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2120 artiklar · sida 27 av 85

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Researchers discovered that self-replicating structures can form on their own in cellular automata—without being programmed in. The structures work as distributed teams rather than single units, challenging how we define life and individuality in artificial systems and potentially informing the design of autonomous, self-organizing technologies.EN

2026-02-16 · npj Complexity · ,
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A new paper challenges the tech industry's obsession with permanent storage by exploring devices that help people intentionally destroy personal media. The work suggests businesses rethinking data retention could appeal to consumers exhausted by endless digital accumulation and concerned about privacy.EN

2026-01-01 · Proceedings of the 2026 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems · , , et al.
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A sweeping review of industrial Internet of Things technology reveals how factories are adopting advanced sensors, edge computing, and real-time data systems to boost productivity. The findings matter because manufacturers face critical decisions about which platforms to standardize on—choices that affect capital spending, supply chain resilience, and competitive advantage for years to come.EN

2026-01-01 · Future Internet · , ,
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Researchers have developed a new approach that uses quantum processors to solve complex physics equations more efficiently by breaking the work into small, repeatable tasks rather than attempting massive single calculations. The shift could make quantum machines useful for engineering simulations years before they're powerful enough for broader applications.EN

2026-01-01 · Proceedings of Supercomputing Asia and International Conference on High Performance Computing in Asia Pacific Region, SCA/HPCAsia 2026 · , , et al.
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A systematic review of 33 studies reveals that organizational culture—not outdated systems—is the primary barrier to digital transformation. Weak digital mindset, siloed departments, and skills gaps top the list. Companies investing billions in new tech without addressing culture first are likely wasting money.EN

2026-01-01 · CENTERIS - International Conference on ENTERprise Information Systems / ProjMAN - International Conference on Project MANagement / HCist - International Conference on Health and Social Care Information Systems and Technologies · , ,
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A new pipeline automatically detects when researchers have gathered enough voice recordings to reliably measure speech patterns, potentially cutting data collection costs and timelines. For companies building voice AI systems and speech recognition tools, this could mean faster product development and lower annotation expenses.EN

2026-01-01 · Proceedings of the Fifteenth Language Resources and Evaluation Conference (LREC 2026) · , ,
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Researchers have developed a strategic planning model that identifies where to build electric truck charging stations to maximize adoption rates. The phased approach balances immediate feasibility with long-term network efficiency, offering logistics companies and infrastructure planners a roadmap to break through one of the biggest barriers slowing the trucking industry's shift to zero-emission vehicles.EN

2025-01-01 · 2025 IEEE 28th International Conference on Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITSC) · , , et al.
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A new study documents how marginalized communities are building DIY intimate health sensors to circumvent expensive proprietary devices—and argues designers should support this movement. The research suggests open-source approaches to women's health technology could democratize access while reducing the FemTech industry's monopoly on bodily data.EN

2025-01-01 · Proceedings of the 2025 ACM Designing Interactive Systems Conference · , , et al.
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Researchers created a wearable finger sensor that monitors vaginal fluid to predict menstrual cycles—a potential breakthrough for reproductive health tracking. But the work reveals critical tensions companies face: how to collect intimate data responsibly, where to store it, and how to interpret it without reinforcing bias.EN

2025-01-01 · , , et al.
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Researchers have created a middle layer that lets quantum applications switch between different quantum computers — from gate-based systems to annealers — by changing only a configuration file, not the code itself. The approach, borrowed from decades of high-performance computing practices, could dramatically reduce the cost and complexity of deploying quantum solutions across competing hardware platforms.EN

2025-01-01 · Proceedings of 2025 Workshops of the International Conference on High Performance Computing, Network, Storage, and Analysis, SC 2025 Workshops · , , et al.
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Researchers created a musical instrument that forces performers to compose using only their own decade-old recordings, revealing how constraints drive creativity and sustainability. The finding challenges tech companies to design tools around existing user data rather than endless new consumption, offering a model for more environmentally conscious product design.EN

2025-01-01 · Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression ·
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A new case report documents dengue infection arising from the Qdenga vaccine itself, caused by genetic mutations in the virus strain used in the shot. The finding signals the need for enhanced surveillance systems to track vaccine-derived cases as dengue immunization programs expand globally.EN

2025-01-01 · Journal of Travel Medicine · , , et al.
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Researchers have cracked a critical vulnerability in GPS security using only the low-cost motion sensors already built into smartphones. The breakthrough matters because GPS spoofing—where attackers fake satellite signals—threatens autonomous vehicles, financial transactions, and infrastructure timing. This solution could protect billions of devices without expensive hardware upgrades.EN

