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Biotechnology How Do Psychedelics Battle Stress? Scientists Find Their Influence Extends Beyond the Brain The drugs disrupted communication between the brain and immune system to lower stress in mice.
With their bright blue bases, yellow gears, and exposed circuit tops, the 3D-printed robots look like a child’s toys. Yet as a roughly two-dozen-member collective, they can flow around obstacles ...
Artificial Intelligence Meta’s New AI Translates Speech in Real Time Across More Than 100 Languages It's accurate and nearly as fast as expert human interpreters.
Biotechnology These Genetically Engineered Mosquitoes Could Wipe Out Malaria A new gene drive blocks malaria in generations of mosquitoes.
From the possibilitiy of a widespread HIV cure to the first antimatter qubits, check out this week's awesome tech stories from around the web.
The AI agents big tech companies are now developing are significant advances over chatbots because they possess the ability to take actions on your behalf.
Biotechnology Mini Human Organs Just Got Much Closer to Matching the Real Thing New models could shed light on early human development and be used for drug discovery and tissue transplants.
Whether or not growing engineered proteins in bioreactors will be a viable, scalable solution to some of these issues remains to be seen, but for now, at least it may slightly reduce the number of ...
Our liver has admirable regenerative properties. But it takes a beating every day. Eventually, its tissues scar, and if the organ fails, a liver transplant is the only solution. Donor livers are hard ...
Energy Anthropic Says AI Needs a Whole Lot More Power—Stat The company predicts the AI industry will consume 50 gigawatts by 2028, and the US is not prepared to build out that much new capacity.
Artificial Intelligence Evidence Shows AI Systems Are Already Too Much Like Humans. Will That Be a Problem? What happens when you can't tell the difference between a human and an AI chatbot? We're ...
Computing Meta’s Smart Wristband Can Control Devices Like Tom Cruise in ‘Minority Report’ The wearable translates subtle muscle movements into pinches, swipes, and writing.