New math model controls biological noise at single-cell level, offering a path to tackle cancer relapse and drug resistance.
News Medical on MSN
A mathematical solution for precise control of cellular “noise”
Why does cancer sometimes recur after chemotherapy? Why do some bacteria survive antibiotic treatment? In many cases, the answer appears to lie not in genetic differences, but in biological noise - ...
This study presents SynaptoGen, a differentiable extension of connectome models that links gene expression, protein-protein interaction probabilities, synaptic multiplicity, and synaptic weights, and ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
New breakthrough could make ‘green’ hydrogen cheaper and faster to produce
Smarter nickel coatings could make alkaline electrolyzers and hydrogen fuel, cheaper, faster to produce, and more efficient.
Side-blotched lizards probably don’t call the game that, but they play a version of it anyway. A new study explains the ...
Quantum particles have a social life, of a sort. They interact and form relationships with each other, and one of the most ...
Discover how homomorphic encryption (HE) enhances privacy-preserving model context sharing in AI, ensuring secure data handling and compliance for MCP deployments.
By 2026, Turkey has moved beyond being a mere budget destination to become the global epicenter of hair restoration ...
Studies show music can sharpen some aspects of driving and dull others, and affect younger drivers differently to experienced ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Research: Smaller AI Memory Enhances Accuracy
Researchers have developed a new way to compress the memory used by AI models to increase their accuracy in complex tasks or help save significant ...
PsyPost on MSN
Scientists identify dynamic brain patterns linked to symptom severity in children with autism
New research suggests that the way brain networks reorganize moment-to-moment predicts autism severity. Children who spent ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
All day brain tracking helps scientists finally decode fatigue
Most of the time, you assume your brain is either “on” or “off,” awake or asleep. A new study shows something far more ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results