http://news.mit.edu/...s-research-1209
This is a new one. I have seen a few of these machines so far, they try many many many tests with precision and different parameters, and will analyze/sort the data and refine their experiments. This would be a great way to give the machine a narrow goal like freezing and then thawing cells and then seeing if the thawed cells begin to look/behave like the normal cells, because it would find which settings result in closer results to what we want. It would randomly explore parameters, and exploit parameters that work.
Is anyone doing this? This sounds like a great way to do millions of experiments accurately with a broad adaptive methodology that we could never keep track of or at least find as quickly.
It could test parameters like size of the specimen, age, antifreeze chemicals (that's a BIG thing they test manually at least), humidity, water retention, heat, time to reach a temperature, magnetism, I could go on but the parameters are endless.
Edited by TheGene, 10 December 2019 - 05:43 PM.