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Stories about: innovation |
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People suffering from tooth sensitivity and decay as a result of receding gums may have reason to rejoice, say investigators from Switzerland and Germany. They say that using matrices made out of bovine collagen could contribute to reducing inflammation, and promote healing. Exposed roots are the primary reason why ... |
5 March 2012 17:01 GMT |
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Fully aware of the fact that our eyes relay vast amounts of information about ourselves, researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (UWM) are currently researching a new technology, which will allow robots to basically teach humans various things.
In order to do that, the machines will have to become excell... |
5 March 2012 06:54 GMT |
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According to the conclusions of a new scientific study, it would appear that the human brain displays a lot more flexibility than researchers previously gave it credit for. What this discovery means is that, one day, people needing prosthetics could be outfitted with devices that would feel as their own limbs did. B... |
5 March 2012 03:47 GMT |
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Graphene, a form of carbon first synthesized in 2004, is currently proposed as a possible replacement for silicon in electronic devices. Many teams are working towards making this happen, but a group believes that the material called graphyne may be better suited for the task.
Graphyne is a carbon allotrope, just li... |
2 March 2012 04:30 GMT |
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Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and their collaborators announce the creation of a microfluidic device capable of measuring the blood flow of patients diagnosed with sickle cell disease, a very severe condition of the circulatory system.
People suffering from SCD exhibit a specific mut... |
1 March 2012 17:01 GMT |
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Investigators at the US Department of Energy’s (DOE) Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI) announce the development of technologies able to produce petrochemicals without using actual petroleum. They have already started a company to commercialize the process.
This particular class of chemicals is extremely import... |
29 February 2012 05:44 GMT |
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A team of experts at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), in Cambridge, announce the development of a new method for engineering microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) in 3D.
These tiny devices, which are about as large as the width of a human hair (roughly 100 microns), have many uses nowadays, for insta... |
28 February 2012 07:53 GMT |
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Working together with scientists at the Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH), researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) announce the development of a new microfluidic device, which can easily sort various types of cells from blood or other liquids. The device has tremendous potential in medi... |
25 February 2012 04:01 GMT |
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The first space elevator could become a tangible reality by 2050, if a Japanese company goes through with recently announced plans to construct such a device. These elevators would serve to put people in space without the use of rockets.
Having access to such an instrument would have considerable benefits, especiall... |
23 February 2012 08:38 GMT |
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A group of investigators at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in Cambridge, announces the development of a microfluidic device that is able to separate the basic components of a liquid mixture.
The team behind the work says that the tool is very well suited to conducting analyses of human blood, since it ca... |
22 February 2012 08:39 GMT |
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People who've suffered damaging spinal cord injuries, and are currently unable to move their limbs, may benefit extensively from the Tongue Drive System. The device enables them to use a computer or drive an electrical wheelchair, by simply moving their tongue.
The TDS was developed some time ago by experts at... |
20 February 2012 09:24 GMT |
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Physicists have been working towards creating the basis for quantum computers for a very long time, yet technological and theoretical limitations have plagued progress all along. Now, new data is allowing scientists to at least picture what these devices will look like in the future. Everyone knows that practical ap... |
20 February 2012 08:41 GMT |
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Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) announce the development of an implantable drug-delivery chip that can be controlled wirelessly from outside the body. This is the first time such a device is assembled for medical applications.
Thus far, the team has only conducted clinical trials asse... |
17 February 2012 10:56 GMT |
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Investigators at the University of Cambridge have determined in a new investigation that a liquid filament will not break apart into smaller droplets when condensed along its length. Rather, it will coalesce into a single, larger droplet. Experts have been trying to figure out which scenario was valid for years.
Det... |
17 February 2012 09:16 GMT |
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Improving security systems and national defense capabilities is a constant effort at Arizona State University (ASU). Investigators here have recently taken an important step forward in creating a new infrared photodetection technology, which may have important, large-scale applications.
The new technique could be u... |
15 February 2012 14:11 GMT |
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Researchers who participated at the 2012 annual meeting of the Orthopaedic Research Society (ORS), in San Francisco, were the first to be told about a new method of successfully regenerating lost bone tissue. The approach requires the use of patients' own cartilages.
The work was carried out by experts with th... |
15 February 2012 11:01 GMT |
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Ever since its merger with Blizzard, video game publisher Activision has been accused of eliminating any attempt to innovate and of relying on the same core franchises, including Call of Duty and World of Warcraft, in order to generate revenue.
