Morning Overview on MSN
Why some brains switch gears faster than others, new research reveals
Some people can drop a task midstream, respond to a curveball, and then slide back into deep focus with barely a hitch.
The Register on MSN
Artificial brains could point the way to ultra-efficient supercomputers
Sandia National Labs cajole Intel's neurochips into solving partial differential equations New research from Sandia National ...
Organs often have fluid-filled spaces called lumens, which are crucial for organ function and serve as transport and delivery ...
Legacy load forecasting models are struggling with ever-more-common, unpredictable events; power-hungry AI offers a solution.
Sandia National Labs today released an update on its neuromorphic computing research, reporting that these systems, inspired ...
QuantumSpeed technology represents a compelling investment opportunity tied directly to the modernization of global defense infrastructure and the premium placed on speed-driven decision advantage, ...
For financial institutions, threat modeling must shift away from diagrams focused purely on code to a life cycle view ...
Earthquakes happen daily, sometimes with devastating consequences, yet predicting them remains out of reach. What scientists ...
Brian P. Lazzaro from Cornell University discusses the role of dynamic feedbacks in determining infection outcomes ...
Explore the link between cancer and bacterial relapse in light of new research on biological noise and therapy strategies.
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