
Kayla Yup
pig lover & biology major @yale | past: health/science reporting @wsj @thenation @toledonews @nationshealth @yaledailynews @yalesciencemag
Articles
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2 days ago |
inquirer.com | Aubrey Whelan |Kayla Yup |Stephen Stirling |Lizzie Mulvey
President Donald Trump’s administration says it has cut tens of millions of dollars in research funding from universities and research centers in Philadelphia. The Inquirer has been tracking these cuts for months, analyzing the impact to research in the region from the grant terminations playing out nationally.
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Nov 25, 2024 |
wsj.com | Kayla Yup
Alannah Gayden was on a date when she decided to spice things up. While her suitor stepped away from their restaurant booth to take a call, the 26-year-old applied Pure Instinct’s Roll-On Pheromone Perfume to the inside of her wrists and her neck. In her account, her date went wild after he returned to the table. He held her close, smelling her and telling her she was beautiful. “Never seen a reaction like that in my life,” said Gayden, of Elizabethtown, Ky., who works in social-media marketing.
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Oct 18, 2024 |
geneticliteracyproject.org | Kayla Yup
Imagine a world where you could regenerate a missing tooth with a single drug, and microrobots clean your teeth every night. That future is getting closer, scientists say. “We are really looking for disruptive technology,” says Dr. Hyun (Michel) Koo, co-founding director of the Center for Innovation & Precision Dentistry at the University of Pennsylvania. Teeth-cleaning microrobotsA swarm of microrobots could clean your teeth for you.
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Oct 4, 2024 |
reforma.com | Kayla Yup
Robot de limpieza y luz roja: el futuro de la salud dental05 MIN 00 SEGKayla Yup / THE WALL STREET JOURNALNueva York, Estados Unidos (04 octubre 2024) .-05:00 hrsCientíficos trabajan en trasplantes de microbiota oral y en un gel que reconstruye el esmalte. Crédito: BLOOMBERGImagina un mundo en el que pudieras regenerar un diente faltante con un solo fármaco y microrobots limpiaran tus dientes todas las noches.
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Oct 1, 2024 |
wsj.com | Kayla Yup
Imagine a world where you could regenerate a missing tooth with a single drug, and microrobots clean your teeth every night. That future is getting closer, scientists say. “We are really looking for disruptive technology,” says Dr. Hyun (Michel) Koo, co-founding director of the Center for Innovation & Precision Dentistry at the University of Pennsylvania.
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