Daily non-political popular news in brief.
Supercomputing on demand: SDSC supports event-driven science
07-10-2007 · EurekAlert!Somewhere in Southern California a large earthquake strikes without warning, and the news media and the public clamor for information about the temblor -- Where was the epicenter? How large was the quake? What areas did it impact?
Read more »
Keywords: supercomputing, demand, sdsc, supports, event-driven, science, support, event, driven
« Previous | Next »
Similar news on "Supercomputing on demand: SDSC supports event-driven science":
- New research disproves belief that group psychotherapy extends the lives of cancer patients
05-01-2007 · EurekAlert!
Previously-published research has given credence to the notion that psychotherapy extends the lives of people with cancer. In fact, one in four cancer patients believe that science supports the idea that participating in group therapy will extend their lives. However, researchers as the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine concluded -- after an extensive research review -- that there is no compelling evidence linking psychotherapy or support groups with survival among cancer patients.
Similar news · Read more »
- UWM brain research supports drug development from jellyfish protein
10-27-2006 · EurekAlert!
With the research support from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, a Wisconsin biotech company has found that a compound from a protein found in jellyfish is neuroprotective and may be effective in treating neurodegenerative diseases.
Similar news · Read more »
- Listening in on the birth pangs of Earth's crust
11-23-2006 · EurekAlert!
Geologist Donald Forsyth and students from Brown University on a routine ocean-floor mapping cruise jumped into action when they realized that many of the seafloor seismometers they were supposed to collect had been buried by a recent lava flow. Data from the remaining instruments yielded the first detailed record of seismic vibrations leading up to a seafloor spreading event, published this week in the journal Science.
Similar news · Read more »
- Global theme issue on poverty and human development
10-22-2007 · EurekAlert!
Four Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. journals are participating in the Global Theme Issue on Poverty and Human Development, a special worldwide publishing event on Oct. 22, 2007, to raise awareness and stimulate dialogue to address poverty and human development. The Council of Science Editors has organized this unique simultaneous publication event with the participation of key journals throughout the world, including those published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
Similar news · Read more »
- Protein fragments sequenced in 68 million-year-old Tyrannosaurus rex
04-12-2007 · EurekAlert!
In a venture once thought to lie outside the reach of science, researchers from Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center have captured and sequenced tiny pieces of collagen protein from a 68 million-year-old Tyrannosaurus rex. The protein fragments -- seven in all -- appear to most closely match amino acid sequences found in collagen of present day chickens, lending support to a recent and still controversial proposal that birds and dinosaurs are evolutionarily related.
Similar news · Read more »
- Horvitz urges support for basic science
04-26-2007 · Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
H. Robert Horvitz, the David H. Koch Professor of Cancer Biology and recipient of the Nobel Prize, delivered the 35th annual Killian Award lecture April 24. Horvitz spoke on "Worms, Life and Death:В Cell Suicide in Development and Disease."
Similar news · Read more »
- Kenyan center supports literacy, development
05-02-2007 · Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
Aisha Walcott, a graduate student in electrical engineering and computer science, recently traveled to Laare, Kenya, as a representative of the Imara outreach program, which was funded by a grant from the MIT Public Service Center.
Similar news · Read more »
- Fossil record supports evidence of impending mass extinction
10-24-2007 · EurekAlert!
Global temperatures predicted for the coming centuries may trigger a new 'mass extinction event.' where over 50 percent of animal and plant species would be wiped out, warn scientists at the Universities of York and Leeds.
Similar news · Read more »
- ORNL-Mentored Oak Ridge High School team wins Siemens Competition
12-06-2006 · Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL)
A team of Oak Ridge High School students has won first place and $100,000 in the national Siemens Competition in Math, Science and Technology for their research thesis titled "Linking Supercomputing and Systems Biology for Efficient Bioethanol Production."
Similar news · Read more »
- Does student achievement really spur national economic growth?
11-20-2006 · EurekAlert!
Educational policy discourse supports the idea that increases in science and mathematics achievement correlate to nation-wide economic gains. However, a thought-provoking new study from the American Journal of Education challenges the perceived causal links between educational achievement and economic growth. Francisco O. Ramirez (Stanford University) and his co-authors find that without the so-called "Asian Tigers," the correlation diminishes and all but disappears.
Similar news · Read more »