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  • A bionic knee integrated into tissue can restore natural movement | MIT News

    A bionic knee integrated into tissue can restore natural movement | MIT News

    MIT researchers have developed a new bionic knee that can help people with above-the-knee amputations walk faster, climb stairs, and avoid obstacles more easily than they could with a traditional prosthesis.

    Unlike prostheses in which the residual limb sits within a socket, the new system is directly integrated with the user’s muscle and bone tissue. This enables greater stability and gives the user much more control over the movement of the prosthesis.

    Participants in a small clinical study also reported that the limb felt more like a part of their own body, compared to people who had more traditional above-the-knee amputations.

    “A prosthesis that’s tissue-integrated — anchored to the bone and directly controlled by the nervous system — is not merely a lifeless, separate device, but rather a system that is carefully integrated into human physiology, offering a greater level of prosthetic embodiment. It’s not simply a tool that the human employs, but rather an integral part of self,” says Hugh Herr, a professor of media arts and sciences, co-director of the K. Lisa Yang Center for Bionics at MIT, an associate member of MIT’s McGovern Institute for Brain Research, and the senior author of the new study.

    Tony Shu PhD ’24 is the lead author of the paper, which appears today in Science.

    Better control

    Over the past several years, Herr’s lab has been working on new prostheses that can extract neural information from muscles left behind after an amputation and use that information to help guide a prosthetic limb.

    During a traditional amputation, pairs of muscles that take turns stretching and contracting are usually severed, disrupting the normal agonist-antagonist relationship of the muscles. This disruption makes it very difficult for the nervous system to sense the position of a muscle and how fast it’s contracting.

    Using the new surgical approach developed by Herr and his colleagues, known as agonist-antagonist myoneuronal interface (AMI), muscle pairs are reconnected during surgery so that they still dynamically communicate with each other within the residual limb. This sensory feedback helps the wearer of the prosthesis to decide how to move the limb, and also generates electrical signals that can be used to control the prosthetic limb.

    In a 2024 study, the researchers showed that people with amputations below the knee who received the AMI surgery were able to walk faster and navigate around obstacles much more naturally than people with traditional below-the-knee amputations.

    In the new study, the researchers extended the approach to better serve people with amputations above the knee. They wanted to create a system that could not only read out signals from the muscles using AMI but also be integrated into the bone, offering more stability and better sensory feedback.

    To achieve that, the researchers developed a procedure to insert a titanium rod into the residual femur bone at the amputation site. This implant allows for better mechanical control and load bearing than a traditional prosthesis. Additionally, the implant contains 16 wires that collect information from electrodes located on the AMI muscles inside the body, which enables more accurate transduction of the signals coming from the muscles.

    This bone-integrated system, known as e-OPRA, transmits AMI signals to a new robotic controller developed specifically for this study. The controller uses this information to calculate the torque necessary to move the prosthesis the way that the user wants it to move.

    “All parts work together to better get information into and out of the body and better interface mechanically with the device,” Shu says. “We’re directly loading the skeleton, which is the part of the body that’s supposed to be loaded, as opposed to using sockets, which is uncomfortable and can lead to frequent skin infections.”

    In this study, two subjects received the combined AMI and e-OPRA system, known as an osseointegrated mechanoneural prosthesis (OMP). These users were compared with eight who had the AMI surgery but not the e-OPRA implant, and seven users who had neither AMI nor e-OPRA. All subjects took a turn at using an experimental powered knee prosthesis developed by the lab.

    The researchers measured the participants’ ability to perform several types of tasks, including bending the knee to a specified angle, climbing stairs, and stepping over obstacles. In most of these tasks, users with the OMP system performed better than the subjects who had the AMI surgery but not the e-OPRA implant, and much better than users of traditional prostheses.

    “This paper represents the fulfillment of a vision that the scientific community has had for a long time — the implementation and demonstration of a fully physiologically integrated, volitionally controlled robotic leg,” says Michael Goldfarb, a professor of mechanical engineering and director of the Center for Intelligent Mechatronics at Vanderbilt University, who was not involved in the research. “This is really difficult work, and the authors deserve tremendous credit for their efforts in realizing such a challenging goal.”

    A sense of embodiment

    In addition to testing gait and other movements, the researchers also asked questions designed to evaluate participants’ sense of embodiment — that is, to what extent their prosthetic limb felt like a part of their own body.

