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Learning to choose the right web host for your business

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Guiding you towards choosing a web hosting plan

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Secure Your Website - Easy Tips To Avoid Hacking

It is good to be security conscious in the digital world. Hackers and internet thieves will happily act on any opportunities that are given them, so it's important to take all preventive measures poss...


Do 68 Molecules Hold The Key To Understanding Disease?

Why is it that the origins of many serious diseases remain a mystery?  In considering that question, a scientist at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine has come up with a unified molecular view of the indivisible unit of life, the cell, which may provide an answer.


Cigarettes' Power May Not Be In Nicotine Itself, New Study Suggests

New research suggests that cigarettes' power may not be in nicotine itself but in how it enhances other experiences while smoking.


Addicted To Tanning Beds? 'Tanorexia' Common Among University Students

A new study conducted at a large university finds more than 25 percent of those surveyed reported symptoms of tanning dependence, including symptoms similar to alcohol and drug-addicted individuals. Suggestively, the study also found those with a tanning dependence tend to be more likely to be thin and smoke cigarettes than others.


Most Vaccine-allergic Children Can Still Be Safely Vaccinated, Experts Say

With close monitoring and a few standard precautions, nearly all children with known or suspected vaccine allergies can be safely immunized, according to a team of vaccine safety experts led by the Johns Hopkins Children's Center. The scientists offer pediatricians a step-by-step tool for quickly identifying children with allergic reactions to vaccines, and a much-needed guide, they say, to safely immunize those who are allergic.


Complex Ocean Behavior Studied With 'Artificial Upwelling'

A team of scientists is studying the complex ocean upwelling process by mimicking nature -- pumping cold, nutrient-rich water from deep within the Pacific Ocean and releasing it into surface waters near Hawaii that lack the nitrogen and phosphorous necessary to support high biological production.


Participating In Religion May Make Adolescents From Certain Races More Depressed

One of the few studies to look at the effects of religious participation on the mental health of minorities suggests that for some of them, religion may actually be contributing to adolescent depression. Previous research has shown that teens who are active in religious services are depressed less often because it provides these adolescents with social support and a sense of belonging.


Closest Look Ever At Edge Of A Black Hole

Astronomers have taken the closest look ever at the giant black hole in the center of the Milky Way. By combining telescopes in Hawaii, Arizona, and California, they detected structure at a tiny angular scale of 37 micro-arcseconds -- the equivalent of a baseball seen on the surface of the moon, 240,000 miles distant. These observations are among the highest resolution ever done in astronomy.


Hearing Restoration May Be Possible With Cochlear Repair After Transplant Of Human Cord Blood Cells

Hearing loss due to cochlear damage may be repaired by transplanting human umbilical cord hematopoietic stem cells. This study, using animal models of chemical and auditory cochlear damage, found that when transplanted stem cells migrated to the damaged area, "surprisingly few" transplanted cells were necessary to help repair sensory hair cells and neurons. Researchers say transplanting umbilical cord stem cells provides hope for the repair of human hearing impairments rising from cochlear damage.


Second Site For Prostate Cancer Gene Found

Scientists studying a prostate cancer gene called HNF1B have found a second independent site within the HNF1B gene on chromosome 17 (17q12) -- increasing the number of genetic variants that may contribute to risk of developing the disease.


Global Warming: Warmer Seas Linked To Strengthening Hurricanes, According to New Research

The theory that global warming may be contributing to stronger hurricanes in the Atlantic over the past 30 years is bolstered by a new study.


African-Americans Twice As Likely As Caucasians To Die Following A Liver Operation, Study Finds

New research shows African-Americans are more than twice as likely as Caucasians to die in the hospital after surgical removal of part of the liver -- an increasingly used procedure for the treatment of liver cancer.


Tutankhamen Fathered Twins, Mummified Fetuses Suggest

Two fetuses found in the tomb of Tutankhamen may have been twins and were very likely to have been the children of the teenage Pharaoh, according to the anatomist who first studied the mummified remains of the young King in the 1960s.


Loss Of Sleep, Even For A Single Night, Increases Inflammation In The Body

Loss of sleep, even for a few short hours during the night, can prompt one?s immune system to turn against healthy tissue and organs. Losing sleep for even part of one night can trigger the key cellular pathway that produces tissue-damaging inflammation according to new research. The findings suggest a good night?s sleep can ease the risk of both heart disease and autoimmune disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis.


PET Scans Help Identify Mechanism Underlying Seasonal Mood Changes

Brain scans taken at different times of year suggest that the actions of the serotonin transporter -- involved in regulating the mood-altering neurotransmitter serotonin -- vary by season, according to a new report. These fluctuations may potentially explain seasonal affective disorder and related mood changes.


