A brain-computer interface allowed two people who had lost the ability to move their limbs to type at speeds of up to 22 words per minute ...
China has approved a brain implant for people with severe paralysis to help restore their hand movements. The brain–computer interface (BCI) is the first in the world to be available for wider use ...
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.
Neuracle Medical Technology’s invasive brain-computer interface has been given the green light in China for people with partial spinal cord injuries ...
"Extremophile" bacteria could survive asteroid impacts that are strong enough to launch them into space, suggesting that life ...
Ever since we said goodbye to Stranger Things at the start of the year, we've been in desperate need of a new sci-fi obsession, and thankfully right now there are so many genuinely good sci-fi series ...
A clump of human brain cells can play the classic computer game Doom. While its performance is not up to par with humans, experts say it brings biological computers a step closer to useful real-world ...
For thousands of years, humans have trained pigeons to race, deliver messages and “spy behind enemy lines”, said Bloomberg. “What would happen if people could bypass the training and steer their bird ...
Caveats accompanied the findings. "Blind leaps from the detection of tumors to the prediction of human health risk should be avoided," one study cautioned. Also, because none of the studies had a ...
Like a children’s nursery rhyme gone very, very wrong, Tracy Letts’ 1996 play “Bug” hints at sweet dreams — a tentative romance between two troubled souls — before the bedbugs start biting. The ...
The gray-market drugs flooding Silicon Valley reveal a community that believes it can move faster than the F.D.A. Credit...Hannah Agosta Supported by By Jasmine Sun Jayden Clark first heard about ...
Air sacs in the lungs called alveoli are crucial for gas exchange and provide an important barrier against inhaled viruses and bacteria that cause respiratory diseases like flu and tuberculosis (TB).