Archive for June, 2010
Tiger, tiger, burning out: What is gain Russia’s critically endangered Amur tigers? <<>>
Written by Scientific American Topic - Epidemics & Pandemics on June 26, 2010 – 12:00 am -It may not be extended previous we witness the extinction of one of the world's six species of tigers, the Amur (or Siberian) tiger ( Panthera tigris altaica ). As we obtain in olden days reported, Amur tiger populations organize dropped precipitously in new years to evasive treatment 250 animals, and the species faces a genetic bottleneck that puts it at gamble of inbreeding. Now, a strange illness has started spreading throughout the Amur population, causing the destruction of four grown up tigers and several newborns in the olden times 10 months.
"We may be witnessing an epidemic in the Amur tiger population," Dale Miquelle, director for the Wildlife Maintenance Mankind (WCS) Russia Program, told the Guardian.
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Making Connections (preview) <<>>
Written by Scientific American Topic - Epilepsy on June 24, 2010 – 2:00 pm -Many people choose their memory worked like a video recording. How nearby would that be? Discovery your car keys would sparsely be a significance of zipping back to the form everything you had them and hitting “play.” You would not in a million years let slip by an position or fail to pay a banknote. You would remember everyone’s birthday. You would ace every exam.
Or so you might contemplate. In fact, a retention like that would snare mostly useless materials and mix them willy-nilly with the information you uncommonly needed. It would not let you prioritize or dream up the links between events that discharge them meaning. For the completely few people who have true photographic recall--eidetic memory, in the lingo of the field--it is more burden than boon.
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Copious genome run shows body lice have planned vicious faculty of smell <<>>
Written by Scientific American Topic - Epidemics & Pandemics on June 21, 2010 – 8:01 pm - The confederation louse, a harry to humans and our ancestors for millions of years, subsists exclusively on our unwitting sociability. Scientists compel ought to now parsed the modern child body louse's ( Pediculus humanus humanus ) genome, revealing a insubstantial evolutionary dependence on humans and "remarkable completeness," in defiance of being the shortest yet decoded in the insect group, the researchers wrote in a burn the midnight oil published online June 21 in Proceedings of the State Academy of Sciences.
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Antiretroviral regimens drastically slacken up on tit drain HIV sending middleman mothers and babies <<>>
Written by Scientific American Topic - Epidemics & Pandemics on June 16, 2010 – 10:50 pm - HIV infects an estimated 430,000 infants and children worldwide each year. Although myriad of those cases are contracted from an HIV-positive shelter during pregnancy or birth, some 40 percent of infected children get the illness in every way breast-feeding. But because of well-being risks associated with rubric feeding--especially in resource-poor regions--the In all respects Robustness Classifying placid recommends breast-feeding for mothers with HIV/AIDS in the developing times a deliver. Nautical port untreated, however, exchange half of HIV-infected infants die in advance the age of two.
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Predictive Modeling Warns Drivers One Hour in the past Jams Manifest itself <<>>
Written by Scientific American Topic - Epidemics & Pandemics on June 10, 2010 – 1:00 pm -Onboard steersmanship and alert applications can censure drivers how to avoid above jams. Hector is, most of the drivers are already on the road, it may be already in the jam. But IBM is exchange to deploy a process that will-power suggest movement overflowing up to an hour previously it occurs, giving travelers large time to keep away from disorder.
During shepherd tests in Singapore, forecasts customized across 500 urban locations accurately predicted traffic volume 85 to 93 percent of the obsolescent and instrument speed 87 to 95 percent of the opportunity. Similar results were achieved in Finland and on the New Jersey Turnpike.
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Bursting Bubbles Beget Itty-Bitty Bubbles <<>>
Written by Scientific American Topic - Epidemics & Pandemics on June 9, 2010 – 6:57 pm -Bubbles. Big ones entertain children and trifling ones tickle champagne aficionados. Even witches cherish what they talk about to a boiling cauldron. If you, too, are a seethe lover, then you’ll have a ball the latest fizz read published in the journal Variety. In it, scientists guide that a bursting fizz can bequeath in its wake a mob of smaller bubbles, a find that could be experiencing implications for sickness despatching. [James Bird et al., http://bit.ly/c9dEFy ]
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Take heed of power: Israeli blitz on Turkish sailing-boat and BP oil pour out substantiate upside of ubiquitous reconnaissance <<>>
Written by Scientific American Topic - Epilepsy on June 8, 2010 – 10:30 pm -In a previous post, " Grassroots espionage leave away have amicable possible," I argued that the spread of technologies that allow us to spy on each other might also exhort us safer. New York Press smacked me for having "elevated the phantasy of no-privacy to jaw-dropping levels." The writer, Matt Harvey, quotes some pro-privacy guy wondering whether my "pro-intelligence rhetoric" reflects my "clandestine corporate or facts connections."
Well, I do own a picayune Apple stock; I would contain owned more but I sold most of it in February after my kids showed me an Internet video of Hitler ranting about the soon-to-be-released IPad ; needless to say the selection afterwards soared. Also, I once consulted for the Inhabitant Counterterrorism Center , an event that I'll tell of if someone asks nicely. But I assurance that no insidious motives--unless yearning for peace counts as insidious--lurk below my hopes for omnidirectional detection.
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If doctrine is a side significance of sex, does that course God doesn’t exist? <<>>
Written by Scientific American Topic - Epilepsy on June 3, 2010 – 7:15 pm - In a collection on Asperger's syndrome , my individual blogger Karen Schrock manages to pounding both scrupulous believers and nonreligious rationalists in justified a few paragraphs. Kudos, Karen! People with Asperger's, a mild produce of autism, cater to not to attribute events in their lives to a "higher power or supernatural force," Karen reports. Conversely, the inclination of allegedly salutary people to see "intention or purpose" behind every once in a while events may stem from an overactive " theory of mind ," the innate facility to head perceptions, emotions and intentions in others. Religion is a pathology, and so is the deficit thereof. Basically, we're all nuts. Who could disagree?
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The Big Dozen: 12 Events That Drive Change Caboodle <<>>
Written by Scientific American Topic - Epidemics & Pandemics on June 3, 2010 – 3:40 am - Detailed American ammunition Rewriter in Chief Mariette DiChristina and news compiler Philip Yam join podcast host Steve Mirsky (pictured) to talk reciprocity the extend story of the June consequence of the magazine, "12 Events That Compel Difference Everything".
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Epidemic kills 12,000 critically threatened antelopes <<>>
Written by Scientific American Topic - Epidemics & Pandemics on June 1, 2010 – 11:10 pm -At least 12,000 critically imperilled saiga antelopes ( Saiga tatarica ) obtain been institute uninterested in Kazakhstan in the finished two weeks, victims of a confounding prevailing. The deaths characterize as about 15 percent of the species' worldwide citizenry.
Saiga antelopes in use accustomed to to tally on the top of one million, but the breakup of the Soviet Conjunction led to luxuriant poaching all the way through the species' radius and 95 percent of the animals were killed off. Unbiased 81,000 of the antelopes remained in five remote populations in Russia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Mongolia. Until this outbreak, the Kazakh citizenry numbered 26,000 animals, almost half of which maintain now died.
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