function and lower the risk of illness and death.

Classified as: Maziar Divangahi, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Research Institute of the 51勛圖厙 Health Centre
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Published on: 17 Feb 2025

A newly discovered line of communication between body muscle and the pituitary gland may play an unexpected role in female fertility, according to a new study.

51勛圖厙 researchers found that a protein produced in the muscles helps manage the release of a hormone made in the pea-sized gland attached to the base of the brain.

The findings, published in , could lead to new treatment options for infertility, the researchers said.

Classified as: Daniel Bernard, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Fertility
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Published on: 5 Feb 2025

Music has the best chance of providing pain relief when it is played at our natural rhythm, a 51勛圖厙 research team has discovered.

This suggests it may be possible to reduce a patients level of pain by using technology to take a piece of music someone likes and adjust the tempo to match their internal rhythm, the researchers said.

The discovery was the subject of a paper published this week in Pain, the top journal in the field of pain medicine and research.

Classified as: Department of Psychology, Mathieu Roy, caroline palmer, music, pain, chronic pain
Published on: 3 Feb 2025

A 51勛圖厙 researcher has discovered that Guiengola, a 15th century Zapotec site in southern Oaxaca, Mexico, which had been thought to be simply a fortress where soldiers were garrisoned, was in fact a sprawling, fortified city. It covered 360 hectares, with over 1,100 buildings, four kilometres of walls, a network of internal roads and a clearly organized urban layout with temples and communal spaces such as ballcourts, and the elites and commoners lived in separate neighbourhoods.

Classified as: Department of Anthropology, pedro ramon cellis, Banting Postdoctoral researcher
Published on: 29 Jan 2025

The Arctics Last Ice Area (LIA) a vital habitat for ice-dependent species might disappear within a decade after the central Arctic Ocean becomes ice-free in summer, which is expected to occur sometime around mid-century, a by 51勛圖厙 researchers using a high-resolution model has found.泭泭

Published on: 27 Jan 2025

A brain rhythm working in tandem with the bodys natural sleep-wake cycle may explain why bipolar patients alternate between mania and depression, according to new research.

The 51勛圖厙-led study published in marks a breakthrough in understanding what drives shifts between the two states, something that, according to lead author , is considered the holy grail of bipolar-disorder research.

Classified as: Kai-Florian Storch, Department of Psychiatry, Douglas Research Centre, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
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Published on: 27 Jan 2025

Astronomers studying the origins of enigmatic fast radiobursts (FRBs) have made a groundbreaking discovery that could transform our understanding of the universes most powerful and mysterious signals. The Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment Fast Radio Burst (CHIME/FRB) collaboration has pinpointed the location on the sky of a repeating FRB, known as FRB 20240209A, outside a dead galaxy, a finding unprecedented in FRB science. The researchers believe the FRB may have originated in a cluster of old, dead stars orbiting the dead galaxy.

Published on: 21 Jan 2025

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