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  • No bull: Cattle seem to know which way is north

    WASHINGTON -- Talk about animal magnetism, cows seem to have a built-in compass. No bull: Somehow, cattle seem to know how to find north and south, say researchers who studied satellite photos of thousands of cows around the world. Most cattle that were grazing...

    Articles 2008-08-26

  • Frog die-off a global problem

    For years, California developers have been struggling to find ways to not disturb the endangered red-legged frog. Now, research led by two UC Berkeley biologists finds frogs and other amphibians worldwide need help because they are dying at alarming rates. The researchers found that...

    Articles 2008-08-12

  • Frog die-off a global problem, UC researchers say

    For years, California developers have been struggling to find ways to not disturb the endangered red-legged frog. Now, research led by two UC Berkeley biologists finds frogs and other amphibians worldwide need help because they are dying at alarming rates. The researchers found that...

    Articles 2008-08-12

  • Brain Slow to Judge Fast-Moving Objects Head-On

    If you are not experienced at dodging flying or speeding objects, your best bet may be to just get out of the way, a new study says. balls or cars, for example -- coming straight toward them based more on past experience than actual perception, according to findings published in...

    Articles 2008-08-06

  • DNA Helps Trace History of Human Migration

    An analysis of human DNA has provided new information about how ancient people shared knowledge that helped advance civilization, say Stanford University researchers. They found that animal-herding methods arrived in southern Africa about 2,000 years ago on a wave of human migration, rather than by movement of ideas between people....

    Articles 2008-08-05

  • Vitamin C injections slow cancer in mice: study

    WASHINGTON AFP — High doses of vitamin C injections reduced the size of tumors and slowed cancerous growths by about 50 percent in laboratory mice, according to US research. Researchers at the National Institutes of Health noted the phenomenon in brain, ovarian and pancreatic cancers, according to findings...

    Articles 2008-08-04

  • Vitamin C Injections Slow Tumor Growth in Mice

    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> <!DOCTYPE text PUBLIC "-//The Gale Group//DTD Mercury Version 1.0//EN" "Article.dtd"> <Text rich="yes"> <P> High-dose injections of vitamin C, also known as ascorbate or ascorbic acid, reduced tumor weight and growth rate by about 50 percent in mouse models of brain, ovarian, and...

    Articles 2008-08-04

  • Sowing Atheism

    Sowing Atheism Robert Bowie Johnson Jr. Solving Lights Books 727 Mount Alban Drive, Annapolis, MD 21409 9780970543851, $12.95, www.solvinglight.com Could pushing a curriculum of evolution on schools be going too far? "Sowing Atheism: The National Academy of Sciences Sinister Scheme...

    Articles 2008-08-01

  • Sidney Kimmel Foundation for Cancer Research Announces the Appointment of Dr. Theodore Lawrence to the Foundation's Medical Advisory Board

    PHILADELPHIA -- Sidney Kimmel, Founder and Chairman of The Sidney Kimmel Foundation for Cancer Research, has announced the appointment of Theodore Lawrence, M.D., Ph.D. to the Medical Advisory Board of the Kimmel Scholar Award program. Theodore S. Lawrence, M.D., Ph.D., Isadore Lampe Professor of Radiation...

    Articles 2008-07-08

  • Wake up and smell the coffee: Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation

    A new study co-authored by Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation scientist Linda Thompson found that mice immunized to develop a multiple sclerosis-like condition were protected from the disease by drinking caffeine. The research appears in the online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy...

    Articles 2008-07-02

  • NeuroVigil Inc., a Salk Institute spin off, Wins First Prize at World-Class UCSD $50K Innovation Competition

    NeuroVigil Led the Diverse Pack of 68 Accomplished Teams SAN DIEGO -- The UCSD $50K Competition today announced that NeuroVigil Inc., a Salk Institute spin off, has won first prize of $30,000 for innovation in brain analysis. NeuroVigil Inc. is the first wireless neurodiagnostics company....

    Articles 2008-07-02

  • Keith Pitts Joins Marrone Organic Innovations as Regulatory VP

    Brings over 20 years of senior public policy and regulatory affairs experience DAVIS, Calif., July 1 /PRNewswire/ -- Marrone Organic Innovations, Inc. MOI announces that Keith Pitts has joined the company as Vice President of Regulatory Affairs. Mr. Pitts has worked in...

    Articles 2008-07-01

  • Growth hormone in dairy cows a greenhouse-gas plus: study

    WASHINGTON AFP — Giving one million dairy cows a growth hormone makes them produce more milk would cut greenhouse gas emissions equal to taking 400,000 cars off the road, a US study found. Large scale cow milk production requires the use of huge amounts of land,...

    Articles 2008-07-01

  • Coffee could help beat MS: study

    WASHINGTON AFP — A strong cup of coffee may do more than just wake you up in the mornings. It could also help you stave off multiple sclerosis MS, according to a new study. Scientists in Oklahoma found that mice which had been immunized to develop...

    Articles 2008-07-01

  • Bovine growth hormone &#39;could cut CO2 emissions&#39;

    The use of bovine growth hormone to boost milk production - a bte noire of the organic food movement - could cut emissions of greenhouses gases substantially, according to a study that makes a strong environmental case for the controversial cattle injections. Bovine...

    Articles 2008-07-01

  • Burnham Institute Researchers Link Early Stem Cell Mutation to Autism

    LA JOLLA, Calif. -- In a breakthrough scientific study published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, scientists at the Burnham Institute for Medical Research have shown that neural stem cell development may be linked to Autism. The study demonstrated that mice lacking the...

    Articles 2008-06-30

  • Caffeine Could Stave Off Multiple Sclerosis

    Caffeine just might prevent multiple sclerosis, a new animal study suggests. Giving mice the equivalent of 6 to 8 cups of coffee a day prevented mice from getting the animal model equivalent of MS, said Dr. Linda Thompson, of the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, and a member of the...

    Articles 2008-06-30

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Research and Development in the Social Sciences and Humanities: 541720
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