‘When people speak up, its taken seriously:’ Charlize Theron on playing Megyn Kelly in ‘Bombshell’ – Desert Sun

The floodgates atFox News broke open in 2016.

Former anchor Gretchen Carlson suedformer Fox News chairman and CEO, the late RogerAiles,forsexual harassment.Other female employees, including anchorMegyn Kelly, also began speaking out abouta toxic culture in their workplace.

In Kelly's2016 memoir, "Settle for More," the anchorsaid Ailes"made sexual comments" and "offers of professional advancement in exchange for sexual favors.

Kelly also Business Insiderthat she reported Ailes' sexual advances to a supervisorbut was toldto simply steer clear of him.

The film "Bombshell," starring Charlize Theron asKelly,Nicole Kidman asCarlson andMargot Robbie as a composite character producer Kayla Pospisil chronicles thewomen's journey to expose the abuse.

Ailes resigned in July 2016, reportedly witha severance package of$40 million, and denied all allegations.

Charlize Theron stars as Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly in "Bombshell."(Photo: Hilary B Gayle)

But a culture of silencebegan to splinter.

A year later, film producer and Miramax co-founder Harvey Weinstein was embroiled in sexual abuse allegations,and #MeTootrended widely on social mediaas other men and women went public about surviving sexual harassment and abuse. Actors Louis C.K. and Kevin Spacey,Boston Symphony Orchestra music director James Levine,PBS and CBS host Charlie Rose, and Democratic Sen. Al Franken weresome of the high-profile starsaccused of sexual misconduct.

While the scandal at Fox News the most-watched news network in America with a reputation for conservative political commentary didn't surprise Theron,the women who spoke out did.

"There was a moment of thinking, Wow, what an unusual group of women to bring forth something like this and get thisresult," said Theron, who will receive the International Star Award, Actress for her performance in "Bombshell" at the 2020 Palm Springs International Film Festival.

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The actress, who has publicly discussed being sexually harassed during her first audition, saidHollywood is better because of the #MeToo movement.

"Weve seen real consequences for a lot of this behavior," Theron said in a recent interview with The Desert Sun."People are definitely trying to re-educate themselves and be more sensitive as to how they are on a set, and human resources is more involved. When people speak up, its taken seriously."

When Theron first received the offer to play the role of Kelly, however, she was uncertainbecauseof the anchor's well-known personality.

"I asked,Is that even feasible?Will I even be able to do this in a way where the movie will still shine and Im not distracted thinking, Does that even look like Megyn Kelly?" Theron said. "Its all those things,and it just took (director) Jay Roach as a filmmaker to get me to cross that line."

Charlize Theron (left) as Megyn Kelly and Liv Hewson (right) as Lily Balin in "Bombshell."

(Photo: Hilary B Gayle)

While it's common foractors to meet the subjects they are playing in biographical moviesespecially if the person is still aliveTheron chose not to meet withKelly.

"It was my choice. It just felt like too much pressure," Theron said."I had access to so much information that it would have been weird for her and too much pressure for me. If I didnt have access to what I had and all the sources I did, it might have been different. But I had a lot to work from."

To take on the role of Kelly, Theron used the same physical actingmethodshe did for the 2003 film, "Monster," in which shewon an Oscar for her performance asconvicted serial killerAileen Wuornos.Critics not only praised Theron's physical transformationfor that film, but also how well she portrayed someone with antisocial and borderline personality disorders.

Just as she focused onWuornos'physicality and body language, she found ituseful to do the same for"Bombshell."

"Theres a lot of the physical things on both Megyn and Aileen, their physicality told a lot of their emotional story," Theron said."It takes months to get to that conclusion, how someone is hearing themselves and how it expresses their emotional journey.

"You just try to get access to as muchinformation as you can," Theron continued."You look at it from an investigative angle and try to get anything you possibly can, and sit with it as long as you can tostart deciphering it and live with it, so what youre reading on a page might start to tell you a different story or you start seeing behaviorforming youto who the person is."

There aredifferences to playing a serial killer and a famed female news anchor, but Therontried to expressthe humanity of both despite their infamous personas.

Charlize Theron and Christina Ricci in a scene from the motion picture "Monster."(Photo: XXX NEWMARKET FILMS)

"I told Aileen'sstory during the last two years of her life with a few flashbacks, but its condensed into those last couple years of her life where circumstances came into play andshe found herself informed byher humanity," Theron said.

"Its the same of Megyn.The year and half we focus on atFox News, her circumstances were rough. She was a rock star thereand she was re-negotiating one of the biggest deals in their history. She put this thing behind her that happened 10 years earlier and didnt want to be defined by it."

(Before Kelly left Fox in 2017, she was re-negotiatingher contract andthe networkwas prepared to pay her more than $20 million a year,according to the New York Times.)

"(Kelly) had a moral dilemma of liking(Ailes) and thought he was someone who elevated her to where she was," Theron said."All those things come into play when you deal with a human being. Those are human conflicts I can wrap my head around. I might not necessarily agree with everything she says and does, but the circumstances are whats interesting to me."

Charlize Theron (left) as Megyn Kelly and John Lithgow (right) as Roger Ailes in the 2019 film "Bombshell."

(Photo: Courtesy of Hilary B Gayle)

'Pushing the envelope' with physicality

Before becomingan actress, Theronpursued a career in ballet but her knees gave out while studying at the Joffrey Ballet School in New York. She moved to Los Angeles in 1994 and was discovered by talent agent John Crosby.

Havingtrained as a ballet dancer,Theron said she finds iteasy to tell a character's story through physicality as she didto embody characters like Wuornos and Kelly.

"Physicality is something I pay more attention to than what theysay," Theron said."I think characters are like human beings. We dont always say whats going on and we tend to say whats not going on. Were deflecting and not talking about the things that are really going on. Its your body, its your postureand those things tell you way more about a person than whats coming out of their mouths."

Charlize Theron is a stressed-out mom whose perspective is changed when she receives a gift: a nanny named "Tully."(Photo: Kimberly French/Focus Features)

Butthisfocus on physicality can have consequences.In 2005, Theron starred in an action film based on the animated series "on Flux"and injured herself while performing a stunt in the movie.

"I did a back-handspring and I landed on my neck and I herniated a disk between fiveand six," Theron said. "You can always get hurt. Youre pushing the envelope with this physical stuff. Its the work you put in before, its the many months youve trained for something and you get it perfect."

"Theres always a chance somethingcan go wrong. You work around it and thats part of what those movies are."

For Theron, physicality is a window into a character's humanity. Throughout her career, she's taken on roles that allow for honest dialogue peopledealingwith real-life situationsthat only seem to get worse, or don't resolve by the end credits.

