Plasma tech could replace one of world’s rarest materials – News – The University of Sydney

Dr Behnam Akhavan's plasma. Credit: Dr Behnam Akhavan

When you change the transparency of a wearable electronic or a smart window, an electrochromic device is doing the work, said Dr Akhavan.

Until now, these devices have typically relied on materials like rare indium to do the job. What we have created is a manufacturers dream: a technology that removes the need for indium and instead uses a plasma-engineered, three-layered structure that is much cheaper to produce.

Early iterations of the technology were produced for the first time in 2019, using a new method of tungsten oxide deposition known as HiPIMS (the plasma technology used to create these materials). Now, instead of a bare tungsten oxide layer, the group has developed a nanocomposite of tungsten oxide and silver. This nanotechnology-enabled approach allows electrochromic devices to efficiently and rapidly change colour upon a users request.

The plasma coatings are transparent and also electrically conductive. They are made up of a layer of silver that is approximately 10,000 times thinner than the width of human hair, placed in between two nano-thin layers of tungsten oxide decorated with silver nanoparticles.

These plasma-fabricated coatings can then be applied to electronic papers, smart phones and glass windows and can be dimmed with the application of a small electrical current.

DECLARATION

There are no conflicts of interest to share. The research was funded by the University of Sydney and the Australian Research Council.

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Plasma tech could replace one of world's rarest materials - News - The University of Sydney

The sensor that detects COVID in a room – ACS

A new biosensor developed by RMIT researchers can detect COVID-19 when placed in a room or worn as a personal tag.

The Soterius Scout sensor is sensitive enough to detect the presence of tiny amounts of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and has results within a minute to provide the all-clear for someone to enter a work environment or alert them if they need to undertake a medical COVID test and self-isolate.

Scout uses nanotechnology-enabled biosensors developed at the RMIT Micro Nano Research Facility in Melbourne.

One sensor can detect up to eight viral strains and be adapted to detect new variants or novel viruses as they emerge.

After a successful prototype, RMIT and Soterius in partnership with MIP Diagnostics, the Burnet Institute, D+I and Vestech, are working towards a commercial release early 2022.

Professor Sharath Sriram, RMIT University project lead, told Information Age the high-tech sensor uses semiconductors, the same as those used in electronics that give or remove charge, with a surface coated with locations where the virus would bind.

These are designed carefully to match the target it has to be designed to be a perfect match for accurate readings and precise measurements, said Sriram.

The analogy is a pair of jigsaw puzzle pieces only the right pieces would fit into each other. So, if the virus (or any target) is present, they will go into their matching site. We measure the electrical properties of a specially-designed semiconductor surface, he says.

When the target material lands, it changes the electrical property of the device, which instantly reveals whether the target virus is present or not (a positive or negative charge). "More importantly, there are millions of target sites as more are occupied, the strength of the electrical signal changes. This allows us to estimate concentration of the target reliably, he says.

The Soterius Scout team [L to R]: Professor Sharath Sriram (RMIT), Dr Alasdair Wood (Soterius), Dr Md Ataur Rahman (RMIT), Dr Chih Wei Teng (Soterius), Dr Ganganath Perera (RMIT)

The power of ultraviolet light processes

The high-tech sensor utilises a system with three parts the sensor chip, the flexible electronics using micro-fabrication and the reader (just a standard NFC-enabled smartphone or simple NFC readers available in the market).

The chip uses silicon electronics fabrication technology, the same as electronics in laptops and phones.

On the silicon wafer, the sensor is defined by a process called photolithography (patterning with light), where ultraviolet light is used to define the micro-scale structure. These are coated with thin (100nm, 1000x thinner than human hair) layers of gold, which defines the electronic interface, Sriram said.

"On this electronic structure, the surface is chemically modified to define the binding sites for the target.

In this particular case, we use synthetic nano-imprinted polymer molecules from MIP Diagnostics in the UK, he says.

The interface uses flexible electronics which collect the sensor data and the antenna and peripherals that transmit the data are defined on a 25m thick plastic sheet using a material called polyimide.

We can either use laser patterning or etching to define the structures. On top of this, miniature electronic components (~0.2 mm is size) are assembled to form the circuit.

The device prototypes are currently made in the Micro Nano Research Facility at RMIT University.

However, although it has the capacity to make large volume of sensor chips, the interface electronics volumes are limited.

The objective is to manufacture in Victoria or Australia, with a few proposals submitted to government agencies to support such local manufacturing.

Tiny technology with big potential

Despite its micro-size, the technology is versatile and can be rapidly repurposed to target any virus providing a host of potential applications.

The sensor chip can be covered with binding sites for any material of interest, be it other respiratory viruses, biomarkers related to disease or diet, or to find minor variants of DNA, Sriram said.

The genius of this technology lies in its compact electronics the size of a postage stamp and without a battery that allows it to be deployed anywhere in the world, reaching remote and vulnerable communities.

The devices have been developed with manufacturing requirements a primary consideration, said Sriram.

Every step used in production leverages existing manufacturing techniques, which creates opportunities to scale-up rapidly.

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The sensor that detects COVID in a room - ACS

Outlook on the Nanostructured Coatings, Films and Surfaces Global Market to 2031 – 382 Companies Profiled Including Bio-Gate, Tesla Nanocoatings and…

DUBLIN, July 19, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- The "The Global Market for Nanostructured Coatings, Films and Surfaces (Nanocoatings) 2021-2031" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

This report provides an analysis of market size, applications, growth prospects, impact of COVID-19, market challenges, drivers and opportunities.

The use of advanced nanocoatings to mitigate viruses and environmental damage has emerged. Applied to high-transmission surfaces the use of nanocoatings offers continuous disinfection. This is one example of the many functionalities nanocoatings offer to a wide range of products and processes.

Types of nanocoatings covered include:

Market for nanocoatings covered include:

Report contents include:

Key Topics Covered:

