Minnesota engineers developed fluid-filled 3D-printed tissues that mimic the feel of surgery, earning praise from surgeons.
People are increasingly turning to software to design complex material structures like airplane wings and medical implants. But as design models become more capable, our fabrication techniques haven't ...
Budding surgeons may soon train on stretchy, lifelike 3D-printed skin that oozes out blood and pus when cut.
University of Minnesota researchers 3D print simulated human tissue - which mimics real tissues - for medical training.
Google's Gemini AI photo editing app has crossed five billion images in under a month. The main driver behind this massive surge is a viral tool known online as 'Nano Banana'. Company Vice President ...
Explore incredible spooky body art and stunning 3D makeup illusions featuring Pennywise and twisted ribbon designs. Perfect for Halloween or anyone who loves creative, eerie makeup transformations! #B ...
Researchers at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities have successfully 3D printed lifelike human tissue structures that can ...
A book of mechanical actions is a wondrous thing — mechanically inclined children have lost collective decades pouring over ...
Researchers at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities have successfully 3D printed lifelike human tissue structures that can ...
Structural and computational approaches uncover the molecular basis for dimerization, open-closed conformational transitions, and the dynamic behavior of the human angiotensin-I converting enzyme ...
Instagram users have a new obsession, which has become a trend, the trend of generating hyper-realistic 3D figures.
Google's Gemini 2.5 Flash Image tool, playfully nicknamed 'Nano Banana,' has sparked a viral trend of 3D digital figurines on social media. Users are transforming photos into lifelike 3D models, ...