With the help of machine learning, a skin-like sensor internalizes different stimuli, allowing it to read and interpret hand movement. Science has afforded us with many life-changing advancements. Vaccines to help protect…
3D printing allows blind scientists to visualize data using touch
3D-printed lithophanes are helping to democratize science by making data more shareable between sighted and blind scientists. Using 3D printing and an old-fashioned art form, a team of researchers is making science…
Boosting immune memory for broader vaccines
Our bodies have adapted intricate mechanisms to defend against external pathogens. A complex network, the human immune system works to eliminate threats and keeps a record of every infection it has ever…
No, the human brain did not shrink
Researchers refute a hypothesis that the human brain shrank 3,000 years ago as a result of the transition to living in modern societies. Last year, a study was widely circulated in which…
What influences where scarab beetles roll their dung balls?
A numerical model helps scientists understand how particularities of different terrains affect the trajectory and behavior of dung beetles. Out in a sunny field scampers a black scarab beetle, making its way…
In situ cancer vaccine captures antigens from tumors
A new in situ, personalized cancer vaccine captures molecules from growing tumors to activate the body’s immune cells against them. Cancer is a complex disease, and as a result of a myriad…
AI without computers – Advanced Science News
Artificial intelligence, or AI, is ubiquitous. Progress made over the last few decades has been astounding, with achievements demonstrating the ever-growing capabilities of these systems, such as DeepMind’s AlphaGo defeating the world’s…
Solving the oxygen supply shortage with electrochemistry
A new electrochemical device produces high purity oxygen in situ, and researchers hope it might help curb the oxygen supply shortage. Two years into the COVID-19 pandemic and access to oxygen is…
Ada Lovelace, prophet of the computer age
Daughter of the English poet, Lord Byron, Augusta Ada King, Countess of Lovelace — better known as Ada Lovelace — was a mathematician credited for writing the first computer program in the…
Dengue and Zika make their hosts more attractive to mosquitos
Dengue and Zika take control of a protein responsible for body odor, but a simple treatment helps reverse the process. Mosquito-borne infections are a significant public health concern, and new research has…