Menu

Blog

Page 3888

Nov 5, 2022

Ken Hayworth’s personal response to MIT Technology Review article

Posted by in category: neuroscience

This is my rebuttal to the recent MIT Technology Review article by Michael Hendricks. The views expressed here are mine alone and should not be taken as an official statement from the BPF which is an organization with a diverse range of opinions but a common goal to advocate more scientific research into brain preservation…

Nov 5, 2022

Once Upon a Bot • Create a Story with AI

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Create stories with AI.

Nov 5, 2022

The next wave of regenerative medicine

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, neuroscience

Regenerative medicine company Frequency Therapeutics is developing new drugs that activate our innate abilities to restore function and reverse degenerative diseases. The company is working on small molecules that selectively activate progenitor cells already present within our bodies to create healthy, functional tissues. Frequency’s initial focus is on hearing loss and multiple sclerosis, and the company has just completed enrolment of a Phase 2b trial in adults with acquired sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL).

Longevity. Technology: Frequency is focused on progenitor cells, which are like stem cells but can only make cells that belong to the same tissue or organ. While progenitor cells remain active in some of our organs and tissues, they can become dormant in others. Frequency’s small molecules are designed to selectively target and induce dormant progenitor cells to create specific cell types to restore tissue structure and function. We caught up with Frequency’s Chief Scientific Officer Dr Chris Loose to learn more.

Nasdaq-listed Frequency was founded in 2014, licensing technology developed by professors Robert Langer from MIT and Jeffrey Karp from Harvard Medical School.

Nov 5, 2022

Tobias Reichmuth — the longevity market starts now

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Dr talks taking hardcore science to market without biotech approval risk and the catalyst that is translational research.

We were lucky enough to attend the Longevity Investors Conference last month; this key event attracts those interested in learning about longevity investment opportunities and finding out more about the exciting directions in which the field is accelerating. To put it succinctly, as MIT Tech Review did recently, LIC “brings academic scientists and biotech companies together with deep-pocketed investors. We’re talking millionaires and billionaires.”

Continue reading “Tobias Reichmuth — the longevity market starts now” »

Nov 5, 2022

Research team reconstructs gravity to find a more robust way of understanding the cosmos

Posted by in categories: cosmology, information science

Scientists from around the world have reconstructed the laws of gravity, to help get a more precise picture of the universe and its constitution.

The standard model of is based on General Relativity, which describes gravity as the curving or warping of space and time. While the Einstein equations have been proven to work very well in our solar system, they had not been observationally confirmed to work over the entire .

An international team of cosmologists, including scientists from the University of Portsmouth in England, has now been able to test Einstein’s theory of gravity in the outer-reaches of space.

Nov 5, 2022

Does free will violate the laws of physics? | Sean Carroll

Posted by in categories: physics, space

Sean Carroll: We might solve free will one day. But here’s why I doubt it.

Up next, The great free will debate ► https://youtu.be/3O61I0pNPg8

Continue reading “Does free will violate the laws of physics? | Sean Carroll” »

Nov 5, 2022

A new quantum component made from graphene

Posted by in categories: particle physics, quantum physics

Less than 20 years ago, Konstantin Novoselov and Andre Geim first created two-dimensional crystals consisting of just one layer of carbon atoms. Known as graphene, this material has had quite a career since then.

Due to its exceptional strength, is used today to reinforce products such as tennis rackets, car tires or aircraft wings. But it is also an interesting subject for , as physicists keep discovering new, astonishing phenomena that have not been observed in other materials.

Nov 5, 2022

European astrophysicist pokes a hole in the Big Bang theory

Posted by in category: cosmology

Everyone knows that the universe began about 14 billion years ago after the Big Bang happened. It turns out, ‘everyone’ might be wrong.

Nov 5, 2022

China-Linked Internet Trolls Try Fueling Divisions in U.S. Midterms, Researchers Say

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, internet

Google’s cybersecurity arm says activity shows a new interest in sowing discord in American politics, though the impact has been minimal.

Nov 5, 2022

How one company is turning used chopsticks into furniture, shelves, and countertops

Posted by in category: futurism

ChopValue, a Canadian company, repurposes millions of chopsticks every year as shelves, furniture and countertops.