Research Stash Weekly Review #7

Research Stash Weekly Roundup ~ Latest news in Science and Technology around the globe.

New structures of the HIV-1 envelope protein provide a description of how the HIV-1 fusion machinery functions

‘True blue’ chrysanthemum flowers produced with genetic engineering

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Roses are red, but science could someday turn them blue. That’s one of the possible future applications of a technique researchers have used to genetically engineer blue chrysanthemums for the first time. Read More

Stem cells located in the hypothalamus shown to have slowed aging in mice

Turns Out, The Purpose of Diarrhoea Is Way More Complicated Than We Thought

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For centuries, scientists have been confounded by one of the messiest aspects of the human experience – diarrhea, and why exactly we have to endure it. Read More

Facebook AIs Develop Their Own Language That No Human Can Understand

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Right now, artificial intelligence (AI) tend to fall into one of two categories – freakishly impressive, like the Google AI that can invent its own AI, or hilarious rubbish, like the one failing miserably at designing inspirational posters. Facebook recently developed an AI that falls into the former, and it turns out to be so good at its job that the plug was pulled before it could get any further. Read More

In quest to reach Alpha Centauri, Breakthrough Stasrhot launches World’s Smallest Spacecraft

Breakthrough Starshot, a multifaceted program to develop and launch practical interstellar space missions, successfully flew its first spacecraft – the smallest ever launched. Read More

Scientists Have Used CRISPR to Edit a Human Embryo in The US For The First Time

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Researchers in Portland, Oregon have, for the first time, edited a human embryo in the US. This work adds to the promise of CRISPR, and it stands as an important step toward the birth of the first genetically modified humans. Read More

Scientists Have Found a Woman Whose Eyes Have a Whole New Type of Colour Receptor

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After more than 25 years of searching, neuroscientists in the UK recently announced that they’ve discovered a woman who has an extra type of cone cell – the receptor cells that detect color – in her eyes. Read More

Fewer components are needed for chromosome assembly during cell division than previously supposed

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In a discovery that could lead to the rewriting of biology textbooks, RIKEN researchers have found that tightly wound strands of DNA, known as chromosomes, can form even in the near absence of substructures that were thought to be essential for their production Read More

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How Malaria Tricks the Immune System

The new study suggests a possible defense in the battle against this deadly disease Global efforts to eradicate malaria are crucially dependent on scientists’ ability to outsmart the malaria parasite.

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Complex Organic Molecules Found on “Space Hamburger” — Prebiotic Atmosphere Discovered on Accretion Disk of Baby Star

An international research team, led by Chin-Fei Lee of the Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics (ASIAA, Taiwan), has used the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) to detect complex organic molecules for the first time in the atmosphere of an accretion disk around a very young protostar.

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Researchers From Taiwan Has Discovered A New Mechanism of Memory Formation

There is an old Chinese saying that goes like this: “Once bitten by a snake, you will fear grass rope for ten years”. If a fortunate individual bitten by a poisonous snake managed to survive, the shape of the snake and the sense of danger will be associated together and stored into memory.

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