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      Robotic hand helps pianists overcome “ceiling effect”

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 January 2025 • 1 minute

    Fast and complex multi-finger movements generated by the hand exoskeleton. Credit: Shinichi Furuya

    When it comes to fine-tuned motor skills like playing the piano, practice, they say, makes perfect. But expert musicians often experience a "ceiling effect," in which their skill level plateaus after extensive training. Passive training using a robotic exoskeleton hand could help pianists overcome that ceiling effect, according to a paper published in the journal Science Robotics.

    “I’m a pianist, but I [injured] my hand because of overpracticing,” coauthor Shinichi Furuya of Kabushiki Keisha Sony Computer Science Kenkyujo told New Scientist . “I was suffering from this dilemma, between overpracticing and the prevention of the injury, so then I thought, I have to think about some way to improve my skills without practicing.” Recalling that his former teachers used to place their hands over his to show him how to play more advanced pieces, he wondered if he could achieve the same effect with a robotic hand.

    So Furuya et al. used a custom-made exoskeleton robot hand capable of moving individual fingers on the right hand independently, flexing and extending the joints as needed. Per the authors, prior studies with robotic exoskeletons focused on simpler movements, such as assisting in the movement of limbs stabilizing body posture, or helping grasp objects. That sets the custom robotic hand used in these latest experiments apart from those used for haptics in virtual environments.

    Read full article

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    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagscience tagscience tagscience tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagscience tagscience tagscience tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Robotic hand helps pianists overcome “ceiling effect”

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 January 2025 • 1 minute

    Fast and complex multi-finger movements generated by the hand exoskeleton. Credit: Shinichi Furuya

    When it comes to fine-tuned motor skills like playing the piano, practice, they say, makes perfect. But expert musicians often experience a "ceiling effect," in which their skill level plateaus after extensive training. Passive training using a robotic exoskeleton hand could help pianists overcome that ceiling effect, according to a paper published in the journal Science Robotics.

    “I’m a pianist, but I [injured] my hand because of overpracticing,” coauthor Shinichi Furuya of Kabushiki Keisha Sony Computer Science Kenkyujo told New Scientist . “I was suffering from this dilemma, between overpracticing and the prevention of the injury, so then I thought, I have to think about some way to improve my skills without practicing.” Recalling that his former teachers used to place their hands over his to show him how to play more advanced pieces, he wondered if he could achieve the same effect with a robotic hand.

    So Furuya et al. used a custom-made exoskeleton robot hand capable of moving individual fingers on the right hand independently, flexing and extending the joints as needed. Per the authors, prior studies with robotic exoskeletons focused on simpler movements, such as assisting in the movement of limbs stabilizing body posture, or helping grasp objects. That sets the custom robotic hand used in these latest experiments apart from those used for haptics in virtual environments.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagscience tagscience tagscience tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagscience tagscience tagscience tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Robotic hand helps pianists overcome “ceiling effect”

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 January 2025 • 1 minute

    Fast and complex multi-finger movements generated by the hand exoskeleton. Credit: Shinichi Furuya

    When it comes to fine-tuned motor skills like playing the piano, practice, they say, makes perfect. But expert musicians often experience a "ceiling effect," in which their skill level plateaus after extensive training. Passive training using a robotic exoskeleton hand could help pianists overcome that ceiling effect, according to a paper published in the journal Science Robotics.

    “I’m a pianist, but I [injured] my hand because of overpracticing,” coauthor Shinichi Furuya of Kabushiki Keisha Sony Computer Science Kenkyujo told New Scientist . “I was suffering from this dilemma, between overpracticing and the prevention of the injury, so then I thought, I have to think about some way to improve my skills without practicing.” Recalling that his former teachers used to place their hands over his to show him how to play more advanced pieces, he wondered if he could achieve the same effect with a robotic hand.

    So Furuya et al. used a custom-made exoskeleton robot hand capable of moving individual fingers on the right hand independently, flexing and extending the joints as needed. Per the authors, prior studies with robotic exoskeletons focused on simpler movements, such as assisting in the movement of limbs stabilizing body posture, or helping grasp objects. That sets the custom robotic hand used in these latest experiments apart from those used for haptics in virtual environments.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagscience tagscience tagscience tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagscience tagscience tagscience tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotic exoskeleton tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics

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      “Project Mini Rack” wants to make your non-closet-sized rack server a reality

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 January 2025 • 1 minute

    I have one standard rack appliance in my home: a Unifi Dream Machine Pro. It is mounted horizontally in a coat closet, putting it close to my home's fiber input and also incidentally keeping our jackets gently warm. I can fit juuuuuust about one more standard rack-size device in there (maybe a rack-mount UPS?) before I have to choose between outer-wear and overly ambitious networking. Were I starting over, I might think a bit more about scalability.

