Whuut? Why isn't this report not getting more attention?When a beam of light passes through a cloud of atoms, photons (particles of light) sometimes appear to spend a negative amount of time there, with light seeming to exit the cloud before it even enters.
"Fasting, when done safely, is an effective weight loss intervention. Popular diets that incorporate fasting, such as intermittent fasting, claim to have health benefits beyond weight loss. Our results provide evidence for the health benefits of fasting beyond weight loss, but these were only visible after three days of total caloric restriction -- later than we previously thought."
According to the DOJ, black and Hispanic applicants admitted to Yale had substantially lower median MCAT scores and GPAs than white and Asian applicants across multiple admissions cycles, with the department concluding that equally qualified black applicants had dramatically higher odds of receiving interview invitations than comparable Asian applicants.
Agree 100%. 💯If the goal is a medical profession both excellent and broadly representative, then the solution cannot consist merely of manipulating admissions outcomes. The work must begin where the disparities first emerge—not where they become politically embarrassing.
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Meanwhile, Holmes has come up with a brand-new approach to try to erase ‘flashbacks’, the intrusive snapshots of memories that pop into our heads without warning.
“We put people in a brain scanner and what we found is that your brain lights up when you play the computer game Tetris in a similar place as when people have flashbacks,” she says.She has since developed a surprisingly simple technique to reduce flashbacks by essentially hijacking that visual part of the brain.
After you recall the memory of the flashback, you play Tetris for 20 minutes, but do so by carefully focusing on integrating the different shapes together, rather than simply letting them stack up.
BTW, there already is a drug that targets the FGFR receptor, erdafitinib, used for urothelial cancer, and I suspect it was designed in a similar way.
But the data shows that across broader society, the number of people finding partners and having children is declining despite intentions. This is notably pronounced among the least well off, and accompanies mounting loneliness and dating frustrations.So when you see what the ideal man or woman is on the Internet, the real life person standing in front of you just doesn't pass muster. You want the unattainable. Anything less just doesn't cut it anymore.
And even when couples can afford to move into their own place, they are increasingly likely to separate. In several countries, people who move in together are now more likely to split up than to have a child, a sharp reversal of the historical norm.
Dissatisfied with purely economic explanations, researchers are beginning to point the finger at a new culprit — the digital devices and platforms that play an outsized role in young people’s lives across the world.
The number of births fell first and fastest in the areas that received high-speed mobile connectivity earliest. The authors argue that smartphones have transformed how young people spend time with one another, sharply reducing in-person socialising and leading to the collapse in their fertility.
In country after country the birth rate plunged after the introduction of smartphones, no matter what the previous trend was. The younger the age group, the more pronounced the downturn — a mirror image of smartphone usage patterns.
“If you spend lots of time socialising with your peers in the real world, your standards [for a potential partner] are anchored in the real world. If you spend your time on Instagram, your standards are anchored to an artificial sense of what is normal.”
Ugh. This is how misinformation starts. Science Alert (which should have researched this better before publication) has this article titled: A Common Vitamin Has a Complicated Link to Cancer. At first I thought it was going to be about niacin, a vitamin which has some link to carcinogenesis. But no, it's about an old observation regarding vitamin B12 levels. This is an issue that comes up repeatedly, because when someone who has cancer has a vitamin B12 level checked, it can be very high, which has led to suspicion that high vitamin B12 levels cause cancer. The explanation is that vitamin B12 is bound not only by transcobalamin, but also by haptocorrin, and it is the latter that is elevated with cancer and other conditions. When we measure vitamin B12 levels, we are measuring the vitamin bound to holotranscobalamin (which is biologically active) and the vitamin bound to haptocorrin (which is biologically inactive). Elevations of haptocorrin caused by cancer and certain liver diseases makes the vitamin B12 level increase, but that is only an epiphenomenon. There is no available assay for holotranscobalamin in the U.S. – only in the U.K. and it's not approved for use here. That would clear up this whole mess.
Bennings obtained her Piled Higher and Deeper in Higher Education Administration from Texas Tech in 2015. Since then she has held numerous jobs, none last much over 3 years. Texas Tech 3-years, Clovis Community College 1-year, Kellogg Community College 2-years 7 months and PCC for 3 years, 10 months. In the hiring world we call that a troubling pattern. Who is doing the backgrounds and reference checking for these hires?And why is she getting the $25k retention bonus?Isn't that money that's paid to keep someone from leaving? It's not meant to be part of a severance package.
At her previous position as president of Kellogg Community College, she fired the DEI officer and gave the position to herself. She knows how to work the system.
The proposed layoffs accompany a host of other measures that Cudd says the university is using to bridge the deficit. These include savings from vacancies and retirements (estimated at roughly 48 employees and $7.2 million in savings) and eliminating cost-of-living increases for unclassified unrepresented staff and university administrators. Notably, the university is also raising tuition—Cudd said the university’s board had approved a roughly 5% increase at its last meeting.
How do these people sleep?EviCore markets itself to insurance companies by promising a 3-to-1 return on investment — that is, for every $1 spent on EviCore, the insurer would pay out $3 less on medical care and other costs. EviCore salespeople have boasted of a 15% increase in denials, according to the investigation, which is based on internal documents, corporate data and dozens of interviews with former employees, doctors, industry experts, health care regulators and insurance executives. Almost everybody interviewed spoke on condition of anonymity because they continue to work in the industry.
Although most of the balloon bombs are thought to have gone down in the Pacific Ocean, a few remain in remote areas of the Pacific Northwest. Two forestry workers discovered one near Lumby, British Columbia, in 2014. A Canadian navy bomb disposal unit arrived and blew it to bits. Use caution when hiking.