Popular Articles

Cancer Immunotherapy Can Use Small Numbers Of Stem-Like Immune Cells To Destroy Large Tumors In Mice
A new approach to stimulating immune cells enhances their anticancer activity, resulting in a powerful anti-tumor response in mice, according to a study by researchers at the National Cancer Institute, a part of the National Institutes of Health. This work represents an important advance in the development of immunotherapy for cancer and appears online June 14, 2009 in Nature Medicine.

Second Strokes Often Follow Within Hours Of A Mild Stroke
About half of all people who have a major stroke following a warning stroke (a transient ischemic attack or mild stroke) have it within 24 hours of the first event, according to research published in the June 2, 2009, print issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
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Carbon Monoxide Prevents Clotting
Researchers led by Drs. James F. George and Anupam Agarwal at the University of Alabama at Birmingham have found that carbon monoxide (CO) can protect against arterial clotting. They report their data in the July 2009 issue of the American Journal of Pathology.
Mental Health

Cold Blooded Criminals Use Violence Indiscriminately, UK

Psychopaths are more likely to use violence in a cold blooded, calculated way than non-psychopathic violent offenders. This is the finding of a study being presented today, Thursday 25th June 2009, at the British Psychological Society Division of Forensic Psychology Annual Conference at the University of Central Lancashire, Preston. John Cordwell, in association with Queen Mary College, University of London, studied 492 violent offenders with convictions from common assault to GBH and manslaughter. He compared their levels of psychopathy (as measured on the Psychopathy Checklist - Revised) to an analysis of the violence they used in their crimes. John Cordwell said: "Psychopaths tend to be callous, un-empathic, cunning, and frequently lie. We discovered that offenders who scored highly on the measure of psychopathy committed significantly more instrumental violence than the other offenders - they used violence to achieve goals such as obtaining money, sex or drugs, and there could be little or no emotional component to this violence. "These results indicate that highly psychopathic criminals are more likely than non-psychopaths to use violence to get what they want, and could be seen as "cold blooded". However, these highly psychopathic offenders are also no less likely than other offenders to become violent in a reactive and impulsive way as a result of a highly emotional state. This study further asks the question of whether reactivity is a genuine phenomenon of psychopathy or actually a phenomenon of violence itself. The conference is being held at the University of Central Lancashire from the 23rd to 25th July. British Psychological Society


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