1 Executive Summary

2 Overview of Nanocoatings

3 Market Analysis by Nanocoatings Type

4 Market Segment Analysis, by End-user Market

5 Nanocoatings Companies5.1 3M5.2 Abrisa Technologies5.3 Accucoat, Inc.5.4 Aculon, Inc.5.5 Acreo Engineering5.6 Adaptive Surface Technologies5.7 Advanced Materials-JTJ S.R.O5.8 Advanced Nanotech Lab5.9 Advanced Silicon Group5.10 Advanced Soft Materials, Inc.5.11 Advenira Enterprises, Inc.5.12 Aereus Technologies5.13 Agienic Antimicrobials5.14 AKALI Technology5.15 AkzoNobel5.16 ALD Nanosolutions, Inc.5.17 Alfred Clouth Lackfabrik GmbH & Co. KG5.18 Allied Bioscience5.19 AMProtecTion, LLC5.20 Alchemy5.21 Alexium, Inc.5.22 Americhem5.23 AMProtecTion, LLC5.24 AM Technology Ltd.5.25 Analytical Services & Materials, Inc.5.26 Ancatt5.27 Applied Graphene Materials5.28 Applied Nanocoatings, Inc.5.29 Applied Nanotechnologies S.L5.30 Applied Nano Surfaces5.31 Applied Sciences, Inc.5.32 Applied Thin Films, Inc.5.33 Artekya5.34 Ar Brown5.35 ARA-Coatings5.36 Asahi Glass Co. Ltd.5.37 Attonuclei5.38 Autonomic Materials, Inc.5.39 Avaluxe International GmbH5.40 Avanzare Innovacion Tecnologica S.L5.41 Bactiguard AB5.42 BASF Corporation5.43 Battelle5.44 Beneq Oy5.45 BigSky Technologies LLC5.46 Biocote Ltd.5.47 Bio-Fence5.48 Bio-Gate AG5.49 Bioni CS GmbH5.50 Bionic Technology Holding BV5.51 Boral Limited5.52 Buhler Partec5.53 BYK-Chemie GmbH5.54 Cambridge Nanotherm Limited5.55 Cambrios Technologies Corporation5.56 Cardinal Glass Industries5.57 Caparol5.58 Carbodeon Ltd. Oy5.59 Ceko Co. Ltd.5.60 Cellutech AB5.61 CeloNova BioSciences, Inc.5.62 CeNano GmbH & Co. KG5.63 Cellucomp Ltd.5.64 CeloNova BioSciences, Inc.5.65 Cetelon Nanotechhnik GmbH5.66 Cellutech AB5.67 Cidetec5.68 CG2 Nanocoatings, Inc.5.69 Clarcor Industrial Air5.70 Cleancorp Nanocoatings5.71 Clearbridge Technologies Pte. Ltd.5.72 Clou5.73 CMR Coatings GmbH5.74 CNM Technologies GmbH5.75 Coating Suisse GmbH5.76 Corning, Incorporated5.77 Cotec GmbH5.78 Coval Molecular Coatings5.79 Covalon Technologies Ltd.5.80 Covestro AG5.81 Cristal/Tronox5.82 Crossroads Coatings5.83 CSD Nano, Inc.5.84 CTECHnano5.85 Cytonix LLC5.86 Dab FLow Nanotechnology5.87 Daicel FineChem Limited5.88 Daikin Industries, Ltd.5.89 Decorative Products GmbH5.90 Diamon-Fusion International, Inc.5.91 Diarc-Technology Oy5.92 Diatomix, Inc.5.93 DFE Chemie GmbH5.94 Dortrend5.95 Dow Corning5.96 Dropwise Technologies Corporation5.97 DrivePur5.98 DryWired5.99 Dry Surface Technologies LLC5.100 DSP Co. Ltd.5.101 Dupont Teijin Films5.102 Duralar Technologies5.103 Duraseal Coatings5.104 Ecology Coatings LLC5.105 Eeonyx Corporation5.106 Eikos, Inc.5.107 Elcora Advanced Materials5.108 Energenics5.109 Engineered Nanoproducts Germany AG5.110 Enki Technology5.111 ENVIRAL Oberflachenveredelung GmbH5.112 Enviro Specialty Chemicals (ESC)5.113 EnvisionSQ5.114 EonCoat, LLC5.115 Eoxolit5.116 Europlasma NV5.117 Eurama Corporation5.118 Evonik Hanse5.119 F Group Nano LLC5.120 Few Chemicals GmbH5.121 Flora Coatings LLC5.122 FN Nano, Inc.5.123 ForgeNano5.124 Formacoat5.125 Freshlight SOlutions5.126 Fumin Co. Ltd.5.127 FutureCarbon GmbH5.128 Future Nanocoatings5.129 Gaematech5.130 GBneuhaus GmbH5.131 GE Global Research5.132 General Paints5.133 GKN plc5.134 Global Graphene Group5.135 Grafoid, Inc.5.136 GrapheneCA5.137 Graphene Innovation & Technologies (GIT)5.138 Graphematech AB5.139 Green Earth Nano Science, Inc.5.140 Green Millenium, Inc.5.141 Grillo Zinkoxid GmbH5.142 Grox Industries5.143 Grupo Repol5.144 GSI Creos Corporation5.145 GXC Coatings5.146 GVD Corporation5.147 HakusuiTech Co. Ltd.5.148 Hardide Coatings5.149 Hemoteq GmbH5.150 HeiQ Materials AG5.151 Henkel AG & Co. KGaA5.152 Hexigone Inhibitors Ltd.5.153 Hexis S.A5.154 Hiab Products5.155 Hitachi Chemical5.156 Honeywell International, Inc.5.157 Hoowaki LLC5.158 HyperSolar, Inc.5.159 Hy-Power Nano, Inc.5.160 HzO, Inc.5.161 Hygratek, LLC5.162 iFyber, LLC5.163 Imagine Intelligent Materials5.164 Imbed Biosciences, Inc.5.165 Inframat Corporation5.166 Inhibit Coatings5.167 InMat, Inc.5.168 Innovative Surface Technologies, Inc (ISurTech)5.169 Inno-X5.170 Instrumental Polymer Technologies LLC5.171 Integrated Surface Technologies, Inc.5.172 Integran Technologies, Inc.5.173 Integricote5.174 Interlotus Nanotechnologie GmbH5.175 Intumescents Associates Group5.176 Ionics Surface Technologies5.177 Ishihara Sangyo Kaisha, Ltd.5.178 ISTN, Inc.5.179 Italcementi Group5.180 Izovac Ltd.5.181 JNC Corporation5.182 Joma International AS5.183 Jotun Protective Coatings5.184 Kaneka Corporation5.185 Kastus Technologies Ltd.5.186 Kriya Materials B.V5.187 Kon Corporation5.188 Kusumoto Chemicals5.189 Leibniz Institute for New Materials (INM)5.190 Life Air Iaq Ltd.5.191 Lintec of America, Inc.5.192 Lipocoat BV5.193 Liquiglide, Inc.5.194 Liquipel, LLC5.195 Lofec Nanocoatings5.196 Lotus Applied Technology5.197 Lotus Leaf Coatings, Inc.5.198 Luna Innovtions5.199 MACOMA Environmental Technologies, LLC5.200 Maeda-Kougyou Co. Ltd.5.201 Marusyo Sangyo Co. Ltd.5.202 Master Dynamic Limited5.203 Mavro5.204 Maxon Technologies5.205 MDS Coating Technologies Corporation5.206 Melodea Ltd.5.207 Merck Performance Materials5.208 Mesocoat, Inc.5.209 Metal Estalki5.210 Metashield5.211 Mica NanoTech5.212 Millidyne Oy5.213 MMT Textiles Limited5.214 Modumetal, Inc.5.215 Molecular Rebar5.216 Muschert5.217 Muse Nanobots5.218 MVX Protex5.219 N2 Biomedical LLC5.220 Nanjing High Technology Nano Material Co. Ltd. (HTNano)5.221 Nanobiomatters S.I5.222 Nano Came Co. Ltd.5.223 Nano-Care Deutschland AG5.224 Nanoclean Global Private Limited5.225 NanoCover A/S5.226 Nanocyl5.227 Nanofilm, Ltd.5.228 Nanogate AG5.229 Nanohmics5.230 Nanohydrophobics, Inc.5.231 Nanokote Pty Ltd.5.232 NanoLotus Scandanavia ApS5.233 Nanomate Technology5.234 Nanomedic Technologies Ltd.5.235 Nanomech5.236 Nanomembrane5.237 NanoPack, Inc.5.238 NanoPhos SA5.239 NanoPhyll, Inc.5.240 Nanopool GmbH5.241 NanoPure Technologies5.242 nanoSAAR AG5.243 Nanosol AG5.244 Nanosonic, Inc.5.245 The NanoSteel Company, Inc.5.246 Nano Surface Solutions5.247 Nanotech Security Corporation5.248 Nano-Tex, Inc.5.249 NanoTouch Materials, LLC5.250 Nanovere Technologies, LLC5.251 Nanoveu Pte. Ltd.5.252 Nanovis Inc.5.253 Nanova Care Coat5.254 Nanowave Inc.5.255 Nano-X GmbH5.256 Nano-Z Coating Ltd.5.257 NascNano Technology Co. Ltd.5.258 NBD Nanotechnologies5.259 Nanto Protective Coating5.260 NEI Corporation5.261 Nelumbo5.262 Neoxal5.263 Neverwet LLC5.264 NGimat5.265 NIL Technology ApS5.266 NILima Nanotechnologies5.267 Nippon Paper Industries5.268 Nippon Sheet Glass Co. Ltd.5.269 Nissan Chemical Industries Ltd.5.270 NITROPEP5.271 Nobio Ltd.5.272 Norcop5.273 NTC Nanotech Coatings GmbH5.274 NOF Corporation5.275 n-tec GmbH5.276 NTT Advanced Technology Corporation5.277 Oceanit5.278 Opticote Inc.5.279 Optics Balzers AG5.280 Optitune Oy5.281 Opus Materials Technology5.282 Organiclick AB5.283 Oxford Advanced Surfaces5.284 Oxford Nanosystems5.285 Oxlutia5.286 P2i Ltd.5.287 Paperlogic5.288 Perpetual Technologies, Inc.5.289 Philippi-Hagenbuch, Inc.5.290 Picosun Oy5.291 Pioneer Medical Devices GmbH5.292 Pixelligent Technologies5.293 Polymerplus, LLC5.294 Powdermet, Inc.5.295 PPG Industries, Inc.5.296 Promethean Particles Ltd.5.297 Promimic AB5.298 Pureti, Inc.5.299 qLayers5.300 Quantiam Technologies, Inc.5.301 QuatCare LLC5.302 Rads Global Business BV5.303 RAS AG5.304 RBNano5.305 Reactive Surfaces, LLP5.306 Resodyn Corporation5.307 Resysten5.308 Rochling Engineering Plastics5.309 Royal DSM N.V5.310 Rust-Oleum5.311 Saint-Gobain Glass5.312 Sandvik Materials Technology5.313 Schott AG5.314 Schaeffler Technologies AG & Co. KG5.315 Sciessent LLC5.316 Scutum Nano Solutions GmbH5.317 sdst5.318 Seashell Technology LLC-Hydrobead5.319 Seiko PMC /KJ Chemicals5.320 Sensor Coating Systems (SCS)5.321 Sol-Gel Materials and Applications (SGMA)5.322 Sharklet Technologies, Inc.5.323 The Sherwin Williams Company5.324 Shin-Etsu Silicones5.325 SHM5.326 Showa Denko K.K5.327 Sicora Technologies Private Limited5.328 SiO2 Nanotech, LLC5.329 Sketch Co. Ltd.5.330 Slips Technology5.331 Sobinco5.332 SolCold5.333 Sono-Tek Corporation5.334 Sonovia5.335 Souma Co. Ltd.5.336 Starfire Systems, Inc.5.337 Starlight Industry Co. Ltd.5.338 Sub-One Technology, Inc.5.339 Sugino Machine Limited5.340 Sumitomo Electric Hard-Metal Ltd.5.341 Sunex, Inc.5.342 SupraPolix BV5.343 Suncoat GmbH5.344 SuSoS AG5.345 Surfactis Technologies SAS5.346 Surfatek LLC5.347 Surfix BV5.348 Surwon Technology5.349 Suzhou Super Nano-Textile Teco Co5.350 Swift Coat, Inc.5.351 Talga Resources5.352 Taiyo Kogyo Corporation5.353 Takenake Seisakusho Co. Ltd.5.354 Tata Steel5.355 Tecnalia5.356 TEC10-95.357 Tesla Nanocoatings5.358 Thomas Swan5.359 TitanPE Technologies, Inc.5.360 TNO5.361 TopChim NV5.362 Topasol LLC5.363 TopsenTechnology5.364 Toray Advanced Film Co. Ltd.5.365 Toshiba Materials Co. Ltd.5.366 Toto5.367 Toyokosho Co. Ltd.5.368 Toyota Tsusho Corporation5.369 Ube Exsymo Co. Ltd.5.370 Ultratech International, Inc.5.371 USA Nanocoat5.372 Valentis Nanotech5.373 Vestagen Protective Technologies, Inc.5.374 Viaex Technologies, Inc.5.375 Viriflex5.376 Wacker Chemie AG5.377 Wattglass, LLC5.378 X-Therma, Inc.5.379 Xtalic Corporation5.380 Yield Co. Ltd.5.381 Zixilai Environoment5.382 Znshine Solar

6 Nanocoatings Companies No Longer Trading

7 Research Methodology

8 References

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/jdhreq

Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [emailprotected]

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Outlook on the Nanostructured Coatings, Films and Surfaces Global Market to 2031 - 382 Companies Profiled Including Bio-Gate, Tesla Nanocoatings and...

Nanotechnology in Medical Devices Market 2021 Size, Status and Business Outlook -Stryker Corporation, 3M Company, St. Jude Medical Inc., Affymetrix…

Nanotechnology in Medical Devices Market 2021-2026 Financial Insights, Business Growth Strategies with Competitive Landscape

The Nanotechnology in Medical Devices Market Research study published byMarketInsightsReports, entitledGlobal Nanotechnology in Medical Devices Market Growth 2021-2026consists of the market share, size, segmentation,and current trends. The study also contains the numerical research of the global Nanotechnology in Medical Devices market on a global level and offers planning and designing statistics to boost business development. The report author has included key competitive landscape (upcoming identifiers) on past and future projections of Nanotechnology in Medical Devices market industrial growth in forecast time-period. It then sheds light on key development trends, regional application and type wise analysis in the Nanotechnology in Medical Devices market report.

Click the link to get a Sample Copy of the Report-

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Top Companies in the Global Nanotechnology in Medical Devices Market are Stryker Corporation, 3M Company, St. Jude Medical Inc., Affymetrix Inc., PerkinElmer Inc., Starkey Hearing Technologies, Smith& Nephew plc ., Dentspl, etc.

Nanotechnology in Medical Devices Market Segmentation:

This report fragments the Global Nanotechnology in Medical Devices Market based on Types are-

biochips, implantable materials, medical textile and wound dressing, active implantable devices

Based on Application, the Global Nanotechnology in Medical Devices Market are divided into-

Therapeutic

Diagnostic

Research

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Global Nanotechnology in Medical Devices Market: Regional Segment-

The Study Objectives Of the Nanotechnology in Medical Devices Market are:

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Some Major Points from Table of Contents:

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As the Nanotechnology in Medical Devices industry enters a new and different chapter in its history after the second wave of the pandemic, a subscription to the Worlds leading B2B Nanotechnology in Medical Devices market report will make sure that you are subscribed to the latest Nanotechnology in Medical Devices industry trends and have access to the latest market data covering both the qualitative and quantitative aspects along with the key company information.

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Nanotechnology in Medical Devices Market 2021 Size, Status and Business Outlook -Stryker Corporation, 3M Company, St. Jude Medical Inc., Affymetrix...

Nourishdoc Brings Top Integrative Medicine Practitioners For Wellness Workshops | The Magazineplus – The Magazine Plus

Consumers can learn from webinars and connect with top holistic practitioners to find natural remedies for common health concerns based on science and research.

(The Magazine Plus Editorial):- Redwood City, California Jul 19, 2021 (Issuewire.com)NourishDoc, the first 360-degree technology platform connecting wellness seekers and top holistic practitioners, announced today that it will start offering educational programs for chronic conditions. Integrative practitioners, professors, and researchers share their years of expertise in easy-to-understand informational sessions for natural remedies that can help heal millions around the world during these difficult times.

Consumers can easily learn and then connect with practitioners for their health concerns across holistic therapies. They can learn how to make smart choices for good gut health foods, adaptogenic herbs, SIBO diet, how to balance hormones, and even learn why your stomach growls. Experts include those in integrative medicine, functional medicine, Ayurveda, acupuncture, massage therapy, chiropractic, diet & nutrition, and holistic health coaches. The platform offers educational webinars, research, real-world case studies, and client stories.