Prior to "Bombshell," Kellyworked on two films with director Jason Reitmanknown for "Juno" and "Up in the Air" who she says "taps into interesting human behavior." She playedan alcoholic, young adult series writerin the 2011 movie"Young Adult" and a pregnant struggling mother of twoin last year's "Tully."

"I tend to have to push on directors the not-so-human behavior because its much easier to do things that are easier to swallow and wrap your arms around," Theron said."A lot of directors are in the business to tell those stories because its easier. The more the audience likesyou, the better the movie is."

Charlize Theron (left) stars as Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly in the film, "Bombshell."(Photo: HILARY B. GAYLE)

As a mother of two adopted children, and having friends who struggled with postpartum depression, she found her role in "Tully" to be important in educating the public about anotherreal-life subject affecting women.

"That story was very personal to me," Theron said."It was her experience with her third child and I had a friend while I was making that film who was going through severe postpartum. Its something we dont talk about enough. I thought she represented so much of what motherhood is and nobody wants to admit."

Throughout her career, Theron hasn'tshiedawayfrom roles that offer an honest, unflinching look atcontroversial issues including those affecting women that may not be widely talked about, frompostpartum depression to sexual harassment.

"I can see a lot of change," Theron said of the #MeToo movement's effect onHollywood."It doesnt mean we dont have a long way to go, but I think where we are today versus five years ago is night and day."

What: Palm Springs International Film Festival Film Awards Gala

Where: Palm Springs Convention Center,277 N. Avenida Caballeros, Palm Springs

When: Jan. 2, 2020

Catch up on all the action at deserts.co

Charlize Theron in "Bombshell."

(Photo: Hilary B Gayle/SMPSP)

Desert Sun reporter Brian Blueskye covers artsand entertainment. Hecan be reached at brian.blueskye@desertsun.com or (760) 778-4617. Support local news, subscribe to The Desert Sun.

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'When people speak up, its taken seriously:' Charlize Theron on playing Megyn Kelly in 'Bombshell' - Desert Sun

Deciphering Artificial Intelligence in the Future of Information Security – AiThority

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is creating a new frontline in information security. Systems that independently learn, reason and act will increasingly replicate human behavior. Like humans, they will be flawed, but also capable of achieving great things.

AI poses new information risks and makes some existing ones more dangerous. However, it can also be used for good and should become a key part of every organizations defensive arsenal. Business and information security leaders alike must understand both the risks and opportunities before embracing technologies that will soon become a critically important part of everyday business.

Already, AI is finding its way into many mainstream business use cases. Organizations use variations of AI to support processes in areas including customer service, human resources, and bank fraud detection. However, the hype can lead to confusion and skepticism over what AI actually is and what it really means for business and security. It is difficult to separate wishful thinking from reality.

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As AI systems are adopted by organizations, they will become increasingly critical to day-to-day business operations. Some organizations already have, or will have, business models entirely dependent on AI technology. No matter the function for which an organization uses AI, such systems and the information that supports them have inherent vulnerabilities and are at risk from both accidental and adversarial threats. Compromised AI systems make poor decisions and produce unexpected outcomes.

Simultaneously, organizations are beginning to face sophisticated AI-enabled attacks which have the potential to compromise information and cause severe business impact at a greater speed and scale than ever before. Taking steps both to secure internal AI systems and defend against external AI-enabled threats will become vitally important in reducing information risk.

While AI systems adopted by organizations present a tempting target, adversarial attackers are also beginning to use AI for their own purposes. AI is a powerful tool that can be used to enhance attack techniques or even create entirely new ones. Organizations must be ready to adapt their defenses in order to cope with the scale and sophistication of AI-enabled cyberattacks.

Security practitioners are always fighting to keep up with the methods used by attackers, and AI systems can provide at least a short-term boost by significantly enhancing a variety of defensive mechanisms. AI can automate numerous tasks, helping understaffed security departments to bridge the specialist skills gap and improve the efficiency of their human practitioners. Protecting against many existing threats, AI can put defenders a step ahead. However, adversaries are not standing still as AI-enabled threats become more sophisticated, security practitioners will need to use AI-supported defenses simply to keep up.

The benefit of AI in terms of response to threats is that it can act independently, taking responsive measures without the need for human oversight and at a much greater speed than a human could. Given the presence of malware that can compromise whole systems almost instantaneously, this is a highly valuable capability.

The number of ways in which defensive mechanisms can be significantly enhanced by AI provide grounds for optimism, but as with any new type of technology, it is not a miracle cure. Security practitioners should be aware of the practical challenges involved when deploying defensive AI.

Questions and considerations before deploying defensive AI systems have narrow intelligence and are designed to fulfill one type of task. They require sufficient data and inputs in order to complete that task. One single defensive AI system will not be able to enhance all the defensive mechanisms outlined previously an organization is likely to adopt multiple systems. Before purchasing and deploying defensive AI, security leaders should consider whether an AI system is required to solve the problem, or whether more conventional options would do a similar or better job.

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Questions to ask include:

Security leaders also need to consider issues of governance around defensive AI, such as:

AI will not replace the need for skilled security practitioners with technical expertise and an intuitive nose for risk. These security practitioners need to balance the need for human oversight with the confidence to allow AI-supported controls to act autonomously and effectively. Such confidence will take time to develop, especially as stories continue to emerge of AI proving unreliable or making poor or unexpected decisions.

AI systems will make mistakes a beneficial aspect of human oversight is that human practitioners can provide feedback when things go wrong and incorporate it into the AIs decision-making process. Of course, humans make mistakes too organizations that adopt defensive AI need to devote time, training and support to help security practitioners learn to work with intelligent systems.

Given time to develop and learn together, the combination of Human and Artificial Intelligence should become a valuable component of an organizations cyber defenses.

Computer systems that can independently learn, reason and act herald a new technological era, full of both risk and opportunity. The advances already on display are only the tip of the iceberg there is a lot more to come. The speed and scale at which AI systems think will be increased by growing access to big data, greater computing power and continuous refinement of programming techniques. Such power will have the potential to both make and destroy a business.

AI tools and techniques that can be used in defense are also available to malicious actors including criminals, hacktivists and state-sponsored groups. Sooner rather than later these adversaries will find ways to use AI to create completely new threats such as intelligent malware and at that point, defensive AI will not just be a nice to have. It will be a necessity. Security practitioners using traditional controls will not be able to cope with the speed, volume, and sophistication of attacks.

To thrive in the new era, organizations need to reduce the risks posed by AI and make the most of the opportunities it offers. That means securing their own intelligent systems and deploying their own intelligent defenses. AI is no longer a vision of the distant future: the time to start preparing is now.

