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Jan 27, 2019
Go Boldly — Future of Medicine
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, futurism
Jan 27, 2019
MIT Has Invented Slightly Eerie Lasers That Transmit Whispers Only You Can Hear
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: military
New technology being developed by the MIT’s Lincoln Laboratory uses laser light to excite moisture in the air surrounding a target’s ear, causing it to quietly whisper a personal message from several metres away.
“Our system can be used from some distance away to beam information directly to someone’s ear,” says MIT team leader and physicist Charles M. Wynn.
You probably don’t need us to count off potential applications for such a device, which range from military applications to targeted advertising.
Continue reading “MIT Has Invented Slightly Eerie Lasers That Transmit Whispers Only You Can Hear” »
Jan 27, 2019
Cambridge University releases a brain-training app that improves concentration akin to Ritalin
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: entertainment, neuroscience
Decoder, developed in collaboration with a games developer, gets users to assume the role of an intelligence officer tasked with breaking up global criminal gangs (users are able to select a character and their backstory).
To meet the objective, users have to identify different combinations of number strings in missions littered with distraction.
Winning each mission means users unlock letters of the next criminal location (the higher the score, the more letters revealed).
Jan 27, 2019
Paralyzed Individuals Operate Tablets Using Brain Waves
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Jan 27, 2019
High-Speed & High-Definition Book Scanner
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: electronics
Jan 27, 2019
A new tooth-mounted sensor will soon help you lose weight
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in category: electronics
… the sensor can monitor how much sugar, salt, and alcohol a person has consumed, and transmit that information wirelessly to a mobile app.
Although there are many advantages, it could be problematic for one particular group of people.
Jan 27, 2019
AI Helps Amputees Walk With a Robotic Knee
Posted by James Christian Smith in categories: biotech/medical, cyborgs, information science, robotics/AI
A movie montage for modern artificial intelligence might show a computer playing millions of games of chess or Go against itself to learn how to win. Now, researchers are exploring how the reinforcement learning technique that helped DeepMind’s AlphaZero conquer chess and Go could tackle an even more complex task—training a robotic knee to help amputees walk smoothly.
Computer algorithms help prosthetics wearers walk within minutes rather than requiring hours of training.
Jan 27, 2019
AI technology accelerates and augments legal work
Posted by James Christian Smith in categories: law, robotics/AI
Law firms are under tremendous pressure to innovate to provide better value to their clients, who demand more value for their legal dollars. Providing higher-value services in turn boosts firms’ competitiveness.
However, much of the day-to-day work of any legal office – whether it’s in-house counsel, a boutique firm or one of the largest legal power houses – is the tedious, repetitive work of reading and preparing answers to complaints. Larger firms may have armies of junior associates do much of this necessary but mundane case-preparation work. At smaller firms, partners and senior associates are often involved in all stages of litigation. Preparing responses is time-consuming. It can take several hours to a full day to complete. Those are hours that both attorneys and firms would prefer to use tackling more strategic legal work.
We asked ourselves, what if, instead of taking hours, those high-volume, repetitive tasks could take a couple of minutes?
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