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Jan 7, 2019

Jazmine Barnes Case Shows How Trauma Can Affect Memory

Posted by in category: neuroscience

Eyewitness testimony is unreliable because people try to understand a traumatic event by using what they know about the world and fill in gaps, experts said.


Jan 7, 2019

Inhalable RNA could breathe new life into lung cancer treatments

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

In the body, messenger RNA (mRNA) molecules are in charge of instructing cells to produce specific proteins, and hijacking this natural system is emerging as a promising new way to treat a wide variety of illnesses. Now, researchers at MIT have developed an inhalable mRNA aerosol that can take the molecules directly to the lungs, as a potential new treatment for cystic fibrosis or lung cancer.

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Jan 7, 2019

A Grindr harassment suit could change the legal landscape for tech — and free speech

Posted by in category: law

Months of harassment led Matthew Herrick to file a lawsuit against the dating app — and he’s using laws meant to protect consumers from dangerous products to do so.

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Jan 6, 2019

NASA’s First Cosmic Car Changed How We Explore the Moon | Apollo

Posted by in categories: space, transportation

How did NASA engineer a car for the Moon?

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Jan 6, 2019

Fountains of youth: Biotech startups emerge from stealth mode to ‘take on aging’

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

An exciting recent article to wish everyone here a happy new year!


A super-stealthy holding company called Life Biosciences has launched more than a half dozen biotechs aimed at finding new ways to slow the aging process.

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Jan 6, 2019

LMC Will Collide with Milky Way and Awake Black Hole at Heart of Galaxy

Posted by in category: cosmology

The Milky Way is under threat: new research from astrophysicists at Durham University, UK, suggests that the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) will dramatically collide with our galaxy in two billion years’ time.

It was previously predicted that the Milky Way would collide with the nearby galaxy of Andromeda in between four billion and eight billion years’ time, turning both galaxies into one combined giant elliptical galaxy. But now it seems that long before that collision happens, the Milky Way will be impacted by the LMC, the brightest satellite galaxy of the Milky Way which currently sits around 163,000 light-years from us.

The new prediction, published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, was made once it was discovered that the LMC has nearly twice as much dark matter as previously believed, meaning that it has a much larger mass than was expected which affects the way that it interacts with other nearby galaxies. The increased mass means that the LMC is losing energy at a high rate and will inevitably collide with the Milky Way.

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Jan 6, 2019

Scientists Fight Back Against Deadliest Animal on Earth Using “Gene Drives”

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

What is the deadliest animal on earth? It’s a question that brings to mind fearsome lions, tigers, sharks, and crocodiles. But the answer is an animal that is no more than 1 centimeter long.

A few mosquito species, out of the thousands that populate different environments, are the deadliest animals on earth. Anopheles mosquitoes alone, transmit malaria through their bite and annually infect more than 200 million people, and are responsible for 400,000 deaths per year, of which 70 percent are children under the age of 5.

Other mosquito species also transmit diseases — dengue, West Nile, and Zika — through their bite.

Continue reading “Scientists Fight Back Against Deadliest Animal on Earth Using ‘Gene Drives’” »

Jan 6, 2019

IBM Aims to Build the First Commercial Quantum Computer in ‘the Next Few Years’

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

A new initiative could push us into the quantum computing era.

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Jan 6, 2019

Tesla Tests EVs in Freezing Cold at “Secure Facility” in Alaska

Posted by in category: futurism

Ice Road Teslas.

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Jan 6, 2019

Here’s what the Red Planet could look like if humans were to live on Mars

Posted by in categories: habitats, space

SPECIALISTS have unveiled prototypes for human homes on a Martian colony after research revealed one in ten Brits would move to the Red Planet tomorrow if they could.

Architectural experts produced plans for three distinct dwellings fit for Mars: an apartment aimed at young professionals, a family home and a luxury mansion.

Each is designed to protect interplanetary homeowners from hazardous cosmic rays, space radiation and Mars’ severe dust storms, as well as insulate them from the cold.

Continue reading “Here’s what the Red Planet could look like if humans were to live on Mars” »