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Mashup Score: 4
The relatively lightly built skeletons of modern humans developed late in evolutionary history, and may have been the result of a shift away from a nomadic lifestyle to a more settled one, a new study finds.
Source: www.livescience.comCategories: General Medicine News, RheumatologyTweet
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Mashup Score: 122 jobs artificial general intelligence (AGI) may replace — and 10 jobs it could create - 2 day(s) ago
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is set to improve the world for many — but others may lose out.
Source: www.livescience.comCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
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Mashup Score: 2AI computers could run in extreme environments like Venus thanks to heat-proof memory device - 4 day(s) ago
Ultra-heat resistant computer storage can operate at Venus-like temperatures and may be used in extreme conditions such as nuclear plants and even for future NASA missions.
Source: www.livescience.comCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
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Mashup Score: 7New 3D map charted with Google AI reveals 'mysterious but beautiful' slice of human brain - 6 day(s) ago
Harvard and Google researchers have collaborated to map a tiny fragment of an adult human brain in unprecedented detail.
Source: www.livescience.comCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
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Mashup Score: 14
Scientists build the world’s first 6G antenna that, when fitted into devices, can transmit data at high speeds.
Source: www.livescience.comCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
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Mashup Score: 12'The most critically harmful fungi to humans': How the rise of C. auris was inevitable - 10 day(s) ago
“The march of drug-resistant C. auris clearly isn’t slowing. If anything, it’s rapidly speeding up. How did a fungus, so deadly to immunocompromised humans, just suddenly appear? And why was it killing people when it had never even made people sick before?”
Source: www.livescience.comCategories: General Medicine News, Infectious DiseaseTweet
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Mashup Score: 12'The most critically harmful fungi to humans': How the rise of C. auris was inevitable - 10 day(s) ago
“The march of drug-resistant C. auris clearly isn’t slowing. If anything, it’s rapidly speeding up. How did a fungus, so deadly to immunocompromised humans, just suddenly appear? And why was it killing people when it had never even made people sick before?”
Source: www.livescience.comCategories: General Medicine News, Infectious DiseaseTweet
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Mashup Score: 13
Scientists build the world’s first 6G antenna that, when fitted into devices, can transmit data at high speeds.
Source: www.livescience.comCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
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Mashup Score: 1Deepest blue hole in the world discovered, with hidden caves and tunnels believed to be inside - 20 day(s) ago
Scientists have yet to reach the bottom of the Taam Ja’ Blue Hole in Mexico’s Chetumal Bay, which new measurements hint could be connected to a labyrinth of submarine caves and tunnels.
Source: www.livescience.comCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
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Mashup Score: 5Claude 3 Opus has stunned AI researchers with its intellect and 'self-awareness' — does this mean it can think for itself? - 27 day(s) ago
Anthropic’s AI tool has beaten GPT-4 in key metrics and has a few surprises up its sleeve — including pontificating about its existence and realizing when it was being tested.
Source: www.livescience.comCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
Why modern sedentary humans need to increase #physicalactivity & #exercise to protect from #osteoporosis ⚠️#Bone density dropped through evolution Primates climbing trees ⏬ Upright land being ⏬ Hunter gatherer ⏬ Agriculturalists 👉🏽https://t.co/stquKJu8Vd via @LiveScience https://t.co/JAAZAdvUyT