Portrait de Mikel Orobengoa

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ISEA

ULMA Handling Systems-ek bere etorkizuna INDUSTRY 4.0 iraultzaren gomendio utzi du.

Etengabeko berrikuntza estrategian buru-belarri, ULMA Handling Systemsek ateak ireki dizkio INDUSTRY 4.0 iraultza berriari. Etorkizuneko industria gisa aurkezten den iraultza honetan informazio teknologien (IT) mundu birtuala, makinen mundu fisikoa eta Internet bat bihurtzen dira.

Teknologia Zentroekin elkarlanean, ULMA Handling Systems INDUSTRY 4.0 zigilua duten hainbat proiektu garatzen ari da gaur egun.

ULMA Handling Systems confía su futuro en la revolución INDUSTRY 4.0

Inmerso en su estrategia de innovación constante, ULMA Handling Systems abre sus puertas a la nueva revolución INDUSTRY 4.0 que se presenta como la Industria del Futuro, donde el mundo virtual de la tecnología de la información (TI), el mundo físico de las máquinas e Internet se convierten en uno.

En colaboración con Centros Tecnológicos, ULMA Handling Systems se encuentra actualmente en pleno desarrollo en diversos proyectos con sello de INDUSTRY 4.0 orientados a la generación de sistemas de entorno colaborativo Hombre-Máquina o

Neurotrack Secures $6.5 Million in Financing to Advance Cognitive Health

Today, Neurotrack has announced the release of its first product, Neurotrack’s Imprint™, a digital cognitive assessment test that will enable earlier and more effective evaluation of patients who may be at risk for cognitive decline and help advance research and treatment of cognitive diseases like Alzheimer’s. The company has also revealed the private beta of Neurotrack’s cognitive health product, a personalized lifestyle program that brings together the best scientific research shown to reduce the risk of cognitive decline and improve overall cognitive health.

Do Animals Have A Sixth Sense For The Earth’s Magnetic Field?

The flight paths of migrating birds can span continents. Honeybees zigzag through orchards and meadows to the sweetest spots for nectar and then zip back home again. Adult salmon, in what might be the most epic voyage in the animal kingdom, swim from the ocean upstream through branching and churning rivers to lay eggs in the spot where they were born. It’s a route they took only once before — in the opposite direction, as young fish — and yet they don’t get lost.

Obviously, none of these animals, which range from invertebrates to mammals, rely on Google Maps. Instead, they seem to be reading some invisible clues in the environment. People throughout history have tried to solve the mystery. Now researchers are being drawn to some powerful clues.

Immune System Offers Major Clue to Schizophrenia.

Winning a rare insight into the cause of schizophrenia and possible ways to treat it, scientists in Boston say they have identified a biochemical pathway that contributes to the disease by altering connections between brain cells.

The link between schizophrenia and a protein called complement component 4, or C4, was painstakingly established by combining a genetic screen of more than 65,000 people with laboratory findings in mice and analysis of 700 postmortem brain samples. Researchers said they believe the protein plays a role in signaling which connections between neurons should be “pruned,” or removed, as the brain develops after childhood.

First Laser Measurements of Magnetic Fields of Single Nerves.

Biologists have known that nerves produce and respond to electrical signals since the 18th century, when Luigi Galvani discovered that the muscles in a frog’s leg twitch when stimulated by a spark.

However, the systematic study of the electrical signals that nerves produce had to wait until the early 20th century for the development of sensitive electrical recording equipment such as the cathode ray oscilloscope.

This development revolutionized the understanding of nervous function. The ways nerves conduct signals can be a powerful indicator for diseases such as multiple sclerosis and can even detect certain types of intoxication.

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