frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Open Source @Github

fp.

Open in hackernews

Ultrasound Imaging of the Brain

https://alephneuro.com/blog/ultrasound-brain
53•rossant•3h ago

Comments

echelon•1h ago
This is ridiculously cool, but I have a ton of questions.

> The bubbles themselves are pockets of sulfur hexafluoride encapsulated in lipid shells. They're an FDA-approved contrast agent,

Combined with ultrasound, could these be causing damage of any kind to the vasculature?

> A few years ago, a paper came out that blew our minds. The idea was that you can decode what someone is looking at just from their brain activity.

How realistically close can this get to reading thoughts, visuals, etc.?

Do we have a path to imaging people's visual cortex? Their inner lives, dialogues, memories? (Scary thought - this could be used as an interrogation tool without consent. "Did you kill Bob?" could be a simple brain scan.)

Can it be done in real time in a feedback loop and perhaps be used as an advanced reinforcement learning system?

BurningFrog•12m ago
This kind of mind reading could easily become the end of human privacy.

That's bad enough in democracies, but the consequences in more common forms of government seem really dystopian.

pixelpoet•1h ago
Sulfur hexafluoride escaping is exceptionally damaging as a greenhouse gas, is there nothing else they can use?

Edit: wow, serves me right for asking / not understanding that contrast means SF6...

amluto•1h ago
Their goal is contrast-free imaging — read the bottom of the article.
w4yai•1h ago
It feels like ultrasound is solving everything for the last week.
qgin•33m ago
There were a lot of people who declared very loudly last week during the Midjourney discourse that this was an impossible use of ultrasound.
Aurornis•20m ago
The Midjourney scanners don’t do the same thing that this is using. See how blurry the first image on the page is? That’s what you get from ultrasound through bone like the skull.

They used a trick to inject sparse bubbles into the patient and let them flow through the brain, then looked for the perturbations caused by those sparse bubbles.

The Midjourney scanners aren’t injecting this bubble contrast agent into everyone’s veins.

tiahura•1h ago
How about just getting it more established in orthopedic practices so patients aren't required to 1. See ortho for MRI referral 2. schedule mri at imaging facility 3. PAY $750 - $3000 for an MRI 4. Wait to get back into ortho.

I really don't understand why a fetus' heart can be examined for defects, but you can't use it in the office to tell me if my labrum is torn?

rich_sasha•56m ago
I thought the whole "we can guess what you're thinking from an MRI" thing was BS, along the lines: take a small set of photos, image people's brains as they are looking at these pictures, to map to some low-dimensional vector of "brain activity". Then show them some of these (in sample!) pictures, measure the vector of activity and predict back what they were looking at.

Happy to be corrected. But if that's right then this... does the BS thing in a potentially less intrusive way?

amluto•50m ago
re: imagining red blood cells

The super-resolution trick as they’ve done it is highly reliant on the sparseness of the bubbles. If you imagine a point or a very sparse set of points at low resolution, you can fit for the locations of those points even though you don’t see them clearly. This is a common technique in radio astronomy and (I assume although I don’t have personal knowledge) astrometry, and compressed sensing was an extremely hot field a while back.

But RBCs are weird squishy things, and they fill the bloodstream quite densely, and ChatGPT estimates that they’re spaced about 20µm apart and that, when confined to a capillary, they’re about 7µm long. (And that sounds at least plausibly correct to me.)

So, even ignoring the much worse scattering properties of RBCs, they not nearly as sparse. You mostly lose a whole dimension of sparseness and up trying to resolve the entire capillary. Which seems possible but much harder. Unfortunately, brain capillaries are about 40µm apart, so the result might be a mess.

The article did not say what wavelength they’re using or what their native (wavelength/2) resolution is.

sheepscreek•30m ago
I’m a complete layman to this field, but what the article did say was they’re hopeful that AI/ML can help develop a model that can pull out information such as the scattering caused by RBCs (which is present in the large volume of data gathered by the probe but is too weak to be used for manual techniques) and turn that into meaningful visuals. That’s gonna require a ton of data and that is exactly what they are trying to gather now with what they have built so far.
nico•30m ago
Is this the same tech the Midjourney scanner device is using?
Aurornis•23m ago
> The bubbles themselves are pockets of sulfur hexafluoride encapsulated in lipid shells.

The high resolution images were generated by injecting sparse bubbles of this contrast agent. How sparse are they? Is the image we see a stacked set of many bubbles over time composited together?

Their aspirations at the end of doing this without the bubbles are great, but there’s a big “now draw the rest of the owl” energy around that leap. The first technique relies entirely on the bubbles, but they provide no explanation for how they think this could be achievable without the bubbles other than vaguely saying that technology is advancing.

frangonf•11m ago
Meta is also going at it [0], which inevitably makes me ponder some orwellian questions for the near future:

If I bring my pet mouse to the cinema and my friend scans the movie back using his apple ifmri does the DRM still holds or will the mouses be DRM locked? Will my iris suffice for booting my computer or would I need to press accept all brainwave cookies? Can I email my local Flock representative to install a new Brain Pole in my neighborhood? I saw a bunch of dark thoughted young males around and my amazon think camera says the probability of missing packages increased.

