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Released: 30-Jan-2020 10:20 AM EST
New research could aid cleaner energy technologies
Binghamton University, State University of New York

New research led by faculty at Binghamton University, State University of New York, could aid cleaner energy technologies.

Released: 30-Jan-2020 10:15 AM EST
Self-learning heat­ing control system saves energy
Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

Can buildings learn to save all by themselves? Empa researchers think so. In their experiments, they fed a new self-learning heat­ing control system with temperature data from the previous year and the current weather forecast. The “smart” control system was then able to assess the building’s behavior and act with good anticipation. The result: greater comfort, lower energy costs.

Released: 30-Jan-2020 9:00 AM EST
Autonomous pods SWARM together like bees in world first demonstration
University of Warwick

Autonomous pods born in Coventry are now able to swarm together in a world first, thanks to research by WMG at the University of Warwick in partnership with Aurrigo and Milton Keynes council.

Released: 30-Jan-2020 7:05 AM EST
Public Interest Technology Event to Showcase Latest Research in Tech Law, AI and Society, Data Science, and More—Feb. 6
New York University

New York University will feature the latest public interest technology research, including work in the areas of tech law, AI, social science, data science, robotics, investigative journalism, human rights, and more on Thurs., Feb. 6.

Released: 29-Jan-2020 6:15 PM EST
UC San Diego Health Launches Drone Transport Program with UPS, Matternet
UC San Diego Health

UC San Diego Health launches pilot project using drones to move medical samples, supplies and documents between Jacobs Medical Center, Moores Cancer Center and the Center for Advanced Laboratory Medicine, speeding delivery of services and patient care currently managed through ground transport.

   
Released: 29-Jan-2020 5:05 PM EST
Robot sweat regulates temperature, key for extreme conditions
Cornell University

Just when it seemed like robots couldn’t get any cooler, Cornell University researchers have created a soft robot muscle that can regulate its temperature through sweating.

Released: 29-Jan-2020 1:50 PM EST
NSF’s Newest Solar Telescope Produces First Images
National Solar Observatory

Just released first images from the National Science Foundation’s Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope reveal unprecedented detail of the Sun’s surface and preview the world-class products to come from this preeminent 4-meter solar telescope. NSF’s Inouye Solar Telescope, on the summit of Haleakala, Maui, in Hawai‘i, will enable a new era of solar science and a leap forward in understanding the Sun and its impacts on our planet.

Released: 29-Jan-2020 1:30 PM EST
The Big Questions: Ian Foster on High-Performance Computing
Department of Energy, Office of Science

The Big Questions series features perspectives from the five recipients of the Department of Energy Office of Science’s 2019 Distinguished Scientists Fellows Award describing their research and what they plan to do with the award. Ian Foster is the director of Argonne National Laboratory’s Data Science and Learning Division.

Released: 29-Jan-2020 1:10 PM EST
New Centers Lead the Way towards a Quantum Future
Department of Energy, Office of Science

The Department of Energy (DOE) recently announced that it will establish Quantum Information Science Centers to help lay the foundation for these technologies. As Congress put forth in the National Quantum Initiative Act, the DOE’s Office of Science will make awards for at least two and up to five centers.

Released: 29-Jan-2020 11:15 AM EST
Particle Physics Turns to Quantum Computing for Solutions to Tomorrow’s Big-Data Problems
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Giant-scale physics experiments are increasingly reliant on big data and complex algorithms fed into powerful computers, and managing this multiplying mass of data presents its own unique challenges. To better prepare for this data deluge posed by next-generation upgrades and new experiments, physicists are turning to the fledgling field of quantum computing.

Released: 28-Jan-2020 1:50 PM EST
Virtual assistants provide disappointing advice when asked for first aid, emergency info
University of Alberta

Virtual assistants don't yet live up to their considerable potential when it comes to providing users with reliable and relevant information on medical emergencies, according to a new study from University of Alberta researchers.

   
Released: 28-Jan-2020 12:30 PM EST
Fifteen organizations join Los Alamos’ Efficient Mission Centric Computing Consortium in first year
Los Alamos National Laboratory

Just over a year after Los Alamos National Laboratory launched the Efficient Mission Centric Computing Consortium (EMC3), 15 companies, universities and federal organizations are now working together to explore new ways to make extreme-scale computers more efficient.

