Category: Archive

Power lines may mess with honeybees’ behavior and ability to learn

“The reductions in learning are pretty concerning,” says Sebastian Shepherd, Purdue researcher and the entomologist who worked on the study while at the University of Southampton in England.

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Getting cancer drugs to the brain is difficult – but a new ‘road map’ might make it easier

Tiffany Lyle, assistant professor of veterinary anatomic pathology at Purdue University, led research that has provided the first comprehensive characterization of both the blood-brain and blood-tumor barriers in brain metastases of lung cancer, which will serve as a road map for treatment development.

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Risky business: Frogs’ mating calls also attract predators

In the túngara frog — a tiny native of Middle, Central and South America — disease, predation and communication are intricately intertwined. Parasites are transmitted by frog-biting flies called midges, which find their way to frogs by “intercepting” their mating calls. Male frogs need to call to attract females, but in a catch-22, this also alerts predators of their whereabouts.

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Anthrax may be the next tool in the fight against bladder cancer

Researchers at Purdue University have come up with a way to combine the anthrax toxin with a growth factor to kill bladder cancer cells and tumors.

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New material points toward highly efficient solar cells

A new type of material for next-generation solar cells eliminates the need to use lead, which has been a major roadblock for this technology.

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Professor Torbert’s Orange Corn grits headed to Kennedy Space Center

On Nov. 8, grits made from Purdue University professor Torbert Rocheford’s variety of biofortified corn, more commonly known as orange corn due to its vibrant color, were featured at Taste of Space, an event at the Kennedy Space Center on Merritt Island, Florida. The event celebrated the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 12 moon landing and showcase cuisines from around the country.

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Beyond ‘You are What You Eat’

Purdue researchers are pursuing a broad sweep of obesity-related studies across fields ranging from nutrition science and psychology to biology and food science. One key interdisciplinary thrust is to understand eating behaviors and their results.

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Machine learning advances new tool to fight cybercrime in the cloud

Researchers at Purdue University have developed a cloud forensic model using machine learning to collect digital evidence related to illegal activities on cloud storage applications.

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‘Listening’ to engine blades to stop failures, disasters

Purdue University researchers have developed a monitoring system to detect one of the most common causes of premature blade failure in gas turbine engines – rotor forced response vibration. (Image provided)

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Your dog might be hiding its true colors

New research from Purdue University’s College of Veterinary Medicine shows that some breeds of dogs have hidden coat colors – and in some cases, other traits – that have been lurking all along. Example: There are around 18 recognized breeds of dogs that have the genetic potential to be born without a tail – such as the popular Australian Shepherd (shown in photo). But the data shows that up to 48 of the breeds analyzed possess the tailless gene variant, usually at a very low frequency. (Photo provided)

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