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sabayonino in attesa che si risvegli rosetta & compagnia cantante (06.04.26, 15:48)
sabayonino a me dei crediti frega niente . la gpu le metto su asteroids e la cpu su gaia o spacious (06.04.26, 15:47)
zioriga Provarfe per credere !! (06.04.26, 15:19)
zioriga Attenzione che Milky non ha più applicativo su GPU, per quanto riguarda invece Asteroids è meglio usare solo la CPU perchè già solo con 2/3 thead dedicati, si generano più crediti rispetto alla GPU (06.04.26, 15:19)
sabayonino per quanto rigurada i progetti non matematici le mie 980Ti e 750ti girano bene su @einstein , @milkyway , @Asteroid (06.04.26, 13:09)
mindfeed32 comunque a me da wcg non arriva nulla da fare, e ho tutti i progetti selezionati! Da qui (https://worldcommunitygrid.org/stat/viewGlobal.do) dice che ieri hanno ricevuto solo 156 wu. Non penso sia normale... (05.04.26, 23:20)
mindfeed32 Non so con quelle gpu folding@home quanto ci possa mettere, ma penso vada bene. Altrimenti einstein@home va alla grandissima (05.04.26, 23:14)
samu986 Altra domanda: ho una GeForce 970, una GeForce 980 Ti e una Radeon Vega 64. So che sono vecchiotte, ma avete qualche progetto interessante da consigliare che non sia matematico? Magari fisico o medico o simili? (05.04.26, 17:16)
samu986 Ho un'altra domanda: ho 3 PC collegati su WCG con lo stesso account, però la coda delle WU me la dà soltanto in un PC. Come mai? Io vorrei la coda di lavoro in tutti i PC. Qualcuno potrebbe aiutarmi per cortesia? (05.04.26, 17:02)
samu986 zioriga, ho capito, grazie mille per le delucidazioni. (05.04.26, 17:02)
zioriga credo sia a causa della configurazione del server di WCG, che non contente lo scarico delle statistiche (05.04.26, 14:24)
zioriga purtroppo l stats su WCG non funzionano (05.04.26, 14:23)
samu986 sabayonino, perciò da quello che capisco avete tutti problemi con le statistiche. Io personalmente sto elaborando SOLO su WCG, a me interessano le stats di quello. Dite anche a me cosa sta succedendo per cortesia? Grazie. (03.04.26, 23:11)
kidkidkid3 Scoperti oltre11mila asteroidi, 33 sono vicini alla Terra Visti 'al primo sguardo' dall'osservatorio Vera Rubin in Cile ROMA, 03 aprile 2026, 13:27 (03.04.26, 17:47)
zioriga non pensavo di essere così in alto (02.04.26, 21:34)
zioriga Ho appena controllato il mio punteggio su https://www.worldcommunitygrid.org/team/viewTeamMemberDetail.do?sort=points&teamId=J4K5DVH5Q1 e vedo con stupore il mio punteggio totale è al quinto posto del team (02.04.26, 21:33)
Ram Io su WCG sono a 1.300.000 (02.04.26, 16:43)
zioriga io su WCG sono intorno a 3500 (02.04.26, 11:24)
sabayonino Clicca per guardare il video (01.04.26, 20:53)
sabayonino occhio che poi li devi dichiarare al fisco (01.04.26, 19:55)
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Scan del cervello umano 23/04/2013 22:19 #91182

  • hellcobra
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chemical treatment that turns whole organs transparent offers a big boost to the field of ‘connectomics’ — the push to map the brain’s fiendishly complicated wiring. Scientists could use the technique to view large networks of neurons with unprecedented ease and accuracy. The technology also opens up new research avenues for old brains that were saved from patients and healthy donors.
“This is probably one of the most important advances for doing neuroanatomy in decades,” says Thomas Insel, director of the US National Institute of Mental Health in Bethesda, Maryland, which funded part of the work. Existing technology allows scientists to see neurons and their connections in microscopic detail — but only across tiny slivers of tissue. Researchers must reconstruct three-dimensional data from images of these thin slices. Aligning hundreds or even thousands of these snapshots to map long-range projections of nerve cells is laborious and error-prone, rendering fine-grain analysis of whole brains practically impossible.
The new method instead allows researchers to see directly into optically transparent whole brains or thick blocks of brain tissue. Called CLARITY, it was devised by Karl Deisseroth and his team at Stanford University in California. “You can get right down to the fine structure of the system while not losing the big picture,” says Deisseroth, who adds that his group is in the process of rendering an entire human brain transparent.The technique, published online in Nature on 10 April, turns the brain transparent using the detergent SDS, which strips away lipids that normally block the passage of light (K. Chung et al.Nature dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature12107; 2013). Other groups have tried to clarify brains in the past, but many lipid-extraction techniques dissolve proteins and thus make it harder to identify different types of neurons. Deisseroth’s group solved this problem by first infusing the brain with acryl*amide, which binds proteins, nucleic acids and other biomolecules. When the acrylamide is heated, it polymerizes and forms a tissue-wide mesh that secures the molecules. The resulting brain–hydrogel hybrid showed only 8% protein loss after lipid extraction, compared to 41% with existing methods.
Applying CLARITY to whole mouse brains, the researchers viewed fluorescently labelled neurons in areas ranging from outer layers of the cortex to deep structures such as the thalamus. They also traced individual nerve fibres through 0.5-millimetre-thick slabs of formalin-preserved autopsied human brain — orders of magnitude thicker than slices currently imaged.
​“The work is spectacular. The results are unlike anything else in the field,” says Van Wedeen, a neuroscientist at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and a lead investigator on the US National Institutes of Health’s Human Connectome Project (HCP), which aims to chart the brain’s neuronal communication networks. The new technique, he says, could reveal important cellular details that would complement data on large-scale neuronal pathways that he and his colleagues are mapping in the HCP’s 1,200 healthy participants using magnetic resonance imaging.Francine Benes, director of the Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center at McLean Hospital in Belmont, Massachusetts, says that more tests are needed to assess whether the lipid-clearing treatment alters or damages the fundamental structure of brain tissue. But she and others predict that CLARITY will pave the way for studies on healthy brain wiring, and on brain disorders and ageing.
Researchers could, for example, compare circuitry in banked tissue from people with neurological diseases and from controls whose brains were healthy. Such studies in living people are impossible, because most neuron-tracing methods require genetic engineering or injection of dye in living animals. Scientists might also revisit the many specimens in repositories that have been difficult to analyse because human brains are so large.
The hydrogel–tissue hybrid formed by CLARITY — stiffer and more chemically stable than untreated tissue — might also turn delicate and rare disease specimens into re*usable resources, Deisseroth says. One could, in effect, create a library of brains that different researchers check out, study and then return.

Nature496,151(11 April 2013)

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