Education by experts in integrative medicine for prevention and wellness remedies can go a long way in healing preventable conditions, said Nageen Sharma, CEO & Co-Founder, NourishDoc. We created NourishDoc to be a tool that brings education and transparency to people who are confused about holistic & integrative medicine therapies. They can now learn why and how holistic therapies can be effective for specific ailments from top integrative practitioners. Practitioners provide education for therapies, root causes of ailments, wellness plans that work, case studies, research, science, member stories and more to give consumers a 360 view that has been missing all along,

Consumers can easily learn, share, and connect with top holistic practitioners. The platform offers consumers a learning-oriented approach based on outcomes for their specific health concerns.

We created NourishDoc platform for holistic & integrative medicine for wellness to eliminate the confusion that can surround integrative approaches for healing. People want to hear directly from the practitioners about what the therapy can or cannot heal. They want to discover their practitioner support system to address health concerns before they worsen or address those where traditional treatments were ineffective, he added.

The wellness tech startup places an emphasis on the quality of practitioners and therapies. They have to be rooted in science and research studies. The wellness seminars are presented by practitioners who are recipients of national awards, professors in prestigious universities, and with real-world outcomes and research.

Health and wellness practitioners nationwide can sign up for free to list their practice on NourishDoc to share their expertise, grow their practice, enroll new clients, and manage the clients in an online platform.

.

About NourishDoc:

NourishDoc is the first-of-its-kind technology platform for wellness seekers to learn, explore, connect and recommend award-winning credentialed practitioners. NourishDoc serves as a platform for consumers to find for a certain condition the right therapy, the right practitioner, the right integrative practices, and the right wellness plans. NourishDoc has over one thousand award-winning practitioners in specialties such as integrative medicine, functional medicine acupuncture, Ayurveda, diet & nutrition, holistic health coaching, and other integrative therapies. To join an educational session, share your wellness story, or recommend holistic practitioners you love, visit https://www.nourishdoc.com/.

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Nourishdoc Brings Top Integrative Medicine Practitioners For Wellness Workshops | The Magazineplus - The Magazine Plus

Dr. Deepak Chopra launches telehealth platform at the intersection of modern and alternative medicine – Mobihealth News

Alternative medicine advocate Dr. Deepak Chopra is teaming up with Verizon and CareSpan on a new platform called Chopra Integrative Medicine Center Telehealth, which was designed to bring a network of holistic medical providers into one space.

The platform specializes in prevention but says it can treat patients with all types of health conditions. Specifically, the platform examines genetic and lifestyle factors in a person's life. It takes a collaborative approach to healthcare by integrating providers and services.

"TheChopraIntegrative Medicine Telehealth Platform lives in the intersection of Allopathic, Alternative and Lifestyle medicine," Ara Suppiah, MD, leading the peak living program on the platform, said in a statement.

Patients using the platform meet with a physician for "a series of 60-minute visits"which covers everything from health history, to lifestyle factors and diet to spirituality. Clinicians may meet with other colleagues to come up with a users' personalized plan. The plan typically hits on nutrition, sleep, hormones, strength and mind-body medicine.

The telehealth service runs on Verizon's BlueJeans Telehealth and is HIPAA-ready. Meanwhile, CareSpan will provide the integrated digital care platform, which the company boasts also HIPAA and ONC compliant.

WHY IT MATTERS

Telehealth became popular during the first wave of COVID-19. Whilethe numbers have dropped slightly according to a recent McKinsey report, about 40% of survey consumers said they would continue to use telehealth going forwards, up from 11% prior to the pandemic.

Chopra is pitching this new platform as a way to integrate care while using telehealth, and incorporating holistic factors into the mix.

"Because of technology, the future of well-being is very precise, it's personalized, it's predictable, it's preventable and it is a process that requires everyone's participation," Chopra said during a Facebook live call today.

THE LARGER TREND

This isn't the first time Chopra has been involved with digital health projects. In February, Fitbit announced that Chopra would headline a collection of wellness content for Fitbit Premium members. His sessions included topics such as mindfulness, breathing and stress management.

Chopra has also teamed up with author and major digital health player Dr. Eric Topol on a study to measure the physiological effects of medication.

In 2009 he founded the Chopra Foundation, a non-profit dedicated to research around mind-body practices.

See the article here:
Dr. Deepak Chopra launches telehealth platform at the intersection of modern and alternative medicine - Mobihealth News

Deepak Chopra Announces Chopra Integrative Medicine Center Telehealth Platform in Collaboration with BlueJeans by Verizon and CareSpan Digital…

LAKE NONA, Fla., July 15, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --Deepak Chopra, M.D., Pioneer of Integrative Medicine, and Founder ofThe Chopra Foundationand Chopra Global, today announced the Chopra Integrative Medicine Center Telehealth platform, a curated network of leading integrative medicine healthcare professionals. The platform will provide access to leading treatment protocols to address the whole body, with the goal to enable everyone to achieve their health goals and enable peak living.

The goal of the telehealth platform is to enable a nationwide network of approved integrative medicine practitioners and hybrid local clinics for high touch patient services. The platform will enable industry leading continuous lifestyle monitoring and care services to ensure contextual interventions and care services can be provided in near real-time.

Deepak Chopra, MD, founder of the Chopra Integrative Medicine Center, said, "With the Integrative Telemedicine Network and practice, we aim to provide the highest-level credentialed doctors globally for Integrative mind body practices and a platform of medical advice that is personalized, predictable, precise, participatory and process oriented. Consultations will be in all areas for both prevention and treatment and in all medical specialties."

Integrated with CareSpan's Digital Care platform for patient care, the Chopra Integrative Medicine Center Telehealth platform will leverage Verizon's BlueJeans Telehealth solution to initiate patient visits and help ensure seamless data-driven virtual care conversations.

Announced this spring, BlueJeans Telehealth is a HIPAA-ready, purpose-built video conferencing solution for healthcare providers that streamlines the telemedicine experience to help improve patient care. By simplifying the virtual join and visit procedures, BlueJeans Telehealth is able to help facilitate greater access to care, provide more flexibility for providers and patients, improve safety and extend the reach of services available.

"With BlueJeans Telehealth, our goal is to change the conversation around what patient care should look like," said Eric Spadafora, VP and GM, BlueJeans by Verizon. "By tapping into our strength in video interoperability and meeting simplicity, the Chopra Integrative Medicine Center will be able to facilitate a new era of patient-centric care. We're proud to be a part of this initiative and provide a platform for the best minds in integrative medicine to come together and determine the best treatment options for patients moving forward."

CareSpan, provides theintegrated digital careplatform with a HIPAA- and ONC-compliant solution designed to meet the rapidly evolving needs of independent practices by combiningin-person and virtualcare delivery, electronic medical records (EMR), remote patient monitoring (RPM),patient engagement, andpractice management capabilities. Rembert de Villa, Vice-Chairman and CEO of CareSpan Health says,"We are honored to be part of this important initiative of The Chopra Integrative Medicine Center.CareSpan's digital care platform was designed and developed with the integration of physical and mental health in mind, and we are excited to play a role in support of the Center's vision."

Ara Suppiah, MD, leading the peak living program on the platform said, "The Chopra Integrative Medicine Telehealth Platform lives in the intersection of Allopathic, Alternative and Lifestyle medicine. World-renowned experts across various specializations will collaborate to provide personalized care. Leveraging state of the art technology we provide real-time interventions, contextual service and high touch care. This is peak living. This sets us apart."

Poonacha Machaiah, CEO of The Chopra Foundation, said, "The Chopra foundation will bring best in class evidence-based approaches to the care team. Chopra Foundation researchers and integrative medicine professionals will study and improve practices through comprehensive lifestyle analytics and provides insights to personalize and optimize wellbeing."

The Chopra Integrative Medicine Center Telehealth platform is currently being trialed and officially available for public release in November 2021. The first Chopra Integrative Medicine Center will be launched at Lake Nona (Orlando, Florida).

About Chopra Integrative Medicine CenterThe Chopra Integrative Medicine Center of Excellence founded by Deepak Chopra, MD leverages the best in evidence-based practices to enhance conventional, alternative, and lifestyle medicine patient care. The center is designed to treat patients with all types of health conditions with a special focus on preventive health and peak living. For further information please visit: https://www.chopra.health

AboutBlueJeans by VerizonBlueJeans by Verizon offers a HIPAA-ready, mobile-friendly telehealth platform that is secure and easy to use for clinicians and patients. Thousands of telehealth encounters are conducted by providers every day on BlueJeans, extending the reach of care and helping to drive better patient outcomes. For more information, visit https://www.bluejeans.com/products/telehealth.

About CareSpanCareSpan via its integrated digitalClinic in the Cloudoffering has dedicated to the future of integrated digital care, using sophisticated digital diagnostic and clinical decision support tools in collaboration with primary, specialty and mental health providers to drive better outcomes with a patient-centered approach. For further information please visit:www.carespanhealth.com

For Media Enquiries:Kristen Marion623-308-2638 [emailprotected]

SOURCE The Chopra Foundation

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Deepak Chopra Announces Chopra Integrative Medicine Center Telehealth Platform in Collaboration with BlueJeans by Verizon and CareSpan Digital...

Promising to Love, Honor and Remain Quirky – The New York Times

Six weeks after Dr. Lauren Grossman and Glenn Kramon were introduced by mutual friends via email in November 2015, they had not yet spoken to each other, though they were undeniably smitten with one another.

She had a big mind, said Mr. Kramon, 68, a lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business and a former assistant managing editor of The New York Times.

She was also extremely bright, he said, and very, very curious.

Neither, though, seemed curious enough that first month and a half to want to hear the sound of each others voice.

Dr. Grossman, 65, who lives in Denver, and Mr. Kramon of Palo Alto, Calif., emailed each other day after day, night after night for six weeks. They never strayed from the comfort of their respective inboxes, ultimately sending a message to family and friends that the doctor and the lecturer whom she lovingly refers to as my mad professor were more a quirky couple than a conventional one.

We were introduced by email, so we just continued emailing, said Dr. Grossman, who specializes in emergency medicine. She is currently the medical director of the UCHealth Integrative Medicine Center, and a faculty member of the University of Colorado School of Medicine, both in Denver.

The following month they finally met in person, at an inn in Evergreen, Colo.

It was a cold and rainy day, according to Mr. Kramon, with a good chance for quirkiness, as Dr. Grossman would soon find out.

Less than an hour into their initial face-to-face conversation in late December 2015, Mr. Kramon produced a notepad filled with dozens of prepared questions, and began interviewing Dr. Grossman for the role of girlfriend.

There were many doctor-related questions, I had never dated a doctor, said Mr. Kramon, whose previous marriage ended in divorce. He had already printed 200 pages of their emails and committed them to a leather journal.

Dr. Grossman, whose first marriage also ended in divorce, was delighted. Call it an old-fashioned courtship, using a new medium, she said, laughing. I dont know anyone who is as passionate as Glenn about anything he does.

Mr. Kramon, ready and willing to embark on a long-distance relationship, agreed with the doctors analysis. She should know, he said, since she happens to be my greatest passion.

Lauren loves life and she loves people, he added. If she gets down, she never stays down for long.

They were married June 26 at the Bodega Bay Lodge in Bodega Bay, Calif., before Rabbi Oren Postrel and 110 guests, including the couples five combined children.

