This page shows you the latest news items in this category. This is page number 5.

Total 2075 results found since Jan 2013.

The U.S. Needs Minerals for Electric Cars. Everyone Else Wants Them Too
The Chaerhan Salt Lake in Golmud, China, where brine is processed to extract lithium and other minerals. The United States is entering an array of agreements to secure the critical minerals necessary for the energy transition, but it’s not clear which of the arrangements can succeed. The U.S.…#chaerhansaltlake #golmud #hiroshima #beijing #g7 #kirstenhillman #indonesia #opec #indopacific #jakesullivan
Source: Reuters: Health - May 21, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Forensic chemical and chemicotoxicological examination of ricin poisoning by the HPLC-MS/MS method - Kalekin RA, Barseghyan SS, Volkova AA, Orlova AM, Akimova VD.
Is to suggest the method of ricin determination in biological liquids during forensic medical and chemicotoxicological examination. This research describes the optimal conditions of sample processing of biological liquids, allowing to extract the component...
Source: SafetyLit - May 19, 2023 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Poisoning Source Type: news

Ledger Continues to Defend Recovery System, Says It ' s Always ' Technically ' Possible to Extract Users ' Keys
Ledger Continues to Defend Recovery System, Says It's Always 'Technically' Possible to Extract Users' Keys "Technically speaking it is and always has been possible to write firmware that facilitates key extraction. You have always trusted Ledger not to deploy such firmware whether you knew it or…#ledgercontinues #twitter
Source: Reuters: Health - May 18, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Privacy concerns sparked by human DNA accidentally collected in studies of other species
Everywhere they go, humans leave stray DNA. Police have used genetic sequences retrieved from cigarette butts and coffee cups to identify suspects; archaeologists have sifted DNA from cave dirt to identify ancient humans. But for scientists aiming to capture genetic information not about people, but about animals, plants, and microbes, the ubiquity of human DNA and the ability of even partial sequences to reveal information most people would want to keep private is a growing problem, researchers from two disparate fields warn this week. Both groups are calling for safeguards to prevent misuse of such human genomic “bycat...
Source: ScienceNOW - May 15, 2023 Category: Science Source Type: news

Is Congress playing a high stakes game of political chicken?
Congress could vote to raise the debt limit at any point, but Republicans in the legislature only want to do so if they can extract policy concessions from Mr Biden and the Democrats. The president and his allies, however, have so far refused to engage in what they consider to be a negotiation…#republicans #democrats #trump #mrbiden
Source: Reuters: Health - May 9, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Mushrooms may hold anti-cancer properties - but which mushroom is best?
In lab tests an extract from the mushroom was shown to "slow" the growth of some cancer cells.
Source: Daily Express - Health - May 7, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Mitsubishi Materials aims to start cobalt production in Chile
TOKYO -- Japan's Mitsubishi Materials aims to become a producer of cobalt with a new operation in Chile that would diversify the supply of a metal vital to electric vehicles, Nikkei has learned. The company will begin testing a production method in fiscal 2023 that seeks to extract cobalt at…#tokyo #mitsubishimaterials #chile
Source: Reuters: Health - May 6, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Who wore this ancient deer pendant? DNA reveals a Stone Age woman with surprising origins
Twenty thousand years ago, someone dropped a deer-tooth pendant in a cave in southwestern Siberia, where it lay until archaeologists excavated it in 2019. Now, researchers have caught a glimpse of its last wearer. After years of effort, Elena Essel, a graduate student at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology (EVA), developed a way to extract DNA embedded in an artifact’s porous surface by sweat and skin cells. Her team’s analysis of the ornament, reported this week in Nature , shows it once adorned a woman whose ancestry lay far east of the cave. “It’s the first time to my knowledg...
Source: ScienceNOW - May 3, 2023 Category: Science Source Type: news

Ex-Foxer Abby Grossberg Reveals Tucker Carlson ’s Stunning Plan To Make McCarthy Grovel on Live Hunger Games-Style Show
Fired Fox News producer Abby Grossberg revealed that fired Fox News host Tucker Carlson planned to have Kevin McCarthy “grovel” for the speakership and extract concessions from him in a live Hunger Games-style spectacle during the vote for speaker of the House. Carlson was extremely vocal about…#abbygrossberg #tuckercarlson #kevinmccarthy #andersoncooper360 #grossberg #andersoncooper #cooper #justinwells #republicanparty #ronjohnson
Source: Reuters: Health - May 3, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Cooperative multi-camera vehicle tracking and traffic surveillance with edge artificial intelligence and representation learning - Yang HF, Cai J, Liu C, Ke R, Wang Y.
Traffic surveillance cameras are the eyes of the Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS). However, they are currently isolated and can only extract information from each of their fixed views. To track vehicles across multiple cameras and help public agenc...
Source: SafetyLit - April 20, 2023 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Engineering, Physics, Structural Soundness and Failure Source Type: news

Calum Best gets his SIXTH hair transplant... this time using locks taken from his beard
Calum, 42, was so short of donor hair on his scalp that his surgeon needed to extract some from his his neck. Experts said Calum was well-suited for the procedure because his beard was like a 'rug'.
Source: the Mail online | Health - April 19, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Nanoparticle with mRNA appears to prevent, treat peanut allergies in mice
Key takeawaysPeanuts are one of the most common food allergens for children.UCLA scientists have developed a nanoparticle that delivers mRNA to liver cells in order to teach the immune system to tolerate peanut protein and alleviate allergies.In mice, the nanoparticle successfully dampened symptoms of serious allergy.Peanut allergies affect 1 in 50 children, and the most severe cases lead to a potentially deadly immune reaction called anaphylactic shock.Currently, there is only one approved treatment that reduces the severity of the allergic reaction, and it takes months to kick in. A group of UCLA immunologists is aiming ...
Source: UCLA Newsroom: Health Sciences - April 3, 2023 Category: Universities & Medical Training Source Type: news

Clinical and social features of patients with eye injuries admitted to a tertiary hospital: a five-year retrospective study from Crete, Greece - Kyriakaki EDO, Detorakis ET, Bertsias AK, Tsakalis NG, Karageorgiou I, Chlouverakis G, Symvoulakis EK.
Eye injuries are a major cause of visual disability worldwide and may present a burden to both quality of life of the sufferers and healthcare services. The aim of this study was to extract and triangulate information on the demographic, clinical, and soci...
Source: SafetyLit - April 3, 2023 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Economics of Injury and Safety, PTSD, Injury Outcomes Source Type: news

Intelligent multi-lingual cyber-hate detection in online social networks: taxonomy, approaches, datasets, and open challenges - Gamal D, Alfonse M, Jim énez-Zafra SM, Aref M.
Sentiment Analysis, also known as opinion mining, is the area of Natural Language Processing that aims to extract human perceptions, thoughts, and beliefs from unstructured textual content. It has become a useful, attractive, and challenging research area ...
Source: SafetyLit - April 1, 2023 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Media, Marketing, and Internet Issues Source Type: news

The FBI is struggling to analyze Sam Bankman-Fried ' s laptop because it has so much data on it, prosecutors say
Prosecutors said they're struggling to analyze a laptop for their case against Sam Bankman-Fried. • It has so much data that it's taking weeks to just extract information, they said on Thursday. • Sam Bankman-Fried pleaded not guilty to federal prosecutors' new criminal charges against him.…#sambankmanfried #manhattan #nicholasroos #fbi #ftx #justicedepartment #bankmanfried #markcohen #lewiskaplan #alamedaresearch
Source: Reuters: Health - March 30, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news