Air pollution has been convincingly linked to respiratory illnesses, while run-off from industries has not only diminished ...
Air pollution silently reduces global cognitive potential, driving inequality and threatening brain health across all generations.
Researchers argue that exposure to fine particulate air pollution (PM2.5) may affect cognitive function and intelligence, potentially causing large population-level losses in global IQ. Using ...
Air pollution caused by wildfires can raise the risks of cardiovascular events and death, but the impact is inconsistent, according to new data from two major California wildfires. Increased risks of ...
Scent is essential to ant society: every ant within a colony wears the badge of membership in the form of smelly hydrocarbons ...
Even at levels safe for humans, air pollution can disrupt the way some insects communicate with plants, and with each other.
Something quietly alarming is happening in cities, suburbs, and rural communities alike. People are checking air quality apps before stepping outside. They're buying N95 masks in bulk, sealing their ...
The Cool Down on MSN
Stanford study reveals how 22 million Americans can quickly avoid exposure to air pollution: 'The No. 1 thing they could do'
"Seeing it in real time was a surprise to me." Stanford study reveals how 22 million Americans can quickly avoid exposure to ...
Eating fruit may reduce the effects of air pollution on lung function, according to research presented at the European Respiratory Society Congress in Amsterdam, the Netherlands [1]. The study was ...
Future Cardiol. 2012;8(4):577-602. A recently published meta-analysis of the studies addressing the question of oxidative stress and PM scrutinized the evidence from the controlled exposures, panel ...
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