Also in attendance were the married couple who introduced them, Diane and David Schonberger. Glenn disliked the idea of a long-distance relationship, Ms. Schonberger said. My husband and I agreed that Glenns and Laurens quirkiness made them perfect for each other.

The bride is the daughter of the late Leo Goldberg, a produce grower and distributor, and the late Geri Goldberg, a homemaker, both of Las Vegas; the groom is a son of the late Roy A. Kramon, the founder of a mens clothing business, the Majer Company, in Manhattan, and the late Hermine M. Kramon, a homemaker, both of Scarsdale, N.Y.

Each reduced the other to tears with very-personal, heartfelt vows.

I profess my love, hopes and promises for us with our magnificent village as witnesses, the bride said to the groom. We were upfront right from the start me writing that it was intimidating to meet a very fine journalist via the written word. You replied that it was a little frightening to write to someone who manipulates blood for a living and not pixels.

Then it was the grooms turn.

He promised to remain as quirky as Diane and David said we both were when they introduced us, he said, going on to make several other promises, such as to be your editor, your healer, and to be happier together than apart.

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Promising to Love, Honor and Remain Quirky - The New York Times

From COVID-19 adversity comes opportunity: teaching an online integrative medicine course – DocWire News

This article was originally published here

BMJ Support Palliat Care. 2021 Jul 15:bmjspcare-2020-002713. doi: 10.1136/bmjspcare-2020-002713. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: We examine the impact of a 5-day online elective course in integrative medicine (IM) taking place during the COVID-19 pandemic, attended by 18 medical students from two faculties of medicine in Israel.

METHODS: The course curriculum addressed effectiveness and safety of IM practices highlighting supportive and palliative care, demonstrated the work of integrative physicians (IPs) in designing patient-tailored treatments and taught practical skills in communication regarding IM. Group discussions were conducted via Zoom with 32 physicians, healthcare practitioners and IM practitioners working in integrative academic, community and hospital-based settings, in Israel, Italy, UK and Germany. An 18-item questionnaire examined student attitudes and perceived acquisition of skills for implementing what was learned in clinical practice. Student narratives were analysed using ATLAS.Ti software for systematic coding, identifying barriers and advantages of the online learning methodology.

RESULTS: Students reported a better understanding of the benefits of IM for specific outcomes (p=0.012) and of potential risks associated with these therapies (p=0.048). They also perceived the acquisition of skills related to the IM-focused history (p=0.006), learnt to identify effectiveness and safety of IM treatments (p=0.001), and internalised the referral to IPs for consultation (p=0.001). Student narratives included reflections on the tools provided during the course for assessing effectiveness and safety, enhancing communication with patients, enriching their patient-centred perspective, raising awareness of available therapeutic options, and personal and professional growth.

CONCLUSIONS: Online clinical electives in IM are feasible and can significantly increase students awareness and modify attitudes towards acquirement of patient-centred perspectives.

PMID:34266910 | DOI:10.1136/bmjspcare-2020-002713

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From COVID-19 adversity comes opportunity: teaching an online integrative medicine course - DocWire News

Garrett Thompson Receives "Top 100 Leaders in Education" Award from GFEL – WFMZ Allentown

TEMPE, Ariz., July 19, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ --H. Garrett Thompson DC, PhD, Vice President of Academic Affairs at Southwest College of Naturopathic Medicine & Health Sciences, was named a "Top 100 Leaders in Education" by the Global Forum for Education and Learning (GFEL).

The leaders are selected through a nomination-based award process in which GFEL judged nominees based on five broad areas: overall reach; industry impact; spirit of innovation; future readiness; and market demand. At the Forum, Dr. Thompson received this acknowledgement and participated in the panel discussion "Revolutionizing Education from the Ground Up."

"This recognition means so much to me, particularly in a time when the status quo of higher education is being challenged," said Thompson. "Higher education institutions must shift from being 'Centers of Knowledge' to becoming 'Centers of Application' to best meet the needs of the learner, their eventual employer and the populations they serve. I am proud to be championing this at SCNM."

Dr. Thompson serves the community and healthcare professions by having volunteered as treasurer of the board of directors of the American Holistic Health Association and secretary of the Council on Naturopathic Medical Education. He is also a workgroup member for the Academic Collaborative for Integrative Health. Dr. Thompson has researched several human pathologies including breast cancer, asthma, and bone diseases. His research interests have since expanded into the field of education with recent publications on interprofessional education and educational competencies for NDs.

Dr. Thompson's multi-disciplinary approach has resulted in being published in journals in the fields of bioinformatics, cell biology, tissue engineering and interprofessional education. Additionally, he has authored a textbook on biochemistry, as well as a chapter on alcohol, tobacco and drug abuse in the textbook Introduction to Public Health for Chiropractors and a chapter on endocrinology in the textbook Naturopathic and Integrative Family Medicine. He has been recognized with numerous accolades for his teaching and leadership including "Excellence in Teaching," "Excellence in Scholarship," and "Excellence in Service" at SCNM.

For more information, visit scnm.edu.

About Southwest College of Naturopathic Medicine & Health Sciences

Southwest College of Naturopathic Medicine & Health Sciences (SCNM) is a school of medicine and health sciences grounded in naturopathic principles. Dedicated to the ideal that everyone deserves high-quality healthcare, we engage students in rigorous, innovative academic programs, discover and expand knowledge, and empower individuals and communities to achieve optimal health. Our vision is a world that embraces the healing power of nature. For more information on Southwest College of Naturopathic Medicine & Health Sciences, visit scnm.edu.

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Garrett Thompson Receives "Top 100 Leaders in Education" Award from GFEL - WFMZ Allentown

Weigh in: 9 ways to reassure shoppers that supplements are a healthful choice – New Hope Network

Whether they're called fraudulent, unproven or expensive urine, dietary supplements frequently fall prey to negative press. Although the full story is usually more complex than "X supplement doesn't work," media outlets make oversimplified conclusions and craft misleading clickbait headlines, generating bad buzz. This leaves natural products retailers to address shoppers' skepticism and set the record straight.

"On social media, negative press travels six times further than positive press does," says Abraham Nabors, second-generation owner and director of education and standards of Mustard Seed Market and Caf in Akron, Ohio. "In this day and age, you can be certain people will read negative headlines about supplements and come in to talk to you about them."

To help retailers answer shoppers' efficacy questions and explain supplements' roleaccurately, effectively and legallywe asked Nabors plus an integrative physician and a supplements educator to share their best advice.

Cheryl Myers, chief of scientific affairs and education,EuroPharma Inc. in Green Bay, Wisconsin

Distinguish vitamins and supplements.Mainstream medical research often says "you're wasting your money on vitamins." Here's the problem: Vitamins are single compoundsA, B, C, D, E and Kbut in many consumers' minds, everything sold in a health food store is a vitamin. So, when consumers see negative headlines, they get the message that nothing sold in a health food store works. To combat this, explain to shoppers that most supplements are not vitamins.

Identify appropriate endpoints. Consumers constantly hear that vitamins don't work or herbs have been disprovenbut it's for things they were never intended to do in the first place. To prevent nutrient deficiency syndrome, it has been proven that that supplemental nutrients work. For optimal immune function, it has been proven that without optimal levels of vitamin C on board, the immune system isn't as vigorous. Ask shoppers what they're aiming to achieve and outline realistic expectations.

Highlight flaws in meta-analyses. Many negative studies on supplements are meta-analyses, where researchers combine the results of several studies to look for trends or efficacy. I don't think these should be used as a research tool for herbsever. Unlike, say, ibuprofen, which is a single chemical entity, herbs contain multiple compounds. To accurately compare multiple studies of an herb, researchers would need to control for standardization, absorption, dosage size, study duration and other factors, but they often don't. They'll just pool the results of several studies and conclude that an herb doesn't work, when in reality, one good study may have shown efficacy, but it was diluted by all the low-dose and weird studies.

Abraham Nabors, owner and director of education and standards, Mustard Seed Market and Caf in Akron, Ohio

Identify experiential vs. nonexperiential."Will I feel it working?" That's the number-one thing people want to know when determining supplement efficacy, even though it can only be applied to some supplements. With CBD or turmeric, you may notice pain reduction or inflammation support, whereas you're probably not going to feel the effects of vitamin A. It's important to communicate clearly which supplements are in the "feel it" category and which aren't. For those that aren't, to help shoppers understand whether or not they're working, I'm a huge fan of diagnostics. We sell omega-3 fatty acid blood spot tests and vitamin D blood tests. It's powerful when people can see data showing their levels.

Arm staff with facts.We have to respond to supplement criticism all the time, which is why we need to be more informed than our customers, who trust us to pour over the details and be transparent and factual about what we've learned. The science is complicated, and you have to look at the nuances. Whenever a new hit piece comes out, I research it and develop our official talking points in anticipation of people asking about it. Along with helping individual customers in the aisles, this helps us maintain our brand proposition in the community. If you don't prepare your staff, who knows what their individual perceptions might be, and if they're speaking on behalf of your brand, that can be risky.

Give credence to correlation data.Regarding the studies suggesting vitamin D is not effective for COVID-19, I tell people we don't have conclusive scientific word yetbut the correlation data blows my mind. When 90% of people dying of COVID-19 are deficient in vitamin D, what's the risk of taking it? As long as you measure and don't go into toxicity, I say there is nothing but benefit to taking vitamin D and getting your levels to the optimal range.

Gina Serraiocco, M.D., internist and integrative medicine practitioner,Palo Alto Medical Foundation's Institute for Health and Healing in San Carlos, California

Explain nutrient optimization.When explaining what nutrients can do for the body, I use the analogy of an old, abandoned tree that's not doing well. When you give it proper sun, water and compost, the tree inherently knows how to fix itself. You're not telling it how to grow leaves; rather, you're supporting its environment and innate wisdom. It's the same with humans. You are trying to optimize the terrain, and with right supportive terrainincluding the proper intake of nutrients. The problem is our soil is now so depleted that it's hard to get enough nutrients from food, so there are many supplements we absolutely need in order to stay healthy in today's world.

Point out study limitations.When research is done on a single supplement, I tell people it's like fertilizing a tree but giving it only nitratesof course that won't work! Similarly, when we study the standard Americanwho is sedentary, eats Big Macs and takes medications that strip them of nutrientsand give them only vitamin D, well, no wonder vitamin D doesn't help. Vitamin D works in concert with other nutrients. It helps the body absorb calcium for bones, but it needs magnesium and vitamin K2 to direct the calcium. So, if vitamin D doesn't have its team, like it doesn't in many studies, then we can't expect much.

Dispel the silver-bullet myth.In our Western world, we have this notion that every single problem has "one pill to fix the ill." But the body is so much more complex than that. And with so much disease in our bodies in our unhealthy environments, there is rarely a simple fix. Now, that doesn't mean negative studies about supplements should be ignored. Retailers should be upfront about what supplements can and can't do.

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Weigh in: 9 ways to reassure shoppers that supplements are a healthful choice - New Hope Network

Pet CBD Products Need Better Regulation, Researchers Say – Forbes

Buyer bewarepet products containing cannabidiol (CBD) are freely available and sold as supplements, but research shows labels arent always accurate and those products often get mixed with reputably-sourced brands.

Like clockwork, in early July, The U.S. Food and Drug Administrations (FDA) Center for Veterinary Medicine tweeted its yearly warning to pet owners about unregulated CBD products, ahead of the seasonal spike of CBD sales due to firework-induced dog anxiety. Distrust of the FDA abounds, but the organization may have a solid point when it comes to the sketchier side of CBD products marketed for pets.

