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JA Purity IV JA Purity IV
  • Top Stories
  • ENN Original
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Wildlife
  • Policy
  • More
    • Agriculture
    • Green Building
    • Sustainability
    • Business
  • Sci/Tech
  • Health
  • Press Releases
  • Computer Program Predicts Risk of Deadly Irregular Heart Beats

    Combining a wealth of information derived from previous studies with data from more than 500 patients, an international team led by researchers from Johns Hopkins has developed a computer-based set of rules that more accurately predicts when patients with a rare heart condition might benefit—or not—from lifesaving implanted defibrillators. 

  • Future of Elephants Living in Captivity Is Under Threat

    Scientists at the University of Sheffield and University of Turku are looking at ways to boost captive populations of Asian elephants without relying on taking them from the wild.

  • AI Accurately Predicts the Useful Life of Batteries, Stanford and MIT Researchers Find

    If manufacturers of cell-phone batteries could tell which cells will last at least two years, then they could sell only those to phone makers and send the rest to makers of less demanding devices.

  • Will Large Protected Areas Save the Oceans or Politicize Them?

    How can we save the oceans? They cover two-thirds of the planet, but none are safe from fishing fleets, minerals prospectors, or the insidious influences of global warming and ocean acidification.

  • Genetic Tagging May Unlock Nature’s Secrets and Help Conserve the World’s Wildlife

    Tracking animals using DNA signatures are ideally suited to answer the pressing questions required to conserve the world’s wildlife, providing benefits over invasive methods such as ear tags and collars, according to a new study by University of Alberta biologists.

  • The Struggle for Life in the Dead Sea Sediments: Necrophagy as a Survival Mechanism

    The Dead Sea is not completely dead.

  • Study Examines Commercial Hybrid-Electric Aircraft, Reduced Carbon Emissions

    Although we’re still a long way from commercial airplanes powered by a combination of fossil fuel and batteries, a recent feasibility study at the University of Illinois explored fuel/battery configurations and the energy lifecycle to learn the tradeoffs needed to yield the greatest reductions in carbon dioxide emissions.

  • The Sense of Water—and Nitrogen: Studies Uncover Genome-Wide Responses That Limit Crop Growth in Nutrient-Poor Soils

    A team of researchers has tested how each gene within the genome of rice—one of the world’s most important staple crops—senses and responds to combinations of water and nutrients.

  • Rice Cultivation: Balance of Phosphorus and Nitrogen Determines Growth and Yield

    In the future, a newly discovered mechanism in control of plant nutrition could help to achieve higher harvests in a sustainable way. 

  • Artificial Intelligence Identifies Key Patterns from Video Footage of Infant Movements

    A simple video recording of an infant lying in bed can be analyzed with artificial intelligence (AI) techniques to extract quantitative information useful for assessing the child’s development as well as the efficacy of ongoing therapy.

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