• We’re not al alike in sensory awareness | Letter

    We’re not al alike in sensory awareness | Letter
    Some neurodivergent people do not experience smells in the same way as the neurotypical, writes an anonymous step-parentThe response to the parent concerned that her daughter has “zero sense of personal hygiene” did not include the possibility that the daughter may not possess the same sensory experiences as the mother (My daughter rarely bathes and her room is smelly, but says she doesn’t care, 14 June). The situation chimed with my own, in relation to my stepson’s lack
  • Do you dream of becoming one with your partner? The deep-sea anglerfish shows how badly that can end

    Do you dream of becoming one with your partner? The deep-sea anglerfish shows how badly that can end
    In some fish species, couples lose all independence when they mate, even sharing one pair of eyes. Is that really something to aspire to?I have just discovered how the deep-sea anglerfish mates. My apologies if this is old ichthyological news to you, but it is new news to me, and it is very definitely going to be the hook for this week’s column.The female deep-sea anglerfish is very large compared with the male deep-sea anglerfish. In some species, he sniffs her out (using his giant nostri
  • Biden Administration Finalizes Rule to Strengthen Mental Health Parity Law

    Source: U.S. News and World ReportThe Biden Administration on Monday said it had finalized regulation to help ensure the 175 million Americans with private health insurance have access to affordable mental health services. Even though mental health care services are already supposed to be on par with other medical services, in practice that is often not the case. Less than half of U.S. adults with mental illness were able to access care in 2020, according to studies cited by the...
  • German Police Methods Foster Racial Profiling and Bias, Report Concludes

    Source: U.S. News and World ReportGerman police practices foster systemic discrimination, with officers routinely engaging in racial profiling and relying on ethnic stereotypes, according to a study published Monday by Mediendienst Integration. The findings suggest that officers often rely on racial markers rather than behavior when conducting patrols, and people seen as "Black Africans" or "Albanians" are often associated with drug crimes, leading to heightened police attention.
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  • ‘A diagnosis can sweep away guilt’: the delicate art of treating ADHD – podcast

    For children with ADHD, getting the help they need depends on being correctly diagnosed. As a doctor, I have seen how tricky and frustrating a process that can be. By Jack Goulder Continue reading...
  • ‘For me, the wig was the key’: how I defied family expectations to become a criminal barrister

    ‘For me, the wig was the key’: how I defied family expectations to become a criminal barrister
    Coming from a family of builders and roofers, a career in the law seemed unlikely. But then my elder brother ran into some difficulties…Perhaps the most important lesson I have learned in my life – certainly of those that apply to being a parent – is the need to give free rein to a child’s ambitions. My son has just turned six and, as with most kids, what he wants to be when he grows up changes with the wind: marine biologist; palaeontologist; treasure hunter; film direc
  • People Facing Life-or-Death Choice Trust AI Too Much, Simulation Shows

    Source: Science Daily - Top SocietyIn simulated life-or-death decisions, about two-thirds of people in a study published in Scientific Reports allowed a robot to change their minds when it disagreed with them—an alarming display of trust in artificial intelligence, researchers said. Human subjects allowed robots to sway their judgment despite being told the AI machines had limited capabilities and were giving advice that could be wrong. In reality, the advice was random.
  • How to Eat in a More Sustainable Way: Top Environmentally-Friendly Foods

    Source: U.S. News and World ReportDevastating droughts, wildfires, hurricanes, and other extreme weather have escalated concerns about climate change. Can what we eat make a difference? You bet. Increasingly, food-related solutions to climate change are on the table. About one-third of all human-caused greenhouse gas emissions is linked to food, and there are plenty of things we can do at the dinner table that could help us get to net zero growth in greenhouse gases.
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  • Disabled People Hit With Long COVID at High Rates, Study Finds

    Source: Science Daily - Top SocietyThe COVID-19 pandemic has been especially hard on individuals with disabilities. New research published in the American Journal of Public Health shows that this population has also been hit with long COVID at more than twice the rate of the general population. Of people who tested positive for COVID, 60% with pre-existing chronic illnesses or diseases went on to develop long COVID, as did 45% of those with mental illness or psychiatric...
  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Changes Brain Circuits to Relieve Depression

    Source: Science Daily - Top HealthCognitive behavioral therapy, one of the most common treatments for depression, can teach skills for coping with everyday troubles, reinforce healthy behaviors, and counter negative thoughts. But can altering thoughts and behaviors lead to lasting changes in the brain? New research, led by Stanford Medicine and published in the journal Science Translational Medicine, has found that it can.
  • Brain Scans Reveal That Mindfulness Meditation for Pain Is Not a Placebo

    Source: Science Daily - Top HealthA new study has found that mindfulness meditation employs different brain mechanisms to reduce pain than does a placebo response. According to the results, mindfulness meditation reduces pain intensity and pain unpleasantness ratings as well as brain activity associated with pain and negative emotions. In contrast, neither a placebo cream nor a fake mindfulness procedure (consisting only of deep breathing) reduced neural pain signals.
  • We each have a Nazi in us. We need to understand the psychological roots of authoritarianism | Gabor Maté

