You can recover from the New Year’s slip – Florida Weekly

HODGES UNIVERSITY

By Florida Weekly Staff | on January 29, 2020

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Youre celebrating and pumped to carry out your New Years resolution.

However, did you know there is a day called Quitters Day? Each year Strava predicts the day when most people will quit New Years resolutions. For 2020 it was predicted for Jan. 19. The 19th has come and gone, and perhaps your resolution has passed with it.

In order to get yourself back on track you need to understand how you are motivated.

Psychology is the study of human behavior and helps explain why we do the things we do, and what motivations trigger our behaviors. Motivations can be intrinsic or extrinsic. When your behavior is driven by an external reward, it is a motivation that arises from outside of yourself. The motivation that arises from within you is intrinsic. People who are intrinsically motivated perform for the sense of personal satisfaction. Which is more important when it comes to keeping those annual resolutions? The answer is intrinsic motivation. This is because intrinsic motivation is linked to changes that happen within us. Essentially, it involves the desire to focus our attention in a particular way that originates from our inner selves. Tapping into your intrinsic motivation is very powerful when it comes to fulfilling promises or completing goals. The reason it is so powerful is that is linked to personal efficacy and purpose. So in order to be more successful it would be helpful to know your purpose for completing your goals.

BUSHEY

Intrinsic motivation is also linked to self-determination, and involves focusing on the tasks that carry you toward your goal. Engaging in these tasks will carry you through your goals, and result in energized emotions and enjoyment. Intrinsic motivation also involves a high degree of autonomy. Ultimately, you are doing this for that feeling of personal satisfaction.

Extrinsic motivation relies on and is fueled by the praise of others and an external reward. That comes in the form of positive affirmation and support in your journey. So what happens if you dont receive that extrinsic motivation? You could lose heart. Even if your 2020 resolutions fell flat, it is not too late.

Instead, here are some questions to ask yourself in order to help you get back on track. After all, you have 11 months left in 2020.

What is your purpose?

What would be the most satisfying element of achieving your goal?

How can you boost your inner autonomy in order to stay on track?

When will you begin again?

Remember that your New Years resolution is something you can still achieve.

Dr. Kelly Bushey is the as sociate professor of applied psychology at Hodges University.

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You can recover from the New Year's slip - Florida Weekly

UB Department of Theatre and Dance Presents Forbidden: Undocumented and Queer in Rural America – UB News Center

BUFFALO, N.Y. The University at Buffalo Department of Theatre and Dance presents a free film screening of, "Forbidden: Undocumented and Queer in Rural America," a feature length documentary about an inspiring young man whose story is exceptional, although not unique.

"Forbidden: Undocumented and Queer in Rural America" reflects the life of Moises Serrano. As a baby, his parents risked everything to flee Mexico in search of the American dream.Forbidden to live and love as an undocumented gay man in the country he calls home, Serrano saw only one option to fight for justice.

The screening will take place at the Center for the Arts Screening Room in Amherst, New York on Wednesday, Feb. 5 at 7 p.m. and will be followed by a Q-and-A with the director and subject of the film, Moises Serrano.

Forbidden was produced by Sisters Unite Productions and Pony Pictures. The small team of local and national filmmakers were inspired to produce the film after a chance encounter with Serrano. The award-winning documentary is directed by filmmaker and guest dance artist Tiffany Rhynard, who will be in residence with UB Theatre and Dance from Feb. 2-7, 2020.

Rhynard is an artist, dancer, and filmmaker compelled to make work that examines the complexity of human behavior and addresses social issues. Having created numerous works for stage and screen, Rhynards choreography, dance films, and documentaries have been presented nationwide and internationally.

Her recent dance documentary short, "Black Stains," about black male identity in the United States, is currently screening at film festivals. The film was created in collaboration with Trent D. Williams, Jr.

As a performer, Rhynard has danced for choreographers including Gerri Houlihan, Laura Dean Dancers and Musicians, and Chavasse Dance and Performance Group. She taught at colleges and universities throughout the country and currently is an assistant professor in the School of Dance at Florida State University.