[0]https://ai.meta.com/blog/tribe-v2-brain-predictive-foundatio...

Why have papers by one of history's most famous physicists been retracted?

https://www.science.org/content/article/why-have-papers-one-history-s-most-famous-physicists-been...
131•adharmad•1h ago•44 comments

Incident CVE-2026-LGTM

https://nesbitt.io/2026/06/26/incident-report-cve-2026-lgtm.html
197•mooreds•2h ago•34 comments

Jolla Phone, Over 13 500 units sold

https://commerce.jolla.com/products/jolla-phone-october-2026
48•mrbn100ful•47m ago•26 comments

Ultrasound Imaging of the Brain

https://alephneuro.com/blog/ultrasound-brain
55•rossant•3h ago•15 comments

Om Malik has died

https://om.co/2026/06/24/1966-2026/
1131•minimaxir•18h ago•131 comments

An entire Herculaneum scroll has been read for the first time

https://scrollprize.org/firstscroll
1489•verditelabs•23h ago•320 comments

New satellites from years to weeks, days, or hours

https://arstechnica.com/space/2026/06/a-us-military-exercise-in-space-got-underway-with-barely-an...
12•jonbaer•2d ago•1 comments

Bipartite Matching Is in NC

https://scottaaronson.blog/?p=9851
69•amichail•3d ago•4 comments

Libre Barcode Project

https://graphicore.github.io/librebarcode/
233•luu•12h ago•38 comments

What happened after 2k people tried to hack my AI assistant

https://www.fernandoi.cl/posts/hackmyclaw/
279•cuchoi•13h ago•119 comments

Framework's 10G Ethernet module exposes USB-C's complexity

https://www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2026/framework-10g-ethernet-module-usb-c-complexity/
260•Alupis•14h ago•139 comments

Show HN: WebBase-III – dBASE III rebuilt in the browser with its own interpreter

https://github.com/DDecoene/WebBaseIII
39•ddecoene•2d ago•11 comments

22-year-old Mozart's handwritten notebook unearthed in 'major discovery'

https://www.classicfm.com/composers/mozart/handwritten-notebook-discovered-major-paris/
158•thunderbong•5d ago•42 comments

FEXPRs vs. vtable: how LispE interpreter works

https://github.com/naver/lispe/wiki/2.7-FEXPR-vs.-vtable
21•birdculture•2d ago•4 comments

The 'papers, please' era of the internet will decimate your privacy

https://expression.fire.org/p/the-papers-please-era-of-the-internet
927•bilsbie•17h ago•461 comments

A game where you're an OS and have to manage processes, memory and I/O events

https://github.com/plbrault/youre-the-os
301•exploraz•3d ago•62 comments

We all depend on open source. We will defend it together

https://akrites.org/letter/
371•dhruv3006•9h ago•179 comments

The Garbage Collection Handbook: The Art of Automatic Memory Management (2nd Ed) (2023)

https://gchandbook.org/
197•teleforce•16h ago•42 comments

Oxide computer 3D rack guided tour

https://explorer.oxide.computer/
432•darthcloud•4d ago•173 comments

IBM debuts sub-1 nanometer chip technology

https://newsroom.ibm.com/2026-06-25-ibm-debuts-worlds-first-sub-1-nanometer-chip-technology
356•porridgeraisin•23h ago•191 comments

Hey Nico, you didn't vibe code your data room but stole it from Papermark

https://twitter.com/mfts0/status/2070080422482977095
503•mmunj•1d ago•209 comments

Show HN: Chess-Inspired Roguelike

https://princechazz.com
381•cowboy_henk•5d ago•122 comments

Show HN: OpenKnowledge – open source AI-first alternative to Obsidian/Notion

https://github.com/inkeep/open-knowledge
325•engomez•23h ago•155 comments

The AI industry is pouring millions into US elections

https://www.bloodinthemachine.com/p/the-ai-industry-is-pouring-hundreds
15•speckx•30m ago•1 comments

Un-0: Generating Images with Coupled Oscillators

https://unconv.ai/blog/introducing-un-0-generating-images-with-coupled-oscillators/
175•babelfish•18h ago•42 comments

Microbubbles in Medicine

https://worksinprogress.co/issue/microbubbles/
21•Jimmc414•4d ago•3 comments

The Doorman's Fallacy in action

https://rozumem.xyz/posts/17
178•rozumem•19h ago•236 comments

An oral history of Bank Python (2021)

https://calpaterson.com/bank-python.html
152•tosh•19h ago•64 comments

Apple raises prices of MacBooks, iPads

https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/apple-raises-prices-macbooks-ipads-memory-costs-skyroc...
786•virgildotcodes•1d ago•1158 comments

Zig's new bitCast semantics and LLVM back end improvements

https://ziglang.org/devlog/2026/#2026-06-25
263•kouosi•1d ago•134 comments