Our goal is to evaluate, test and share the validated & most promising Maker projects to create an alternative system to supply medical materials.
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Apr 3, 2020
‘Rebooting the brain’: Our fight to bring people back from the dead
Posted by Lola Heavey in categories: biotech/medical, computing, neuroscience
Studies of hibernating animals suggest that the molecular and synaptic integrity of neurons in the cerebral cortex that underlie self and consciousness is maintained in many cases when from the outside the brain appears dead.
A striking feature of medicine over the past few centuries has been our growing ability to bring people back from the “dead.” For most of human history, patients who were unconscious and not breathing were treated as though they had died. But the concept of resuscitation emerged as doctors grew to understand the basic function of the lungs and airways. That led to new techniques and tools capable of restoring both breathing and heartbeat — and the realization that cardiac arrest was not always a death sentence. That, in turn, gave rise to a distinction between what’s now called clinical death versus brain death.
Continue reading “‘Rebooting the brain’: Our fight to bring people back from the dead” »
Apr 3, 2020
Scientists develop AI that translates brainwaves into sentences
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in category: robotics/AI
An AI that translates brainwaves into sentences.
Scientists have developed a new artificial intelligence-based system that converts brain activity into text which could result in transforming communication for people who can’t speak or type.
The electrodes on the brain have been used to translate brainwaves into words spoken by a computer which is helpful for people who have lost the ability to speak. When you speak, your brain sends signals from the motor cortex to the muscles in your jaw, lips, and larynx to coordinate their movement and produce a sound.
Apr 3, 2020
Cellex and Mayo Clinic Launch Tests to Determine COVID-19 Immunity from Previous Exposure
Posted by Nicholi Avery in categories: biotech/medical, health
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first blood test that looks for the antibodies against the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19. This is different than assays that test for presence of the virus—those test to determine if a patient has COVID-19. These new antibody tests determine if the person was exposed to the virus, had COVID-19 and recovered. And it suggests, if positive, that the person is now immune to COVID-19 and can’t get it again.
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina-based Cellex was granted an emergency use authorization (EUA) on its test yesterday.
The test is performed on a blood sample taken from a patient’s vein and can be performed by laboratories certified under the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988 (CLIA), the Health and Human Services division that oversees clinical diagnostic testing in the United States.
Apr 3, 2020
UH professor develops coating that protects PPE from droplets that spread COVID-19
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: biotech/medical, health
HOUSTON — A University of Houston professor is waiting for FDA approval of a waterproofing solution that he says can shield personal protective equipment such as N95 masks from the droplets that spread COVID-19.
Professor Seamus Curran said he developed the hydrophobic coating in 2011 while testing it on fabrics. He continued creating similar solutions to be used on wood and masonry with his company, Integricote.
When COVID-19 broke out, he felt the coating could help, especially as health care workers warned of a nationwide shortage of personal protective equipment (PPE) such as N95 masks that health care workers wear.
Apr 3, 2020
Quantum computing meets particle physics for LHC data analysis
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: information science, particle physics, quantum physics, robotics/AI
Apr 3, 2020
Coronavirus Delivers ‘World’s First’ Drone Delivery Service
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, drones, food
Coronavirus is sending in the drones. In what’s being billed as a “world first,” startup Manna Aero has begun a drone delivery service in Moneygall, Ireland. Delivering medicine to vulnerable people locked in their homes, it provides yet another strong example of how technology is helping the world adjust to life in the shadow of the coronavirus.
Having received authorisation from the Irish Aviation Authority, Manna Aero’s service began last Friday as a pilot in Moneygall, which was previously best known as Barack Obama’s ancestral village. However, if the trial is successful, the service will be rolled out throughout Ireland, and could also be used to deliver food.
The drones will deliver prescription orders for medicine to around a dozen households. As Manna Zero’s founder Bobby Healy told the Irish Independent, the drones ensure “zero human-contact” and can execute deliveries “in ways normal delivery can’t.”
Apr 3, 2020
SpaceX loses its third Starship prototype during a cryogenic test
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: Elon Musk, space travel
Shortly after the failure, SpaceX’s founder and chief engineer, Elon Musk, said on Twitter, “We will see what data review says in the morning, but this may have been a test configuration mistake.” A testing issue would be good in the sense that it means the vehicle itself performed well, and the problem can be more easily addressed.
This is the third time a Starship has failed during these proof tests that precede engine tests and, potentially flight tests. Multiple sources indicated that had these preliminary tests succeeded, SN3 would have attempted a 150-meter flight test as early as next Tuesday.
Continue reading “SpaceX loses its third Starship prototype during a cryogenic test” »
Apr 3, 2020
An AI can read words in brain signals
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: information science, robotics/AI
One week ago…
“Gasoline in the United States has fallen to about $2 a gallon and continues to slide. However, that price is nowhere near the least expensive in the world. Venezuela has the least expensive gas in the world at two cents per gallon.”