Wed.Oct 11, 2023

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What is Angular Development in 2023?

Smart Data Collective

AI technology is going to be a lot more important for developing web applications in the near future. This is one of the reasons the AI market is growing by 37% a year. As AI becomes more important for the web, companies are hiring developers to help create the best AI applications. These developers need to be proficient in a number of different types of programming languages.

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Cycling in school improves teenagers’ mental health, but wider social factors may impact benefits

Frontiers

by Deborah Pirchner, Frontiers science writer Image: Eric Arce for Outride Physical activity promotes mental well-being and finding activities that people are keen to engage in is key. For teenagers, cycling might be one of them – combining fun, competition, and transportation needs. Researchers in the US have examined if taking part in an in-school cycling program improves middle schoolers’ mental health and found positive effects.

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Tech Advice for Incoming Online MSW Students: What You’ll Need, What You Can Skip

The New Social Worker

If you’re just starting your online MSW program, congratulations! As you start to plan where you’ll log into your classes and get your tech set up, we’d like to offer you some budget tips to save money and prioritize your spending.

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Frontiers institutional partnerships update – autumn 2023

Frontiers

The latest news on our collaborations with research institutions, libraries, consortia, and funders. Welcome from Franck Vazquez, director of partnerships at Frontiers Frontiers is committed to making trusted science openly available to all. Something we believe to be crucial in a world facing unprecedented challenges from climate change to fake news and conflict.

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Researchers reconstruct speech from brain activity, illuminates complex neural processes

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

Researchers created and used complex neural networks to recreate speech from brain recordings, and then used that recreation to analyze the processes that drive human speech.

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Barbara Burlingame – Unraveling the power of traditional food systems and sustainable diets

Frontiers

Author: Catherine Rawlinson Dr Barbara Burlingame is a professor at Massey University , New Zealand. Her research predominantly focuses on nutrition science, and she is also involved in nutrition policy research at the global level. In relation to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 2: Zero Hunger , I spoke to Barbara about how her research over the years has contributed to nutrition policy and how this relates to providing sustainable diets for all.

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Researchers capture first-ever afterglow of huge planetary collision in outer space

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

A chance social media post by an eagle-eyed amateur astronomer sparked the discovery of an explosive collision between two giant planets, which crashed into each other in a distant space system 1,800 light years away from planet Earth.

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Doubling down on known protein families

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

A massive computational analysis of microbiome datasets has more than doubled the number of known protein families. This is the first time protein structures have been used to help characterize the vast array of microbial 'dark matter.

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Fruit fly serenade: Neuroscientists decode their tiny mating song

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

An extremely supportive atmosphere for new ideas laid the foundation for an 'Aha moment' about a toggle-switch in the fruit fly brain. Do humans have one, too?

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NASA's Webb captures an ethereal view of NGC 346

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

One of the greatest strengths of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is its ability to give astronomers detailed views of areas where new stars are being born. The latest example, showcased here in a new image from Webb’s Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI), is NGC 346 – the brightest and largest star-forming region in the Small Magellanic Cloud.

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'Mona Lisa' hides a surprising mix of toxic pigments, study shows

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

Leonardo da Vinci is renowned to this day for innovations in fields across the arts and sciences. Now, new analyses show that his taste for experimentation extended even to the base layers underneath his paintings. Surprisingly, samples from both the 'Mona Lisa' and the 'Last Supper' suggest that he experimented with lead(II) oxide, causing a rare compound called plumbonacrite to form below his artworks.

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Evolutionary secrets of 'Old Tom' and the killer whales of Eden revealed by genetic study

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

Evolutionary biologists have for the first time decoded the genetic lineage of a famous killer whale and a pod that once worked alongside whale hunters off the coast of Australia. In the Australian tradition of claiming New Zealand's celebrities as its own, Old Tom, the leader of a pod of killer whales that famously helped whalers hunt baleen whales in the 20th century, has ancestral links to modern-day killer whales in New Zealand, according to new DNA research.

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