Released: 28-Jan-2020 12:15 PM EST
5 Big Questions About the Future of Retail
University of Virginia Darden School of Business

Traditional retail remains in a period of widespread transformation. Many suburban malls have shuttered, or limp along with few tenants. The rapid transformation even has its own doom-and-gloom shorthand: the Retail Apocalypse. Amid the turmoil, there is also transformation and growth. Darden Professor Vidya Mani says these are indeed dynamic times, and she recently spoke about how she sees the space and what may come next.

Released: 28-Jan-2020 9:00 AM EST
Robotic Submarine Snaps First Images at Foundation of Notorious Antarctic Glacier
Georgia Institute of Technology

These are the first-ever images taken at the foundations of the glacier that inspires more fear of sea-level rise than any other - Thwaites Glacier. The grounding line is integral to Thwaites' fate and that of the world's coastlines.

Released: 28-Jan-2020 7:00 AM EST
Cactus Communications announces acquisition of UNSILO, a Denmark-based technology solutions company
Cactus Communications

Cactus Communications, a global scientific communications company, announced that it has acquired UNSILO, a Denmark-based Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Natural Language Processing (NLP) company that specializes in text analytics, linguistics, and data science.

Released: 27-Jan-2020 3:10 PM EST
The great e-scooter hack
University of Texas at San Antonio

Micromobility vehicles, such as e-scooters, zip in and out of traffic. In San Antonio alone, over 12,000 scooters are on the road. For this reason, micromobility is seen as an alleviating trend to help tackle traffic congestion.

Released: 27-Jan-2020 2:45 PM EST
New UC San Diego Symposium Stirs Dialogue Among Data Science and Arts and Humanities Experts
University of California San Diego

On February 7 and 8, UC San Diego will bring together experts from data science and the arts and humanities to examine the emerging relationship between data and culture. The symposium will provide a forum for artists, historians, philosophers, literary scholars, political scientists, and computer and data scientists to explore how analytic techniques can unveil new understandings of culture, and how the proliferation of data in everyday life changes how culture is produced, distributed, and influenced.

21-Jan-2020 4:45 PM EST
Young Age Does Not Equal Low Risk for Patients Needing Aortic Valve Replacement
The Society of Thoracic Surgeons

While transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) continues to expand its pool of eligible patients, open heart surgery—resulting in excellent patient survival and fewer strokes when compared to TAVR—is the best option for young and middle-aged adults with aortic valve disease—at least for now.

21-Jan-2020 4:40 PM EST
First-of-its-Kind Technology Lights Up Lung Cancer Cells, Helps Improve Patient Outcomes
The Society of Thoracic Surgeons

A groundbreaking tumor-highlighting technology—OTL38—enhances the visualization of lung cancer tissue, providing surgeons with a significantly better chance of finding and removing more cancer than previously possible.

Released: 27-Jan-2020 12:15 PM EST
Contradicting prevalent view, UCI oceanographers predict increase in phytoplankton
University of California, Irvine

Irvine, Calif., Jan. 27, 2020 – A neural network-driven Earth system model has led University of California, Irvine oceanographers to a surprising conclusion: Phytoplankton populations in low-latitude waters will expand by the end of the 21st century. The unexpected simulation outcome runs counter to the longstanding belief by many in the environmental science community that global climate change will make tropical oceans inhospitable to phytoplankton, which form the base of the aquatic food web.

Released: 27-Jan-2020 12:10 PM EST
Los Alamos high-performance computing veteran to chair SC22
Los Alamos National Laboratory

Candace Culhane, a program/project director in Los Alamos National Laboratory’s Directorate for Simulation and Computation, has been selected as the general chair for the 2022 SC Conference (SC22).

Released: 27-Jan-2020 11:30 AM EST
Could Drones Save Cows? Why University of Kentucky Research Team Thinks So
University of Kentucky

It's a staggering statistic — every year nearly 3 million cows in the U.S. die from health problems. And it's costing the cattle industry more than $1 billion. Could eyes in the sky be the answer? Jesse Hoagg, the Donald and Gertrude Lester Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Kentucky, thinks so.