Brett Hartmann gives his dogs Cayley, a six-year-old-Labrador Retriever drops of a cannabis based ... [+] medicinal tincture to treat hip pain and anxiety, June 8, 2017 at his home in Los Angeles, California. It's early morning, just after breakfast, and six-year-old Cayley is wide awake, eagerly anticipating her daily dose of cannabis. The black labrador, tail wagging, laps up the liquid tincture owner Brett Hartmann squirts into her mouth, a remedy he uses morning and evening to help alleviate Cayley's anxiety. As the multi-billion dollar medical and recreational marijuana industry for humans blossoms in the United States, so is a new customer base -- animals. / AFP PHOTO / Robyn Beck (Photo credit should read ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images)

Recent findings from Leafreport found that 56% of pet CBD products that were sampled were mislabeled with inaccurate claims. Leafreport collected a sampling of 55 pet CBD products, and found over half had inaccurate labeling, most often, incorrect levels of CBD. Out of 55 pet products that were independently tested at Las Vegas-based Canalysis Laboratories, 31 contained the wrong amounts of CBD, and many also contained no THC despite being labeled as full-spectrum CBD.

Beyond pet products, the teams continued research also found an alarming amount of mislabeled delta-8-THC products (often converted from CBD-rich biomass or isolate in a lab) and on July 13, the team published findings detailing wildly different pricing standards between CBD products, meaning some companies scoop up newbieshook, line, and sinker.

One pet product was particularly deceptivecontaining only about 1.5% of the CBD the label claimed it contained, meaning that your pet might not even be getting amounts of the healing compound significant enough to do anything.

Instead, go with a brand that provides certificates of analysis and that is sold in a reputable store, such as a state-regulated dispensary or a CBD store that vets its vendors to ensure their products are safe.

What if we regulated pet CBD products better, consistently providing analytical data, or at the very leastallow veterinarians to properly guide pet owners?

Leafreportoriginally founded in 2019 in Tel Aviv, Israelis an online resource on CBD with discussions from medical doctors, clinical consultants, chemists, nutritional and natural health experts from around the world.

Dr. Zora DeGrandpre practices naturopathic medicine and is a medical and scientific writer and editor, specializing in naturopathic, functional, botanical, and integrative medicine. DeGrandpre writes online courses for medical students around the world including courses for continuing medical education and on the use of medical marijuana and CBD.

DeGrandpre explained that the same product caution that anyone uses for themselves should ideally be applied to their petsadding that consumers need to look into the companys history and reputation.

While different animals may respond differently to CBD, contaminants such as microbial products, heavy metals, toxins, and pesticides are often more toxic to pets than to humans, DeGrandpre says in an email. In addition, dogs appear to be particularly sensitive to THCso you should only use zero-THC products with dogs, and to be safer, with any animals. Also, there isnt a lot of research around CBD and animalsmany vets (for many reasons including legal and professional ones) urge caution when using CBD with your pet.

The effects of CBD on a 200-pound person is not going to work the same way on a 10-pound toy dog, which is why titration is a bit more imperative when dealing with pets, even though they are fully equipped with an endocannabinoid system. Source CBD, for instance, provides a dosing calculator for humans and pets, and relies an anecdotal reports from people who claim a variety of beneficial effects on both mammals and reptiles.

Luna, a pug with acne and seizures, takes her daily dose of CBD oil.

Finally, you should always use the same principle with pets that we recommend for humans! DeGrandpre adds. Start low and go slow, always monitoring the effects on your pet carefully. You want to ensure your pets health, after all! We also recommend checking with your vet to ensure that CBD products will not interfere with any medication that your pet may be on already.

The global pet CBD market is projected to witness considerable growth over the coming years of the forecast period 2018-2028, according to data compiled by San Francisco-based TMR Research. In Europe, researchers came to nearly the same conclusion: Data released on July 12 from Dublin, Ireland-based Research and Markets reported similar findings. The global CBD pet products market to rise with a CAGR of 41.3% during the forecast period (2021-2026). Research and Markets analysts attributed the rise in part to the 2018 Farm Bill, which set things off in the United States.

Some states in the U.S. are starting to allow specific provisions for veterinarians and medical cannabis, such as Nevadas forward-thinking Assembly Bill 101, allowing recommendations, sponsored by Assemblymember Steve Yeager. Then theres Californias Assembly Bill No. 2215, approved in 2018, which basically only allows veterinarians to discuss medical cannabis treatment without fears of repercussions. Californias Assembly Bill 384 would take it a step further, allowing them to give recommendations. Oregon and Washington State Veterinary Medical Associationspostedtheir owncautionary fact sheetsfor medical cannabis advice online. New Yorks Assembly Bill A5172 would offer similar provisions.

Eloise Theisen is a board certified Adult Geriatric Nurse Practitioner who specializes in cannabis therapy. For over 20 years, Theisen has worked primarily with cancer, dementia, and chronic pain patientsfocusing her efforts on cannabinoid therapies for the past five years. Theisen is the president of the American Cannabis Nurses Association.CBD products for pets and humans are still not regulated and testing is not required, Theisen says. It is important to look for companies that do independent 3rd party testing to ensure that the product label. matches the certificate of analysis. Some products may have THC levels that are above the legal limit and that could be unhealthy for pets. Additionally, some companies may have more or less CBD than listed on a label and you may not be giving your pet exactly what you expected.

Furthermore, some companies can be misleading about ingredients such as hempseed oil, which contains antioxidants and fatty acids, butno CBD.

I recommend only buying from a company that provides an independent 3rd party certificate of analysis, Theisen adds. It is important to know exactly what you are giving your pet. A comprehensive certificate of analysis from a reputable 3rd party testing lab will ensure that the product is free of contaminants and that the potency is accurate. If the company cannot provide a certificate of analysis, look for another company that does. There are enough companies out there providing transparency with their products.

In general, its on the consumer to vet the safety and ingredients in pet CBD productsfor the health of their pets, if for no other reason.

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Pet CBD Products Need Better Regulation, Researchers Say - Forbes

Planetary conjunction: Mars, Venus, Moon set to align on July 12-13 – Hindustan Times

PUBLISHED ON JUL 12, 2021 07:28 AM IST

Those interested to see the Earth's neighbours are in for a treat this week. Mars and Venus - two of the Earth's closest neighbours - will come closest to each other in the sky on Tuesday giving a chance to sky gazers to watch these planets with naked eyes.

Both Mars and Venus will appear in the western horizon under clear weather conditions just after sunset.

Before that, the moon will pass closest to the two planets on Monday.

This unique phenomenon is part of planetary conjunction. Such conjunction takes place when two planets appear to have come closer, while in reality they remain far away.

Mars and Venus are likely to be 0.5 degrees apart as observed from Earth, though they are actually further apart. Bengalurus Indian Institute of Astrophysics (IIA) stated that the conjunction will also include the Earths moon coming close to within four degrees of the planets.

"Mars and Venus are passing close to each other in the sky and will be only 0.5 deg (as wide as the size of the Moon) on 13 July. The Moon will also be close to them on 12 July. This is a naked eye event, so go out and see them every evening from today. We bring you 12 posters!" the institute posted in its Twitter handle IIAstrophysics.

Both Mars and Venus are expected to move away gradually after Tuesday. The planetary alignment will be observable only from Earth. It can be viewed from anywhere in India in clear skies. Both planets can be spotted aligned in the same frame through telescopes or binoculars. The angles of the paths are set to be slightly different for northern parts of India.

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Planetary conjunction: Mars, Venus, Moon set to align on July 12-13 - Hindustan Times

Worlds largest telescope will see better with Irish technology – The Irish Times

The worlds largest telescope the Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) is under construction in Chile. When it captures its first light, sometime in 2027 or 2028, Irish adaptive optics technology will be there to ensure it sees further and with greater clarity than any telescope in human history.

The opportunity for Irish astronomers to take part in the ELT project arose when the government decided to join the European Southern Observatory (ESO) the top intergovernmental astronomy organisation in Europe in 2018. Membership cost 14.66 million, with an annual fee of 3.5 million.

A team of researchers at NUI Galway, led by Dr Nicholas Devaney, with expertise in adaptive optics are involved in the ELT project as part of a consortium also involving the Grenoble Institute for Planetary Sciences and Astrophysics and the National Institute of Astrophysics (INAF) in Italy.

The consortium will design and manage the construction of an instrument on the ELT, called multi-conjugate adaptive optics relay (MAORY), which corrects image distortion due to atmosphere blurring. The NUIG team were invited to join the MAORY project based on their scientific reputation.

The Galway team is responsible for the device we call the test unit that is needed to pass all the performance on this domain here in Europe and then also when we arrive on the mountains in Chile, says Paolo Ciliegi, an astronomer at INAF; the overall principal investigator of MAORY.

They put on the table their expertise in adaptive optics and also the construction of this test unit, Ciliegi adds.

The construction of the ELT at an altitude of some 10,000 feet on top of a mountain called Cerro Amazones has halted due to the Covid situation in Chile. The site is in the Atacama Desert, a high plateau covering an area slightly bigger than Ireland, and made up mostly of stones, salt and sand.

The altitude puts it above the cloud line, so there is very little precipitation, which can distort telescope images of space. That dryness this is the driest desert on the planet outside the poles make it an ideal location for astronomers to view the heavens. Yet the ELT must still peer up and out through about 480km of atmosphere, with the distortion that this brings.

When you feel the bumpiness in an airplane thats the atmospheric turbulence, says Devaney. The turbulent atmosphere, he says, is made up of bubbles of air with differing temperatures. The speed of light through air varies slightly with the temperature of the air through which it travels.

The net effect of this is to reduce the sharpness of images from space that a ground telescope can gather. That introduces distortions in the light which leads to a blurry image instead of a sharper image, he adds.

Adaptive optics technology works hard to overcome such atmospheric distortion. This task is akin to gathering light that has been bent and scattered in water and rebuilding it into its underformed original form. This is the job that the MAORY instrument will be performing for the ELT.

A limitation of adaptive optics technology up to now has been that it relies on a natural constellation of bright stars to sharpen distorted images from an optical telescope viewing a big area of sky, but such constellations are not always available. In order to get over this issue scientists use guide stars.

The ELT is going to generate six artificial laser-generated guide stars which will act like a natural constellation of six bright stars to facilitate adaptive optics to work wherever the ELT is pointing towards in the sky. It has proved a huge challenge over decades to get the lasers up to sufficient power to produce bright enough guide stars to facilitate adaptive optics.

After much research scientists decided to use a sodium wavelength for producing guide stars. This is because there is a natural layer of charged sodium ions in the Earths atmosphere at an altitude of 90km, which can be excited and energized by a laser so that it looks just like a natural star.

This is perfect for astronomers, says Devaney. Its like the ions were put out there specifically for that purpose. It means that it is possible to make constellations of artificial guide stars using the six lasers on the ELT.

An optical telescope works by gathering light through mirrors. The bigger its mirrors the more light the telescope can gather and the farther it can see. The main mirror of the ELT will be an enormous 39 metres ( 127.9ft), in diameter. Thats roughly equivalent to 21 men, six feet tall, lying head to toe.

