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Jul 17, 2017

This automatic toothbrush can clean your teeth in seconds

Posted by in category: futurism

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Jul 17, 2017

This bar is floating off Fiji (and we need to go right now!)

Posted by in category: futurism

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Jul 17, 2017

This motorised surfboard can ‘fly’ over the water at 25 mph

Posted by in category: futurism

Click on photo to start video.

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Jul 17, 2017

Are we a Simulation?

Posted by in category: futurism

The theory that we could be the result of a simulation has its proponents in science and philosophy. Are we prepared to replace God fo a teen future hacker?

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Jul 17, 2017

This solar paint will turn your house into a power station

Posted by in categories: energy, habitats

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Jul 17, 2017

This UV patch will fix the your bad sunscreen habits

Posted by in category: futurism

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Jul 17, 2017

Watch this cube completely transform using augmented reality

Posted by in category: augmented reality

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Jul 17, 2017

This Google robot is cool but also terrifying

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

This Google robot is cool but also terrifying. http://cnnmon.ie/2smtXfL

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Jul 17, 2017

Lab-grown capillaries are here, 3D-printed organs are just around the corner

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, biotech/medical

Scientists have demonstrated a method for growing capillaries, the tiny vessels responsible for transporting blood around the body.

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Jul 17, 2017

Synapses in the brain mirror the structure of the visual world

Posted by in category: neuroscience

The research team of Prof. Sonja Hofer at the Biozentrum, University of Basel, has discovered why our brain might be so good at perceiving edges and contours. Neurons that respond to different parts of elongated edges are connected and thus exchange information. This can make it easier for the brain to identify contours of objects. The results of the study are now published in the journal Nature.

Individual visual stimuli are not processed independently by our brain. Rather neurons exchange incoming information to form a coherent perceptual image from the myriad of visual details impinging on our eyes. How our visual perception arises from these interactions is still unclear. This is partly due to the fact that we still know relatively little about the rules that determine which neurons in the brain are connected to each other, and what information they exchange. The research team of Prof. Sonja Hofer at the Biozentrum, University Basel studies neuronal networks in the brain. She has now investigated in the mouse model what information individual neurons in the visual cortex receive from other neurons about the wider .

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