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Apr 20, 2019
Your Own Personal Aircraft
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: futurism, transportation
This electric vehicle could become your future mode of transportation đ via @kittyhawkaero
Apr 20, 2019
A Mars Colony Could Be Humanityâs First Shot at a Ground-Up, Pure Economy
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: economics, space
Apr 20, 2019
Ending Age-Related Diseases Conference: April Update
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, business, life extension
On July 11â12, we will be hosting our second annual Ending Age-Released Diseases conference. This conference focuses on the progress of aging research along with the business and investment side of rejuvenation biotechnology.
Aging research is on the cusp of some major breakthroughs in the battle against age-related diseases, and we invite you to join us for an action-packed event filled with exciting talks and discussion panels featuring some of the leaders of aging research and the biotech business.
Continue reading “Ending Age-Related Diseases Conference: April Update” »
Technology in todayâs day and age progresses at an incredible speed! But did you know it moved THIS fast?
Apr 20, 2019
IBM Pulls the Plug on Drug-Discovering Watson AI
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: finance, robotics/AI
Apr 20, 2019
A psychology experiment unexpectedly discovered a man who canât cooperate because of brain damage
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: neuroscience
When someoneâs especially cooperative, donât thank their easy-going nature, but give credit to their brain. A team of New York University psychologists hypothesized that cooperation depends on the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DPC), an area of the brain in the frontal lobe involved in regulation control and goal pursuit; after all, cooperation often requires reigning in oneâs naughty impulses to take everything for themselves. To test their theory, the researchers conducted an experiment involving participants with brain damage to the DPCâand discovered someone who would not cooperate at all.
For the study, published last year in the journal Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, the researchers recruited 26 healthy control participants alongside 33 participants with brain damage: eight who had frontal-lobe damage, 14 with amygdala damage, and 11 with damage in other areas of the brain. The participants were split into groups of four, and then put through 20 rounds of a decision-making scenario where each person was given $8 and told they could keep it for themselves, or share it equally with the group. After each round, the participants saw whether the others in their group chose to share. Overall, participants cooperated by sharing their money 38.5% of the time.
More interestingly, participants with damage to their DPC were more likely to keep the $8 for themselves. âOvercoming that intuition to be selfish requires them to regulate their response,â says Jay Van Bavel, a professor of psychology at NYU, and one of the study authors. âYou just reach and grab for the money whenever you can take it. As people had more damage to their DPC, they were more likely to be selfish.â
Apr 20, 2019
Light sails and stingray airships to explore space
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: innovation, space
NASA has announced the 18 projects awarded funding in its NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) programme.