Apr 22, 2024
Activating a gene that slows brain aging and increases lifespan
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: food, life extension, neuroscience
I found this on NewsBreak: Activating a gene that slows brain aging and increases lifespan.
I found this on NewsBreak: Activating a gene that slows brain aging and increases lifespan.
I found this on NewsBreak: A new physics paper suggests that we may all be living in the ultimate 4X strategy game after all.
My money’s on the universe being like Civ 6, with its borked-n-bonkers AI.
I found this on NewsBreak: The Telomere Paradox: Researchers Discover a Twist in How Diet Affects Aging.
I found this on NewsBreak:
To study living organisms at ever smaller length scales, scientists must devise new techniques to overcome the so-called diffraction limit. This is the intrinsic limitation on a microscope’s ability to focus on objects smaller than the wavelength of light being used.
I found this on NewsBreak: NASA’s About to Make a Big Announcement About Mars. Here’s What We Know.
I found this on NewsBreak: Scientists Discover Potential Interstellar Origins of Life on Earth.
Year 2023 face_with_colon_three
Honda is among those expecting big things from a new hyper-precise additive manufacturing process for 3D-printed metal car parts.
Continue reading “Honda Joins Race for High Tech 3D-Printed Metal Car Parts” »
Posthuman Psychology is now out in paperback — https://www.amazon.co.uk/Posthuman-Psychology-Historical-Gen…p_swatch_0 — review copies (printed not for resale as in photo) are possible, also quantity discounts — please message me.
Buy Posthuman Psychology: Part One — Historical, General and Introductory by Nichols, Steve (ISBN: 9798637459223) from Amazon’s Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders.
People who have obesity, or are tall with fat accumulation around their middle, are at an increased risk of colorectal cancer, regardless of their ancestry.
Repeated studies have made the link between obesity and height and increased cancer risk, including colorectal cancer. For example, a study published in 2022 showed that people of European ancestry who are tall and centrally obese, as well as people with general obesity, have a higher risk of developing colorectal cancer.