Daily non-political popular news in brief.
The smell of money
11-21-2006 · EurekAlert!It's not hard to recall the pungent scent of a handful of pocket change. Similar smells emanate from a sweat-covered dumbbell or the water emerging from an old metal pipe. Yet no one has been able to identify the exact chemical cause of these familiar odors.
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Keywords: smell, money
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- Bargain or waste of money? Consumers don't always agree
10-23-2006 · EurekAlert!
Marketing executives should add new product features for upgraders and improve existing ones for first-time buyers if they want to sell more products, according to an assistant professor of marketing.
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- RAND study finds mental health courts have the potential to save taxpayers money
03-01-2007 · EurekAlert!
Special courts that sentence people with mental illness who are convicted of misdemeanors and low-level felonies to treatment instead of jail have the potential to save taxpayers money, according to a RAND Corp., study conducted for the Council of State Governments Justice Center. The study issued today is the first to look at the fiscal impact of a mental health court anywhere in the United States.
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- Extra pay does not improve hospital performance
06-05-2007 · EurekAlert!
Paying hospitals extra money does not appear to significantly improve the way they treat heart attack patients or how well those patients do. But giving hospitals the information that they need to improve heart attack care does help.
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- How dirty is your money?
09-13-2007 · EurekAlert!
Drug dealers found with bank notes contaminated with unusually high levels of drugs are now less likely to get away with their crimes, thanks to new evidence from a team led by the University of Bristol, UK. The research finds that geographical location has absolutely no influence on the distribution of drug contamination on bank notes.
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- Misery is not miserly: New study finds why even momentary sadness increases spending
02-08-2008 · EurekAlert!
How you are feeling has an impact on your routine economic transactions, whether you're aware of this effect or not. In a new study that links contemporary science with the classic philosophy of William James, a research team finds that people feeling sad and self-focused spend more money to acquire the same commodities than those in a neutral emotional state.
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- When smell cells fail they call in stem cell reserves
04-29-2007 · EurekAlert!
Hopkins researchers have identified a backup supply of stem cells that can repair the most severe damage to the nerves responsible for our sense of smell. These reservists normally lie around and do nothing, but when neighboring cells die, the scientists say, the stem cells jump into action. A report on the discovery will appear online next week in Nature Neuroscience.
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- Risk factors for Parkinson's disease under study
01-07-2008 · EurekAlert!
Doctors know an impaired sense of smell is an early indicator of Parkinson's disease.Now they want to know if a smell test can help determine if people with no symptoms eventually develop the disease.
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- Cost-benefit analysis: Combo treatment costs more, saves money later
11-07-2006 · EurekAlert!
From a health insurer's perspective, the most effective cancer treatment may also be the most cost-effective, according to a new study sponsored by the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG 91-11). Compared to higher-priced combination treatments, the least expensive, single-modality cancer treatment may cost more in the long run because of the costs associated with treating complications and recurrence of cancer.
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- Parenting program helps improve child behavior and is likely to be value for money
03-08-2007 · EurekAlert!
Research in Wales has demonstrated that the Incredible Years parenting program, an evidence-based program developed at the University of Washington, Seattle, is very effective in reducing the likelihood of children going on to develop behavioral problems in the UK.
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- 'Better to give than to receive' may not hold true for corporations
06-06-2007 · EurekAlert!
Most grew up with the familiar saying, "It is better to give than to receive," and many corporations live by this adage when they donate money to charitable causes. University of Missouri-Columbia researchers, however, have found that corporate giving may not be the cure-all that some companies would expect.
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