Showing posts with label research outcomes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label research outcomes. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

4,000 Meters Below Sea Level, Scientists Have Found the Spectacular ‘Dark Oxygen’

 4,000 Meters Below Sea Level, Scientists Have Found the Spectacular ‘Dark Oxygen’

What if it could solve all of our energy problems?

By
  • Scattered across an abyssal plain known as the Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ) are polymetallic nodules that are a potato-sized prize for mining companies in search of materials needed for humanity's green energy transition.
  • A study analyzing these modules reveals that these rocky lumps are capable of producing “dark oxygen” 4,000 meters below sea level where light cannot reach.
  • While this discovery could upend our understanding of how life started on Earth, the study also complicates negotiations around deep-sea mining regulations as it showcases how little we really know about the ocean’s depths.

Nestled between Hawaii and the western coast of Mexico lies the Pacific Ocean’s Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ), a 4.5 million-kilometer-square area of abyssal plain bordered by the Clarion and Clipperton Fracture Zones. Although this stretch of sea is a vibrant ecosystem filled with marine life, the CCZ is known best for its immense collection of potato-sized rocks known as polymetallic nodules.

These rocks, of which there are potentially trillions, are filled with rich deposits of nickel, manganese, copper, zinc, cobalt. Those particular metals are vital for the batteries needed to power a green energy future, leading some mining companies to refer to nodules as a “battery in a rock.”

Source: https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/environment/ (06/05/2026)

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Science Says Sleeping in a Really Dark Room Will Make You Smarter

 Science Says Sleeping in a Really Dark Room Will Make You Smarter

The darker the room tonight, the smarter and more alert you’ll be tomorrow. 

EXPERT OPINION BY JEFF HADEN @JEFF_HADEN

 

Brain Swirl Tech W18 

 You probably already know you need at least seven hours of sleep a night to function at your best. (And don’t say, “Not me. I do just fine on five or six hours.” According to a study published in Cell Research, only a tiny fraction of the population functions well on less than seven hours.)

Why? A 2018 study published in Sleep says if you only sleep for five to six hours you’re 19 percent less productive than people who regularly sleep for seven to eight hours. If you only sleep five hours a night? You’re nearly 30 percent less productive.

That’s especially true for entrepreneurs: A study published in Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice found that lack of sleep makes people more likely to start a business on impulse or whim rather than on a solid, well-considered idea. More broadly, a study published in Journal of Business Venturing found that lack of sleep causes you to come up with worse ideas.

And to believe your bad ideas are actually good ideas. ​

So, yeah: Getting enough sleep is actually a competitive advantage.

Especially if you take it one step further. According to a 2022 study published in Sleep, sleeping in as close to total darkness as possible can not only improve the quality of your sleep, it can also improve your memory and alertness. 

After just two nights of wearing a sleep mask, participants:

  • Displayed significantly better learning skills
  • Displayed significantly better physical reaction times
  • Learned new motor skills more quickly

Why? One explanation could be the “synaptic homeostasis hypothesis,” the theory that increased slow-wave activity during sleep (which is promoted by darkness) promotes the “down-scaling” of synapses that became saturated while you were awake and restores your capacity for encoding new information. 

Or, in non-researcher-speak, a dark night’s sleep primes both your cognitive and motor skills for the next day. The same holds true for feeling (and actually being) more alert.

That doesn’t mean I’m eager to embrace a sleep mask. It feels weird to have a mask on, and it made me feel like I didn’t sleep as well. But I’m probably wrong; as the researchers write: 

It deserves mention that even though participants reported that sleeping with the control mask was more uncomfortable in comparison with the eye mask, this did not impact self-reported sleep quality, morning alertness, or sleep parameters.

So even if you don’t love the idea of a mask, the mask will still — in terms of the benefits it provides — love you back. 

But you don’t have to wear a mask. Draw your blinds. Consider room-darkening curtains. Turn off device notifications and leave them face-down on your nightstand. The darker you make your bedroom — the more you limit the presence of ambient or intermittent light that can disturb your sleep — the more you’ll benefit in terms of memory performance and alertness the next day.

As the researchers write:

Given the current climate of life-hacking, sleep monitoring, and cognitive enhancers, our findings suggest the eye mask as a simple, economical, and noninvasive way to get more out of a night of sleep.

Source: https://www.inc.com/jeff-haden/science-says-sleeping-in-a-really-dark-room-will-make-you-smarter/91269306 (25/11/2025)

Thursday, March 8, 2018

RESEARCH STUDY SAYS: Welcome! to my new weblog via Google Blogger

RESEARCH STUDY SAYS

Google/Blogger supported my new personal weblog on the Research Findings, Outcomes etc.

Hello Everyone,
Welcome!! to my new blog via Google Blogger.

This weblog shall cover any type of research studies in all the disciplines and across the globe.

For the benefit of mankind, hope, this shall serve as a treasure trove of information on "What Research Says?"

Look for the valuable feedbacks from the viewers...
Thank you!!

Best regards,
Puttaraj Choukimath
Asst. Librarian (SG),
TISS, Mumbai.

Economists have found an answer to slowing cognitive decline: avoid retiring early, study finds

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