Researchers from the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Max-Planck-Institute for Informatics, and Stanford University created the technology, which could one day be used for dubbing films. A video demonstration shows a 'source actor' (pictured top left) who pulls various faces and speaks, while the 'target actor' (bottom left) keeps a straight face and remains mute. It then shows the target actor's face on the screen, making the same faces as the gurning source, only retaining their own facial features (pictured right).
The technology giant has been granted a patent for an iRing that will be able to take photographs, text and tell the time.
She is the creation of Teruyuki and Yuki Ishikawa are a husband-and-wife team of freelance 3D computer graphics artists from Tokyo.
The gadget that scans for CALORIES: $249 Scio uses beams of light to analyse the amount of fat, carbs and proteins in a food
The device (pictured), designed by Consumer Physics, an Israeli company, works by uses beams of light to analyse the molecular 'signature' of whatever it is scanning. To accurately assess the number of calories, the user would have to identify the portion size of the piece of food that is being scanned. The device may also prove useful to emergency services personnel for identifying pills using the same method.
The sun's sprung a leak! Enormous coronal hole that is 50-EARTHS-wide spotted on star (but don't worry, it's harmless)
Captured by Nasa's Solar Dynamics Observatory, the region occurs where a magnetic field fails to loop back down to the sun's surface and instead sends out coronal material. The high-speed solar wind originating from this coronal hole created a geomagnetic storm near Earth that resulted in several nights of auroras. The material that constantly flows from the sun is called the solar wind, which typically 'blows' at around 250 miles (400 km) per second. When a coronal hole is present, however, the wind speed can double to nearly 500 miles (800 km) per second.
- Do YOU notice anything unusual about Saya, the Japanese girl taking the internet by storm?
- Where will the next catastrophic natural disaster take place? Scientists identify ‘climate tipping points’ that could predict abrupt changes
- A decapitated women, sacrificial dogs and a wooden 'sex toy': Danish Iron Age remains reveal macabre practices
- The sun's sprung a leak! Enormous coronal hole that is 50-EARTHS-wide spotted on star (but don't worry, it's harmless)
- Creepy software puts YOUR expression onto another person's face to make them smile or frown
- Scott Kelly becomes US astronaut to spend the most time in space: Commander breaks the world record by living on ISS for 383 days (and he still has another 139 to go)
- Can't afford an iPhone 6s? App gives your old handset the latest 3D Touch features for free (but only if you jailbreak it first)
- Are YOU smart enough to join Mensa? Take the quiz to see if your IQ measures up against 250 child geniuses
- The REAL science of zombies vs plants: Researchers uncover the process of turning flowers into 'living dead'
- Lab-grown burgers 'will be on the menu by 2020': Scientists set up company to make stem cell meat an affordable reality
- The dinosaur that whipped its tail like Indiana Jones: Scale model confirms sauropod created SONIC BOOMS
- The gadget that scans for CALORIES: $249 Scio uses beams of light to analyse the amount of fat, carbs and proteins in a food
- What makes superglue so sticky? Infographic reveals the complex chemistry of the finger-fusing adhesive
- Drones have met their match: Portable 'gun' uses radio pulses to halt aircraft mid-air
- Could a simple eye test diagnose autism? Pupils of children with the condition 'take markedly longer to narrow after penlight test'
- Is Alzheimer's caused by FUNGUS? Traces found in the brains of sufferers suggest the disease 'could caused by an infectious microbe'
- Now you can Skype with ANYONE using a browser: Feature lets you take calls without installing apps or creating accounts
- Do YOU notice anything unusual about Saya, the Japanese girl taking the internet by storm?
- Will YOUR city survive the next century? Interactive map reveals 414 'doomed' cities that will be obliterated by rising sea levels
- Have researchers discovered an alien MEGASTRUCTURE? 'Bizarre' star could be surrounded by a Dyson sphere built by extraterrestrials, researchers claim
- A decapitated women, sacrificial dogs and a wooden 'sex toy': Danish Iron Age remains reveal macabre practices
- 'This winter will not be normal': Forecasters say El Niño is set to outgrow 1997 event as they warn phenomenon is now too big to fail
- Now alien hunters think they've seen 'Buddha' on Mars: Latest ridiculous claim is being used to prove existence of ET
- Welcome to Fakebook: More than 75% of people admit to making their lives seem more exciting on social media
- Facebook bug reveals how popular you REALLY are: View counts are appearing below posts on the mobile site
- Where will the next catastrophic natural disaster take place? Scientists identify ‘climate tipping points’ that could predict abrupt changes
- Pluto is an active world of 'spectacular' colour: Nasa reveals first scientific results from New Horizons' historic flyby of dwarf planet
- Frozen world of Enceladus revealed: Cassini captures the fractured and pockmarked surface of Saturn's moon in unprecedented detail
- Could these bubbles be a climate bomb? Mysterious plumes may be releasing toxic methane near Washington, claims study
- Biology in ACTION: Impalas locking horns wins photography award, beating a 'scared' ant and mating toads on a lotus leaf
- The gadget that scans for CALORIES: $249 Scio uses beams of light to analyse the amount of fat, carbs and proteins in a food
- Drones have met their match: Portable 'gun' uses radio pulses to halt aircraft mid-air
- The $50 hypercam that could give your phone 'X-ray vision' to see inside objects - and could even tell you if fruit is ripe
- Could your views on God and immigration be changed by using MAGNETS? Brain stimulation can alter beliefs, study claims
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Biology in ACTION: Impalas locking horns wins photography award, beating a 'scared' ant and mating toads on a lotus leaf
A striking image of male impala locking curly horns on the plains of Etosha National Park in Namibia (pictured left) has taken first place in the Royal Society of Biology's Photographer of the Year competition. Barbara Stanley captured the power struggle between two males during rutting season. A striking image of a 'lonely' flower 18,208 feet (5,550 metres) above sea level at Pensi La Pass mountain pass in Ladakh, India (top left) was the winning entry in the under-18's category. Other highly commended entries included photographs of Sri Lankan stilt fishermen, mating toads and a 'scared' ant (bottom right).
