GyanSys Selected by AgReliant Genetics as the Primary Partner for Their Implementation of SAP S/4HANA as Part of Their Digital Transformation – Yahoo…

CARMEL, Ind., Jan. 24, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --AgReliant Genetics, a leader in seed research, production and provider of seed solutions, signed a contract with GyanSys Inc. ("GyanSys"), a leading IT services provider headquartered in Indiana, to implementSAP S/4HANA on HANA Enterprise Cloud (HEC) as part of their digital transformation journey to replace their legacy ERP systems.

Steve Thompson, CIO of AgReliant Genetics "GyanSys led our team to conduct S/4HANA Best Practice workshops, gap analysis, and recommended the right SAP software bill-of-materials. AgReliant is excited to start our digital transformation journey partnering with GyanSys to build a scalable digital core for our Finance, Purchasing, Planning, Sales, Manufacturing, and Warehouse Management systems."

Rajkishore Una, President & CEO of GyanSys "GyanSys is committed to successfully deliver AgReliant Genetics' new SAP environment with our global delivery approach and our best practice-led implementation methodology. We are bringing our expertise in SAP S/4HANA digital core, alongside BPC, EWM, aATP, Manufacturing for Planning & Scheduling, and Analytics Cloud, for AgReliant to derive the most value from this strategic investment."

About AgReliant Genetics:

AgReliant Genetics offers corn, soybean, sorghum, and alfalfa seed solutions to farmers through their product brands. Contact your local AgriGold, LG Seeds, or PRIDE Seeds representative for more information.

Learn more about AgReliant Geneticsat http://www.agreliantgenetics.com.

About GyanSys Inc.:

GyanSys is a mid-tier global systems integrator specializing in SAP, Salesforce, Microsoft, and ServiceNow Platforms to improve the Sales, Finance, Supply Chain, Manufacturing, Operations, and HR business processes to support digital transformation.

Headquartered in Indiana, GyanSys was founded in 2005 and has approximately 1,000+ professionals globally serving 125+ customers across various industries, including the manufacturing, automotive, high-tech, CPG, and life sciences industries.

For more information about GyanSys, visit http://www.gyansys.com.

For press inquiries and more information, contact:Cliff SaitoDigital Marketing ManagerE-mail: cliff.saito@gyansys.com

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Research thrives at Mindfulness Center – The Brown Daily Herald

As students take a step into another year and another semester, exams and busy schedules, the Mindfulness Center at Brown continues to connect University researchers from diverse areas of study.

The Mindfulness Centers mission is to develop research and provide evidence-based mindfulness programs that are inspiring and accessible to communities worldwide, said Eric Loucks, director of the Mindfulness Center and associate professor of epidemiology, behavioral and social sciences and medicine. Its principal aims are in research, mindfulness programs, training experts in the field and collaborating with other organizations to produce system-wide impacts, he added.

Mindfulness involves increasing peoples awareness of their emotions and bodily reactions so that they may alter their behavior as needed, said Jud Brewer, the director of research and innovation at the Mindfulness Center and associate professor of behavioral and social sciences at the School of Public Health. Mindfulness training is there to help people live better lives, and that involves changing both physical behavior, (and)also mental behaviors, like judging ourselves or worrying.

Since the Center opened in the Jewelry District in 2017, it has connected investigators who incorporate mindfulness into their research, The Herald previously reported. These researchers come from various Brown-affiliated institutions, including the School of Public Health, Warren Alpert Medical School and neighboring hospitals.

A study on the effects of mindfulness on blood pressure was published in November. The results from the clinical trial were part of a larger project funded by a five-year grant from the National Institutes of Health in 2015, The Herald previously reported. The project team, consisting of researchers from multiple disciplines and universities, conducted systematic reviews on how mindfulness influences self-regulation and self-awareness, Loucks said. He was one of the principal investigators of the study.

