ICYMI: Robots want us to rely on them for daily tasks

Today on In Case You Missed It: The latest servant robot to join the Pepper and Buddy crew is Big-I, a Kickstarter bot that uses 3D vision, motion tracking and facial recognition to help out the humans in their household. We say it looks like a rol...

Zebrafish Embryos Used to Identify New Diabetes Drugs


Researchers have genetically engineered 500,000 zebrafish embryos. These mutant fish will aid the discovery of diabetes drugs in the future. 24 drug candidates have already gotten selected for study...

Visualized: a fish brain lights up while on the prowl (video)

Visualized fish neurons light up while on the prowl

Ever wonder what's going through a fish's mind? While we won't develop underwater telepathy anytime soon, Saitama University can now show us the raw activity. Researchers have learned that injecting zebrafish larvae with green fluorescent protein puts on a light show whenever their neurons fire, illustrating very clearly just which brain regions are active in a given situation, such as chasing down a paramecium for food. The method is more effective and longer-lasting than using dye, and also provides further insight: scientists can clearly spot the neural path when the zebrafish spots and reacts to its prey. As the protein is relevant to humans as well, its longevity could lead to better, longer-term drug testing that shows the cause-and-effect link. Just don't expect as much in the way of mental fireworks.

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Via: Wired

Source: Current Biology