This restaurant hired robot waiters to serve you your food.
Archive for the ‘food’ category: Page 227
Jul 17, 2019
Machine Learning Identifies Potential Anti-Cancer Molecules in Food
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, food, internet, robotics/AI
The internet is rife with myths and articles making dubious claims about certain foods and their anti-cancer properties. We have all seen the articles of questionable scientific merit gracing social media suggesting that such-and-such foods can cure cancer, the majority of which are highly questionable. A new study offers a unique kind of insight into the potential true effectiveness of food in fighting cancer [1].
Investigating molecules in food with machine learning
There is no doubt that there are many foods that contain a myriad of active molecules, and perhaps some of these food myths may have a grain of truth to them. A team of researchers decided to do some real myth-busting and put a variety of bioactive molecules found in foods to the test to see if they might potentially help to combat cancer.
Jul 16, 2019
India has suffered its driest June in 5 years
Posted by Brady Hartman in category: food
Via environment — world economic forum
If the rains don’t improve over the next two to three weeks, India could face a crisis that hammers harvests and rural demand, analysts said. Companies supplying farmers with everything from tractors to consumer goods would be vulnerable.
The country is still recovering from a drought last year that ravaged crops, killed livestock, emptied reservoirs and drained water supplies to city dwellers and some industries.
Continue reading “India has suffered its driest June in 5 years” »
Jul 16, 2019
Gut microbes protect against neurologic damage from viral infections
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: biotech/medical, food, neuroscience
Gut microbes produce compounds that prime immune cells to destroy harmful viruses in the brain and nervous system, according to a mouse study published today in eLife.
The findings suggest that having healthy and diverse microbiota is essential for quickly clearing viruses in the nervous system to prevent paralysis and other risks associated with diseases such as multiple sclerosis.
A condition that causes progressive damage to nerve cells, multiple sclerosis has become more common over the past several decades. Viral infections in the brain or spinal cord are thought to trigger this disease. Some scientists believe that changes in the way we eat, increased sanitation or growing antibiotic use may be causing detrimental changes in the helpful bacteria that live within the human body, potentially increasing the risk of multiple sclerosis and other related diseases.
Jul 15, 2019
This start-up has invented an amazing way to make food last longer
Posted by Brady Hartman in category: food
A natural solution to food waste.
Jul 15, 2019
Here are four creative ways companies are fighting food waste
Posted by Brady Hartman in category: food
815 million people go hungry every day.
Jul 12, 2019
Ageing Debate between Vadim Gladyshev & Aubrey de Grey on Damage Repair
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: biotech/medical, food, life extension
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=of2F3xgImi0
Is comprehensive damage repair feasible? A debate at Undoing Aging 2019 between Vadim Gladyshev, Harvard Medical School and Aubrey de Grey, SENS Research Foundation.
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Continue reading “Ageing Debate between Vadim Gladyshev & Aubrey de Grey on Damage Repair” »
Jul 11, 2019
Scientists make progress in understanding the gut microbiome’s role in individual response to diet
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: food
A new study, led by Dr. Dan Knights from the University of Minnesota (USA), has found that the gut microbiome responds more to particular foods than to combinations of nutrients and that microbiome responses to diet are personalized.
The researchers studied the impact of habitual diet on the gut microbiome in 34 subjects for 17 consecutive days. Both the fecal microbiome and the participants’ diet were sampled every day through shotgun metagenomic sequencing and daily 24-hour dietary records, respectively.
Although the relative abundance of gut microbial species showed a high variation within and between individuals, functional traits tended to remain stable across individuals. In contrast, a specific group of functions related to stress response, the conversion of nitrate to nitrogen and the conversion of formate to methane showed a high interindividual variability that did not correlate with nutrient and food intake.
Jul 9, 2019
Scientists successfully edit a long-locked part of plant DNA, improving crop security
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, food, genetics, security
Think of DNA and chances are the double helix structure comes to mind, but that’s only one piece of the puzzle. Another major part is mitochondrial DNA, and in plants that’s even more important – and so complex that scientists haven’t yet been able to edit the genes in there. Now a team of Japanese researchers has managed to do just that, which could help improve the genetic diversity of crops.
Jul 8, 2019
New research sheds light on a possible cause of autism: processed foods
Posted by Fyodor Rouge in categories: food, neuroscience
The more we learn about the microbiome, the more the pieces are fitting together.