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May 13, 2024
Simulated Microgravity Affects Sleep and Physiological rhythms
Posted by Natalie Chan in category: space
Simulated effects of microgravity significantly affect rhythmicity and sleep in humans, a new study from the University of Surrey finds. Such disturbances could negatively affect the physiology and performance of astronauts in space.
May 13, 2024
ChatGPT Prompt Generator: Free Online Tool
Posted by Arthur Brown in category: robotics/AI
Discover the ChatGPT Prompt Generator, a user-friendly tool designed to create tailored prompts for OpenAI’s ChatGPT.
May 13, 2024
Natural killer cells may broaden access to advanced cancer therapy
Posted by Paul Battista in category: biotech/medical
Unlike CAR-T-cell therapy, experimental CAR-NK treatments could potentially be used off-the-shelf against many cancers. But finding the right source of NK cells is vital.
May 13, 2024
Sleights of Mind by Macknik and Martinez Conde Audiobook
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: futurism
May 13, 2024
Papua New Guineans, genetically isolated for 50,000 years, carry Denisovan genes that help their immune system, study suggests
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: biotech/medical, genetics
Genes inherited from Denisovans, extinct human relatives, may help Papua New Guineans in the lowlands fight off infection, while mutations to red blood cells may help highlanders live at altitude.
Some people, like Sam Harris, say that science has values of its own. According to him, even a statement like “Water is two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen” is value-laden. But I don’t think that it is value-laden, it is simply a factual statement. Perhaps demonstrating that statement to be true requires values, but that statement by itself is true whatever your values are. So, then, what have professional philosophers (besides Sam Harris) written or said about this matter, of whether science is value-free, and also whether even basic scientific statements are value-free?
May 13, 2024
A Q&A With Renowned Neuromorphic Chip Designer Chiara Bartolozzi
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: robotics/AI
For our final feature celebrating Women’s History Month, we interviewed Chiara Bartolozzi, a senior researcher moving the needle in neuromorphic engineering.
Every year for Women’s History Month, All About Circuits spotlights the contributions of distinguished women engineers worldwide. For this article, we interviewed Chiara Bartolozzi, a senior researcher and neuromorphic chip expert at the Italian Institute of Technology (IIT).
Since earning a degree in engineering from the University of Genova and a Ph.D. in neuroinformatics from ETH Zurich, Bartolozzi has led important research in neuromorphic engineering. She also helped design iCub, a toddler-sized humanoid robot developed at IIT that serves as a robotics testbed worldwide.
May 13, 2024
Inside the bizarre world of quantum computing
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: computing, quantum physics
It’s mind-bending tech that could soon transform our lives. What do qubits and cats have to do with it?
May 13, 2024
Research team discovers new property of light
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: computing, solar power, sustainability
A research team headed by chemists at the University of California, Irvine has discovered a previously unknown way in which light interacts with matter, a finding that could lead to improved solar power systems, light-emitting diodes, semiconductor lasers and other technological advancements.