Monday, November 19, 2012

Gene predicts time of death

  • Gene Predicts Time Of Death Down To The Hour: Study

    Genetic "switches" determine much about our bodies, including hair color, blood type and disposition to certain diseases.

    www.huffingtonpost.com

  • Study: A Gene Predicts What Time of Day You Will Die

    IMPLICATIONS: More relevant than allowing us to channel our inner Nate Silver and predicting the time of people's death, understanding people's individualized rhythms can allow us to reschedule things like school and work hours to help people function ...

    www.theatlantic.com

  • Gene Predicts Time of Death

    A common gene variant separates early birds from night owls, and can even predict someone's hour of death. The findings—published in the November issue of the journal Annals of Neurology—could help people schedule anything from work to medical ...

    www.genengnews.com

  • The time of your death is in your genes

    The time of your death is in your genes. By Charlotte Beugge 19.11.12. Scientists have discovered a gene which predicts what time of day you'll die - but, rather unhelpfully, does not provide the date. A team of scientists investigating the development ...

    www.lifeinsurance.co.uk

  • Gene variant that predicts time of death

    Scientists have for the first time discovered a common gene variant that influences when you will wake up each day and the time of the day you are most likely to die, a new study has claimed. Researchers identified the gene variant that affects ...

    english.samaylive.com

  • Genetic Variants Could Predict Time Of Death And Whether You Are A Night Owl ...

    Scientists have for the first time identified a common gene variant which not only determines whether or not a person is an early riser or a night owl, but could also indicate what time of day an individual is likely to die. The research, which is ...

    www.redorbit.com

  • Gene That Determines If You're A Night Owl Or An Early Bird Also Makes A ...

    It may help researchers predict what time you're going to die, like a gypsy made of DNA. Andrew Lim, an author on the study, had this to say of the gene, which seems to be ... The natural circadian rhythm of death means most people are likely to kick ...

    www.geekosystem.com

  • Early bird? Night Owl? Beth Israel says there's a gene for that

    Much creepier, researchers say this gene can also predict what time of day a person is most likely to die. In the past, researchers have ... While the majority of deaths occur before 11 a.m., those in the G-G group died before 6 p.m.. Lim and his ...

    www.masshightech.com

  • The keys to cancer therapy hide deep in evolution

    The price that ordinary cells pay for this is death; most replicate for a while, but all commit suicide when at their use-by date, a process known as apoptosis.

    www.canberratimes.com.au

  • The gene that controls the body clock, NHS patients that are unwittingly going ...

    The Daily Mail reports that the gene variation affects the body clock so much that it predicts the time of day that a patient is most likely to die.

    www.pulsetoday.co.uk

  • Post Time: 2012 Projections at a glance

    By Gene Kershner. It's a slow time in the thoroughbred racing world, so let's take a timeout this week and take a glance back at some of my 2012 predictions that I concocted last December at the EquiSpace blog. On an annual basis for the past three ...

    blogs.buffalonews.com

  • Talking With Josh Finney About Titanium Rain

    But the real "moment" of inspiration came late one night while thinking about one of my personal heroes, Gene Roddenberry.

    www.bleedingcool.com

  • Meta-Review of 46 Studies: Even the Lowest-Level Radiation Is Damaging to ...

    [Background] He suggests two reasons: first, some effects may result from genetic damage that manifests itself only after several generations of cells have been exposed, and, second, a "bystander effect," in which a cell absorbs radiation and seems ...

    www.globalresearch.ca

  • Lung cancer odds better with gene test

    Through that chance encounter, Heinrichs, a Hillsborough resident, became one of the first patients to benefit from a new molecular test developed by UCSF researchers that can predict whether a tumor - even at the earliest stage - is likely to turn ...

    www.sfgate.com

  • Predictions: This time it's all red — Dogs, Falcons win

    Predictions: This time it's all red - Dogs, Falcons win. 12:34 pm ... and this is why I always check under my car for suspicious wire before starting it - it's time to check in on the remains of Gene Chizik. Two years ago ... the Peoples Republic of ...

    blogs.ajc.com

  • Fear, Reward, and The Bottle: An Update to My Column on Neurogenetics

    He hopes that the Duke Neurogenetics Study, as he's dubbed it, will reveal some of the ways in which the variations in our genes influence our brain circuitry and, ultimately, our personality and behavior. Hariri plans to collect data from over ...

    blogs.discovermagazine.com

  • Commentary: Nature or nurture

    I found out I had a slightly increased risk for Type II diabetes, for example - but thankfully no identifiable genetic risk factors for cancer, dementia or early heart disease.

    savannahnow.com

  • The Autism Project: Mothers with ASD ask why scientists are missing girls

    Stephen Scherer, director of the Centre for Applied Genomics at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children, co-led an international study that discovered the X chromosomes of a small number of men with autism have a deleted patch in a genetic region that ...

    www.thestar.com

  • Answers About Alzheimer's, Part 1

    It is a result of how our brains are wired to enable predictions of future needs based on relevance and strength of associations.

    www.nytimes.com

  • Prostate Cancer Research: 10 Things We've Learned So Far This Year

    Prostate cancer is the most common kind of cancer and the second leading cause of death from cancer for men in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    www.huffingtonpost.com

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