If you ever tried cramming all your learning in one night before the exam, you know it doesn’t usually work. Surprisingly, this has little to do with the brain.
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Nov 8, 2024
Get High-Speed Internet on the Go With Starlink’s Mini Dish
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: internet
You can pop this new version onto your backpack, which could be a game changer for travelers.
Nov 8, 2024
Repairing Organs With the Touch of a Nanochip
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biotech/medical, mobile phones
Year 2021 resharing This design could be used to put on a watch or smartphone.
This new device changes the function of cells by injecting them with synthetic DNA.
Nov 8, 2024
Wild Discovery Reveals That Comb Jellies Can Age in Reverse
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: life extension
When things get tough in adulthood, it might seem appealing to return to simpler times.
One bizarre marine creature has taken this approach to dire situations quite literally, regressing its physical adult body to a juvenile stage once the stress of starvation or injury has subsided.
Continue reading “Wild Discovery Reveals That Comb Jellies Can Age in Reverse” »
Nov 8, 2024
Daifengwanglab/BOMA: Brain and Organoid Manifold Alignment
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: neuroscience
Brain and Organoid Manifold Alignment. Contribute to daifengwanglab/BOMA development by creating an account on GitHub.
Nov 8, 2024
Frontiers: They basically controlled butterflies in a virtual environment wirelessly with human organoids
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biological, robotics/AI, virtual reality
Wetware computing and organoid intelligence is an emerging research field at the intersection of electrophysiology and artificial intelligence. The core concept involves using living neurons to perform computations, similar to how Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) are used today. However, unlike ANNs, where updating digital tensors (weights) can instantly modify network responses, entirely new methods must be developed for neural networks using biological neurons. Discovering these methods is challenging and requires a system capable of conducting numerous experiments, ideally accessible to researchers worldwide. For this reason, we developed a hardware and software system that allows for electrophysiological experiments on an unmatched scale. The Neuroplatform enables researchers to run experiments on neural organoids with a lifetime of even more than 100 days. To do so, we streamlined the experimental process to quickly produce new organoids, monitor action potentials 24/7, and provide electrical stimulations. We also designed a microfluidic system that allows for fully automated medium flow and change, thus reducing the disruptions by physical interventions in the incubator and ensuring stable environmental conditions. Over the past three years, the Neuroplatform was utilized with over 1,000 brain organoids, enabling the collection of more than 18 terabytes of data. A dedicated Application Programming Interface (API) has been developed to conduct remote research directly via our Python library or using interactive compute such as Jupyter Notebooks. In addition to electrophysiological operations, our API also controls pumps, digital cameras and UV lights for molecule uncaging. This allows for the execution of complex 24/7 experiments, including closed-loop strategies and processing using the latest deep learning or reinforcement learning libraries. Furthermore, the infrastructure supports entirely remote use. Currently in 2024, the system is freely available for research purposes, and numerous research groups have begun using it for their experiments. This article outlines the system’s architecture and provides specific examples of experiments and results.
The recent rise in wetware computing and consequently, artificial biological neural networks (BNNs), comes at a time when Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) are more sophisticated than ever.
The latest generation of Large Language Models (LLMs), such as Meta’s Llama 2 or OpenAI’s GPT-4, fundamentally rely on ANNs.
Nov 8, 2024
3D map reveals our solar system’s local bubble has an ‘escape tunnel’
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: cosmology
Hot spots and tunnels to neighboring “superbubbles” seem to have been created by supernovas and infant star outbursts.
Nov 8, 2024
Memories Are Not Only in the Brain
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: neuroscience
Study shows kidney and nerve tissue cells learn and make memories in ways similar to neurons.
Nov 8, 2024
A portable light system that can digitize everyday objects
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: health, robotics/AI
Researchers from MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL), the University of California at Berkeley, and Aarhus University have taken an intriguing step forward by fabricating “PortaChrome,” a portable light system and design tool that can change the color and textures…
The portable light system and design tool “PortaChrome” uses UV and RGB LEDs to activate photochromic dye, reprogramming everyday objects like shirts. The MIT CSAIL researchers’ software can help users turn items into multicolor displays of fashion designs and health data.
Nov 8, 2024
Don’t Stifle AI With Regulation
Posted by Rx Sobolewski in categories: biotech/medical, economics, education, government, robotics/AI
Since the public release of OpenAI’s ChatGPT, artificial intelligence (AI) has quickly become a driving force in innovation and everyday life, sparking both excitement and concern. AI promises breakthroughs in fields like medicine, education, and energy, with the potential to solve some of society’s toughest challenges. But at the same time, fears around job displacement, privacy, and the spread of misinformation have led many to call for tighter government control.
Many are now seeking swift government intervention to regulate AI’s development in the waning “lame duck” session before the inauguration of the next Congress. These efforts have been led by tech giants, including OpenAI, Amazon, Google, and Microsoft, under the guise of securing “responsible development of advanced AI systems” from risks like misinformation and bias. Building on the Biden administration’s executive order to create the U.S. Artificial Intelligence Safety Institute (AISI) and mandate that AI “safety tests,” among other things, be reported to the government, the bipartisan negotiations would permanently authorize the AISI to act as the nation’s primary AI regulatory agency.
The problem is, the measures pushed by these lobbying campaigns favor large, entrenched corporations, sidelining smaller competitors and stifling innovation. If Congress moves forward with establishing a federal AI safety agency, even with the best of intentions, it risks cementing Big Tech’s dominance at the expense of startups. Rather than fostering competition, such regulation would likely serve the interests of the industry’s largest corporations, stifling entrepreneurship and limiting AI’s potential to transform America—and the world—for the better. The unintended consequences are serious: slower product improvement, fewer technological breakthroughs, and severe costs to the economy and consumers.