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Jan 12, 2023

COVID-19-Associated Acute Disseminated Encephalomyelitis: A Systematic Review

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

I had similar symptoms, and I thought it was a covid infection. I need to get myself tested for ADEM. If your child or family member has a strange rash on the back or legs, take them to the hospital to see if it is ADEM before they have seizures like I did.

The objective of this study was to provide an overview of acute disseminating encephalomyelitis, a potential and serious complication of COVID-19.


Blood investigations and CSF analysis were done in 17 patients. Raised inflammatory markers were most commonly seen in nine (ferritin raised in four, C-reactive protein in five, and D-dimer in five), and lymphopenia was seen in four patients.

Continue reading “COVID-19-Associated Acute Disseminated Encephalomyelitis: A Systematic Review” »

Jan 12, 2023

Timeline of transhumanism

Posted by in categories: life extension, transhumanism

This is a timeline of transhumanism, attempting to decribe significant events related to the movement. Topics directly related to transhumanism, including extropianism, life extension and eradication of suffering, are also described.

Jan 12, 2023

Recent progress in the understanding of neuraminidase-specific antibodies for the development of universal influenza vaccines

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

A recent study published in Viruses reviewed the characteristics of neuraminidase (NA) with emphasis on the development of NA-based universal influenza vaccines.

Influenza causes significant morbidity and mortality worldwide. The influenza virus harbors two glycoproteins on the surface – hemagglutinin (HA) and NA. Infection-or vaccine-induced immune responses are targeted toward HA. Besides, NA-specific antibodies confer protection and can reduce infection severity.

Existing seasonal influenza vaccines confer narrow immune responses specific to the strain, and their efficacy depends on how well the vaccine strains match those in circulation. Thus, universal influenza vaccines with high breadth and potency are required. In the present study, the authors discussed the characteristics of NA, anti-NA antibodies, and recent progress in developing NA-based vaccines.

Jan 12, 2023

Does Our Consciousness Continue After Death?

Posted by in category: neuroscience

What is the experience of death? Can one’s consciousness continue after death and if so, for how long?

Catch an all new EXPEDITION UNKNOWN: SEARCH FOR THE AFTERLIFE sunday 10p on discovery.

Continue reading “Does Our Consciousness Continue After Death?” »

Jan 12, 2023

Generative AI, cloud computing and security top tech trends for 2023: Alibaba academy

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, security

Alibaba Damo Academy, an in-house research initiative by Chinese technology giant Alibaba, has identified generative artificial intelligence, dual-engine decision intelligence, cloud computing and security as top technology trends for 2023.

Jan 12, 2023

Astronomers create new microwave map of the Milky Way and beyond

Posted by in categories: mapping, space

An international team of scientists have successfully mapped the magnetic field of our galaxy, the Milky Way, using telescopes that observe the sky in the microwave range. The new research is published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

The team used the QUIJOTE (Q-U-I JOint TEnerife) Collaboration, sited at the Teide Observatory on Tenerife in the Canary Islands. This comprises two 2.5 m diameter telescopes, which observe the sky in the microwave part of the electromagnetic spectrum.

Led by the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC), the mapping began in 2012. Almost a decade later, the Collaboration has presented a series of 6 , giving the most accurate description to date of the polarization of the emission of the Milky Way at microwave wavelengths. Polarization is a property of transverse waves such as that specifies the direction of the oscillations of the waves and signifies the presence of a magnetic field.

Jan 12, 2023

‘A perfect little system’: Physicists isolate a pair of atoms to observe p-wave interaction strength for the first time

Posted by in categories: chemistry, particle physics, quantum physics

“Suppose you knew everything there was to know about a water molecule—the chemical formula, the bond angle, etc.,” says Joseph Thywissen, a professor in the Department of Physics and a member of the Centre for Quantum Information & Quantum Control at the University of Toronto.

“You might know everything about the molecule, but still not know there are waves on the ocean, much less how to surf them,” he says. “That’s because when you put a bunch of molecules together, they behave in a way you probably cannot anticipate.”

Thywissen is describing the concept in physics known as emergence: the relationship between the behavior and characteristics of individual particles and large numbers of those particles. He and his collaborators have taken a first step in understanding this transition from “one-to-many” particles by studying not one, not many, but two isolated, interacting particles, in this case potassium atoms.

Jan 12, 2023

Now on the molecular scale: Electric motors

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology

Electric vehicles, powered by macroscopic electric motors, are increasingly prevalent on our streets and highways. These quiet and eco-friendly machines got their start nearly 200 years ago when physicists took the first tiny steps to bring electric motors into the world.

Now a multidisciplinary team led by Northwestern University has made an electric motor you can’t see with the naked eye: an on the molecular scale.

This early work—a motor that can convert into unidirectional motion at the —has implications for and particularly medicine, where the electric molecular motor could team up with biomolecular motors in the human body.

Jan 12, 2023

China-Solar Camera/Data

Posted by in category: space

China publishes data on solar atmosphere captured by space-based solar camera.

Jan 12, 2023

For The First Time, Physicists Have Used Antimatter in One of The Most Famous Physics Experiments

Posted by in category: particle physics

For the first time, scientists have performed an iconic physics experiment with a positron — the antimatter counterpart of an electron, one of the fundamental particles.

Not only did they get some truly interesting results, but this achievement could become the first step towards potentially revolutionary discoveries.

The experiment — an antimatter version of the famous double-slit setup — was carried out by researchers from Switzerland and Italy in order to lay the groundwork for a novel line of super-sensitive experiments that might help solve a mystery concerning the Universe’s two domains of matter.