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Sep 12, 2017
Scientists discover genetic timetable of brain’s aging process
Posted by Paul Gonçalves in categories: genetics, life extension, neuroscience
Brain scientists have identified a genetic programme that controls the way our brain changes throughout life.
The programme controls how and when brain genes are expressed at different times in a person’s life to perform a range of functions, the study found.
Experts say the timing is so precise that they can tell the age of a person by looking at the genes that are expressed in a sample of brain tissue.
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Sep 12, 2017
How computers learn to recognize objects instantly
Posted by Müslüm Yildiz in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI
Ten years ago, researchers thought that getting a computer to tell the difference between a cat and a dog would be almost impossible. Today, computer vision systems do it with greater than 99 percent accuracy. How?
Joseph Redmon works on the YOLO (You Only Look Once) system, an open-source method of object detection that can identify objects in images and video — from zebras to stop signs — with lightning-quick speed. In a remarkable live demo, Redmon shows off this important step forward for applications like self-driving cars, robotics and even cancer detection.
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Sep 12, 2017
UV emission linked to Supernova explosion mechanism
Posted by Amberley Levine in category: cosmology
Supernovae are an explosion of a massive supergiant star which may shine with the brightness of 10 billion suns! The study of these phenomena has unlocked mysteries about black holes, the origin of metals such as gold and the dynamic of the universe. Supernovae are rare — the last supernova seen in our galaxy was recorded in 1604, according to NASA. However, the Universe is large and astronomers estimated that one of the Milky Way’s massive stars explodes about every 50 years on average [1].
Sep 12, 2017
Keith Comito on SCIQ on TYT discussing why scientific research needs crowd funding to maximize progress and innovation
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
There is a crisis in science funding and in the relatively small field of rejuvenation biotechnology this means that crowdfunding breakthrough science is vitally important.
Sep 11, 2017
Solar Physicist Explains How The Sun Controls Climate, Not Man
Posted by Brett Gallie II in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience, policy, sustainability
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lmVxMZfy4eQ&feature=youtu.be
Are these huge solar flares causing massive hurricanes or Man made Climate Change? Interview with Harvard-Smithsonian Solar Physicist Wei-Hock “Willie” Soon about how solar cycle accounts for climate change.
In this exclusive interview, Infowars reporters Millie Weaver and David Knight talk with Harvard-Smithsonian Solar Physicist Wei-Hock “Willie” Soon about how solar cycle account for climate change. Soon uses science to dispel the false notion that CO2 emissions are to blame for ‘global warming’ and that it is nothing more than the politicization of pseudoscience for policy makers.
Continue reading “Solar Physicist Explains How The Sun Controls Climate, Not Man” »
Sep 11, 2017
Researchers Find ‘Internal Clock’ Within Live Human Cells
Posted by Paul Gonçalves in category: biotech/medical
A new study offers up a method of gauging which point of the cell cycle a particular cell has reached.
Sep 11, 2017
Here’s my 20 minute talk at Raadfest 2017 on #transhumanism and the Immortality Bus
Posted by Zoltan Istvan in categories: life extension, transhumanism
Here’s my 20 minute talk at Raadfest 2017 on # transhumanism and the Immortality Bus. https://www.facebook.com/ZoltanGIstvan/videos/1980371782204597/?fref=mentions
Sep 11, 2017
If Atoms Are Mostly Empty Space, Why Do Objects Look And Feel Solid?
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: particle physics
Chemist John Dalton proposed the theory that all matter and objects are made up of particles called atoms, and this is still accepted by the scientific community, almost two centuries later. Each of these atoms is each made up of an incredibly small nucleus and even smaller electrons, which move around at quite a distance from the centre. If you imagine a table that is a billion times larger, its atoms would be the size of melons. But even so, the nucleus at the centre would still be far too small to see and so would the electrons as they dance around it. So why don’t our fingers just pass through atoms, and why doesn’t light get through the gaps?