    Questions included whether the patients felt as if they had two legs, if they felt as if the prosthesis was part of their body, and if they felt in control of the prosthesis. Each question was designed to evaluate the participants’ feelings of agency, ownership of device, and body representation.

    The researchers found that as the study went on, the two participants with the OMP showed much greater increases in their feelings of agency and ownership than the other subjects.

    “Another reason this paper is significant is that it looks into these embodiment questions and it shows large improvements in that sensation of embodiment,” Herr says. “No matter how sophisticated you make the AI systems of a robotic prosthesis, it’s still going to feel like a tool to the user, like an external device. But with this tissue-integrated approach, when you ask the human user what is their body, the more it’s integrated, the more they’re going to say the prosthesis is actually part of self.”

    The AMI procedure is now done routinely on patients with below-the-knee amputations at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and Herr expects it will soon become the standard for above-the-knee amputations as well. The combined OMP system will need larger clinical trials to receive FDA approval for commercial use, which Herr expects may take about five years.

    The research was funded by the Yang Tan Collective and DARPA.

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  • Record-Breaking Martian Meteorite Could Fetch $4 Million at Sotheby’s

    Record-Breaking Martian Meteorite Could Fetch $4 Million at Sotheby’s

    A 54-pound chunk of Mars—believed to be the largest Martian meteorite ever discovered on Earth—is hitting the auction block at Sotheby’s New York on July 16, with an estimate of $2 million to $4 million.

    Dubbed NWA 16788, the rock was discovered in November 2023 in Niger’s Agadez region and accounts for an astonishing 6.5 percent of all known Martian material on Earth. It’s also 70 percent larger than the next largest piece of Mars found on our planet. Sotheby’s is billing it as the most valuable meteorite ever offered at auction.

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    According to Cassandra Hatton, Sotheby’s vice chairman of science and natural history, “NWA 16788 is a discovery of extraordinary significance,” a “once-in-a-generation find” that connects us to “our celestial neighbor that has long captured the human imagination.”

    Blasted from Mars by an ancient asteroid impact and likely torpedoed to Earth, the specimen features visible areas of “glassy fusion crust,” proof of its searing descent through the atmosphere. According to Smithsonian Magazine, its mineral structure suggests part of it was transformed into maskelynite, a type of glass formed under extreme pressure and heat.

    Sotheby’s said that meteorites are rarer than diamonds, and that Martian meteorites are exceptionally scarce—only around 400 have ever been identified, most of them consisting of small fragments. Sotheby’s also notes that North America averages just 15 meteorite discoveries annually.

    The meteorite will be on view at Sotheby’s from July 8–15 before the live auction on July 16. 

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  • Ollie Pope needs to get head right, both technically and mentally – The Times

    Ollie Pope needs to get head right, both technically and mentally – The Times

    1. Ollie Pope needs to get head right, both technically and mentally  The Times
    2. For Crawley and Pope, the struggle gets real  ESPNcricinfo
    3. Ollie Pope averages 40.83 at Lord’s in Test cricket: Stats  NewsBytes
    4. India tour of England 2025 | Twitter reacts as Jadeja strikes with first ball post tea  SportsCafe.in

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  • Analyst hails Corps Commanders' Conference for discussing range of key issues in detail – RADIO PAKISTAN

    1. Analyst hails Corps Commanders’ Conference for discussing range of key issues in detail  RADIO PAKISTAN
    2. India doubling down on proxy war after clear defeat by Pakistan, says COAS Munir  Dawn
    3. CCC asserts action against ‘Indian-sponsored proxies imperative at all levels’  The Express Tribune
    4. ‘No Proof, No Credibility’: Indian Intelligence Sources Dismiss Pakistan’s ‘Doval Doctrine’ Claims  News18
    5. India adopts state-sponsored terrorism as a policy against Pakistan: DG ISPR  Ptv.com.pk

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  • Woad Watch: LEAP Points Leader Lottie Woad Opens With 68 at The Amundi Evian Championship – LPGA

    Woad Watch: LEAP Points Leader Lottie Woad Opens With 68 at The Amundi Evian Championship – LPGA

    1. Woad Watch: LEAP Points Leader Lottie Woad Opens With 68 at The Amundi Evian Championship  LPGA
    2. Nelly Korda had a luggage scare before this week’s Evian  SBNation.com
    3. After luggage scare, Nelly Korda set to chase first title of 2025 at the Evian in France  MSN
    4. Korda in search of first win of season at Evian Championship  supersport.com
    5. Korda ‘feels like a grandma’ among rising stars like Woad at Evian Championship  thederrick.com

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  • What Amazon’s new hardware to cool Nvidia chips means for our AI stocks

    What Amazon’s new hardware to cool Nvidia chips means for our AI stocks

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  • Peter Andre ‘terrified’ Princess will make ‘same mistakes’ as Katie Price

    Peter Andre ‘terrified’ Princess will make ‘same mistakes’ as Katie Price

    Katie Price ex Peter Andre worried about daughter’s choices

    Katie Price’s ex-husband Peter Andre is reportedly concerned about their daughter Princess’ life choices as she turns 18.

