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Feb 18, 2024

Life Spreads Across Space on Tiny Invisible Particles, Study Suggests

Posted by in categories: alien life, particle physics

Does life appear independently on different planets in the galaxy? Or does it spread from world to world? Or does it do both?

New research shows how life could spread via a basic, simple pathway: cosmic dust.

One thing scientists have learned in the past few decades is that life on Earth might have had an early start.

Feb 18, 2024

Why artificial general intelligence lies beyond deep learning

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Many believe deep learning will continue to advance and play a crucial role in achieving AGI — but it does have its limitations.

Feb 18, 2024

Making STEM accessible through translation

Posted by in categories: innovation, neuroscience

Scientific research continuously expands our collective knowledge and pushes innovation forward. But what good is that innovation if it isn’t accessible to large swaths of the global population?

English is the standard language for most scientific communication — nearly 98% of scientific research is published in English. While standardizing scientific publications into a single language can streamline discussion, it is incredibly limiting for populations that don’t speak English.

A UCLA-led project aims to alleviate this issue. A collaboration among the UCLA Brain Research Institute, the UCLA Department of Spanish and Portuguese and the nonprofit organization Knowing Neurons is translating the informational content on Knowing Neurons’ platform into Spanish. Created by a group of graduate students at UCLA and USC in 2012, Knowing Neurons works to make neuroscience accessible to people interested in learning about the brain.

Feb 18, 2024

There may be a ‘dark mirror’ universe within ours where atoms failed to form, new study suggests

Posted by in categories: cosmology, particle physics

The invisible substance called dark matter remains one of the biggest mysteries in cosmology. Perhaps, a new study suggests, this strange substance arises from a ‘dark mirror universe’ that’s been linked to ours since the dawn of time.

Feb 18, 2024

Robot built with ‘insect brain’ can zip around obstacles with ease

Posted by in categories: biological, robotics/AI

In an age of increasingly advanced robotics, one team has well and truly bucked the trend, instead finding inspiration within the pinhead-sized brain of a tiny flying insect in order to build a robot that can deftly avoid collisions with very little effort and energy expenditure.

An insect’s tiny brain is an unlikely source of biomimicry, but researchers from the University of Groningen in the Netherlands and Bielefeld University in Germany believed it was an ideal system to apply to how robots move. Fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) possess remarkably simple but effective navigational skills, using very little brainpower to swiftly travel along invisible straight lines, then adjusting accordingly – flying in a line angled to the left or the right – to avoid obstacles.

With such a tiny brain, the fruit fly has limited computational resources available to it while in flight – a biological model, the scientists believed, that could be adapted to use in the ‘brain’ of a robot for efficient, low-energy and obstacle-avoiding locomotion.

Feb 18, 2024

Jose Manuel Rodriguez Delgado

Posted by in category: futurism

His ideas should have been used not lobotomies.


Neuropsychopharmacol ogy volume 37, pages 2883–2884 (2012) Cite this article.

Feb 18, 2024

Plug-in Urus and its fully-electric successor will help Lamborghini cut lifetime emissions by 40%

Posted by in category: futurism

Both models are set to arrive by 2030

By Paul Horrell | 2 days ago.

Feb 18, 2024

US Patient ‘Happy Again’ after Brain Implant Treats Epilepsy and OCD

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

American Amber Pearson used to wash her hands until they bled, terrified by the idea of contamination from everyday items, a debilitating result of her obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD).

But the repetitive rituals of her condition are largely consigned to memory, thanks to a revolutionary brain implant that is being used to treat both her epilepsy and her OCD.

“I’m actually present in my daily life and that’s incredible,” the 34-year-old told AFP.

Feb 18, 2024

Important Implications: New Study Aims To Unlock Secrets of the Human Brain

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI

Dr. Richard Naud’s research at the University of Ottawa holds important implications for understanding learning and memory theories, and it may pave the way for advancements in artificial intelligence in the future.

The mysteries of the human brain’s internal mechanisms are slowly being uncovered, and a significant new study led by Dr. Richard Naud from the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Ottawa is bringing us nearer to solving these profound questions.

The study’s results have important implications for theories of learning and working memory and could potentially help lead to future developments in artificial intelligence (AI) since AI developers and programmers watch the work of Dr. Naud and other leading neuroscientists.

Feb 18, 2024

Femtotech: computing at the femtometer scale using quarks and gluons from Hugo de Garis

Posted by in categories: computing, engineering, particle physics

Sept 22 2016.


Kurzweilai – How the properties of quarks and gluons can be used (in principle) to perform computation at the femtometer (10^−15 meter) scale.

An atom is about 10^−10 m in size.

Continue reading “Femtotech: computing at the femtometer scale using quarks and gluons from Hugo de Garis” »

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