Moises Serrano served as a producer and one of the cinematographers for the film. He is an openly queer and undocumented activist and storyteller. His mission is to de-criminalize and humanize the issue of migration while advocating for immediate relief to migrant communities. Serrano quickly became one of the most requested speakers in the state of North Carolina. Described as a"consummate orator,"his advocacy has led him to lead a TedX talk in Greensboro and to be named a notable Latino of the triad.

"Forbidden" is currently available on Amazon Prime, Kanopy, and Pragda, and has aired on LogoTV with sponsorship from the American Civil Liberties Union. The film earned the first ever Social Justice Film Award from the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Freedom Award from Outfest Film Festival.

Date and Time: Wednesday, Feb. 5 at 7 p.m.

Location:UB Center for the ArtsScreening RoomUniversity at BuffaloNorth CampusDirections: ubcfa.org/directions-maps2019

Tickets:FreeAdvance reservations required by email: rachelol@buffalo.edu

General Information:716-645-6897

Media Inquiries:Jackie Hausler 716-645-6775 hauslerj@buffalo.edu

Group Sales: Mike Formato716-645-0611formato@buffalo.edu

theatredance.buffalo.edu

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UB Department of Theatre and Dance Presents Forbidden: Undocumented and Queer in Rural America - UB News Center

Inside the Fight to Keep an Abuse Apologist Off the Church Stage – Sojourners

If you stand up to sexual abuse, you must remain standing, Susan Codone recently told me. Shed said the same thing on Twitterin response to news that Paige Patterson, former president of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, was slated to preach at the Great Commission Weekend at a church in Immokalee, Fla. Patterson was fired from SWBTS in 2018 after trustees learned that he planned to meet privately with a rape survivor because, I have to break her down and I may need no official types there.

Susan Codone, a professor at Mercer University, is a sexual abuse survivor and Southern Baptist. Despite being abused in a Southern Baptist church, she has remained steadfast in her commitment to the denomination and has become a much-needed voice calling for reform. She recently called on Timothy Pigg, the pastor of Fellowship Church Immokalee, to disinvite Patterson because of Pattersons history of allegedly covering up abuse. Pigg earned his bachelors degree, master of divinity degree, and is a current doctoral student, at SWBTS.

Codone said that Pigg, who could not be reached for this article, refused to speak with her privately about Pattersons presence at his event as did every other Southern Baptist in Florida that she contacted except for Tommy Green, the states executive directortreasurer, who withdrew from the event soon after talking with Codone.

I was reaching out the right way, Codone said, but they were not responding.

So, Codone took to social media, where she posted Piggs professional contact information (publicly available at the churchs website), and asked other Southern Baptists to urge Pigg to rescind Pattersons speaking invitation. Pigg, for his part, reported Codones activity to Twitter, which briefly suspended her account. It has since been reinstated.

I am standing on the platform of belief in local-church autonomy, along with cooperation, Codone said. Local-church autonomy is the idea that each church within the Southern Baptist Convention is accountable only to the members of that church, and not to any sort of ecclesiastical hierarchy. Local-church autonomy has often been cited in discussions of why the SBC has not taken action in the sexual abuse crisis it is facing.

Cooperation, though, is the other side of local-church autonomy, and Codone sees focusing on cooperation as a middle-of-the-road way that can also gain traction if enough people will stand together cooperate to make their voices heard.

Immokalee residents where Piggs church is located will likely be familiar with the middle way that Codone has modeled. Nearly 30 years ago, a group of farmworkers and activists founded the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, a non-profit grassroots organization dedicated to improving wages and working conditions of migrant farmworkers. That group soon discovered that slavery was alive and well particularly in Immokalee and it became a leading anti-slavery group that helped the U.S. government prosecute nine cases of modern-day slavery in the United States. That small group cooperating together to make their voices loud enough so people had to listen led to significant, meaningful change for a large group of people.

