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Women in Tech
14th March 2023
‘DEIB In Web3’ playbook launches at Women of Web3 conference

As an industry still recovering from the events such as FTX, Celsius, and Terra Luna from last year, and now the news of SVB and other banks collapsing, the launch of this playbook is an opportunity to reset the Web3 space, once and for all.

Artificial Intelligence
11th September 2018
AI helps track down mysterious cosmic radio bursts

Artificial intelligence is invading many fields, most recently astronomy and the search for intelligent life in the universe, or SETI. Researchers at Breakthrough Listen, a SETI project led by the University of California, Berkeley, have now used machine learning to discover 72 new fast radio bursts from a mysterious source some 3 billion light years from Earth. Fast radio bursts are bright pulses of radio emission mere milliseconds in ...

Aerospace & Defence
27th February 2018
Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind

In the real world, your past uniquely determines your future. If a physicist knows how the universe starts out, she can calculate its future for all time and all space. But a UC Berkeley mathematician has found some types of black holes in which this law breaks down. If someone were to venture into one of these relatively benign black holes, they could survive, but their past would be obliterated and they could have an infinite number of pos...

Medical
19th January 2018
Tracking a thought as it travels through the brain

UC Berkeley neuroscientists have tracked the progress of a thought through the brain, showing clearly how the prefrontal cortex at the front of the brain coordinates activity to help us act in response to a perception. Recording the electrical activity of neurons directly from the surface of the brain, the scientists found that for a simple task, such as repeating a word presented visually or aurally, the visual and auditory cortexes reacted...

Robotics
8th November 2017
Berkeley startup to train robots like puppets

Pieter Abbeel, professor of electrical engineering and computer science at the University of California, Berkeley, and his students, Peter Chen, Rocky Duan and Tianhao Zhang, have launched a startup, Embodied Intelligence Inc., to use the latest techniques of deep reinforcement learning and artificial intelligence to make industrial robots easily teachable.

Medical
7th November 2017
A potential treatment to stop glaucoma in its tracks

Vision scientists at the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Toronto have discovered that lipid mediators have the potential to halt the progression of glaucoma, the world's second-leading cause of blindness. Their findings, to be published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, mark a major step forward in the pursuit of a cure for glaucoma, a neurodegenerative disease in which fluid buildup in the frontal eye cause...

Medical
8th May 2017
Pac-Man-like CRISPR enzymes could aid diagnosis

University of California, Berkeley, researchers have described 10 new CRISPR enzymes that, once activated, behave like Pac-Man to chew up RNA in a way that could be used as sensitive detectors of infectious viruses. The new CRISPR enzymes are variants of a CRISPR protein, Cas13a, which the UC Berkeley researchers reported last September in Nature could be used to detect specific sequences of RNA, such as from a virus.

Analysis
23rd January 2017
To log-in, please (soberly) enter username and brainwave

If you’re feeling fed up with the increasingly complex password combinations that are now demanded by most websites and devices, the latest biometric solution could be of interest – as long as you don’t drink an excessive amount of alcohol, caffeine or require access immediately after a workout.

Robotics
7th December 2016
Wall-jumping robot is most vertically agile ever built

Roboticists at UC Berkeley have designed a small robot that can leap into the air and then spring off a wall, or perform multiple vertical jumps in a row, resulting in the highest robotic vertical jumping agility ever recorded. The agility of the robot opens new pathways of locomotion that were not previously attainable. The researchers hope that one day this robot and other vertically agile robots can be used to jump around rubble in search and ...

Renewables
26th April 2016
The need for smarter energy and water strategies

As the changing climate disrupts familiar weather patterns, many countries face a dual threat: swamping along the coasts, but also unexpected shrinking freshwater supplies in many regions. "Water has never been evenly distributed around the world, but droughts and an alarming decrease in groundwater create potentially catastrophic conditions," says Ashok Gadgil, Deputy for Science and Technology for the Energy Technologies Area at LBNL and p...

Analysis
8th April 2016
ICON to be launched in the summer 2017

NASA's latest space weather research satellite, the Ionospheric Connection Explorer, is on course for a summer 2017 launch after UC Berkeley scientists and their colleagues shipped its four instruments to Utah for testing, prior to being packed into the final satellite. The ICON mission, led by UC Berkeley's Space Sciences Laboratory with the help of scientists and engineers from around the world, will add one more satellite to NASA's fleet of 26...

Medical
21st March 2016
Sperm 'booster switch' could lead to unisex contraceptive

Sperm cells, as it turns out, can become 'hyperactive'. A new study published in the journal Science has revealed that a particular enzyme on their tails responds to the female sex hormone progesterone, activating a 'power kick' that boosts their swimming speed. The body produces various hormones all the time for different purposes. Progesterone is released, for example, just prior to and at the onset of pregnancy, particularly to prepare the ute...

Micros
11th March 2016
Magnetic chips could increase energy efficiency

Engineers at the University of California, Berkeley, have shown for the first time that magnetic chips can operate with the lowest fundamental level of energy dissipation possible under the laws of thermodynamics. The findings, to be published in the peer-reviewed journal Science Advances, mean that dramatic reductions in power consumption are possible—as much as one-millionth the amount of energy per operation used by transistors...

Analysis
10th February 2016
Cockroach inspired robots can squeeze through cracks

Our fear and disgust that cockroaches can quickly squeeze through the tiniest cracks are well-justified, say UC Berkeley scientists. Not only can they squish themselves to get into one-tenth-of-an-inch crevices, but once inside they can run at high speed even when flattened in half.

Medical
28th January 2016
Sweat sensing wristband syncs results to your smartphone

When UC Berkeley engineers say they are going to make you sweat, it is all in the name of science. Specifically, it is for a flexible sensor system that can measure metabolites and electrolytes in sweat, calibrate the data based upon skin temperature and sync the results in real time to a smartphone.

Analysis
23rd September 2015
Invisibility cloak hides 3D objects

Invisibility cloaks are a staple of science fiction and fantasy, from Star Trek to Harry Potter, but don’t exist in real life, or do they? Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and the University of California (UC) Berkeley have devised an ultra-thin invisibility 'skin' cloak that can conform to the shape of an object and conceal it from detection with visible light. Althoug...

Analysis
17th August 2015
Cockroach-inspired robots

  Outfitting a robot with a rounded shell helps it scoot through clutter as easily as a cockroach, UC Berkeley researchers have found.

Memory
17th August 2015
Small tilt in magnets makes them viable memory chips

  UC Berkeley researchers have discovered a new way to switch the polarisation of nanomagnets, paving the way for high-density storage to move from hard disks onto ICs.

3D Printing
14th August 2015
3D-printed ‘smart cap' detects spoilt food

  Engineers from UC Berkeley, in collaboration with colleagues at Taiwan’s National Chiao Tung University, have 3D-printed a wireless 'smart cap' that can detect signs of spoilage in milk cartons using embedded sensors.

Analysis
24th July 2013
Android users will be able to take part in scientific research

Users of android smartphones will soon have a chance to participate in important scientific research every time they charge their phones. Using a new app created by researchers at UC Berkeley, users will be able to donate a phone’s idle computing power to crunch numbers for projects that could lead to breakthroughs ranging from novel medical therapies to the discovery of new stars.

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