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Deciphering Artificial Intelligence in the Future of Information Security - AiThority

End-of-the-year book and podcast suggestions from Stanford Law School | The Dish – Stanford Report

by Stanford Law School Communications on December 19, 2019 3:52 pm

If you are still in search of the perfect winter break book or podcast, here are a few suggestions from the faculty at Stanford Law School.

For instance, RALPH RICHARD BANKS, the Jackson Eli Reynolds Professor of Law, suggests The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead:

The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead is a good one. This book has relatable characters who experience the cruelty and unpredictability of life, and form a bond that carries them through.

NORA FREEMAN ENGSTROM, professor of law, recommends Alas, Babylon by Pat Frank:

Alas, Babylon

Each family vacation we pick one book to read aloud and last summer we enjoyed a stunner my husband had remembered fondly from his youth, Alas, Babylon. Part Swiss Family Robinson atomic age survival tale, part Cold War history lesson, part (even) comedy, we loved every page. Full of pluck, daring and heart, the book is captivating for young and old alike.

WILLIAM GOULD, the Charles A. Beardsley Professor of Law, Emeritus, suggests In Hoffas Shadow by Jack Goldsmith:

The big hit of recent months wasIn Hoffas Shadow by Harvard law Professor Jack Goldsmith, whose stepfather was Teamster boss and Hoffas gofer and the FBIs prime suspect as the man who drove Hoffa to his killers. It is written well, in a style that you wouldnt expect from a law professor. Its about Goldsmiths relationship with his stepfather, his reconciliation with the man he had rejected as an impediment to his own advancement and his search for the truth about Hoffas disappearance. Its a book about Hoffa, his hard and violent struggle in the Teamster leadership, his clashes with RFK (whom Goldsmith despises), and his criminal trials. The book gets as close as any to figuring the whodunnit in Hoffas death. The description of the day of his disappearance will have your heart in your mouth.

PAMELA KARLAN, the Kenneth and Harle Montgomery Professor of Public Interest Law, recommends Silicon City: San Francisco in the Long Shadow of the Valley by Cary McClellan, JD15:

You might think you know the place but Carys book will show you things youve never seen before in an almost cinematographic way. Funny, heartbreaking, unforgettable.

DEBORAH SIVAS, the Luke W. Cole Professor of Environmental Law, recommends the NPR podcast Hidden Brain:

Each episode explores the science behind human behavior, but does so in a narrative storytelling fashion that engages a non-expert audience, sometimes making me laugh, sometimes making me cry, but always making me think.

Read more suggestions on the Stanford Law School website.

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End-of-the-year book and podcast suggestions from Stanford Law School | The Dish - Stanford Report

Is Nothing Sacred? Religion and Sex – Psychology Today

After being raised in a Mormon family in a devoutly religious Mormon community in Idaho, Jordan Moon went on the traditional Mormon mission. He then attended Brigham Young Universitys Idaho campus, where a strict code of conduct prohibited not only alcohol consumption, but even facial hair.Jordan excelled as a psychology student there, and even published a paper on the psychology of moral judgments.

After graduating from BYU, Jordan (who now sports a long beard, and likes to drink an occasional beer) came to Arizona State to study the psychology of religion with my colleague Adam Cohen.Although he is only midway through graduate school, Jordan has already distinguished himself by publishing several papers in prestigious journals.One of Jordans papers, recently released inCurrent Directions in Psychological Science, has the provocative title Is Nothing Sacred: Religion, sex, and reproductive strategies.

The paper argues that people often think about religion in terms of profound supernatural and spiritual ideas: concepts about eternal afterlife, immortal battles of good versus evil, transcending the flesh and devotion to the divine. Those interested in the psychology of religion have also studied the rituals designed to lift peoples thoughts and behaviors out of the metaphorical gutter of sex and selfishness toward lives full of meaning, contemplation, and community service.

But the papers argument is that maybe those high and holy religious beliefs and practices are often secretly serving base selfish and sexual motivations. Religion may, on this view, be an instrument of peoples preferred reproductive strategies.

Do religions cause monogamy, or do monogamous people choose to be religious?

Social scientists have traditionally presumed that ones religious upbringing is a powerful determinant of ones sexual behavior. Most religions indeed have strong rules prohibiting premarital sex, extramarital sex, and even private erotic thoughts.I was in Catholic school when pubescent hormones rudely disruptedthe innocence of my childhood, and I remember feeling intense guilt about my sinful desires to look inside the provocative covers of the pornographic magazines on sale at the local newsstand. Aregular Saturday ritual was to stand in line outside the confessional boxes at St. Josephs Catholic church, awaiting Father McNamaras absolution for those evil thoughts, contingent on my saying five Our Fathers and ten Hail Marys as penance.

But some analyses by my colleague Jason Weeden suggest that, rather than religion dictatorially determining ones attitudes toward sex, the causal arrow often goes in the opposite direction.For adults, their sexual strategies appear to determine their level of commitment to religion.People who are inclined toward monogamy choose to be religious, because traditional religions provide supportfor a family lifestyle, and discourage promiscuity.Promiscuity poses problems for family life from both the husbands and the wifes perspective. If there is a lot of promiscuity in the local society, then husbands (and their resources) may be easily tempted away from the responsibilities of fathering and family.

Men are, after all, notoriously easy, as attested to by data suggesting they have very low thresholds for a one-night stand, for example (Clark & Hatfield; Li & Kenrick, Kenrick et al., 1990; 1993).But if so, why would men, married or otherwise, want promiscuity discouraged?Weeden links that to paternal uncertainty: a married man is investing heavily in his offspring, and in a totally promiscuous society, the odds would be higher that his female partners children might not be his.

Not everyone wants strong constraints on sexuality, though.Highly educated people often wait many years past puberty to settle down, as they delay starting a family for up to a decade while attending college and graduate school. Those individuals do not want strong prohibitions against premarital sexuality and birth control because it would mean theyd need to remain celibate for many years, and completely suppress their post-pubertal sexual urges until they get their Ph.D., M.D., or law degree, and then wait a little longer until theyfind a partner with whom to settle down.Weeden has suggested that the links between religion and reproductive strategy account for many of the heated moral conflicts between the religious right and the irreligious academically elitists on the left.

Several large data sets now provide results consistent with this view of reproductive religiosity, suggesting that peoples preferred mating strategies strongly influence their attraction toward, or repulsion from, religion. Weeden finds that the normally high correlations between religious beliefs and other moral attitudes shrink if you control for peoples attitudes towards sex.And Mike McCullough, another prominent expert on the psychology of religion, finds that many people tend to become especially religious during the years when they have children, and then to become less devout later in life.

The reproductive religiosity model helps solve another logical puzzle.It has often been presumed that men use religiosity to control womens sexuality. But then why is it that women are much more likely to embrace religious beliefs than are men? This becomes less puzzling when one considers that, because of their intrinsically higher initial investment in offspring, women are less likely to benefit from a sexually unrestricted strategy, and more likely to benefit if mens unrestricted inclinations are kept in check.On this view, women may be actively choosing religion rather than being passively enslaved by it.

