Month: July 2017
-
Students Design Prototype Soft Artificial Heart
Two graduate students in materials science and engineering designed and tested an artificial heart made with soft plastics for eventual use as an implanted device.
-
Report: Long, Complex Effort Needed to Stem Opioid Abuse
A report released today says years of coordinated public health efforts are needed at all levels to contain and reverse the current opioid abuse epidemic.
-
Easiest Ways To Boost Your Hotels Occupancy Rates
Knowing how to attract more guests to your hotel and keep that shiny, revolving door of yours spinning all year round is no easy feat.
-
Nanotech Treatment Studied for Brain Tumors
Medical researchers and engineers designed and tested in mice a way to deliver gene-silencing therapies in nanoscale particles to treat glioblastoma, an aggressive form of brain cancer.
-
The Science of Business Success: 3 Tips That Will Help You Get Ahead
How can you use the science of business to help you achieve success, even though there is so much work to be done?
-
Immigration Crackdown “a Disaster” for U.S. Science
A panel of research executives from American universities said the current hostility to immigration in the U.S. is causing fear among many researchers and could have a serious impact on science.
-
For Young People, The Future Is Technology
For thousands of universities graduates, and many more younger than them, the future is technology. For a large portion of them, it’ll be their source of income.
-
Lab-On-Chip Quickly Isolates, Captures Exosomes
Tests of a lab-on-a-chip system show the device can rapidly isolate and recover cellular carriers of biomarkers useful in detecting cancer and other diseases.
-
Save Net Neutrality
Science & Enterprise needs net neutrality, and so do you.
-
NIH Supporting App That Helps Opioid Therapies
A company making game-style mobile apps to help therapies for opioid and other substance abuse is receiving R&D support from National Institutes of Health.