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Technology

Samantha Alger, director of the Vermont Bee Lab, inspects a frame of bees.

Buzz-Worthy Discovery: New Test Spots Super-Resistant Honey Bees as Colony Losses Mount

Categories Life & Non-humans, Technology
NTU scientists, in collaboration with local ecology and biomimicry design firm bioSEA, have developed ‘fungi tiles’ that could help cool buildings down without consuming energy.

Scientists create ‘fungi tiles’ with elephant skin texture to cool buildings

Categories Earth, Energy & Environment, Life & Non-humans, Technology
The newly identified enzyme highlighted in pink.

New green chemistry extracts valuable compounds from plant waste

Categories Earth, Energy & Environment, Technology
By building a unique, advanced machine, Rutgers scientists have created a structure with quantum qualities. The green window (right) is the main growth chamber where synthesis of the quantum "sandwiches" occurs. Within the amber window (left) are advanced characterization tools that uncover chemical and electronic properties of the grown quantum thin films without exposing them to air.

Scientists Merge Two “Impossible” Materials Into New Artificial Structure

Categories Physics & Mathematics, Technology
Vladimir Putin

AI Supercharges Russian Propaganda Machine Without Losing Its Punch

Categories Brain & Behavior, Social Sciences, Technology
graphene

scientists pioneer method to tackle ‘forever chemicals’

Categories Earth, Energy & Environment, Technology
(A) Schematic sketch for illustrating the implementation of the memristive network–based RC system for rover control through processing time-sequential sensory signals. Here, voltage-based analog sensory signals carrying spatiotemporal information components are input to the memristive reservoir. These input signals are differentiated and nonlinearly mapped to a high-dimensional data space based on the temporal contexts of the input sensory signals and are quantitatively represented by the reservoir state vector X(t), which is constructed from the voltage readings at multiple neuron terminals. Afterward, the state vector is multiplied by a pretrained weight matrix W(t) to export the output signals Y(t) for controlling the testing rover. (B to D) Training data acquisition for emulating PID control of a robot rover for performing target-tracking navigation: (B) snapshot captured from the training video, showing the PID-controlled rover tracing after a red-moving target (the inset view is a snapshot from the ESP32-based internet-of-things (IoT) camera on the rover); (C) exemplary target coordinate data plotted as the function of time points; (D) exemplary motor signal data generated by a digital PID controller, plotted as the function of time points.

Brain-like computer steers rolling robot with 0.25% of the power needed by conventional controllers

Categories Brain & Behavior, Technology
illustration of woman awake in bed

One hour’s screen use after going to bed increases your risk of insomnia by 59%, scientists find

Categories Brain & Behavior, Technology
Illustration of a human heart

AI Reveals Heart’s Biological Age, Unlocking Cardiac Risk Prediction

Categories Health, Technology
Associate Professor Mario Lanza and his team demonstrated a groundbreaking silicon transistor that mimics neural and synaptic behaviours, marking a significant breakthrough in neuromorphic computing.

Super-Efficient Transistor Breakthrough Could Shake Up AI Computing World

Categories Physics & Mathematics, Technology
The hydrogel transforms from rubbery softness to rigid armor in seconds when heated—and just as quickly reverts to its flexible state when cooled.

New ‘Instant Armor’ Material Transforms From Soft to Rock-Hard in Seconds

Categories Technology
Example neuron in the anterior ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH, blue line). Using a technique called “uncaging”, researchers found that inhibitory signals near the centre of this neuron (yellow squares) were stronger during the fertile phase of the reproductive cycle. Reduced activity in these cells promotes mating behaviour.

“AI is the future of peer review”

Categories Health, Technology
Dartmouth scientists Michael Heinz (left) and Nicholas Jacobson (center) led the first clinical trial of an AI-powered therapy chatbot and found that, on average, people with diagnosed mental disorders experienced a significant reduction in symptoms. People in the study interacted with the software, known as Therabot, through a smartphone app where they responded to prompts from the Therabot avatar (right) or initiated conversations when they needed to talk.

AI Therapist Matches Human Care in Groundbreaking Mental Health Trial

Categories Brain & Behavior, Social Sciences, Technology
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