Anti-atheist bias may be linked to anti-promiscuity bias

Jordan Moon has contributed to another thought-provoking body of literature, on the prejudice against atheists. People really dont trust atheists.Its not just that religious people trust people who share their beliefs; they trust people of other religions more than they trust atheists.Even atheists themselves trust religious people more than they do other atheists (Gervais, 2013).

Moon and his colleagues have shown, consistently, that people trust religious people more than non-religious people.However, they did a clever study in which they gave judges information not only about someones religious beliefs, but also about their mating strategy. The results suggest that, if you know an atheist also happens to be a committed monogamist, you wouldtrust that person more than youd trust a religious person who is non-monogamous.Those findings suggest that the distrust of atheists is driven in large part by presumptions about their mating strategies (Moon, Krems, & Cohen, 2018).

Standing in the gutter looking up at the stars

We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking up at the stars.Oscar Wilde

Thinking about human thought and behavior in evolutionary terms often involves mucking around in the gutter, taking a hard look at the underside of human nature.It might seem unseemly to explore the connections between religion and sex.But evolutionary psychologists delve into these topics with one eye on the stars, trying to integrate what we learn about the good, the bad, and the ugly aspects of human nature with what we know about the good, the bad, and the sometimes shocking behaviors of other animal species, from barking hyenas to resplendent peacocks.

Yes, everything human beings do can ultimately be connected to reproduction.My students and other evolutionary psychologists have done research connecting lowly reproductive motives to charity, artistic creativity, self-actualization, and even the search for meaning in life (Kenrick, 2010; Griskevicius, et al., 2006; 2007; Krems, Neel, & Kenrick, 2017).But understanding how such exalted human pursuits connect with the rest of the natural world does not diminish them, any more than does understanding the displays of peacocks or the beautiful songs of hermit thrushes.Its also important to remember that, for human beings, successful reproduction is about more than just sex (see What drives us more? Sex or Family Values?).

Our ancestors reproductive success depended not only on finding a mate, but also on maintaining a long-term relationship with that mate, caring for their children, developing a network of friends and relatives to protect and assist one another, and winning the respect and trust of those friends and relatives. And religion has intimate connections to every one of these fundamental human goals.

For some additional background on the Reproductive Religiosity Model

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Is Nothing Sacred? Religion and Sex - Psychology Today

Fake news isn’t the real problem news is: One of the world’s leading internet researchers explains what went wrong – Haaretz

Never in history have we had so much data at our disposal about human culture and behavior, says Lev Manovich, but as far as most artists and academics from the humanities are concerned, this data is capitalism, so its considered bad, because money is bad.

Manovich is one of the most important thinkers and researchers in the realms of the internet and digital culture today. His 2001 book The Language of New Media laid the theoretical foundations for what we now call digital studies, and helped create the terms we use to think and talk about culture in the digital age, first and foremost the concept of new media. A professor of computer science at the City University of New Yorks Graduate Center, Manovich says he sees himself not as an academic per se, but rather as an artist whose medium is academic articles. He also doesnt really get why people are still reading a book he published so long ago, and says, maybe the professors are just too lazy to read something else so they keep citing it and tell their students to read it too.

Manovich, 59, is hard to pin down. A self-proclaimed contrarian, hes critical of the academic world, although he has had an impressive run as both an academic and an artist, with a career that has in many senses shadowed the digital revolution he writes about prolifically. He began his career as a graphic designer in the 1980s, but is today credited with being one of the first to extend critical theory to the examination of software and its impact on society, and his interests range from digital aesthetics to cultural analysis of video games and analog radar systems. Hes also a digital artist with a keen interest in cinema, and was one of the first to teach and analyze digital filmmaking.

In recent years, Manovich has written a number of popular and academic studies of what he terms contemporary visual culture, which he defines very widely. This has included studying Instagram, and more recently, setting up a cultural analytics lab (based jointly at CUNY and at Caltech) that works with corporate giants like Google as well as such artistic institutions as the Museum of Modern Art to try to bring know-how from the world of computer science for example, the use of big data to the world of culture.For example, the lab analyzed almost 7.5 million Instagram photos that were shared in Manhattan and crossed-referenced them with demographics data to gauge how factors like inequality are reflected visually, in terms of what images are shared on the social media network. In another project, the lab created an interactive digital installation of the streets of New York City, based on 30 million images and data points collected from Instagram. Manovichs work at the MoMa is perhaps the most representative of his thought, and employs data-visualization methods to 20,000 photos held in the museums photography collection to try and used big data to yield cultural findings related to art history.

The underlying logic of his 30-year career can be seen as the attempt to reconcile two worlds that are seemingly irreconcilable: that of art and high culture, on the one hand, and that of computers and digital culture. Though one may seem aesthetic and artistic, and the other pragmatic and analytic, for Manovich, the digital revolution has linked them together: Computers have become the mediator of all of our cultural consumption, and software has become our artistic tool kit.

In the past, each art form had its own medium for expressing itself the photographer had his camera and the writer, his typewriter. Today, however, many forms of art and human creativity manifest almost exclusively through computer software. For Marshall McLuhan, the medium was the message because there were fundamental differences between television and books and radio. Today we live in a world in which films and television are consumed through Netflix, and music and podcasts through Spotify, both of which are accessed through a computer be it a smartphone app or an internet browser. For Manovich that means there are no longer different media as much as there is the new medium of software.

No human being writes anymore, Friedrich Kittler, the philosopher of technology, wrote in 1982, observing that, Today, human writing runs through inscriptions burnt into silicon.

Identity and politics

Manovich was born in 1960 in the Soviet Union, and raised in a Jewish household in Moscow: My parents were scientists and they were very secular, he says. He moved to the United States in the 1980s to complete his doctorate, at the University of Rochester, in visual and cultural studies. Therefore, one might assume that like other emigres from the USSR a younger member of that same cohort is Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google, who was born in 1973 Manovich is enamored of American culture. But thats not actually true: With Manovitch, nothing is black or white, and today he has returned to Russia (on sabbatical) to continue his cultural analytics project.

What I find terrifying is that intellectuals in America actually believe what they read in The New York Times, he says, which is to say they treat it as the gospel truth. Russia has many problems, however, Russia is outside of human rationality meanwhile, the U.S. is the most rational place in the world. When I came to America, I felt I was surrounded by robots.

Russia is a very complex country with lots of problems there are many spaces there where people still feel helpless, for example, the court system. But there are also lots of good things. For example, technologically, Moscow is very progressive, it has the best WiFi, Uber works great and Russia is the third-biggest country in terms of Instagram users. So its basically a contemporary country, but its also an authoritarian country so is China, by the way, but China is efficient and Russia is not.