Frozen world of Enceladus revealed: Cassini captures the fractured and pockmarked surface of Saturn's moon in unprecedented detail
The images were captured by Nasa's Cassini spacecraft during its 14 October flyby of Saturn's icy moon Enceladus. Cassini passed 1,142 miles (1,839km) above the surface, which Nasa had expected to be heavily cratered. The new high-resolution images instead show a landscape of stark contrasts including thin cracks (pictured) across the craters. Mission controllers in California said the spacecraft will continue transmitting images and other data over the weekend.
Woolly mammoths WERE wiped out by hunters: Tusks suggest that calves were forced to wean earlier because of human predators
Researchers from University of Michigan found chemical clues about weaning age - when a calf stops nursing - embedded in the tusks (pictured inset) of juvenile Siberian woolly mammoths (an adult is illustrated main). This evidence suggests they were forced to mature earlier over some 30,000 years, matching signs of hunting pressure, rather than climate change.
Pluto is an active world of 'spectacular' colour: Nasa reveals first scientific results from New Horizons' historic flyby of dwarf planet
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Pluto is a world of 'spectacular' colours, dramatic surface features and dynamic geology, the first published results from the historic fly-by of the dwarf planet have shown. The surface of Pluto is marked by plains, troughs and peaks that appear to have been carved out by geological processes that have been active for a very long period. The study has also found that its moons Nix (inset left) and Hydra (inset right), both have reflective surfaces, suggesting relatively clean water ice.
A decapitated women, sacrificial dogs and a wooden 'sex toy': Danish Iron Age remains reveal mysterious macabre practices
Archaeologists discovered the young woman's remains (pictured left) at Skødstrup near the city of Aarhus in Denmark, where they believe she was sacrificed around 2,000 years ago. Her bones were found in a heap, indicating she had been thrown into the bog along with two stakes, one with a sharp point. They found her skeleton near the remains of dogs (pictured bottom right) that were also sacrificed and thrown into bogs as an offering to the gods. The site once housed an Iron Age village (pictured top right).
'This winter will not be normal': Forecasters say El Niño is set to outgrow 1997 event as they warn phenomenon is now too big to fail
- Hurricanes 'unlike anything you've seen in history': Scientists warn grey swan megastorms could ravage areas ranging from Florida to Dubai
- Lightning is so powerful it changes the atomic structure of rocks: Bolts pack a punch similar to a NUCLEAR BOMB or meteor impact
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Forecasters from the NOAA and Nasa say the south of North America, particularly southern California, is likely to see cooler and wetter than normal winter, while the northern tier could be warmer and drier. 'Whether El Niño gets slightly stronger or a little weaker is not statistically significant now - This baby is too big to fail,' said Bill Patzert, a climatologist at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Dawn of the GHOST BOATS: Remote-controlled drones that can reach a top speed of 44mph could help the Royal Navy carry out covert operations
The technology (illustrated main), will be used by the Royal Navy and is designed to be fitted to Rigid Inflatable Boats (RIBs). It will have a complex array of sensors, including a navigation radar. The boat (pictured in action top and bottom right), which is capable of operating on its own for up to 12 hours on either a pre-planned route or via remote control, can reach impressive speeds of up to 44mph (38 knots).
Tesla's Model S autopilot can steer, park and change lanes by ITSELF - and Elon Musk said it will be 'better than a person'
Over the next week, 60,000 people who own Tesla's latest Model S car (pictured inset right) will be given the option to download the software wirelessly in North America, Europe and Asia. Tesla boss Mr Musk said the system is unique because it will constantly collect data from drivers and improve itself. Taking control of the wheel disables autopilot but drivers need to rest their hands near it at all times because if they don't (pictured main) the autopilot system will chime to remind them. The dashboard view of the update, called Tesla Version 7.0 with Autopilot, is pictured inset left.
Panoramas of the MOON: Photographer stitches Apollo mission snaps together to reveal the vast emptiness of the lunar surface
Maciej Winiarczyk, who lives in Wick, Caithness, used scenes from the US space agency's archive and Photoshop to edit them and join them together. Stitched images made from Apollo 17 photographs are shown top and bottom left, while the one on the bottom right is a patchwork of Apollo 11 pictures. Two weeks ago 10,000 photographs taken by the astronauts on the lunar missions in the 1960s and 70s were uploaded to Flickr by Apollo archivist Kipp Teague.
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British photographers Fiona Rogers and Anup Shah captured apes in Indonesia and Borneo - and highlighted how human our evolutionary cousins are.