Question:

Can u please give me 20 best research problem you think of that is not readily yet researched.?

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i'll give 10 points to the person who gives first her/his ideas for me....... its a "questions for professionals' ill pick you up,,,

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  1. The biggest advances are still needed to be made in neurological conditions and diseases.

    Alzheimers, Parkinsons, Multiple Sclerosis (immune & neurological), Retinis Pigmentosa, Huntington's Disease, Adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD), Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS, sometimes called Maladie de Charcot, or Lou Gehrig's), TBI (Traumatic Brain Injury), Spinal Cord Injury, Cerebral Palsy, Cerebrovascular Disease, Epilepsy, Encephalitis, Muscular Dystrophy, Guillain-Barre Syndrome , Von Hippel-Lindau Disease, Meniere's disease, Narcolepsy.


  2. Your one question is behind the funding of millions of dollars worth of NIH (National Institutes of Health) and NSF (National Science Foundation) funding. It is worth potentially billions of dollars.

    Within each area of unresolved research there are twists and turns that arise, and at each twist and turn new questions need to be answered for full understanding of that area. For example, in some viral diseases cells that should die do not, and are able to evade the body's immune response. This is true in HPV and HIV. Research is being conducted in these areas, but new questions keep on coming up as to why things happen. For example, why does the formation of a lasso structure in an intron of HPV's genome help it evade the host's immune response? How does HIV work to escape autophagy? The problems that researchers address are very specific, and honestly, unless you have some background in the area, the questions will probably not make sense to you. This is how research works.    



    If you are a professional, then you know how tightly in competition researchers, especially medical researchers, really are with one another.  As a rule of thumb, researchers on the "cutting edge" of their fields do not openly share their "secrets", (research or research ideas) that are unpublished.  This is because it is very easy for other researchers to take these ideas and use them as their own, and "scoop" other researchers in the field. Likewise, most researchers will say that their field is the most important, as current and future funding for both them and their research depend on others thinking the same thing.

    If you want to really look into research questions, Google PubMed. PubMed is the NIH's  database of articles, and every paper that is published in a scientific journal that is funded through the NIH can be found at this website. You can read the abstracts for free (but need subscriptions to the various journals to read most of the full articles).

    Also, a researcher can have really good ideas, but funding isn't available for that area of research, then the ideas will probably never be examined. This is why really rare diseases  usually are not studied, unless funded privately. The NIH  divides the money that it has available to fund research into different areas, with the majority of funding going to the issues that are more common. A better question for you to ask might be, "what are the top 20 areas that are being funded by the NIH?" This would throw out a researcher's bias for his or her own work or field, and you would get a better picture of what most government health experts feel are important areas of research. You can find this information out by looking at the NIH website.

    I am also biased - I am in neuroscience, so my personal list of research ideas concern neuroscience issues.

  3. most types of cancer

    limb regeneration

    hiv and aids

    avoiding death entirely

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