Aggressive behavior as a teenager is linked to faster biological aging by age 30, researchers reported March 5 in the journal Health Psychology. These angry teens also are more likely to pack on ...
According to a new study published in the journal Health Psychology, researchers found that aggressive behavior as a teenager ...
When someone sits in hot air, sweat forms and evaporates, carrying heat away from the skin. This evaporation acts like a cooling system. Submerge the body in water, and that heat escape route largely ...
A new study suggests that theobromine — a compound in dark chocolate — may be linked to slower biological aging.
EpiciphAI公司正研发一款液体活检产品,通过检测无细胞染色质上的组蛋白标记,确定染色质片段的组织来源,并区分该组织中与疾病相关的状态。目前该公司仍处于种子前阶段,其技术的首个应用场景为难以进行活检的组织的癌症诊断与病情监测。
Teens who frequently lash out at others may face lasting physical health consequences later in life, according to research published in the journal Health Psychology. The study found that aggressive ...
Theobromine in dark chocolate is tied to slower cell aging, with higher levels linked to younger biological ages in a KCL ...
Chronic pain has a personalized "brain fingerprint," allowing AI to decode spontaneous pain levels through fMRI scans.
New noninvasive tools reveal that subtle shifts in brain blood flow and oxygen use may mirror key markers of Alzheimer’s risk ...
Adolescent aggression leads to accelerated biological aging and health risks by age 30, driven by ongoing relationship conflict.