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Dec 18, 2024

Helping machine learning models identify objects in any pose

Posted by in categories: information science, robotics/AI, space

A new visual recognition approach improved a machine learning technique’s ability to both identify an object and how it is oriented in space, according to a study presented in October at the European Conference on Computer Vision in Milan, Italy.

Self-supervised learning is a machine learning approach that trains on unlabeled data, extending generalizability to real-world data. While it excels at identifying objects, a task called semantic classification, it may struggle to recognize objects in new poses.

This weakness quickly becomes a problem in situations like autonomous vehicle navigation, where an algorithm must assess whether an approaching car is a head-on collision threat or side-oriented and just passing by.

Dec 18, 2024

The secret to healthy aging? Scientists say these ‘superagers’ may hold answer

Posted by in category: life extension

Scientists are studying the genes of “superagers” in hopes of identifying targets for therapies and treatments to help people live longer, healthier lives.

Dec 18, 2024

ORNL researchers translate foundational uranium science into active nonproliferation solutions

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, military, nuclear energy, science, terrorism

Through its commitment to international nuclear nonproliferation — a mission focused on limiting the spread of nuclear weapons and sensitive technology while working to promote peaceful use of nuclear science and technology — the United States maintains a constant vigilance aimed at reducing the threat of nuclear and radiological terrorism worldwide.

With extensive research into both basic and applied uranium science, as well as internationally deployed operational solutions, the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory is uniquely positioned to contribute its comprehensive capabilities toward advancing the U.S. nonproliferation mission.

In 1943, seemingly overnight, ORNL emerged from a rural Tennessee valley as the site of the world’s first continuously operating nuclear reactor, in support of U.S. efforts to end World War II. ORNL’s mission soon shifted into peacetime applications, harnessing nuclear science for medical treatments, power generation and breakthroughs in materials, biological and computational sciences.

Dec 18, 2024

Researchers propose building homes on Mars with human blood

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

AstroCrete uses a protein found in plasma as a binder. No, really.

Dec 18, 2024

CRISPR genome-editing grows up: advanced therapies head for the clinic

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

Gene-editing technologies for cancer and blood disorders are maturing a little more than a year after the first CRISPR drug was approved.

Dec 18, 2024

Israel now operating its first domestically built quantum computer

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

First Israeli superconductor-based quantum computer supporting defense and civilian applications is now operational.

Dec 18, 2024

What would happen to the human body moving at near lightspeed?

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Colors change, time distorts, and you’d probably get pancaked.

Dec 18, 2024

How Einstein Tried to Explain Matter

Posted by in category: futurism

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Dec 18, 2024

Ultrahigh-gain colloidal quantum dot infrared avalanche photodetectors

Posted by in category: quantum physics

Kinetically pumped avalanche multiplication has been demonstrated in a colloidal quantum dot photodetector, achieving an 85-fold multiplication gain. This proposes new opportunities for developing colloidal quantum dot single-photon detectors.

Dec 18, 2024

Hubble trouble or Superbubble? Astronomers need to escape the ‘supervoid’ to solve cosmology crisis

Posted by in category: cosmology

The disagreement in the rate of expansion of the universe, the Hubble tension, could arise from the fact Earth sits in an under-dense supervoid region of space.

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