Invisibility Undone: Chinese Scientists Demonstrate How To Uncloak An Invisible Object

Harry Potter beware! A team of Chinese scientists has developed a way to unmask your invisibility cloak. According to a new paper in Optics Express certain materials underneath an invisibility cloak would allow invisible objects be seen again.


True Extent Of Self-harm Amongst Teenagers Revealed

New research reveals that one in four cases of self-harm go unreported and one in five occur under the influence of alcohol. Also, six in ten ?self-harmers? mention suicidal wishes. The new study also shows that self-cutting is not confined to young girls, but is the most common form of self-harm amongst young boys too.


Researchers Create Animal Model Of Chronic Stress

In an effort to better understand how chronic stress affects the human body, researchers have created an animal model that shows how chronic stress affects behavior, physiology and reproduction. Developing the animal model better positions the researchers to understand the neurohormonal causes of such stress and the body reaction in order to develop more effective treatment options for humans.


Children Of Older Fathers More Likely To Have Bipolar Disorder, New Report Finds

Older age among fathers may be associated with an increased risk for bipolar disorder in their offspring, according to a new report.


Wolves Would Rather Eat Salmon

Although most people imagine wolves chasing deer and other hoofed animals, new research suggests that, when they can, wolves actually prefer fishing to hunting. The study shows that when salmon is available, wolves will reduce deer hunting activity and instead focus on seafood.


Is There Hope For The Prevention Of Dementia?

Scientists reviewed the latest findings about the effect of antihypertensive treatment on cognitive function and dementia at a recent conference. As a risk factor for stroke, ischemic brain lesions and silent brain infarcts, general atherosclerosis, myocardial infarction and cardiovascular morbidity, hypertension may also be a risk factor for dementia related to cerebrovascular disease.


Verifying Wireless Hackers For Homeland Security

Wireless sensor networks used to detect and report events including hurricanes, earthquakes, and forest fires and for military surveillance and anti-terrorist activities are prone to subterfuge. In the International Journal of Security and Networks, computer scientists at Florida Atlantic University describe a new anti-hacking system to protect WSNs.


Multitasking Can Be Efficient At Certain Optimal Times

In today's fast-paced world, multitasking has become an increasingly necessary part of our daily routine. Unfortunately, multitasking also is notoriously inefficient. However, a new brain imaging study led by a cognitive neuroscientist finds that there are optimal times when we are better suited to multitask.


Physicists Discover 'Doubly Strange' Particle

Physicists of the DZero experiment at the US Department of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory have discovered a new particle made of three quarks, the Omega-sub-b. The particle contains two strange quarks and a bottom quark. It is an exotic relative of the much more common proton and weighs about six times the proton mass.


Early Onset Gene For Inflammatory Bowel Diseases Identified

Two new genetic markers that influence the likelihood of getting Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis during childhood have been identified. One marker sits next to a gene that regulates inflammatory responses, suggesting a target for therapy.


Improving Piglet Survival

Neonatal mortality in pigs is a major welfare and economic concern. It is one of the issues being tackled by Welfare Quality®, an EU-funded project designed to integrate farm animal welfare into the food chain.


How Often Do Hip And Knee Replacements Need Revision?

A comprehensive study using nationwide data on hip and knee replacements in England has found that one in 75 patients require a revision of their joint replacement after three years. Although this compares favorably with the rest of the world, the study reinforces concerns about the new surgical techniques of hip resurfacing and unicondylar knee replacement.


A Little Nitrogen Can Go A Long Way

With significant increases in the price of fertilizer and grain, site-specific management -- especially in variable rate nitrogen application -- can have a significant impact on yield and profitability, as reported in the latest issue of Agronomy Journal.


Post-marketing Studies Finding Adverse Events In Drugs Used In Children

The Food and Drug Administration Modernization Act, designed to stimulate more drug safety studies in children, has resulted in more than 130 label changes since its inception nearly six years ago, according to researchers.


'Bar-coding' Midges Could Help Prevent Spread Of Bluetongue In The UK

Ecologists have developed a new technique for genetically "bar-coding" biting midges that could help prevent the spread of bluetongue -- a serious animal disease -- in the UK.


Substance Found In Fruits And Vegetables Reduces Likelihood Of The Flu

Mice given quercetin, a naturally occurring substance found in fruits and vegetables, were less likely to contract the flu. The study also found that stressful exercise increased the susceptibility of mice to the flu, but quercetin canceled out that negative effect. Quercetin, a close chemical relative of resveratrol, is present in a variety of fruits and vegetables, including red onions, grapes, blueberries, tea, broccoli and red wine.