    Along those lines, technologist and YouTube maker Jeff Geerling has launched the Project Mini Rack page for folks who have similarly server-sized ambitions, coupled with a lack of square footage. "I mean, if you want to cosplay as a sysadmin, you need a rack, right?" Geerling says in the announcement video . It's a keen launching point for a new "homelab" or "minilab" project, also known as bringing the networking and hardware challenges of a commercial network deployment into your home for "fun."

    Project Mini Rack announcement video, from Jeff Geerling.

    It's a good time fall into the compact computing space. As Geerling notes in a blog post announcing the project, there's a whole lot of small-form-factor PCs on the market. You can couple them with single-board computers, power-over-Ethernet devices, and network-accessible solid state drives that allow you to stuff a whole lab into a cube you can carry around in your hands.

    Read full article

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    • tagtech tagtech tagtech taghomelab taghomelab taghomelab tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagminilab tagminilab tagminilab tagrackmount tagrackmount tagrackmount tagserver rack tagserver rack tagserver rack tagtech tagtech tagtech taghomelab taghomelab taghomelab tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagminilab tagminilab tagminilab tagrackmount tagrackmount tagrackmount tagserver rack tagserver rack tagserver rack tagtech tagtech tagtech taghomelab taghomelab taghomelab tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagminilab tagminilab tagminilab tagrackmount tagrackmount tagrackmount tagserver rack tagserver rack tagserver rack

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    • Ar chevron_right

      “Project Mini Rack” wants to make your non-closet-sized rack server a reality

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 January 2025 • 1 minute

    I have one standard rack appliance in my home: a Unifi Dream Machine Pro. It is mounted horizontally in a coat closet, putting it close to my home's fiber input and also incidentally keeping our jackets gently warm. I can fit juuuuuust about one more standard rack-size device in there (maybe a rack-mount UPS?) before I have to choose between outer-wear and overly ambitious networking. Were I starting over, I might think a bit more about scalability.

    Along those lines, technologist and YouTube maker Jeff Geerling has launched the Project Mini Rack page for folks who have similarly server-sized ambitions, coupled with a lack of square footage. "I mean, if you want to cosplay as a sysadmin, you need a rack, right?" Geerling says in the announcement video . It's a keen launching point for a new "homelab" or "minilab" project, also known as bringing the networking and hardware challenges of a commercial network deployment into your home for "fun."

    Project Mini Rack announcement video, from Jeff Geerling.

    It's a good time fall into the compact computing space. As Geerling notes in a blog post announcing the project, there's a whole lot of small-form-factor PCs on the market. You can couple them with single-board computers, power-over-Ethernet devices, and network-accessible solid state drives that allow you to stuff a whole lab into a cube you can carry around in your hands.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagtech tagtech tagtech taghomelab taghomelab taghomelab tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagminilab tagminilab tagminilab tagrackmount tagrackmount tagrackmount tagserver rack tagserver rack tagserver rack tagtech tagtech tagtech taghomelab taghomelab taghomelab tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagminilab tagminilab tagminilab tagrackmount tagrackmount tagrackmount tagserver rack tagserver rack tagserver rack tagtech tagtech tagtech taghomelab taghomelab taghomelab tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagminilab tagminilab tagminilab tagrackmount tagrackmount tagrackmount tagserver rack tagserver rack tagserver rack

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    • Ar chevron_right

      “Project Mini Rack” wants to make your non-closet-sized rack server a reality

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 January 2025 • 1 minute

    I have one standard rack appliance in my home: a Unifi Dream Machine Pro. It is mounted horizontally in a coat closet, putting it close to my home's fiber input and also incidentally keeping our jackets gently warm. I can fit juuuuuust about one more standard rack-size device in there (maybe a rack-mount UPS?) before I have to choose between outer-wear and overly ambitious networking. Were I starting over, I might think a bit more about scalability.

    Along those lines, technologist and YouTube maker Jeff Geerling has launched the Project Mini Rack page for folks who have similarly server-sized ambitions, coupled with a lack of square footage. "I mean, if you want to cosplay as a sysadmin, you need a rack, right?" Geerling says in the announcement video . It's a keen launching point for a new "homelab" or "minilab" project, also known as bringing the networking and hardware challenges of a commercial network deployment into your home for "fun."

    Project Mini Rack announcement video, from Jeff Geerling.