    As reported by Closer Magazine, an insider revealed that Peter is worried that Princess, who recently turned 18, will repeat the “same mistakes as her mum.”

    The source said, “Turning 18 is a major moment for Princess in both her career and personal life. There’s pressure from all sides, and Peter is deeply worried. He knows the choices she makes now will shape her future, and he’s terrified she’ll end up repeating the same mistakes as her mum.”

    Despite his worry, the insider noted that Peter is “doing everything he can” to guide Princess through “next chapter.”

    “He’s seen what fame can do, and he’s terrified of the thought that she could fall into the same cycles – fast fame, hasty decisions and a lifetime of consequences. For Peter, this isn’t just about parenting styles, it’s about protecting Princess from the chaos he’s worked so hard to shield her from,” the insider added.

    “There’s a growing sense of unease around how much time Princess will now spend with her mum. Katie’s world is unpredictable at best, from bankruptcy to cosmetic surgeries and whirlwind romances.”

    “Peter has always tried to raise Princess with stability, keeping her grounded and out of the madness. But now that she’s legally an adult, he can’t control what she does or who she spends time with,” the source stated.

    Peter reportedly believes that the “more time Princess spends with her mum, the more influence Katie could have.”

    He is also concerned about Princess getting more tattoos just like her mom Katie. “Peter’s joked he wouldn’t be surprised if she came home with full sleeves like Katie. Behind the jokes, though, there’s real concern.”

    Besides Princess, Peter Andre and Katie Price are also parents of a son, Junior.


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  • Verve Therapeutics, Inc. (VERV): A Bull Case Theory

    Verve Therapeutics, Inc. (VERV): A Bull Case Theory

    We came across a bullish thesis on Verve Therapeutics, Inc. on Stock Region Research’s Substack by Stock Region. In this article, we will summarize the bulls’ thesis on VERV. Verve Therapeutics, Inc.’s share was trading at $11.26 as of June 26th.

    A scientist in a laboratory working on a gene editing tool, to create treatments for rare genetic diseases.

    Verve Therapeutics’ stock surged an astounding 75% following Eli Lilly’s $1.3 billion acquisition announcement, signaling a pivotal moment for the biotech space. At the heart of this excitement is VERVE-102, Verve’s lead drug candidate targeting cardiovascular disease. The therapy, which aims to eliminate chronic disease management through gene editing, could mark a paradigm shift in how heart disease is treated.

    The FDA’s Fast Track designation for VERVE-102 further underscores the drug’s breakthrough potential and validates Verve’s scientific approach. Eli Lilly’s substantial bid is a clear vote of confidence, suggesting the pharma giant sees transformational value in Verve’s pipeline. The acquisition not only provides financial validation but also shines a light on the evolving landscape of biotech, where high-impact innovation meets large-scale pharmaceutical backing. From a technical perspective, bullish momentum remains strong above $11.27, with caution advised if the stock dips below $10.95.

    Beyond the numbers, this deal exemplifies how cutting-edge therapies are attracting serious capital and reshaping the future of medicine. The excitement surrounding Verve’s breakthrough technology and Eli Lilly’s aggressive investment underscores the growing belief in gene editing as a frontier in healthcare. For investors, this move by Lilly isn’t just about Verve—it reflects a broader confidence in biotech’s ability to redefine chronic disease care.

    With VERVE-102 leading the charge and now bolstered by big pharma support, Verve appears well-positioned at the intersection of innovation and real-world impact, making this a landmark moment for the company and the sector at large.

    Previously we covered a bullish thesis on CRISPR Therapeutics AG (CRSP) by Two Natural Cap in June 2025, which highlighted the company’s role in a groundbreaking base-editing therapy for a rare liver disorder. The company’s stock price has appreciated approximately by 12.4% since our coverage. The thesis still stands as CRSP advances gene-editing leadership. Stock Region shares a similar outlook but emphasizes Verve’s cardiovascular focus.

