PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

How tiny machines become capable of learning

Team of physicists led by Professor Frank Cichos develop learning microswimmers

How tiny machines become capable of learning
2021-03-25
(Press-News.org) Microswimmers are artificial, self-propelled, microscopic particles. They are capable of directional motion in a solution. The Molecular Nanophotonics Group at Leipzig University has developed special particles that are smaller than one-thirtieth of the diameter of a hair. They can change their direction of motion by heating tiny gold particles on their surface and converting this energy into motion. "However, these miniaturised machines cannot take in and learn information like their living counterparts. To achieve this, we control the microswimmers externally so that they learn to navigate in a virtual environment through what is known as reinforcement learning," said Cichos.

With the help of virtual rewards, the microswimmers find their way through the liquid while repeatedly being thrown off of their path, mainly by Brownian motion. "Our results show that the best swimmer is not the one that is fastest, but rather that there is an optimal speed," said Viktor Holubec, who worked on the project as a fellow of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation and has now returned to the university in Prague. According to the scientists, linking artificial intelligence and active systems like in these microswimmers is a first small step towards new intelligent microscopic materials that can autonomously perform tasks while also adapting to their new environment. At the same time, they hope that the combination of artificial microswimmers and machine learning methods will provide new insights into the emergence of collective behaviour in biological systems. "Our goal is to develop artificial, smart building blocks that can perceive their environmental influences and actively react to them," said the physicist. Once this method is fully developed and has been applied to other material systems, including biological ones, it could be used, for example, in the development of smart drugs or microscopic robot swarms.

INFORMATION:

Original title of the publication in Science Robotics:

"Reinforcement Learning with Artificial Microswimmers"


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
How tiny machines become capable of learning

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

NTU Singapore scientists develop antibacterial gel bandage using durian husk

NTU Singapore scientists develop antibacterial gel bandage using durian husk
2021-03-25
Food scientists from Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) have made an antibacterial gel bandage using the discarded husks of the popular tropical fruit, durian. Known as the "King of Fruits" in Southeast Asia, the durian has a thick husk with spiky thorns which is discarded, while the sweet flesh surrounding the seeds on the inside is considered a delicacy. By extracting high-quality cellulose from the durian husks and combining it with glycerol - a waste by-product from the biodiesel and soap industry - NTU scientists created a soft gel, similar to silicon sheets, which can be cut into bandages of various shapes and sizes. They then added the organic molecules produced from baker's yeast known as natural yeast phenolics, making the bandage deadly ...

How improving acoustic monitoring of bats could help protecting biodiversity

How improving acoustic monitoring of bats could help protecting biodiversity
2021-03-25
In order to assess the risk of bats dying at wind turbines, it is common practice to record the acoustic activity of bats within the operating range of the rotor blades. For this purpose, ultrasonic detectors are attached to the nacelles of the mast top. In a recent analysis, a team of scientists led by the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (Leibniz-IZW) concludes that the effectiveness of this acoustic monitoring is insufficient to reliably predict mortality risk, especially for bats at large turbines. They therefore recommend installing supplementary ultrasonic detectors at other locations on the wind turbines and developing additional techniques such as radar and thermal imaging cameras for monitoring. The results of their analysis are published in ...

Insufficient financial reporting may lead to underestimation of environmental liabilities

2021-03-25
European listed companies in the energy and mining sector provide, to say the least, sparse information on future environmental costs in their annual reports. Researchers believe that stricter guidelines are required as the lack of information may lead to underestimation of environmental liabilities, resulting in that future generations may have to bear the burden of cleanup costs. "I believe that the future environmental liabilities such as decommissioning costs are often underestimated and few understand the burden these costs might impose on future generations. If, for example, an oil & gas company fails, it costs an incredible amount to clean up after old oil wells and the risk is great that the taxpayers will have to pay the bill. Therefore, it is important that environmental obligations ...

Relieve your stress, relieve your allergies

2021-03-25
Increased allergic reactions may be tied to the corticotropin-releasing stress hormone (CRH), suggests a study published this month in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences. These findings may help clarify the mechanism by which CRH induces proliferation of mast cells (MC) - agents involved in the development of allergies in the human nasal cavity. "In my daily practice, I meet many patients with allergies who say their symptoms worsened due to psychological stress," states lead researcher Mika Yamanaka-Takaichi, a graduate student of the Department of Dermatology, Osaka City University, "This is what led me to do this research." Together with Professor Daisuke Tsuruta of the same department, they hypothesized that due to its ...

Urban 'escalator' means disadvantaged rural students miss out on top universities

2021-03-25
Bright but disadvantaged students from urban areas are more likely to enter elite UK universities than similar peers from rural communities due to an urban 'escalator effect', according to a new study. Researchers from the University of Bath analysed data from 800,000 English students commencing university in the years 2008, 2010, 2012, 2014 and 2016. They found that while in general rural areas had higher overall progression to university than city centres and surrounding areas, when controlling for factors including socio-economic status, age, ethnicity and sex, disadvantaged pupils from rural areas were less likely to progress to one of 27 'top' UK universities. The authors suggest the difference ...