    It's a good time fall into the compact computing space. As Geerling notes in a blog post announcing the project, there's a whole lot of small-form-factor PCs on the market. You can couple them with single-board computers, power-over-Ethernet devices, and network-accessible solid state drives that allow you to stuff a whole lab into a cube you can carry around in your hands.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagtech tagtech tagtech taghomelab taghomelab taghomelab tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagminilab tagminilab tagminilab tagrackmount tagrackmount tagrackmount tagserver rack tagserver rack tagserver rack tagtech tagtech tagtech taghomelab taghomelab taghomelab tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagminilab tagminilab tagminilab tagrackmount tagrackmount tagrackmount tagserver rack tagserver rack tagserver rack tagtech tagtech tagtech taghomelab taghomelab taghomelab tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagjeff geerling tagminilab tagminilab tagminilab tagrackmount tagrackmount tagrackmount tagserver rack tagserver rack tagserver rack

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Sleeping pills stop the brain’s system for cleaning out waste

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 January 2025

    Our bodies rely on their lymphatic system to drain excessive fluids and remove waste from tissues, feeding those back into the blood stream. It’s a complex yet efficient cleaning mechanism that works in every organ except the brain. “When cells are active, they produce waste metabolites, and this also happens in the brain. Since there are no lymphatic vessels in the brain, the question was what was it that cleaned the brain,” Natalie Hauglund, a neuroscientist at Oxford University who led a recent study on the brain-clearing mechanism, told Ars.

    Earlier studies done mostly on mice discovered that the brain had a system that flushed its tissues with cerebrospinal fluid, which carried away waste products in a process called glymphatic clearance. “Scientists noticed that this only happened during sleep, but it was unknown what it was about sleep that initiated this cleaning process,” Hauglund explains.

    Her study found the glymphatic clearance was mediated by a hormone called norepinephrine and happened almost exclusively during the NREM sleep phase. But it only worked when sleep was natural. Anesthesia and sleeping pills shut this process down nearly completely.

    Read full article

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    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagbrain tagbrain tagbrain tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagbrain tagbrain tagbrain tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagbrain tagbrain tagbrain tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Sleeping pills stop the brain’s system for cleaning out waste

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 January 2025

    Our bodies rely on their lymphatic system to drain excessive fluids and remove waste from tissues, feeding those back into the blood stream. It’s a complex yet efficient cleaning mechanism that works in every organ except the brain. “When cells are active, they produce waste metabolites, and this also happens in the brain. Since there are no lymphatic vessels in the brain, the question was what was it that cleaned the brain,” Natalie Hauglund, a neuroscientist at Oxford University who led a recent study on the brain-clearing mechanism, told Ars.

    Earlier studies done mostly on mice discovered that the brain had a system that flushed its tissues with cerebrospinal fluid, which carried away waste products in a process called glymphatic clearance. “Scientists noticed that this only happened during sleep, but it was unknown what it was about sleep that initiated this cleaning process,” Hauglund explains.

    Her study found the glymphatic clearance was mediated by a hormone called norepinephrine and happened almost exclusively during the NREM sleep phase. But it only worked when sleep was natural. Anesthesia and sleeping pills shut this process down nearly completely.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagbrain tagbrain tagbrain tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagbrain tagbrain tagbrain tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagbrain tagbrain tagbrain tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Sleeping pills stop the brain’s system for cleaning out waste

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 January 2025

    Our bodies rely on their lymphatic system to drain excessive fluids and remove waste from tissues, feeding those back into the blood stream. It’s a complex yet efficient cleaning mechanism that works in every organ except the brain. “When cells are active, they produce waste metabolites, and this also happens in the brain. Since there are no lymphatic vessels in the brain, the question was what was it that cleaned the brain,” Natalie Hauglund, a neuroscientist at Oxford University who led a recent study on the brain-clearing mechanism, told Ars.

    Earlier studies done mostly on mice discovered that the brain had a system that flushed its tissues with cerebrospinal fluid, which carried away waste products in a process called glymphatic clearance. “Scientists noticed that this only happened during sleep, but it was unknown what it was about sleep that initiated this cleaning process,” Hauglund explains.

    Her study found the glymphatic clearance was mediated by a hormone called norepinephrine and happened almost exclusively during the NREM sleep phase. But it only worked when sleep was natural. Anesthesia and sleeping pills shut this process down nearly completely.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagbrain tagbrain tagbrain tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagbrain tagbrain tagbrain tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagscience tagscience tagscience tagbiology tagbiology tagbiology tagbrain tagbrain tagbrain tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagneurobiology tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagnrem sleep tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills tagsleeping pills

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