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Aug 3, 2023

OpenAI Just Shuttered Its AI Detection Tool

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

That was fast.

Less than six months after its public release, it appears that OpenAI has shut down its “AI classifier,” an AI-detection tool that the ChatGPT creator had previously billed as a “classifier to distinguish between text written by a human and text written by AIs from a variety of providers.”

“While it is impossible to reliably detect all AI-written text, we believe good classifiers can inform mitigations for false claims that AI-generated text was written by a human,” reads an OpenAI blog post introducing the tool, published January 31 of this year, “for example, running automated misinformation campaigns, using AI tools for academic dishonesty, and positioning an AI chatbot as a human.”

Aug 3, 2023

Trolls Immediately Steal Twitter CEO’s Handle After “X” Name Change

Posted by in category: futurism

Another stone left unbranded in Twitter’s disastrous X rebrand: CEO Linda Yaccarino’s former username, which was quickly snagged by a troll.

Aug 3, 2023

Scramble to Validate Superconductor Breakthrough Confirms Zero Resistance, With a Catch

Posted by in categories: innovation, materials

Chinese researchers have announced in a video that they’ve verified LK-99’s ability to conduct current with zero resistance, but questions still linger.

Aug 3, 2023

The mechanisms of triptan using metabolomics and transcriptomics in spontaneous migraine attacks

Posted by in category: futurism

Migraines are characterized by moderate to severe headache attacks and are commonly considered polygenic disorders. Typically, migraines are treated with triptans like serotonin receptor agonists; however, the mechanisms of triptans are debated upon, with these agents only effective in only about 60% of the population.

A new Scientific Reports study discusses the mechanisms of triptans for the treatment of spontaneous migraine attacks by using transcriptomics and metabolomics.

Aug 3, 2023

Pinwheel house by JM Architecture resembles ‘a white pebble in the landscape’

Posted by in categories: habitats, materials

Glossy white-concrete panels clad this holiday home with a pentagonal plan in Italy, which has been designed by Milan studio JM Architecture.

The dwelling is named Pinwheel after its distinctive shape, which was JM Architecture’s solution for the client’s “only request” – that it offers views of both the nearby Lake Maggiore and surrounding alpine valleys.

“While exploring several design options for a compact house to fit on this small plot, we realised that the building constraints and the client’s requirements resulted in the simple geometry of a pentagon shape,” said JM Architecture founder Jacopo Mascheroni.

Aug 3, 2023

World’s First Tooth Regrowth Medicine Enters Clinical Trials — ‘Every Dentist’s Dream’ Could Be A Life-Changing Reality

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

A pioneering dental medicine project in Japan is making strides toward clinical trials, with the aim of becoming the world’s first tooth-regrowing treatment, according to the country’s national news site Mainichi.

The upcoming trial will be focused on patients affected by anodontia, a genetic condition characterized by the absence of teeth, or partial anodontia, where people are missing some teeth, as described by the National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD).

Clinical trials are scheduled to begin next July in Japan. If successful, regulatory approval for the tooth-regrowing medicine is anticipated by 2030, potentially heralding groundbreaking advancements in dentistry.

Aug 3, 2023

Antiviral Peptoids Target Lipid to Burst Bubble-Like Membranes

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Antiviral therapies are notoriously difficult to develop, as viruses can quickly mutate to become resistant to drugs, or hide within cells. Researchers at NYU have now developed a new approach to antiviral treatment that ignores the fast-mutating proteins on the surface of viruses and instead targets lipids in the membranes of enveloped viruses, which disrupts their protective layers. In a newly published study the researchers showed how these novel peptoid molecules, inspired by the immune system, could inactivate several viruses, including Zika and chikungunya. The team suggests their approach may not only lead to drugs that can be used against many viruses, but could also help overcome antiviral resistance.

“We found an Achilles heel of many viruses: their bubble-like membranes,” said Kent Kirshenbaum, PhD, professor of chemistry at NYU. “Exploiting this vulnerability and disrupting the membrane is a promising mechanism of action for developing new antivirals.” Kirshenbaum is senior author of the team’s published paper in ACS Infectious Diseases, which is titled “Peptidomimetic Oligomers Targeting Membrane Phosphatidylserine Exhibit Broad Antiviral Activity.”

Continue reading “Antiviral Peptoids Target Lipid to Burst Bubble-Like Membranes” »

Aug 3, 2023

Diamagnetically stabilized magnet levitation

Posted by in categories: energy, materials

Year 2001 😗😁


Stable levitation of one magnet by another with no energy input is usually prohibited by Earnshaw’s theorem. However, the introduction of diamagnetic material at special locations can stabilize such levitation. A magnet can even be stably suspended between (diamagnetic) fingertips. A very simple, surprisingly stable room temperature magnet levitation device is described that works without superconductors and requires absolutely no energy input. Our theory derives the magnetic field conditions necessary for stable levitation in these cases and predicts experimental measurements of the forces remarkably well. New levitation configurations are described which can be stabilized with hollow cylinders of diamagnetic material. Measurements are presented of the diamagnetic properties of several samples of bismuth and graphite.

Aug 3, 2023

New all-electric thruster draws ‘limitless power from the Sun’

Posted by in categories: quantum physics, space travel

😀 😍 🤩


Imaginima / iStock.

Continue reading “New all-electric thruster draws ‘limitless power from the Sun’” »

Aug 3, 2023

Standard Model Stays Strong for Leptons

Posted by in category: particle physics

Newly released data taken using the Belle II experiment at KEK in Japan and the LHCb experiment at CERN in Switzerland show no sign of a possible anomaly that researchers think could provide a route to overturning the standard model of particle physics [13].

According to the standard model, electrons, muons, and tau leptons should all behave identically when subjected to any of the fundamental forces of nature. Over a decade ago, researchers began questioning the validity of this assumption—known as lepton universality—when they observed high-energy particle decays that deviated from standard-model predictions. Specifically, the observations concerned the decay of B mesons into various leptons, with the experiments hinting that a few more tau leptons were being produced than expected. Excitement built among particle physicists, who hoped they were on the cusp of finding the long-sought standard-model violation that would uncover new physical phenomena. Hopes rose further as other experiments found hints of lepton-universality violations in the decay of B mesons into electrons and muons, but the signals remained too small to rule out experimental artifacts.

Then at the end of last year, hopes began to fade when the LHCb Collaboration released data for B-meson decays involving electrons and muons that exactly matched standard-model predictions [2, 3]. Now data from the Belle II Collaboration for a different B-meson decay involving electrons and muons dim those hopes further [1]. The study provides the most precise lepton-universality test yet in such decays. But researchers haven’t yet given up on leptons unlocking a door to new physics, says Belle II Collaboration member Henrik Junkerkalefeld of the University of Bonn, Germany. He notes that, although the results provide new constraints on the options for undiscovered physics, they don’t completely rule them all out.