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Disco lasers helps snow groomers project tracks, warnings and speed cues

When it comes to snow groomers, excavators or crane vehicles, how can their operation be optimized even in difficult conditions and made safer for people in and around the vehicle? An international research team, including the Institute of Visual Computing at Graz University of Technology (TU Graz), investigated this question as part of the THEIA-XR project.

The researchers aimed to improve human-machine interaction through the use of extended reality technologies. The focus was on the operator, whose field of perception was to be expanded without negatively affecting control performance. The work is published in the journal Computers & Graphics.

When working with snow groomers, for example, the team from TU Graz found that data or VR headsets tend to be counterproductive, while information projected via a repurposed disco laser proved to be a great help.

Immune ‘energy signature’ linked to tuberculosis may explain why some individuals control infection

Researchers at Trinity College Dublin have identified key differences in how immune cells generate and use energy, a process known as cellular metabolism, in people with latent versus active tuberculosis (TB). The findings offer new insights into why some individuals control infection while others develop disease.

The study, published in the Journal of Infection, focused on circulating monocytes, key immune cells involved in the defense against TB infection. The researchers found that cells from people with latent TB remain metabolically flexible, allowing them to mount strong antibacterial responses, whereas cells from people with active TB disease show impaired metabolism and weaker responses to infection.

TB remains the world’s leading infectious killer, with 10.8 million cases and 1.25 million deaths recorded globally in 2023. While many people infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis never become ill, researchers still do not fully understand why some individuals progress to active disease while others successfully control the infection. The findings could help pave the way for improved TB monitoring tools and future therapies or vaccines that target how immune cells generate energy.

Single-cell transcriptomics and RNAi screening define a hierarchical program of planarian eye regeneration

Some organisms have the capacity to regenerate missing organs de novo. Scimone et al. systematically identify the genes that control a sequence of organ-regeneration steps from differentiation of progenitors to the emergence of final architecture for the case of the planarian eye.

Time Itself Seems to Have a Limit of Precision Due to a Quantum Physics Model

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Hello and welcome! My name is Anton and in this video, we will talk about a proposition that time precision has a major limit.
Links:
https://journals.aps.org/prresearch/p
Other videos: • Atomic Clock Breakthrough Could Lead To Qu…
• Most Accurate Time Keeping Device in the W…
#quantumphysics #time #science.

0:00 Limits of time measurement.
0:45 Quantum mechanics and why some things happen certain ways.
2:38 Spontaneous collapse model explained.
5:00 Gravity doesn’t like quantum stuff.
7:10 New study — effects on time measurement.
8:50 How accurate then?
10:25 Implications.
11:30 Can this be proven?
12:30 Conclusions.

Enjoy and please subscribe.

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Google Just Dropped The Singularity Bomb

Google DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis says humanity may already be standing in the foothills of the singularity. AI agents are now coding, researching, planning, paying, helping with science, and cutting real work from days to minutes. The big question is no longer whether AI is perfect. It’s whether imperfect AI has already become useful enough to speed up everything around it.

📩 Brand Deals \& Partnerships: [email protected].
✉ General Inquiries: [email protected].
🚀 New Channel: / @space.revolution.

📌 What You’ll See:
Google DeepMind’s warning that we are entering the foothills of the singularity.
SOURCE: https://www.axios.com/2026/05/26/deep… new Gemini for Science tools built to speed up scientific discovery SOURCE: https://blog.google/innovation-and-ai… AWS letting autonomous AI agents make payments and complete transactions SOURCE: https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/what… AxiomProver helping prove new math results in Lean and Mathlib SOURCE: https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.05090 Biohub’s new world model of protein biology trained across billions of sequences SOURCE: https://biohub.ai/esm/protein ARC-AGI-3 showing the huge gap between today’s frontier AI and human reasoning SOURCE: https://aiforautomation.io/news/2026-… 🚨 Why It Matters This is bigger than another AI model update. Google DeepMind is now openly talking about the singularity, while AI agents are already starting to speed up coding, science, business, and research. Some experts think AGI may be closer than expected, while others say current AI still lacks true intelligence. Either way, the AI race is shifting fast from chatbots into agents that can plan, act, build, discover, and change real workflows. #google #singularity #ai.
Google’s new Gemini for Science tools built to speed up scientific discovery.
SOURCE: https://blog.google/innovation-and-ai
AWS letting autonomous AI agents make payments and complete transactions.
SOURCE: https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/what
AxiomProver helping prove new math results in Lean and Mathlib.
SOURCE: https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.05090
Biohub’s new world model of protein biology trained across billions of sequences.
SOURCE: https://biohub.ai/esm/protein.
ARC-AGI-3 showing the huge gap between today’s frontier AI and human reasoning.
SOURCE: https://aiforautomation.io/news/2026-

🚨 Why It Matters.
This is bigger than another AI model update. Google DeepMind is now openly talking about the singularity, while AI agents are already starting to speed up coding, science, business, and research. Some experts think AGI may be closer than expected, while others say current AI still lacks true intelligence. Either way, the AI race is shifting fast from chatbots into agents that can plan, act, build, discover, and change real workflows.