The designers knew that technically it wasnt possible to construct the main mirror as one piece. They also knew that it would be difficult to carry large mirror segments to a mountain top. A decision was therefore made to separately make 798 hexagonal-shaped segments; each 1.5 metres wide weighing 250kg, which, when aligned carefully together, would make up the main ELT mirror.

The mirror segments had to be aligned with nano-metre precision, and that alignment has to be maintained as the telescope moves and tracks objects. There are some 9,000 tiny sensors arranged around each segment so that any kind of motion in one segment with respect to another is accounted for.

There are also actuators that bend the mirrors into optimum shape. The biggest optical telescopes today have three mirrors. The ELT will have five.

In return for Devaneys team working on the adaptive optics on the ELT his astronomer colleagues at NUIG are to be offered ELT observation time. One of those scientists hoping to use the ELT to advance his work is physicist Dr Matt Redman, director of the centre of astronomy at NUIG.

Redman is interested in planetary nebulae. These are badly named celestial objects as they have nothing to do with planets. They looked like planets when viewed by the first telescopes so thats how they got the name. They might better be described as the glowing shell of gas ejected from a dying star.

These nebulae are observed in a variety of shapes including butterfly-shaped, elliptical, spherical, ring-shaped, bi-polar, cylindrical and round.

The big mystery is that the Sun is round, spherical and will turn into one of these objects, and these objects are not round and spherical, says Redman. The most likely idea is a companion star, or even a companion planet, disturbing the material as the dying star throws it off, he explains.

I am hoping the MAORY will be able to get right into the centre of these objects and we might even see that shaping mechanism happening, he adds.

There are some who question the economic and scientific logic of building expensive telescopes on the top of Chilean mountains in order to see through atmospheric distortion when it is possible to put a space telescope, like the Hubble telescope, into orbit up where atmospheric distortion is not a factor.

The justification lies in the cost of getting telescopes into orbit against building them on Earth. The Hubble Space Telescope, which had a primary mirror 2.4metres wide, cost 2.5 billion (today equivalent) to get into orbit and operational. The ELT will cost some 1.3 billion; about half the price.

This point of view holds that although they do different things, ground-based telescopes like ELT give more scientific bang for your buck than space telescopes. The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), set to launch in November, will cost 8.2 billion.

The ELT sees farther, clearer. You are able to collect a lot more, like with a 39-metre mirror, says Devaney. You are able to see further away and see things that are much fainter, such as really faint galaxies. The ELT will be able to see things that are fainter than was possible with the Hubble.

The huge jump in astronomical capability that the ELT will provide is likely to trigger a round of unexpected scientific findings that will change our understanding of the Universe and how it was formed in its earliest days.

Weve seen it before. For example, in 1998 data from the Hubble led scientists to conclude the universe was expanding at an ever accelerating rate. Each time there is a big step forward like this it leads to a huge mushrooming of astronomical activities and discoveries, says Devaney.

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Worlds largest telescope will see better with Irish technology - The Irish Times

Stars and Galaxies . Seeing Some Cosmic X-Ray Emitters Might Be a Matter of Perspective – Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Scientists have suspected that some ULXs might be hidden from view for this reason. SS 433 provided a unique chance to test this idea because, like a top, it wobbles on its axis a process astronomers call precession.

Most of the time, both of SS 433s cones point well away from Earth. But because of the way SS 433 precesses, one cone periodically tilts slightly toward Earth, so scientists can see a little bit of the X-ray light coming out of the top of the cone. In the new study, the scientists looked at how the X-rays seen by NuSTAR change as SS 433 moves. They show that if the cone continued to tilt toward Earth so that scientists could peer straight down it, they would see enough X-ray light to officially call SS 433 a ULX.

Black holes that feed at extreme rates have shaped the history of our universe. Supermassive black holes, which are millions to billions of times the mass of the Sun, can profoundly affect their host galaxy when they feed. Early in the universes history, some of these massive black holes may have fed as fast as SS 433, releasing huge amounts of radiation that reshaped local environments. Outflows (like the cones in SS 433) redistributed matter that could eventually form stars and other objects.

But because these quickly consuming behemoths reside in incredibly distant galaxies (the one at the heart of the Milky Way isnt currently eating much), they remain difficult to study. With SS 433, scientists have found a miniature example of this process, much closer to home and much easier to study, and NuSTAR has provided new insights into the activity occurring there.

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Stars and Galaxies . Seeing Some Cosmic X-Ray Emitters Might Be a Matter of Perspective - Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Venus, Mars and crescent moon to align in ‘planetary conjunction’ during 12-13 July – Firstpost

FP TrendingJul 12, 2021 09:37:08 IST

A special week is ahead for sky gazers and astronomy enthusiasts as two of Earths immediate neighbours - Venus and Mars will be coming close to one another in the coming days. This celestial event is being termed as planetary conjunction because it will be easily visible to the naked eye.

Being observable only from Earth, a planetary conjunction occurs when two planets come closest to each other on a specific day even though they remain far away from one another.

Venus, Mars and moon planetary conjunction. Image credit: Abigail Banerji/Tech2

Informing people about the event on social media, the Indian Institute of Astrophysics (IIA) shared a post revealing details. Mars and Venus are passing close to each other in the sky and will be only 0.5 degrees (as wide as the size of the Moon) on 13 July, a tweet from the official handle reads.

Further in the post, the IIA informed that the moon will also be close to Venus and Mars on 12 July. The institute had asked sky gazers to go out and witness the event every evening from today, 8 July.

This amazing sight will be only visible in the western sky or horizon under clear sky conditions after sunset.

As the meeting of these celestial objects is a big occurrence in the sky, astronomy enthusiasts can commence observing the sky from Thursday (8 July) and continue till Tuesday (13 July). People who continue watching it after the event will also be able to see the departure of these planets. Any ordinary binoculars will show Venus and Mars at their closest.

Meanwhile, the Pune-based Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics (IUCAA) and the IIA, located in Bengaluru have invited photograph entries of the event. Candidates who are interested can send their photos or sketches to outreach@iiap.res.in. The best among them will be published by the institutes online.

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Venus, Mars and crescent moon to align in 'planetary conjunction' during 12-13 July - Firstpost

Researchers Discover Orbital Patterns of Trans-Neptunian Objects Vary Based on Their Color – SciTechDaily

Credit: NYU Abu Dhabi

Data collected can be used to provide new insights into the evolution of the Kuiper Belt, and the larger solar system.

Trans-Neptunian Objects (TNOs), small objects that orbit the sun beyond Neptune, are fossils from the early days of the solar system which can tell us a lot about its formation and evolution.

A new study led by Mohamad Ali-Dib, a research scientist at the NYU Abu DhabiCenter for Astro, Particle, and Planetary Physics,reports the significant discovery that two groups of TNOs with different surface colors also have very different orbital patterns. This new information can be compared to models of the solar system to provide fresh insights into its early chemistry. Additionally, this discovery paves the way for further understanding of the formation of the Kuiper Belt itself, an area beyond Neptune comprised of icy objects, that is also the source of some comets.

In the paper,The rarity of very red TNOs in the scattered disk,publishedinThe Astronomical Journal,the researchers explain how they studied the chemical composition of TNOs in order to understand the dynamical history of the Kuiper Belt. TNOs are either deemed Less Red (often referred to as Gray), or Very Red (often referred to as Red) based on their surface colors. By re-analyzing a 2019 data set, the researchers discovered that gray and red TNOs have vastly different orbital patterns. Through additional calculations, the researchers determined that the two groups of TNOs formed in different locations, and this led to the dichotomy in both their orbits and colors.

Many models of the solar system have been designed to show how the Kuiper Belt has evolved, but these models only study the origins of its orbital structure or colors, not both simultaneously.

With more data, our teams work could be applied to more detailed solar system models and has the potential to reveal new insights about the solar system and how it has changed over the course of time, said Ali-Dib.

Reference: The Rarity of Very Red Trans-Neptunian Objects in the Scattered Disk by Mohamad Ali-Dib, Michal Marsset, Wing-Cheung Wong and Rola Dbouk, 16 June 2021, The Astronomical Journal.DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/abf6ca

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Researchers Discover Orbital Patterns of Trans-Neptunian Objects Vary Based on Their Color - SciTechDaily

Taught skills needed for the space sector the space sector – Open Access Government

The space sector of the worlds economy is growing, the UK is no exception and, indeed, it is UK Government policy that it should grow. Currently, the UK has 5.1% of worldwide economic activity related to space, and the Government has set the goal to grow that to 10% by 2030.

The UK is already involved in the production of nearly half of all small satellites and a quarter of all telecommunications satellites. A 2020 report states that the space sector itself is worth an annual 14.8 billion to the UK economy, with productivity at three times the national average. This does not include the larger contribution from companies that access space data or assets in their daily work.

That is part of the attraction. Though the hardware is launched into space, the money stays on Earth, paying for a wide variety of skilled jobs. Engineers of many types, physicists, mathematicians, programmers, material scientists, telecommunications experts, geographers, earth scientists, oceanographers, data analysts, the list goes on. Once up there, the hardware creates new markets with new users, products and services. There is also the endless positive PR of the scientific exploration of the Moon and planets, via UK involvement in the European Space Agency (ESA) and projects run by the UK Space Agency.

As well as providing support via central facilities at places such as the Harwell Space Cluster, and trade bodies such as UK Space, the UK must do more. One thing it needs is a supply of trained graduates for the space job market. This doesnt just mean astronauts or jobs with ESA, as most jobs are in the UK in industry and applications.

Traditionally, graduates entering these positions have come from the big city red-bricks supporting the aerospace industry, such as Southampton, Birmingham and Strathclyde. Often, however, these courses are more aero than space. There are also other niche providers with courses like Astronomy, Space Science and Astrophyics degrees, which provide broader, physics based qualifications with space specialisms.

If the sector is to grow, more of the mainstream engineering departments must add space to their aero courses, and more niche providers must add space as well, or at the very least, utilise space products and data sets in their courses.

By adding space related or generated activities to their courses, universities will be keeping their degrees up to date, and also sensitise students to the many work opportunities which will only grow over the next decade.

One important step is the growth of undergraduate degrees with a year in industry. Traditionally often the preserve of engineering and business degrees, these are now widely available in many universities and should be offered on every science or engineering degree programme at the very least. Companies themselves offer internships, either during the undergraduate degree or as one-year courses after graduation in the case of ESA.

Finding a job in the space sector may sound daunting, but there is always help. For example, UKSEDS (the organisation of UK space students) runs a careers web page. UK Space also helps students find internships, and there is a service by the UK Space Agency helping students and companies find short term placements.

The next workforce generation wants meaningful employment which improves the world. But how do you monitor the climate? From space. How do you find the carbon and methane emitters? From space. How do you build a new, connected world? From space. From a graduates perspective, the space sector means well-paid jobs in an industry that is making a difference.

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Taught skills needed for the space sector the space sector - Open Access Government

NASA will attempt a ‘risky’ maneuver to fix its broken Hubble Space Telescope as early as next week – Business Insider

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NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has been offline for nearly a month.

The telescope's payload computer a 1980s machine that controls and monitors all of the spacecraft's science instruments suddenly stopped working on June 13. Engineers have been troubleshooting the problem since then, but with little success.

However, a recent NASA announcement suggests a glimmer of hope: The agency tweeted on Thursday that it had successfully tested a procedure that would switch parts of the telescope's hardware to their back-up components.

This could pave the way for the payload computer to come back online, leading to the restart of Hubble's scientific observations.

