Science and Technology

Star Trek's Holodeck recreated using ChatGPT and video game assets

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
Star Trek's Holodeck is no longer just science fiction. Using AI, engineers have created a tool that can generate 3D environments, prompted by everyday language.

Method to extract useful proteins from beer-brewing leftovers

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
Researchers have created a method that extracts over 80 percent of the available protein in grain leftovers from brewing beer, commonly known as brewers' spent grain.

Discovery brings all-solid-state sodium batteries closer to practical use

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
Researchers have developed a mass synthesis process for sodium-containing sulfides. Mass synthesis of electrolytes with high conductivity and formability is key to the practical use of all-solid-state sodium batteries, thought to be safer than lithium-ion batteries and less expensive, as sodium is far more plentiful than lithium.

Breakthrough promises secure quantum computing at home

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
The full power of next-generation quantum computing could soon be harnessed by millions of individuals and companies, thanks to a breakthrough guaranteeing security and privacy. This advance promises to unlock the transformative potential of cloud-based quantum computing.

Biofortified rice to combat deficiencies

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
Vitamin B1 is an essential micronutrient for human beings. Its deficiency is the cause of numerous diseases of the nervous and cardiovascular systems. Researchers have achieved a significant advance in the fight against vitamin B1 deficiency, frequently associated with a rice-based diet. By specifically targeting the nourishing tissues of the rice grain, the scientists have succeeded in considerably increasing its vitamin B1 content, without compromising agronomic yield. These results could help solve a major public health problem in regions where rice is the staple food.

Scientists uncover key resistance mechanism to Wnt inhibitors in pancreatic and colorectal cancers

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
A new study reveals why some pancreatic and colorectal tumors resist targeted anti-Wnt drugs and suggests how to overcome it, offering new hope to patients with fully treatment-resistant cancers.

Economist: Tens of billions of dollars in forest products are being overlooked

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
Are we missing the forest for the trees? More than timber grows in forests -- including products worth many tens of billions of dollars. Because these goods go unrecorded in official trade statistics, their economic value escapes our attention. As a result, clear opportunities to combat poverty are being missed, according to an economist.

New ways to fine tune electrochemistry

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
Optimizing electrochemical reactions is essential for the transition to renewable energies. In electrochemical reactions, electric currents and potential differences are used to binding and induce reactions. Electrochemistry is a prerequisite for hydrogen production, and for battery technology, and thus for sustainable chemistry. Although there has been a lot of technological development in this area in recent years, there is still room for improvement and a long way towards large scale industrial applications.

Twinkle twinkle baby star, 'sneezes' tell us how you are

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
Researchers have found that baby stars discharge plumes of gas, dust, and magnetic flux from their protostellar disk. The protostellar disk that surrounds developing stars are constantly penetrated by magnetic flux, and if too much magnetic flux remained, the resulting object would generate a magnetic field stronger than any observed protostar. These newly discovered discharges of magnetic flux, or 'sneezes' as the researchers describes them, may be a vital step in proper star formation.

Oxidant pollutant ozone removes mating barriers between fly species

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
Researchers show that ozone levels, such as those found in many places on hot summer days today, destroy the sex pheromones of fruit fly species. As a result, some natural mating boundaries maintained by species-specific pheromones no longer exist. The research team has shown in experiments that flies of different species mate when exposed to ozone and produce hybrid offspring. Since most of these offspring are unable to reproduce, the results could provide another explanation for the global decline of insects.

Ocean currents threaten to collapse Antarctic ice shelves

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
Meandering ocean currents play an important role in the melting of Antarctic ice shelves, threatening a significant rise in sea levels.

Nothing is everything: How hidden emptiness can define the usefulness of filtration materials

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
Voids, or empty spaces, exist within matter at all scales, from the astronomical to the microscopic. In a new study, researchers used high-powered microscopy and mathematical theory to unveil nanoscale voids in three dimensions. This advancement is poised to improve the performance of many materials used in the home and in the chemical, energy and medical industries -- particularly in the area of filtration.

Cloud engineering could be more effective 'painkiller' for global warming than previously thought

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
Cloud 'engineering' could be more effective for climate cooling than previously thought, because of the increased cloud cover produced, new research shows.

AI model can accurately assess PTSD in postpartum women

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
By analyzing the narratives of women who experienced traumatic childbirth and women with non-complicated childbirth, researchers created an AI model that can accurately identify those at risk of childbirth-related PTSD.

Hybrid intelligence can reconcile biodiversity and agriculture

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
So far, biodiversity and agricultural productivity could not be reconciled because the socio-ecological system of agriculture is highly complex, and the interactions between humans and the environment are difficult to capture using conventional methods. A research team now shows a promising way to achieve both goals at the same time. They focus on further developing artificial intelligence in combination with collective human judgement: hybrid intelligence.

Landmark study involving babies in Ireland supports use of Cystic Fibrosis drug in infants from four weeks of age

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
A Cystic Fibrosis drug targeting the basic defect that causes the condition has been shown to be safe and effective in newborns aged four weeks and above, new research suggests.

Parkinson's Disease: New theory on the disease's origins and spread

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
New hypothesis paper builds on a growing scientific consensus that Parkinson's disease route to the brain starts in either the nose or the gut and proposes that environmental toxicants are the likely source.

Food security in developed countries shows resilience to climate change

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
A study has found that market forces have provided good food price stability over the past half century, despite extreme weather conditions.

Synthetic platelets stanch bleeding, promote healing in animal models

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
Researchers have developed synthetic platelets that can be used to stop bleeding and enhance healing at the site of an injury. The researchers have demonstrated that the synthetic platelets work well in animal models but have not yet begun clinical trials in humans.

Study lays the basis for new knowledge on gastrointestinal diseases

Science Daily - 11/04/2024
The transition from the esophagus to the stomach is a delicate region from a medical point of view, often associated with pathological disorders leading to cancer. An international research team has now gained new insights into this region. These pave the way for new prevention and treatment options.

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