New Discovery About Growth Factor Can Be Breakthrough For Cancer Research

A research team has discovered an entirely new signal path for a growth factor that is of crucial importance for the survival and growth of cancer cells. This discovery, published in Nature Cell Biology, opens up an entirely new landscape for research on breast and prostate cancer, among other types.


Biological Invasions Increasing Due To Freshwater Impoundments, Says Study

The growing number of dams and other impoundments is increasing the number of invasive species and the speed at which they spread, putting natural lakes at risk, says a study led by the University of Colorado at Boulder.


Nearly Half Of US Adults Will Develop Painful Knee Osteoarthritis By Age 85: Study

Almost half of all US adults and nearly two-thirds of obese adults will develop painful osteoarthritis of the knee by age 85, a new study suggests.


Remote Satellite Imaging Predicts Outbreaks Of Infectious Disease

Scientists in the USA have established a way to predict outbreaks of cholera, making it easier to control. This finding could provide a model to predict and potentially control outbreaks of other important infectious diseases.


Teen Suicide Spike Was No Fluke

After 10 years of steady decline, researchers say a recent spike in the teen suicide rate is not a fluke and new prevention strategies need to be developed. The teen suicide rate jumped 18 percent from 2003-2004. That's the largest one year change in 15 years. Now, the most recent stats available (2004-2005) show the numbers are still significantly higher, and experts are concerned this could be a new trend.


Deep Brain Stimulation Halts Cell Loss, Parkinson's Researchers Find

Deep brain stimulation, a surgical technique often viewed as a last resort for people with Parkinson's disease, halts the progression of dopamine-cell loss in animal models, according to preliminary research.


Too Much Calcium In Blood May Increase Risk Of Fatal Prostate Cancer

Men who have too much calcium in their bloodstreams may have an increased risk of fatal prostate cancer, according to a new analysis.


Drug Reduces Vomiting, Hospital Admissions In Children With Gastroenteritis, Study Finds

Researchers have demonstrated that a drug called ondansetron helps reduce vomiting, the need for intravenous fluids and hospital admissions in children with acute gastroenteritis.


Virus Weaves Itself Into The DNA Transferred From Parents To Babies

New research shows that some parents pass on the human herpes virus 6 (HHV-6) to their children because it is integrated into their chromosomes. This is the first time a virus has been shown to become part of the human DNA and then get passed to subsequent generations.


Collective Traumas: Early Explanations Of 9/11 Linked To Long-term Adjustment

A new study, lead authored by Kent State University's John Updegraff, suggests that finding meaning in the immediate aftermath of the 9/11 terroist attacks was an important coping response that helped many Americans adjust by reducing their fears of future terrorism.


Cell Division Study Resolves 50-year-old Debate, May Aid Cancer Research

A new study has finally resolved a controversy that cellular biologists have been arguing over for nearly 50 years, with findings that may aid research on everything from birth defects and genetic diseases to the most classic "cell division" issue of them all -- cancer.


Tall Men At Increased Risk Of Prostate Cancer Development And Progression

A man's height is a modest marker for risk of prostate cancer development, but is more strongly linked to progression of the cancer, say researchers who conducted their own study on the connection and also reviewed 58 published studies.


Hurricane Katrina Increased Mental And Physical Health Problems In New Orleans By Up To Three Times

Half the residents of New Orleans were suffering from poor mental and physical health more than a year after their homes and community were devastated by Hurricane Katrina in August 2005, according to new research.


Low Birth Weight Children Appear At Higher Risk Of Psychiatric Disturbances

Low-birth-weight children appear to be at higher risk for psychiatric disturbances from childhood through high school than normal-birth-weight children, according to a new report. In addition, low-birth-weight children from urban communities may be more likely to have attention problems than suburban low-birth-weight children.


Energy-saving Bacteria Resist Antibiotics

Bacteria save energy by producing proteins that moonlight, having different roles at different times, which may also protect the microbes from being killed. The moonlighting activity of one enzyme from the tuberculosis bacterium makes it partially resistant to a family of broad-spectrum antibiotics, according to a paper published in the journal Microbiology.


DNA Shows That Last Woolly Mammoths Had North American Roots

In a surprising reversal of conventional wisdom, a DNA-based study has revealed that the last of the woolly mammoths--which lived between 40,000 and 4,000 years ago--had roots that were exclusively North American.