NASA reported the procedure could happen as early as next week, following additional preparations and reviews. The telescope and the scientific instruments on board remain in working condition.

But the switch will be "risky," according to NASA astrophysics division director Paul Hertz.

"You can't actually put your hands on and change hardware or take a voltage, so that does make it very challenging," he told New Scientist.

Hubble is the world's most powerful space telescope; it orbits 353 miles above the Earth.

On June 30, NASA announced it had figured out that the source of the payload computer problem was in Hubble's Science Instrument Command and Data Handling unit (SI C&DH for short), where the computer resides.

"A few hardware pieces on the SI C&DH could be the culprit(s)," NASA said.

Backup pieces of hardware are pre-installed on the telescope. So it's just a matter of switching over to that redundant hardware. But before attempting the tricky switch from Earth, engineers have to practice in a simulator, the agency added.

NASA has rebooted Hubble using this type of operation in the past. In 2008, after a computer crash took the telescope offline for two weeks, engineers successfully switched over to redundant hardware. A year later, astronauts repaired two broken instruments while in-orbit Hubble's fifth and final reservicing operation. (NASA does not currently have a way to launch astronauts to the space telescope.)

Getting the observatory back online is critical to NASA.

"Hubble is one of NASA's most important astrophysics missions. It's been operating for over 31 years, and NASA is hopeful it will last for many more years," an agency spokesperson told Insider in June.

Hubble, which launched into orbit in 1990, has captured images of the births and deaths of stars, discovered new moons around Pluto, and tracked two interstellar objects as they zipped through our solar system. Hubble's observations have also allowed astronomers to calculate the age and expansion of the universe and to peer at galaxies formed shortly after the Big Bang.

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NASA will attempt a 'risky' maneuver to fix its broken Hubble Space Telescope as early as next week - Business Insider

Die as a human or live forever as a cyborg: Will robots rule the world? – Sydney Morning Herald

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In movies, theyre the bad guys killer cyborgs with bones of steel and lightning-fast reflexes, perhaps an Austrian accent too. But Peter Scott-Morgan has never been afraid of robots. As a scientist and roboticist by trade, he spent decades researching how artificial intelligence (AI) might transform our lives.

Then, in 2017, Dr Scott-Morgan was diagnosed with motor neuron disease, the same paralysing condition that killed Stephen Hawking. Months after puzzling over his wonky foot falling asleep, he was told he had two years to live.

He had other ideas. To survive, he would turn to the technology he had spent his career researching. He would become the cyborg. Scott-Morgan has now had two major surgeries to help keep himself alive with robotics machine upgrades that breathe for him, help him speak, and hopefully will even see him stand again as the advancing paralysis traps him inside his body. He plans to merge his brain with AI eventually too, so he can speak with his thoughts rather than the flicker of his eyes. And Im OK with giving up some control to the AI to stay me, he says. Though that might change what it means to be human ... Theres a long tradition of scientists experimenting on themselves. But die as a human or live as a cyborg? To me, its a no-brainer.

But what about the rest of us? Is humanity destined to merge with machine? We keep hearing that the robots are coming to take our jobs, how likely are they to stage a coup? And why are Facebook and Elon Musk already building machines to read our thoughts?

Credit:Illustration: Matt Davidson

A century ago, a Spanish scientist mapped the human brain and uncovered a hidden kingdom. As microscopes began to peer deeper into that mass of little grey cells, Santiago Cajal lay bare the wiring within, so dense he called it a jungle. It is from his detailed drawings that the world understood neurons for the first time and how they exchange information in a tangled network, giving rise to the senses, the emotions and possibly even consciousness itself.

Decades later, a philosopher and a young, homeless mathematician wondered if that network could be broken down into the most fundamental binary of logic: true or false. Neurons could, after all, be considered on or off, firing a signal or not. This theory, by Warren McCulloch and Walter Pitts at the University of Chicago, proved to be an incomplete model for the human brain, too simple to capture all the strange magic really going on inside. But it did give rise to the binary code of computers those ones and zeroes now form infinite variations of on or off to tell machines what to do. Scientists have been trying to bring computers closer to human brains, at least in function, ever since.

Because machines interpret the world through this binary code, and algorithms (rules made from that code), they are good at a lot of specific things we find difficult, such as solving complex equations fast (and playing chess better than a grandmaster). Yet they often struggle with the mundane things we, with our more complex, adaptable thinking centres, find easy: recognising facial expressions, making small talk and, most of all, improvising.

To overcome this, machine learning models seek to train computers to categorise and then react to things themselves rather than waiting on human programming. Over the past decade, one such model known as deep learning has charged beyond the rest, fuelling an AI boom. Its why your iPhone can recognise your face and Alexa understands you when you ask her to switch on the lights. And deep learning did it by going back to Cajals neural jungle. The learning is said to be deep because a machine is trained to classify patterns by filtering incoming information through layers of interconnected neuron-like nodes.

Im sorry, Dave, Im afraid I cant do that. In the 1968 sci-fi classic 2001: A Space Odyssey, a computer called HAL (Heuristically programmed ALgorithmic) takes over a spaceship.Credit:Fair Use

While these artificial networks take a staggering amount of data to train compared to a human brain, experts such as Scott-Morgan hope they will only get better and more efficient as computing power increases (it is roughly doubling every two years). Already, AI can translate speech, trade stock, and perform surgery (under supervision). Since his own surgical journey was documented in the British documentary Peter: The Human Cyborg, Scott-Morgan has been upgrading to a very Hollywood cyborg-like interface that uses AI to track the movement of his eyes across its screen with tiny cameras and then offers up phrases for his robot voice to say predictive text based on the letters he has spelt out so far.

As UNSW professor of AI Toby Walsh points out, machines are not limited by biological processing speeds the way humans and animals are. But others suspect that the capability of even this kind of AI is about to hit a wall. At the University of Sheffield, computer scientist James Marshall says deep learning networks are still based on a cartoon of how the [human] brain works. They are not really making decisions, because they do not understand for themselves what matters and what doesnt. That means theyre fragile. To tell a picture of a cat from a dog, for example, an AI needs to sift through a huge trove of images. While it might pick up tiny changes that would escape the notice of a human, such as a few pixels out of place, these tiny changes usually dont matter a lot because we understand the main features that set a cat apart from a dog. But suddenly you change some pixels and the AI thinks its a dog, Marshall says. Or if it sees a drawing of a cat or a cat in real life [in 3D] it might have to start from scratch again.

The tendency of AI, however powerful, to break in unexpected ways is part of the reason those driverless cars we keep being promised are yet to arrive. Machines can be fooled even into seeing things that arent really there driverless cars tricked into accelerating past stop signs when the addition of a few stickers on the sign makes them instead perceive increased speed limits; or facial recognition programs duped into skipping past suspects wearing wigs and glasses.

Any AI network is vulnerable to this kind of manipulation, and if hackers know its weak points they can do more than break it, they can hijack it to perform a new task entirely. Of course, AI can be trained to identify and resist this kind of sabotage too but, at some point, it will encounter a problem it hasnt prepared for.

Perhaps a little paradoxically, some experts say that a way to give deep learning more common sense is to fuse it with the old, more rigid form of AI that came before it, where machines used hard-coded rules to understand how the world worked. Others say deep learning needs to become more flexible yet, writing its own algorithms and programs to perform new functions as it needs to, even testing its actions in the real world through robotics (or at least very good simulators) to help it understand causality. Amazons new line of Alexa assistants look through a camera to better understand the world (and their owners).

But I dont think [deep learning] will ever work for driverless cars, Marshall says. When you have to build a more and more complicated machine for a fairly simple task, maybe the machine is built wrong.

Arnold Schwarzenegger (and his iconic Austrian accent) starred as a killer cyborg in The Terminator franchise.Credit:

Marshall is flying a drone around his lab. Its not bumping into walls, the way drones normally do when trying to distinguish one beige, slab of office wallpaper from another. This drone has a tiny chip in its brain holding an algorithm borrowed from a honeybee. It tells it how to navigate the world as the insect does.

At Marshalls lab in Sheffield, now a company offshoot of his university called Opteran, the team is trying something new modelling machine thinking on animals. Marshall calls it natural intelligence, not artificial intelligence. Autonomy, the kind driverless cars and robot vacuums need to navigate their surrounds, is a solved problem, he says. It happens all the time in the natural world. We require very little brain power ourselves to drive, most of the time were on autopilot.

Bees have a less formidable number of neurons than humans about a million, next to tens of billions and yet they can still perform impressive behaviours: navigating, communicating and problem-solving. Marshall has been mapping their brains, training them to perform tasks such as flying through tunnels and then measuring their neural activity; making silicon models of different regions of their brain according to their function and then converting that into algorithms his machines can follow.

Its like a jigsaw puzzle, Marshall says. We havent mapped it all yet, even those million neurons still interact in really complex ways.

So far, he has converted into code how bees sense the world and navigate it, and is busy finalising algorithms from the decision-making centre of their brains. Unlike Cajol, hes not looking to record all the exquisite detail that keeps the brain alive. We just need how it does the function we want. We dont just reproduce the neurons, we reproduce the computation.

When he first put his bee navigation algorithm in the drone, he was stunned at how much it improved, changing course as people moved around it, as walls came closer. Thats when we saw it could work, he says. But because everyone is focused on deep learning, we decided to make our own company to scale it up.

Marshall is also mapping the brains of ants to improve ground-based robots, imagining a world in which autonomous devices are as common as computers, cleaning and improving the world around us. And as machines get smaller smaller even than the head of a pin or the width of a human hair scientists hope they may help fight disease in the body too, cleaning blood or killing cancer and infection. Perhaps one day these nanobots could even repair the nerves fraying apart in people with motor neuron disease such as Scott-Morgan, or keep humans alive longer.

Marshall hopes to eventually look into the brains of larger animals too, including primates. There scientists might find more complex functions again, beyond just autonomy, and into advanced problem-solving, even moral reasoning. Still, just as Marshall is sure his robot bee is not a real bee, he doubts wed be able to reproduce an entire human brain in silico and fire it up to see if some kind of consciousness springs to life. A lot of this research comes out of that very question: could we just replicate the brain somehow, suppose we had a 3D printer, Marshall says. But the brain isnt just its neurons, its how it all interacts. And we still dont understand it yet.

In his latest book Livewired, US neuroscientist David Eagleman describes in new detail the plasticity of the human brain, where neurons fight for territory like drug cartels. There may even be a kind of evolution, a survival of the fittest being waged within our minds day to day, as new neural connections are forged. Quantum scientists, meanwhile, wonder if reactions are happening inside the brain, at its smallest scale, which we cannot even measure. How then could we ever hope to replicate it accurately? Or upload someones consciousness to a machine (another popular sci-fi plot)?

Will Smith battles another pesky AI that thinks it knows best (and a few thousand robots) in the 2004 film I, Robot.

Of all the renderings of AI in science fiction, few occupy the minds of real-world researchers like the singularity a hypothetical (and some say inevitable) tipping point where machine intelligence growth becomes exponential, out of control. In the 1960s, British mathematician I.J. Good spoke of an intelligence explosion, and everyone from Stephen Hawking to Elon Musk has since weighed in.

The theory is that as soon as we have a system as smart as a human, and we allow it to design a system superior to itself, well kick off a domino effect of ever-increasing intelligence that could shift the balance of power on Earth overnight. Humans, who are limited by slow biological evolution, couldnt compete, and would be superseded, Hawking told the BBC in 2014.