If hypertension, or high blood pressure, is not properly controlled as is the case in about half of people with the condition it can cause stroke and heart disease, which are the biggest killers in the world, Loucks said. The study sought to determine whether mindfulness skills like self-awareness, emotional regulation and meditation could reduce hypertension when applied to medical regimens that affect blood pressure, such as exercise and eating, he added.

Participants of the study, who had been unable to regulate their blood pressure through physical activity, diet or medications alone, underwent nine weeks of mindfulness training. Afterwards, they were asked to incorporate the techniques into other daily behaviors of their choosing, Loucks said. Prior research on the reduction of blood pressure through mindfulness without the application to other behaviors yielded inconsistent, and less significant, findings, Loucks said. But this clinical trial resulted in a significant drop in average blood pressure among the participants, and these decreases were noticeable as early as three months following the program.

Whereas the intention of this first trial was geared towards determining the acceptability and efficacy of the mindfulness interventions, the research team is currently finishing a second, randomly controlled clinical trial for which Loucks hopes to have results by this summer. This study includes a control group that did not undergo mindfulness training a component that was absent from the first trial. If this subsequent study confirms the results of the November study, the next steps may include improving the efficacy and efficiency of the studied mindfulness techniques, and offering this kind of program to the public, he added.

Director of Integrative Cardiology and Prevention and Associate Professor Monica Aggarwal at the University of Florida, who was not involved in the study, researches the effects of nutrition and lifestyle on cardiovascular health. Seeing more studies showing an integrative approach to managing cardiovascular risk factors is excellent, Aggarwal wrote in an email to The Herald. I believe we will be seeing more and more studies showing that an integrative approach works in the coming years.

But seeing more metabolic parameters of stress and more clinical parameters would have been great, Aggarwal wrote.

Another principal investigator of this project, Willoughby Britton, assistant professor of psychiatry and human behavior and of behavioral and social sciences, has also researched meditation. Britton directs the Clinical and Affective Neuroscience Laboratory with Visiting Professor of Religious Studies Jared Lindahl.

After Britton came across a counterintuitive and surprising finding in a previous study that meditation reduced sleep she has further investigated potential consequences of mindfulness.

As part of the Varieties of Contemplative Experience project the largest study ever conducted on negative meditation experiences Britton studied meditation teachers and 60 meditators who were experiencing difficulties resulting from meditation, she said. Britton has also been investigating the bodily and mental effects associated with various meditation practices and how outcomes may differ among people with varying personalities or conditions, she added.

From a clinical perspective, Brandon Gaudiano, a psychologist and associate professor of psychiatry and human behavior and of behavioral and social sciences, conducts research at Butler Hospital. His work involves the application of acceptance and commitment therapy an approach that alters peoples behavior using their values in those with psychotic disorders and depression, Gaudiano said.

He has partnered with Associate Professor of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Psychiatry and Human Behavior David Williams on an ongoing investigation using mindfulness to help increase physical activity in those who have depression, Loucks said.

The Center has been innovative in its incorporation of technologies such as digital therapeutics and functional MRI an imaging technique that can be used to show how meditation affects brain activity, Brewer said.

In his own lab, Brewer investigates meditations impact on the brain and mindfulness apps effects on health. For example, the Unwinding Anxiety program used a mindfulness application targeting anxiety, and the results revealed significant reductions in anxiety after a couple of months, he added. The findings illustrate how mindfulness training reduces peoples susceptibility to their emotions, which alleviates anxiety, Brewer said.

Amidst the stresses of college, the free Mindfulness-Based College program at the Mindfulness Center has showed positive results in a clinical trial, Loucks said.

In its research, the Mindfulness Center has also addressed diversity.

After expanding to the west from eastern cultures, wealthy communities have become the primary beneficiary of mindfulness programming, said Assistant Professor of Behavioral and Social Sciences and of Psychiatry and Human Behavior Jeffrey Proulx.

But Proulx, who joined the Mindfulness Center Sept. 2019, works to bring mindfulness research to underserved populations. Proulx came to the University because the Mindfulness Center here is one of the premier locations of people who guide the policies of mindfulness around the world, he said. Proulx, who is Native American, has focused on bringing mindfulness to Native American communities to alleviate prevailing distress and intergenerational trauma, he added. Stress can elevate heart rate, reduce brain volume and negatively impact the immune system, Proulx said.

