From Consumer Reports, what you need to know about the newer blood thinners, including how to take these meds safely and effectively.
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Mar 10, 2020
Healthspan first, Lifespan — distant Second
Posted by Paul Battista in category: life extension
This episode #20 of my “Pessimistic guide to Anti-Aging Research” titled “Healthspan First, Lifespan –Distant Second”.
When we are dreaming of physical immortality, we really mean not one but two very different immortalities: the one for our body, and quite another for our spirit. The body permits essentially any kind of interventions, modifications, replacements or even transformations for the sake of staying healthy and young indefinitely. In contrast, the spirit absolutely demands the preservation of our unique personalities and memories and, therefore, does not make allowances for treatments that violate this condition.
Mar 10, 2020
Coronavirus ‘worse than a bomb’ on Italy, says doctor coordinating response
Posted by Mario Acosta in categories: biotech/medical, government, health
Giacomo Grasselli — a senior Italian government health official who is coordinating the network of intensive care units in Lombardy — explains the “critical” situation in Italy, brought about by the Covid-19 outbreak (Subscribe: https://bit.ly/C4_News_Subscribe)
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Mar 10, 2020
Solved: The mystery of the expansion of the universe
Posted by Roderick Reilly in categories: cosmology, physics
The Earth, solar system, the entire Milky Way and the few thousand galaxies closest to us move in a vast “bubble” that is 250 million light years in diameter, where the average density of matter is half as high as for the rest of the universe. This is the hypothesis advanced by a theoretical physicist from the University of Geneva (UNIGE) to solve a conundrum that has been splitting the scientific community for a decade: At what speed is the universe expanding? Until now, at least two independent calculation methods have arrived at two values that are different by about 10% with a deviation that is statistically irreconcilable. This new approach, which is set out in the journal Physics Letters B, erases this divergence without making use of any “new physics.”
The universe has been expanding since the Big Bang occurred 13.8 billion years ago—a proposition first made by the Belgian canon and physicist Georges Lemaître (1894−1966), and first demonstrated by Edwin Hubble (1889−1953). The American astronomer discovered in 1929 that every galaxy is pulling away from us, and that the most distant galaxies are moving the most quickly. This suggests that there was a time in the past when all the galaxies were located at the same spot, a time that can only correspond to the Big Bang. This research gave rise to the Hubble-Lemaître law, including the Hubble constant (H0), which denotes the universe’s rate of expansion. The best H0 estimates currently lie around 70 (km/s)/Mpc (meaning that the universe is expanding 70 kilometers a second more quickly every 3.26 million light years). The problem is that there are two conflicting methods of calculation.
Mar 10, 2020
Scarcity Of Health Workers A New Concern As Self-Quarantining Spreads With Virus
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, health
Coronavirus Spread Spurs Debate Over Which Health Workers Need To Be Quarantined : Shots — Health News Should “potential exposure” by a health worker to someone with coronavirus be enough to send that worker home for two weeks of self-quarantine? Health systems have begun debating relative risks.
Mar 10, 2020
Scientists Linked Artificial and Biological Neurons in a Network—and Amazingly, It Worked
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: biological, internet, neuroscience, robotics/AI
This month, an international team put all of those ingredients together, turning theory into reality.
The three labs, scattered across Padova, Italy, Zurich, Switzerland, and Southampton, England, collaborated to create a fully self-controlled, hybrid artificial-biological neural network that communicated using biological principles, but over the internet.
The three-neuron network, linked through artificial synapses that emulate the real thing, was able to reproduce a classic neuroscience experiment that’s considered the basis of learning and memory in the brain. In other words, artificial neuron and synapse “chips” have progressed to the point where they can actually use a biological neuron intermediary to form a circuit that, at least partially, behaves like the real thing.
Mar 10, 2020
Mind Reading and Mind Control Technologies Are Coming
Posted by Paul Battista in category: neuroscience
Mar 10, 2020
NASA center in California issues mandatory work-from-home order after employee tests positive for coronavirus
Posted by Prem Vijaywargi in categories: biotech/medical, policy
NASA’s Ames Research Center in California has issued a mandatory policy for employees to work from home after one worker tested positive for the coronavirus responsible for COVID-19.
The research center, which is located in Moffett Field in the Silicon Valley, has been placed on restricted access after the employee was confirmed to have the coronavirus on Sunday (March 8).
Mar 10, 2020
Continuous Glucose Monitoring System
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biotech/medical, electronics
https://youtube.com/watch?v=QKi5T4uTGXk
Check your blood glucose without fingersticks using the FreeStyle Libre System, a continuous glucose monitoring system that includes a sensor and reader.
Mar 10, 2020
Psychedelic Research Finds Ego Exists in This Part of the Brain
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: neuroscience
Scientists have found that an area of our brain, known as the Default Mode Network, is responsible for our ego and the subsequent psychological disorders that stem from it.