In real world experiments, a team of Stanford researchers demonstrated that a virus with AI-written DNA could target and kill ...
Research led by a physicist at the University of California, Riverside, shows how viruses form protective shells (capsids) ...
The work, described in a preprint paper, has the potential to create new treatments and accelerate research into artificially ...
A group of Stanford bioengineers claim that they've created synthetic bacteriophages using AI-generated designs that not only ...
Stanford and Arc Institute used AI to design viruses that kill bacteria, sparking hope for new therapies and warnings over biosecurity risks.
In 2010, a computer worm called Stuxnet sabotaged Iran’s nuclear program. It wasn’t ordinary malware—it was the world’s first true cyberweapon, capable of crippling nations.
To solve a problem, we have to see it clearly. Whether it's an infection by a novel virus or memory-stealing plaques forming ...
Looking for some help with today's NYT Connections? Some hints and the answers for today's game are right here.
Internet experts call it ransomware, a very particular type of virus that infects computers and restricts users’ access to their files or threatens the permanent destruction of their information ...
To solve a problem, scientists first need to see it clearly. Whether it’s a virus slipping past the immune system or plaques forming in the brain, visualization is the first step toward finding ...
To solve a problem, we have to see it clearly. Whether it's an infection by a novel virus or memory-stealing plaques forming in the brains of Alzheimer's patients, visualizing disease processes in the ...