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Nov 6, 2019
A Second Woman Has Gotten Parasitic Eye Worms, and Surely We’re All Next
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: biotech/medical
A species of worm that can infect human eyes has done it again, and this time it chose a 68-year-old woman from Nebraska. The woman is thought to be only the second human victim of these worms ever documented. But the incident signals they could become an emerging parasitic disease in the U.S.
The disturbing details of the case were laid out in a paper published this October in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases. The woman’s doctors, as well as researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, contributed to the paper.
Nov 6, 2019
The Universe May Be Round—and That Would Be Bad News for Physicists
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: physics, space
Scientists analyzing data from a defunct satellite say we should all consider that our universe might be round, rather than flat. The consequences, they explain in a new paper, could be crisis-inducing.
Current theories of the universe, which describe its age, size, and how it evolves over time, are built around a flat spacetime. A new paper reiterates that data from the final Planck satellite release might be better explained by a round universe than a flat universe. Though not everyone agrees with the paper’s conclusions, the authors write that the consequences of assuming a flat universe when the universe is actually round could be dire.
Nov 6, 2019
A slice of artificial liver mimics how a real liver reacts to drugs
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: biotech/medical, computing
A lab-grown liver stand-in may better predict bad responses to drugs than animal testing does.
A human “liver chip” — liver cells grown on a membrane along with several types of supporting cells — formed structures reminiscent of bile ducts and reacted to drugs similarly to intact livers, researchers report November 6 in Science Translational Medicine. Similar rat and dog liver chips also processed drugs like normal livers in those species, allowing scientists to compare human liver cells’ reactions to drugs to those of the other species.
Rats, dogs and other animals are often used to test whether drugs are toxic to humans before the drugs are given to people. But a previous study found that the animal tests correctly identified only 71 percent of drug toxicities.
Nov 6, 2019
Opinion: It’s arrogant to assume humans will never imbue AI with consciousness
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: quantum physics, robotics/AI
“Cogito, ergo sum,” Rene Descartes. Translation: “I think, therefore I am.”
What makes us, us? How is it that we’re able to look at a tree and see beauty, hear a song and feel moved, or take comfort in the smell of rain or the taste of coffee? How do we know we still exist when we close our eyes and lie in silence? To date, science doesn’t have an answer to those questions.
In fact, it doesn’t even have a unified theory. And that’s because we can’t simulate consciousness. All we can do is try to reverse-engineer it by studying living beings. Artificial intelligence, coupled with quantum computing, could solve this problem and provide the breakthrough insight scientists need to unravel the mysteries of consciousness. But first we need to take the solution seriously.
Nov 6, 2019
Quantum Computer Made from Photons Achieves a New Record
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: computing, quantum physics
Nov 6, 2019
Voyager 2 Makes an Unexpectedly Clean Break from the Solar System
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space travel
The first scientific results from the spacecraft’s exit into interstellar space have been published, revealing a simpler departure than its predecessor.
Nov 6, 2019
Crispr Takes Its First Steps in Editing Genes to Fight Cancer
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: biotech/medical
So far, a procedure that turbocharges the immune system to attack tumors seems safe, but it’s too soon to tell whether it helps patients.
Nov 6, 2019
New technologies promise sharper artificial vision for blind people
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: futurism
Nov 6, 2019
What Shape Is the Universe? A New Study Suggests We’ve Got It All Wrong
Posted by Paul Battista in category: space
Most every cosmologist believes the universe is flat. A new analysis argues that it’s closed.