At its new Stone Mountain, Georgia, facility, Roomba-like robots shuffle between stacks, another adds shipping labels while another arranges packages in pallets
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Hello and welcome! My name is Anton and in this video, we will talk about a few studies that explain how the human brain developed complexity.
Links:
https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0092867423009170
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.ade5645
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.05.01.592020v5.full.pdf.
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abm1696
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-022-01925-6
https://www.microbiologyresearch.org/content/journal/mgen/10…01322#tab2
Other videos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qyMbXCzcS0k.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e10yOoP-x3g.
#brain #biology #evolution.
0:00 Discoveries about the evolution of the brain.
1:20 800 Million years ago… how it all began.
3:10 Did nervous system evolve multiple times? Comb jellies.
4:45 Big brains — primates vs octopuses.
9:20 Human brains and human intelligence genes.
11:20 Gut microbes and fuel for the brain.
12:20 Conclusions and implications.
Enjoy and please subscribe.
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Stephen Wolfram shares surprising new ideas and results from a scientific approach to metaphysics. Discusses time, spacetime, computational irreducibility, significance of the observer, quantum mechanics and multiway systems, ruliad, laws of nature, objective reality, existence, mathematical reality.
All life on Earth shares a common ancestor that lived roughly four billion years ago. This so-called “last universal common ancestor” (LUCA) represents the most ancient organism that researchers can study. Previous research on the last universal common ancestor has found that all the characteristics we see in organisms today, like having a cell membrane and a DNA genome, were already present by the time of this ancestor. So, if we want to understand how these foundational characteristics of life first emerged, then we need to be able to study evolutionary history prior to the last universal common ancestor.
In an article published in the journal Cell Genomics, scientists Aaron Goldman (Oberlin College), Greg Fournier (MIT), and Betül Kaçar (University of Wisconsin‑Madison) describe a method to do just that.
“While the last universal common ancestor is the most ancient organism we can study with evolutionary methods,” said Goldman, “some of the genes in its genome were much older.” The authors describe a type of gene family known as a “universal paralog,” which provides evidence of evolutionary events that occurred before the last universal common ancestor.