Unlike other researchers studying mindfulness in Native American communities, Proulx is creating unique interventions for them, he said. His current projects include studies of mindfulness programs with Native American communities in Oregon and California, the Eastern Band Cherokee in North Carolina, and the Narragansett Tribe in Rhode Island. Proulx receives feedback from communities in attempt to find parallels between Native American traditions like berry picking, dancing and meditation and mindfulness practices, he said.

Proulx focuses his work on bringing mindfulness interventions in really respectful ways to Native American communities His ability to navigate through diversity and inclusion is inspiring, Loucks said.

Im just excited that Im at Brown and at the Mindfulness Center, especially because of their commitment to diversity, Proulx said. The Mindfulness Center is filled with people that have such an open focus on the future and on being inclusive.

Although the researchers affiliated with the Mindfulness Center are based in many different locations, the establishment has enabled collaboration amongst the researchers and between them and mindfulness educators, Loucks said. We have very strong mindfulness research, but then we also have very strong mindfulness teacher training programs so theres a lot of synergies between those two.

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Research thrives at Mindfulness Center - The Brown Daily Herald

The Natural History of Song: Is music the same everywhere? – Medical News Today

A team of multidisciplinary researchers has attempted to determine the truth of the highly speculated theory that music is a universal factor among cultures.

The team analyzed ethnographic observations carried out in 315 societies throughout the world and explored vast troves of research data and recorded music to break new ground in resolving an old conundrum.

Throughout history, fundamental questions about music have remained unanswered. Experts have assumed but not proven that music is universal, existing in all human societies. However, many scholars and musicologists disagree about whether the location of a piece of musics creation determines its sound.

The current study may now provide quantified evidence that music is universal and that its form can transcend cultural differences and geographic contexts.

Three researchers, all currently or formerly associated with Harvard University, in Cambridge, MA, developed this large-scale study: Samuel Mehr, a research associate, Prof. Luke Glowacki, and Manvir Singh, a graduate student.

However, researchers from various institutions contributed, including expert musicians, ethnomusicologists, and music theorists. The team also analyzed data from more than 29,000 volunteers.

They set about answering musics most challenging questions, such as Does music appear universally? and, What kinds of behavior are associated with song, and how do they vary among societies? They recently published their findings in the journal Science.

Previous studies into the universality of music among societies were not considered representative because of small sample sizes or limited geographic contexts.

Also, earlier studies often relied solely on the analysis of personal accounts and written histories, making the findings vulnerable to human bias. Mehr and the team were set on creating a more robust method; they write:

Hypotheses of the evolutionary function of music are [] untestable without comprehensive and representative data on its forms and behavioral contexts across societies.

To provide conclusive evidence of musics universality, the team needed to crunch a huge amount of data. Combining computational science and ethnomusicology (the study of music from a cultural perspective), the team analyzed data from private collections and ethnographic databases, such as the Human Relations Area Files online database.

They amassed nearly 5,000 ethnographic descriptions of songs from 60 societies and a staggering number of recordings. The team collectively titled these collections the Natural History of Song (NHS). They then assembled the NHS discography, which includes 118 songs from 30 geographic regions.

Ultimately, the researchers found mentions of song in all 315 societies included in their analysis. From this, they concluded that music is, indeed, universal.

Mehr and the team then used a mix of computational and human analysis to study variation in the interpretation of music around the world.

They applied technological tools that automatically define the qualities of a songs tone and pitch and recruited expert listeners to describe the theoretical features of each piece of music. They also used nonexpert listeners to establish perceptive qualities of the music, such as how a song made them feel.

The study grew larger still with the inclusion of a huge data set from 29,357 volunteers who visited the teams citizen science website and categorized songs by type.

This study expands our understanding of musics universality in a number of ways. The authors make the following conclusions:

The defining factor that underpins these findings will come as a surprise to many musicologists: When it comes to music, we have more in common than not.