But if you look at The New York Times, they only write about Russia from a negative perspective. So you want to know about the problem with fake news? Its the news is itself that is the problem, because its a very biased view of the world.

To Manovich, journalism is a flawed medium that we shouldnt fetishize. People assume the news is the truth and that fake news corrupted a perfect medium. He says, its not perfect, its flawed because of its business model, which incentivizes negative narratives.

The percentage of negative news is on the rise, he asserts, studies in the 1960s and 70s also found this. Why? Maybe because they need to sell advertisements, but intellectuals and other people think we are living in a time of crisis.

Guys! What crisis? Between 1940 and 1945 there was a crisis there was the Holocaust and the entire world was at war. Now there are only a few local conflicts we live in humanitys best period and every single indicator says so but the media create this sense that thats not true, and so people are depressed.

But nonetheless, the rise of Donald Trump, and Vladimir Putins growing global power create the sense that we are on the brink of a social or political crisis and that technology plays a key role in that.

But that has nothing to do with technology! Technology only reflects and permits cultural and social desires.

What do you mean? How does technology reflect social desires?

People want to feel safe, people want to neutralize uncertainty and increase predictability. And into this space, enters technology. Technology is very good at addressing human desires. For example: Authoritarian countries love technology because they love the idea of total control and total surveillance, and in China and Russia theyve embraced the internet more than anyone else.

The problem with this, according to Manovich, is the expectations we have of technology: Dont ask too much of technology and dont try to blame it for everything. In the 1990s, we lived in this optimistic decade, it was the end of the Cold War, the beginning of globalization, etc., and people projected these feelings onto technology and lots of left-wing thinkers, writers and journalists were writing about the internet as being connected to freedom so the internet was seen as a liberation project that works well with left-wing ideas. Twenty-five years later, we are now told that there is a massive social and political crisis, and people now project those feelings onto technology and blame it for that.

So loss of privacy and surveillance are not really a problem?

That is a misunderstanding and a problem of misplaced expectations: People really need to accept the fact that technology is not black or white, but part of our culture and our society. Every technology can be used in thousands of different ways. Just like you go out into the physical world and you see beauty and ugliness, life and death, love and hate. So for me, its the same with technology and the internet and even Facebook.

What is the biggest misunderstanding the general public has about the internet and technology?

Technology is seen as a mechanism that will allow for safety and predictability. So we put cameras everywhere and allow people to read our emails. But what Im trying to say is that the problem is not surveillance, the problem is that people want surveillance. And in some cases it works crime is down in some places because of these cameras. So its not all bad. For example, the Google Assistant does want to help me and make sure I reach my flight on time and it knows I have a flight because it reads my emails. It is in that sense that technology is very good at answering our desires, but the desire for stability and security through technology is the real problem: No one treats the internet as something to experiment with or something that can liberate anymore. Therefore, people are using it to create this very safe and predictable world that is closed and very conventional and it is very depressing.

The problem that occupies Manovich, is the conservative way people look at technology, and the fact that people from the arts and humanities no longer think about computers in creative ways, and even incite against big data instead of finding a way to wrest if from the hands of corporations for their own use.

The 1990s and early 2000s was a very activist period very idealistic, avant-garde, and people created things like Wikipedia. Today we have high-tech and big data but nobody is creating the next Wikipedia perhaps the best of online projects, which gave millions of people access to knowledge. So why is there no new Wikipedia today? Because society has changed and people realize you can make money from technology, not change the world, and thats what they are doing. I love the world, but I feel sad this is very reactionary, the professor says, adding, Think how great the ideas of the early internet thinkers were. People like Ted Nelson who thought about hypertext as a revolutionary force, or even someone like Vanevar Bush, who thought about organizing knowledge in a completely new way.

Both Nelson and Bush wrote texts about technologies that were never realized but that influenced generations of engineers and entrepreneurs. For example, in a seminal text published in The Atlantic in 1945, Bush, who headed headed the U.S. Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD), suggested creating a desktop system for storing and retrieving the wealth of information created by science. His so-called Memex system (a portmanteau of memory index) is considered a precursor to the desktop computer. Nelson, for his part, coined the term hypertext, as well as the idea of copy/paste, and envisaged a system called Xanadu, with interlinked pages, which foreshadowed the world wide web.

But at the end of the day, the digital revolution didnt actually create a revolution in knowledge like Bush and certainly like Nelson wanted. For example, Wikipedia is written by a relatively small group of predominantly male editors and it seems to me to have recreated many of the biases of the past despite promising to do the exact opposite.

What are you talking about! That is just not true. For millions of people, Wikipedia allowed access to knowledge for the first time. In Russia its used for intellectual debate.Listen, there were always utopian ideas; that is not new and that is not unique to our age and certainly not digital culture. All the problems with Wikipedia, for example, are problems that are related to humanity and have always been there. I wrote some articles on Wikipedia and now I feel ownership over it that is a human issue, not a technological [one].But the internet did something amazing and we in the West either forgot [that] or dont want to talk about that anymore.

China is a good counter example [of a digital revolution]: They built a big firewall, but at the same time, they also developed their own IT industry. They are the only country to do that [built their own discrete internet], and it works for them, and the educated middle class there likes the social credit system, for example [which is intended to give and make public scores on both financial credit and behavior for both individuals and businesses]. From a Western point of view that is very terrifying, but they are clearly saying, we want order and we have to give up some privacy and freedom for that order and at some level they are okay with that.

Life in a photoshopped society

I meet Manovich, a well-built and emotive man, at a stylish hotel in central Tel Aviv. Hes in town its his first time in Israel for the PrintScreen festival, and arrived courtesy of the U.S. Embassy in Israel. Which leads me to ask him if he feels Jewish, and if he had ever wanted to visit here before.

Im a Jew, so obviously I wanted to come to Israel, he says. I even have some family here, so its almost strange that I havent been here yet. But Ill also admit Im one of those Jews whos afraid of other Jews, you know? Like if theres too many of us in one place, someone may try to kill us. But its a strange thing, this idea of Jewish continuity.

Did you feel like you grew up with a Jewish identity?

There is no word I hate more than identity. Personally, yes, Im a proud Jew. My mother raised us to be proud of being Jewish and was proud that our family was living in Moscow from the 19th century, which is rare for Jews. On the other hand, I have never done those genetic tests, and they may be a lie. I dont know what I think about them and if there really is such a thing as a Jewish gene.

Obviously, there is no such thing! Do you not see a connection between genetic testing and identity politics? As if DNA can supply a scientific basis for identity?