But at least one leading executive working at the company believes that ... |
14 February 2012 16:41 GMT |
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Colorado School of Mines scientists have just create a new type of filter for circular polarized light, bringing the goal of having the ability to control all possible polarizations of visible light one step closer to reality. The achievement opens the way for several high-profile applications.
Light filters are ob... |
9 February 2012 07:03 GMT |
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At this point, railguns are among the most devastating long-range weapons that can be deployed to the battlefield. Experts at the US Navy Office of Naval Research (ONR) want to make them even more effective, by having them fire in rapid succession.
The thing about railguns is that they use electromagnetic forces to ... |
9 February 2012 06:37 GMT |
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Investigators at the University of York Department of Physics led an international collaboration of researchers who recently announced the development of an improved method for magnetic recording. The achievement could be used to develop very advanced hard drives, as well as other devices. Information stored on suc... |
8 February 2012 05:38 GMT |
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Scientists say that the next step in modern warfare will be to augment the minds of soldiers taking the battlefield, so that they are able to interface with their weapons directly. What this means is that the warfighters will be able to use their brains to control firearms and other equipment directly. Naturally, o... |
7 February 2012 03:59 GMT |
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A collaboration of experts in the United States has just finished developing the high-temperature version of photonic crystals, advanced materials that are used for numerous applications. The new constructs can function at temperatures of up to 1,200 degrees Celsius, opening even more applications.
The research team... |
3 February 2012 17:01 GMT |
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The American space agency cannot go about exploring space without a series of guidelines to ensure that no time and money are needlessly wasted. The latest set of such guidelines were recently delivered to NASA by the US National Research Council (NRC).
In the new report, entitled “NASA Space Technology Roadma... |
2 February 2012 03:53 GMT |
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By using induced pluripotent stem cells as a starting point, researchers in the United States say they can obtain liver-like cells that could help them crack the mystery surrounding hepatitis C. The condition is puzzling because it produces different effects on patients.
The overall effects are the same – mos... |
1 February 2012 07:47 GMT |
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A team of experts at the Rice University announces the development of a new class of terahertz polarizers, which make good use of carbon nanotubes for improving their performances. The devices could have applications in the fields of communication, sensing and security applications.
The robust terahertz polarizer t... |
31 January 2012 03:38 GMT |
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A paper published in the January 25 issue of the New Journal of Physics describes a tube-like structure that is capable of masking three-dimensional objects from microwave light. This invisibility cloak is one of the few out there that is capable of hiding 3D objects from view.
The tube itself is made up of insulat... |
26 January 2012 07:52 GMT |
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A group of investigators was recently able to boost a standard scanning electron microscope's (SEM) ability to resolve and measure the crystal structures of both nanoparticles and thin films, by as much as 1,000 percent. SEM imaging will from now on be used increasingly often in nanotechnology studies.
SEM imag... |
25 January 2012 03:48 GMT |
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A group of experts at the Vanderbilt University announces the development of a prototype bionic leg, which they say is capable of supporting its user in conducting a number of motions that are impossible to do with existing prosthetics.
Researchers already sold the technology to a major prosthetics manufacturer, so ... |
24 January 2012 03:29 GMT |
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The emerging field of optogenetics is an area of science that deals with using light to control various aspects of neural functionality. Researchers at the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Kendall Research have just developed a new type of instrument that acts like a neural router.
The tool will help investigators de... |
23 January 2012 04:45 GMT |
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Over the past few years, robotics experts have been working on developing intelligent robots, capable of conducting a wide array of missions. Right now, scientists based at the Georgia Tech University are working on emulating ants' teamwork and snake movements in two new classes of robots.
These machines would ... |
23 January 2012 03:49 GMT |
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Physicists and engineers at the US Department of Energy's (DOE) Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) announce the development of an innovative power-over-fiber (PoF) communications cable, which is capable of achieving total electrical isolation.
According to its creators, the cable will make it a lot easier to ac... |
18 January 2012 17:01 GMT |
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Producing a whole subclass of organic compounds called nitrogen-containing heterocycles should now be a lot easier for scientists, thanks to a team of experts based at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), in Pasadena. Experts here developed a new method for creating complex molecules.
The main applicati... |
17 January 2012 16:01 GMT |
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A group of scientists from the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL), in Switzerland, announces that it's currently working on developing a very special type of printer, one that will be capable of printing artificial living tissues on command.
The new investigation could finally provide research tea... |
17 January 2012 04:33 GMT |
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Razer unveiled Project Fiona at the CES with claims that it will redefine the way PC players look at their gaming devices and the leader of the company believes that the innovation included is a sign of how the PC market can be revived.Speaking at the CES 2012 trade show Min-Liang Tan, who is the Chief Executive Offi... |
17 January 2012 02:08 GMT |
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A collaboration of scientists from the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL), in the United States, announces the development of a new imaging technique, which allows investigators to take high-detail anatomical images of the whole mammalian brain.
