Menu

Blog

Page 4562

Dec 11, 2021

Machine-learning system flags remedies that might do more harm than good

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

The system could help physicians select the least risky treatments in urgent situations, such as treating sepsis.

Sepsis claims the lives of nearly 270,000 people in the U.S. each year. The unpredictable medical condition can progress rapidly, leading to a swift drop in blood pressure, tissue damage, multiple organ failure, and death.

Prompt interventions by medical professionals save lives, but some sepsis treatments can also contribute to a patient’s deterioration, so choosing the optimal therapy can be a difficult task. For instance, in the early hours of severe sepsis, administering too much fluid intravenously can increase a patient’s risk of death.

Continue reading “Machine-learning system flags remedies that might do more harm than good” »

Dec 11, 2021

Machine learning speeds up vehicle routing

Posted by in categories: information science, mathematics, robotics/AI, transportation

Strategy accelerates the best algorithmic solvers for large sets of cities.

Waiting for a holiday package to be delivered? There’s a tricky math problem that needs to be solved before the delivery truck pulls up to your door, and MIT researchers have a strategy that could speed up the solution.

The approach applies to vehicle routing problems such as last-mile delivery, where the goal is to deliver goods from a central depot to multiple cities while keeping travel costs down. While there are algorithms designed to solve this problem for a few hundred cities, these solutions become too slow when applied to a larger set of cities.

Continue reading “Machine learning speeds up vehicle routing” »

Dec 11, 2021

Asteroid Nereus Cruised Past Earth Today. In 39 Years It Could Be Mined For $5 Billion In Precious Metals

Posted by in categories: futurism, space

The possibility of space mining in future was thrown into sharp relief this weekend as a Near Earth Asteroid (NEA) called 4,660 Nereus passed our planet.

Worth an estimated $5 billion in precious metals and measuring 330 meters across, Nereus at no point came anywhere near being dangerous, getting no closer than 2.4 million miles/3.9 million kilometers at 13:51 UTC on Saturday, December 11, 2021.

That’s about 10 times the distance between the Earth and the Moon.

Continue reading “Asteroid Nereus Cruised Past Earth Today. In 39 Years It Could Be Mined For $5 Billion In Precious Metals” »

Dec 11, 2021

Exotic six-quark particle predicted by supercomputers

Posted by in categories: particle physics, supercomputing

The predicted existence of an exotic particle made up of six elementary particles known as quarks by RIKEN researchers could deepen our understanding of how quarks combine to form the nuclei of atoms.

Quarks are the fundamental building blocks of matter. The nuclei of atoms consist of protons and neutrons, which are in turn made up of three quarks each. Particles consisting of three quarks are collectively known as baryons.

Scientists have long pondered the existence of systems containing two baryons, which are known as dibaryons. Only one dibaryon exists in nature—deuteron, a hydrogen nucleus made up of a proton and a neutron that are very lightly bound to each other. Glimpses of other dibaryons have been caught in nuclear-physics experiments, but they had very fleeting existences.

Dec 11, 2021

What If Doctors Are Always Watching, but Never There?

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, robotics/AI

🤔

I would prefer it if the data was anonymized and handed back to the patient via an AI interface on the assessment, — Recommended actions and risks involved with each decision. It would then be up to the patient to share the data with a doctor or not, to decide how much data they want to share, and to what extent recommendations can interfere with their day to day life. I’m gonna have a glass of wine. AI: this is your 3rd glass today, do you want to know the risks associated with this decision? No. AI: ok-do you want to monitor vital health statistics in relation to drinking wine instead of water? No. AI; Do you want / Just shut up. Erase all records of my wine drinking and do not monitor this going forward. To live means to die, at least for now. Don’t touch my wine 🍷


Remote technology could save lives by monitoring health from home or outside the hospital. It could also push patients and health care providers further apart.

Continue reading “What If Doctors Are Always Watching, but Never There?” »

Dec 11, 2021

China Pressuring Thailand for Thai Chana App Personal, Location Data

Posted by in category: futurism

We’ve come a long way since the days of gunboat diplomacy…

Welcome to datamacy, the international data exchange powering relations between people, companies and countries.

Thailand has its own ways of dealing with such ‘requests’ 😁

Continue reading “China Pressuring Thailand for Thai Chana App Personal, Location Data” »

Dec 11, 2021

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope will spend its first year looking for primordial galaxies, gold-forging explosions, and habitable planets

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, space

NASA is about to launch the world’s most powerful space telescope. Webb’s first year of science could rewrite the history of the universe.


Recently, OpenAI opened public access to GPT-3, one of the world’s most sophisticated AI writing tools. It might fool you in a conversation.

Dec 11, 2021

Passing the Turing Test: AI creates human-like text

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Recently, OpenAI opened public access to GPT-3, one of the world’s most sophisticated AI writing tools. It might fool you in a conversation.

Dec 11, 2021

Experiment finds evidence for a long-sought particle comprising four neutrons

Posted by in categories: particle physics, space

While all atomic nuclei except hydrogen are composed of protons and neutrons, physicists have been searching for a particle consisting of two, three or four neutrons for over half a century. Experiments by a team of physicists of the Technical University of Munich (TUM) at the accelerator laboratory on the Garching research campus now indicate that a particle comprising four bound neutrons may well exist.

While agree that there are no systems in the universe made of only protons, they have been searching for particles comprising two, three or four neutrons for more than 50 years.

Should such a particle exist, parts of the theory of the strong interaction would need to be rethought. In addition, studying these particles in more detail could help us better understand the properties of neutron stars.

Dec 11, 2021

Hacking the child brain: The 5 step process to unlock every kid’s potential

Posted by in categories: education, neuroscience

The biggest myth in education is that some kids are destined for greatness and others aren’t.