Mehr considers the project to represent a rich, complex analysis of human behavior and cognitive perception. He holds that the results of the analysis have only highlighted our similarities:

Despite the staggering diversity of music influenced by countless cultures and readily available to the modern listener, our shared human nature may underlie basic musical structures that transcend cultural differences.

Samuel Mehr

In a world fraught with division, its comforting to hear that some universal practices unite us.

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The Natural History of Song: Is music the same everywhere? - Medical News Today

To advance robot swarms, UB engineers turn to video games – UB Now: News and views for UB faculty and staff – University at Buffalo Reporter

The key to improving robot swarm technology may lie within video games.

Thats according to a research team from UBs Artificial Intelligence Institute, which received a $316,000 federal grant to study the decisions people make as well as biometric information such as their brain waves and eye movements while gaming.

Researchers will use this data to build artificial intelligence they believe can improve coordination among teams of autonomous air and ground robots.

The idea is to eventually scale up to 250 aerial and ground robots, working in highly complex situations. For example, there may be a sudden loss of visibility due to smoke during an emergency. The robots need to be able to effectively communicate and adapt to challenges like that, says the grants principal investigator, Souma Chowdhury, assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.

Co-investigators include David Doermann, director of the UBs Artificial Intelligence Institute and SUNY Empire Innovation Professor of computer science and engineering; Eshan Esfahani, associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering; and Karthik Dantu, assistant professor of computer science and engineering.

Swarm robotics research is inspired by many sources; ant colonies and schooling fish are examples. But the potential to improve AI systems by learning from humans is enormous,says Chowdhury, a member of UB's Sustainable Manufacturing and Advanced Robotic Technologies (SMART) Community of Excellence.

The study, which is funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), will center on real-time strategy games. These are time-based (as opposed to turn-based) and involve using resources to build units and defeat opponents. Examples include StarCraft, Stellaris and Company of Heroes.

Students will play a basic real-time strategy game developed by the research team. In addition to recording the decisions the gamers make, researchers will track their eye movements with high-speed cameras and their brain activity through electroencephalograms.

The team will use the data to create artificial intelligence algorithms that guide the behavior of autonomous air and ground robots.

We dont want the AI system just to mimic human behavior; we want it to form a deeper understanding of what motivates human actions. Thats what will lead to more advanced AI, Chowdhury says.

Eventually, the team will integrate and evaluate artificial intelligence it develops into more sophisticated virtual environments developed by DARPAs partner organizations.

This project is one example of how machine intelligence systems can address complex, large-scale heterogeneous planning tasks, and how the University at Buffalo Artificial Intelligence Institute is tackling fundamental issues at the forefront of AI, says Doermann.

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To advance robot swarms, UB engineers turn to video games - UB Now: News and views for UB faculty and staff - University at Buffalo Reporter

Using Voice Analysis to Assess the Well-Being of Patients – Psych Congress Network

An interactive voice applications assessment of patient well-being through analysis of their speech was highly comparable with physicians tracking of patient well-being, according to a study published online in PLOS One.

The pilot study included 47 patients with diagnoses of bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, schizophrenia, or schizoaffective disorder. For up to 14 months, patients provided speech samples by calling a toll-free number at least weekly and answering 3 open-ended questions: How have you been over the past few days? Whats been troubling or challenging over the past few days? Whats been particularly good or positive?

The application, MyCoachConnect, employed artificial intelligence trained to use a patients words to analyze well-being. The app focused mostly on word choice and how responses changed over time and had a smaller emphasis on tone of voice and other audio features.

Using Data to Better Understand Patients and Their Mental Health

The way people answer questions and the way they change their answers over time is unique to each patient, said lead author Armen Arevian, MD, PhD, director of the Innovation Lab at the Jane and Terry Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, University of California Los Angeles. We were looking at a person as a person and not as a diagnosis.

After comparing the technologys analysis of patient well-being with patient global assessment ratings provided by clinicians, researchers deemed the app both effective and feasible to use.

