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Nov 17, 2016
Materials and microfabrication processes for next-generation brain-machine devices
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Transfer printing microstructures onto novel hydrogel interfaces and customised composite electrodes could increase the compatibility and information transfer between body tissue and electronic devices.
Implantable devices such as pacemakers, cochlear implants, and deep brain stimulation devices enhance the quality of life for many people. Improving the integration of such devices with the body could enable the next generation of brain-machine interfaces (such as, implantable devices that can record and modulate neurological function in vivo) to monitor physiology, detect disease, and deploy bioelectronic medicines.
Nov 17, 2016
Wireless Brain Implant Allows “Locked-In” Woman to Communicate
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: neuroscience
Experts call the technology a “significant achievement,” but critics say the risks may not be justified.
- By R. Douglas Fields on November 17, 2016
Nov 17, 2016
China’s deep spacecraft will be guided by X-ray pulses from distant stars
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: space travel
EMN is a world-class collective of award-winning journalists and researchers whose mission is to be the leading online live streaming news network for alternative news and information. This news and research-driven force will be the recognized source for inquiring minds. From the paranormal to the supernormal, inner space to outer space, whether groundbreaking scientific discoveries or research into the world of the unexplained; EMN is the gateway for inquiring minds uniting a formidable community of truth-seekers worldwide led by the most respected industry leaders committed to the highest level of integrity.
Nov 17, 2016
Tracking the flow of quantum information
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, quantum physics
If objects in motion are like rainwater flowing through a gutter and landing in a puddle, then quantum objects in motion are like rainwater that might end up in a bunch of puddles, all at once. Figuring out where quantum objects actually go has frustrated scientists for years.
Now a Yale-led group of researchers has derived a formula for understanding where quantum objects land when they are transmitted. It’s a development that offers insight for controlling open quantum systems in a variety of situations.
“The formula we derive turns out to be very useful in operating a quantum computer,” said Victor Albert, first author of a study published in the journal Physical Review X. “Our result says that, in principle, we can engineer ‘rain gutters’ and ‘gates’ in a system to manipulate quantum objects, either after they land or during their actual flow.”
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Nov 17, 2016
Cryogenics: does it offer humanity a chance to return from the dead?
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: cryonics, life extension
While it used to be the stuff of science fiction, the technology behind the dream has advanced in recent years.
Nov 17, 2016
An Eerie Landscape Becomes a Hunting Ground in Cyberpunk Concept Short Lost Boy
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: cyborgs, entertainment
A punky warrior races across a barren wasteland, pursued by a hulking cyborg. There’s not much more to go on in the visually stunning Lost Boy, but since it’s a proof-of-concept film, mood and style are the main attraction. It’s by PostPanic Pictures, whose visually-rich short Sundays received feature interest last year.
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Nov 17, 2016
The Matrix-esque Short Sundays Will Become A Feature Film
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: entertainment, virtual reality
Short proof-of-concept Sundays video is getting a feature film thanks to Warner Bros. Wonderful, we’ve had a real dearth of virtual reality, “this isn’t real”, Matrix-like features. If that’s what this short film is actually about???
Nov 17, 2016
Stamping Out Disease: Russian Scientists Aim to Bioprint Human Kidneys By 2030
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: 3D printing, bioprinting, biotech/medical
After 3D-printing a mouse thyroid gland and successfully transplanting it last year, Russia’s 3D Bioprinting Solutions is aiming to make a human kidney by 2030, the company’s scientists told Sputnik.
© Sputnik/ Sergey Guneev
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Nov 17, 2016
Colonizing the Solar System, part 2: the Outer Solar System
Posted by Montie Adkins in categories: engineering, environmental, habitats, space
This is a nice vid but there are two things to note.
1. he does not mention Callisto in place of Europa. Europa gets enough radiation to kill you in a day where on Callisto you would not even get the radiation you get here on Earth.
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