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Jul 31, 2016
Now there’s an app to help you breathe
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, health, neuroscience
Apple’s new app to help you do deep breathing to improve your mind, intelligence, and over all health.
APPLE is set to launch a new app that aims to make you healthier through just a few minutes a day of deep breathing.
It is based on the growing field of research proving the biological benefits, including genetic changes, of mind-body medicine.
Jul 31, 2016
People of the future may not congregate in crowds—at least not physically
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: augmented reality, virtual reality
VR again helping people and their fears.
Actual crowds may be replaced by what we might call distributed crowds, with virtual and augmented reality’s help.
Jul 31, 2016
New material could advance superconductivity
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: nanotechnology, particle physics
Abstract: Scientists have looked for different ways to force hydrogen into a metallic state for decades. A metallic state of hydrogen is a holy grail for materials science because it could be used for superconductors, materials that have no resistance to the flow of electrons, which increases electricity transfer efficiency many times over. For the first time researchers, led by Carnegie’s Viktor Struzhkin, have experimentally produced a new class of materials blending hydrogen with sodium that could alter the superconductivity landscape and could be used for hydrogen-fuel cell storage. The research is published in Nature Communications.
It had been predicted that certain hydrogen-rich compounds consisting of multiple atoms of hydrogen with so-called alkali metals like lithium, potassium or sodium, could provide a new chemical means to alter the compound’s electronic structure. This, in turn, may lead the way to metallic high-temperature superconductors.
“The challenge is temperature,” explained Struzhkin. “The only superconductors that have been produced can only exist at impractically cold temperatures. In recent years, there have been predictions of compounds with several atoms of hydrogen coupled with alkali metals that could exist at more practical temperatures. They are theorized to have unique properties useful to superconductivity.”
Jul 31, 2016
Scientists Complete the Most Detailed Map of the Brain Ever
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
To me, maps always conjure up a sense of exploration.
Back in the Age of Discovery, rudimentary maps allowed European explorers to sail into the vast unknown. They began charting new worlds, and in turn, made newer maps that helped future generations better understand the lands and seas that cover our world.
Continue reading “Scientists Complete the Most Detailed Map of the Brain Ever” »
Jul 31, 2016
Lab 2.0: Will Computers Replace Experimental Science?
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: chemistry, computing, mobile phones, physics, science, solar power, sustainability
We spend our lives surrounded by hi-tech materials and chemicals that make our batteries, solar cells and mobile phones work. But developing new technologies requires time-consuming, expensive and even dangerous experiments.
Luckily we now have a secret weapon that allows us to save time, money and risk by avoiding some of these experiments: computers.
Continue reading “Lab 2.0: Will Computers Replace Experimental Science?” »
Jul 31, 2016
How Quantum Mechanics Is Changing Everything We Know About Our Lives
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: neuroscience, quantum physics, time travel
Quantum physics is the new physics that is pointing to something far greater than the materialistic world that we once believed to be the basis of our existence. Not only is it disproving our original perception of space and time, but it is opening the doors to the possibility of time travel, telepathy, and consciousness creating our reality.
Jul 31, 2016
How much sway do our genes really hold over our IQ?
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: health, neuroscience
Interesting read to an old question.
New research explores what influences our intelligence and how we can give ourselves an upgrade.
By Sally Blundell In Health
Continue reading “How much sway do our genes really hold over our IQ?” »
Jul 31, 2016
Artificial Intelligence May Soon Drive Your Car — And Keep You Company at the Same Time
Posted by Aleksandar Vukovic in categories: robotics/AI, sustainability, transportation
Honda said in a press release that the AI will use conversations with the driver and other data it gathers ‘both to perceive the emotions of the driver and to engage in dialogue with the driver based on the vehicle’s own emotions.’ The just-announced partnership works toward application of the ‘emotion engine,’ which is ‘a set of AI technologies developed by cocoro SB Corp., which enable machines to artificially generate their own emotions.’
Image source: Getty Images.
Continue Reading Below.
Jul 31, 2016
Building Blade Runner: How UCLA’s IDEAS Lab Envisions the Future
Posted by Andreas Matt in category: futurism
We visited the UCLA Architecture and Urban Design (A.UD) department to meet the architects of tomorrow.