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Leading coalition in Iraq election backs recount
Republicans soften opposition to financial reform
Space shuttle Discovery glides to Earth after one-day delay
NASA's shuttle Discovery landed safely Tuesday morning after poor weather had thwarted two initial landing opportunities Monday. The orbiter touched down at Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 9:08 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, ending its 15-day mission to the International Space Station . [More]
Ten countries urge privacy changes at Google
Brain training: Does it work?
Iran arrests members of a "terrorist group": report
Who needs high-speed broadband?
On paper, the main crux of the Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) recently released National Broadband Plan is fairly straightforward: help 100 million rural, underprivileged and otherwise underserved households across the U.S. get access to the Internet at speeds of at least 100 megabits per second over the next decade. The reality of the country's efforts to expand broadband access is much more complicated, according to a roundtable discussion hosted Monday by New York Law School in New York City. [More]
Subliminal Cues Can Empty Wallets
MONTREAL--Rational calculations do not dictate financial decisions, as psychologists have revealed in recent years. Emotions often sway our spendthrift or miserly ways. In particular, positive feelings promote risk taking--gambling in Vegas, say, or going on a shopping spree--whereas bad moods prompt protective selling or saving. In some cases, our feelings may have an obvious origin: studies show that sunshine breeds stock surges, whereas clouds curtail purchasing. But much of what influences our spending is far more subtle--subliminal, in fact. Now psychology graduate student Julie L. Hall of the University of Michigan reports at the Cognitive Neuroscience Society 2010 annual meeting that subconscious emotional cues have a far greater impact on financial risk taking than conscious ones do. What is more, one particular brain region mediates the connection between what influences our feelings and the financial decisions we make. [More]
Supreme Court strikes down animal cruelty law
"Socialist" snacks nourish Chavez fans in Venezuela
Once Learned, Never Forgotten
What happens when a language learned as a child is forgotten over time? Many adoptees and emigrants have no conscious memory of their native tongue, but a new study suggests at least some information remains in the brain. [More]
Apple says iPad 3G available on April 30
Iceland volcano ash cloud lower, but winds high
By Patrick Lannin
REYKJAVIK (Reuters) - The ash cloud surging from an erupting Icelandic volcano is hanging lower in the air, which is good news for travellers, but strong winds higher up moving ash still made conditions uncertain, officials said on Tuesday.
[More]Pirates take 3 Thai ships with 77 crew
Goldman earnings beat overshadowed by fraud probe
Civil rights leader Dorothy Height dies at 98
Antioxidants may not be worth their salt in preventing cancer
WASHINGTON--To decrease your risk of cancer , don't count on antioxidant supplements, a panel of researchers said here at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research . But assessing antioxidants' role (and that of many other dietary supplements) in preventing disease has been notoriously difficult. [More]
Iraqis say Qaeda deaths will not improve their lives
Rat Grandmas' Diet Linked to Granddaughters' Cancer
How’s this for a possible new culprit for breast cancer sufferers: they may be able to blame their grandmas’ diets. That’s the implication of a study done with rats. Researchers [Sonia de Assis et al.] affiliated with the Georgetown University Medical Center fed a group of pregnant rats a high-fat diet throughout their gestation, with 43 percent of calories coming from fat. A control group ate a normal diet. Both groups consumed the same total calories. All the rats’ offspring and the next generation, the granddaughters, ate a normal diet.
That high-fat diet increased breast cancer in the rats’ female offspring. And, more surprisingly, it apparently increased breast cancer in the granddaughters. They had an 80 percent chance of developing the disease, compared with 50 percent in the control group. The results were presented at the meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research.
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