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Scientists make ‘major finding’ with nanodevices that can seemingly produce energy out of thin air: ‘Contradicting prior understanding’

Two scientists at the Swiss Laboratory of Nanoscience for Energy Technologies in the School of Engineering may have hit upon a way to simultaneously produce clean water and clean electricity, all with zero pollution.

Giulia Tagliabue, the head of the laboratory, and Tarique Anwar, a PhD student, focused their research on hydrovoltaic effects, which can harness the power of evaporation to provide a continuous flow of energy in order to harvest electricity using specialized nanodevices.

In less technical terms: It’s a way to create clean energy using the power of evaporation. And scientists are taking interest in it due to its planet-friendliness.

Hacking Healthspan: Gene Therapy and Your Telomeres

Liz Parrish, CEO of BioViva Science, is the world’s most genetically modified person. She took a telomere-restoring gene therapy in 2015 alongside follistatin, making her the first person to take gene therapy to treat biological aging.

But why telomeres?

While there are other ways to measure and address the aging process, lengthening telomeres is an especially promising avenue.

Paper page — Aurora-M: The First Open Source Multilingual Language Model Red-teamed according to the U.S. Executive Order

Aurora-M

The First Open Source Multilingual Language Model Red-teamed according to the U.S. Executive Order https://huggingface.co/papers/2404.

Pretrained language models underpin several AI applications, but their high computational cost for training limits accessibility.


Join the discussion on this paper page.

Identifying inflammation is at the heart of the matter

By contrast, information on coronary inflammation can provide crucial early warning signs of a cardiac event. Yet traditional diagnostic methods of measuring inflammation are not specific for cardiovascular diseases. Inflammation is invisible to CT scans, for instance. And biomarkers such as hsCRP (High-sensitivity C-reactive Protein) measure systemic inflammation, rather than cardiovascular inflammation, so the test may show up high in the case of inflammation driven by non-heart organs.

CaRi-Heart leverages AI tech to detect and quantify coronary inflammation, giving it an edge over traditional diagnostic methods. Cheng explains that while it is important to find patients who already have significantly narrowed coronary arteries, and obviously need immediate treatment, cardiologists often end up archiving many cases of patients with no visible signs of disease but who potentially have high coronary inflammation. This inflammation, driven by cholesterol, or smoking, or diabetes and other risk factors, ultimately causes the wall of the artery to become thickened and narrowed.

Caristo’s CaRi-Heart technology is a non-invasive cloud-based solution that utilizes AI to analyse CT scans, overcoming the limitations of traditional diagnostic methods, offering a more sensitive and specific approach to detecting and quantifying coronary inflammation, says Cheng. CaRi-Heart is the only commercially available technology that can detect and measure coronary inflammation on routine cardiac CT scans, and it has been cleared for clinical use in the UK, EU and Australia.