ScienceDaily: Top Technology News |
- New catalyst process uses light, not metal, for rapid polymerization
- Computers using digital footprints are better judges of personality than friends and family
- 3-D printed Shelby Cobra
- Water, water, everywhere: Controlling the properties of nanomaterials
- Solar cell polymers with multiplied electrical output
- From the bottom up: Manipulating nanoribbons at the molecular level
- Vision system for household robots
- Virtual reality brain training game can detect mild cognitive impairment, a condition that often predates Alzheimer’s disease
- Social media could impact on quality of conference presentations
- Graphene plasmons go ballistic
- Robot cameras monitor deep sea ecosystems
- Using wearable technology, man leaves hospital without a human heart
- They see flow signals: Researchers identify nature of 'sixth sense' in fish
- 'Batman' leads way to extremely fast and precise data storage
- Flame protection for the jet set
New catalyst process uses light, not metal, for rapid polymerization Posted: 12 Jan 2015 03:13 PM PST |
Computers using digital footprints are better judges of personality than friends and family Posted: 12 Jan 2015 12:44 PM PST Researchers have found that, based on enough Facebook Likes, computers can judge your personality traits better than your friends, family and even your partner. Using a new algorithm, researchers have calculated the average number of Likes artificial intelligence (AI) needs to draw personality inferences about you as accurately as your partner or parents. |
Posted: 12 Jan 2015 11:12 AM PST |
Water, water, everywhere: Controlling the properties of nanomaterials Posted: 12 Jan 2015 10:39 AM PST Properties of water molecules on the surface of metal oxides can be used to better control these minerals and use them to make products such as more efficient semiconductors for organic light emitting diodes and solar cells, safer vehicle glass in fog and frost, and more environmentally friendly chemical sensors for industrial applications. |
Solar cell polymers with multiplied electrical output Posted: 12 Jan 2015 10:39 AM PST Scientists paired up photovoltaic polymers that produce two units of electricity per unit of light instead of the usual one on a single molecular polymer chain. Having the two charges on the same molecule means the light-absorbing, energy-producing materials work efficiently when dissolved in liquids, which opens the way for a wide range of industrial scale manufacturing processes, including "printing" solar-energy-producing material like ink. |
From the bottom up: Manipulating nanoribbons at the molecular level Posted: 12 Jan 2015 10:39 AM PST Researchers have developed a new precision approach for synthesizing graphene nanoribbons from pre-designed molecular building blocks. Using this process the researchers have built nanoribbons that have enhanced properties--such as position-dependent, tunable bandgaps--that are potentially very useful for next-generation electronic circuitry. |
Vision system for household robots Posted: 12 Jan 2015 08:07 AM PST For household robots ever to be practical, they'll need to be able to recognize the objects they're supposed to manipulate. But while object recognition is one of the most widely studied topics in artificial intelligence, even the best object detectors still fail much of the time. A new algorithm could enable household robots to better identify objects in cluttered environments. |
Posted: 12 Jan 2015 08:04 AM PST Researchers have demonstrated the potential of a virtual supermarket cognitive training game as a screening tool for patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) among a sample of older adults. MCI is a condition that often predates Alzheimer's disease (AD) and is characterized by memory loss and inability to execute complex activities such as financial planning. |
Social media could impact on quality of conference presentations Posted: 12 Jan 2015 06:32 AM PST |
Graphene plasmons go ballistic Posted: 12 Jan 2015 06:32 AM PST |
Robot cameras monitor deep sea ecosystems Posted: 12 Jan 2015 06:31 AM PST Advanced photographic tools in an unmanned Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV) have been used to make major advancements in estimating deep-sea ecosystem diversity at 'landscape' scales, researchers report. By using a camera on the Autosub6000 AUV to take a continuous stream of high resolution photographs of life on the sea floor, this new method revealed a tenfold increase in the precision of deep sea ecosystem diversity estimates relative to the use of scientific trawling. |
Using wearable technology, man leaves hospital without a human heart Posted: 12 Jan 2015 06:30 AM PST |
They see flow signals: Researchers identify nature of 'sixth sense' in fish Posted: 12 Jan 2015 06:30 AM PST |
'Batman' leads way to extremely fast and precise data storage Posted: 12 Jan 2015 05:29 AM PST Researchers have succeeded in switching tiny, magnetic structures using laser light and tracking the change over time. In the process, a nanometer-sized area bizarrely reminiscent of the Batman logo appeared. The research results could render data storage on hard drives faster, more compact and more efficient. |
Flame protection for the jet set Posted: 09 Jan 2015 01:55 AM PST |
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