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Release date: 26-Sep-2024 4:05 PM EDT
MSU professor launches Election Madness game to engage college students in 2024 election
Michigan State University

Like sports, pollsters and pundits have been making predictions about the 2024 election, including key U.S. Senate and U.S. House races that will likely determine which party holds more power in Washington, D.C. To help students learn about the election process, an MSU political science professor devised a clever way for students to engage through an Elections Madness Game.

UNREVIEWED

Release date: 26-Sep-2024 4:05 PM EDT
Ochsner Health recognized for innovation with HIMSS Davies Award
Ochsner Health

This prestigious validation recognizes the innovative use of technology to drive better patient care across all 46 hospitals and 390 clinics within the Ochsner system throughout the Gulf Coast region.

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Newswise: How to build our body’s protein recycling factories
Release date: 26-Sep-2024 4:05 PM EDT
How to build our body’s protein recycling factories
Sanford Burnham Prebys

Scientists at Sanford Burnham Prebys have developed a clearer picture of how crucial machinery in the human cell’s recycling process for obsolete and misshapen proteins—known as proteasomes—are formed.

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Newswise: UC San Diego Health Achieves Milestones for Lifesaving Heart and Lung Treatments
Release date: 26-Sep-2024 3:05 PM EDT
UC San Diego Health Achieves Milestones for Lifesaving Heart and Lung Treatments
UC San Diego Health

Patient undergoes 5,000th innovative surgery by a multidisciplinary team at UC San Diego Health to remove blood clots from the lung’s paper-thin arteries.

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Newswise: Argonne researchers crack a key problem with sodium-ion batteries for electric vehicles and grid energy storage
Release date: 26-Sep-2024 3:05 PM EDT
Argonne researchers crack a key problem with sodium-ion batteries for electric vehicles and grid energy storage
Argonne National Laboratory

New method for cathode preparation prevents the particle cracking that caused performance decline with cycling of sodium-ion batteries, which offer a cheaper, more abundant alternative to lithium-ion batteries.

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Newswise: 1920_aap-media-advisory-kid-with-pediatrician-cedars-sinai.jpg?10000
Release date: 26-Sep-2024 3:05 PM EDT
Cedars-Sinai Experts Available to Comment on Children’s Health Topics
Cedars-Sinai

Experts from Cedars-Sinai Guerin Children’s are available to discuss a range of pediatric topics, including infectious diseases, adolescent weight management and the latest pediatric research coming out of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) annual conference happening Sept. 27-Oct. 1 in Orlando, Florida.

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Newswise: Mouse study explores 3D structure of DNA in nerve cells
Release date: 26-Sep-2024 3:05 PM EDT
Mouse study explores 3D structure of DNA in nerve cells
Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center

New mouse model research led by scientists at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, College of Medicine and Imperial College London explored how nerve cells repair themselves, which could lead to new treatments for nerve injuries.

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Release date: 26-Sep-2024 3:00 PM EDT
Call to Action: A Blueprint for Change in Acute and Critical Care Nursing
University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing

A groundbreaking article published in the latest issue of Nursing Outlook proposes a significant shift in how nursing care is measured within acute and critical care settings. This "Blueprint for Action" seeks to revolutionize current methods by recognizing the full scope of a nurse's work and its profound impact on patient outcomes.

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Release date: 26-Sep-2024 2:05 PM EDT
Climate change will lead to wetter US winters, modeling study finds 
University of Illinois Chicago

Most Americans can expect wetter winters in the future due to global warming, according to a new study led by a University of Illinois Chicago scientist

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Newswise: New Study Explores Asian Consumers Love of Luxury Shopping
Release date: 26-Sep-2024 2:05 PM EDT
New Study Explores Asian Consumers Love of Luxury Shopping
University of Michigan Ross School of Business

The Asia-Pacific region is the largest consumer of personal luxury goods in the world. Asian consumers shop at home and overseas in cities like New York, Milan and Paris, contributing to the luxury industry’s remarkable growth. However, many Asian countries are deeply shaped by traditional values and religions, such as Confucianism and Buddhism, both of which advocate modest and even frugal living. This paradox intrigued Rajeev Batra, professor of marketing. Batra and colleagues investigated how these seemingly conflicting phenomena coexist. Their research revealed that collectivism in these Asian markets actually enhances luxury consumption.

