Going to bed immediately after eating heavy meals disrupts the body’s natural digestive process and could predispose individuals to choking, heartburn, and weight gain, nutrition experts have warned.
With the upcoming Artemis II lunar mission, we thought it would be fun to explore some of the foods astronauts have eaten ...
“Butterflies in the stomach” is the fluttery, nervous sensation many people experience before a job interview, public speech, exam or even at the start of a new romance. As academic Amy Loughman ...
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The "Yes in God's Backyard" movement explained
Faith-based organizations across the United States are emerging as unexpected players in the housing crisis through a movement known as “Yes in God’s Backyard,” or YIGBY. The idea is simple: allow ...
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'Mass migration' of stars from the Milky Way's center could explain why there's life in our solar system
The Gaia telescope spotted more than 6,000 sunlike stars, all of which appear to have migrated from the galaxy's center more ...
As busy schedules and sedentary jobs compete for our time, many people are asking: What's the least amount of movement I need to still see benefits? According to Stella Volpe, head of Virginia Tech's ...
While a nap after a heavy meal can feel heavenly, it increases your risk of digestive problems, acid reflux, or sluggishness. Read on to know if you should sleep after a heavy meal.
Scientists at Arizona State University have uncovered surprising new ways bacteria move, even without their usual whip-like propellers called flagella. In one study, E. coli and salmonella were found ...
A Coma Pattern-Based Autofocusing Method Resolves Bacterial Cold Shock Response at Single-Cell Level
Imaging-based single-cell physiological profiling holds great potential for uncovering fundamental bacterial cold shock response (CSR) mechanisms, but its application is impeded by severe focus drift ...
Vibration plates aren’t generally harmful, but many promoters overstate the benefits of these platforms. Most research showing vibration plates are beneficial has involved perfo ...
New research by engineers at the University of Colorado Boulder aims to get to the bottom of why, as the saying goes, you get a "skip in your step" when you're happy.
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