ScienceDaily: Living Well News |
- Mosquitoes smell you better at night
- Study reveals the face of sleep deprivation
- Brain imaging study reveals the wandering mind behind insomnia
- Exercising one day a week may be enough for older women
- Overweight and obese women are equally capable of the impulse control that lean women exhibit
- Music lessons enhance the quality of school life
- Children who go to daycare may benefit from a wider variety of social situations
- Alcohol breaks brain connections needed to process social cues
- Jet lag: Why the body clock is slow to adjust to time changes
Mosquitoes smell you better at night Posted: 30 Aug 2013 01:13 PM PDT The major malaria vector in Africa, the Anopheles gambiae mosquito, is able to smell major human host odorants better at night. |
Study reveals the face of sleep deprivation Posted: 30 Aug 2013 01:13 PM PDT A new study finds that sleep deprivation affects facial features such as the eyes, mouth and skin, and these features function as cues of sleep loss to other people. |
Brain imaging study reveals the wandering mind behind insomnia Posted: 30 Aug 2013 01:13 PM PDT A new brain imaging study may help explain why people with insomnia often complain that they struggle to concentrate during the day even when objective evidence of a cognitive problem is lacking. |
Exercising one day a week may be enough for older women Posted: 30 Aug 2013 11:38 AM PDT A new study reveals that women over age 60 may need to exercise only one day a week to significantly improve strength and endurance. |
Overweight and obese women are equally capable of the impulse control that lean women exhibit Posted: 30 Aug 2013 10:10 AM PDT Previous studies have shown that overweight and obese people have a harder time delaying gratification, so they are more likely to forego the healthy body later on in favor of eating more calorie-dense foods now. But new research now shows that behavioral interventions that improve delay of gratification can work just as well with overweight and obese women as with lean women. |
Music lessons enhance the quality of school life Posted: 30 Aug 2013 06:17 AM PDT A new study examined whether an extended music education had an impact on pupils' experienced satisfaction with the school. Nearly a thousand pupils at ten Finnish schools with extended music classes and comparison classes participated on a survey that measured the quality of school life at Year 3 and Year 6. |
Children who go to daycare may benefit from a wider variety of social situations Posted: 30 Aug 2013 06:17 AM PDT Children who go to daycare may benefit from a wider variety of social and communicative situations relative to children who do not go to daycare, a recent study suggests. The former have a heightened ability to adjust their non-verbal communication to take into account the age of the person they are playing with. |
Alcohol breaks brain connections needed to process social cues Posted: 29 Aug 2013 11:49 AM PDT Alcohol intoxication reduces communication between two areas of the brain that work together to properly interpret and respond to social signals, according to researchers. |
Jet lag: Why the body clock is slow to adjust to time changes Posted: 29 Aug 2013 09:40 AM PDT New research in mice reveals why the body is so slow to recover from jet lag. The study identifies a target for the development of drugs that could help us to adjust faster to changes in time zone. |
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