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Blockchains, Cryptoeconomics, and Emerging Technology Risks

The recent rise in the value of BitCoin, whether a bubble or not, has stimulated great interest in the blockchain, and a recent opinion piece in the New York Times places it in the context of falling confidence in institutions and governments. From “The Bitcoin Boom: In Code We Trust” by Tim Wu, Dec. 18, [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:25+00:00December 30th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

Scientists Use Electron Microscopy to Study Magnetic Fields of Bacterial Cells and Nano-Objects

A research team led by a scientist from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Ames Laboratory has demonstrated for the first time that the magnetic fields of bacterial cells and magnetic nano-objects in liquid can be studied at high resolution using electron microscopy. This proof-of-principle capability allows first-hand observation of liquid environment phenomena, and has the [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:25+00:00December 29th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

Fewer laboratory animals thanks to secondary nanobodies

Antibodies are indispensable in biological research and medical diagnostics. However, their production is time-consuming, expensive, and requires the use of many animals. Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry in Göttingen, Germany, have now developed so-called secondary nanobodies that can replace the most-used antibodies and may drastically reduce the number of animals in [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:25+00:00December 27th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

Nanowire device detects cancer with a urine test

Cells communicate with each other through a number of different mechanisms. Some of these mechanisms are well-known: in animals, for example, predatory threats can drive the release of norepinephrine, a hormone that travels through the bloodstream and triggers heart and muscle cells to initiate a “fight-or-flight” response. A far less familiar mode of cellular transport [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:25+00:00December 26th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

Plants that glow – Illumination from nanobionic plants might one day replace some electrical lighting

Imagine that instead of switching on a lamp when it gets dark, you could read by the light of a glowing plant on your desk. MIT engineers have taken a critical first step toward making that vision a reality. By embedding specialized nanoparticles into the leaves of a watercress plant, they induced the plants to [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:26+00:00December 24th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

Nanomedical Device and Systems Design: Challenges, Possibilities, Visions – Discounted until Jan. 1 2018

  Features Explores and presents innovative nanotechnological and biomimetically derived strategies in the design of potential nanomedical devices and their constituents Contains several post-chapter Proposed Research Tasking Lists to facilitate the further investigation and potential development of specific nanomedical capacities Includes eight chapters contributed by some of the leading experts in nanotechnology, nanomaterials, and [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:26+00:00December 23rd, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

Light-up specks find and track tiny tumors

Scientists have created a method to detect tiny tumors and track their spread using light-emitting nanoparticles. The technology could lead to earlier cancer detection, more precise treatments, and even improvement in patient cure rates and survival times. “We’ve always had this dream that we can track the progression of cancer in real time, and that’s [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:26+00:00December 22nd, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

Fluorescent nanomedicine can guide tumor removal, kill remaining cancer cells

Oregon State University scientists have developed a nanomedicine platform for cancer that can help doctors know which tissue to cut out as well as kill any malignant cells that can't be surgically removed. The platform allows for greater precision and thoroughness in cancer treatment. Here's how it works: Nanoparticles tightly loaded with a dye compound [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:26+00:00December 21st, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

DNA That Folds Like Origami Has Applications for Drug-Delivering Nanobots

From an article by Kyree Leary at futurism.com: In 1953, a pair of scientists named James D. Watson and Francis H.C. Crick — with help from the data supplied by the research of another scientist, Rosalind Franklin, — successfully modeled the structure of DNA for the first time. Since then, whenever we think of DNA, we usually imagine the [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:26+00:00December 20th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments

The Future of Nanomedicine – Dr Joy Wolfram at the HT Summit 2017

  Dr Joy Wolfram from the Mayo Clinic explains how nanomedicine has the potential to change the way we treat disease. Filmed at the 2017 Hello Tomorrow Global Summit. Joy Wolfram, Ph.D., focuses her research in nanomedicine on the development of new strategies for the treatment of disease. In particular, her team is [...]

By |2018-03-22T14:32:26+00:00December 19th, 2017|Categories: News|0 Comments
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