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Jun 29, 2019

Anti-Alzheimer’s Protein Complex Identified

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, neuroscience

A new mouse study highlights the proteins responsible for LC3-associated endocytosis (LANDO), an autophagy process that is involved in degrading β-amyloid, the principal substance associated with Alzheimer’s disease.

Proteostasis

Proteins in the human brain can form misfolded, non-functional, and toxic clumps known as aggregates. Preventing these aggregates from forming, and removing them when they do, is a natural function of the human body, and it is known as proteostasis. However, as we age, this function degrades, and loss of proteostasis is one of the hallmarks of aging. The resulting accumulation of aggregates leads to several deadly diseases, one of which is Alzheimer’s.

Jun 29, 2019

The Pinay whose work revealed a deadly snail to be a medical wonder

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Meet National Scientis Dr. Lourdes J. Cruz, a biochemist whose research on Conus geographus venom made a significant impact on neurological medicine.

Jun 29, 2019

What If Earth Was Near the Center of the Milky Way?

Posted by in category: space

What’s at the center of the Milky Way galaxy and what would be different if Earth was positioned there?

Jun 28, 2019

CRISPR nanoparticles are the next big hope in Alzheimer’s disease treatments

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology, neuroscience

Nearly 6 million Americans live with Alzheimer’s disease without solid treatment options.

Jun 28, 2019

Couple clones cat after it dies for hefty price

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. (WCNC) – A North Carolina couple couldn’t bear to break the bond they had with their furry feline friend. So after 19-year-old Cinnabun passed away, the Bullerdicks decided to clone their kitty.

The cost? A whopping price of $25,000.

The couple found a Texas-based company known for cloning dogs, cats and horses. They bought a kit and with a skin sample and saliva sample… Cinnabun the second was born.

Jun 28, 2019

Oppo MeshTalk can make calls and send texts with no carrier or Internet connection

Posted by in category: internet

It’s a mesh network system that sends data between devices — no cell towers, Wi-Fi hotspots or Bluetooth needed.

Jun 28, 2019

Dragonfly: NASA’s New Mission to Explore Saturn’s Moon Titan

Posted by in category: space

Next stop? Saturn’s moon Titan!

Titan, an analog to the early 🌎, can provide clues to how life may have arisen on our planet. Working with the JHU Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), we’ll send our new mission #Dragonfly to take to the skies in search for the building blocks of life: https://go.nasa.gov/2Nv0Eb0

Jun 28, 2019

New solar technology could produce clean drinking water for millions in need

Posted by in category: sustainability

Solar still produces 12 times the clean water of commercial versions.

Jun 28, 2019

Neuroimaging Of Brain Shows Who Spoke To A Person And What Was Said

Posted by in categories: computing, information science, neuroscience

Flashback to 2 years ago…


Scientists from Maastricht University have developed a method to look into the brain of a person and read out who has spoken to him or her and what was said. With the help of neuroimaging and data mining techniques the researchers mapped the brain activity associated with the recognition of speech sounds and voices.

In their Science article “‘Who’ is Saying ‘What’? Brain-Based Decoding of Human Voice and Speech,” the four authors demonstrate that speech sounds and voices can be identified by means of a unique ‘neural fingerprint’ in the listener’s brain. In the future this new knowledge could be used to improve computer systems for automatic speech and speaker recognition.

Seven study subjects listened to three different speech sounds (the vowels /a/, /i/ and /u/), spoken by three different people, while their brain activity was mapped using neuroimaging techniques (fMRI). With the help of data mining methods the researchers developed an algorithm to translate this brain activity into unique patterns that determine the identity of a speech sound or a voice. The various acoustic characteristics of vocal cord vibrations (neural patterns) were found to determine the brain activity.

Jun 28, 2019

Is Life Extension Natural? | LifeXtenShow

Posted by in category: life extension

Aging is just natural, while rejuvenation therapies aren’t, but does this mean we should accept aging as it is and forget about rejuvenation? Not at all, and as Nicola explains in this video, just because something is natural, it’s not also automatically good for you.

Learn more about our conference in NYC:
https://www.leafscience.org/ending-age-related-diseases-adva…ects-2019/

Continue reading “Is Life Extension Natural? | LifeXtenShow” »