Zhao
No mentions found
This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.
Related Articles from SNS
What Beijing’s shrinking youth population reveals about its changing appeal
What Beijing’s shrinking youth population reveals about its changing appeal Beijing’s resident adult population aged 20 to 29 has nearly halved over the past decade. CNA explores how young Chinese are recalculating the costs and benefits of life in the capital, even as it remains a magnet for talent. BEIJING: Zhao Haozhe, 20, has never lived anywhere but Beijing.
Towards Guaranteed Optimal PID Tuning for Uncertain Nonlinear Systems
arXiv:2606.04787v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Despite the widespread use of PID controllers in engineering practice, designing optimal PID parameters has long been regarded as a challenging problem in both theory and practice, particularly when faced with uncertain nonlinear dynamical systems. Based on the authors' PID control theory established recently for MIMO nonlinear uncertain systems (Zhao and Guo, 2022), which provides a concrete PID parameter set for global stability of PID...
China launches investigation of county chief months after he inspected fatal coal mine
A county-level Communist Party chief in China’s central Shanxi province was put under disciplinary review, 11 days after a deadly gas explosion at a local mine killed 82 people and left two missing. Zhao Yongjin, party secretary of Qinyuan county in Changzhi, Shanxi, was “suspected of serious violations of discipline and law”, the Shanxi provincial discipline inspection and supervisory commission, an anti-corruption watchdog, announced on Tuesday night. The blast took place at the Liushenyu...
Doctors thought this kidney drug helped some patients. It may help millions more.
Doctors thought this kidney drug helped some patients. It may help millions more. - Date: - June 8, 2026
Memory decline after menopause linked to loss of estrogen production in brain
A largely overlooked space between cells in women’s brains may hold the key to understanding memory loss tied to estrogen decline after menopause, reports a new preclinical Northwestern Medicine study. Nearly two-thirds of Americans with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) are women, but the reasons why women are more vulnerable are still not fully understood. Scientists have long theorized that the loss of estrogen after menopause may reduce the brain’s natural protection against memory loss and...
The best new popular science books of June 2026
This is a month to look out for some powerful new books, with authors taking on challenges of all sorts and imagining whole new worlds. There are fresh ways to think about a cancer diagnosis, a book tackling the real inner world of hormones, in which we are all hormonal all the time, plus a major re-envisioning of the natural world where we abandon the shallows of competition for the depth and intricacies of connection and togetherness. Welcome to the symbiocene.
Cancer’s favorite escape trick may actually make it easier to kill
Cancer’s favorite escape trick may actually make it easier to kill - Date: - June 4, 2026 - Source: - Baylor College of Medicine - Summary: - Scientists have uncovered a surprising new way the immune system fights cancer, overturning a core belief that has guided immunology for decades. The research found that when cancer cells shut down a key immune-recognition molecule called MHC I—a common trick used to hide from “killer” T cells—they can actually become more vulnerable to attack by a...
Human-Like Neural Nets by Catapulting
Human-like Neural Nets by Catapulting Speculative proposal to create artificial neural nets with human-like performance by high-learning-rate/regularization training of overparameterized NNs to trigger catapulting/grokking. Over-parameterization as a route to true generalization would resolve many outstanding mysteries of artificial versus natural intelligence. There are many mysteries about deep learning and human intelligence, but we could describe the biggest anomaly this way: why are...
Folding Beijing
At ten of five in the morning, Lao Dao crossed the busy pedestrian lane on his way to find Peng Li. After the end of his shift at the waste processing station, Lao Dao had gone home, first to shower and then to change. He was wearing a white shirt and a pair of brown pants—the only decent clothes he owned.
A single protein may be holding back CAR T cancer therapy
A single protein may be holding back CAR T cancer therapy - Date: - June 2, 2026 - Source: - University Hospital Tübingen - Summary: - A newly identified protein may be one of the biggest obstacles holding CAR T-cell therapy back. Researchers found that NFIL3 causes these engineered immune cells to become exhausted and lose their cancer-fighting power over time. When NFIL3 was disabled, the cells remained stronger for longer and controlled tumors more effectively in animal models.