Toggle light / dark theme

Introducing MirrorBot, a robot designed to foster human connection

While technology has made the world “smaller,” it has also pulled individuals apart, thanks to mobile phones and other devices that command our attention. Cornell University researchers are using technology, in the form of a mirror-equipped robot, to help bring people together. Members of the Architectural Robotics Lab, led by Keith Evan Green, have built a four-foot-tall robot—dubbed MirrorBot—with dual mirrors that, when placed in front of a pair of strangers, let each participant see themself in one mirror and the other person in the other.

In a study involving participants in a waiting-room setting, MirrorBot spurred conversations, playful exchanges and other interactions between strangers. The findings suggest that robots can act not only as conversational partners, but also as spatial mediators. The research is published in the journal Proceedings of the 21st ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction.

“We weren’t just trying to trigger conversations, but to support the very first moment of social connection, which is the eye contact,” said Serena Guo, lead author of the paper.

Abstract: Proposing a no-nonsense strategy for the treatment of dominant neurodevelopmental disorders:

Xiaochang Zhang & team introduce exon annotation for nonsense-mediated mRNA (EANMD) and report on alternatively spliced exons in the brain that trigger mRNA decay, noting modulation of such exons in disease-causal genes can potentially treat neurodevelopmental disorders.


Address correspondence to: Xiaochang Zhang, University of Chicago, Cummings Life Science Center 507A, 920 E. 58th St., Chicago, Illinois 60,637, USA. Phone: 773.834.5369; Email: [email protected].

Quasiparticles reveal a magneto-optical transport phenomenon

Excitons are being explored in materials science and information technology as a means of storing light. These luminous quasiparticles move through individual layers of quantum materials and can absorb and emit light with high efficiency. They form when a laser pulse excites an electron, leaving behind a positively charged “hole.” The electron and hole attract each other and behave together like a new, independent particle. When the quasiparticle recombines, it emits light and can be detected in high-tech laboratories.

Excitons in ultrathin quantum materials have been intensively studied for more than a decade, including by Alexey Chernikov and his team. At the Cluster of Excellence ctd.qmat—Complexity, Topology and Dynamics in Quantum Matter—at the Universities of Würzburg and Dresden, Chernikov and an international research team based in Dresden have now made a surprising discovery: excitons can be carried along by the magnetic excitations of a quantum material and, as a result, accelerated to ultrahigh speeds. The findings are published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.

“The fact that the motion of optical particles can be controlled by magnetism is new. Until now, we only knew that the transport of electrons could be controlled by the magnetic order in a quantum material—this is how some sensors in smartphones work, for example. This newly discovered link between optics and magnetism could open up entirely new technological possibilities,” explains Florian Dirnberger, head of an Emmy Noether Junior Research Group at the Technical University of Munich and formerly a postdoctoral researcher in Alexey Chernikov’s Chair of Ultrafast Microscopy and Photonics, where he was responsible for carrying out the research project.

Supporting the concept that GLP1 agonist drugs lower BloodPressure independent from their weight loss effects

Daniel J. Drucker & team identify the vascular smooth muscle GLP-1 receptor as a key cellular target for the actions of GLP-1 medicines to lower blood pressure.

The figure: Renal GLP1R/Glp1r is expressed in human and murine vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) and Glp1rVSM-/- mice have reduced Glp1r transcripts in renal tissues.


1Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, Sinai Health System, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

2Section of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

Address correspondence to: Daniel J. Drucker, Mt. Sinai Hospital, 600 University Ave. Mailbox 39, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5G1X5. Phone: 416.361.2661; Email: [email protected].

🌟Technical advance🌟

Martin Prlic & team demonstrate the feasibility of the FDA-approved blood lancet Tasso+ as an at home blood collection device for remote immune monitoring by high parameter FlowCytometry.


Address correspondence to: Martin Prlic, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, E5-110, 1,100 Fairview Ave. N, Seattle, Washington 98,109, USA. Phone: 206.667.2216; Email: [email protected]. Or to: Alpana Waghmare, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, E4-100, 1,100 Fairview Ave. N, Seattle, Washington 98,109, USA. Phone: 206.667.7329; Email: [email protected].

Find articles by Konecny, A. in: | Google Scholar

1Vaccine And infectious disease division, fred hutchinson cancer center, seattle, washington, USA.

New memory chip survives temperatures hotter than lava

The electronics inside your phone, your car, and every satellite currently orbiting Earth share one critical weakness: heat. Push them past about 200 degrees Celsius and they start to fail. For decades, that thermal ceiling has been one of the hardest walls in engineering. Now a team at the University of Southern California may have just found a way around it.

In a study published in Science, researchers led by Joshua Yang, Arthur B. Freeman Chair Professor at the Ming Hsieh Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering of the USC Viterbi School of Engineering and the USC School of Advanced Computing, report a new type of electronic memory device that kept working reliably at 700 degrees Celsius, hotter than molten lava and far beyond anything previously achieved in its class. The device showed no signs of reaching its limit. Seven hundred degrees was simply as hot as their testing equipment could go.

“You may call it a revolution,” Yang said. “It is the best high-temperature memory ever demonstrated.”

MHealth Intervention to Improve Hypertension Care in High-Risk Patients

RESEARCH ARTICLE: mHealth Intervention to Improve Hypertension Care in High-Risk Patients @valnp @countryside1991 @PDrawz


BACKGROUND: The mGlide RCT (randomized controlled trial) evaluated whether a pharmacist-led, mobile health technology facilitated care model improves hypertension control in diverse populations. METHODS: We recruited adult English, Spanish, or Hmong-speaking patients with uncontrolled hypertension from a large health care system and smaller community clinics serving low-income patients. Participants were randomized 1:1 to mGlide or usual care. The 6-month intervention included daily blood pressure (BP) self-monitoring using a smartphone and wireless monitor, automated app-based data sharing, and responsive medication adjustment by a pharmacist-led provider-team. Comparison participants received a digital monitor. Outcomes included mean 6-month systolic BP (SBP), 12-month sustained BP control, 24-hour ambulatory BP and patient activation.

A humanoid robot sprints past the human half-marathon world record in Beijing race

The winner from Honor, a Chinese smartphone maker, completed the 21-kilometer (13-mile) race in 50 minutes and 26 seconds, according to a WeChat post by the Beijing Economic-Technological Development Area, also known as Beijing E-Town, where the race kicked off.

That was faster than the human world record holder, Uganda’s Jacob Kiplimo, who finished the same distance in about 57 minutes in March at the Lisbon road race.

The performance by the robot marked a significant step forward from last year’s inaugural race, during which the winning robot finished in 2 hours, 40 minutes and 42 seconds.

Sinus MCs are enriched in burn pit–exposed military veterans with CRS and in mice exposed to environmental combustion-related compounds

Address correspondence to: Taylor A. Doherty, UCSD, 9,500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, California 92093–0635, USA. Phone: 858.822.7563; Email: [email protected].

Find articles by Wang, X. in: | Google Scholar

¹VA San Diego Healthcare System, La Jolla, California, USA.

/* */