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Friday, March 24, 2023

3.129 AMICOR (25)

 3.129 - AMICOR (25) 

#Dra. Valderês Antonietta Robinson Achutti (*13/06/1931+15/06/2021)

Nas escadarias do Louvre, no fim do século passado

#Slideshow: 99 fotos de abertura Clicar em apresentação de slides


#MEDPAGE Today

GPT-4 Is Here. How Can Doctors Use Generative AI Now?

Chatbots can be helpful as "first-draft" office or research assistants



In the past 3 months, ChatGPT has risen from its obscure testing grounds at OpenAI's headquarters in San Francisco to become the fastest-growing applicationopens in a new tab or window in history, prompting a deluge of viral medical TikTok tutorialsopens in a new tab or window, new research policies, and being the subject of studiesopens in a new tab or window itself.

Even as healthcare professionals still figure out how to use this advance in generative artificial intelligence (AI) to their benefit, OpenAI announced the limited release of the new and vastly improved GPT-4opens in a new tab or window, which the company called its "latest milestone" in its work to scale the model's deep learning capabilities./.../

#ChatGPT for Google


1. What is ChatGPT?
ChatGPT is a language model developed by OpenAI, it's a type of AI that is able to understand and generate human-like text. It's been trained on a vast amount of text data from the internet, so it has a good understanding of various topics and it can perform various natural language processing tasks such as language translation, text summarization, and text completion. Essentially, it's a computer program that can communicate with people in a way that feels natural and human-like.

2. What is ChatGPT for Google?
ChatGPT for Google is a browser extension that enhance search engines with the power of ChatGPT. It works by showing ChatGPT response alongside normal search engine results.

#TIME HEALTH
What to know about Candida auris
BY HALEY WEISS
Health Reporter

The CDC is charting the rapid spread of a fungal threat that can be lethal to the immunocompromised—but can be stopped before becoming an infection in most healthy people.

New data show that Candida auris yeast is doing real damage in U.S. hospitals and other care centers. The number of cases nationally grew by 95% in 2021, and infections have now been recorded in 28 states and D.C. The pandemic, which made it difficult for hospitals to focus on perfecting protocol for much else besides COVID-19, may also have given this superbug a boost.

Here's what to know about C. auris:/.../

#SA - Today in Science



Deadly Fungi Are the Newest Emerging Microbe Threat All Over the World

These pathogens already kill 1.6 million people every year, and we have few defenses against them

By Maryn McKenna | June 2021


#TIME

How mortality risk increases after losing a spouse
BY HALEY WEISS
Health Reporter

Scientists have long described the detrimental impacts of losing a spouse. These effects, which are physical as well as emotional, can be so strong that married people sometimes die a short amount of time apart from each other: what's known as the widowhood effect. Now, a large new study has uncovered patterns within these trends. Here are three of the most interesting findings from the research, which followed nearly a million Danish citizens for up to six years.

  • Though the risk of death within the first year of losing a spouse increases for everyone, it actually decreases within the first weeks following their death. The study doesn't theorize why, but experts who weren't involved with the research think that this could potentially reflect the short period of increased support from friends and family that mourners often experience.
  • The risk of death in the first year of widowhood is a lot larger for men than it is for women. Women are, in part, just more resilient, experts say.
  • People in their 60s are much more susceptible to the widowhood effect than those in their 70s and older. It’s possible that this could be tied to the fact that deaths before age 70 are less likely to involve the type of drawn-out caregiving process that can allow spouses to begin processing their grief even before they’ve lost their partner.

READ MORE


#HMV


https://instagram.com/atrion.moinhos?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=


#AM Nat. History incredible journeys through human evolution and our solar neighborhood. 

American Museum of Natural History
Visitors exploring the Rose Center for Earth and Space.

Upcoming at The Museum

This April, tease out the mysteries behind human hair at programs for both teens and adults. We’ll also take you on an immersive journey through our solar neighborhood in the Hayden Planetarium.

We look forward to welcoming you at these programs and in our halls this spring.


#
My Bookmarks

QUANTUM GRAVITY | ALL TOPICS

 

Wormhole Experiment Called Into Question

By CHARLIE WOOD

Last fall, a team of physicists announced that they had teleported a qubit through a holographic wormhole in a quantum computer. Now another group suggests that’s not quite what happened.

Read the article

COMBINATORICS

 

Surprise Computer Science Proof Stuns Mathematicians

By LEILA SLOMAN

Two computer scientists have blown past decades of incremental progress on a key problem in arithmetic progression.

Read the article


Related: 
Coloring by Numbers Reveals
Arithmetic Patterns in Fractions

By Leila Sloman

QUANTIZED ACADEMY

 

The Symmetry That Makes Solving Equations Easy

By PATRICK HONNER

Learn why the quadratic formula works and why quadratics are easier to solve than cubics.

Read the column


Related: 
The Sordid Past
of the Cubic Formula

By David S. Richeson (2022)

THE JOY OF WHY

 

Is There Math Beyond the Equal Sign?

Podcast hosted by STEVEN STROGATZ

Can mathematics handle things that are essentially the same without being exactly equal? Category theorist Eugenia Cheng and host Steven Strogatz discuss the power and pleasures of abstraction.

Listen to the podcast

Read the transcript

DINOSAURS

 

Dinosaur Bone Study Reveals That Not All Giants Grew Alike

By ANNA GIBBS

A survey of prehistoric bones reveals that T. rex and some of its cousins had more than one way to reach enormous sizes. Evolution may have preserved that variation in modern animals too.


Read the blog

TURING AWARD

 

Bob Metcalfe, Ethernet Pioneer, Wins Turing Award

By BEN BRUBAKER

The American researcher was recognized for his central role in inventing, standardizing and commercializing the ubiquitous networking technology.

Read the blog


Related: 
To Boldly Go Where No Internet
Protocol Has Gone Before

By Susan D'Agostino (2020)

Around the Web

Bye Bye Bias
Artificial intelligence is notoriously plagued by bias. For MIT Technology Review, Niall Firth reports on research that suggests a surprisingly simple solution: Ask the AI to be unbiased. Biases in AI often reflect the biases — unconscious and otherwise — in our society. In 2020, Natalie Wolchover wrote for Quanta about how AI does what it’s told and why that’s often a problem.


Brain Stem
Researchers have traced how different types of stem cells take on specialized roles in the brain, reports Heidi Ledford for Nature. They injected stem cells into the brains of mice and watched as the human brain tissue grew and differentiated. Integrating human brain tissue into the brains of mice and rats is a young technology that enables a host of neurological experiments. In 2022, Allison Whitten wrote for Quanta about how implanted brain “organoids” could be used to study neurodevelopment.
#N.Geographic Magazine
we examine promising exercise-stimulating behaviors