Please be careful not to project your own ideas on to me when you write up this interview. I am not one of those intellectuals like [Slavoj] Zizek, who can talk about anything. I dont like talking about things that I havent thought about. But forget that. Im here because I want to fall in love with Tel Aviv and my condition for this interview is that you give me a good recommendation for a place to go out tonight. But I dont want to go to some bar with only teenagers where Ill feel old.

You should go to the Teder [entertainment compound]; its classic Tel Aviv and theres tons of places there, but you may feel old. Im 32 and I also feel a bit old there sometime. But Tel Aviv is amazing.

It feels like you guys are still in the 1990s technology and high-tech are still working for you.

Really? When did digital culture become a cultural force? In the 90s?

The big change came in 2005-2006 with social media. If in the 80s we had maybe 40 people in the entire world doing animation with computers, then today Adobe has 20 million users and there are about one billion photographers on Instagram.

In his 2013 book Software Takes Command, Manovich offers a historical and cultural analysis of software as a creative tool. I look at Photoshop filters like an art historian looks at the Mona Lisa, he says proudly today. Indeed, his book gives a detailed analysis of how Photoshops menu, for example, impacts digital photography ideas that today hes using to critique Instagram.

Do you feel digital culture is by definition a visual culture?

Yes, very much. Today you buy a phone and you are forced to become a photographer. That has both cultural and aesthetic significance. Because now suddenly everyones a photographer and there is an aesthetic that is a direct result of the technological forces behind these new media.

An example of those technological forces can be found in his book, where Manovich recounts how he traveled to South Korea to find the graphic design studio that did the illustrative shots that come with all of Samsungs phones. For him, this small studio in effect created the aesthetic language for an entire generation of photographers who use Samsung phone as a camera.

When I went to Seoul, I met my wife, who was probably the only person in South Korea who had had plastic surgery. When I was there I understood that this is a society that has been photoshopped an airbrushed society and therefore it makes sense they would create this aesthetic because they have this aesthetic of perfection.

Over the past few months, a number of South Korean K-pop stars have committed suicide, most recently Goo Hara, in her case after it was revealed that she had undergone plastic surgery. Is this the price of this aesthetic of perfection?

Maybe, but airbrushing is not new. Photography has always been airbrushed, technology only increases its precision and scale. For example, you look at the photos in old newspapers and they are so airbrushed that for us it looks almost like painting. Photoshop did not invent airbrushing, it only expanded its scale and increased its precision. The Photoshop revolution preserved this aesthetic quality but also made it more wide-scale and more accurate.

The same thing happened with Instagram and camera phones. Photoshop was used only by professional photographers they are the only ones who understood what I was writing about [in the late 1990s] because they felt the change Photoshop created in their field. Meanwhile, Instagram wanted to be used by the general public. But what actually happened? Five, six years into Instagram, all the photos there look super photoshopped everything is filtered and airbrushed, just now its automatic. But Photoshops influence on Instagram is just so clear, and today the goal of Instagram photos is that they look super professional and perfect even though it was set up as an attempt to democratize Photoshop and Flickr, which were scary and intended only for professional photographers.

Do you think Instagram actually democratized photography?

I dont know. If anything, it democratized beauty. But at the aesthetic level, this is a very dangerous thing, people get used to perfection and perfect images. Every picture you see online not to mention in print has been airbrushed and worked on. In the past 20 years, the desire for an aesthetics of perfection has also undergone a process of mass production. Today this aesthetic is actually preserved and enhanced not just through human behavior but also through algorithms and machine learning. When you swipe, you are sorting for the best picture and the algorithm only wants to [reinforce this by showing] you what you will click on, and that creates this situation.

In your most recent works, you have turned your focus to Instagram, attempting to treat it as an arena that is both artistic and big data. You asked: How can I look at a billion photographs at the same time and try to reach some aesthetic or cultural understanding. Do you think the age of human aesthetics is over and now we only have big data aesthetics?

That is not what I think at all and really dont want you to project your own ideas about this post-subject aesthetic onto me. I will give you an answer that will surprise you, because we are both smart Jews: My next text is not about the attempt to look at a million photographs but rather only at one. I want to write about one single Instagram photo and dedicate 60 pages to it.

Why?

Because I want to write about things that move us and I think that today content matters more than ever. Computers cannot see what makes a photograph beautiful and thats what interests me. Today people seem to think that there are too many photos, too many posts, and that content doesnt matter. I think the opposite. Now content matters more than ever before. The single frame, the single post or even a book the perfection of each of these is more important because the competition is so big. People are looking for a point of orientation to grab onto and a book is just such an orienting point.

If I write a book that is good and people read it then that means that it has succeeded despite there being so many blog posts and articles out there. Look at Yuval Noah Harari I dont know if what he writes is actually good scientifically but people are interested in what he has to say, and that is amazing. People read him all over the world.

And what about digital culture and data? Why arent people more interested in that?

Maybe if Id write about money, like [Thomas] Pikkety, and not about culture, people would be more interested and Id be more successful. But forget about that, its not just software and digital culture its data. Ill give you an example. I gave a lecture to PhD students in art and art history; these are the people who are going to go on to become curators at the MoMa and so on. And I tell them about my research into Instagram and they listen politely but at the end of my talk, they ask me: Why are you wasting your time on Instagram, its not art. So I say: What are you talking about, Im interested in contemporary visual culture and thats where its happening.

Do you understand? There are a billion people using Instagram, but for those students, its capitalism and corporations, so its bad and all these people using Instagram are just living in false consciousness. That the only perspective for examining Instagram is not as art or culture, but as an ideology. For them Instagram is just an instrument of ideology, but I hate that bullshit.

Come on, not all of academia is that Marxist. There are social studies that do focus on digital culture.

Of course, but you need to understand that today there are two types or schools of social sciences: the one done at universities, and the one done by corporations. They both miss something, in some sense. Humanities and social sciences only focus on diversity, inclusion and identity trying to challenge the Western canon which is very important and actually great, but its a really bad way to research Instagram and think about software culture. Why? Because it treats these things as capitalistic. And therefore in some strange way, I find myself on the side of the corporations, because they do analysis of human behavior. But there is a massive difference between what Google and Amazon do and what academia does: First of all, they dont publish their results, but more importantly, they have 5,000 data points about every person but they only ask one question: Will they buy something? They look at this data for purely commercial reasons. So Im stuck in this weird position and feel a certain discomfort.

Do you think the digital revolution skipped over the humanities and social sciences?

When did Western society really start thinking critically about itself? Yes, theres Descartes, but during the 18th and 19th centuries, we have this golden age of thought. From Marx to Weber and Freud and Durkheim. All this intellectual output was devoid of data, and toward the 1990s, you start to have this sense that everything that can be thought of has already been thought of. There is this intellectual exhaustion, almost, in academia and in what I call high culture. No one thinks about social structures anymore, no one even thinks about the structure of text anymore. There are no big ontological or social theories anymore except with some giants like [philosopher of science] Bruno Latour, but even he limits himself to talking only about science.

