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Study shines headlights on consumer driverless vehicle safety deficiencies

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 11:35am
Researchers have demonstrated that multicolored stickers applied to stop or speed limit signs on the roadside can 'confuse' self-driving vehicles, causing unpredictable and possibly hazardous operations.
Categories: Science

Study shines headlights on consumer driverless vehicle safety deficiencies

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 11:35am
Researchers have demonstrated that multicolored stickers applied to stop or speed limit signs on the roadside can 'confuse' self-driving vehicles, causing unpredictable and possibly hazardous operations.
Categories: Science

NASA's Hubble finds Kuiper Belt duo may be trio

Space and time from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 11:35am
The puzzle of predicting how three gravitationally bound bodies move in space has challenged mathematicians for centuries, and has most recently been popularized in the novel and television show '3 Body Problem.' There's no problem, however, with what a team of researchers say is likely a stable trio of icy space rocks in the solar system's Kuiper Belt.
Categories: Science

NASA's Hubble finds Kuiper Belt duo may be trio

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 11:35am
The puzzle of predicting how three gravitationally bound bodies move in space has challenged mathematicians for centuries, and has most recently been popularized in the novel and television show '3 Body Problem.' There's no problem, however, with what a team of researchers say is likely a stable trio of icy space rocks in the solar system's Kuiper Belt.
Categories: Science

Consumer devices can be used to assess brain health

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 11:34am
Technology is changing how physicians think about assessing patients and, in turn, how patients expect to be able to measure their own health. Apps designed for smartphones and wearable devices can provide unique insights into users' brain health. It is estimated that 55 million individuals worldwide suffer from some form of dementia. Alzheimer's disease and related dementias being the leading causes, with numbers expected to triple by 2050.
Categories: Science

Using computer science to save the bees

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 11:34am
Researchers have created a system to help beekeepers monitor and analyze the health of their beehives and take corrective actions to prevent colony collapse -- when a majority of the worker bees abandon the colony and its queen. Beehives use thermoregulation to ensure the hive temperature stays between 33 and 36 degrees Celsius, about 91 to 97 degrees Fahrenheit. For example, bees might cluster to create insulation when it's cold or fan their wings when it's hot. But when beehives experience external stressors, such as pesticides or unexpected weather events, they lose the ability to regulate the hive temperature.
Categories: Science

Using computer science to save the bees

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 11:34am
Researchers have created a system to help beekeepers monitor and analyze the health of their beehives and take corrective actions to prevent colony collapse -- when a majority of the worker bees abandon the colony and its queen. Beehives use thermoregulation to ensure the hive temperature stays between 33 and 36 degrees Celsius, about 91 to 97 degrees Fahrenheit. For example, bees might cluster to create insulation when it's cold or fan their wings when it's hot. But when beehives experience external stressors, such as pesticides or unexpected weather events, they lose the ability to regulate the hive temperature.
Categories: Science

Foundation AI model predicts postoperative risks from clinical notes

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 11:33am
A team unveils a versatile large language model to enhance perioperative care.
Categories: Science

Researcher compares AI, human evaluators in swine medicine

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 11:33am
A research team is studying whether artificial intelligence (AI) could play a supportive role in the evaluation of respiratory disease in pigs.
Categories: Science

This week’s Bill Maher clip

Why Evolution is True Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 8:45am

In this latest nine-minute comedy/news bit from Bill Maher’s “Real Time,” a show that included Rahm Emanuel and Fareed Zakaria, Maher suggests who the Dems should run for President and Vice-President in 2028.

Ths clip, called “New Rule: The next Democratic Star” proffers a solution to the waning popularity of the Democratic Party and the increasing desire of its members to move to the center. Maher suggests John Fetterman as a potential Prez, because he comes off as someone who understands the average American.  He also notes that Fetterman shares some of the features that helped Trump win, the most important being “authenticity, balls, and charisma.”

Yes, Fetterman had a stroke and suffers from depression, but Trump is unhealthy and suffers from narcissism. Fetterman, however, has sensible and potentially winnable political views; as Maher says, “Fetterman says the four words that strike fear into the heart of every Republican who wants to hang onto power: ‘I am not woke’.”

Maher also suggests Mayor Pete as a possible VP candidate, and I’m for that, too. (He notes that a disabled President combined with a gay VP surely checks as many intersectionality boxes as one person of color.) If not Mayor Pete, than Gretchen Whitmer.

This is a very good one; watch it!

Categories: Science

Researchers unveil neuromorphic exposure control system to improve machine vision in extreme lighting environments

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 8:43am
A research team has recently developed a groundbreaking neuromorphic exposure control (NEC) system that revolutionizes machine vision under extreme lighting variations. This biologically inspired system mimics human peripheral vision to achieve unprecedented speed and robustness in dynamic perception environments.
Categories: Science

Researchers unveil neuromorphic exposure control system to improve machine vision in extreme lighting environments

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 8:43am
A research team has recently developed a groundbreaking neuromorphic exposure control (NEC) system that revolutionizes machine vision under extreme lighting variations. This biologically inspired system mimics human peripheral vision to achieve unprecedented speed and robustness in dynamic perception environments.
Categories: Science

Scientists unravel the spiraling secrets of magnetic materials for next-generation electronics

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 8:43am
Engineers have developed a new computational approach to accurately model and predict the properties of a class of magnetic molecules called chiral helimagnets. Their work could accelerate the discovery of new materials for spintronics technologies.
Categories: Science

Scientists unravel the spiraling secrets of magnetic materials for next-generation electronics

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 8:43am
Engineers have developed a new computational approach to accurately model and predict the properties of a class of magnetic molecules called chiral helimagnets. Their work could accelerate the discovery of new materials for spintronics technologies.
Categories: Science