Regarding Codones call on social media for others to contact Pigg, she said, There was a grassroots effort but I didnt expect it to go very far. There has been some movement, though. Two of the events sponsors, including the Florida Baptist Convention and Crossroads Church, have dropped out, as have two of the speakers Tommy Green and Wayne Briant, who, like Green, holds a position with the Florida Baptist Convention. The two speakers have been replaced by Scott Colter, a former employee under Patterson whose wife posted onlinethe private records of survivor Megan Lively, and Brad Jurkovich, a frequent speaker at Louisiana College, where last yearin a chapel sermon the dean of the school of human behavior compared women to crack houses and advised them to mow your lawn.

In addition to the withdrawal of sponsors and speakers, SBC president J.D. Greear spoke out against Patterson last week, telling Houston Chronicles religion writer RobertDownen, Trustees terminated Paige Patterson for cause, publicly disclosing that his conduct was antithetical to the core values of our faith, and adding, I advise any Southern Baptist church to consider this severe action before having Dr. Patterson preach or speak and to contact trustee officers if additional information is necessary.

In language that echoes what Codone has been saying, Greear highlighted the need for cooperation among Southern Baptists to protect church members against abusers and enablers of abuse: Southern Baptist churches must take our mutual accountability to each other more seriously than we have in the past If our system of governance means anything, it means exercising due diligence and heeding what those whom we put in positions of trustee oversight have reported about official misconduct.

While Greears condemnation has no disciplinary effect for churches that choose to host Patterson or otherwise embrace disgraced leaders, given church autonomy, his words do carry weight and people are paying attention.

This is perhaps not the monumental change abuse survivors and advocates hope for, but it is proof of Codones concept. Like the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, perhaps grassroots organizing is just the effort needed to rid Southern Baptist churches of evils of abuse.

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Inside the Fight to Keep an Abuse Apologist Off the Church Stage - Sojourners

Implement AI and Design Thinking Strategies to Grow With Technology – Northdallasgazette

Tech giants like Google, Apple, Microsoft, and Amazon are spending nearly $20 billion collective dollars on AI products and services annually. Photo by Franck V. on Unsplash

By Gilbert Salazar

Artificial intelligence (AI) has been around since the 1950s, but not until the last two decades has it impacted the daily lives of some consumers. Many industries such as healthcare, retail, manufacturing, and banking are now going through dramatic evolutions in how they incorporate AI. Many companies are still trying to figure out how this new frontier can potentially add value to their organizations. There is no doubt the list of uses for AI will continue to grow as data scientists and AI engineers discover new opportunities to incorporate it into the business structure. The first step towards understanding the benefits of AI in your industry is to evaluate its value and determine how implementing this technological innovator can lead to growth.

Like any other technology, AI requires thorough road mapping, planning, and a design-centric approach, especially if the intent of the AI solution itself is to interact with humans a common challenge that often arises with the execution of AI. Tech giants like Google, Apple, Microsoft, and Amazon are spending nearly $20 billion collective dollars on AI products and services annually, leading the way for mid-level technology companies to start considering how AI can benefit their products and services. Locally, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, companies such as Softweb Solutions, SparkFish and Retrocube are using AI and design thinking strategies to develop innovative services that connect with consumers.

Considering your consumer is key when developing AI technologies for human use. While evaluating AIs benefits, it is important to understand how poor execution can hinder growth. A very basic example of poor AI execution is to imagine a chatbot that continues to ask the same question after youve already answered. A more complex example would be facial recognition AI that cant read your face because perhaps youve grown a beard or cut your hair. If at its core, the idea of AI is to mimic human behavior, then shouldnt humans be considered? In other words, dont forget humans when creating AI for humans.

The Interaction Design Foundation defines design thinking as an interactive process that challenges assumptions and redefines problems to identify alternative strategies and solutions that might not be instantly apparent. It is a way of thinking and working, including hands-on methods, that provides a solution-based approach to solving problems.

By adopting the principles of design thinking, AI Experience Engineers can tackle problems that are undefinable. They can also dissect potential challenges through the lens of the user, resulting in much more refined experimentation and exploration of concepts and ideas. Pairing design thinking with AI can add tremendous value by reframing problems and coming up with innovative solutions to determine the best way to enhance and perfect a users interactions and intents.