That is the paradox of our time: We can have all the information in the world about everyone with an internet connection, and in the future we will even be able to see what people are reading and even view their brains thinking or reading in real time so you can look at society at scale and in resolutions that in the past were impossible, but it hasnt led to any new theory or research. We have all this big data but we dont really know what to do with it, and we think about it and use it with 19th-century methods. For example, Excel is amazing but spreadsheets have existed since the 19th century and are [an example of] classic capitalistic cognition. I want to tell people to think about data in artistic and creative ways.

You also have a revolutionary project it seems. Do you also want to change the world?

Maybe you are right. My goal is to get people to think about technology differently, to think about digital culture in a less rigid way, and get people to think less in stereotypes. I want to make them see the world in a more complex way because thats the way I see the world. In this sense, I do have a left-wing project but its not connected to changing the world, but rather to a desire to make people more open. In that sense, Im actually more of a contrarian.

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Fake news isn't the real problem news is: One of the world's leading internet researchers explains what went wrong - Haaretz

Advances in Bispecific Antibody Development are Leading to an Evolution in Anti-cancer Drugs – OncoZine

The concept of using bispecific antibodies for tumor therapy has been developed more than 30 years ago with many initial struggles. However, new developments such as sophisticated molecular design and genetic engineering have helped tremendously in solving many technical challenges and created the next generation bispecific antibodies with high efficacy and safety profiles.

With many successes recently, the zoo of bispecific antibodies now consists of more than 100 different formats, and about 80 bispecific antibodies are currently in clinical trials.

KEYNOTE PRESENTATION: Current Landscape and Outlook of Bispecific Antibody

Roland Kontermann, PhD, Professor, Biomedical Engineering, Institute of Cell Biology and Immunology, University of Stuttgart

Bispecific antibodies have experienced a dramatic interest and growth for therapeutic applications, with more than 80 molecules in clinical development; e.g., in oncology, immuno-oncology, but also for non-oncology applications. An overview will be given on the making of bispecific antibodies and the various therapeutic concepts and applications, e.g., for dual targeting strategies, retargeting of immune effector cells, and substitution therapy by mimicking the function of natural proteins.

Functional Screening Unlocks the Therapeutic Potential of Bispecific Antibodies

Mark Throsby, PhD, CSO, Merus NV

Case studies of clinical assets will be discussed that highlight the role of empirical functional screening. Examples will include both I-O and targeted therapies demonstrating that diverse functional readouts can be incorporated into bispecific antibodies screens.

Selection-Based Development of a Heavy Chain-Light Chain Pairing Technology

Paul Widboom, PhD, Associate Director, Antibody Discovery, Adimab LLC

A significant challenge in the development of multivalent bispecific antibodies involves solving the heavy chain-light chain pairing problem. While most heavy chain-light chain pairs possess a preference for their cognate partner, noncognate mispairing occurs. Avoiding these undesired mispairs is a relevant challenge in the field of bispecific antibody manufacturing. Here we present a solution to the heavy chain-light chain problem derived from a novel selection system. This system finds mutations that improve cognate heavy chain-light chain pairing while maintaining antigen binding affinity.

A Novel Class of Fully Human Co-Stimulatory Bispecific Antibodies for Cancer Immunotherapy

Dimitris Skokos, PhD, Director, Immunity & Inflammation, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals

T-cell activation is initiated upon binding of the T-cell receptor (TCR)/CD3 complex to peptide-MHC complexes (signal 1); activation is then enhanced by engagement of a second co-stimulatory receptor, such as the CD28 receptor on T cells binding to its cognate ligand(s) on the target cell (signal 2). Recently described CD3-based bispecific antibodies act by replacing conventional signal 1, linking T cells to tumor cells by binding a tumor-specific antigen (TSA) with one arm of the bispecific, and bridging to TCR/CD3 with the other.

Next-Generation Bispecifics for Cancer Immunotherapy

Michelle Morrow, PhD, Vice President, Preclinical Translational Pharmacology, F-star

The use of bispecific antibodies can potentially modulate anti-tumour immune responses. Bispecific antibodies: an attractive alternative to cancer treatment combinations. F-stars approach to create bispecific mAb. In vitro and in vivo efficacy of F-star bispecific antibodies targeting oncology pathways observed in preclinical studies.

Bispecific Gamma Delta T Cell Engagers for Cancer Immunotherapy

Hans van der Vliet, MD, PhD, CSO, LAVA Therapeutics; Medical Oncologist, Amsterdam UMC

V9V2 T cells constitute the largest T cell subset in human peripheral blood and are powerful anti-tumor immune effector cells that can be identified in many different tumor types. This presentation will discuss bispecific antibodies designed to engage V9V2 T cells and their use for cancer immunotherapy.

Combinatorial Approaches to Enhance Bispecific Anti-Tumor Efficacy

Eric Smith, PhD, Senior Director, Bispecific Antibodies, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals

This presentation will describe Regenerons bispecific platform and present preclinical data on REGN4018, a clinical stage T cell engaging bispecific targeting Muc16 for solid tumor indications. In addition, status updates on Regenerons other clinical stage bispecific antibodies (REGN1979, REGN5458, REGN5678) will be presented as well as a discussion of new combinatorial approaches being taken to enhance bispecific anti-tumor efficacy.

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Advances in Bispecific Antibody Development are Leading to an Evolution in Anti-cancer Drugs - OncoZine

Global Immunofluorescence Laser Capture Microdissection Equipment Market Forecast to 2024 Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc. (US) – Market Reports…

Major Growth Opportunities of Immunofluorescence Laser Capture Microdissection Equipment Market by 2019 2025.

GlobalImmunofluorescence Laser Capture Microdissection EquipmentMarket provides you idea regarding Market Rate, size at the worldwide level. The experts utilize the different strategy and expository procedure, for example, SWOT examination to figure platform growth. Global Immunofluorescence Laser Capture Microdissection Equipment Market gives you and huge scale stage with full chances to the specific business, makers, firms, affiliation enterprises and dealers that are constantly working on their business development at a world level. This Report Covers segment data including: type segment, industry segment, channel segment. Also, cover different industries clients information, which is very important for the manufacturers.

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The global Immunofluorescence Laser Capture Microdissection Equipment market is valued at xx million USD in 2019 and is expected to reach xx million USD by the end of 2025, growing at a CAGR of xx% between 2019 and 2024.

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Bates biochemist and physicist receive $373,000 for Lyme research – Bates News

Two Bates College scientists have received nearly $373,000 from the National Institutes of Health for first-of-its-kind research into the genetic functioning of bacteria that cause Lyme disease.

