by newshunter August 18, 2008 - 8:37
Category: Science   Tags:
Brain wave-reading technology

Here's a mind-bending idea: The U.S. military is paying scientists to study ways to read people's thoughts.
The hope is that the research could someday lead to a gadget capable of translating the thoughts of soldiers who suffered brain injuries in combat or even stroke patients in hospitals. But the research also raises concerns that such mind-reading technology could be used to interrogate the enemy.

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by Sound_BM July 1, 2008 - 4:54
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T-cells attacked by HIV

Mice have been made resistant to HIV by sabotaging a gene in the blood cells that the virus normally infects.

Researchers who developed the treatment at Sangamo BioSciences, a biotechnology company in Duarte, California, US, hope to test it in patients by the end of 2008. If successful, the treatment could offer a more effective way for controlling HIV in patients with the disease, the researchers say.

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by coNNaiSSeur June 24, 2008 - 8:26
Odysseus slaughtering a group of suitors

Using clues from star and sun positions mentioned by the ancient Greek poet Homer, scholars think they have determined the date when King Odysseus returned from the Trojan War and slaughtered a group of suitors who had been pressing his wife to marry one of them.
It was on April 16, 1178 B.C. that the great warrior struck with arrows, swords and spears, killing those who sought to replace him, a pair of researchers say in Monday's online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.

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by smartY June 20, 2008 - 7:19
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Some physical attributes of the homosexual brain resemble those found in the opposite sex

Brain scans have provided the most compelling evidence yet that being gay or straight is a biologically fixed trait.

The scans reveal that in gay people, key structures of the brain governing emotion, mood, anxiety and aggressiveness resemble those in straight people of the opposite sex.

The differences are likely to have been forged in the womb or in early infancy, says Ivanka Savic, who conducted the study at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden.

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by smartY June 20, 2008 - 4:18
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Water Ice on Mars

There is water ice on Mars within reach of the Mars Phoenix Lander, NASA scientists announced Thursday.

Photographic evidence settles the debate over the nature of the white material seen in photographs sent back by the craft. As seen in lower left of this image, chunks of the ice sublimed (changed directly from solid to gas) over the course of four days, after the lander's digging exposed them.

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Sex and marriage with robots?

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by smartY June 13, 2008 - 11:13
Category: Science   Tags:
Robot-human sex

Sex and marriage with robots? It could happen
At first, sex with robots might be considered geeky, "but once you have a story like 'I had sex with a robot, and it was great!' appear someplace like Cosmo magazine, I'd expect many people to jump on the bandwagon," Levy said.

I can see it now -
Once you've had 'bot, you cain't settle for twat !

Robo-Romeo... he keeps going... and going... and going...

LoL !

By Killjoy

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NASA Plans to Visit the Sun

smartY's picture
by smartY June 12, 2008 - 10:25
Solar Probe+ Appearance

For more than 400 years, astronomers have studied the sun from afar. Now NASA has decided to go there.
"We are going to visit a living, breathing star for the first time," says program scientist Lika Guhathakurta of NASA Headquarters. "This is an unexplored region of the solar system and the possibilities for discovery are off the charts."

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by smartY June 10, 2008 - 8:13
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Disney’s Buzz Lightyear takes a tour of the International Space Station

Buzz, a space ranger from the animated 1995 film “Toy Story,” launched to the International Space Station (ISS) last week aboard NASA’s shuttle Discovery as part of an educational campaign to encourage interest in science and math among schoolchildren. He’ll stay aboard the station for about six months alongside NASA astronaut Greg Chamitoff.

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by smartY May 29, 2008 - 10:38
Seven laureates of The Kavli Prizes

Norwegian-born philanthropist Fred Kavli awarded seven scientists his first batch of $1 million prizes for astrophysics, neuroscience and nanotechnology on Wednesday.
Kavli, a physicist who left Norway in 1955 with $300 and turned it into a $340 million fortune in California, set up the prize for advances in research ranging from deep space to how the brain works and the use of molecule-sized devices.

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by smartY May 22, 2008 - 8:52
Category: Science   Tags:
Blood-pressure-sensing underpants

Blood pressure is not hard to measure, but the necessary equipment for clinically accurate measurements – a cuff, a pump, and stethoscope or electronics – is bulky and heavy.

However, researchers have recently found that a person's "pulse wave velocity" is closely linked to blood pressure. This is the rate at which the pulse pressure wave passes through the blood circulatory system.

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