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Study offers glimpse into how monkeys—and machines—process images

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  • 2025-07-08 23:47 event
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Study offers glimpse into how monkeys—and machines—process images
Yale researchers have discovered a process in the primate brain that sheds new light on how visual systems work and could lead to advances in both human neuroscience and artificial intelligence.

691. Online poll shows Americans can't tell healthy processed foods from unhealthy ones

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Thirty-nine percent of respondents to an online poll incorrectly said all processed foods are unhealthy, according to new research by the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine published today, July 8, 2025, in JAMA Network Open. When asked which foods increase type 2 diabetes risk, 51% cited sugar, 19% said desserts, and 7% said carbohydrates, in general—all inaccurately.

692. Researchers issue call to prioritize head and neck cancer nutrition research and therapies

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Proper nutrition is important for people diagnosed with cancer, both to help them feel better and to assist them in maintaining their strength during treatment and its side effects. But cancer and its treatment can affect both a person's ability and desire to eat, making it hard to get enough calories and nutrients. This is especially true for people who have been diagnosed with some type of head and neck cancer, malignancies that arise predominantly in the mouth, throat and voice box.

693. Patients discharged against medical advice impact their own outcomes and the health care system

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About 1%–2% of all inpatient hospitalizations result in the patient being discharged against medical advice (DAMA), leading to more than $800 million in annual associated health care costs. To further understand the impact of DAMA, researchers evaluated trends including risk factors, length of stay, and readmission risk, among others. Their findings are published in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons.

694. 'Power surges' on cancer cell membranes may fuel progression of disease

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In a bid to better understand how cancer cells power their explosive growth and spread, scientists at Johns Hopkins Medicine say they have shed new light on the location and function of power-generating waves on the covering, or membrane, of these cells. The scientists say the waves, generated by rhythmic propagation of enzymes that produce energy from glucose, could potentially be used to better stage cancers, and as targets of drugs designed to slow down or halt the spread of cancer.

695. Researchers call for global action to ensure patients, caregivers, and relatives are valued equally

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It's time to see lived experience—knowledge gained by being a patient, caregiver, or relative—as essential expertise, to ensure that health care is relevant, responsive, effective, resilient, equitable, and fully inclusive, say experts in a special collection of articles published by The BMJ today.

696. TikTok docs: Survey shows Gen Z turn to DMs over MDs and why

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The phrase "doctor's orders" does not hold much weight with Generation Z.

697. US measles cases hit highest level since disease was eliminated in 2000

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Measles cases in the United States have reached their highest level in 25 years, with more than 1,270 confirmed cases this year.

698. Decades of cancer control efforts found paying off

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Research by Cancer Council Victoria's Cancer Epidemiology Division published in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health has revealed more than 230,000 lives have been saved from the impact of cancer control measures implemented since about the 1960s.

699. Study lays groundwork for precision treatment of HR+/HER2- breast cancer

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Preliminary results of an observational clinical trial underway at Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center are shedding light on why some patients with an aggressive form of metastatic breast cancer fare better than others after receiving standard treatment with cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) 4/6 inhibitors, a form of targeted therapy that prevents cancer cells from growing and multiplying.

700. Study offers glimpse into how monkeys—and machines—process images

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Yale researchers have discovered a process in the primate brain that sheds new light on how visual systems work and could lead to advances in both human neuroscience and artificial intelligence.

701. Hungry for change: New report looks at obesity and food insecurity in the north of England

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A major new report co-authored by York academics shows regional inequalities in levels of children's food security and obesity.

702. Rare blood clotting syndrome linked to COVID-19 vaccines explored in study

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Major new analysis from the Thrombotic Thrombocytopenia Syndrome (TTS) Consortium has provided critical insights into the rare but serious condition known as vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia (VITT).

703. Northern British Columbia shows how big resource projects can strain rural health care

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American tariffs and fears of a prolonged recession have increased calls to expand resource development and infrastructure projects in Canada. The pace and scope of expansion projects like these have major implications for Canada on many levels, including: commitments to environmental sustainability, relations with Indigenous Peoples and the quality of local health services.

704. Metabolic network simulations reveal potential gene targets to re-sensitize drug-resistant breast cancer

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One of the biggest obstacles in cancer treatment is drug resistance in cancer cells. Conventional efforts have focused on identifying new drug targets to eliminate these resistant cells, but such approaches can often lead to even stronger resistance.

705. The aftermath of floods, hurricanes and other disasters can be hardest on older rural Americans

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Hurricanes, tornadoes and other extreme weather do not distinguish between urban and rural boundaries. But when a disaster strikes, there are big differences in how well people are able to respond and recover—and older adults in rural areas are especially vulnerable.

706. Staying positive might protect against memory loss

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Want to remember things better as you get older? The secret might be surprisingly simple: focus on feeling good.

707. Online therapy as effective as in-person therapy, finds large study

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When COVID arrived early in 2020, pandemic restrictions made in-person mental health care difficult or impossible. Both therapists and patients had to adapt almost overnight. For many in the field, it felt like a gamble: could this screen-based format offer the same level of support for people struggling with depression, anxiety or trauma?

708. Common autoimmune drug may help reverse immunotherapy-induced diabetes

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A team of researchers at the UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center has identified a potential new strategy to prevent, and even reverse, immune checkpoint inhibitor–induced type 1 diabetes, a rare but life-threatening side effect of cancer immunotherapy, using an existing class of autoimmune drugs.

709. These 'exploding' capsules can deliver insulin without a needle using sodium bicarbonate

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Georgia Tech engineers have created a pill that could effectively deliver insulin and other injectable drugs, making medicines for chronic illnesses easier for patients to take, less invasive, and potentially less expensive.

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