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Jan 6, 2023

Cancer Vaccine to Simultaneously Kill and Prevent Brain Cancer Developed

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Summary: A new stem cell therapy approach eliminates established brain tumors and provides long-term immunity, training the immune system to prevent cancer from returning.

Source: Brigham and Women’s Hospital.

Scientists are harnessing a new way to turn cancer cells into potent, anti-cancer agents.

Jan 6, 2023

New Alzheimer’s Drug Approved by FDA, Promises to Slow Disease

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, neuroscience

U.S. health regulators gave early approval to a new Alzheimer’s drug from Eisai Co. and Biogen Inc., the most promising to date in a new class of medicines that may help slow cognitive decline caused by the disease.

The Food and Drug Administration granted conditional approval to the drug, called lecanemab, based on an early study finding it reduced levels of a sticky protein called amyloid from the brains of people with early-stage Alzheimer’s. The companies will sell it under the brand name Leqembi.

Jan 6, 2023

The XBB.1.5 variant is taking over on the East Coast. Will it happen in California too?

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, habitats

You may have come home with it after a recent trip to New England. Or you may have gotten it from that friend or family member who flew in from New York over the holidays.

The newest Omicron subvariant of concern is XBB.1.5, and it has arrived in Southern California. This version of the coronavirus is more contagious and more resistant to existing immunity than any of its predecessors.

“It’s just the latest and greatest and most infectious variant,” said Paula Cannon, a virologist at USC. “It’s amazing to me that this virus keeps finding one more trick to make itself even more infectious, even more transmissible.”

Jan 6, 2023

I asked Chat GPT to build a To-Do app — Have we finally met our replacement?

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Year 2022 Basically this could easily create a near perfect code and solve for coding problems. This could also create the superintelligence in ai.


Are we about to be replaced by an AI, again?

Continue reading “I asked Chat GPT to build a To-Do app — Have we finally met our replacement?” »

Jan 6, 2023

Coupled ferroelectricity and superconductivity in bilayer Td-MoTe2

Posted by in category: futurism

The authors show a hysteretic behaviour of superconductivity as a function of electric field in bilayer Td-MoTe2, representing observations of coupled ferroelectricity and superconductivity.

Jan 6, 2023

Yes, the Universe really is 100% reductionist in nature

Posted by in categories: computing, particle physics, space

In other words, what appears to be emergent to us today, with our present limitations of what its within our power to compute, may someday in the future be describable in purely reductionist terms. Many such systems that were once incapable of being described via reductionism have, with superior models (as far as what we choose to pay attention to) and the advent of improved computing power, now been successfully described in precisely a reductionist fashion. Many seemingly chaotic systems can, in fact, be predicted to whatever accuracy we arbitrarily choose, so long as enough computational resources are available.

Yes, we can’t rule out non-reductionism, but wherever we’ve been able to make robust predictions for what the fundamental laws of nature do imply for large-scale, complex structures, they’ve been in agreement with what we’ve been able to observe and measure. The combination of the known particles that make up the Universe and the four fundamental forces through which they interact has been sufficient to explain, from atomic to stellar scales and beyond, everything we’ve ever encountered in this Universe. The existence of systems that are too complex to predict with current technology is not an argument against reductionism.

Jan 6, 2023

Chip that Mimics the Human Brain

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BDrrjLB7lgE

In this video I discuss why Neuromorphic processors is the future of AI #NeuromorphicChips #Loihi #IntelNeuromorphic.

➞ Register for Phenom AI Day here:
https://bit.ly/3l4CDWx.

Continue reading “Chip that Mimics the Human Brain” »

Jan 6, 2023

A few-layer covalent network of fullerenes

Posted by in category: chemistry

A two-dimensional crystalline polymer of C60, termed graphullerene, is synthesized by chemical vapour transport, and mechanically exfoliated to produce molecularly thin flakes with clean interfaces for potential optoelectronic applications.

Jan 6, 2023

Does cognition bottom out somewhere?

Posted by in category: entertainment

Clip taken from my conversation with Professor Michael Levin. Full episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C96Hq8kDORU&ab_channel=Thinginitself.

Podcast.
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0dUBLTl6qzOfA0xMndLFzq.
Google: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5yZWR…FhMw%3D%3D
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/thing-in-it-self/id1616881426
Amazon: https://music.amazon.ca/podcasts/9c6c08b2-e975-47d6-a897…in-it-self.

Continue reading “Does cognition bottom out somewhere?” »

Jan 6, 2023

Black holes are time machines, with a catch

Posted by in categories: cosmology, space travel, time travel

Sam Baron, Australian Catholic University.

Black holes form natural time machines that allow travel to both the past and the future. But don’t expect to be heading back to visit the dinosaurs any time soon. At present, we don’t have spacecraft that could get us anywhere near a black hole. But, even leaving that small detail aside, attempting to travel into the past using a black hole might be the last thing you ever do.