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Feb 9, 2023
When alpha mice are trounced by weaklings, they spiral into depression
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: neuroscience
Feb 9, 2023
Playing Zeus, scientists use a laser beam to control lightning bolts
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: climatology
Feb 9, 2023
How shapeless blobs of cells grow into wriggling worms
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: futurism
For the first time, scientists observed a worm’s cell-by-cell transition from larva to adulthood.
Feb 9, 2023
Scientists breed honey bees to fight deadly parasite
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: futurism
Feb 9, 2023
Plant turns suspected crop pest into pollinator
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: futurism
Feb 9, 2023
Moms’ mitochondria may refresh cells in sick kids
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, innovation
Innovative treatment designed to treat mitochondrial disease shows promise in a few patients.
Feb 9, 2023
How to reverse unknown quantum processes
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: quantum physics
In the world around us, processes appear to follow a certain time-direction: Dandelions eventually turn into blowballs. However, the quantum realm does not play by the same rules. Physicists from the University of Vienna and IQOQI Vienna have now shown that for certain quantum systems, the time-direction of processes can be reversed. This demonstration of a so-called rewinding protocol has been published in Optica.
Everyday life is full of changes that are well understood, yet practically impossible to reverse; for example, the metamorphosis of a dandelion into a blowball. However, one could imagine undoing this transformation, step by step, if one knew precisely how each molecule in the plant moved in time. In the quantum realm the problem gets even trickier: One of the core principles of quantum physics is that simply observing a system causes it to change.
This makes it impossible, even in principle, to track a system’s change in time and reverse the process. However, at the same time, the laws of quantum mechanics also open up new possibilities such as universal rewinding protocols. These allow for reversing changes in a quantum system without knowing what they were.
Feb 9, 2023
Researchers develop new method for specializing and purifying human stem cells into interneurons
Posted by Nicholi Avery in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, neuroscience
Injury to the spinal cord often leads life changing disability, with decreased or complete loss of sensation and movement below the site of injury. From drugs to transplantation, there are many scientific advances aiming to restore function following spinal cord injury.
One promising approach is the use of stem cell derived neurons to replace those damaged. New research from the Centre for Gene Therapy & Regenerative Medicine and Centre for Neurodevelopment at King’s College London hopes to improve on this approach by providing pure populations of neurons made from stem cells.
The spinal cord is a delicate structure, with neurons carry messages from your brain to the rest of your body to allow movement and sensation. Integral to this system are interneurons, or the cells that relay information between your brain and other neurons. Research has previously shown that transplanting a class of interneurons, ventral spinal interneurons, to treat spinal cord injury in animal models provides promising recovery of sensory and motor function.