Technology doesnt have to be complicated, Dr. Arevian said. In this study, patients didnt need a smartphone. It could be simple and low tech on the patient end, and high tech on the backend.

Some patients remarked that speaking to a computer-generated voice was freeing.

They also said it helped them feel less lonely because they knew that someone would be listening to it, Dr. Arevian said, and to them that meant that someone cared.

Jolynn Tumolo

References

Arevian AC, Bone D, Malandrakis N, et al. Clinical state tracking in serious mental illness through computational analysis of speech. PLOS One. 2020;15(1):e0225695.

App uses voice analysis, AI to track wellness of people with mental illness [press release]. Los Angeles, California: University of California - Los Angeles Health Sciences; January 17, 2020.

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Using Voice Analysis to Assess the Well-Being of Patients - Psych Congress Network

AI in the Courtroom: Will a Robot Sentence You? – Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence

The possibility of an AI judge is raised in a recent article on new developments in artificial intelligence (AI) in court systems, which include Los Angeles Gina the Avatar for traffic ticket resolution and a proposed Jury Chat Bot.

Some experts think AI might be fairer than human judgment:

It may not be particularly hard to build an AI-based system that delivers better results than humans, panelists at the conference noted. Theres plenty of evidence of all kinds of human bias built into justice systems. In 2011, for instance, a study of an Israeli parole board showed by the parole board delivered harsher decisions in the hour before lunch and the hour before the end of the day.

But others warn of AIs limitations. Many AI decisions are not explainable because the computer system is motoring through 10,000 cases and comes up with a mathematical solution. Humans do not think that way and may not regard the decision as fair, no matter what it is.

In any event, one Superior Court judge warns that many cases dont come down to information alone:

In my experience in judging, especially with a self-represented litigant, most of the time people dont even now what to tell you, she said. If an automated system builds its decision based on the information it receives, she continued, how are you going to train it to look for other stuff? For me thats a very subjective, in-the-moment thing.

For instance, Chang said, if theyre fidgeting, Ill start asking them questions, and it will come to a wholly different result.

She cited immigration cases where the unsuccessful litigant is immediately murdered after deportation to a home country. Some such risks may be hard to quantify, especially if few wish to know about or accept responsibility for the outcomes.

On the other hand, we may be prone to inflating the difference AI will make. Gonzaga University law professor (emeritus) David DeWolf (right) doesnt see AI in the courtroom as a threat to justice. He told Mind Matters News,

Its hard to be too critical of AI in the courtroom because the current state of the U.S. legal system is so flawed. Resolving disputes through a trial is the very last resort, like going to war when diplomacy fails. It is never your first option.

Taking criminal sentencing as an example, there are multiple axes upon which the right sentence should be built. Retribution, deterrence, incapacitation, and rehabilitation are all relevant considerations. The desire to individualize a sentence to optimize these factors has to be limited to avoid arbitrary subjective judgments by the judge (or commission) imposing the sentence.

The late economist Kenneth Boulding pointed out that there were three ways of organizing human behavior: coercion, exchange, and gift. Armies and the legal system operate on the basis of coercion. Markets operate on the basis of exchange, while families, friends and churches operate on the basis of gift. All societies incorporate all three systems, but the less they rely on coercion, and the more they benefit from gift, the healthier they are.

Im less worried about the use of AI in the legal system than I am about the increasing dependence upon law a form of coercion to regulate human behavior.

If Dr. DeWolf proves correct, the principal concern should perhaps be that AI can do nothing to address fundamental problems with the way a system works. Those problems derive from human choices in the face of incentives, constructive or perverse.

We might also ask, what exactly has AI changed in various professions today? In disciplines that require years of study, like law, AI is not taking jobs so much as creating them. Just a few examples:

In general, in fields where human judgment is required, the huge increase in information that AI methods offer should result in more opportunities to exercise it.

