Morning Overview on MSN
Forget transistors: an intelligent material computes like a brain
Engineers are starting to build hardware that does not just run artificial intelligence, it behaves like a primitive form of ...
A new study suggests that aspartame consumption may be linked to decreased heart and brain function. The artificial sweetener, found in diet sodas and sugar-free products, was linked to fat loss, mild ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Shells, beans, and plant fibers-made artificial synapse mimics the human brain
The Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST) in South Korea has developed a fully biodegradable artificial ...
Computer development has taken a wide path away from the silicon-based hardware we’ve grown accustomed to. Research has been conducted into various other ways of building even more efficient systems.
People who consumed the highest levels of certain artificial sweeteners — equivalent to just one diet soda a day — saw a significant decline in their ability to remember and recall words when compared ...
Ever wondered if you could build a robot controlled by chemical reactions? [Marb] explores this wild concept in his video, merging chemistry and robotics in a way that feels straight out of sci-fi.
A new, high-performance brain-computer interface (BCI) can be rapidly implanted through a minimally invasive procedure. The ...
Artificial sweeteners are widely found in American diets, marketed as low-calorie alternatives to sugar for weight management.
In the first long-term and real-world reflective study of its kind, scientists have uncovered new detrimental health impacts of the artificial sweetener aspartame that echoes those found in shorter ...
It sounds like science fiction. Or one of Elon Musk’s more whacked-out tech fantasies. But an American composer who died in 2021 is still creating music via an artificially-created brain. How? What?
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