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Aug 9, 2020

Highly sensitive dopamine detector uses 2-D materials

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, neuroscience

A supersensitive dopamine detector can help in the early diagnosis of several disorders that result in too much or too little dopamine, according to a group led by Penn State and including Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and universities in China and Japan.

Dopamine is an important neurotransmitter that can be used to diagnose disorders such as Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease and schizophrenia.

“If you can develop a very sensitive, yet simple-to-use and portable, detector that can identify a wide range of dopamine concentration, for instance in sweat, that could help in non-invasive monitoring of an individual’s health,” said Aida Ebrahimi, assistant professor of electrical engineering, Penn State, and a corresponding author on a paper published Aug. 7 in Science Advances.

Aug 9, 2020

Space calendar 2020: Never miss another launch, meteor shower or celestial event again

Posted by in category: space

Space calendar 2020: Upcoming rocket launches, meteor showers, Mars missions and more!


Here’s everything significant happening in space science and solar system exploration for the rest of the year.

Aug 9, 2020

#SpaceWatchGL Opinion: Space Traffic Management – Impact of Large Constellations on Military Operations in Space

Posted by in categories: military, policy, space, sustainability

#SpaceWatchGL Opinion: Space Traffic Management – Impact of Large Constellations on Military Operations in Space.

🌚 #SpaceWatchGL


As part of the partnership between SpaceWatch. Global and Joint Air Power Competence Centre, we have been granted permission to publish selected articles and texts. We are pleased to present “Space Traffic Management – Impact of Large Constellations on Military Operations in Space”, originally published by the Joint Air Power Competence Centre for the Conference Read Ahead 2020.

Continue reading “#SpaceWatchGL Opinion: Space Traffic Management – Impact of Large Constellations on Military Operations in Space” »

Aug 9, 2020

1 Million Cannibal Ants Have Now Escaped Their Soviet Nuclear Bunker Prison

Posted by in category: law enforcement

Researchers applaud as a million cannibal ants escape their nuclear bunker prison and head out into the world. Good for those ants.

Aug 9, 2020

An Algorithm Has Been Developed to Obstruct AI Facial Recognition, and It’s Free to Use

Posted by in categories: information science, robotics/AI

Are you worried about AI collecting your facial data from all the pictures you have ever posted or shared? Researchers have now developed a method for hindering facial recognition.

It is a commonly accepted fact nowadays that the images we post or share online can and might find themselves being used by third parties for one reason or another. It may not be something we truly agree with, but it’s a fact that most of us have accepted as an undesirable consequence of using freely available social media apps and websites.

Continue reading “An Algorithm Has Been Developed to Obstruct AI Facial Recognition, and It’s Free to Use” »

Aug 9, 2020

Oxnard, CA’s FORMAT Medical Research Secures Two Big Clinical Trials with Regeneron Investigating REGN-COV2

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, business

The Study

Now, Format Medical Research takes on two high profile clinical trials involving the antibody cocktail known as REGN-COV2. Garnering national attention, this investigational therapy targeting COVID-19 has receive a lot of attention. The Ventura County Star reports that the SMO will commence the first study, representing one of 150 sites in North and South America, this Friday. The goal: determine if the antibody medicine offers a safe and effective treatment for those who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2.

The second study focuses on those participants who are actually healthy but “at risk” of the virus. In this study, the participants will take the therapy to determine if there are prevention properties and the sponsor seeks up to 2,000 participants.

Continue reading “Oxnard, CA’s FORMAT Medical Research Secures Two Big Clinical Trials with Regeneron Investigating REGN-COV2” »

Aug 9, 2020

Jupiter’s huge moon Ganymede may have the largest impact scar in the solar system

Posted by in category: space

Scientists have discovered what they believe may be the largest impact crater in the entire solar system, with scars covering a vast portion of Jupiter’s huge moon, Ganymede.

Aug 9, 2020

The Force of Nothingness Has Been Used to Manipulate Objects

Posted by in categories: chemistry, physics, space

Scientists can use some pretty wild forces to manipulate materials. There’s acoustic tweezers, which use the force of acoustic radiation to control tiny objects. Optical tweezers made of lasers exploit the force of light. Not content with that, now physicists have made a device to manipulate materials using the force of… nothingness.

OK, that may be a bit simplistic. When we say nothingness, we’re really referring to the attractive force that arises between two surfaces in a vacuum, known as the Casimir force. The new research has provided not just a way to use it for no-contact object manipulation, but also to measure it.

The implications span multiple fields, from chemistry and gravitational wave astronomy all the way down to something as fundamental and ubiquitous as metrology — the science of measurement.

Aug 9, 2020

Best Public Datasets for Machine Learning and Data Science

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, science

Author(s): Stacy Stanford, Roberto Iriondo, Pratik Shukla

This resource is continuously updated. If you know any other suitable and open dataset, please let us know by emailing us at [email protected] or by dropping a comment below.

📚 Check out the Monte Carlo Simulation An In-depth Tutorial with Python. 📚

Aug 9, 2020

What If Your Teacher Were AI?

Posted by in categories: education, robotics/AI

We would soon have an Ai teacher @ Ogba Educational Clinic.


Watch our Discussed episode where we dive deeper into the topic with Dr. Joanna Bryson: https://bit.ly/what-if-your-teacher-were-ai

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