    We each have a Nazi in us. We need to understand the psychological roots of authoritarianism | Gabor Maté
    Neuroimaging studies have shown that the amygdala, the tiny almond-shaped brain structure that mediates fear, is larger in people with more rightwing views“Any attempt to understand the attraction which fascism exercises upon great nations compels us to recognize the role of psychological factors,” the German-Jewish social psychologist Erich Fromm asserted in 1941. Such factors are not specifically German or, say Italian, nor were they the manifestations of a unique historical era, n
  • Dr. Alfred J. Liotta Recognized as a Lifetime Featured Member by Strathmore’s Who’s Who Worldwide

    Dr. Alfred J. Liotta Recognized as a Lifetime Featured Member by Strathmore’s Who’s Who Worldwide
    Dr. Alfred J. Liotta of Yonkers, New York, has been recognized as a Lifetime Featured Member by Strathmore’s Who’s Who Worldwide Edition for his outstanding contributions and achievements in the field of education.About Dr. Alfred J. Liotta With over 40+ years of experience, Dr. Alfred J. Liotta is an instructor at Mercy University in Dobbs Ferry, New York, where he teaches medical ethics, sociology, death [PR.com]
  • I am falling for an amazing woman who is a flat-earther. Can I reconcile my diminishing respect? | Leading questions

    I am falling for an amazing woman who is a flat-earther. Can I reconcile my diminishing respect? | Leading questions
    Disagreements about our beliefs are one thing, writes advice columnist Eleanor Gordon-Smith, but our beliefs are also bound up with what we valueRead more Leading questionsI am a divorced man, raising two sons alone and getting back into the dating world at 43 years old. I am a few months into dating this absolutely amazing woman and I’ve enjoyed it very much. She seems to be the total package in many, many ways! She is kind, thoughtful, empathetic, soft, genuine, intuitive, honest and man
  • I am falling for an amazing woman who is a flat-earther. Can I reconcile my diminishing respect?

    Disagreements about our beliefs are one thing, writes advice columnist Eleanor Gordon-Smith, but our beliefs are also bound up with what we valueRead more Leading questionsI am a divorced man, raising two sons alone and getting back into the dating world at 43 years old. I am a few months into dating this absolutely amazing woman and I’ve enjoyed it very much. She seems to be the total package in many, many ways! She is kind, thoughtful, empathetic, soft, genuine, intuitive, honest and man
  • Artificial Intelligence Likely to Play an Increasing Role in Science Publications

    Source: Science Daily - Top SocietyAccording to former editor-in-chief of the Journal of the American Medical Association Howard Bauchner, MD, artificial intelligence is poised to transform the writing of scientific manuscripts, assist in reviewing them, and help editors select the highest impact papers. It may even help editors increase the influence of their journals, he says, although he questions whether editors should use AI to predict journal article citations.
  • Pope Francis Says Climate Change a Common Cause During Mosque Visit

    Source: U.S. News and World ReportPope Francis invited Muslims and Catholics Thursday to push global leaders to confront the dangers of climate change and extremism, and spoke of the common roots of different religious beliefs as he visited Southeast Asia's largest mosque in Jakarta. During his visit to Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim-majority country, the pope issued a joint declaration with the national grand imam that called for "decisive action" to address the...
  • Trump Says U.S. Colleges Could Lose Accreditation Over Antisemitism

    Source: U.S. News and World ReportRepublican presidential candidate Donald Trump told a crowd of more than 1,000 Republican Jewish Coalition donors Thursday that U.S. universities would lose accreditation and federal support over what he described as "antisemitic propaganda" if he is elected to the White House. Protests roiled college campuses in spring, with students opposing Israel's war in Gaza and demanding institutions stop doing business with companies supporting the war.
  • YouTube Adopts New Teen Safeguards on Body Weight, Social Aggression

    Source: United Press International - Health NewsYouTube on Thursday rolled out what it said are additional safeguards for content recommendations for teen users. The video platform said in a blog post that it is now limiting repeated recommendations of content that "compares physical features and idealizes some types over others, idealizes specific fitness levels or body weights, or displays social aggression in the form of non-contact fights and intimidation."
  • ‘They’d ask me: “Do you want to die today?”’ How I was kidnapped by pirates – and rescued by US Navy Seals

    ‘They’d ask me: “Do you want to die today?”’ How I was kidnapped by pirates – and rescued by US Navy Seals
    In 2011, aid worker Jessica Buchanan was taken captive in the Somaliland desert. It was more than three months before she was freed – and every day felt like it might be her lastIn the first moments of her kidnapping, Jessica Buchanan’s brain seized up, her mind went blank – but her body knew. Her experience of terror was physical. She struggled to breathe. She somehow turned icy cold, while at the same time she felt roasted alive.“I had this very basic rumination: &lsquo
  • How Do You Know When AI Is Powerful Enough to Be Dangerous?

