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Scientists use bioactive glass to treat bone cancer.
sciworthy.com Scientists use bioactive glass to treat bone cancer

Researchers showed that bioactive glass administered with gallium oxide in the laboratory can reduce cancer cells and leave noncancerous cells unharmed.

Scientists use bioactive glass to treat bone cancer

> Researchers showed that bioactive glass administered with gallium oxide in the laboratory can reduce cancer cells and leave noncancerous cells unharmed.

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Millions in US Live in Places Where Doctors Don’t Practice and Telehealth Doesn’t Reach.
kffhealthnews.org Millions in US Live in Places Where Doctors Don’t Practice and Telehealth Doesn’t Reach - KFF Health News

Nearly 3 million Americans live sicker, shorter lives in the hundreds of rural counties where doctor shortages are the worst and poor internet connections mean little or no access to telehealth services.

Millions in US Live in Places Where Doctors Don’t Practice and Telehealth Doesn’t Reach - KFF Health News

> Green lights flickered on the wireless router in Barbara Williams’ kitchen. Just one bar lit up — a weak signal connecting her to the world beyond her home in the Alabama Black Belt.

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scopeblog.stanford.edu What's the deal with the gut-brain connection?

Stanford Medicine researchers describe the gut-brain relationship and how it affects conditions from anxiety to long COVID to Parkinson’s.

What's the deal with the gut-brain connection?

> It affects your mood, your sleep, even your motivation to exercise. There's convincing evidence that it's the starting point for Parkinson's disease and could be responsible for long COVID's cognitive effects. And it sits about 2 feet below your brain. > > The gut plays an obvious role in our health by digesting what we eat and extracting nutrients. But there's a growing appreciation among scientists that our digestive systems affect our general well-being in a much broader fashion. One fascinating aspect of the gut's widespread impact on health is its direct influence on and communication with the brain, a conduit known as the gut-brain axis. > > Through direct signals from the vagus nerve, connects the brain and the gut, as well as through molecules secreted into the bloodstream from our gut microbes and immune cells that traffic from the gut to the rest of the body, our brains and our digestive tracts are in constant communication. And when that communication goes off the rails, diseases and disorders can result.

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Cognitive Behaviors that Enable Self-Improving Reasoners, or, Four Habits of Highly Effective STaRs.
arxiv.org Cognitive Behaviors that Enable Self-Improving Reasoners, or, Four Habits of Highly Effective STaRs

Test-time inference has emerged as a powerful paradigm for enabling language models to ``think'' longer and more carefully about complex challenges, much like skilled human experts. While reinforcement learning (RL) can drive self-improvement in language models on verifiable tasks, some models exhib...

Cognitive Behaviors that Enable Self-Improving Reasoners, or, Four Habits of Highly Effective STaRs

> Test-time inference has emerged as a powerful paradigm for enabling language models to ``think'' longer and more carefully about complex challenges, much like skilled human experts. While reinforcement learning (RL) can drive self-improvement in language models on verifiable tasks, some models exhibit substantial gains while others quickly plateau. For instance, we find that Qwen-2.5-3B far exceeds Llama-3.2-3B under identical RL training for the game of Countdown. This discrepancy raises a critical question: what intrinsic properties enable effective self-improvement? We introduce a framework to investigate this question by analyzing four key cognitive behaviors -- verification, backtracking, subgoal setting, and backward chaining -- that both expert human problem solvers and successful language models employ. Our study reveals that Qwen naturally exhibits these reasoning behaviors, whereas Llama initially lacks them. In systematic experimentation with controlled behavioral datasets, we find that priming Llama with examples containing these reasoning behaviors enables substantial improvements during RL, matching or exceeding Qwen's performance. Importantly, the presence of reasoning behaviors, rather than correctness of answers, proves to be the critical factor -- models primed with incorrect solutions containing proper reasoning patterns achieve comparable performance to those trained on correct solutions. Finally, leveraging continued pretraining with OpenWebMath data, filtered to amplify reasoning behaviors, enables the Llama model to match Qwen's self-improvement trajectory. Our findings establish a fundamental relationship between initial reasoning behaviors and the capacity for improvement, explaining why some language models effectively utilize additional computation while others plateau.