The world's longest bottlebrush polymer ever synthesized

The worlds longest bottlebrush polymer ever synthesized
2021-03-25
NIMS and RIKEN have succeeded in synthesizing the longest ever bottlebrush polymer. This polymer--resembling a green foxtail--is composed of a main chain and numerous side chains grafting from it. The team also succeeded in giving various chemical properties to the ultralong bottlebrush polymer. These achievements are expected to substantially advance the current synthetic methods of bottlebrush polymers. This technique may be applicable to the development of flexible and low-friction polymeric materials. In the development of polymeric materials, it is necessary to link molecular units with desired chemical properties, called monomers, to ...

Scientists first realized real-time GW-BSE investigations on Spin-Valley exciton dynamics

2021-03-25
Prof. ZHAO Jin's research team from University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) has made important progress in the development of Spin-Valley exciton dynamics. The research developed an ab initio nonadiabatic molecular dynamics (NAMD) method based on for the spin-resolved exciton dynamics. The team gained the first clear and complete physical picture of valley exciton dynamics in MoS2 from the perspective of first-principles calculations based on GW plus real-time Bethe-Salpeter equation (GW + rtBSE-NAMD). It can accurately include many-body effects at the level of first principles and break through the bottleneck of GW+BSE method in ...

Revealing nano big bang -- Scientists observe the first milliseconds of crystal formation

2021-03-25
When we grow crystals, atoms first group together into small clusters - a process called nucleation. But understanding exactly how such atomic ordering emerges from the chaos of randomly moving atoms has long eluded scientists. Classical nucleation theory suggests that crystals form one atom at a time, steadily increasing the level of order. Modern studies have also observed a two-step nucleation process, where a temporary, high-energy structure forms first, which then changes into a stable crystal. But according to an international research team co-led by the ...

More protein doesn't mean more strength in resistance-trained middle-aged adults

More protein doesnt mean more strength in resistance-trained middle-aged adults
2021-03-25
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- A 10-week muscle-building and dietary program involving 50 middle-aged adults found no evidence that eating a high-protein diet increased strength or muscle mass more than consuming a moderate amount of protein while training. The intervention involved a standard strength-training protocol with sessions three times per week. None of the participants had previous weightlifting experience. Published in the American Journal of Physiology: Endocrinology and Metabolism, the study is one of the most comprehensive investigations of the health effects of diet and resistance training in middle-aged adults, the researchers say. Participants were 40-64 years ...

Fossil fuel companies benefit from inefficient pricing on climate and health consequences

2021-03-25
Fossil fuel producers in the U.S. are directly benefiting from implicit subsidies on the order of $62 billion a year because of inefficient pricing that doesn't properly account for the costs of damages to the environment, climate, and human health. That's the finding of a newly published study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) by Yale School of the Environment Economics Professor Matthew Kotchen that analyzed gasoline, natural gas, diesel, and coal. The total annual implicit subsidy is equivalent to an average of 3% of the U.S. gross domestic product, according to the study which examined data from 2010-2018. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Morton Arboretum tree root scientist recognized as top-cited researcher for second straight year

Scientists show electrical stimulation could be key to healthy tendons

University Hospitals only health system in northeast Ohio offering FDA-approved KISUNLA™ for treatment of Alzheimer’s disease

Real-world chemists are more diverse than generative AI images suggest

Curiosity, images, and scientific exploration

Nature publishes collection of papers advancing the human cell atlas, with research supported by CZI

Researchers catalog the microbiome of US rivers

Mapping 1.6 million gut cells to find new ways treat disease

First molecule identified that promotes gut healing while inhibiting tumour progression

Trends in postpartum depression by race, ethnicity, and prepregnancy BMI

Short-term and long-term mortality risk after preterm birth

Thanksgiving special: dinosaur drumsticks and the story of the turkey trot

Superior photosynthesis abilities of some plants could hold key to climate-resilient crops

Human immune system is ‘ready to go’ long before birth

R sounds are rough, and L sounds are smooth, according to cross-cultural study

Healthy women have cells that resemble breast cancer, study finds

Cancer-like mutations in healthy cells point to origins of breast cancer

Preterm birth associated with increased mortality risk into adulthood, study finds

Genome Research publishes a Special Issue on Long-read DNA and RNA Sequencing Applications in Biology and Medicine

Dementia risk prediction: Zero-minute assessment at less than a dollar cost

Children’s Hospital Colorado Heart Institute earns national recognition for excellence in cardiomyopathy care

Trial shows alcohol-mimicking medication can give laryngeal dystonia patients back their voice

Cigarette smoke alters microbiota, aggravates flu severity

Landmark study reveals over 100,000 American youth living with inflammatory bowel disease

Diverse diets of civets in Borneo rainforest allow them to live in same geographical area

Virtual reality could be gamechanger in police-civilian crisis encounters

Recycled pacemakers function as well as new devices, international study suggests

Researchers eliminate the gritty mouth feel: How to make it easier to eat fiber-rich foods

An innovative antibiotic for drug-resistant bacteria

Garden produce grown near Fayetteville works fluorochemical plant contains GenX, other PFAs

[Press-News.org] How tiny machines become capable of learning
Team of physicists led by Professor Frank Cichos develop learning microswimmers