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Sep 24, 2021

Machine learning uncovers ‘genes of importance’ in agriculture and medicine

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

“We show that focusing on genes whose expression patterns are evolutionarily conserved across species enhances our ability to learn and predict ‘genes of importance’ to growth performance for staple crops, as well as disease outcomes in animals,” explained Gloria Coruzzi, Carroll & Milton Petrie Professor in NYU’s Department of Biology and Center for Genomics and Systems Biology and the paper’s senior author.


Machine learning can pinpoint “genes of importance” that help crops to grow with less fertilizer, according to a new study published in Nature Communications. It can also predict additional traits in plants and disease outcomes in animals, illustrating its applications beyond agriculture.

Using to predict outcomes in agriculture and medicine is both a promise and challenge for . Researchers have been working to determine how to best use the vast amount of genomic data available to predict how organisms respond to changes in nutrition, toxins, and pathogen exposure—which in turn would inform crop improvement, disease prognosis, epidemiology, and public health. However, accurately predicting such complex outcomes in agriculture and medicine from genome-scale information remains a significant challenge.

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Sep 24, 2021

CISA releases advisory on Conti ransomware, notes increase in attacks after more than 400 incidents

Posted by in category: cybercrime/malcode

CISA did a deep dive on the Conti ransomware, providing information for those protecting organizations.

Sep 24, 2021

Researchers discovered a ‘unprecedented’ giant spherical void in space

Posted by in category: space

Researchers make an ‘unprecedented’ discovery of a sphere-shaped void in space that stretches 500 light-years in diameter.

Sep 24, 2021

Samsung in talks with Tesla to make next-gen self-driving chips —Korea Economic Daily

Posted by in categories: economics, robotics/AI, transportation

The logo of Samsung Electronics is seen at its office building in Seoul, South Korea, August 25 2017. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo.

SEOUL, Sept 23 (Reuters) — Samsung Electronics (005930.KS) is in talks with Tesla (TSLA.O) to make Tesla’s next-generation self-driving chips based on Samsung’s 7-nanometre chip production process, a South Korean newspaper reported on Thursday.

Since the beginning of this year, Tesla and Samsung have discussed chip design multiple times and exchanged chip prototypes for Tesla’s upcoming Hardware 4 self-driving computer, the Korea Economic Daily reported, citing sources with direct knowledge of the matter.

Sep 24, 2021

As Spacecraft Toilet Rumors Swirl, Bidet Company Pitches Elon Musk

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, space travel

Seriously, skid marks in a space suit isn’t a good look.

Sep 24, 2021

Our Universe Could Be An Expanding Bubble in an Extra Dimension

Posted by in category: futurism

Circa 2019

Livescience.com | By LIVESCIENCE


Is our universe sitting on the edge of an expanding bubble?

Sep 24, 2021

Spicy Tomatoes, Hangover-proof Wine: Is There Anything CRISPR Can’t Do?

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

CRISPR is the genius behind innovations that seemed impossible a decade ago. Could you grow tomatoes with the kick of hot sauce or ferment wine that doesn’t cause a hangover? That’s just two of the things scientists are looking into.

Sep 24, 2021

The largest space telescope in history is about to blow our minds

Posted by in category: cosmology

The launch date of NASA’s Webb Space Telescope is December 18. It will study exoplanets, the Big Bang, and more.

Sep 24, 2021

How multi-skilled AI could chart a path to human-like intelligence

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

A more comprehensible concept could be “multi-skilled AI.”

Multi-skilled AI is an approach to improving technologies by expanding their senses. In a similar way to how kids learn through perception and talking, multi-skilled AI systems combine senses and language to broaden their understanding of the world.

“It goes beyond image or language recognition and allows multiple tasks to be done,” Elizabeth Bramson-Boudreau, the CEO and publisher of MIT Technology Review, tells TNW.

Sep 24, 2021

This AI tries to code whatever you tell it to, even videogames

Posted by in categories: entertainment, robotics/AI

2030’ish: on demand books, movies, TV shows, video games, etc…


In the ever-increasing list of things that machine learning AI can do in our modern world, there’s now a program that will code (or at least, try to code) whatever you tell it to in plain English. Want some flashy banner text that changes color every few seconds? Tell that to OpenAI Codex and it will code it for you in seconds. The OpenAI Codex beta, currently only available through an online waiting list, is a simple web tool with three windows: one to type in commands, one that shows the code generated by those commands, and one that shows what the code does. You could theoretically use Codex for all sorts of tasks in over a dozen coding languages, but the coolest use I’ve seen is coding simple Javascript videogames with just a handful of natural language instructions. Check out the video below from YouTuber Joy of Curiosity to see it in action.

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