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Curating the Internet: Science and technology micro-summaries for August 18, 2019

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A gel for sealing internal wounds can be made from the body's own bacteria; A Steem review of an article in July's issue of Science: T cell–mediated regulation of the microbiota protects against obesity; IEEE Spectrum's weekly selection of awesome robot videos; Approaching the paranormal from a scientific perspective; Cool but obscure tools for the X11 windows system


Straight from <A HREF=https://theoldreader.com>my RSS feed
Whatever gets my attention
Links and micro-summaries from my 1000+ daily headlines. I filter them so you don't have to.

pixabay license: source.

  1. Scientists create gut gel 'band-aid' made from the body's own bacteria - A problem for treating wounds to the gut or intestine is that patches and bandages won't stick to the slippery walls of the enclosure. To address this problem, a team of scientists from Harvard has created a hydrogel from the body's own bacteria that can be applied through syringes or sprays. The consistency of the gel is similar to the mucus that occurs naturally in the body, and it can be tailored for particular areas of the body. Postdoctoral fellow, and research team member, Anna Duraj-Thatte, describes the method as a hack of the natural healing process of the human body. To date, the process has only been tried on animals, so it may be a while before it shows up in operating rooms.

  2. STEEM The miscommunication between T cells and microbiome makes the poor mice fat - Journal club - In this post, @scienceblocks discusses
    T cell–mediated regulation of the microbiota protects against obesity published by Petersen et al from June Round's and W. Zac Stephens' labs at Utah. It is published (in the) july 2019 edition of Science.
    The post reports that, by editing the genome to effect the immune system's T cells and conducting experiments, researchers were able to determine that certain bacteria in mice effect weight gain. In fact, mice that are treated with antibiotics and then exposed to bacteria from the guts of obese humans become obese, whereas bacteria that are treated with antibiotics and exposed to bacteria from the guts of lean humans do not. Additionally, the post notes that scientists were able to spread the bacteria for obesity by housing the mice together, implying that obesity in mice actually is contagious (which reminds me of a viral news story from just over a decade ago). In addition to summarizing the paper, @scienceblocks also expresses the frustration that it left many loose ends, creating as many new questions as it answered. (A 10% beneficiary setting has been applied to this post for @scienceblocks.)

  3. Video Friday: Watch Robots Make a Crepe and Twist the Perfect Pretzel - This week, IEEE Spectrum's weekly selection of awesome robot videos includes: A diverse squad of robots from Team CoSTAR (JPL, MIT, Caltech, KAIST, LTU); Ground and aerial robots from Carnegie Mellon and Oregon State University for the DARPA Subterranean Challenge; quadrupeds that can carry you around in a chair, play tug-of-war; tow a minivan; or navigate a maze; a pharmaceutical assembly robot that can produce personalized tablets with medicine for multiple ailments; a dogs' head on a quadruped robot; Competing with wheel chairs, arm and leg prosthetic robots; and more...

    Here's my favorite, with robotic wheat harvesting:
    https://youtu.be/aqfSix3C46A

  4. A Scientific Approach to the Paranormal - Starting with her own "haunting", that turned out to be a gas leak, in this TED talk, Carrie Poppy describes her work as a paranormal investigator. In her discussion, she talks about "inner truth" and "outer truth". In this model, inner truth is something that a person believes that can't be verified others. On the other hand, outer truth is verifiable by bystanders. She explains that belief in ghosts or other paranormal phenomenon are usually forms of inner truths, and the way to find the corresponding outer truth is to find testable claims that can produce evidence for or against a claim of paranormal activity. h/t RealClear Science

  5. Cool, but obscure X11 tools - I wasn't going to share this link, but then I got to X026, an X11 IBM 026 keypunch emulator. I've never operated a keypunch, but I did work with card-readers, back in the day. Let me tell you, clearing jams was no fun. The link also includes the usual things like a variety of clocks, calendars, editors, file system interfaces, games, and so on....h/t OS news


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