Autism symptoms vanish in mice after Stanford brain breakthrough

Stanford Medicine scientists investigating the neurological underpinnings of autism spectrum disorder have found that hyperactivity in a specific brain region could drive behaviors commonly associated with the disorder. Using a mouse model of the disease, the researchers identified the reticular thalamic nucleus — which serves as a gatekeeper of sensory information between the thalamus and…

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8th September – Threat Intelligence Report

For the latest discoveries in cyber research for the week of 8th September, please download our Threat Intelligence Bulletin. TOP ATTACKS AND BREACHES A supply chain breach involving Salesloft’s Drift integration to Salesforce exposed sensitive customer data from multiple organizations, including Cloudflare, Zscaler, Palo Alto Networks, and Workiva. The attackers accessed Salesforce CRM systems via…

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I Hate My AI Friend

Schiffmann seems to be doing well, compared to the last times either of us spoke to him. When he first announced the Friend, he talked about how he had come up with the idea for an AI buddy while traveling alone and yearning for companionship. Schiffmann posits himself as older now, wiser, more experienced than…

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One number at age 7 could predict how long you live

Children who had higher blood pressure at age 7 were more likely to die early from cardiovascular disease by their mid-50s. The risk was highest for children whose blood pressure measurements were in the top 10% for their age, sex and height. Both elevated blood pressure (90-94th percentile) and hypertension (≥95th percentile) were linked with…

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Flamingos reveal their secret to staying young

Is aging inevitable? While most living beings age, some do so more slowly than others. A new scientific study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science (PNAS) addresses a fascinating question: what if migration influences the way we age? To explore this mystery, scientists turned their attention to the pink flamingo (Phoenicopterus…

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Scientists just made CRISPR three times more effective

CRISPR gene-editing machinery could transform medicine but is difficult to get into tissues and disease-relevant cells New delivery system loads CRISPR machinery inside spherical nucleic acid (SNA) nanoparticles Particles entered cells three times more effectively, tripled gene-editing efficiency, and decreased toxicity compared to current delivery methods With the power to rewrite the genetic code underlying…

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