Scientists placed 200,000 living human brain cells on a microchip and taught it how to play a doomsday video game — and are now using the dystopian tech to power AI data centers. Australian biotech ...
Wolverine's Winter Soldier programming kicks in! Can Jean Grey stop him before he tears through his allies in Ultimate ...
Otega Oweh has been UK basketball's most consistent scorer the past two years. Can he carry the Kentucky Wildcats deep in ...
The Edwardsville Intelligencer on MSN
Seven questions with Illinois 13th District candidate Dylan Blaha
Dylan Blaha is challenging U.S. Rep. Nikki Budzinski in the Democratic primary.
Though new regulatory frameworks address fairness, accountability, and safety in AI systems, they often fail to directly ...
Bethany Christian Services’ new EmpowerED Youth program is recruiting teens 12–18 in Troup and Meriwether to be peer leaders ...
In short, the woman who cannot decide whether she is GI Jane, Calamity Jane, or Amelia Earhart is a despicable freak whose ...
The natural and the social world shaped the evolution of each. Knowing whom to invite to dinner is as important as knowing ...
Researchers in Japan pioneered reprogrammed cells 20 years ago. Now the country has given the first-ever authorizations to manufacture and sell medical products based on the technology.
AI Humanizers are gaining popularity. This entails making AI seem more human. In a mental health realm, is this good or bad?
Six-time USA Memory champion Nelson Dellis has memorized hundreds of digits of pi. He has tips for how to improve your memory.
When we learn a new skill, the brain has to decide—cell by cell—what to change. New research from MIT suggests it can do that with surprising precision, sending targeted feedback to individual neurons ...
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