Page 8516
Jun 3, 2019
This robot may one day write you a traffic ticket
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: robotics/AI
The robot is a proof-of-concept developed by Stanford Research Institute international to aid police with traffic stops.
Jun 3, 2019
Companies report progress on blood tests to detect cancer
Posted by Paul Battista in category: biotech/medical
A California company says its experimental blood test was able to detect many types of cancer at an early stage and gave very few false alarms in a study that included people with and without the disease.
Grail Inc. gave results in a news release on Friday and will report them Saturday at the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting in Chicago. They have not been published in a journal or reviewed by other scientists.
Many companies are trying to develop early detection “liquid biopsy” tests that capture bits of DNA that cancer cells shed into blood.
Continue reading “Companies report progress on blood tests to detect cancer” »
Jun 3, 2019
Caltech reactor could convert CO2 into breathable oxygen for space trips
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: climatology, space, sustainability
Although oxygen is common throughout the cosmos, most of it isn’t in the form that we as humans need to breathe – molecular oxygen, or O2. Now, researchers at Caltech claim to have created a reactor that can turn carbon dioxide into molecular oxygen, which could help us fight climate change here on Earth or generate oxygen for life in space.
Jun 3, 2019
Beyond CSI: How big data is reshaping the world of forensics
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: information science
In recent years, forensics scientists, statisticians, and engineers have been working to put crime scene forensics on a stronger footing, with some classic techniques falling out of favor.
[Photos: OpenClipart-Vectors/Pixabay; Hunter Harritt/Unsplash; blickpixel/Pixabay].
Jun 3, 2019
These $10 Sensor-Packed Gloves Could Give Robots a Sense of Touch
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, information science, robotics/AI
Machines are mastering vision and language, but one sense they’re lagging behind on is touch. Now researchers have created a sensor-laden glove for just $10 and recorded the most comprehensive tactile dataset to date, which can be used to train machine learning algorithms to feel the world around them.
Dexterity would be an incredibly useful skill for robots to master, opening up new applications everywhere from hospitals to our homes. And they’ve been coming along in leaps and strides in their ability to manipulate objects, OpenAI’s cube juggling robotic hand being a particularly impressive example.
So far, though, they’ve had one hand tied behind their backs. Most approaches have relied on using either visual data or demonstrations to show machines how they should grasp objects. But if you look at how humans learn to manipulate objects, you realize that’s just one part of the puzzle.
Jun 3, 2019
There’s an Unfinished ‘City of The Future’ Tucked Away in The Arizona Desert
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: futurism
There’s a giant contradiction in the middle of the Arizona desert: an experimental city designed for thousands that now contains only a few dozen inhabitants.
For nearly five decades, a group called the Cosanti Foundation has been working to build a city that would inspire a new future of urban design. Today, the project is only 5 percent complete.
Called Arcosanti, the city was envisioned by Italian architect Paolo Soleri, whose dream was to create an advanced urban laboratory where everyday activities could be powered by Earth’s natural resources.
Continue reading “There’s an Unfinished ‘City of The Future’ Tucked Away in The Arizona Desert” »
Jun 3, 2019
Humanoid AI robot opens own art exhibition
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: robotics/AI
Jun 3, 2019
KLM to help fund Flying-V plane, where passengers fly in the wings
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: transportation
Dutch national carrier KLM will help fund the development of the Flying-V, a plane that would carry passengers in the wings and increase efficiency.
Jun 3, 2019
Detection of dead body underwater
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biotech/medical, computing
Learn more about image processing, human body detection, image processing under water, underwater vision system Computer Vision Toolbox.