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How do cells know what they should become as the body develops? Biological development depends crucially on spatial patterns: ...
Johns Hopkins researchers have discovered new materials and a new process that could advance the ever-escalating quest to ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Scientists grow mini-brains in lab to unlock energy-efficient artificial intelligence
Researchers at Lehigh University are exploring tiny lab-grown brain organoids to unlock the secrets of the brain’s efficiency ...
Researchers reveal that high-intensity interval training (HIIT) was more effective than moderate exercise in making ...
Johns Hopkins researchers have found new materials and methods to create smaller, faster, and more affordable microchips used ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Dog crate-sized robot factory learns to assemble electronics by watching humans
Developed by MicroFactory, the general-purpose tabletop robot can be trained with the help of AI or human demonstration. The ...
New research shows how fatty acids in cooking oil can safely dissolve and recover silver from circuit boards without harmful chemicals or environmental damage.
Tech Xplore on MSN
Room-temperature terahertz device opens door to 6G networks
In a world first, researchers at Nagoya University in Japan have successfully developed a resonant tunnel diode (RTD) that ...
Neurodegenerative diseases remain some of the most difficult conditions to treat. Disorders like Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s ...
KFF Health News on MSN
An AI assistant can interpret those lab results for you
And many patients are using large language models, or LLMs, like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Anthropic’s Claude, and Google’s Gemini, to interpret their records. That help comes with some risk, though.
A new thermogalvanic device uses nanoparticles to control ion flow, allowing it to convert waste heat to electricity and store the energy without external batteries.
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