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Jan 31, 2017

A New Alliance Could Give Humanity the World’s First Cancer Vaccine

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

The Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy has partnered with dozens of organizations to develop a cancer vaccine to prevent the disease which is expected to grow by an additional 21.7 million through 2030. The plan is to target genetic markers specific to tumors to allow the body to generate an immune response to combat the cancer before it ever takes hold.

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Jan 31, 2017

Soft robotic sleeve developed to aid failing hearts

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI

A soft robotic sleeve placed around the heart in a pig model of acute heart failure. The actuators embedded in the sleeve support heart function by mimicking the outer heart muscles that induce the heart to beat. (credit: Harvard SEAS)

An international team of scientists has developed a soft robotic sleeve that can be implanted on the external surface of the heart to restore blood circulation in pigs (and possibly humans in the future) whose hearts have stopped beating.

The device is a silicone-based system with two layers of actuators: one that squeezes circumferentially and one that squeezes diagonally, both designed to mimic the movement of healthy hearts when they beat.

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Jan 31, 2017

4 Stem Cell Breakthroughs Happening Right Now

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

These 4 stem cell developments are huge and might end up saving your life.

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Jan 31, 2017

Milky Way galaxy is being pushed across the universe

Posted by in category: space

Our home galaxy, the Milky Way, is being pushed across the universe by a large unseen force, according to new research. Although it may not seem like a friendly gesture, the newly discovered Dipole Repeller is actually helping our galaxy on its journey across the expanding universe.

Researchers have known that the galaxy was moving at a relative speed for the past 30 years, but they didn’t know why.

“Now we find an emptiness in exactly the opposite direction, which provides a ‘push’ in the sense of a lack of pull,” said Brent Tully, one of the study authors and an astronomer at the Institute for Astronomy in Honolulu. “In a tug-of-war, if there are more people at one end, then the flow will be toward them and away from the weaker side.”

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Jan 31, 2017

‘Substantial evidence’ the universe is a hologram

Posted by in categories: cosmology, holograms

International team of researchers carry out observational tests of holographic cosmology.

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Jan 31, 2017

Millimeters-Thick Metal Foam Armor Obliterates Incoming Bullets

Posted by in category: weapons

Foam armor for the future.

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Jan 31, 2017

Electromagnetic Levitation Quadcopter

Posted by in category: transportation

Spinning magnets near copper sheets create levitation!
Try Audible free for 30 days: http://bit.ly/AudibleVe
Special thanks to Hyperloop One for showing me around.

Thanks to Patreon supporters:
Nathan Hansen, Donal Botkin, Tony Fadell, Saeed Alghamdi, Zach Mueller, Ron Neal, Perry cl, Bryan Baker.
Support Veritasium on Patreon: http://bit.ly/VePatreon

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Jan 31, 2017

Is Tesla working on computers that can be implanted into BRAINS?

Posted by in categories: cyborgs, Elon Musk, robotics/AI

https://youtube.com/watch?v=cIYAhIt2UEM

In the hope of creating a ‘human-AI’ cyborgs, Elon Musk has revealed that Tesla may be working on computers that can be implanted into people’s brains.

The astonishing revelation came in response to a tweet, asking Musk if he was working on ‘neural lace’ – a way of installing computers into the human brain.

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Jan 31, 2017

LunaH-Map CubeSat to Map the Moon’s Water Deposits

Posted by in category: space

Arizona State University (ASU) is developing a small satellite that will search hydrogen in lunar craters with the ultimate goal of creating the most detailed map of the moon’s water deposits. The spacecraft, named Lunar Polar Hydrogen Mapper (LunaH-Map), is expected to shed new light on the depth and distribution of water-ice on the moon.

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Jan 31, 2017

New Synthetic Human Lung Is (Quite Literally) a Breath of Fresh Air

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, biotech/medical, computing

In Brief

  • Czech scientists have developed a 3D printed model of a functioning lung that can simulate real-life conditions like asthma and other chronic breathing problems.
  • Their model could lead to new treatment options for those suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases, which claim more than 3 million lives every year.

3D printing is opening so many new doors in the medical field. The technology allows researchers and doctors to manipulate the finest design nuances of models as well as the properties of the materials used to build them. These 3D printed models of organs, bones, and other organic subjects are valuable tools for both students learning the basics and medical experts testing new treatments and conducting experimental research.

Now, Czech scientists from the Brno University of Technology have developed a 3D printed model of a functioning lung that can simulate real-life conditions like asthma and other chronic breathing problems. They believe that their 3D printed mechanical model and its computer-based counterpart can be used to devise new, more precise treatment methods. It would be particularly useful in creating a reference standard for inhaled drugs. “This model will show whether an inhaled drug will settle in the concrete areas where we need it to,” Miroslav Jicha, the head of the research team, told Reuters.

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