Inside an IIT Delhi laboratory, a microscope now takes instructions not from a human researcher, but from artificial intelligence. In a bre.
At Health First, this innovation is being brought to life through partners like NextGen Pathology, delivering precise diagnostic services.
Imagine walking into a laboratory where an AI is carefully adjusting a microscope, running experiments, and analysing results ...
ZME Science on MSN
The World’s Strangest Computer Is Alive and It Blurs the Line Between Brains and Machines
Scientists are building experimental computers from living human brain cells and testing how they learn and adapt.
The device advances medicine toward a future that might see tiny robots sent into the body to rewire damaged nerves, deliver ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Sub-millimeter-sized robots can sense, 'think' and act on their own
Robots small enough to travel autonomously through the human body to repair damaged sites may seem the stuff of science ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Researchers create world's smallest programmable, autonomous robots
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania and University of Michigan have created the world's smallest fully programmable ...
Scientists mapped where drugs bind inside the body, cell by cell, to better understand benefits and side effects.
In early 2025, Google launched Gemini 2.0, an AI co-scientist designed to act as a virtual collaborator for biomedical ...
11don MSN
esearchers break speed and scale barriers in 3D nanofabrication with new meta-optics platform
Tiny metalenses split a laser into 120,000+ points, letting 3D nanoprinting cover wafer-size areas with 113 nm detail at 1,000 speed.
What will be the next blockbuster research to emerge from Princeton’s labs? No one can say for sure, but history tells us ...
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