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Mar 6, 2020

New sleep method strengthens brain’s ability to retain memories

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

A new joint study by Tel Aviv University (TAU) and Weizmann Institute of Science researchers has yielded an innovative method for bolstering memory processes in the brain during sleep.

The method relies on a memory-evoking scent administered to one nostril. It helps researchers understand how sleep aids memory, and in the future could possibly help to restore memory capabilities following brain injuries, or help treat people with post– (PTSD) for whom memory often serves as a trigger.

The new study was led by Ella Bar, a Ph.D. student at TAU and the Weizmann Institute of Science. Other principal investigators include Prof. Yuval Nir of TAU’s Sackler Faculty of Medicine and Sagol School of Neuroscience, as well as Profs. Yadin Dudai, Noam Sobel and Rony Paz, all of Weizmann’s Department of Neurobiology. It was published in Current Biology on March 5.

Mar 6, 2020

The Hunt for a Better Gut Bacteria in Central Africa

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

Powerful antibiotics and widespread sanitation practices have expanded lifespans across the industrialized world. But they have also come at a cost. Our microbiomes, or the trillions of microbes collectively working in our bodies to help regulate our immune system and food digestion, have lost much of its health-promoting bacteria because of our modern lifestyles and sanitation practices.

Scientists across the world are now looking to the planet’s few remaining pre-industrialized societies to see what industrialized guts have lost–and in doing so, could fundamentally change the way scientists think about germs. Thomas Morton heads to the Central African Republic to see this emerging field of microbiome science.

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Mar 6, 2020

Rats avoid harming other rats. The finding may help us understand sociopaths

Posted by in categories: evolution, neuroscience

Humans and rodents have similar brain structures that regulate empathy, suggesting the behavior is deeply rooted in mammal evolution.

Mar 6, 2020

Scientists Want to Build Robots out of Floating Liquid Metal

Posted by in categories: cyborgs, robotics/AI

The researchers are hoping the extremely light material could be used to construct lightweight exoskeletons and shape-shifting “Terminator 2”-style robots, New Scientist reports.

Glass Beads

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Mar 6, 2020

This Futuristic Tire Concept Regrows Its Tread

Posted by in category: futurism

Another year, another wacky Goodyear tire concept.

Mar 6, 2020

Undoing Aging 2020

Posted by in category: life extension

Early Bird ends TOMORROW!

Have you got your tickets yet? If not, then you just have a few hours to do so and save €200. Early Bird ends tomorrow 11:59 pm CET (15:00pm Pacific).


Accelerating rejuvenation therapies to repair the damage of aging.

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Mar 6, 2020

The Longevity landscape and investment potential

Posted by in category: life extension

Hype or hyper-exciting? Kate Batz of Longevity. Capital shares her views on the Longevity landscape and its investment potential: pragmatic optimism, but full of opportunity.

Mar 6, 2020

E020-Interview with Elizabeth Parrish CEO of BioViva Sciences

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Should we be forced to die? Live? We’re going to dig into some deep questions about health and longevity in our discussion this week with the CEO of BioViva Sciences, Elizabeth Parrish. BioViva is dedicated to improving healthy human longevity through bioinformatics used in health predictions and recommendations, precision medicine, and the discovery of novel biomarkers by applying state of the art computational methods on vast collections of biological data.

Mar 6, 2020

In World First, CRISPR Used on Patient’s Eye in Attempt to Cure Genetic Blindness

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

For the first time, doctors have attempted to cure blindness by gene-hacking a patient with CRISPR technology.

A team from Oregon Health & Science Institute injected three droplets of fluid that delivered the CRISPR DNA fragments directly into a patient’s eyeball, The Associated Press reports, in hopes that it will reverse a rare genetic condition called Leber congenital amaurosis, which causes blindness early in childhood.

“We literally have the potential to take people who are essentially blind and make them see,” Charles Albright, chief scientific officer of Editas Medicine, told the AP.

Mar 6, 2020

The inevitable impact of the Coronavirus on the world’s rare earths supply

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, food

The coronavirus outbreak in China has had a foreseeable but unintended consequence. Truck drivers have refused to make deliveries into areas either identified as or suspected of harboring the disease.

This has interrupted not only the flow of minerals out of the affected areas but also the refining and manufacturing of metals, food, and fuel. Among the under-reported deficiencies thereby caused the most important ones for the global rare earths production and utilization industries is the interruption in the flow of chemical reagents necessary for refining rare earths and for producing metals, alloys, and magnets.


Critical materials-based supply chains may be hanging by a thread, the thread of the size of existing Chinese inventories. The coronavirus outbreak in China has had a foreseeable but unintended consequence.

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