Where has AI failed? In one spectacular example, a hospital tried to automate and streamline the process of telling a man that he was dying. Never again!, the administration vowed, after a huge outcry. But that was a failure in judgment on their part; a non-personal approach to dying should never have been considered in the first place.

Further reading:

Robot-proofing your career, Peter Thiels way

Students, dont let smart machines disruptyour futureThree ways you can avoid life in Moms basement and the job pouring coffee.

Creative freedom, not robots, isthe future of work.In an information economy, there will be a place where the human person is at the very center

and

Maybe the robot will do you a favor andsnatch your job.The historical pattern is that drudgery gets automated, not creativity

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AI in the Courtroom: Will a Robot Sentence You? - Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence

Heart Disease That Hurts Others – Chron.com

The famous biblical account of the Ten Plagues visited on Egypt in an effort to liberate Israelite slaves is troublesome on various theological levels. Equally troublesome is Pharaohs response. After several of the early plagues, Pharaoh appears to acquiesce to Moses request to Let My People Go, only to have his heart hardened in the final moment. What kind of responsible leader would put his population at risk for his/her own personal gain? And, what does it mean to harden ones heart?

The contemporary psychologist Erich Fromm wrote, the hardening of Pharaohs heart is one of the most fundamental laws of human behavior. Every evil act tends to harden mans heart, that is, to deaden it. Every good act tends to soften it, to make it more alive. The more mans heart hardens, the less freedom he has to change; the more is he determined already by previous action. But there comes a point of no return, when mans heart has become so hardened and so deadened that he has lost the possibility of freedom, when he is forced to go on and on until the unavoidable end which is, in the last analysis, his own physical or spiritual destruction.

When one becomes accustomed to lying, lying becomes ones new truth. It is not that a pathological liar refuses the truth, he/she is just unable to distinguish one from the other. The same may be said with regard to Pharaohs narcistic refusal to back down in the face of his own peoples suffering. It is not that he doesnt want to, his habitual concern with his own power and authority has blinded him to the needs of anyone else.

Rabbi Hillel Silverman comments, Every time we disobey the voice of conscience, it becomes fainter and feebler, and the human heart becomes harder to reach and move. The ancient Pharaoh of the Book of Exodus has become a metaphor for leaders of every age whose personal ambition causes them to lose sight of those they lead. The dustpan of human history is littered with leaders whose only concern was ambition, power, and self-aggrandizement.

The 19th century British historian and politician, Sir John Dalberg-Acton is best known for saying, Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. It is not easy to wear the crown of leadership. The pantheon of effective and visionary leaders is few in number. We need only look around. In todays world there are far too many Pharaohs, and not enough Moses!

Rabbi Howard Siegel

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Heart Disease That Hurts Others - Chron.com

‘We have not learned the lessons’: Holocaust survivor warns genocide persists around the world – Washington Examiner

Societies have failed to learn from the Holocaust and prevent the repetition of such crimes, Auschwitz survivor Ruth Cohen warned today during a commemoration event at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C.

I am so disheartened and sadly convinced that we have not learned the lessons that this history my history teaches, Cohen told U.S. and European officials, Holocaust survivors, and national Jewish organizations assembled for the 2020 International Holocaust Remembrance Day Commemoration.

Cohen, 88, was sent to Auschwitz after Nazi German forces marched into Hungary in 1944. She recalled learning shortly after her arrival at the notorious camp that our mother, brother, and little cousins who had come with us had already been murdered before emphasizing that such horrors are underway today.

As I look around our world, I see groups like the Yazidi, the Rohingya, and Uighurs, being persecuted and subject to incarceration, violence, and even genocide, Cohen said.

That was a reference to three campaigns of brutality that have taken place just in the last five years. The Yazidis, an ethnic and religious minority in Iraq, were targeted by the Islamic State through mass sex slavery and murder that the United Nations deemed a genocide in 2016. Thousands of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar have been killed by government security forces intent on ethnic cleansing, according to the U.N. And Chinese communist officials in Xinjiang have detained more than a million Uighur Muslims in re-education camps, an industrial-scale crackdown unseen since the 1930s, according to State Department officials.

