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Jan 25, 2023

Shutterstock releases its own AI image generator

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Shutterstock is cooperating with OpenAI. Now the stock database is releasing a platform for the AI generation of images.

In October, Shutterstock and OpenAI partnered to integrate DALL-E 2 into the company’s creative tools. Today, Shutterstock released the AI image generation platform. It is available to all users and the images generated can be used under license.

According to Shutterstock, the tool was developed with an “ethical approach and uses a library of assets that authentically represent the world we live in. Shutterstock also recognizes the artists’ contributions to the generative content by paying royalties for the intellectual property used to develop the models and for the ongoing licensing of the content.”

Jan 25, 2023

Microsoft users hit with global cloud outage that impacted products like Teams and Outlook

Posted by in category: futurism

Microsoft is investigating issues with several of its products including Teams and Outlook, the company said Tuesday.

Jan 25, 2023

Researchers Synthesize Ocean-Based Molecule That Could Fight Parkinson’s

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Summary: Researchers have successfully created a synthetic version of a small molecule found in a recently discovered sea sponge that appears to have therapeutic benefits for Parkinson’s disease.

Source: UCLA

Organic chemists at UCLA have created the first synthetic version of a molecule recently discovered in a sea sponge that may have therapeutic benefits for Parkinson’s disease and similar disorders. The molecule, known as lissodendoric acid A, appears to counteract other molecules that can damage DNA, RNA and proteins and even destroy whole cells.

Jan 25, 2023

The Death of Death during the coming #DLD Tel Aviv Innovation Festival in Israel. Top news at #i24

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, economics, engineering, singularity, space travel, transhumanism

José Cordeiro, PhD, talking about his international bestseller “The Death of Death” during the coming DLD Tel Aviv Innovation Festival in Israel. Top news at i24 news discussing about aging as the “mother” of all chronic diseases!

José Cordeiro is an international fellow of the World Academy of Art and Science, vicechair of HumanityPlus, director of The Millennium Project, founding faculty at Singularity University in NASA Research Park, Silicon Valley, and former director of the Club of Rome (Venezuela Chapter), the World Transhumanist Association and the Extropy Institute.

Continue reading “The Death of Death during the coming #DLD Tel Aviv Innovation Festival in Israel. Top news at #i24” »

Jan 25, 2023

A robot able to ‘smell’ using a biological sensor

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

A new technological development by Tel Aviv University has made it possible for a robot to smell using a biological sensor. The sensor sends electrical signals as a response to the presence of a nearby odor, which the robot can detect and interpret.

In this new study, the researchers successfully connected the to an electronic system and, using a machine learning algorithm, were able to identify odors with a level of sensitivity 10,000 times higher than that of a commonly used electronic device. The researchers believe that in light of the success of their research, this technology may also be used in the future to identify explosives, drugs, diseases, and more.

Continue reading “A robot able to ‘smell’ using a biological sensor” »

Jan 25, 2023

Study shows that the lateral orbitofrontal cortex ‘writes’ cognitive maps in the brain

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

The orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) is a region in the frontal lobe of the brain known to be involved in decision-making and information processing. The lateral part of this brain region, known as the lOFC, has been identified as a particularly salient region for the creation of so-called “cognitive maps.”

Cognitive maps are mental representations of the world that are believed to guide . While past studies have linked the lOFC to the brain’s use of these maps, it is still unclear whether it creates these maps or merely deploys them when necessary.

Researchers at the National Institute on Drug Abuse in Baltimore and the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics have recently carried out a study exploring these two hypotheses, with the hope of better understanding the functions of the lOFC. Their findings, published in Nature Neuroscience, suggest that the lateral OFC is directly involved in the writing of cognitive maps.

Jan 25, 2023

Scientists Have a Plan to Turn Earth Into a Giant Observatory

Posted by in category: satellites

Fiber-optic cables stretch across oceans and wind their way underground to handle our communications systems, and scientists think that this vast network of infrastructure could be put to another use: observing Earth’s surface from below.

Specifically, the 1.2 million kilometers (more than 745,000 miles) of existing fiber-optic cable could be combined with satellites and other remote sensing instruments to monitor the entire globe in real time.

Storms and earthquakes could be tracked in this way, the team behind the idea suggests, as well as ships and whales passing through the seas. The network might even have the potential to be used to spot broken pipelines.

Jan 25, 2023

Ants ‘can detect scent of cancer’

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Science_Hightech — operanewsapp.

Jan 25, 2023

Long-term follow-up study of chronic pancreatitis patients highlights need for closer monitoring after surgery

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Chronic pancreatitis, a painful, debilitating condition, often requires major surgery to remove all or part of the pancreas. Few large studies have evaluated how these patients fare five years or more after their operations. The largest study to date of patients who have had surgery for chronic pancreatitis with follow-up of six years or longer has found that about two-thirds survive after 10 years. However, more than one-fourth of these patients were still using opioids daily for pain.

The study, presented at the Southern Surgical Association 134th in December in Palm Beach, Florida, has been published online as an “article in press” in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons (JACS).

“After , we, as surgeons, expect that we return these back to their normal lives,” said lead study author Gregory C. Wilson, MD, an assistant professor of at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. “In this study, we have long-term follow-up examining survival and cause of death in these patients well after that surgical period, and what we see is that survival continues to decline even five years out from surgery.”

Jan 25, 2023

The outline of people’s bodies can be detected from Wi-Fi signals

Posted by in categories: internet, robotics/AI

Machine learning can analyse how the signals from Wi-Fi transmitters are disrupted by human bodies to reveal what position people are sitting, standing or lying in.