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Taking It to the Streets: Scientists Mobilize to Fight Trump’s ‘Unprecedented’ Anti-Science Agenda.
insideclimatenews.org Taking It to the Streets: Scientists Mobilize to Fight Trump’s ‘Unprecedented’ Anti-Science Agenda - Inside Climate News

Scientists turned out at rallies from coast to coast and in Europe to “Stand Up for Science,” revitalizing a movement to defend scientific integrity that started during Trump’s first term.

Taking It to the Streets: Scientists Mobilize to Fight Trump’s ‘Unprecedented’ Anti-Science Agenda - Inside Climate News

> Scientists turned out at rallies from coast to coast and in Europe to “Stand Up for Science,” revitalizing a movement to defend scientific integrity that started during Trump’s first term.

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greatergood.berkeley.edu Does Ambition Breed Dishonesty?

Ambition is a predictor of success. But according to a new study, the motives behind it can also lead to lying and cheating.

Does Ambition Breed Dishonesty?

> Ambition is a predictor of success. But according to a new study, the motives behind it can also lead to lying and cheating.

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Turing back the clock on aging.
elifesciences.org Turing back the clock on aging

Lifestyle improvements like adopting a healthy diet or quitting smoking can slow biological aging processes.

Turing back the clock on aging

> Lifestyle improvements like adopting a healthy diet or quitting smoking can slow biological aging processes.

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Scientists Identify Critical “Midlife Window” for Preventing Age-Related Brain Decline.
news.stonybrook.edu Scientists Identify Critical “Midlife Window” for Preventing Age-Related Brain Decline - SBU News

Groundbreaking research reveals metabolic interventions could help prevent cognitive aging STONY BROOK, NY, March 5, 2025 – A landmark study published in PNAS has unveiled that brain aging follows a distinct yet nonlinear trajectory with critical transition points. The research, conducted by an inte...

> A landmark study published in PNAS has unveiled that brain aging follows a distinct yet nonlinear trajectory with critical transition points. The research, conducted by an international team of scientists led by Lilianne R. Mujica-Parodi, PhD, of Stony Brook University, offers new insights into when interventions to prevent cognitive decline might be most effective.

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Revealing the Intricate Links Between Metabolism and Reproduction.
doi.org Revealing the Intricate Links Between Metabolism and Reproduction • scientia.global

The brain plays a vital role in controlling reproductive functions. It helps to maintain a delicate balance of hormones, all of which can be affected by the metabolism. Investigating the impact of the metabolism on reproductive development and function is critical to a better understanding of health...

Revealing the Intricate Links Between Metabolism and Reproduction • scientia.global

> The brain plays a vital role in controlling reproductive functions. It helps to maintain a delicate balance of hormones, all of which can be affected by the metabolism. Investigating the impact of the metabolism on reproductive development and function is critical to a better understanding of health and diseases. Professor Carol Fuzeti Elias and Dr Cristina Sáenz de Miera Patín from the University of Michigan in the USA, carry out groundbreaking research in neuroscience, exploring the molecular and neural mechanisms at play.

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Neuroscience @mander.xyz Bee @mander.xyz
Mapping infant brains.
elifesciences.org Mapping infant brains

Movie watching may provide scientists a window into infant brain activity and organization.

Mapping infant brains

> Movie watching may provide scientists a window into infant brain activity and organization.

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Neuroscience @mander.xyz Bee @mander.xyz
Age and cognitive skills: Use it or lose it.

> Cross-sectional age-skill profiles suggest that cognitive skills start declining by age 30 if not earlier. If accurate, such age-driven skill losses pose a major threat to the human capital of societies with rapidly aging populations. We estimate actual age-skill profiles from individual changes in literacy and numeracy skills at different ages. We use the unique German longitudinal component of the Programme of the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC-L) that retested a large representative sample of adults after 3.5 years. Our empirical approach separates age from cohort effects and corrects for measurement error from reversion to the mean. Two main results emerge. First, average skills increase strongly into the forties before decreasing slightly in literacy and more strongly in numeracy. Second, skills decline at older ages only for those with below-average skill usage. White-collar and higher-educated workers with above-average usage show increasing skills even beyond their forties. Women have larger skill losses at older age, particularly in numeracy.

