Researchers reveal communication tactics used by sexual predators to entrap children

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A child’s innocence and vulnerability presents a target for a sexual predator’s abusive behavior. University of Missouri researchers are beginning to understand the communication process by which predators lure victims into a web of entrapment. This information could better equip parents and community members to prevent, or at least interrupt, the escalation of child sexual abuse.


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All News summaries for April 17, 2008

Seeing Alzheimer's amyloids

1 minute ago | User rating: not rated yet
In an important step toward demystifying the role protein clumps play in the development of neurodegenerative disease, researchers have created a stunning three-dimensional picture of an Alzheimer’s peptide ...

New MRI technique developed at UT Southwestern detects subtle but serious brain injury

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A new technique for analyzing magnetic resonance imaging data, developed by researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center, can reveal serious brain injury missed by current tests and help predict a patient’s degree of recovery.

New approach to protect the hearts of patients with muscular dystrophy

31 minutes ago | User rating: not rated yet
A team of researchers has recently shown that the administration of sildenafil protects the heart in mice with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. This study was led by Dr. Christine Des Rosiers from the Université de Montréal and ...

Glypican-3 gene function in regulating body size helps inform novel cancer treatments

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In a leading study that has implications for the development of novel therapies for a number of breast, lung and ovarian cancers that have lost the expression of a gene called glypican-3 (GPC3), Sunnybrook researchers have ...

Anti-inflammatory drugs do not improve cognitive function in older adults

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The anti-inflammatory drugs naproxen and celecoxib do not appear to improve cognitive function in older adults with a family history of Alzheimer’s disease, and naproxen may have a slightly detrimental effect, according to ...