Every time a Burmese python swallows a meal, something remarkable happens inside its body. Its heart expands by a quarter.
Scientists have discovered a novel metabolite in pythons that quells appetite without causing gastrointestinal side effects ...
Abstract: Least-squares reverse time migration (LSRTM), a linearized inverse problem, provides high-resolution subsurface images by minimizing the misfit between observed and simulated data. LSRTM can ...
In psychological health research, a person’s ability to think, otherwise known as their cognitive functions, is a crucial subject of research. The cognitive functions are a variety of different, but ...
Abstract: High-resolution and amplitude-preserved imaging is crucial for mapping impedance interfaces and identifying hydrocarbon reservoirs in the subsurface. Although elastic reverse-time migration ...
Desertification is accelerating under climate change, threatening biodiversity, food security, and human wellbeing across the Mediterranean Basin, southern Europe, and the Middle East. Water scarcity ...
For more than a century, people have considered Alzheimer's disease (AD) an irreversible illness. Consequently, research has focused on preventing or slowing it, rather than recovery. Despite billions ...
Researchers used supramolecular nanoparticles to repair the brain’s vascular system and reverse Alzheimer’s in mice. Instead of carrying drugs, the nanoparticles themselves triggered natural clearance ...
Virginia Tech researchers have shown that memory loss in aging may be reversible. Using CRISPR tools, they corrected molecular disruptions in the hippocampus and amygdala, restoring memory in older ...
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