Menu

Blog

Page 7787

Feb 27, 2020

Asia’s economies must learn to accommodate rise of robots

Posted by in categories: economics, employment, government, robotics/AI

While robotics and automation create a plethora of opportunities for skilled labor, they substitute many jobs of unskilled labor. Philips’ automated shaver factory in the Netherlands employs one-tenth of the workforce of its factory in China that makes the same shavers. Such developments accentuate inequality and pose severe social pressure in developed countries, which would need to be addressed by government in the years to come.


Technology can complement humans but it can also eliminate their jobs.

Lilac Nachum

Continue reading “Asia’s economies must learn to accommodate rise of robots” »

Feb 27, 2020

NASA’s idea for making food from thin air just became a reality

Posted by in category: food

The company’s protein powder, “Solein,” is similar in form and taste to wheat flour.

Feb 26, 2020

CDC confirms first possible community transmission of coronavirus in US

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

Wuhan Coronavirus Pandemic — USA

California has the first case that cannot be traced back to a traveler from an area with an outbreak.

“It’s significant because it means that it’s also possible the infection is spreading untraced throughout the local community.”

Continue reading “CDC confirms first possible community transmission of coronavirus in US” »

Feb 26, 2020

Advancement simplifies laser-based medical imaging

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, materials

Photoacoustic imaging, a technique for examining living materials through the use of laser light and ultrasonic sound waves, has many potential applications in medicine because of its ability to show everything from organs to blood vessels to tumors.

Caltech’s Lihong Wang, a pioneer in the field, has developed variants of imaging that can show organs moving in real time, develop three-dimensional (3D) images of internal body parts, and even differentiate cancerous cells from healthy cells.

Wang, Bren Professor of Medical Engineering and Electrical Engineering, has now further advanced technology with what he calls Photoacoustic Topography Through an Ergodic Relay (PATER), which aims to simplify the equipment required for imaging of this type.

Feb 26, 2020

The antimatter factory about to solve the universe’s greatest mystery

Posted by in category: space

Why is there something rather than nothing? We’re finally making enough antimatter to extract an answer – and it might reveal the dark side of the universe too.

Feb 26, 2020

Deaf moths evolved noise-cancelling scales to evade predators

Posted by in category: biological

Some species of deaf moths can absorb as much as 85 per cent of the incoming sound energy from predatory bats—who use echolocation to detect them. The findings, published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface today, reveal the moths, who are unable to hear the ultrasonic calls of bats, have evolved this clever defensive strategy to help it survive.

Bats hunt at night using echolocation. The technique, which is also known as biological sonar, first evolved around 65 million years ago and enables bats to search for and find prey putting huge predation pressure on nocturnal insects. One defence that many nocturnal insects evolved is the ability to hear the ultrasonic calls of bats, which allows them to actively evade approaching bats.

Many moth species, however, cannot hear. The team of researchers from the University of Bristol wanted to investigate the alternative defences against bats that some species of deaf moths might have evolved.

Feb 26, 2020

Researchers find an animal without mitochondria

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The “powerhouse of the cell” is apparently not necessary for animal life.

Feb 26, 2020

AI drug enters human clinical trials

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

Medicine to treat obsessive compulsive disorder.

Feb 26, 2020

This Designer is Making Ceramic Wares With Human Urine

Posted by in categories: futurism, materials

Human urine is an promising material in the future where an enormous amount of urine is produced by rapidly growing population.

Feb 26, 2020

Scientists propose new regulatory framework to make AI safer

Posted by in categories: information science, robotics/AI

Scientists from Imperial College London have proposed a new regulatory framework for assessing the impact of AI, called the Human Impact Assessment for Technology (HIAT).

The researchers believe the HIAT could identify the ethical, psychological and social risks of technological progress, which are already being exposed in a growing range of applications, from voter manipulation to algorithmic sentencing.