Menu

Blog

Page 1538

Feb 7, 2024

Lucid Dreaming Breakthrough Achieved as Researchers Report Successful Control of a Virtual Object While Sleeping

Posted by in category: innovation

The first two-way control of a virtual object by study participants while lucid dreaming has been documented, according to the findings of a new research effort.

Researchers with REMspace, a California startup, report that five participants in the recent study were successfully able to control a virtual Cybertruck while lucid dreaming, and even avoid obstacles that appeared on a screen.

Multitasking While Dreaming

Feb 7, 2024

First passages of rolled-up Herculaneum scroll revealed

Posted by in categories: media & arts, robotics/AI

Researchers used artificial intelligence to decipher the text of 2,000-year-old charred papyrus scripts, unveiling musings on music and capers.

Feb 7, 2024

Ecstadelic GPT: Navigating the Frontiers of Mind, Technology, and Future

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, life extension, robotics/AI, transhumanism

Ecstadelic GPT, powered by GPT-4, is pioneering the frontier of AI-assisted understanding of Biohacking, Anti-Aging, Superlongevity, Wellness, Technohedonism, SuperWellbeing, Personal Development, Self-Transcendence, Transhumanism.

Feb 7, 2024

Gut microbiota’s impact: linking neonatal jaundice and IBD through bilirubin processing

Posted by in category: futurism

The low amount of bacteria from the gut microbiota able to process bilirubin, a product of heme degradation, during the neonatal period of life suggests a strong connection between the microbiome composition and development of jaundice in infants. In other words, the lack of certain bacteria in the gut of infants seems to be linked to the risk of developing jaundice.

Feb 7, 2024

Bill Gates’ TerraPower joins shipbuilders for nuclear-powered ships

Posted by in category: nuclear energy

Core Power, HD Hyundai, TerraPower, and Southern Company collaborate on nuclear power for shipping, focusing on small modular reactor (SMR) technology.

Feb 7, 2024

Samsung Galaxy Ring Tipped for Late 2024 Launch: What We Know So Far

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, privacy

A patent from Samsung also suggests the ring will contain a biometric sensor and two narrow screens on the ring’s outside edges to display notifications.

Feb 7, 2024

Scientists just turned toxic red mud into CO2-free iron — here’s how

Posted by in category: sustainability

Discover how scientists are revolutionizing metal production by transforming aluminium waste into green steel, slashing CO2 emissions.

Feb 7, 2024

BYD is launching newly developed smart driving ADAS tech next month

Posted by in category: transportation

Chinese EV leader BYD is launching its new in-house smart driving tech next month. According to local reports, the advanced ADAS feature will roll out by the end of March.

A report from LatePost (via CnEVPost) Monday claimed the first BYD city pilot assist driving feature will be available on March 30. BYD’s Denza N7 SUV will be the first of the auto giant’s 20+ lineup to receive the upgrade.

Citing sources close to the matter, the report says major cities like Shenzen (BYD’s headquarters) will be the first to see the feature rollout.

Feb 7, 2024

Meatball made from woolly mammoth unveiled in the Netherlands

Posted by in category: food

An Australian cultured meat startup has “resurrected” the woolly mammoth — in the hope that people will think about eating it.

The challenge: Our traditional way of producing meat — by raising and slaughtering animals — is both bad for the environment and arguably unethical, yet demand for meat continues to increase.

Continue reading “Meatball made from woolly mammoth unveiled in the Netherlands” »

Feb 7, 2024

When Lab-Trained AI Meets the Real World, ‘Mistakes can Happen’

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, employment, robotics/AI

Tissue contamination distracts AI models from making accurate real-world diagnoses. Human pathologists are extensively trained to detect when tissue samples from one patient mistakenly end up on another patient’s microscope slides (a problem known as tissue contamination). But such contamination can easily confuse artificial intelligence (AI) models, which are often trained in pristine, simulated environments, reports a new Northwestern Medicine study.

“We train AIs to tell ‘A’ versus ‘B’ in a very clean, artificial environment, but, in real life, the AI will see a variety of materials that it hasn’t trained on. When it does, mistakes can happen,” said corresponding author Dr. Jeffery Goldstein, director of perinatal pathology and an assistant professor of perinatal pathology and autopsy at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.

“Our findings serve as a reminder that AI that works incredibly well in the lab may fall on its face in the real world. Patients should continue to expect that a human expert is the final decider on diagnoses made on biopsies and other tissue samples. Pathologists fear — and AI companies hope — that the computers are coming for our jobs. Not yet.”