Thus far, this ability was only the prerogative of very few, highly-... |
16 January 2012 04:45 GMT |
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Star Wars: The Old Republic has performed better than expected in the months since its simultaneous world release and as gamers discover more of the experience the developers at BioWare are having to answer charges that the new game lacks innovation and is too close to its main competitor.As part of a post mortem ana... |
13 January 2012 08:57 GMT |
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The future of graphene in the electronics industry is assured, experts behind a new investigation on the material's properties explain. They say that they were able to make the extremely strong, unbelievably thin carbon compound magnetic.
This property was never observed in graphene before. In its natural stat... |
9 January 2012 05:47 GMT |
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Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 might have been the biggest entertainment launch of 2011 but the executives at Activision are not interested in resting on their laurels and will try to use downloadable content to expand the attractiveness of the series.Eric Hirshberg, who is the Chief Executive Officer at Activision P... |
5 January 2012 16:31 GMT |
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All of us enjoy at least a couple of hours in front of our TV sets and sometimes we even choose to stay indoors rather than traveling, visiting our friends or just having a great time outdoors.
Soon enough we will be able to carry around our own LED television attached to high-tech vests, due to an unbelievable inv... |
5 January 2012 08:51 GMT |
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The absolute lower limits of miniaturization may not be reached for at least a few more decades, say researchers who recently conducted a study on the properties of graphene nanowiggles. The advanced nanoscale material could soon replace silicon in all electronic equipment.
The issue with silicon is that electronic... |
5 January 2012 05:47 GMT |
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The first time I saw this video, my jaw literally dropped. I mean, just check out what this microphone can do. Just attach it to any rigid surface, and it can produce sounds that you can record afterwards. If you're a music producer, then you can understand what this means for your sounds.
Researchers Bruno Zam... |
4 January 2012 06:04 GMT |
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Stephan Boyer, a student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) recently created a self-balancing unicycle that looks as a lot of fun to ride.
The new piece of technology is seen in this video as it gets a drive test on some hallway. The machine is still quite small, so you couldn't venture past co... |
29 December 2011 04:00 GMT |
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Paper computing may be the way of the future, says Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab assistant professor Leah Buechley. She and her team recently presented their latest innovation, a kit for sketching and drawing circuits on a very special type of paper, using a very special pen.
The kit contains a fe... |
28 December 2011 04:37 GMT |
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A group of investigators from the Purdue University announce the development of specialized arrays capable of controlling light. The instruments can manipulate photons in very specific ways, potentially enabling a new generation of computers, microscopes and telecommunications devices.
The arrays are made up of ver... |
27 December 2011 04:34 GMT |
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Sustainable design is not only highlighting improvements when it comes to giant towers, homes and commercial buildings.
Small items, like birds houses are also open to innovation revealing a deep respect for the environment and a high dosage of creativity, Inhabitat informs.
The bird houses launched on the market... |
23 December 2011 10:50 GMT |
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Thanks to the work of a team of Stanford engineers, a new type of improved organic semiconductors could soon be used to develop better TV and computer screens, more advanced and efficient solar panels, as well as cell phones and other electronics that can be bent and twisted in all directions.
What the team did dur... |
22 December 2011 03:50 GMT |
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Even though the uncertainties dominating the solar market keep putting investors on the run, scientists are still aiming to innovate this line of business. One of the most recent discoveries is a new kind of cost-effective solar paints, meant to replace the common photovoltaic solar panels.
Experts from University ... |
22 December 2011 03:06 GMT |
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University of California in San Diego (UCSD) investigators announce the creation of a living neon sign that is powered up by millions of bacterial cells. Fluorescent proteins attached to the cells' biological clocks allow them to blink in unison, just like LED or light bulbs would in a street ad billboard.
The ... |
20 December 2011 06:31 GMT |
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Japan seems eager to green up every line of business. What we wear can definitely define who we are nowadays, when eco textiles are available on a large scale. Japan is now one step closer to a sustainable fashion industry, since it has revealed the first renewable, bio-based polyethylene terephthalate (PET) fiber, t... |
19 December 2011 03:11 GMT |
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A group of visionaries is currently setting the foundation of what will soon become a mechanical clock. What separates it from anything else is the fact that it will be constructed for a single purpose – keep a precise track of time over the next 10,000 years, arXiv reports.
In other words, experts are trying... |
16 December 2011 15:51 GMT |
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