#google #singularity #ai

Conversation with Nic Rouleau, part 1: “Some thoughts on the mind as material”

This is a ~1 hour talk and discussion, comprising part 1 of a conversation with a really interesting young neuroscientist, as well as friend, collaborator, and our Center member, Nicolas Rouleau (https://allencenter.tufts.edu/nicolas… goes over unconventional aspects of neuroscience touching on free will, cybernetics, consciousness, and a lot more. We start a discussion which is continued in part 2. For more information:

Nic’s website: www.rouleaulab.com.
X account: @DrNRouleau.

Recent papers to check out:

Sellar, E.P., Rouleau, N. (In Review). A cybernetic framework for synthetic biological intelligence in the era of neural tissue engineering. Preprint doi: 10.31234/osf.io/md2wf_v1.

Kansala, C., Cicek, E., Nkansah-Okoree, V., Golding, A., Murugan, N.J., Rouleau, N. (In Review). Superstitious conditioning forms the experience of free will under causal determinism. Preprint doi: 10.31234/osf.io/fk3yt_v2.

Roskies, A. \& Rouleau, N. (Forthcoming, In Press). Research on brain organoids should prioritize questions of agency, not consciousness. AJOB Neuroscience.

Self-Organizing Agent Teams for Long-Running Scientific Experimentation

AutoScientists changes the game by creating a decentralized “team” of AI agents. Rather than relying on a central planner, these digital scientists look at the shared data and self-organize into specialized groups around the most exciting hypotheses. Before they spend valuable computer processing power on an experiment, they ruthlessly critique each other’s proposals. Crucially, they keep a collective log of both their successes and failures, ensuring the entire system avoids redundant work.


Scientific research proceeds through iterative cycles of hypothesis generation, experiment design, execution, and revision, often requiring researchers to explore multiple competing directions as evidence accumulates and priorities shift. LLM agents can automate parts of this process, but existing agents either concentrate reasoning within a single research thread or coordinate through a central planner with fixed objectives. As a result, they struggle to sustain parallel exploration across research directions or reorganize as promising and unproductive directions emerge over time.

We introduce AutoScientists, a decentralized team of AI agents for long-running computational scientific experimentation. Rather than following decisions from a central orchestrator, agents independently interpret a shared experimental state, self-organize into teams around research directions, critique and filter proposals with a discussion phase before committing experimental compute, and exchange both successful and failed findings across teams to avoid redundant exploration.

Under matched experimental budgets, AutoScientists outperforms prior agentic systems across biomedical machine learning, language-model training optimization, and protein fitness prediction. On BioML-Bench, spanning biomedical imaging, protein engineering, single-cell omics, and drug discovery, AutoScientists achieves a mean leaderboard percentile of 74.4% across 24 tasks, improving over the strongest prior biomedical agent by +8.33%. On GPT training optimization, AutoScientists reaches a target validation bits-per-byte 1.9× faster than autoresearch and continues discovering improvements from a stronger starting champion where the single-agent approach finds none (7 vs. 0 accepted improvements). On ProteinGym fitness prediction, AutoScientists discovers a method for ACE2–Spike binding that improves over the current state-of-the-art model by +12.5% Spearman correlation. Applied without modification to all 217 ProteinGym assays, the same method improves over the prior state of the art by +6.5% in Spearman correlation.

Introducing dynamic workflows

Claude Code just dropped “dynamic workflows” and it’s pretty cool.

You type “create a workflow” or turn on “ultracode” in the effort menu and it spins up hundreds of parallel agents that check each other’s work.


Today we’re introducing dynamic workflows in Claude Code, helping Claude take on the most challenging tasks end-to-end. Work you’d normally plan in quarters now finishes in days. Claude dynamically writes orchestration scripts that run tens to hundreds of parallel subagents in a single session, checking its work before anything reaches you.

Some problems are too big for one pass by a single agent, especially in complex, legacy codebases: a bug hunt across an entire service, a migration that touches hundreds of files, a plan you want stress-tested from every angle before you commit to it. Dynamic workflows can handle all of these end-to-end.

Dynamic workflows are available today in research preview in the Claude Code CLI, Desktop, and the VS code extension for Max, Team, and Enterprise (if admin enabled) plans, as well as on the Claude API, on Amazon Bedrock, Vertex AI, and Microsoft Foundry.

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