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Mar 25, 2021

How Humans Develop Larger Brains Than Other Apes

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Summary: Using brain organoid models, researchers have identified how the brain grows much larger and has three times as many neurons, as the brains of chimpanzees and gorillas.

Source: UK Research and Innovation.

A new study is the first to identify how human brains grow much larger, with three times as many neurons, compared with chimpanzee and gorilla brains. The study, led by researchers at the Medical Research Council (MRC) Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, UK, identified a key molecular switch that can make ape brain organoids grow more like human organoids, and vice versa.

Mar 25, 2021

Medicine 2.0 – Successful Repair of Aging Damage

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Antiaging expert Aubrey de Grey says there is a 50% chance that we reach longevity escape velocity by 2035.

I now think there is a 50% chance that we will reach longevity escape velocity by 2036. After that point (the “Methuselarity”), those who regularly receive the latest rejuvenation therapies will never suffer from age-related ill-health at any age.

Continue reading “Medicine 2.0 – Successful Repair of Aging Damage” »

Mar 25, 2021

Voice-Activated Backpack AIDS the Visually Impaired with AI Cameras

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

Using artificial intelligence, this backpack leverages a set of cameras and open-source software to aid the visually impaired.

Mar 25, 2021

Space Robotics with International Business Law & Space CEO Malak Trabelsi

Posted by in categories: business, law, robotics/AI, space

We invite you to join us for our talk with International Business Law & Space CEO Malak Trabelsi and Everette Philips.

Mar 25, 2021

Episode 43 — What Future And Final Galaxy Surveys Will Teach Us About The Cosmos

Posted by in categories: cosmology, futurism

Great new episode with NASA cosmologist Jason Rhodes who discusses everything from the earliest galaxy surveys to dark matter and the cosmic web.


Jason Rhodes, a cosmologist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, and the JPL Roman Space Telescope Project Scientist, discusses a proposed galaxy survey to end all galaxy surveys. One that would wring as much information out of our universe’s trillion or so galaxies across cosmic time as humanly possible. Astronomers are still at least half a century off from this final galaxy census, but the hope is that it will give cosmologists most of the answers they need about the makeup and structure of the universe.

Continue reading “Episode 43 --- What Future And Final Galaxy Surveys Will Teach Us About The Cosmos” »

Mar 25, 2021

Tiny robots can now smuggle drugs into brain tumors

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

Interesting.

Ranjan KC


Researchers have discovered a way to camouflage microrobots in the body using white blood cells to pass through the blood-brain barrier.

Mar 24, 2021

NASA’s Mars helicopter has made its first appearance on the red planet. It’s set to fly within weeks

Posted by in categories: drones, space

A helicopter for Mars. 😃


The Ingenuity helicopter could pioneer a new way to explore space. In the future, drones may do reconnaissance for Mars astronauts and rovers.

Mar 24, 2021

What is dark matter? An answer may come from the most accurate clocks in the world

Posted by in category: cosmology

These clocks could, in theory at least, keep time so accurately they’d gain or lose less than a second over the entire age of the universe.

Mar 24, 2021

Complex Carbon-Based Molecules Found in Space – “A Major Leap Forward in Astrochemistry”

Posted by in categories: chemistry, space

Discovery may offer clues to carbon’s role in planet and star formation. Much of the carbon in space is believed to exist in the form of large molecules called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). Since the 1980s, circumstantial evidence has indicated that these molecules are abundant in space.

Mar 24, 2021

Piercing Through a Galaxy’s Dusty Core to Uncover the Secrets of an Active Supermassive Black Hole

Posted by in category: cosmology

Researchers using NASA’s upcoming James Webb Space Telescope will map and model the core of nearby galaxy Centaurus A.

As technology has improved over the centuries, so have astronomers’ observations of nearby galaxy Centaurus A. They have peeled back its layers like an onion to discover that its wobbly shape is the result of two galaxies that merged more than 100 million years ago. It also has an active supermassive black hole, known as an active galactic nucleus, at its heart that periodically sends out twin jets. Despite these advancements, Centaurus A’s dusty core is still quite mysterious. Webb’s high-resolution infrared data will allow a research team to very precisely reveal all that lies at the center.