Released: 27-Jan-2020 9:55 AM EST
Technology Used in Space Experiments Could Reveal Key Information about Human Health
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

In an article published recently in Microgravity, a Nature Journal, researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute demonstrate a unique method for studying the mechanisms behind the formation of amyloid fibrils associated with diseases like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.

   
Released: 27-Jan-2020 9:00 AM EST
Autism Diagnosis Test Needs Improvement, Rutgers Researchers Say
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Rutgers researchers have found that a test widely used to diagnose whether children have autism is less reliable than previously assumed.

   
Released: 27-Jan-2020 8:05 AM EST
Expanded Version of the Information Sharing Assessment Tool Now Available
Homeland Security's Science And Technology Directorate

Newly updated with optional scenarios and expanded question sets, the ISAT is a web-based self-assessment tool that helps public safety agencies understand their current information sharing capabilities and gaps.

Released: 24-Jan-2020 4:35 PM EST
Supercomputer Simulations Reveal Details of Galaxy Clusters
University of California San Diego

A new study published late last year in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society explored the molecular gas within and surrounding the intracluster medium, which fills the space between galaxies in a galaxy cluster.

Released: 24-Jan-2020 10:25 AM EST
New IEEE Fellows
University of Delaware

Two University of Delaware faculty, professor Rudolf (Rudi) Eigenmann and Engineering Alumni Professor Dennis Prather, have been named Fellows of IEEE (formerly known as the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers).

Released: 24-Jan-2020 10:05 AM EST
NASA's Kepler Witnesses Vampire Star System Undergoing Super-Outburst
Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI)

Astronomers searching archival data from NASA's Kepler exoplanet hunting mission identified a previously unknown dwarf nova that underwent a super-outburst, brightening by a factor of 1,600 times in less than a day.

Released: 23-Jan-2020 2:45 PM EST
Using artificial intelligence to enrich digital maps
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

A model invented by researchers at MIT and Qatar Computing Research Institute (QCRI) that uses satellite imagery to tag road features in digital maps could help improve GPS navigation.

Released: 23-Jan-2020 2:20 PM EST
Data from Behind Enemy Lines: How Russia May have Used Twitter to Seize Crimea
University of California San Diego

Online discourse by users of social media can provide important clues about the political dispositions of communities.

Released: 23-Jan-2020 2:15 PM EST
Acetone plus light creates a green jet fuel additive
Los Alamos National Laboratory

Take biomass-derived acetone—common nail polish remover—use light to upgrade it to higher-mass hydrocarbons, and, voila, you have a domestically generated product that can be blended with conventional jet fuel to fly while providing environmental benefits, creating domestic jobs, securing the nation’s global leadership in bioenergy technologies, and improving U.S. energy security.

Released: 23-Jan-2020 12:30 PM EST
Quantum experiments explore power of light for communications, computing
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

A team of quantum researchers from ORNL have conducted a series of experiments to gain a better understanding of quantum mechanics and pursue advances in quantum networking and quantum computing, which could lead to practical applications in cybersecurity and other areas.

Released: 23-Jan-2020 11:15 AM EST
Sandia hosts its first Education With Industry officer
Sandia National Laboratories

A student in the highly selective U.S. Air Force Education With Industry program will be bringing his military experience to Sandia National Laboratories and returning to his post with valuable industry experience to share. Capt. Antonio Gallop is not the typical student.

Released: 23-Jan-2020 10:20 AM EST
Efforts to improve vehicle fuel efficiency may come at a high cost to the climate, public health
University of Georgia

New automotive technology that promises enhanced fuel efficiency may have a serious downside, including significant climate and public health impacts, according to research from the University of Georgia College of Engineering.

Released: 23-Jan-2020 9:00 AM EST
'Sex Tech' Study Finds Technology Facilitates Sexual and Emotional Interactions
Indiana University

Advances in technology have allowed us to interact with others across the globe, and a new study of adults who engage with "sex tech"—innovative technologies used to enhance sexuality—announced by the Kinsey Institute at Indiana University reveals that technology increasingly connects people at their most intimate moments.

