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Jan 26, 2021
Remote Controlled Neural Implant Controls Rats’ Brains
Posted by Raphael Ramos in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
I think we may need to be more careful about brain implants in the future. 😃
Cutting down on the number of invasive surgeries associated with implants is one thing, but the wireless implant also stands to improve the quality of animal research. Without wireless controls or charging, animals needed to be wired up to power sources or other electronics with invasive, restrictive tethers. Doing away with those allows the animals to behave how they normally would have.
In the case of this particular test, KAIST scientists used the implant to block cocaine-associated behaviors in rats who they had just injected with the drug. But they suspect the underlying tech could be used in all sorts of implants and medical devices.
Continue reading “Remote Controlled Neural Implant Controls Rats’ Brains” »
In this episode of Lifespan News:
Chemotherapy with light
AI Identifies Senescent Cells and Tests New Drugs
Alpha-Ketoglutarate Delays Age‐Related Fertility Decline
A Genetic Pathway for Preventing Hearing Loss
Investigating the Link Between COVID-19 and Telomeres
Jan 26, 2021
Astronomers Have Discovered a Star That Survived Being Swallowed by a Black Hole
Posted by Magaly Santiago in categories: cosmology, materials
I don’t think that star is the same after that one night stand.
When black holes swallow down massive amounts of matter from the space around them, they’re not exactly subtle about it. They belch out tremendous flares of X-rays, generated by the material heating to intense temperatures as it’s sucked towards the black hole, so bright we can detect them from Earth.
This is normal black hole behaviour. What isn’t normal is for those X-ray flares to spew forth with clockwork regularity, a puzzling behaviour reported in 2019 from a supermassive black hole at the centre of a galaxy 250 million light-years away. Every nine hours, boom — X-ray flare.
Jan 26, 2021
Computer-assisted Venus flytrap captures objects on demand
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: robotics/AI, space
Exploring new approaches to improve the capabilities and accuracy of robots, a team of researchers in Singapore has turned to an unexpected source: plants.
Robots have been dispatched to move cars, lift weighty inventory in warehouses and assist in construction projects.
But what if you need to delicately lift a tiny object 1/50th of an inch?
Jan 26, 2021
Discovery makes the invisible visible
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology
Australian scientists have discovered a new way to analyze microscopic cells, tissues and other transparent specimens, through the improvement of an almost 100-year-old imaging technique.
La Trobe University researchers have led a four-year collaboration to make “the invisible visible” by using custom-designed nanomaterials to enhance the sensitivity of phase contrast microscopy, an imaging technique commonly used by scientists to study biological specimens.
The discovery, detailed in Nature Photonics, will benefit a broad range of researchers and has the potential to advance research into the understanding and detection of disease.
Jan 26, 2021
A technique to estimate emotional valence and arousal
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: robotics/AI
In recent years, countless computer scientists worldwide have been developing deep neural network-based models that can predict people’s emotions based on their facial expressions. Most of the models developed so far, however, merely detect primary emotional states such as anger, happiness and sadness, rather than more subtle aspects of human emotion.
Past psychology research, on the other hand, has delineated numerous dimensions of emotion, for instance, introducing measures such as valence (i.e., how positive an emotional display is) and arousal (i.e., how calm or excited someone is while expressing an emotion). While estimating valence and arousal simply by looking at people’s faces is easy for most humans, it can be challenging for machines.
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Jan 26, 2021
SpaceX may finally launch its newest Starship rocket prototype Tuesday afternoon. With any luck, it won’t explode
Posted by Prem Vijaywargi in categories: Elon Musk, space travel
On Tuesday, SpaceX plans to launch the latest prototype of its Starship spacecraft — a system that could one day carry humans to Mars. The prototype, called.
The first time SpaceX attempted such an ambitious Starship flight, the 16-story vehicle blew up. Seven weeks later, Elon Musk’s company is trying again.
Jan 26, 2021
The ‘X17’ particle: Scientists may have discovered the fifth force of nature
Posted by Prem Vijaywargi in categories: cosmology, particle physics
A new paper suggests that the mysterious X17 subatomic particle is indicative of a fifth force of nature.
Jan 26, 2021
A Physicist Has Worked Out The Math That Makes ‘Paradox-Free’ Time Travel Plausible
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: mathematics, physics, space, time travel
No one has yet managed to travel through time – at least to our knowledge – but the question of whether or not such a feat would be theoretically possible continues to fascinate scientists.
As movies such as The Terminator, Donnie Darko, Back to the Future and many others show, moving around in time creates a lot of problems for the fundamental rules of the Universe: if you go back in time and stop your parents from meeting, for instance, how can you possibly exist in order to go back in time in the first place?
It’s a monumental head-scratcher known as the ‘grandfather paradox’, but in September last year a physics student Germain Tobar, from the University of Queensland in Australia, said he has worked out how to “square the numbers” to make time travel viable without the paradoxes.