No Connection Between Measles, Mumps, Rubella (MMR) Vaccine And Autism, Study Suggests

In a case-control study, the presence of measles virus RNA was no more likely in children with autism and GI disturbances than in children with only GI disturbances. Furthermore, GI symptom and autism onset were unrelated to MMR vaccine timing.


Children With TVs Or Computers In Their Room Sleep Less

Middle school children who have a television or computer in their room sleep less during the school year, watch more TV, play more computer games and surf the net more than their peers who don't.


Innate Immune System Targets Asthma-linked Fungus For Destruction

A new study shows that the innate immune system of humans is capable of killing a fungus linked to airway inflammation, chronic rhinosinusitis and bronchial asthma. Researchers have revealed that eosinophils, a particular type of white blood cell, exert a strong immune response against the environmental fungus Alternaria alternata.


Biocontrol Insect Exacerbates Invasive Weed

Biocontrol agents, such as insects, are often released outside of their native ranges to control invasive plants. But scientists in Montana have found that through complex community interactions among deer mice, native plants and seeds, the presence of an introduced fly may exacerbate the effects of the invasive plant it was meant to control.


Age-related Memory Loss Tied To Slip In Filtering Information Quickly

Scientists have identified a way in which the brain's ability to process information diminishes with age, and shown that this break down contributes to the decreased ability to form memories that is associated with normal aging.


A Fine-tooth Comb To Measure The Accelerating Universe

Astronomical instruments needed to answer crucial questions, such as the search for Earth-like planets or the way the Universe expands, have come a step closer with the first demonstration at the telescope of a new calibration system for precise spectrographs. The method uses a Nobel Prize-winning technology called a "laser frequency comb," and is published in Science.


New Drug Protects Against Second Heart Attack Or Stroke, Study Suggests

Data from a Phase II study of an investigational drug designed to block formation of blood clots show potential for added protection against a second heart attack or stroke among patients who are already taking state-of-the-art prevention therapy, according to researchers.


Venus: Global Structure Of Winds And Clouds Have Been Mapped

Venus is a planet similar in size to the Earth. Nevertheless, it is quite different in other aspects. On the one hand, it spins very slowly on its axis, taking 224 terrestrial days and, moreover, it does so in the opposite direction to that of our planet, i.e. from East to West. Its dense atmosphere of carbon dioxide with surface pressures 90 times that of Earth (equivalent to what we find at 1000 meters below the surface of our oceans), causes a runaway greenhouse effect that raises the surface temperatures up to 450ēC, to such as extent that metals like lead are in a liquid state on Venus.


Asymptomatic Carotid Plaque Healing Mechanisms Observed

Researchers have observed a noninvasive MR imaging a healing mechanism for plaque rupture, a potentially life-threatening event in the cardiovascular system that can result in a fatal heart attack or debilitating stroke. The untimely death of well-known television journalist Tim Russert, was due to the sudden rupture of a vulnerable plaque in a critical location in a coronary artery.


DNA Editing Tool Flips Its Target

Imagine having to copy an entire book by hand without missing a comma. Our cells face a similar task every time they divide. They must duplicate both their DNA and a subtle pattern of punctuation-like modifications on the DNA known as methylation. Scientists have caught in action one of the tools mammalian cells use to maintain their pattern of methylation. Visualized by X-ray crystallography, the SRA domain of the protein UHRF1 appears to act like a bookmark while enzymes are copying a molecule of DNA.


Spending Time In Intensive Care Unit Can Traumatize Kids

Scientists have developed the Children's Critical Illness Impact Scale to measure psychological distress in children following hospital discharge. This is the first self-report scale ever created to measure the psychological impact of intensive care unit hospitalization on children.


Toxic Plastics: Bisphenol A Linked To Metabolic Syndrome In Human Tissue

New research implicates the primary chemical used to produce hard plastics -- bisphenol A (BPA) -- as a risk factor for the metabolic syndrome and its consequences.


World Cancer Declaration Sets Ambitious Targets For 2020

A summit of more than 60 high-level policymakers, leaders and health experts have adopted a global plan aimed at tackling the growing cancer crisis in developing countries. The plan, contained in the World Cancer Declaration, recommends a set of 11 cancer-busting targets for 2020 and outlines priority steps that need to be taken in order to meet them. It was presented Sunday at the close of the World Cancer Congress in Geneva.


Mom's Mood, Baby's Sleep: What's The Connection?

If there's one thing that everyone knows about newborn babies, it's that they don't sleep through the night, and neither do their parents. But in fact, those first six months of life are crucial to developing the regular sleeping and waking patterns, known as circadian rhythms, that a child will need for a healthy future. Some children may start life with the sleep odds stacked against them, though, say sleep experts who study the issue.