    VERV isn’t on our list of the 30 Most Popular Stocks Among Hedge Funds. While we acknowledge the risk and potential of VERV as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and have limited downside risk. If you are looking for an extremely cheap AI stock that is also a major beneficiary of Trump tariffs and onshoring, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock.

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  • Tesla announces November annual meeting under pressure from shareholders

    Tesla announces November annual meeting under pressure from shareholders

    Tesla has scheduled an annual shareholders meeting for November, one day after the electric vehicle company came under pressure from major shareholders to do so.

    Billionaire Elon Musk’s company said in a regulatory filing on Thursday that the meeting will be held on Nov. 6. A group of more than 20 Tesla shareholders said in a letter to the company a day earlier that it needed to provide public notice of the annual meeting.

    Texas law states businesses must hold annual meetings within 13 months of their last one, if shareholders request it. But the law also allows for “written consent instead of the annual meeting” to be executed within the 13-month timeframe. Tesla is incorporated in Texas.

    The annual meeting, given Tesla’s fortunes this year, has the potential to be a raucous event and it is unclear how investors will react to the delay, which is rare for any major U.S. corporation.

    Tesla shares have plunged 27% this year, largely due to blowback over Musk’s affiliation with President Donald Trump, as well as rising competition.

    Many shareholders have been miffed by Musk’s participation in the Trump administration this year, saying he needs to focus on his EV company which is facing extraordinary pressures.

    “An annual meeting provides shareholders with the opportunity to hear directly from the board about these concerns, and to vote for or against directors, the board’s approach to executive compensation, and other matters of material importance,” the group said in the letter.

    Tesla’s last shareholders meeting was on June 13 of last year, where investors voted to restore Musk’s record $44.9 billion pay package that was thrown out by a Delaware judge earlier that year.

    Tesla also said in its regulatory filing on Thursday that July 31 is the new deadline for the submission of proposals to be included in the proxy statement. In a January filing, Tesla said it would file its proxy statement for this year’s annual meeting by the end of April.

    However, the company filed an amended report on April 30, saying that it didn’t have a date for the meeting yet. Tesla also said in that filing that it was creating a special committee to look at Musk’s compensation as CEO.

    Also on Thursday, Musk said that the Grok chatbot will be heading to Tesla vehicles.

    “Grok is coming to Tesla vehicles very soon. Next week at the latest,” Musk said on social media platform X, in response to a post stating that Grok implementation on Teslas wasn’t announced on a Grok livestream Wednesday.

    Grok was developed by Musk’s artificial intelligence company xAI and pitched as an alternative to “woke AI” interactions from rival chatbots like Google’s Gemini, or OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

    Yet Grok has had a bumpy ride during its rollout.

    On Wednesday xAI announced that it was taking down “inappropriate posts” made by its Grok chatbot, which appeared to include antisemitic comments that praised Adolf Hitler.

    Shares of Tesla rose more than 3% in Thursday morning trading after tumbling this week as the feud between Trump and Musk heated up again.

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  • Making healthy snacks a habit when afternoon energy slumps strike at work

    Making healthy snacks a habit when afternoon energy slumps strike at work

    NEW YORK — When Claire Paré was a classroom teacher, working in a setting where every minute, down to the bathroom breaks, was scheduled, she brought granola bars, fruit and protein shakes to school so she’d be prepared when hunger hits.

    Then she transitioned to a job at education publisher McGraw Hill. Working remotely at home in New Hampshire, her children’s cheddar bunny crackers and Fruit Roll-Ups lured her to the pantry, confounding her commitment to healthy snacking.

    “I have the opportunity to be judicious, but I choose not to most of the time,” Paré said. “I really do enjoy being able to put the time into making something, but oftentimes convenience just has to win out.”

    Eating healthy snacks during the workday can be challenging. Many people find themselves facing down a mid-afternoon slump and accompanying sugar, caffeine or carbohydrate cravings after lunch. Busy adults racing from back-to-back meetings to family commitments often reach for what’s easy, whether it’s a candy bar from the office vending machine or potato chips from a kitchen cupboard.

    The problem with eating packaged sugary or salty snacks to get through the afternoon is they may spike blood sugar levels but don’t give a sustained second wind, according to Beth Czerwony, a registered dietitian at Cleveland Clinic.

