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AI Studies the Emotions of Music
Researchers aim to create more complete and precise standards for algorithms that seek to recognize musical emotions perceived by listeners. In the future, these algorithms could be beneficial to regulate emotions through music or in learning applications.
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Predicting Where Coronavirus Binds to Human Proteins
A computational tool allows researchers to predict locations on the surfaces of human and COVID-19 viral proteins that bind with each other. This knowledge will help to develop drugs that block binding sites on SARS-CoV-2.
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DNA Set To Become the World's Smallest Hard Drive
Northwestern University scientists have developed a novel in vitro method for using DNA to record and store information. The work has implications for the current data storage crisis and other scientific fields, such as neuroscience research.
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Predicting Microbial Growth Amid Climate Change
We know combustion engines, such as in cars or power plants, lose efficiency when they run faster. Similarly, research has shown that microbes lose efficiency as their metabolic rates increase.
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Charged Particles Strip Off When Entering the Boundary Layer
Researchers have investigated how positively and negatively charged ions behave at the interface between a solid surface and an aqueous solution.
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Use of E-Cigarettes Linked to Dysregulation of Genes
A study shows that, like smoking, the use of e-cigarettes is linked to the dysregulation of mitochondrial genes and immune response genes.
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A New Mathematical Theory Explains How the Brain Learns
A new mathematical model could help in physical therapy and shed light on learning more generally.
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How Brain Research Tests Supercomputers Like Never Before
In the latest issue of Science, Katrin Amunts and Thomas Lippert explain how advances in neuroscience demand high-performance computing technology and will ultimately need exascale computing power.
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Previously Unknown Cell Components Revealed by AI-Based Technique
By combining microscopy, biochemistry techniques and artificial intelligence, researchers have revealed previously unknown cell components that may provide new clues to human development and disease.
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New Method Gives Insights Into How Cells Are Changed by Disease
A new “image analysis pipeline” is giving scientists rapid new insight into how disease or injury have changed the body, down to the individual cell.
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