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Jan 21, 2017
Artificial Intelligence is Leading a Revolution in Medicine
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI
In Brief The success of this work will help healthcare professionals diagnose more accurately and efficiently, and it will allow for more diagnostic care in areas with limited healthcare services and providers.
In early August, IBM announced that it will acquire Merge Healthcare Inc., a company that sells systems that help medical professionals access and store medical images. This move is a critical step in IBM’s plan to put AI to work medically by training its Watson software to identify maladies like heart disease and cancer.
Merge is valuable to IBM because it owns 30 billion images, including computerized tomography, X-rays, and magnetic-resonance-imaging scans. The company can use these images in its deep learning training program. IBM is hoping that the same kind of software that lets Flickr recognize your face or a dog in your photos can help Watson identify symptoms of diseases.
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Jan 21, 2017
Exploring the environmental impact of quantum dots
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biological, food, nanotechnology, quantum physics
The speed with which microbes in a simplified ecosystem absorb the nanomaterials is raising concerns about the effect on organisms higher in the food chain.
Jan 20, 2017
Arrow 3: Israel’s killer missile can strike targets in outer space (VIDEO)
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: military, space
TEL AVIV, Jan 21 — Israel has upgraded its missile defence system so that the country can be protected from the ground to outer space.
The latest addition, the Arrow 3, became operational on Wednesday. The system has a range up to 2,400 km and can be used as an anti-satellite weapon. It was co-developed by Israel Aerospace Industries and Boeing Co.
An ‘Arrow 3’ ballistic missile interceptor is seen during its test launch near Ashdod, Israel December 10, 2015. — Reuters picThe bottom tier of Israel’s missile defence system is the Iron Dome interceptor, which is designed to destroy short-range rockets and artillery shells fired up to 70 km away. The second tier of the system is David’s Sling, which is designed to shoot down mid-range, lower-altitude missiles. The Arrow 2 is designed to intercept missiles in low to high atmosphere.
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Jan 20, 2017
US Military Adopts Microsoft’s Hologram Technology
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: augmented reality, holograms, military
This post is also available in: עברית (Hebrew)
Microsoft’s HoloLens hologram headset systems are already being used in the Australian, Ukrainian and Israeli military forces, and now the US military is also finding a use for Microsoft’s most advanced technology.
In recent exercises, forces from the Marines held a weeklong exercise called Spartan Emerging Technology and Innovation Week at North Carolina. The event featured various training technologies – from quadcopters to augmented reality developed with support from the Office of Naval Research (ONR) to accelerate the development of decision-making skills.
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Jan 20, 2017
Google’s Brin hints at bright future for smart contact lenses
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: biotech/medical
I am still waiting for mine. I cannot wait to the day I use my smart lenses to take pics, videos, login to view work email, etc. BTW — I look forward to day we eliminate email too.
Google may have shelved Google Glass, its failed attempt to persuade the world that internet-connected spectacles were the next big thing, but it has not given up on the concept of smart eyeware.
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Jan 20, 2017
Most engineers are white — and so are the faces they use to train software
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: robotics/AI
I keep reminding folks it is a must to have a very diverse team when we look at robotics and Biocomputing/ tech of any sort.
A black researcher had to wear a white mask to test her own project.
Jan 20, 2017
The U.K.’s aggressive new surveillance law will have impacts beyond the nation’s shores
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: law, surveillance
Even if you don’t live in Britain, the U.K.’s new “Snooper’s Charter” is worth watching. It could inspire other democratic nations to adopt aggressive surveillance policies.
Jan 20, 2017
MIT research looks into why AI has trouble recognizing diverse faces
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: robotics/AI
Facial recognition programs don’t recognize minorities as often as they do Caucasian faces — and here is why.
Jan 20, 2017
New Delivery Technique Enables Rapid Treatment for Inflammation
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: biotech/medical
A team of engineers has developed a new RNA delivery technique that uses short bursts of ultrasound to efficiently deliver RNA into cells, reducing colon inflammation.
MIT and Brigham and Women’s Hospital researchers have demonstrated that they can deliver strands of RNA efficiently to colon cells, using bursts of ultrasound waves that propel the RNA into the cells. Using this approach, the researchers dramatically turned down the production of a protein involved in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), in mice.
“What we saw in this paper was the ultrasound can enable rapid delivery of these molecules,” says Carl Schoellhammer, a postdoc at MIT’s Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research and the study’s lead author. “In this case it was proinflammatory molecules that we were shutting off, and we saw tremendous knockdown of those proteins.”
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