Cohens remarks contained a rebuke for U.S. and European audiences as well. I am scared at the alarming rise in anti-Semitism, in violent and deadly attacks on Jews in the U.S. and elsewhere, she said. "It is appalling to see the stunning denial of the Holocaust, and how the experience of the survivors and the victims are being distorted in the very places where it happened.

That was an implicit reference to the so-called memory wars still underway in Eastern Europe, where the history of the Holocaust remains a fraught and even geopolitically contentious topic. The Soviet Unions role in the military defeat of the Nazis is complicated by the willingness of Soviet citizens to help Nazis persecute Jews in the war between the two totalitarian regimes. Soviet authorities "imposed a policy of silence and denial after the war, according to the Kennan Institutes Izabella Tavorovsky, while contemporary Russian leaders denounce critics of the Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe as neo-Nazis.

Cohens reflections revealed the personal tragedy that those political disputes can obscure. Her happy childhood in Mukachevo, Czechoslovakia, was marred overnight by the 1938 partition that subjected her to Hungarian rule. My fathers business was taken away immediately, and our nanny had to leave because she was no longer allowed to work for a Jewish family, she said. Shortly after, we learned that members of my mothers family had been taken to Majdanek and murdered. My family officially went into mourning.

She soon witnessed murders herself, beginning with the public execution of a biology teacher, whom I admired and adored, who refused to board the cattle cars that took her Jewish community to Auschwitz. In the months that followed, Cohen and her sister occasionally received messages telling them to be at a specific place where we might see our father, who also worked in the camp. They also managed to meet their uncle and talk across the barbed wire fence that divided them.

He informed us that soon he will be taken to the gas chambers, she said, before her voice broke with emotion. Indeed, in a few days, a friend of his came to our meeting spot and told us sorry that uncle had been killed. There are no words to adequately describe the horror of that moment.

The girls were transferred, first to Nuremberg and then to the Czech town of Holysov to work in Siemens factories. The Holysov factory was overrun by White Russian partisans two days before the end of the war, armed with bayonets.

Most of the Germans did not resist arrest by the partisans, but one officer tried to flee on his motorbike, Cohen said. He was shot in front of us. Some cheered, but most of us were shocked to see such cruelty. Our humanity was still intact.

The White Russian partisans soon made clear that the Jewish captives were not welcome" among them, so the group remained in Holysov to await the U.S. Army.

"The Holocaust teaches us about human nature that there is great capacity for good, as well as for evil, Cohen said. I implore everyone, especially those in leadership positions, to be motivated by this history. Use your authority and influence to push back against those who perpetrate the worst instincts in human behavior. Do what you can to ensure that our children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren do not face the same atrocities.

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'We have not learned the lessons': Holocaust survivor warns genocide persists around the world - Washington Examiner

Man and Metropolis | John Wilson – First Things

Ive been reading a lot about cities lately: Carlo Rotellas excellent book The World Is Always Coming to an End: Pulling Together and Pulling Apart in a Chicago Neighborhood, for instance, but also a number of others that are variously maddening. Imagine writing an entire book about How Latino Immigrants Saved the American City (the 400 pages of Barrio America, from which I learned a lot) and hardly mentioning Christianity. (But a large image of Our Lady of Guadalupe is featured on the cover!)

This has set me to thinking about city writing more generally, and the way in which some of the vexations of the genre present certain recurring temptations that many writers have failed to resist.

Here follow, for starters, some gems from Classic Essays on the Culture of Cities, edited by Richard Sennett (Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1969; Sennett was only in his mid-twenties when the book appeared). Max Weber (The Nature of the City): Neither the city, in the economic sense, nor the garrison, the inhabitants of which are accoutred with special political-administrative structures, necessarily constitute a community. An urban community, in the full meaning of the word, appears as a general phenomenon only in the Occident. Oh, dear. Robert Park (The City: Suggestions for the Investigation of Human Behavior in the Urban Environment; savor that subtitle for a moment): The old adage which describes the city as the natural environment of the free man still holds so far as the individual man finds in the chances, the diversity of interests and tasks, and in the vast un-conscious cooperation of city life the opportunity to choose his own vocation and develop his peculiar individual talents. Louis Wirth (Human Ecology): The studies showing significant differences in such phenomena as delinquency and mental disorders between different areas of the city are of the utmost importance for the advance of scientific knowledge. But of course!