   
Released: 22-Jan-2020 4:15 PM EST
Experts Join Rensselaer-IBM Artificial Intelligence Research Collaboration
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

Four experts in diverse aspects of artificial intelligence have joined Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute as part of the Artificial Intelligence Research Collaboration (AIRC), a recently formed joint initiative of Rensselaer and IBM Research.

Released: 22-Jan-2020 2:40 PM EST
New algorithms improve prosthetics for upper limb amputees
Texas A&M University

Dr. Maryam Zahabi is leading a team of researchers in an effort to improve prosthetics for upper limb amputees. Her team is looking at the mental demand placed on individuals using prosthetics and how new prosthetic interfaces can help reduce this demand.

   
Released: 22-Jan-2020 2:20 PM EST
Tiny Price Gaps Cost Investors Billions
University of Vermont

New research shows that, millions of times each day, investors in the U.S. stock market see different prices at the same moment—and that these differing prices cost investors at least $2 billion dollars each year.

Released: 22-Jan-2020 12:05 PM EST
UAH Space Hardware Club’s liquid fuel rocket readies for inaugural engine test
University of Alabama Huntsville

The new year brings new tests for an ambitious liquid propellant rocket being engineered by the Space Hardware Club (SHC) at The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH).

Released: 22-Jan-2020 4:05 AM EST
Health Technology Assessment Around the World: Broadening the Understanding of Cross-Country Differences
ISPOR—The Professional Society for Health Economics and Outcomes Research

Value in Health announced today the publication of a series of articles investigating the use of health technology assessment (HTA) in healthcare decision making across the globe. The series, “HTA Around the World—Influences of Culture, Values, and Institutions,” appears in the January 2020 issue of Value in Health.

Released: 21-Jan-2020 6:50 PM EST
DHS S&T Selects Georgia Tech Group to Improve Info Sharing & Safeguarding for Public Safety Comms
Homeland Security's Science And Technology Directorate

DHS S&T awarded a $704,000 research-and-development (R&D) contract to Atlanta-based Georgia Tech Applied Research Center (GTARC) to address a crucial gap in the trustmark framework for the public safety community’s information sharing and safeguarding (IS&S) capabilities.

Released: 21-Jan-2020 4:35 PM EST
ASU-led NASA Psyche mission offers free online course on team building from leadership experts
Thunderbird School of Global Management

The new Psyche Mission Innovation Toolkit online course is designed to help learners understand the unique challenges of a diverse team and provides tools to help address these challenges and take actions to be more successful in working with others. Image by ASU Continuing and Professional Education

Released: 21-Jan-2020 4:00 PM EST
Liam Collins: Mapping the unseen
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

As a scientist at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Liam Collins advances atomic force microscopy techniques to enable researchers to study materials and their properties on a nanometer length scale.

Released: 21-Jan-2020 3:05 PM EST
Study takes on e-cigarette warning ‘paradox’
Cornell University

As controversy swirls around the vaping industry, a team of Cornell researchers has set out to help regulators identify the most effective health warnings to include in advertisements for electronic cigarettes.

20-Jan-2020 7:30 PM EST
New Investments and Research Indicate Multi-Trillion Dollar Market for Climate Restoration Through Carbon-Capture
Thunderbird School of Global Management

Climate restoration is the global movement to remove the trillion tons of excess CO2 from the atmosphere to restore our air to preindustrial levels of carbon dioxide and to preserve the Arctic ice. Given the climate emergency, climate restoration is a critical third pillar of climate action, complementing ongoing mitigation and adaptation efforts. New technologies and natural solutions for reducing CO2 levels in the next 30 years already exist and the costs for global-scale implementation are projected to be less than 1-3% of the global annual GDP.

   
Released: 21-Jan-2020 10:05 AM EST
Transformative 'Green' Accelerator Achieves World's First 8-pass Full Energy Recovery
Brookhaven National Laboratory

Scientists from Cornell University and Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) have successfully demonstrated the world's first capture and reuse of energy in a multi-turn particle accelerator, where electrons are accelerated and decelerated in multiple stages and transported at different energies through a single beamline.



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