    Source: U.S. News and World ReportHow do you know if an artificial intelligence system is so powerful that it poses a security danger and requires careful oversight? For regulators trying to put guardrails on AI, it's mostly about the arithmetic. Specifically, AI models must now be reported to the U.S. government if they're trained on 10 to the 26th floating-point operations per second—a level of computing power that could create or proliferate weapons of mass destruction.
  • War and Humanitarian Crisis in Sudan Going Mostly Unnoticed

    Source: Canadian Broadcasting Company - World NewsTens of thousands of civilians dead. Warring factions driving millions from their homes. The threat of famine. Fears of genocide. Any one of these would be a crisis warranting a major international response, but in Sudan, they're all taking place at once, more than 500 days into a brutal civil war. Little global attention is being paid to what's happening in the northeast African nation, with few signs that the situation there will get any...
  • The ‘staggering’ rise in childhood anxiety is not a mental health crisis | Letters

    The ‘staggering’ rise in childhood anxiety is not a mental health crisis | Letters
    Pathologising young people is less effective than tackling the social causes of their worries, suggest clinical psychologists Dr Lucy Johnstone and Dr Helen Care. Plus, letters from a concerned grandparent and Linda KarlsenThe “staggering” rise in anxiety among children (NHS referrals for anxiety in children more than double pre-Covid levels, 27 August) deserves a more sophisticated response than installing counsellors in every school, useful though that may be in some cases, and I s
  • Ozempic Doesn't Raise Risk of Depression or Suicide, Study Finds

    Source: United Press International - Health NewsThe popularity of the weight-loss drug semaglutide has prompted increasing concerns about potential side effects from taking Ozempic or Wegovy. But a new study, published Tuesday in JAMA Internal Medicine, casts doubt on at least one possible problem: the drug does not appear to raise a person's risk of depression or suicide. The study—funded by Novo Nordisk, maker of Ozempic and Wegovy—reviewed data from more than 3,500 people across f
  • California Lawmakers Approve Bills to Ban Deepfakes and Regulate AI

    Source: U.S. News and World ReportCalifornia lawmakers approved a host of proposals this week to regulate artificial intelligence, combat deepfakes, and protect workers from exploitation by the rapidly evolving technology. Governor Gavin Newsom has until September 30 to sign the bills, veto them, or let them become law without signature. In July, he signaled support for a proposal to crack down on election deepfakes, but he has also warned that overregulation could hurt the AI...
  • ‘Why did I hurt?’ A writer on grieving the father she never really knew

    ‘Why did I hurt?’ A writer on grieving the father she never really knew
    When my father died my grief was deep – for him and the dad I wished he’d beenGrief is a thing with wings. It swoops in when and how it wants, often uninvited. When I think of my father, I think of sound. His laughter: a deep rumble from his slightly distended gut, ending with a sigh, as if he were reluctant to let it go. The gentle push of his windscreen-shaped glasses up the bridge of his nose. I think of 5am wake-up calls – me at five or six, my brother five years older, bot
  • Readers reply: What is the evolutionary purpose of blushing?

    Readers reply: What is the evolutionary purpose of blushing?
    The long-running series in which readers answer other readers’ questions on subjects ranging from trivial flights of fancy to profound scientific and philosophical conceptsWhat is the evolutionary purpose of blushing? Peter Walls, LiverpoolSend new questions to [email protected]. Continue reading...
  • Philosophy professor Jeffrey J Kripal: ‘Thinking about a UFO as some kind of extraterrestrial spaceship is naive’

    Philosophy professor Jeffrey J Kripal: ‘Thinking about a UFO as some kind of extraterrestrial spaceship is naive’
    The academic and author draws on quantum mechanics, English romantic philosophy and mysticism to explore a new theory of mind that embraces the paranormalJeffrey J Kripal is a professor of philosophy and religious thought at Rice University in Houston, Texas. He is the author of 10 books on the history of mysticism, psychology and the paranormal. His latest, How to Think Impossibly, draws on a range of sources including gnosticism, quantum physics and English romantic philosophy, to attempt a ne
  • I find conversations with dates dissatisfying, specially when they tell me the plots of films | Ask Philippa

    I find conversations with dates dissatisfying, specially when they tell me the plots of films | Ask Philippa
    Just interrupt and say, ‘Sorry, I can’t bear film plots’The question I am a woman in my 30s and I notice I can find conversation unfulfilling. When I am with new people, I find myself either having a bit of commentary in my head or doing lots of listening to their problems, as they might overshare things and I feel as if they are dumping on me. Such conversation feels unsatisfactory. This is not a feeling I get with older friends, where sharing and turn-taking is mostly natural
  • Announcing GayVeterans.us Has Launched a New Members Portal, Supporting the LGBTQ+ US Veterans Community

    Announcing GayVeterans.us Has Launched a New Members Portal, Supporting the LGBTQ+ US Veterans Community
    This new member portal is dedicated to supporting 1 million LGBTQ+ veterans with resources, camaraderie, and information they need. You can connect with fellow veterans, access a wide range of support services, and get help for PTSD, mental health, find veteran's organizations, and more.GayVeterans.us is the brainchild of Bill Kibler, who has a long-standing reputation of combining both community service and the [PR.com]

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