Chemistry: Triple bond formed between boron and carbon for the first time

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 8:40am
Researchers are opening up new horizons in chemistry: They present the world's first triple bond between the atoms boron and carbon.
Categories: Science

Breakthrough in clean energy: Palladium nanosheets pave way for affordable hydrogen

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 8:40am
Hydrogen energy is widely recognized as a sustainable source for the future, but its large-scale production still relies on expensive and scarce platinum-based catalysts. In order to address this challenge, researchers have developed Bis(diimino)palladium coordination nanosheets (PdDI), a novel two-dimensional electrocatalyst that effectively facilitates the hydrogen evolution reactions while minimizing the use of precious metals like platinum, paving the way for affordable hydrogen production.
Categories: Science

Smartwatches could end the next pandemic

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 8:40am
Everyday smartwatches are extremely accurate in detecting viral infection long before symptoms appear -- now, research shows how they could help stop a pandemic before it even begins.
Categories: Science

The first water may have formed surprisingly soon after the big bang

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 8:00am
Water is an essential part of life on Earth, and possibly elsewhere – and now it we know it may have formed not long after the start of the universe
Categories: Science

The cosmic landscape of time that explains our universe's expansion

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 8:00am
A strange new conception of how time warps across the universe does away with cosmology's most mysterious entity, dark energy
Categories: Science

Oy! Women’s, gender, and sexuality studies at Barnard

Why Evolution is True Feed - Tue, 03/04/2025 - 7:15am

Barnard College was founded in 1889 as a woman’s school because only men were allowed in the nearby Columbia University. Now the two institutions are affiliated and share considerable resources, including classes and dining halls. Barnard students also get their diplomas from Columbia University.

As you may know, three Barnard students were expelled this month for sit-ins in University buildings, and the expulsions are, so far, still in force. Because of that, a passel of pro-Palestinian protestors of unknown origin held their own illegal sit-in in Barnard’s Milbank Hall, a sit-in that included vandalism.  And students also marched on Columbia University, injuring one worker and also committing vandalism. In neither of these last two cases were any protestors punished.

Over the last two years, Columbia has been an epicenter of pro-Palestinian and anti-Semitic activity, so much so that the HHS has decided to review Columbia’s federal funding in light of their accused violations of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, prohibiting “discriminationon the basis of race, color, and national origin in programs and activities receiving federal financial assistance.” (There’s a whole Wikipedia article on “Antisemitism at Columbia University,” a practice that goes back nearly 100 years but of course has ramped up since the Gaza War. Before she resigned as President of Columbia, Minouche Shafik created a Task Force on Antisemitism, but, given their laxity towards protestors who violated Columbia’s rules, I’m not expecting much from it.  All I can say is that if I were a Jewish parent or student, even a secular one, I wouldn’t ever send my kids to either Barnard or Columbia, not only because of their pervasive antisemitism but also because loud and illegal demonstrations are constantly interrupting academic activities.

Columbia is also uber-woke, which is another reason to avoid it, since it practices indoctrination of students. To see how it works, let’s just look at one ideologically-based department, Women’s Gender and Sexuality studies. Click on icon below to see some stuff about it:

 

Here are two of the three pictures on the front page. I don’t think this department is going to abide by institutional neutrality! (There is of course no pro-Israel photo.)

As the reader who sent this to me said:

I guess the “Inclusive” part of DEI at the school does not include Jews or white males.  But yeah — AAUP opposes institutional neutrality, arguing that it violates the academic freedom of departments to express their communal voice.

And on that front page, check out the articles.

Spotlight on Faculty Research:

Neferti Tadiar, “Why the Question of Palestine is a Feminist Concern”: “During our weeklong investigative trip, we were witness to multiple and varied testimonies to and clear evidence of the daily acts of violence, harassment and humiliation that Palestinians are subjected to, both massive and intimate.” Read the full article here.

See also: Neferti Tadiar, “Powers of Defending Freedom”

I’d suggest checking out Tadiar’s article for a real word salad that ignores the fact that Palestine, like many Arab countries, is explicitly anti-feminist. Dr. Tadiar, who is head of this department, includes this as the closing of her essay:

Ultimately, however, what makes the question of Palestine a feminist concern does not rest on any one of these analytical perspectives or points of critique. It rests rather on the connections that the oppression and struggle of Palestinians enables us to draw across those differences on which the oppression depends and that the question as it is now posed presumes. It is a feminist concern because it calls us to forge new relations beyond the province of interests and inherited forms of social belonging to which we might have become tethered and, for those of us not already called, to feel the suffering and aspirations of Palestinians as also our own. The strangulation of Palestinian life is, after all, not the accomplishment of one aberrant state, inasmuch as the latter is supported by a global economy and geopolitical order, which condemns certain social groups and strata to the status of absolutely redundant, surplus populations – an order of insatiable accumulation and destruction that affects all planetary life. The question of Palestine is thus an urgent question of a just and equitable future that is both specific to this context and to this people, and a general and paradigmatic global concern. To take a stand in solidarity with and to be involved in the struggle of Palestinians to resist and transform the conditions of their own dispossession and disposability – to join in their aspiration for collective freedom and self-determination – is also to participate in the remaking of global life, which cannot but be a paramount feminist act.

Also, have a look at the course offerings, which are heavily larded with Social Justice, though I do note one course on “Contemporary American Women’s Jewish Literature.” The rest of the courses comprise a farrago of courses with explicitly political aims, concentrating on victims.

But I wonder what kind of job a graduate in this department is suited for. I can think of only two: to become an academic in a similar department elsewhere, or go to work for a DEI organization.

Categories: Science

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