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‘Google Maps’ approach provides cell-by-cell tumor mapping for more personalized lung cancer treatment

Researchers have developed a way to predict how lung cancer cells will respond to different therapies, allowing people with the most common form of lung cancer to receive more effective individualized treatment.

The research, published Oct. 10 in Nature Genetics, was led by Thazin Aung, Ph.D., in the laboratory of Yale School of Medicine’s David Rimm, MD, Ph.D., in collaboration with scientists at the Frazer Institute at the University of Queensland. Researchers studied the tumors of 234 patients with (NSCLC) across three cohorts in Australia, the United States, and Europe.

“Using AI and spatial biology, we mapped NSCLC, cell-by-cell, to understand and predict its response to ,” Aung says. “This ‘Google Maps’ approach can pinpoint areas within tumors that are both responsive and resistant to therapies, which will be a gamechanger for lung cancer treatment. Rather than having to use a trial-and-error approach, oncologists will now know which treatments are most likely to work with new precision medicine tools.”

China’s AI Hospital with 14 Robotic Doctors — The Future of Medicine!

In a monumental leap for healthcare innovation, China has opened the world’s first fully AI-powered hospital, staffed by 14 artificial intelligence “doctors” capable of diagnosing, treating, and managing up to 10,000 virtual patients per day.

This revolutionary facility, developed by Tsinghua University, is called the Smart Hospital of the Future — and it may represent the most advanced experiment in AI-driven medicine the world has ever seen.

Designed as a testbed for AI medical systems, the hospital blends robotics, machine learning, natural language processing, and big data analytics to simulate full-spectrum care at lightning speed — with zero fatigue, no paperwork errors, and real-time updates from global medical databases.

USC engineers just made light smarter with “optical thermodynamics”

USC engineers have developed an optical system that routes light autonomously using thermodynamic principles. Rather than relying on switches, light organizes itself much like particles in a gas reaching equilibrium. The discovery could simplify and speed up optical communications and computing. It reimagines chaotic optical behavior as a tool for design rather than a limitation.

Old tricks, new tech: Scams in the age of AI

As a college student, Gabriel Aguilar fell victim to an elaborate scam. The fraudsters posed as employers offering job opportunities that provided quick income.

He completed what seemed like a legitimate interview process, was offered a position and was even sent a check to purchase a laptop—which included a note from the perpetrators to send them the change. The was to unfold with the check bouncing and Dr. Aguilar being out his own money. Thankfully, his bank flagged the check because of typos and errors.

Aguilar, now an assistant professor of technical writing and professional communication in The University of Texas at Arlington’s Department of English, examines how today’s scammers are employing artificial intelligence (AI) to help con the public—in particular, the Latino population, which is often targeted.

Novel antibiotic targets IBD—and AI predicted how it would work before scientists could prove it

Researchers at McMaster University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have made two scientific breakthroughs at once: they not only discovered a brand-new antibiotic that targets inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), but also successfully used a new type of AI to predict exactly how the drug works. To their knowledge, this is a global first for the AI.

Detailed in the journal Nature Microbiology, the discovery unveils a promising new treatment option for millions of people affected by Crohn’s disease and other related conditions, while also showcasing important new applications for AI in drug discovery research.

“This work shows that we’re still just scratching the surface as far as AI-guided drug discovery goes,” says Jon Stokes, an assistant professor in McMaster’s Department of Biochemistry and Biomedical Sciences and principal investigator on the new study.

AI Breakthrough Finally Cracks Century-Old Physics Problem

An AI framework now computes once-impossible physics equations within seconds. The breakthrough redefines how scientists study the behavior of materials. Researchers at the University of New Mexico and Los Alamos National Laboratory have created an advanced computational framework that solves a m

Advances in AI will boost productivity, living standards over time

Artificial intelligence offers the potential to improve people’s living standards. Such advances can be approximated by changes in GDP per capita over time. Using that common measure, AI could enhance longstanding productivity gains or, alternatively, drastically alter the economy in relatively short order.

Insane Micro AI Just Shocked The World: CRUSHED Gemini and DeepSeek (Pure Genius)

Samsung just shocked the entire AI world — a 7-million-parameter model called Tiny Recursive Model (TRM) just out-reasoned billion-parameter giants like Gemini and DeepSeek. Built by Samsung’s Montreal research lab, this microscopic AI loops over its own thoughts, rewrites its answers, and fixes mistakes before you even see them — creating reasoning depth without size. It’s 25,000 times smaller than Gemini 2.5 Pro, yet it beat it on real reasoning benchmarks like ARC-AGI.
Meanwhile, Microsoft built an AI brain for quantum chemistry, Anthropic made an AI that audits other AIs, Liquid AI proved on-device intelligence can actually work, and Meta reinvented multimodal search — all in one insane week.

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🧠 What You’ll See:
• Samsung’s 7-million-parameter TRM model that crushed Gemini and DeepSeek.
• How recursive thinking lets TRM fix its own mistakes 16 times per answer.
• Microsoft’s new neural model that changes quantum chemistry forever.
• Anthropic’s Petri framework that makes AIs audit each other.
• Liquid AI’s mobile-ready MoE model that runs locally on your phone.
• Meta’s new MetaEmbed system that rewrites multimodal search.

🚨 Why It Matters:
AI progress is no longer about size — it’s about intelligence, efficiency, and control. The smallest model just proved it can outsmart the giants.

#ai #Gemini #DeepSeek

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