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Jun 4, 2024

Dozens of passengers on United Airlines flight mysteriously fall ill en route to Texas

Posted by in category: futurism

Several passengers on a United Airlines flight from Vancouver, Canada, to Houston, Texas, fell sick on Friday, with officials explaining that 75 passengers came from a cruise.

Jun 4, 2024

Health records system restored after Ascension hospitals cyber attack in the Austin area

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, cybercrime/malcode, health

Some systems are still down, but medical staff can now use the computer system for patient care after almost four weeks.

Jun 4, 2024

Rare skull of an extinct, massive ‘thunder bird’ discovered in Australia

Posted by in category: futurism

The recent discovery of a complete Genyornis newtoni skull has given scientists their first face-to-face encounter with the extinct, massive ‘thunder bird.’

Jun 4, 2024

AI goes underwater: Transforming coral reef conservation with cutting-edge image analysis

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, sustainability

Coral reefs, nurturing hubs of marine biodiversity, are grappling with mounting threats from environmental shifts. Traditional monitoring techniques, often laborious and invasive, are proving inadequate in the face of rapid ecological changes.

Jun 4, 2024

CMSP series of lectures on “Topology and dynamics of higher-order networks”: lecture 3

Posted by in categories: computing, information science, mathematics, quantum physics

ICTP lectures “Topology and dynamics of higher-order networks”

- Network topology: 1 https://youtube.com/watch?v=mbmsv9RS3Pc

Continue reading “CMSP series of lectures on ‘Topology and dynamics of higher-order networks’: lecture 3” »

Jun 4, 2024

Elemind unveils sleep-enhancing ‘electric medicine’ headband

Posted by in category: neuroscience

Neurotech device uses electrical stimulation to shift brainwave patterns, helping wearers fall asleep faster.

Jun 4, 2024

Brain aging research: A need for balance

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, robotics/AI

“Testing people early, so early interventions are possible, is key to longevity,” she says. “Technology, data and AI, and what we’re starting to be able to do with it, are propelling us to a time of greater understanding which will foster earlier, more effective treatment. Or perhaps even therapies that can delay neurodegenerative diseases, pushing back dementia to beyond our lifespan.”

Mind Over Matter goes out on 29th and 30th June on BBC News and 30th June on BBC One.

Lara Lewington will be hosting a Fireside Chat on AI drug discovery with Alex Zhavoronkov at next week’s Founders Longevity Forum. Register your interest to discover how AI is accelerating drug discovery, commercialization and licensing models HERE.

Jun 4, 2024

Impossible is nothing: Spanish engineers build combustion engine with no exhaust emissions

Posted by in categories: health, sustainability, transportation

Spanish scientists are working on an internal combustion engine that does not pollute the environment. Will the new technology change the future of emission-free transport, which until now has been associated with electrification? Two prototypes will soon be presented.

Until recently, it seemed that combustion vehicles, alongside EVs and vehicles that use biofuels, were not participating in the ongoing ‘race’ for sustainable transport. But this has changed, thanks to Spanish scientists from the Technical University of Valencia (Universitat Politècnica de València, UPV) who are working on an emission-free internal combustion engine.

The Spanish scientists have designed a ‘revolutionary’ internal combustion unit that does not generate gases that are harmful to health or carbon dioxide (CO2), and which also stands out for its high efficiency and complies with the emission regulations planned for 2040. According to the Valencian Innovation Agency, which co-financed the project, the first two prototype engines will come to light in the coming months.

Jun 4, 2024

Johns Hopkins Scientists Solve 30-Year Biological Mystery of Night Blindness

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

In what they believe is a solution to a 30-year biological mystery, neuroscientists at Johns Hopkins Medicine say they have used genetically engineered mice to address how one mutation in the gene for the light-sensing protein rhodopsin results in congenital stationary night blindness.

The condition, present from birth, causes poor vision in low-light settings.

The findings, published May 14 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, demonstrate that the rhodopsin gene mutation, called G90D, produces an unusual background electrical “noise” that desensitizes the eye’s rods, those cells in the retina at the back of the eye responsible for nighttime vision, thus causing night blindness.

Jun 4, 2024

Proton Effective Charge Depends on Neutron Population

Posted by in category: futurism

Experiments comparing neutron-rich cadmium with previous data on a neutron-poor version prove that a key parameter in nuclear calculations depends on the neutron-to-proton ratio.

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