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Discovery of antimicrobial peptides with notable antibacterial potency by an LLM-based foundation model.

> Large language models (LLMs) have shown remarkable advancements in chemistry and biomedical research, acting as versatile foundation models for various tasks. We introduce AMP-Designer, an LLM-based approach, for swiftly designing antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) with desired properties. Within 11 days, AMP-Designer achieved the de novo design of 18 AMPs with broad-spectrum activity against Gram-negative bacteria. In vitro validation revealed a 94.4% success rate, with two candidates demonstrating exceptional antibacterial efficacy, minimal hemotoxicity, stability in human plasma, and low potential to induce resistance, as evidenced by significant bacterial load reduction in murine lung infection experiments. The entire process, from design to validation, concluded in 48 days. AMP-Designer excels in creating AMPs targeting specific strains despite limited data availability, with a top candidate displaying a minimum inhibitory concentration of 2.0 micrograms per milliliter against Propionibacterium acnes. Integrating advanced machine learning techniques, AMP-Designer demonstrates remarkable efficiency, paving the way for innovative solutions to antibiotic resistance.

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Bacterial vaginosis: New hope for cure through male partner treatment.
lens.monash.edu Bacterial vaginosis: New hope for cure through male partner treatment

Effectively treating bacterial vaginosis has been elusive for years, but a new study has shone more light on its causes, paving the way for a revolution in how it’s treated.

Bacterial vaginosis: New hope for cure through male partner treatment
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Triple Bond Formed Between Boron and Carbon for the First Time.
www.uni-wuerzburg.de Chemistry: Triple Bond Formed Between Boron and Carbon for the First Time

Researchers from the University of Würzburg are opening up new horizons in chemistry: They present the world's first triple bond between the atoms boron and carbon.

Chemistry: Triple Bond Formed Between Boron and Carbon for the First Time

> Researchers from the University of Würzburg are opening up new horizons in chemistry: They present the world's first triple bond between the atoms boron and carbon.

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Diabetes boosts antibiotic resistance in mice.
www.nih.gov Diabetes boosts antibiotic resistance in mice

Researchers found that infectious bacteria in diabetic mice rapidly evolved resistance to antibiotics.

Diabetes boosts antibiotic resistance in mice

> - Researchers found that infectious bacteria in diabetic mice rapidly evolved resistance to antibiotics. > - Controlling blood sugar in the mice via insulin significantly reduced the emergence of drug-resistant bacteria.

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Cancer cells can cooperate to grow.
www.nih.gov Cancer cells can cooperate to grow

Scientists found that, when deprived of amino acids, cancer cells cooperated to extract and share them from their environment.

Cancer cells can cooperate to grow

> - Scientists found that, when deprived of amino acids, cancer cells cooperated to extract and share them from their environment. > - Blocking a protein called CNDP2 shut down this cooperative survival strategy, suggesting a new potential target for cancer treatment.

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Tentacles and tumors.
elifesciences.org Tentacles and tumors

Experiments in tiny freshwater animals suggest that certain tumors manipulate their host’s body to increase the likelihood of being transmitted to the next generation.

Tentacles and tumors

> Experiments in tiny freshwater animals suggest that certain tumors manipulate their host’s body to increase the likelihood of being transmitted to the next generation.

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Space & Astronomy @mander.xyz Bee @mander.xyz
X-ray Signal Points to Destroyed Planet, Chandra Finds.
www.nasa.gov X-ray Signal Points to Destroyed Planet, Chandra Finds - NASA

A planet may have been destroyed by a white dwarf at the center of a planetary nebula — the first time this has been seen. As described in our latest press

X-ray Signal Points to Destroyed Planet, Chandra Finds - NASA

> A planet may have been destroyed by a white dwarf at the center of a planetary nebula — the first time this has been seen. As described in our latest press release, this would explain a mysterious X-ray signal that astronomers have detected from the Helix Nebula for over 40 years. The Helix is a planetary nebula, a late-stage star like our Sun that has shed its outer layers leaving a small dim star at its center called a white dwarf.

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Bee Bee @mander.xyz
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