Advertisements


Could humans communicate with whales?

The Geochemical and Environmental Research Group (GERG), a center within the College of Geosciences at Texas A&M University, will conduct a research program with Project CETI, the Cetacean Translation Initiative, to understand vocalizations of sperm.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgApr 26th, 2021

AI, as it stands today, is a valuable tool for the auto industry but a poor substitute for humans

As the industry experiments with artificial intelligence, business owners need to be aware of the technology's promise and its limitations......»»

Category: topSource:  autonewsRelated News5 hr. 39 min. ago

Right whales are migrating in new areas, prompting need for better protections, report finds

Endangered Atlantic right whales are venturing to new areas, researchers have found in a recently released report, and many of those areas do not have speed limits on vessels......»»

Category: topSource:  pcmagRelated News7 hr. 6 min. ago

Scientists find southern killer whales of the Pacific have access to enough food, deepening mystery of their struggles

A pair of marine mammal scientists at The University of British Columbia, has found that claims that a lack of access to salmon is what is driving the crash in population numbers for southern resident killer whales of the Pacific are wrong......»»

Category: topSource:  pcmagRelated NewsOct 20th, 2024

Saturday Citations: Brown dwarf actually brown dwarfs; the adaptability of ice-age humans; archaeologists excited

This week, researchers discovered a near-Earth microquasar that sheds new light on sources of relativistic outflows. Doctors reported finding a triphallic gentleman. And neuroscientists reported on modest cognitive boosts from short (or "acute," in c.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 19th, 2024

Controlling sound waves with Klein tunneling improves acoustic signal filtration

In the context of sensory modalities, eyes work like tiny antennae, picking up light, electromagnetic waves traveling at blistering speeds. When humans look at the world, their eyes catch these waves and convert them into signals the brain reads as c.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 18th, 2024

It’s increasingly unlikely that humans will fly around the Moon next year

It's not just Orion's heat shield; the mission's ground systems are running out of time. Don't book your tickets for the launch of NASA's Artemis II mission next year just yet. W.....»»

Category: topSource:  arstechnicaRelated NewsOct 17th, 2024

Microbiome studies in humans and zoo animals pave the way for new drug development

Microorganisms do not just colonize the body of mammals during infections. Billions of microbes can be found on and in healthy humans and animals at any given time, communicating with each other via chemical signals and thus influencing their health......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 17th, 2024

DNA confirms these 19th-century lions ate humans

“Tsavo Man-Eaters” killed dozens of people in late 1890s, including Kenya-Uganda Railway workers. For several months in 1898, a pair of male lions turned the Tsavo region of K.....»»

Category: topSource:  arstechnicaRelated NewsOct 17th, 2024

Humans have near-equal numbers of male and female babies, unlike many other animals—a new genetic study looks for clues

We know that boys and girls are produced in much the same frequency. But how—and why—is this 1:1 ratio achieved?.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 17th, 2024

Coastal cities have a hidden vulnerability to storm-surge and tidal flooding that"s entirely caused by humans

Centuries ago, estuaries around the world were teeming with birds and turbulent with schools of fish, their marshlands and endless tracts of channels melting into the gray-blue horizon......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 17th, 2024

DNA confirms these 19th century lions ate humans

“Tsavo Man-Eaters” killed dozens of people in late 1890s, including Kenya-Uganda Railway workers. For several months in 1898, a pair of male lions turned the Tsavo region of K.....»»

Category: topSource:  arstechnicaRelated NewsOct 16th, 2024

Human Origins Look Ever More Tangled with Gene and Fossil Discoveries

Fossil and gene discoveries paint an ever-more-intertwined history of humans combining with vanished species like Neandertals.....»»

Category: scienceSource:  sciamRelated NewsOct 16th, 2024

Ship-mounted camera systems help increase protections for marine mammals

Vessel strikes and entanglement are some of the leading causes of injury and death to marine animals such as whales. Increasingly urbanized waterways, warming oceans, changes in prey distribution—and in some cases, increasing species populations—.....»»

Category: topSource:  informationweekRelated NewsOct 15th, 2024

Reports: Tesla’s prototype Optimus robots were controlled by humans

But the prototypes used "artificial intelligence" to control their walking. After Elon Musk provided his "long-term" vision for autonomous, humanoid robots at last week's "We, Rob.....»»

Category: topSource:  arstechnicaRelated NewsOct 15th, 2024

Is the physics of red blood cells in bats a key to "artificial hibernation" for humans?

The mechanical properties of red blood cells (erythrocytes) at various temperatures could play an important role in mammals' ability to hibernate. This is the outcome of a study that compared the thermomechanical properties of erythrocytes in two spe.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 15th, 2024

How "vaccinating" plants could reduce pesticide use and secure global food supplies

In a growing and changing world, we need to find ways of putting food on everyone's table. Pesticides have enabled mass cultivation on an incredible scale, but they can have harmful secondary effects on humans and wildlife, and pests are rapidly evol.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 15th, 2024

Ancient hominins had humanlike hands, indicating earlier tool use, study reveals

An analysis by Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen, Germany, on the manual capabilities of early hominins reveals that some Australopithecus species exhibited hand use similar to modern humans......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 15th, 2024

Invisible text that AI chatbots understand and humans can’t? Yep, it’s a thing.

A quirk in the Unicode standard harbors an ideal steganographic code channel. What if there was a way to sneak malicious instructions into Claude, Copilot, or other top-name AI ch.....»»

Category: topSource:  arstechnicaRelated NewsOct 14th, 2024

Ancient humans were so good at surviving the last ice age, they didn"t have to migrate like other species

Humans seem to have been adapted to the last ice age in similar ways to wolves and bears, according to our recent study, challenging longstanding theories about how and where our ancestors lived during this glacial period......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 14th, 2024

What colors do bees see? And how do we know?

I was reading a children's book about insects to my daughter, and it said that bees see colors differently than humans do. My daughter immediately asked, in short succession: "What colors do they see? Why? How do we know?" I did some homework to find.....»»

Category: topSource:  pcmagRelated NewsOct 14th, 2024