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Hormone therapy use for menopause declines despite proven benefits, study finds

Hormone therapy use among women in the U.S. remains low, even though it’s an effective treatment for many menopause symptoms, according to a new Mayo Clinic study published in Mayo Clinic Proceedings.

Menopause affects more than one million women each year in the U.S., and up to 75% experience symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats that can last for years. Yet researchers have found that use of menopausal hormone therapy has steadily declined over time.

The new study found that hormone therapy use dropped from 4.4% in 2007 to 1.7% in 2023. Even among women most likely to benefit—those ages 50 to 59—only about 3.5% were using hormone therapy in 2023.

Finding the best ways for humans and robots to work together requires ‘swarm’ thinking

If the future of warehouse work belongs to humans and robots working side by side, a key question remains: What is the most effective way for them to collaborate?

Research published in Transportation Science suggests that the answer may be more flexible than many warehouse operators expect. The study, “Picking the Best Bot: Collaboration Strategies for Humans and Bots in Order Pick Systems with Traveling Salesman Problem Routing,” found that under many real-world conditions, warehouse workers achieve higher productivity when they dynamically switch among multiple autonomous mobile robots rather than work exclusively with a single robot.

The findings challenge a common assumption that fixed human–robot pairings are the most efficient approach.

The Colorado River Is Drying Out. I Paddled it to See What’s at Stake

With flows nearing record lows, the Colorado River and the people who depend on it are in for a rough summer. On a packrafting trip down a popular stretch of the river, a Backpacker editor finds a still-gorgeous landscape—and motivation to keep up the fight for one of America’s most important waterways.

Neuron ‘ground plans’ could simplify brain and behavior research

While E. Josie Clowney would never suggest that neuroscience is simple, a new study by her team at the University of Michigan could drastically reduce complexity in future studies. Their work focused on instinctual behaviors in fruit flies, but it has the potential to accelerate work to better understand the neurobiology that underlies behavior and decision-making in mammals, including humans.

The research establishes a new way to understand neurons, their connectivity and the behaviors they control. Within this new framework, the researchers can circumvent the conventional approach of considering each type of neuron individually and instead focus on groupings defined by shared structure and by two sets of regulatory genes. The work is published in the journal Nature.

While there are more than 8,000 kinds of neurons in the fruit fly cerebrum —the part of its brain where instinctual behaviors are hardwired—there are less than 200 major structural groups, or ground plans. Led by Najia Elkahlah, who recently defended her doctoral thesis in the Clowney lab, the team’s discoveries revealed how these ground plans get set up. There is a sort of order or hierarchy, where one set of genes coordinates the formation of the ground plan, and the other set produces small differences in shape and connectivity among neurons within each ground plan.

Artificial General Intelligence: So Close Yet So Far?

Despite its rapid development and widespread adoption, AI is a nascent technology with vast potential for enormous growth in the coming years.

Decades of science fiction make it easy to imagine a future in which AI evolves beyond task-focused point applications to offer broad, human-like intelligence. Although artificial general intelligence (AGI) is theoretical, the road to real AGI is fraught with serious technological and societal challenges. AGI developers face the daunting hurdles of making AGI work effectively, accurately, reliably — and, most of all, safely.

Blocking apoptosis promotes survival and alters developmental dynamics of human retinal ganglion cells in retinal organoids

Zhang et al. found that two waves of apoptosis occur in developing human retinas and retinal organoids, affecting RPCs and RGCs, respectively. Retinal organoids undergo an additional wave of necrosis in the core, further eliminating RGCs. Blocking apoptosis in organoids promotes RGC long-term survival and delays their neurogenesis and maturation.

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