Osteoarthritis, AI blood test beats X-rays and predicts it 10 years earlier
By analyzing just 6 proteins in the blood, an AI algorithm predicts years in advance, without symptoms and accurately, who will develop osteoarthritis
By analyzing just 6 proteins in the blood, an AI algorithm predicts years in advance, without symptoms and accurately, who will develop osteoarthritis
Dark energy, responsible for the accelerated expansion of the universe, may not be as constant as previously thought. A discovery that could overturn cosmology.
2024 marks a historic moment: Mickey Mouse and other masterpieces from 1928 enter the public domain, changing the creative landscape.
Ultrasonic 3D printing could revolutionize surgery, allowing implants to be injected and solidified directly into the body
A team of researchers develops new techniques that can repair tissue damaged by heart attacks and heart disease.
The innovative artificial cartilage implant developed by Duke University overcomes the limitations of traditional treatments and prepares for clinical trials.
A large US study identifies 4 key genes in psychological conditions that lead to an increased risk of suicide.
The expiration of copyright "frees" more and more works: here are some of the most famous, which will enter the public domain in 2023.
A new approach to cancer treatment based on a radioactive gel “carrier” has achieved 100% response in mouse models.
A formidable 'synthetic' cartilage based on hydrogel and cellulose promises to repair the knees. Indeed, to improve them.
Personalized brain stimulation was able to cure a very serious depression. A new path opens up for patients.
The first totally artificial heart transplant is a success: it imitates human behavior, complete with liquid pumped inside.
Inventions that were unsuccessful, or premature, or boasted. They were all important: but take a look at the flops they encountered!
A recent WHO report highlights the importance of technology in both the education and practice of nurses. Here are the most promising technologies.
Pulse GAN, a neural network that with a revolutionary approach to images is able to increase the detail of blurred pixels up to 64 times as much.
An algorithm reassembles a frog's cells and tissues into new living organisms designed to perform specific functions. The era of xenobots, living machines, has begun.
Regenerate joint cartilage, perhaps entire limbs, like salamanders? The key factors of this ability have been discovered: man also has them.
The system, called EmoNet, not only looks at facial expressions to make sense of emotions, but also general consensus.
At Menlo Park they say they are ready to present by December a functional and wearable prototype of a device for writing with thoughts
ECMO is a machine capable of saving or making people who are already dead survive even for months. A miracle that however raises enormous ethical doubts
#technology increasingly helps those with temporary or permanent disabilities. The latest news was from a few days ago: people with complete paralysis were able to partially recover some functions (sense of touch, sensation of pain, bladder control and some movements) thanks to just one year of 'hi-tech' #rehabilitation with man-machine interfaces, virtual reality and avatars. The research, the results of which were published in the journal Scientific Reports, was conducted on eight patients with severe paralysis: the few nerves that remained intact after the accident managed to… Read more