Read More Scince News Health 14 days ago Omega-3 From Fish Oil Linked to Up to 28% Drop in Aggression A 2024 meta-analysis of 29 randomized trials finds omega-3 fatty acids, commonly taken as fish oil, can reduce aggression by up to 28% in the short term, with implications for clinical and public-health strategies.
Read More Scince News Health 14 days ago Mixing Your Workouts May Lower Mortality Risk — Large Study A long-term Harvard study finds that people who mix different exercise types have about a 19% lower risk of death. Variety plus total activity — up to a point — appears to boost long-term health.
Read More Scince News Scientific 14 days ago Engineered Dreams: Steering Sleep to Spark Creativity A Northwestern study found that carefully timed sound cues during REM sleep can bias dream content and boost problem-solving. Targeted memory reactivation may make sleep a tool for creativity and learning.
Read More Scince News Health 15 days ago When Cold Is Dangerous: The Truth About Cold Allergies Cold urticaria is a rare but potentially dangerous immune reaction to cold exposure. This article explains symptoms, diagnosis, tests, treatments from antihistamines to biologics, and practical safety advice.
Read More Scince News Space 15 days ago Exploding Primordial Black Hole? PeV Neutrino Clue A 2023 PeV neutrino detected by KM3NeT has prompted a provocative explanation: exploding primordial black holes with a dark charge. This article examines the evidence, theory, and observational tests.
Read More Scince News Health 15 days ago Lab-Made 'Universal' Kidney Could End Blood-Type Waits Researchers converted a type A kidney into an enzyme-converted type O organ, potentially broadening transplant compatibility. Early human-model tests show promise but require more study.
Read More Scince News Health 15 days ago A Living Implant That Could Replace Insulin Injections Researchers from Technion, MIT and partners developed a bioengineered implant that senses blood glucose and secretes insulin autonomously, using a crystalline shield to evade immune attack and potentially replace daily injections.
Read More Scince News Health 16 days ago When and How to 'Burp' Your Home for Better Health Short bursts of ventilation—'house burping'—can reduce indoor aerosols and infection risk, but timing and location matter. Learn when to air out, how to limit outdoor pollution intake, and practical tips for healthier indoor air.
Read More Scince News Space 16 days ago A New Sungrazer: Will Comet MAPS Light Up Our Skies? A newly found member of the Kreutz sungrazers, comet C/2026 A1 (MAPS), will pass within about 120,000 km of the Sun in early April. Observers may see a brightening, fragmentation, or even daytime visibility.
Read More Scince News Nature 16 days ago Storm-Bound Babies: How a Jurassic Storm Solved a Mystery A newly analyzed Late Jurassic fossil deposit, likely formed by a violent storm, preserved clustered baby pterosaurs and clarifies juvenile behavior, fossilization processes, and predator-prey dynamics in ancient ecosystems.
Read More Scince News Space 16 days ago New CT Scans of Mars Rock Reveal Hidden Water Stores Non-destructive X-ray and neutron CT scans of the Martian meteorite NWA 7034 (Black Beauty) uncovered tiny hydrogen-rich iron oxyhydroxide clasts that hold a disproportionate share of the rock's water, informing Mars’ ancient hydrology.
Read More Scince News Health 17 days ago Mass Study Finds Autism Diagnosis Rates Reach Parity by 20s A nationwide Swedish analysis of 2.7 million records shows childhood autism diagnoses favor boys, but the sex ratio evens out by adulthood—raising questions about delayed recognition, diagnostic bias, and the need for sex-aware screening.
Read More Scince News Health 17 days ago Two Habits Drive a Third of Global Cancers — What You Can Do Now A WHO analysis finds about 38% of 2022 cancer cases were preventable, with smoking and alcohol as leading modifiable drivers. Regional air pollution and HPV vaccination gaps also shape risk.
Read More Scince News Health 17 days ago Bacteria in the Retina Linked to Alzheimer's Progression Cedars-Sinai researchers report Chlamydia pneumoniae in the retina correlates with Alzheimer's-related pathology, suggesting a microbial amplifier role and potential for retinal biomarkers and therapeutic targeting.
Read More Scince News Health 17 days ago Why Our Bodies Peak at 35 — What the Study Reveals A 47-year Swedish cohort shows peak physical performance occurs around age 35, then declines. Regular activity raises the peak and slows decline, offering a clear public-health message on lifelong fitness.
Read More Scince News Space 18 days ago Why Axiom Won the Fifth Private Mission to the ISS NASA has awarded the fifth private astronaut mission to Axiom Space, returning private crews to the ISS in early 2027. The article explains Ax-5, the buy-sell logistics with NASA, Axiom's commercial station plans and its AxEMU lunar suits.
Read More Scince News Health 18 days ago Regular Laxative Use Tied to Risks of Dementia, Depression Regular, unsupervised laxative use is linked to higher risks of depression and dementia. Learn how different laxatives work, the potential harms of chronic use, and practical steps to use them more safely.
Read More Scince News Space 18 days ago If Earth Needed a Nuke: Rethinking Asteroid Deflection A Nature Communications study shows that asteroid composition — from iron cores to rubble piles — radically alters how a standoff nuclear detonation would transfer momentum, shaping realistic planetary defense plans.
Read More Scince News Space 18 days ago Hydrogen Leaks Postpone NASA’s Artemis II Lunar Flight A hydrogen leak during the Artemis II wet dress rehearsal forced NASA to delay the crewed lunar flyby. Engineers will re-test fueling and inspect seals before committing the four-person crew to launch, highlighting risks of cryogenic propellants.
Read More Scince News Health 19 days ago Helping Grandkids Might Slow Cognitive Decline in Seniors A longitudinal analysis of nearly 3,000 older adults finds that grandparents who care for grandchildren tend to score higher on verbal fluency and episodic memory tests, with caregiving grandmothers showing slower cognitive decline.