Tokamak Energy reveals new laser technology which will be installed on its world record-breaking ST40 nuclear fusion reactor.
UCLA bioengineers create thin, flexible neck device translating larynx muscle movements into audible speech.
Duke researchers find limits of energy absorption in transparent materials.
Researchers at Duke University in the US have determined the theoretical limits of how much electromagnetic energy a transparent material can absorb. This can help researchers optimize device designs in the future, but it has also ended a 20-year wait for a mathematical solution to the problem.
Scientists are eager to tackle perplexing questions using DUNE, such as the mystery of why the universe is made of matter and how black holes arise from exploding stars.
Moreover, they want to understand the potential connections between neutrinos, dark matter, and other yet-to-be-discovered particles.
These caverns will soon be home to four large neutrino detectors, each the size of a seven-story building.
GiT Towards Generalist Vision Transformer through Universal Language Interface.
Towards Generalist Vision Transformer through Universal Language Interface.
This paper proposes a simple, yet effective framework, called GiT, simultaneously applicable for various vision tasks only with a vanilla ViT.
Join the discussion on this paper page.
Our understanding of RNA evolution still has a long way to go, but this experiment has made a huge leap forward.
Researchers at Virginia Commonwealth University unveiled a genetic bullseye—a key gene that plays a pivotal role in initiating a genetic domino cascade, driving bone metastasis in prostate cancer.
A key gene that fuels the molecular cascade driving prostate cancer bone metastasis progression may open avenues for targeted therapies.
LinkedIn, the Microsoft-owned social platform, has made a name for itself primarily as a platform for people looking to network and pick up knowledge for professional purposes, and for recruitment — a business that now has more 1 billion users. Now, to boost the time people are spending on the platform, the company is breaking into a totally new area: gaming.
TechCrunch has learned and confirmed that LinkedIn is working on a new games experience. It will be doing so by tapping into the same wave of puzzle-mania that helped simple games like Wordle find viral success and millions of players. Three early efforts are games called “Queens”, “Inference” and “Crossclimb.”
App researchers have started to find code that points to the work LinkedIn is doing. One of them, Nima Owji, said that one idea LinkedIn appears to be experimenting with involves player scores being organised by places of work, with companies getting “ranked” by those scores.