Recent comments in /f/science
hellomondays t1_j9byp5w wrote
Reply to comment by Fussel2107 in Developmental predictors of young adult borderline personality disorder: a prospective, longitudinal study of females with and without childhood ADHD by BlitzOrion
Yeah, this team has definitely started to scratch at something interesting. It's a shame that funding to study personality disorders is like non-existent.
Fussel2107 t1_j9bygeg wrote
Reply to comment by hellomondays in Developmental predictors of young adult borderline personality disorder: a prospective, longitudinal study of females with and without childhood ADHD by BlitzOrion
I find it really interesting that the results only work for the younger age group and not for the late adolescence age group, where a BPD diagnosis is usually becoming present.
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I hope someone does some follow-up studies, because that's really curious
Xaendeau t1_j9bxjtk wrote
Reply to comment by bripi in Physicists nail down the most precise value yet of the electron magnetic moment. A newly measured value of an electron’s magnetic moment — a property of its spin and charge — is twice as precise as the one physicists have used for the past 14 years. by MistWeaver80
Hey, don't get offended when someone calls you out on something you should already know. Fundamental, pure research is critically important.
[deleted] t1_j9bwtoq wrote
Reply to According to a new study, researchers propose a novel theory about how the molecules of life may have developed a preferred chirality, or “handedness.” Understanding more about how the concept influences our living beings could help scientists develop drugs to fight molecular disease, like cancer. by Impossible_Cookie596
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BitPoet t1_j9bw6v1 wrote
Reply to comment by Igagug in ‘We found the Artemis-I noise level at 5 km had a crackling quality about 40 million times greater than a bowl of Rice Krispies.’ — Maximum noise measured during Artemis-I launch on 16 Nov. 2022 was higher than predicted by marketrent
You're looking at about a decismoot, not football fields.
[deleted] t1_j9bw2k3 wrote
Reply to comment by ButterSlip in The case of a patient who had COVID for 318 days helped scientists discover a new route for dangerous coronavirus strain emergence. They found mutations enabling T cell escape. Keeping track of mutations is crucial for understanding, monitoring, and controlling the pandemic by Skoltech_
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[deleted] t1_j9bvjdw wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in The case of a patient who had COVID for 318 days helped scientists discover a new route for dangerous coronavirus strain emergence. They found mutations enabling T cell escape. Keeping track of mutations is crucial for understanding, monitoring, and controlling the pandemic by Skoltech_
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[deleted] t1_j9but97 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in The case of a patient who had COVID for 318 days helped scientists discover a new route for dangerous coronavirus strain emergence. They found mutations enabling T cell escape. Keeping track of mutations is crucial for understanding, monitoring, and controlling the pandemic by Skoltech_
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[deleted] t1_j9bsvgz wrote
Reply to The case of a patient who had COVID for 318 days helped scientists discover a new route for dangerous coronavirus strain emergence. They found mutations enabling T cell escape. Keeping track of mutations is crucial for understanding, monitoring, and controlling the pandemic by Skoltech_
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BetterCallSal t1_j9br985 wrote
Reply to comment by Jzerious in The case of a patient who had COVID for 318 days helped scientists discover a new route for dangerous coronavirus strain emergence. They found mutations enabling T cell escape. Keeping track of mutations is crucial for understanding, monitoring, and controlling the pandemic by Skoltech_
Long COVID ain't no joke
ngatipakehatokuiwi t1_j9br37w wrote
Reply to The case of a patient who had COVID for 318 days helped scientists discover a new route for dangerous coronavirus strain emergence. They found mutations enabling T cell escape. Keeping track of mutations is crucial for understanding, monitoring, and controlling the pandemic by Skoltech_
Wow 318 days is A long time
Jzerious t1_j9bqvya wrote
Reply to comment by BetterCallSal in The case of a patient who had COVID for 318 days helped scientists discover a new route for dangerous coronavirus strain emergence. They found mutations enabling T cell escape. Keeping track of mutations is crucial for understanding, monitoring, and controlling the pandemic by Skoltech_
Holy hell that sounds miserable. I had no idea that could happen
[deleted] t1_j9bqp3z wrote
[deleted] t1_j9bpc93 wrote
Reply to The case of a patient who had COVID for 318 days helped scientists discover a new route for dangerous coronavirus strain emergence. They found mutations enabling T cell escape. Keeping track of mutations is crucial for understanding, monitoring, and controlling the pandemic by Skoltech_
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AdImaginary5577 t1_j9bp9nl wrote
Reply to The case of a patient who had COVID for 318 days helped scientists discover a new route for dangerous coronavirus strain emergence. They found mutations enabling T cell escape. Keeping track of mutations is crucial for understanding, monitoring, and controlling the pandemic by Skoltech_
Control? Am I missing something?
BetterCallSal t1_j9bo53u wrote
Reply to The case of a patient who had COVID for 318 days helped scientists discover a new route for dangerous coronavirus strain emergence. They found mutations enabling T cell escape. Keeping track of mutations is crucial for understanding, monitoring, and controlling the pandemic by Skoltech_
My wife's cousin was a nurse. She got COVID that first month. She still has it.
ButterSlip t1_j9bn38u wrote
Reply to The case of a patient who had COVID for 318 days helped scientists discover a new route for dangerous coronavirus strain emergence. They found mutations enabling T cell escape. Keeping track of mutations is crucial for understanding, monitoring, and controlling the pandemic by Skoltech_
I take similar medications as patient S, and I have had rhinovirus for 6 months. Skimmed article to see if it would apply, but its more specific to COVID.
[deleted] t1_j9bn2qq wrote
Reply to comment by squanchingonreddit in Climate change and the projected savannization of the Brazilian Amazon threaten most land-based mammals that live there, new research shows. The “savannization” here refers to when lush rainforest gives way to a drier, open landscape that resembles savanna but is actually degraded forest. by MistWeaver80
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Masterjts t1_j9bn0jb wrote
Reply to comment by aecarol1 in ‘We found the Artemis-I noise level at 5 km had a crackling quality about 40 million times greater than a bowl of Rice Krispies.’ — Maximum noise measured during Artemis-I launch on 16 Nov. 2022 was higher than predicted by marketrent
Are we gatekeeping sound questions now... this is ... cereal... errr... i mean surreal.
[deleted] t1_j9bmoai wrote
Reply to comment by AzureDreamer in Mindfulness-based attention training vastly improves the focus and emotional regulation of high school students by TimTars
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[deleted] t1_j9blvhj wrote
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[deleted] t1_j9bll2h wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in The case of a patient who had COVID for 318 days helped scientists discover a new route for dangerous coronavirus strain emergence. They found mutations enabling T cell escape. Keeping track of mutations is crucial for understanding, monitoring, and controlling the pandemic by Skoltech_
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[deleted] t1_j9byxli wrote
Reply to ‘We found the Artemis-I noise level at 5 km had a crackling quality about 40 million times greater than a bowl of Rice Krispies.’ — Maximum noise measured during Artemis-I launch on 16 Nov. 2022 was higher than predicted by marketrent
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