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Newswise: 092524-np-astrophysical-process.jpg?itok=vgFNgurt
Release date: 26-Sep-2024 2:05 PM EDT
Nuclear Physics Experiment Helps Identify Conditions for a New Astrophysical Process
Department of Energy, Office of Science

A new stellar process, the intermediate “i" process, has been proposed to explain new astronomical observations on nucleosynthesis. Scientists recently reported on the measurement of a nuclear reaction that affects the production of lanthanum in the i process. The measurement will help to improve scientific understanding of nucleosynthesis.

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Release date: 26-Sep-2024 2:05 PM EDT
$12 million grant aimed at probing how vaccines induce lasting immunity
Washington University in St. Louis

Researchers at WashU Medicine have received a $12 million grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases to identify the factors that are responsible for long-lasting immunity against disease.

UNREVIEWED

Newswise: New study reveals which men are most likely to commit sexual assault
Release date: 26-Sep-2024 2:05 PM EDT
New study reveals which men are most likely to commit sexual assault
Binghamton University, State University of New York

Do you respect your date’s refusal? Research from the Psychology Department at Binghamton University, State University of New York sheds light on which men might choose to ignore a lack of consent and why.

UNREVIEWED

Release date: 26-Sep-2024 2:05 PM EDT
The Fight Against Lead: Progress Made, but Dangers Remain
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Rutgers Health expert warns of ongoing risks from consumer products – and calls for increased global cooperation.

UNREVIEWED

Newswise: Cleveland Clinic Researchers Discover New Bacterium that Causes Gut Immunodeficiency
23-Sep-2024 12:05 PM EDT
Cleveland Clinic Researchers Discover New Bacterium that Causes Gut Immunodeficiency
Cleveland Clinic

Cleveland Clinic researchers have discovered a new bacterium that weakens the immune system in the gut, potentially contributing to certain inflammatory and infectious gut diseases. The team identified the bacterium, Tomasiella immunophila (T. immunophila), which plays a key role in breaking down a crucial immune component of the gut’s multi-faceted protective immune barrier. Identifying this bacterium is the first step to developing new treatments for a variety of inflammatory and infectious gut diseases.

Newswise:Video Embedded simultaneous-detection-of-uranium-isotopes-fluorine-advances-nuclear-nonproliferation-monitoring
VIDEO
Release date: 26-Sep-2024 1:30 PM EDT
Simultaneous detection of uranium isotopes, fluorine advances nuclear nonproliferation monitoring
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Combining two techniques, analytical chemists at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory became the first to detect fluorine and different isotopes of uranium in a single particle at the same time.

UNREVIEWED

Release date: 26-Sep-2024 1:05 PM EDT
Do Algorithms Improve Efficiency? New Study Investigates Reality of Algorithm Reliance
University of Michigan Ross School of Business

With the increased implementation of algorithm technology, generative AI, and machine learning in the business world, many are interested in the real impact of these technologies on efficiency. In a new study, Ross School of Business researchers Clare Snyder, PhD ’25, Samantha Keppler, assistant professor of technology and operations, and Stephen Leider, Dale L. Dykema Professor of Business Administration and professor of technology and operations, explore the reality of worker-algorithm interactions and the effects on productivity.

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Newswise: U of I-led study uncovers first evidence of a volcanic spatter cone on Mars
Release date: 26-Sep-2024 1:05 PM EDT
U of I-led study uncovers first evidence of a volcanic spatter cone on Mars
University of Idaho

While working under Erika Rader, an assistant professor in the Department of Earth and Spatial Sciences at University of Idaho, a postdoctoral researcher identified a volcanic vent on Mars as a potential spatter cone and compared it to a spatter cone formed during the 2021 eruption of Fagradalsfjall in Iceland.

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