Cities invite hubrisnot only outsized political ambitions (a l Boss Daley) but also intellectual ambitions. A big city is large enough and sufficiently complex to serve as a comprehensible surrogate for the whole world, a sort of laboratory of the human. And the overweening rhetoric of the generic City attaches itself even to projects that claim a mystique for particular cities. I have on my Kindle an e-galley that will be published by Viking this summer: Peter Lunenfelds City at the Edge of Forever: Los Angeles Reimagined. My nomination for The Worst Book of the Year in 2004 was Alex Kotlowitzs Never a City So Real: A Walk in Chicago. (That title! Lead me to the vomitorium.)

In August 2001, I wrote a couple of pieces marking the fortieth anniversary of Jean Gottmanns book Megalopolis: The Urbanized Northeastern Seaboard of the United States. Gottmann was a French geographer who lived in the U.S. for some years, and his book generated a great deal of attention; its title was, for a while, a concept to conjure with. Nowadays, as I wrote in 2001,

I would love it if my friend Noah Toly and an interesting range of fellow urbanologists would convene to talk about the way we talk and think about cities and the City now. A conversation with Gottmann, so to speak, that might avoid the hubris that seems to attend so much thinking and writing about the city.

John Wilson is a contributing editor forThe Englewood Review of Books.

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5G Technology: No Ordinary Upgrade-Critics Say May Change Life as We Know It (Part One and Two) – KSFR

Wake Up Call Segment Host/Producer MK Mendoza takes a look at the introduction of 5G Technology and how it stands to potentially transform life as we know it. Some historians predict it will cause a revolution more drastic than that experienced by the industrial revolution. Starting with complaints from community activists about its unprecedented potential environmental and health effects to the legal implication of it acting as the transport system to usher in the latest in smart technology-communities are speaking out. Harvard Professor and Author Shoshana Zuboff calls the new business model it will mainstream Surveillance Capitalism. She argues that this new mode of business uses our personal data as its new raw material, to be exploited and mined to predict human behavior. When combined with things like facial recognition and Artificial Intelligence, this raw material becomes a profitable item, so profitable many companies are now turning to it to make more money from the data they collect than the products they sell. Once the data hits the secondary market, there is zero accountability for how that data may be used-where it can end up in the hands of totalitarian governments like that of China where it can be used as a means of gaining social control over not just their own population, but even to subjugate certain populations like that of the Uyghurs who many compare to the modern day jews of the Holocaust. Hi-Tech companies, like Google and Facebook have hidden their means of attaining this information in the internet of things smart technology with products marketed as providing "greater convenience" and "home security". It brings a new irony to the words "personal security system" especially when these items are those used for the surveillance that collects our personal data and where opting out of this surveillance capitalist model seems near impossible, leaving many finding themselves waking up into world that might have only been previously imagined in sci-fi movies and wondering if Big Brother has already arrived. MK Mendoza speaks with local activists and legal experts to weigh in on action that can be taken on a local level to ensure greater accountability from Hi-Tech companies and more protections for consumers in terms of their concerns over their personal data and safety.

Part One (A look at Community Activist Concerns over Environmental and Health Concerns)-An Interview with Kathleen Dudley

Part Two (A Look at the New Economy-Surveillance Capitalism)-How Local Governments Can Keep Industry Accountable

(Extended Interview with Julian Gresser)

To find out more on Kathleen Dudley, email: seasidereflexology@protonmail.com

To find out more about Julian Gresser, see link below:

https://resiliencemultiplier.com/author/julian/

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5G Technology: No Ordinary Upgrade-Critics Say May Change Life as We Know It (Part One and Two) - KSFR