Our world and the self are constructions of the brain, a pioneering neuroscientist argues.
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Aug 25, 2021
Alphabet’s drones delivered 10,000 cups of coffee and 1,200 roast chickens in the last year
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: drones, food
Alphabet’s Wing drone company allows users to order items such as food through a mobile app and is fast approaching 100,000 deliveries since its launch.
Alphabet’s drone company Wing delivered 10,000 cups of coffee, 1,700 snack packs and 1,200 roast chickens to customers in Logan, Australia, over the last year, the company said Wednesday in a blog post outlining its progress.
Wing was initially launched in 2019 in Australia, following a series of drone tests that began in 2014. The service, which was initially part of Alphabet’s experimental research division, allows users to order items such as food through a mobile app and is fast approaching 100,000 deliveries since its launch.
Aug 25, 2021
Berries may lower blood pressure with help from gut bacteria
Posted by Jason Blain in categories: biotech/medical, food
Research indicates that flavonoids may protect against: high blood pressureTrusted Source heart attack and stroke type 2 diabetesTrusted Source certain types of cancer-medicalnewstoday.com
New research finds that people who consume foods high in flavonoids, such as berries, apples, and pears, have lower blood pressure than those who do not.
Aug 25, 2021
Lucy: NASA mission to primordial asteroids may explain 2 cosmic mysteries
Posted by Atanas Atanasov in category: space
During an upcoming NASA mission, currently scheduled for an October lift-off, a spacecraft called Lucy will be the first to visit a fleet of primordial bodies trailing behind Jupiter. It will launch on the Atlas V 401 rocket.
The Lucy mission will be the first to explore the Trojan asteroids, a large group of asteroids that share Jupiter’s orbit around the Sun.
Aug 25, 2021
These Scientists Added A Human Fat Gene To Potatoes — And They Are Growing To Huge Proportions
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, genetics
Okay, maybe not as big as the one in the picture.
Potatoes are my favorite vegetable; you can turn them into fries, bake them for an exquisite dish or mash them and eat them as a side dish. There are endless possibilities to cook a potato and what can be better than adding human fat gene in them to make them bigger and juicier?
Scientists have been experimenting with growing larger crops and it seems like they found the perfect solution; adding the human gene related to obesity and fat mass into the plants to yield super crops. The potato plants were inserted with a fat-regulating protein called FTO which changed the genetic code into producing extra proteins which resulted in large potatoes that were almost twice the size of regular ones grown from the same plant crop. “It [was] really a bold and bizarre idea. To be honest, we were probably expecting some catastrophic effects,” said Chuan He, a chemist at University of Chicago.
Aug 25, 2021
A longevity expert shares the diet, exercise and sleep rules he lives
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
Longevity expert Sergey Young has spent his career gathering insights from health researchers, doctors and dietitians about how to live a longer and stronger life. He shares his top health rules, including his diet, exercise routine and how much sleep he gets.
Aug 25, 2021
Scientists use lasers to create miniature supernova shock waves on Earth
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: cosmology, particle physics
Circa 2020 o.o!
Researchers have created a miniature version of supernova shock waves in a lab here on Earth to solve a long-standing cosmic mystery.
When stars die and explode in supernovas, they create shock waves that emanate across the surrounding plasma. These powerful shock waves blast out cosmic rays, or highly energetic particles, out into the universe. The waves act almost like particle accelerators, pushing these particles out so fast that they approach the speed of light. However, scientists have yet to fully understand exactly how and why the shock waves accelerate these particles.
Aug 25, 2021
Electric polarization and nonlinear optical effects in noncentrosymmetric magnets
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: materials
Magnetic excitations in multiferroic materials accompany electric polarization, known as electromagnons. The authors develop here a general framework to study electric polarization and nonlinear optical responses of noncentrosymmetric magnets based on spin models. They theoretically demonstrate the optical excitation of electromagnon-induced dc current generation (i.e., a photovoltaic effect) from the so-called shift current mechanism.
Aug 25, 2021
Molecules work as quantum bits
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in categories: computing, quantum physics
ACS Meeting News.
Molecules work as quantum bits.
Tunable structures could function as sensors or as logic bits in quantum computing by.
Aug 25, 2021
Israel’s DiA gets $14M to expand AI-driven ultrasound analysis
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: innovation, robotics/AI
Israel-based AI healthtech company, DiA Imaging Analysis, which is using deep learning and machine learning to automate analysis of ultrasound scans, has closed a $14 million Series B round of funding.
Backers in the growth round, which comes three years after DiA last raised, include new investors Alchimia Ventures, Downing Ventures, ICON Fund, Philips and XTX Ventures — with existing investors also participating, including CE Ventures, Connecticut Innovations, Defta Partners, Mindset Ventures, and Dr Shmuel Cabilly. In total, it has taken in $25 million to date.
The latest financing will allow DiA to continue expanding its product range and go after new and expanded partnerships with ultrasound vendors, PACS/Healthcare IT companies, resellers and distributors while continuing to build out its presence across three regional markets.