The project draws on new capabilities in high-resolution microscopy that make it possible to observe spatial arrangements of RNA in Borrelia burgdorferi, one of four Borrelia species that cause Lyme disease. This study of variations in RNA location and shape could eventually suggest new medical responses to Lyme, which strikes up to 300,000 people in the U.S. annually.

Receiving the $372,639 grant for the two-year project are physicist Travis Gould, an expert in the field of fluorescence nanoscopy, and biochemist Paula Schlax, who researches gene expression in spiral-shaped bacteria, also known as spirochetes, such as Lyme bacteria.

Biochemist Paula Schlax and physicist Travis Gould pose with Goulds STED super-resolution microscope in Carnegie Science Hall. (Phyllis Graber Jensen/Bates College)

RNA is an intermediate in the process of cells making proteins, says Schlax, a professor of chemistry and biochemistry at Bates. Were trying to understand generally how production of proteins gets turned on and off when the bacteria move from ticks to mammals and from mammals back to ticks changes in the bacterias environment that change the shape and location of RNA.

We know from other bacteria that RNAs location inside the cell seems to affect how long that RNA lasts whether its near the edges of the cell, or the ends of the cell, or spread out evenly inside. Our hypothesis is that how fast RNA gets broken down, or doesnt get broken down, probably helps the cell decide which proteins to make when conditions change, such as when the bacteria moves from the tick to a mammal or vice versa.

Variations in protein production could cause variations in the bacterias disease-causing capability. The more we understand that process, Schlax says, the easier it is to think about new targets for drugs and new therapeutics.

Until quite recently, the physical limitations of microscope technology curtailed its usefulness in testing such a hypothesis. The bacteria have a characteristic shape, says Gould: very skinny in relation to length. The length is typically around 20 microns, or millionths of a meter, but the bacterias internal diameter is vastly smaller, at about 200 nanometers, or billionths of a meter. (A piece of paper is about 100,000 nanometers thick.)

That 200 nanometers is, in the best-case scenario, at the limit of a conventional microscopes resolution, Gould says. So a conventional microscope cant answer these questions about where RNA is within that 200-nanometer cylinder.

But Gould, an associate professor of physics, is an innovator in imaging technologies that use lasers, fluorescing molecules, and other means to attain much higher resolution. For the NIH-funded research, he has adapted an existing Bates microscope that he built and that uses a process called stimulated emission depletion, or STED, to capture images of the B. burgdorferi RNA.

Going from older microscopy technologies to Goulds newly updated STED is like putting on glasses for the first time.

Specifically, he added another laser to the instrument that expands its imaging capability from two to three dimensions. Going from older technologies to this latest iteration, says Schlax, is like putting on glasses for the first time.

Complementary to the STED technology, the researchers and their students will use a technique called fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) that deploys fluorescent probes to specific parts of the transcripts that the microbes DNA imparts to its RNA.

The research will be the first to identify patterns of transcript localization within B. burgdorferi, and, notably, the first research to use STED microscopy for this sort of localization within any spirochete.

This is significant given the range and impact of diseases caused by such bacteria, including syphilis, yaws, periodontal disease, and leptospirosis, whose effects include kidney failure.

Joining Schlax and Gould in the project are Bates students and research associate Anna Bowsher, whose position is funded by the NIH grant. The work entails growing B. burgdorferi microbes in the lab, affixing individual cells to slides, and introducing DNA molecules, complete with fluorescent tags, that are tailored to activate a specific RNA response.

Then the slides will be examined with Goulds STED microscope, and the results compiled into a spatial-distribution analysis of different types of RNAs. The team hopes that they will have results to report by summer 2020.

The project will involve both thesis students advised by Gould and Schlax and students doing summer research. These kinds of projects really are great for students to see how science is done, says Schlax, and hopefully get their names on some papers and keep them interested in science.

With the use of fluorescing molecules now standard practice in high-resolution microscopy, STED imaging achieves enhanced resolution through a technique of selectively switching off such molecules. STED is one of a number of so-called super-resolution techniques developed to bypass the diffraction limit, a limit on the resolution of conventional microscopy imposed by the length of light waves.

Gould estimates that all told, there are likely two dozen or so labs equipped with commercially available STED microscopes, and another handful that use custom-built instruments like his.

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Bates biochemist and physicist receive $373,000 for Lyme research - Bates News

Assistant Professor for the Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University job with MASARYK UNIVERSITY | 190218 – Times Higher…

Department Department of BiochemistryFaculty of Science

Deadline 20 Jan 2020

Start date 20.02.2020 (upon agreement)

O P E N P OSI T IO N

Assistant professor for the Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University

Dean of the Faculty of Science, Masaryk University opens the selection procedure for the position ofAssistant professor for the Department of Biochemistry.

Deadline: 20.01.2020Starting date: 20.02.2020 (upon agreement)

Requirements:

Application form with attached motivation letter, curriculum vitae, scanned certificates of education and overview of professional activities should be send till20.01.2020to the Personnel Office, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, Kotlsk 2,61137 Brno using the electronic application form.

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Assistant Professor for the Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University job with MASARYK UNIVERSITY | 190218 - Times Higher...

Wiped Film Evaporators (WFE) Market growth in technological innovation, Competitive landscape mapping the trends and outlook for next 5 years LCI…

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Introduction about Global (United States, European Union and China) Wiped Film Evaporators (WFE)

Global (United States, European Union and China) Wiped Film Evaporators (WFE) Market Size (Sales) Market Share by Type (Product Category) [, Vertical Wiped Film Evaporators & Horizontal Wiped Film Evaporators] in 2018Wiped Film Evaporators (WFE) Market by Application/End Users [Pharmaceuticals, Chemical Industry, Food and Beverages, Petrochemical Industry, Textile Industry & Others]Global (United States, European Union and China) Wiped Film Evaporators (WFE) Sales (Volume) and Market Share Comparison by ApplicationsGlobal Global (United States, European Union and China) Wiped Film Evaporators (WFE) Sales and Growth Rate (2014-2025)Wiped Film Evaporators (WFE) Competition by Players/Suppliers, Region, Type and ApplicationWiped Film Evaporators (WFE) (Volume, Value and Sales Price) table defined for each geographic region defined.Global (United States, European Union and China) Wiped Film Evaporators (WFE) Players/Suppliers Profiles and Sales DataAdditionally Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base and Competitors list is being provided for each listed manufacturersMarket Sales, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2014-2018) table for each product type which includeCost Structure AnalysisKey Raw Materials Analysis & Price TrendsSupply Chain, Sourcing Strategy and Downstream Buyers, Industrial Chain Analysis..and view more in complete table of Contents

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Wiped Film Evaporators (WFE) Market growth in technological innovation, Competitive landscape mapping the trends and outlook for next 5 years LCI...