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Apr 12, 2019
Deep Knowledge Analytics Photo
Posted by Franco Cortese in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI
Announces the publication of a new open-access quarterly report: AI for Drug Discovery, Biomarker Development and Advanced R&D Landscape Overview 2019/Q1. Except for providing the analysis of 350 investors, 50 corporations and 150 companies operating in the field, the main events that took place in the industry from January to March 2019 are covered. The report also features the list of 30 leading R&D centers that provide important researches in the segment.
Link to the Report: https://www.ai-pharma.dka.global/quarter-1-2019
Never mind how to get there—what will we live in on the Red Planet? Personal Tech columnist David Pierce examines designs from Bjarke Ingels, Foster + Partners and others.
Apr 12, 2019
TRANSHUMANIA is creating videos on science, philosophy, and futurism
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: science, transhumanism
https://youtube.com/watch?v=dh2kWSmxjUo
Become a patron of TRANSHUMANIA today: Read posts by TRANSHUMANIA and get access to exclusive content and experiences on the world’s largest membership platform for artists and creators.
Apr 12, 2019
Today in Science History: The third manned lunar landing mission, Apollo 13, kicked off with the launch of the Odyssey spacecraft
Posted by Michael Lance in categories: science, space travel
On April 13, the crew had already traveled 200,000 miles away from Earth when one of the oxygen tanks exploded, forcing them to abort the mission and head back, fighting for their own survival.
You may be familiar with the immortal line “Houston, we have a problem,” which was supposedly uttered by Lovell in the 1995 film “Apollo 13.” Actually, the real quote was “Houston, we’ve had a problem,” and it was Swigert who said it.
Apr 11, 2019
‘Mindreading’ neurons simulate decisions of social partners
Posted by Xavier Rosseel in category: neuroscience
Scientists have identified special types of brain cells that may allow us to simulate the decision-making processes of others, thereby reconstructing their state of mind and predicting their intentions. Dysfunction in these ‘simulation neurons’ may help explain difficulties with social interactions in conditions such as autism and social anxiety.
Researchers at the University of Cambridge identified the previously-unknown neuron type, which they say actively and spontaneously simulates mental decision processes when social partners learn from one another.
The study, published today in Cell, suggests that these newly-termed ‘simulation neurons’ — found in the amygdala, a collection of nerve cells in the temporal lobe of the brain — allow animals (and potentially also humans) to reconstruct their social partner’s state of mind and thereby predict their intentions.
Continue reading “‘Mindreading’ neurons simulate decisions of social partners” »
Apr 11, 2019
Unique oil-eating bacteria found in world’s deepest ocean trench
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: sustainability
Scientists from the University of East Anglia have discovered a unique oil eating bacteria in the deepest part of the Earth’s oceans—the Mariana Trench.
Apr 11, 2019
Aging Analytics Agency Photo 4
Posted by Franco Cortese in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, robotics/AI
Presents its list of the top 30 FemTech Influencers, whose efforts in the FemTech Healthcare, FemTech Preventive Medicine and FemTech Longevity sectors have helped to grow the industry to its current state of maturity.
Jill Angelo genneve Elina Berglund Natural Cycles Starling Bank Tania Boler Elvie Ghela Boskovich Judith Campisi Adia Femtech Collective Dame Products EMBR Robin Starbuck Farmanfarmaian Cora Lifestyle Angie Lee Janet Lieberman Nuala Murphy Moment.Health Elena Mustatea Bold Health Anastasia Georgievskaya Haut.AI Maven Clinic THINX Nicole Shanahan Clearaccessip, Inc. Tammy Sun Ida Tin
Link to the Report: https://www.aginganalytics.com/femtech-healthcare-q1-2019
Apr 11, 2019
Falcon Heavy, SpaceX’s Giant Rocket, Launches Into Orbit, and Sticks Its Landings
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space travel
It was only the second flight for what is the most powerful rocket now available on Earth, improving on its spectacular test launch in 2018.
Apr 11, 2019
Strange anti-ageing effect of space travel discovered in NASA’s Twin Study
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, space
When NASA set out to study identical twin astronauts, leaving one on Earth and sending the other to the International Space Station (ISS) for a year, they expected that the rigours of microgravity would have largely negative impacts.
But on board the ISS, Scott Kelly, 51, underwent a very strange transformation which has left scientists scratching their heads.
The telomeres in his white blood cells got longer. Telomeres are the protective caps which sit at the end of chromosomes, protecting the DNA inside, like the plastic aglets on the end of shoelaces.
Continue reading “Strange anti-ageing effect of space travel discovered in NASA’s Twin Study” »