Read More Scince News Health 14 days ago Shingles Vaccine Tied to 24% Lower Dementia Risk in Study A Brown University analysis of over 509,000 nursing home residents found Shingrix vaccination was associated with a 24% lower dementia incidence over four years. The observational study suggests vaccines might protect brain health but calls for further research.
Read More Scince News Health 14 days ago How One Family-Friendly Sport Sharply Boosts Brain Function A 45-minute family-friendly tag rugby session improved short-term working memory in children and sped information processing in parents, while lowering parents' post-meal insulin—suggesting shared play boosts brain and body.
Read More Scince News Health 14 days ago Why Blood Type B May Raise Type 2 Diabetes Risk: New Review A large umbrella review finds a modest but robust link between blood type B and a 28% higher risk of type 2 diabetes, after reanalyzing 51 systematic reviews and 270 proposed blood-group associations.
Read More Scince News Health 15 days ago What New Research Really Says About Collagen Use Today A review of 113 trials finds modest benefits of collagen supplements for skin hydration, joint pain and muscle health, but inconsistent methods, varied products and low-quality studies leave many questions unanswered.
Read More Scince News Health 15 days ago Poverty and Racism Speed Up Our Biological Clocks Today A meta-analysis of 140 studies finds poverty and racial marginalization are linked to faster biological aging detectable by modern epigenetic clocks — effects that begin in childhood and reflect deep health inequities.
Read More Scince News Space 15 days ago A Cosmic Oddity: Three Galaxies with No Dark Matter Astronomers have identified a third dark-matter-deficient galaxy, NGC 1052-DF9, in a linear chain with DF2 and DF4. The discovery supports a collision-driven origin and offers a fresh laboratory for testing dark matter.
Read More Scince News Health 15 days ago Macrophages Filmed Devouring Live Melanoma Cells in Action Garvan Institute researchers filmed CD169-positive macrophages engulfing live melanoma cells, revealing a tumor-containment role that could help convert ‘cold’ tumors and broaden immunotherapy options.
Read More Scince News Health 16 days ago Daily Probiotics May Ease Depression in Older Adults A small randomized trial in India found that older adults on antidepressants who took a daily probiotic (L. helveticus and B. longum) showed greater reductions in depression and anxiety and increases in BDNF, though cognitive gains and quality-of-life measures were unchanged.
Read More Scince News Health 16 days ago World's First HIV-Positive Donor Lung and Liver Transplant Surgeons at NYU Langone completed the first successful double-lung and liver transplant from an HIV-positive donor to an HIV-positive recipient, expanding donor options and offering new avenues for HIV care and research.
Read More Scince News General info 16 days ago China Alleges Spies Use Turtles and Fish to Steal Ocean Data China has accused foreign intelligence agencies of using turtles and fish as sensor platforms to steal oceanographic data—claims that mix technical possibility, historical precedents, and geopolitical signaling about maritime security.
Read More Scince News Health 16 days ago Moderna’s mRNA Flu Vaccine Moves Closer to U.S. Approval Moderna's mFlusiva, the first mRNA influenza vaccine, earned unanimous support from an FDA advisory panel after trials showed reduced infections and stronger responses in older adults, despite higher short-term side effects.
Read More Scince News Scientific 16 days ago Coffee Grounds into Coal in 90 Seconds: Korean Breakthrough Korean researchers developed a flame plasma pyrolysis device that converts wet coffee grounds into coal-like biochar in about 90 seconds, eliminating pre-drying and yielding a high-energy, low-sulfur fuel.
Read More Scince News Scientific 16 days ago China Tests Space-Based Solar Power and Wireless Beaming Xidian University's Zhuri prototype concentrated sunlight with a 4.8 m mirror, converted it to microwaves and beamed kilowatt‑level power to a ground receiver. The tests validate space solar harvesting but highlight deployment, targeting and safety hurdles for future gigawatt orbital farms.
Read More Scince News Health 17 days ago Zero-Sugar Diets in Mice Linked to Hidden Metabolic Harm A mouse study found that removing sucrose from a low-fat diet altered gut microbes, impaired glucose control and led to liver fat — suggesting extreme sugar elimination may have unintended metabolic effects.
Read More Scince News Scientific 17 days ago Deadly Plague Struck Hunter-Gatherers 5,500 Years Ago Ancient DNA from Lake Baikal burials reveals Yersinia pestis killed hunter-gatherer communities 5,500 years ago. The strains lacked flea-adaptive genes but carried a potent toxin, reshaping ideas about plague origins.
Read More Scince News Space 17 days ago Why NASA Chose Relativity Space for the 2028 Mars Mission NASA awarded Relativity Space the 2028 contract to launch the Aeolus atmospheric payload to Mars. Aeolus will map winds, dust and temperature to improve landing safety and guide spacecraft design for crewed missions.
Read More Scince News Space 17 days ago NASA’s ERNEST Rover: Ten Times Faster, Battle‑Hardened NASA's ERNEST rover prototype blends advanced suspension, four‑wheel steering and reinforcement‑learning autonomy to achieve speeds near 1 km/h—about ten times faster than recent rovers—aiming to transform lunar and Martian exploration.
Read More Scince News Health 17 days ago Your Eyes May Reveal Alzheimer's Risk Years Ahead Today New research shows retinal photographs analyzed with AI can reveal subtle vascular and neural signs linked to higher Alzheimer's risk years before symptoms, suggesting routine eye scans might help flag at-risk individuals.
Read More Scince News Health 18 days ago Why Swimming May Strengthen Your Heart More Than Running A Brazilian study in mice found swimming and running boost fitness similarly, but swimming produced greater heart growth and beneficial microRNA changes—suggesting exercise type shapes cardiac biology.
Read More Scince News Scientific 18 days ago A Transistor That Acts Like a Neuron Near Absolute Zero HKU researchers turned silicon-carbide MOSFETs into neuron-like transistors at millikelvin temperatures, enabling energy-efficient cryogenic neuromorphic chips for scalable quantum control and space electronics.