Gene Is Likely Cause Of Stroke-inducing Vascular Malformations

Scientists have discovered that a gene controlling whether blood vessels differentiate into arteries or veins during embryonic development is linked to a vascular disorder in the brain that causes stroke.


Computerized Whiteboards Improve Classroom Learning, Study Suggests

The British government has invested more money in Interactive Whiteboards in its schools than any other government in the world. But is this huge investment worth it? Have the new data projection technologies allowed students to learn more effectively? This is the subject of recent research.


College Freshmen: Pain Killers And Stimulants Less Risky Than Cocaine; More Risky Than Marijuana

A new study in Prevention Science, finds that college freshmen believe that nonmedical use of prescription drugs like pain killers and stimulants is less risky than cocaine, but more risky than marijuana. Study also describes types of students who are most likely to engage in nonmedical use of prescription drugs.


Global Sea-rise Levels By 2100 May Be Lower Than Some Predict, Says New Study

Despite projections by some scientists of global seas rising by 20 feet or more by the end of this century as a result of warming, a new study concludes that global sea rise of much more than 6 feet is a near physical impossibility.


New Stem Cell Tools To Aid Drug Development

Scientists have designed, developed and tested new molecular tools for stem cell research to direct the formation of certain tissue types for use in drug development programs.


Previous Claims Of SiRNA Therapeutic Effects Called Into Question By Report In Human Gene Therapy

The many recent reports documenting the therapeutic efficacy of short interfering RNAs in animal models of human disease may actually be describing non-specific therapeutic effects related to the ability of siRNA to activate an immune response, according to a paper in Human Gene Therapy.


25 Years Of Conventional Evaluation Of Data Analysis Proves Worthless In Practice

So-called ?intelligent? computer-based methods for classifying patient samples, for example, have been evaluated with the help of two methods that have completely dominated research for 25 years. Now Swedish researchers are revealing that this methodology is worthless when it comes to practical problems.


Australian Over-50s Walk Away Memory Problems In World-first Trial

An Australian study has found that walking for two and a half hours a week can significantly improve memory problems in the over-50s.


Technology Users Are Failing To Take Adequate Steps To Protect Their Digital Privacy

Technology users are failing to take adequate steps to protect their privacy in digital society. In the face of technology that will soon be able not only to track an individual?s movements but predict them too, people are far too relaxed about protecting their privacy, according to one social psychologist.


What Is A Gene? Media Define the Concept In Many Different Ways

Even scientists define ?a gene? in different ways, so it comes as little surprise that the media also have various ways of framing the concept of a gene, according to a new study.


LHC Switch-on Fears Are Completely Unfounded

A new report provides the most comprehensive evidence available to confirm that the Large Hadron Collider (LHC)?s switch-on, due on Wednesday next week, poses no threat to mankind. Nature?s own cosmic rays regularly produce more powerful particle collisions than those planned within the LHC, which will enable nature?s laws to be studied in controlled experiments.


Molecular Evolution Is Echoed In Bat Ears

Echolocation may have evolved more than once in bats, according to new research from the University of Bristol.


New Methods Identify And Manipulate 'Newborn' Cells In Animal Model Of Parkinson's Disease

Researchers in the United States and Sweden used an engineered virus to deliver a protein that glows green when exposed to blue light (green fluorescent protein) into newborn cells of the striatum in an animal model of Parkinson's disease.


Natural Childbirth Makes Mothers More Responsive To Own Baby-cry

A new study has found that mothers who delivered vaginally compared to caesarean section delivery were significantly more responsive to the cry of their own baby, identified through MRI brain scans two to four weeks after delivery.


Hospitalized Patients With CKD Are At Increased Risk Of Being Harmed By Medical Errors, Study Finds

Hospitalized patients with chronic kidney disease are at higher risk for adverse consequences of medical care compared with those without the disease, according to a new study. The findings indicate that steps should be taken to reduce potentially preventable complications of medical care for CKD patients, a population that is frequently under-recognized in most health care settings.


Eyeball Reflexes: Security and Biometrics That Cannot Be Spoofed

Electronic fingerprinting, iris scans, and signature recognition software are all becoming commonplace biometrics for user authentication and security. However, they all suffer from one major drawback -- they can be spoofed by a sufficiently sophisticated intruder. Researchers now describe a new approach based on a person's reflexes that could never be copied, forged, or spoofed.


Racial Disparities Found In Radiation Therapy Rates For Breast Cancer

African-American women are less likely than white women to receive radiation therapy after a lumpectomy, the standard of care for early stage breast cancer, according to a new study by researchers at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center.