And, if AI were ever smart enough to be put in charge and make decisions for us, as is imagined in films such as I, Robot and The Matrix, what if their radical take on efficiency involves enslaving or powering down humans (i.e. mass murder)? Remember the glowing red eye of Hal the AI in 2001: A Space Odyssey, who decided the best thing to do, when faced with a crisis far out in space, was to stage a mutiny against his human crew? Musk himself says that, for a powerful AI, wiping out the human race wouldnt be personal if we stood in their way, it would be a matter of course, like squishing an ant hill to build a road.

When we refer to intelligence in machines, we usually mean weve taught a computer to do something that in humans requires intelligence, Walsh says. As of 2021, those smarts are still very narrow beating a human in a game of chess, for example. AI enthusiasts point to machines helping write music or mimicking the styles of great painters as signs of burgeoning creativity, but such demonstrations still rely on considerable human input, and results are often random or spectacularly bad. The limits of deep learning again mean true spontaneity, originality, is lacking. At IBM, Arvind Krishna imagines you could train an AI on images of what is and isnt beautiful, good art and bad art, for example, but that would still be training the AI on the creators own tastes, not moulding a new artist for the world. Mostly, experts see machines becoming another tool to deepen human creativity and decision-making, revealing patterns and combinations that might have otherwise been missed.

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Still, Walsh says theres no scientific or technical reason why the gap between human and machine intelligence couldnt close one day. Every time we thought that we were special, that the sun went around the Earth, that we were different than the apes, we were wrong, he says. So to think theres anything special about our intelligence, anything that we could not create and probably surpass in silicon, I think would be terribly conceited of the human race.

Indeed, machines have a lot of apparent advantages over us mere flesh bags, as Hawking alluded to. Theyre faster thinkers, with bigger, potentially infinite memories; they can network and interface in a way that would be called telepathy if a human could do it. And theyre not limited by their physical bodies.

In Scott-Morgans case, transforming into a cyborg has already come with unexpected benefits. He can no longer speak on his own Im answering these questions long after my body has stopped working sufficiently well to keep me alive, he writes instead but through his new robot voice, he can communicate in any language. In May, his digital avatar even broke into song during a live interview with broadcaster Stephen Fry. His wheelchair, meanwhile, will soon allow him to stand, so he will tower over his fellow mortals and hopefully, with the aid of an inbuilt AI, it will drive itself wherever Scott-Morgan wishes to go. (I envision being able to speed through an obstacle course or safely make my way through a showroom of porcelain vases.)

The hair of his avatar is never out of place and my powers will double every two years. Ill be a thousand times more powerful by the time Im 80. Hes working on programming in a maniacal laugh for his avatar, too.

Of course, because these AI networks are being built by humans, they may inherit the worst of us along with the best. Weve seen this already on platforms such as Facebook and YouTube where AI used to curate user content has been shown to veer sharply into extremism and misinformation. Or police surveillance networks learning their human developers cultural prejudices. And, because AIs operate using complex mathematics, they are often themselves a black box, hard to scrutinise. Experts, including the late Hawking, have stressed that regulation and ethical frameworks must catch up fast to the technology, so we can maximise its social good, not just profit margins.

But what we may learn too, is that theres a ceiling to how intelligent something can be. The universe is full of fundamental limits, Walsh says. It might not be [as simple as] we wake up one day and the computers can program themselves. I suspect that we will get smarter computers, but it will be the old-fashioned way, through our sweat, ingenuity and perseverance.

While Marshall doubts well ever create a machine that is itself conscious (along the lines of, say, the eloquently self-aware cyborgs in Blade Runner), he is wary of the new push for robots or algorithms that can evolve independently designed to breed the way computer viruses spread now and so rewrite and advance their own programming. I dont think thats the path, Marshall says. I think we need to always know what it does, and, if it can evolve on its own, well, life finds a way

How can you tell? Cyborgs called replicants are much like humans in the 1982 sci-fi film Blade Runner. Credit:Fair Use

Rather than turning to one all-knowing AI to run the show, many experts think it more likely we will draw on the power of machines to improve our own thinking. If we had a better way to connect with computers, closer than our screens, futurists wonder if we could surf the internet with our minds, back up our memories to the cloud, even download ready-formed skills such as a second language or another sense entirely like echolocation or infrared vision.

In 2020, Elon Musk was ruling out none of this when he introduced the world to a pig called Gertrude and the coin-sized computer chip in her brain he hoped would allow people to plug in directly to machines one day. Its kind of like a Fitbit in your skull with tiny wires, Musk said, conceding this is sounding increasingly like a Black Mirror episode. In 2021, a monkey with the same chip, made by Musks company Neuralink, was shown playing a game of ping-pong using only his mind to control a joystick.

Labs, including military labs, around the world have been developing neural implants for more than a decade, mostly to help people with paralysis operate robotic limbs and those with epilepsy head off seizures. In 2016, an implant connected to a robotic arm even gave back the sensation of touch as well as movement to a man paralysed from the neck down he used it to fist-bump president Barack Obama.

But this is still new technology, so far involving about 100 electrodes inserted into the brain that read its neural signals and send them wirelessly back to a machine. Neuralinks prototype has more than a 1000 electrodes, each smaller than a human hair, and grand claims of fast insertion into the skull using a robotic surgery (and no need for even a general anesthetic).

Plunging anything into the brain is risky and can cause damage. But in 2016 two neurologists at the University of Melbourne, Tom Oxley and Nicholas Opie, developed a clever technique to insert an implant without the need for open surgery using, Oxley says, the veins and blood vessels as the natural highway into the brain. Theyve just received $52 million in funding from Silicon Valley to run more clinical trials of their own chip, called the Stentrode, in the US. Its about the size of a paperclip and in Melbourne its helped patients with motor neuron disease text, email and bank online by thought alone.

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Neuralinks end goal is to develop a non-invasive headset instead of a chip but for now such external devices pick up a much weaker signal from the brain. Facebook, meanwhile, is looking at wearable wrist devices that would read your mind, literally, where nerves carry messages down to your hands, eventually allowing users to do away with the traditional mouse and keyboard and type at a speed of 100 words per minute just by thinking. Like Neuralink, helping patients with paralysis is their first goal, but they also plan to scale up to everyday users. Already, researchers funded by Facebook have managed to translate brain waves into speech with an accuracy rate of between 61 and 76 per cent (that beats Google Translate in some cases), using existing electrodes implanted in the brains of patients with epilepsy.

Some of this work being done by Facebook and Musk is right out on the edge for enhancement, says the chief executive of Bionics Queensland, Robyn Stokes, but it will likely benefit health applications along the way. Just as brain chips could become digital assistants of the mind, she imagines they could also help manage mental health conditions such as serious depression. Those sorts of brain computer interfaces are really advancing quickly, she says, pointing to the Strentrode. She expects an implant that can perform many functions inside the body, beyond reading brainwaves, will soon follow.

Even then, there are still concerns. While the brains now-famed plasticity could help it rewire around implants, for example, some experts warn it could also mean it quickly forgets how to perform important functions, if they are taken over by machines. What then if something fails?

Peter Scott-Morgan tries out AI technology that tracks his eye movements to spell out his speech.Credit:Cardiff Productions

Still, enthusiasts, or transhumanists, imagine the next stage of human evolution will inevitably be technological future generations can expect reinforced bones and improved brain power thanks to cybernetic upgrades. In British drama Years and Years, a new parental nightmare plays out as a daughter announces she wants to upload her mind and live as a machine. (I dont want to be flesh. I want to escape this thing and become digital.)

In his first book on robotics in 1984, long before his disease had emerged, Scott-Morgan himself considered how AI might unlock human potential, and vice versa. AI on its own is like a brilliant jazz pianist, but without anyone to jam with, he says now. Its nowhere near its full potential. The duet of human and AI, meanwhile, would seem close to magic ... a mutually dependent partnership, not a rivalry. And, to his mind, it could well be the only route that doesnt lead to a dead end. I anticipate that otherwise therell be a crippling backlash against whats typically perceived as the uncontrolled rise of raw AI.

Scott-Morgan plans for his eye-controlled communication interface to rely more and more on its underlying AI to generate his speech. That means sometimes what comes out will not be what biological Peter was planning to say. And Im very comfortable with that. I keep reassuring [everyone] I have absolutely no qualms about technology potentially making me appear cleverer, or funnier, or simply less forgetful, than I was before.

Others imagine a greater fusion of robotics, especially nanotech, with animals too. Already parts of nature are being re-engineered as technology in the lab from viruses repurposed as vaccines and computer chips that mimic the function of human organs to a robot-fish hybrid sent down as a deep-sea probe to collect data beneath the waves. Both the US and Russian armies have kitted out trained dolphins as underwater spies over the years, so perhaps its no surprise military researchers have been looking at going further even putting mind-controlling brain chips into sharks next. And, if bees die out, some experts say cyborg insects may be needed to pollinate plants in their place. All this again raises the strange question of when something is alive, or conscious, and whether we are building better robots or creating new life entirely.

The Terminator robots have no plans to co-exist to humans. They want the whole planet.Credit:Fair Use

Even if we dont get shark cyborgs, low-cost lethal machines are already changing the face of warfare. Imagine fighter drones talking to one another to find bombing targets, instead of a human pilot back at a base. Or swarms of explosive drones slamming themselves into people and buildings.

These are not visions of the future but news stories from 2020. According to a recent UN report, Turkish drones, packing explosives and facial recognition cameras, were sent out by Libyas army in 2020 to eliminate rebels via swarm attack in Tripoli, without requiring a remote connection between drone and base. They were, effectively, hunting their own targets. And the tech on board was not much more impressive than what youd find on a smartphone. Meanwhile, the Poseidon is a new class of robotic underwater vehicle that Russia is said to have already made, which can travel undetected and launch cobalt bombs to irradiate entire coastal cities all unmanned.

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Machines that decide to kill like this, based on their sensors and a pre-programmed target profile, are making humanitarian groups increasingly nervous. The International Committee of the Red Cross wants the worlds governments to ban fully autonomous weapons outright. ICRC president Peter Maurer says they will make it difficult for countries to comply with international law, in effect substituting human decisions about life and death with sensor, software and machine processes.

Walsh agrees autonomous killer robots raise a host of ethical, legal and technical problems. If things go wrong or they break international law, who is held accountable? Should it be the programmer, the commander or the robot on trial for war crimes? Theyre not sentient, theyre not conscious, they cant have empathy, they cant be punished, Walsh says. And that takes us to a very, very dark place. It would be terribly destabilising and would change the speed and scale of war.

Of course, he adds, autonomous systems built for defence, such as the robots used to clear landmines, show that AI can reduce casualties in war too. And computers will continue to come online that can process battlefield data and make recommendations faster than humans ever could. But [we need] human oversight, human judgment, which is still significantly better than machines, at least today, Walsh says.

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He thinks we should ban lethal autonomous weapons as we have chemical and biological weapons (as well as blinding lasers and cluster munitions), with enforcement powers for the UN to check no rogue state is stepping out of line.

The problem is that such bans rarely happen before things get ugly. For chemical weapons, it took the horrors of the First World War.

Im fearful that we wont have the initiative to do the same here until weve seen such weapons being used, Walsh says. A swarm of robot drones, hunting down humans and killing them mercilessly. It will look like a Hollywood movie.

Read more:

Die as a human or live forever as a cyborg: Will robots rule the world? - Sydney Morning Herald