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Army Researchers Examine Soldiers Brain and Muscle Responses to Smart ExoBoot

Army Researchers Examine Soldiers’ Brain and Muscle Responses to Smart ‘ExoBoot’  Army Researchers Examine Soldiers’ Brain and Muscle Responses to Smart ‘ExoBoot’  Army researchers are answering tough questions as part of a new study that focuses on how technology adapts to human behavior. Neil Adams/Army Research Lab Get the latest federal technology news delivered to your inbox. email April 29, 2021 04:13 PM ET One of the end goals is to cut down on training time soldiers need to get acclimated with assistive, wearable technologies.  Army researchers are exploring how humans interact with an intelligent system specifically, an exoskeleton boot that adapts to and assists its wearer in real-time to ultimately minimize soldiers’ training time with future technology-enabled gear.

Texas Will Soon be Home America s Biggest Wool Testing Lab

Texas Will Soon be Home to America’s Biggest Wool Testing Lab By Lupe Zapata Texas SHARE SAN AGNELO, Texas — Big things are happening in Texas agriculture. Sheep ranchers will soon be saving a lot of money on wool production.  A wool testing facility in the works coming to San Angelo will service the entire nation’s commercial wool testing needs, according to former President of The American Sheep Industry Association (ASI) Benny Cox.   “This part of Texas is known as the sheep ranching capital of the county,” said Cox.  ASI partnered with the Texas A&M University AgriLife Extension Service’s Bill Sims Wool & Mohair Research Laboratory in San Angelo to build the testing lab that Cox says will speed the manufacturing process. 

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CROW Clinic: Royal terns feeling the impact of red tide on Sanibel

CROW Clinic: Birds, turtles feeling the impact of red tide in SWFL this year Published: February 22, 2021 6:05 PM EST Updated: February 22, 2021 9:37 PM EST While it looks like there are fewer spots of red tide dotting our coast, the effects of it can last much longer by taking a toll on wildlife. The CROW Clinic on Sanibel Island has admitted nearly 100 royal terns (Thalasseus maximus) as patients so far this year. Of those birds, 66 have signs of red tide poisoning, showing how algal blooms can disrupt the food web. So, it’s a welcome sight when the CROW Clinic releases an animal back into the wild.

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