Toshiba Corp. says Monday it has developed a technology to detect 13 types of cancer from a single drop of blood with 99 percent accuracy.
2019年11月24日 星期日
2019年11月21日 星期四
Bangladesh could be the first to cultivate golden rice, genetically altered to fight blindness
Bangladesh may become the first country to cultivate golden rice, which was created in an effort to combat vitamin A deficiency, the leading cause of childhood blindness.
2019年11月13日 星期三
Reading or Writing Might Shield the Brain from Dementia
Reading or writing—largely apart from any formal education—may help protect against the forgetfulness of dementia.
SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
2019年11月6日 星期三
Microbiota and the social brain
Increasingly, it is recognized that the microbes resident in the gastrointestinal tract can influence brain physiology and behavior.
A new Review in Science explores how the microbiota might facilitate neurodevelopment, help program social behaviors, and facilitate communication in various animal species, including humans.
SCIENCE.SCIENCEMAG.ORG
2019年11月2日 星期六
Japanese university artificially incubates endangered eel species
Japanese university artificially incubates endangered #eel species
Kindai University said about 30 eel larva, which were artificially incubated on Sept. 12 at its research facility in Wakayama Prefecture, have grown to about 2 centimeters over 50 days.
The university is separately growing around 1,100 larva. If things go smoothly, some of these are expected to grow to a marketable size next spring.
In a bid to cut back on aquaculture costs and workloads, Kindai will try to develop a feed that is less likely to pollute water, according to the university.
Google 翻譯
金大大學說,大約30頭鰻魚幼蟲於9月12日在和歌山縣的研究機構人工孵化,在50天內長到大約2厘米。
這所大學分別生長著大約1,100個幼蟲。 如果一切進展順利,預計其中一些將在明年春季增長到可銷售的規模。
該大學表示,為了減少水產養殖的成本和工作量,金岱將嘗試開發一種不會污染水的飼料。
ENGLISH.KYODONEWS.NET
Japanese university artificially incubates endangered eel species
Japanese university artificially incubates endangered eel species
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