2025-01-01 · ,
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Researchers have discovered that medical AI systems can achieve better performance while using a fraction of the computing power previously thought necessary. The finding could make advanced diagnostic tools accessible to smaller hospitals and clinics that lack expensive GPU infrastructure, potentially accelerating AI deployment across healthcare.EN

2025-01-01 · Proceedings 2025 IEEE/CVF International Conference on Computer Vision Workshops (ICCVW) · , , et al.
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Researchers analyzed a decade of Swedish education records to identify which students pursue computing degrees based on family income, parental education, and school type. The findings could guide policymakers and tech employers on how to broaden talent pipelines and reduce socioeconomic barriers to tech careers.EN

2025-01-01 · PROCEEDINGS OF 25TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMPUTING EDUCATION RESEARCH, KOLI CALLING 2025 ·
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Researchers have created a SageMath package that lets computer scientists analyze complex algorithms with built-in error bounds—answering previously unsolved questions in computational mathematics. For businesses deploying AI systems where precision matters, this tool could accelerate verification and reduce the hidden costs of algorithmic uncertainty.EN

2024-01-01 · 35th International Conference on Probabilistic, Combinatorial and Asymptotic Methods for the Analysis of Algorithms (AofA 2024) · ,
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Researchers have discovered a fundamental mathematical pattern that explains how B-trees—the data structures powering most databases—evolve as new information is added. The finding could help engineers optimize database performance and predict how systems will behave under real-world conditions, potentially reducing costly infrastructure upgrades.EN

2024-01-01 · 35th International Conference on Probabilistic, Combinatorial and Asymptotic Methods for the Analysis ofAlgorithms (AofA 2024) · ,
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Researchers have solved a decades-old mathematical puzzle by discovering unexpected connections between two seemingly unrelated systems—parking arrangements and tree-like networks. The breakthrough reveals underlying statistical patterns that could have applications in optimization problems across logistics, network design, and resource allocation.EN

2024-01-01 · 35th International Conference on Probabilistic, Combinatorial and Asymptotic Methods for the Analysis of Algorithms (AofA 2024) · ,
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Researchers have developed a method to keep mobile devices operating reliably in extreme environments—like orbiting nanosatellites and nuclear plant robots—even when their software or memory becomes corrupted. The advance matters because these systems operate where human fixes are impossible, and any downtime could be costly or dangerous.EN

2024-01-01 · HOTMOBILE '24 · , , et al.
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Researchers have published a methodological blueprint for combining rigorous trial evidence with real-world patient data to assess drug and treatment effectiveness more accurately. The approach could help companies, regulators, and healthcare systems make faster, more confident decisions about which treatments actually work in practice—not just in controlled studies.EN

2024-01-01 · EPIDEMIOLOGIC REVIEWS · , , et al.
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Researchers have designed three functional devices that physically destroy sound recordings, exploring how constraints and sustainable design principles could apply to data management. The work raises questions about privacy, data control, and whether destruction—rather than storage—should be a standard option for sensitive audio.EN

2024-01-01 · NordiCHI '24 Adjunct: Adjunct Proceedings of the 2024 Nordic Conference on Human-Computer Interaction ·
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A comprehensive review of 58 studies finds that standalone artificial intelligence systems match or exceed radiologist performance in detecting breast cancer during routine screening. The findings could reshape how hospitals allocate resources and staff, while raising critical questions about liability and regulatory approval as AI diagnostic tools move toward clinical deployment.EN

2023-01-01 · RADIOLOGY · , , et al.
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Researchers reviewed how digital health tools for chronic pain are built, highlighting a gap: most fail to account for different patient needs and preferences. The finding matters because poorly designed apps waste development budgets and leave patients without effective treatment options—a costly problem as healthcare systems push toward digital care delivery.EN

2023-01-01 · INTERNET INTERVENTIONS-THE APPLICATION OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY IN MENTAL AND BEHAVIOURAL HEALTH · , , et al.
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Researchers have optimized wearable garments that deliver electrical pulses to muscles, with a focus on getting patients to actually use them consistently. The advance could expand options for physical rehabilitation and sports performance, potentially opening new markets in health tech and wearables.EN

2023-01-01 · EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY · , , et al.
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A new analysis of healthcare cybersecurity identifies critical vulnerabilities in digital medical platforms and proposes protective measures to strengthen defenses. As hospitals and clinics increasingly digitize patient records and remote care, security breaches could expose sensitive health data and disrupt care delivery—making robust protection strategies essential for healthcare providers and policymakers.EN

2023-01-01 · DERMATOLOGIE · , , et al.