Menu

Blog

Page 9845

Mar 11, 2018

Nvidia Inception’s AI health care startups cover neural interfaces to better MRI

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, cyborgs, health, robotics/AI, transhumanism

More than 200 artificial intelligence startups applied for Nvidia’s Inception contest, which seeks to identify the best AI startups. The company created the program to find new uses for its graphics processing units (GPUs), but it’s also hoping these startups will change the world.

So far, the company has identified more than 2,800 AI startups over the years through Inception. I listened to pitches from 12 finalists in a Shark Tank styled judging event last week. Each is competing to be one of three finalists to share the $1 million prize pool.

“We’re trying to enable our ecosystem of deep learning neural networks,” said Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, as he introduced a panel of four judges. The 12 semi-finalists gave their 8-minute pitches, six finalists were selected, and the final winners will be picked at the company’s GPU Technology Conference on March 27 in San Jose, California. They ranged from AI for bionic arms to faster, cheaper, and more accurate magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans.

Continue reading “Nvidia Inception’s AI health care startups cover neural interfaces to better MRI” »

Mar 11, 2018

Sir John Sulston obituary

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Pioneering biologist best known for his work on the human genome who was a fierce advocate of free access to scientific data.

Sun 11 Mar 2018 11.19 EDT Last modified on Sun 11 Mar 2018 13.22 EDT.

Continue reading “Sir John Sulston obituary” »

Mar 11, 2018

At IBM, I Got A Glimpse Of What Our Quantum Future Will Look Like

Posted by in categories: futurism, quantum physics

Those that win in this new age will not be the ones who can do old things faster, but those who can imagine new possibilities.

By Greg Satell

Continue reading “At IBM, I Got A Glimpse Of What Our Quantum Future Will Look Like” »

Mar 11, 2018

Bitnation — Android Apps on Google

Posted by in category: mobile phones

NEW RELEASE OF PANGEA (v.0.3.3) ON ANDROID_

“The latest release has been published. v.0.3.3 includes bug fixes and UI/UX upgrades since the last release, and the ability to create, join and leave nations. The chat feature is working so now you can also have “Nation Group Chats” to speak with other Citizens of your Nation(s).”


Gateway to your decentralized world & P2P services.

Read more

Mar 11, 2018

YouPorn used AI to predict the porn searches of the future and, um, brace yourselves

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

Online pornography is going to some new and very bizarre places, according to the neural network YouPorn used to predict future porn searches.

Read more

Mar 11, 2018

Russian spacecraft with tourists onboard to carry out its first mission in 2025

Posted by in category: space travel

MOSCOW, March 6. /TASS/. CosmoCourse, a private Russian company that is designing a reusable spacecraft for suborbital flights, plans to make its first commercial launch with tourists onboard in 2025, CosmoCourse Director General Pavel Pushkin told TASS in an interview.

“The first flight of the prototype (a missile and a space vessel — TASS) is due in 2023, and the first tourist flight is expected in 2025,” Pushkin said.

CosmoCourse’s director general specified that the operational testing for the missile and the launched capsule would kick off in 2022. “The hardware is to be finished in 2021, and in 2022 test operations will begin,” he said.

Read more

Mar 10, 2018

Enzymes and Cognitive Decline

Posted by in categories: biological, life extension, neuroscience

Enzymes play an important role in cognitive function. Enzymes are biological catalysts. They’re responsible for accelerating chemical reactions.

What role do enzymes play in #aging and cognitive function?

According to new research in laboratory mice by UC San Francisco scientists have discovered that loss of an #enzyme that modifies gene activity to promote brain regeneration may be partly responsible for age-related cognitive decline. When age related cognitive decline starts is still debatable, however the effects of age related cognitive decline are well known.

Read more

Mar 10, 2018

1 thought on “Insights into the Neurobiology of Death”

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

A recent study gives insight into the #neurobiology of dying. Before the process of dying neurologists closely monitored patients with devastating #brain injuries following Do Not Resuscitate-Comfort Care orders. This gave key insights into the mechanisms and timing of events in the brain and the circulatory system during the dying process.

The objective of emergency treatment is to restore circulation to prevent #cerebral ischemia. #Cerebral ischemia is a condition that occurs when blood flow is restricted to the brain, which then causes the #death of brain tissue. Understanding the brain’s response to energy depletion can help us estimate how much time is available for resuscitation until irreversible damage has occurred. The goal is to develop methods that can prolong this window before irreversible damage takes place. Injury to central neurons begins only during the progressive and uncontrollable #depolarization of neurons called anoxic depolarization. This Anoxic depolarization “wave” is potentially reversible and typically starts 2 to 5 minutes after the emergence of severe ischemia. This marks the beginning of a toxic change within the neuron which eventually leads to irreversible brain injury.

Read more

Mar 10, 2018

A Magnetic ‘Wormhole’ That Connects Two Regions of Space Was Created in The Lab

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics, space travel

Back in 2015, researchers in Spain created a tiny magnetic wormhole for the first time ever. They used it to connect two regions of space so that a magnetic field could travel ‘invisibly’ between them.

Before you get too excited, it wasn’t the kind of gravitational wormhole that would theoretically allow humans to travel rapidly across space in science fiction TV shows and films such as Stargate, Star Trek, and Interstellar, and it wouldn’t have been able to transport matter.

But the physicists managed to create a tunnel that allowed a magnetic field to disappear at one point, and then reappear at another, which is still a pretty huge deal.

Continue reading “A Magnetic ‘Wormhole’ That Connects Two Regions of Space Was Created in The Lab” »

Mar 10, 2018

Scientists warn of mysterious and deadly new epidemic called Disease X that could kill millions around the world

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

The World Health Organisation has added the unknown future pathogen to a list of deadly threats to mankind

By.

Read more