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An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.


Data Mining For Global Change: Furthering Science, Knowledge
From ACM TechNews

Data Mining For Global Change: Furthering Science, Knowledge

University of Minnesota's Vipin Kumar and colleagues want to integrate computer scientists into the effort to address climate change, ecosystem health, and global...

From ACM TechNews

A Made-to-Measure Social Network For the Academic World

Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne researchers have developed Graaasp, an academic social network that responds to the specific needs of the academic world...

Software Developer Shows Face-Swapping in Realtime
From ACM TechNews

Software Developer Shows Face-Swapping in Realtime

New software can now replace a face with another in real time. 

Data Mining ­ncovers New Connections Between Health Problems
From ACM News

Data Mining ­ncovers New Connections Between Health Problems

Researchers in Denmark are using data mining techniques to uncover new connections between health problems as seemingly unrelated as migraines and hair loss.

New Targets For the Control of Hiv Are Predicted ­sing a Novel Computational Analysis
From ACM TechNews

New Targets For the Control of Hiv Are Predicted ­sing a Novel Computational Analysis

Virginia Tech researchers have developed a computational approach that can predict several human proteins that the human immunodeficiency virus requires to replicate...

From ACM News

Scientists ­se Brain Imaging to Reveal the Movies in Our Mind

Imagine tapping into the mind of a coma patient, or watching one’s own dream on YouTube. With a cutting-edge blend of brain imaging and computer simulation, scientists...

Will We All Be Tweaking Our Own Genetic Code?
From ACM News

Will We All Be Tweaking Our Own Genetic Code?

You have to wonder what's going on in the DNA of Harvard genetics professor George Church. What extra bit of code does he have that the rest of us don't? If genes...

From ACM News

Mining Data For Better Medicine

The antidepressant Paxil was approved for sale in 1992, the cholesterol-lowering drug Pravachol in 1996. Company studies proved that each drug, on its own, works...

From ACM TechNews

Fraunhofer SCAI Successfully Completes Pilot Project on Information Extraction from Chinese Scientific Literature

The Fraunhofer Institute for Algorithms and Scientific Computing recently completed a pilot Chinese text mining project. 

App Lets ­niversity Students Send Video Instantly to Police
From ACM TechNews

App Lets ­niversity Students Send Video Instantly to Police

The University of Maryland at College Park has launched a phased rollout of a smartphone app that can provide students, faculty, and staff with a direct and instantaneous...

From ACM TechNews

Information Technologies Can Foster Freedom or Reinforce Repression

New communication tools such as text messaging and social networks my not be as uniformly beneficial or as robust as suggested by the media, which portrays them...

Living in a Digital World
From Communications of the ACM

Living in a Digital World

Technology has created new opportunities to connect and interact. Yet, researchers are increasingly concerned that heavy technology usage is changing people's behavior...

Improving Brain-Computer Interfaces
From Communications of the ACM

Improving Brain-Computer Interfaces

Researchers are demonstrating advances in restorative BCI systems that are giving paralyzed individuals more effective ways to communicate, move, and interact with...

Gamers Succeed Where Scientists Fail
From ACM TechNews

Gamers Succeed Where Scientists Fail

Gamers have produced an accurate model of the structure of a retrovirus enzyme within three weeks, according to University of Washington researchers. 

­nbridled Ingenuity at Maker Faire
From ACM News

­nbridled Ingenuity at Maker Faire

Around noon this past Sunday, I found myself asking a young girl why, even though the music-producing device she and her family had made was called "Slugophone...

Synchronized Swimming: Patrolling For Pollution with Robotic Fish
From ACM TechNews

Synchronized Swimming: Patrolling For Pollution with Robotic Fish

Michigan State University researchers want to develop robotic fish that can navigate underwater and patrol for pollution in oceans, lakes, and rivers. 

Researchers Sequence Dark Matter of Life
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Sequence Dark Matter of Life

University of California, San Diego researchers have developed a method to sequence the genomes of thousands of bacteria species, including microorganisms that...

Blood Vessels from Your Printer
From ACM News

Blood Vessels from Your Printer

Researchers have been working at growing tissue and organs in the laboratory for a long time. These days, tissue engineering enables us to build up artificial...

Kinect Assists At-Risk Older Adults
From ACM News

Kinect Assists At-Risk Older Adults

Kinect and other computer technology, like Doppler radar, are being used to detect the early onset of illness and the risk of falling in older adults.

From ACM News

In Case You Wondered, a Real Human Wrote This Column

"WISCONSIN appears to be in the driver's seat en route to a win, as it leads 51–10 after the third quarter. Wisconsin added to its lead when Russell Wilson found...
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