Menu

Blog

Page 9785

May 11, 2018

Six tips for social-emotional learning (SEL) to transfer into real-world skills

Posted by in category: education

Great suggestions for educators who want to implement SEL and mindfulness more effectively in their classrooms.


___ Social-emotional learning (SEL) teaches the key attitudes and skills necessary for understanding and managing emotions, listening, feeling and showing empathy for others, and making thoughtful, responsible decisions. For five years, I was an educator in the field teaching mindfulness and emotional skills to.

Read more

May 11, 2018

ER One

Posted by in categories: sustainability, transportation

For an invited competition, Pickard Chilton and ARUP collaborated on the concept design for a Mega-Skyport – Uber’s vision for a next-generation urban aviation transport system. Dubbed “Sky Tower,” the project is intended to facilitate at least 1000 vehicle arrivals and 1000 departures per hour, with each vehicle accommodating up to five passengers.

Once the objective of the desired throughput was resolved, Pickard Chilton and ARUP endeavored to create an elegant yet highly engineered and sophisticated work of architecture that would support and augment the Uber brand. Due to the multi-faceted kit-of-parts and adaptability of the individual module, it can be applied both vertically and horizontally to suit any given context.

While the Sky Tower is conceptual, it is not science fiction. Based on a pragmatic and research-driven approach, the Sky Tower concept delivers to Uber a modular, extensible and sustainable solution that supports their vision for the future of intra-urban transportation.

Read more

May 10, 2018

Boston Dynamics’ robots are learning how to run outside and navigate autonomously

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Boston Dynamics’ robots look more natural and more amazing with each video, and today the company posted two more clips to its YouTube channel showing the latest progress of its Atlas and SpotMini robots.

Read more

May 10, 2018

Early Time-Restricted Feeding Improves Insulin Sensitivity, Blood Pressure, and Oxidative Stress Even without Weight Loss in Men with Prediabetes

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Sutton et al. conduct the first supervised controlled feeding trial to test whether intermittent fasting has benefits in humans in the absence of weight loss. Prediabetic men following a form of intermittent fasting called early time-restricted feeding improved their insulin sensitivity, blood pressure, and oxidative stress levels without losing weight.

Read more

May 10, 2018

Elon Musk wants to launch the same rocket to orbit twice in a single day

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, space travel

Launching the same rocket to orbit twice in 24 hours has never been done before. But Elon Musk says the newest version of his Falcon 9 rocket will accomplish the feat in 2019.

“This is a ridiculously hard thing that has taken us…16 years of extreme effort and many, many iterations,” the serial entrepreneur told reporters, after warning them “we’re definitely going to stay on space, don’t even try.” SpaceX is debuting the new rocket today with the launch of Bangladesh’s first satellite.

Musk said this is intended to be the final version of the SpaceX workhorse Falcon 9, allowing his engineers to focus on a larger interplanetary rocket called the BFR. In the meantime, Block 5, as the final iteration is known, could fly as many as 300 missions into space. “If things go well, SpaceX will launch more rockets than any other country in 2018,” Musk predicted.

Continue reading “Elon Musk wants to launch the same rocket to orbit twice in a single day” »

May 10, 2018

Seeing is believing: How AI could prevent blindness for 415 million people (right now)

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, information science, robotics/AI

When you take a picture of a cat and Google’s algorithms place it in a folder called “pets,” with no direction from you, you’re seeing the benefit of image recognition AI. The exact same technology is used by doctors to diagnose diseases on a scale never before possible by humans.

Diabetic retinopathy, caused by type two diabetes, is the fastest-growing cause of preventable blindness. Each of the more than 415 million people living with the disease risks losing their eyesight unless they have regular access to doctors.

In countries like India there are simply too many patients for doctors to treat. There are 4,000 diabetic patients for every ophthalmologist in India, where the US has one for every 1,500 patients.

Continue reading “Seeing is believing: How AI could prevent blindness for 415 million people (right now)” »

May 10, 2018

Scientists develop a 3D view of an interstellar cloud, where stars are born

Posted by in category: space travel

Astronomers have accomplished a difficult feat: determining the 3D structure of an interstellar cloud, where stars are born.

Read more

May 10, 2018

US commercial drones given green light

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, drones, food, robotics/AI

Drones that monitor crops, control mosquito populations and deliver defibrillators are to be tested in US airspace.

Ten commercial drone projects have been selected to try out new ways for unmanned aircraft to be integrated into the skies.

They include Zipline, which currently offers a blood-delivery service in Rwanda, and Apple.

Continue reading “US commercial drones given green light” »

May 10, 2018

Doctors Replaced a Soldier’s Lost Ear Using a Wild Medical Technique

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, materials

In a first for United States Army doctors, Burrage received an ear transplant that was grown from her own tissue inside her own body. A team, led by Lieutenant Colonel Owen Johnson III, the chief of plastic and reconstructive surgery at William Beaumont Army Medical Center in El Paso, Texas, harvested cartilage from Burrage’s ribs, carved it into the shape of an ear, and implanted it under the skin in her arm. There, it developed blood vessels, which Johnson says will allow Burrage to regain feeling in the ear once it’s healed. In an announcement released on Monday, Johnson called the operation a success.

Article continues below.

Read more

May 10, 2018

Microsoft predicts five-year wait for quantum computing in Azure

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

Read more