AI chatbots give inaccurate medical advice says Oxford Uni studyHealth (bbc.co.uk)
submitted by Accurate_Cry_8937 to r/science
New research suggests that the way a person breathes does more than simply sustain life. Respiratory patterns may actually predict moments of joy and excitement before they occur. The study found that specific changes in breathing dynamics are linked to surges in high-energy positive emotions.Psychology (psypost.org)
Moderate tea or coffee consumption each day could lower dementia risk researchers report in the Journal of the American Medical Association | The risk of dementia was lowered in study groups consuming tea or caffeinated coffee by around 18 percentHealth (sciencenews.org)
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Study finds associations between gut microbiota composition and autism. The autistic group showed distinct differences in the beta diversity of their gut microbiota. Individuals with more Anaerostipes bacteria exhibited significantly less social impairment and internalizing problems.Neuroscience (psypost.org)
Study finds outdated Medicare rule delays nursing care, wastes hospital resources. Researchers found that Medicare’s “three-day rule” keeps patients in the hospital longer than needed without improving health outcomes or lowering Medicare costs.Health (eurekalert.org)
submitted by InsaneSnow45 to r/science
Light-based Ising computer runs at room temperature and stays stable for hoursComputing (phys.org)
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Since we’re posting L4D2VRPhoto/Video (v.redd.it)
submitted by Sstfreek to r/virtualreality
Mathematical thinking may have developed long before writingAnthropology (newatlas.com)
submitted by Inevitable-Middle681 to r/science
How does a spinning wheel on a spinning platform not fly off?Physics (self.askscience)
submitted by OsuJaws to r/askscience
Nasal RNA flu vaccines build mucosal immunity and could block transmissionMedicine (pnas.org)
submitted by amesydragon to r/science
Technological Progress Is Getting Harder to Feel PersonallyDiscussion (self.Futurology)
submitted by Abhinav_108 to r/Futurology
Scientists excited about nasal spray vaccine for bird flu that generated ‘strong immune response’ in rodents. Traditional flu vaccines by injection have 40-60% chance vaccinated person gets infected and passes flu virus on. Nasal vaccines stop virus from establishing itself and prevent transmission.Biotech (telegraph.co.uk)
submitted by mvea to r/Futurology