    “It’s going to burn off really fast, so you’re going to get that boost of energy and then all of a sudden you’re going to get another crash,” Czerwony said. “Some people just chase that for a while, and they’re drinking coffee or their energy drinks and they’re eating their candy, and it just sets you up for these spikes and these drops.”

    Here are some ideas for maintaining healthy snacking habits at work.

    Foods that are high in protein, such as Greek yogurt, hard-boiled eggs, cottage cheese and beef or turkey jerky, can help people feel full for longer periods of time than snacks without protein, said Caroline Susie, a Dallas-based registered dietitian and spokesperson for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.

    Eating a snack consisting of refined carbohydrates such as a bagel causes blood sugar to rise rapidly and then drop, so teaming it up with another source of nutrition is preferable, Susie said.

    “When you pair that carbohydrate with lean protein or have a protein-forward choice, it contributes to satiety. So you’re just going to stay fuller longer,” she added.

    Czerwony recommends snacks that combine lean proteins with complex carbohydrates such as crackers, rice cakes or fruit. The combination works because carbohydrates raise blood sugar, giving you a boost, while the protein takes longer to digest, helping to sustain you for longer, she said.

    “The carbohydrates are like the kindling on the fire, and then the proteins are the logs,” Czerwony said. “You’re going to get the slow burn from the protein, but you need that sudden start, so you have the carbohydrates to get you going.”

    Many people find it hard to resist crunchy foods. For a satisfying munch, the American Heart Association recommends sliced apples with a tablespoon of low-sodium peanut butter, pears dipped in reduced-fat cottage cheese, vegetables such as carrots, celery, bell peppers, cucumber or zucchini paired with hummus or tzatziki sauce, popcorn, rice cakes or unsalted nuts and seeds. You can also roast chickpeas, which provide both protein and carbohydrates.

    For a packaged snack, read the nutrition label to check how much added sugar and sodium it contains, the association suggests.

    The Cleveland Clinic recommends whole fruit, edamame, seeds, a handful of nuts or a single-serving package of tuna that you can eat with a fork.

    Bringing your own snacks to work can help you control the quality and quantity of what you eat, Czerwony said. Try slicing vegetables, cheese or low-fat meats on weekends to last through the week, she said.

    “If you have all that stuff already made, then it’s easy in the morning to just grab it and go,” she said.

    Take along a small, soft-sided cooler to help keep snacks like yogurt, sliced veggies or hummus fresh. “Get cute little bento boxes, get little containers, make it fun if that’s something that you want to do, because we’ll eat things that are more attractive instead of just being in a Ziploc,” Czerwony said.

    Petra Durnin, a Los Angeles-based senior director at commercial real estate firm JLL, blends greens, nuts, berries, avocado, banana and chia or flax seeds into homemade smoothies, which she makes in large batches. At night, she moves one jar to the fridge to thaw for the next day. An afternoon smoothie keeps her full until dinnertime and less likely to reach for chips, chocolate and sugar, she said.

    “I feel like I have better brain clarity,” Durnin said. “I’m able to push through the afternoon and work more efficiently. I don’t feel bloated, bogged down. It just feels better.”’

    Adopting healthy snacking habits doesn’t mean you have to deprive yourself entirely of treats. If a coworker is celebrating a birthday, an occasional slice of cake won’t completely derail healthy habits.

    “Let’s not demonize food,” Susie said.

    Before dipping into a bag of chips, eat a meal that includes lean protein, complex carbohydrates and healthy fat, and then add something healthy to the snack while keeping an eye on portion size, Susie said.

    “There’s not going to be a perfect substitute for chips. You can eat carrots all you want, but you can’t trick your body with thinking that they’re chips,” Czerwony said. “If you want a chip, have the stinking chip and just be done with it.”

    However, a constant hankering for chips could be a sign of a dietary deficiency, and it’s worth figuring that out so “those types of things are more treats than something that’s in the routine mix of what you’re eating throughout the day,” Czerwony said.

    Gisela Marx, 53, rarely gets a chance to sit or eat while working as deputy front of house manager at the Auditorium Theater in Chicago. On event days, she works from 3 p.m. until 11 p.m. or later. She packs healthy snacks such as watermelon and nuts.

    She also keeps an emergency stash of Reese’s Pieces, which her boss has to replenish if he eats the last one.

    “Just having it there is a comfort. I can always have it if I want it,” Marx said.

    ___

    Share your stories and questions about workplace wellness at cbussewitz@ap.org. Follow AP’s Be Well coverage, focusing on wellness, fitness, diet and mental health at https://apnews.com/hub/be-well

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