There is no doubt that AI is here to stay. That said, the key to giving your technology a competitive advantage is to apply a design thinking approach and considering the who and why behind your AI design.

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Implement AI and Design Thinking Strategies to Grow With Technology - Northdallasgazette

Threadless and Strange Planet Viral Webcomic Creator, Nathan W. Pyle, Lead a New Wave of Wearable Art – Cherokee Tribune Ledger News

CHICAGO, Jan. 28, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Threadless, leading ecommerce apparel company and online artist community, in partnership with Nathan W. Pyle, cartoonist and New York Times best-selling author, announces the sale of over 300,000 unique items in Strange Planet merchandise thanks to Threadless Artist Shops.

Pyle, who launched his Strange Planet webcomic series in early February 2019, experienced rapid and viral success, gaining one million Instagram followers in the first five weeks. Within the comic's first year, Pyle amassed over 6.5 million followers and quickly turned to Threadless to open his Artist Shop to capitalize on the series' success.

Threadless' Artist Shops platform enables artists around the world, like Pyle, to effortlessly promote, add, fulfill, and deliver print-on-demand merchandise. In just six months, Pyle and Threadless sold hundreds of thousands of products, featuring his hilarious spin on human behavior through the lens of blue, interstellar beings. The top-selling item is t-shirts, priced on average at $20 each.

"Working with Threadless has been fantastic. I can focus on making my comics while Threadless makes high-quality merchandise available in my Artist Shop nearly instantaneously," said Nathan W. Pyle,cartoonist and New York Times best-selling author. "Being able to upload a design once and apply it to dozens of different Threadless products is super fun and easy. And they're always working on new product additions, which is super exciting to me!"

Threadless works with both amateur and seasoned artists to maintain their Artist Shops, add and promote new products and designs, support marketing efforts, and provide customer service to help artists both established and up-and-coming do exactly what Pyle has achieved.

"Threadless exists to support independent artists," said Threadless Founder and CEO, Jake Nickell. "We make it simple for an artist to get their work in the hands of their fans by opening up access to our nearly 20 years of experience in ecommerce merchandising, branding, marketing, product manufacturing, order fulfillment, and technology."

Threadless launched their customizable online merch platform, Artist Shops, in 2016 to allow artists like Pyle to monetize their art as their own brand. With Artist Shops, individuals upload their art and transform it into merch-ready, tangible products their customers can buy. Threadless handles logistics for Artist Shops owners like manufacturing, order fulfillment, and customer service. Currently, the platform hosts over 250,000 unique Artist Shops.

For more information on Threadless and Nathan W. Pyle's Strange Planet webcomicwatch the brand's interview with Nathan on http://www.youtube.com/ThreadlessXNathanPyle, visitartistshops.com/strangeplanetand nathanwpyle.threadless.com, and follow @nathanwpylestrangeplanetand @threadless on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter.

About Nathan W. Pyle Nathan W. Pyle is the #1 New York Times best seller of Strange Planet and best-selling author of NYC Basic Tips and Etiquette and 99 Stories I Could Tell. He is a former staff writer and illustrator for BuzzFeed. Though based in New York City, Nathan also travels the country speaking about creativity and storytelling.

About ThreadlessFounded in 2000, Threadless is an ecommerce apparel company and online artist community. Consumers vote on artist-submitted designs that become purchasable catalogue products. In 2016, Threadless launched the print-on-demand Artist Shops platform to make selling art online easier. The turnkey merchandise solution allows individuals, companies, and nonprofits to create their own custom-branded online store for free.

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Threadless and Strange Planet Viral Webcomic Creator, Nathan W. Pyle, Lead a New Wave of Wearable Art - Cherokee Tribune Ledger News

Oxford study explores links between personality and the gut microbiome – New Atlas

A new study out of Oxford University is suggesting there is a strong link between individual personality traits and gut microbiome composition. The research does not claim gut bacteria directly determines a persons personality, but instead reveals a distinct and perhaps bi-directional, association between behavior and the microbiome.

There has been growing research linking the gut microbiome to the brain and behavior, known as the microbiomegutbrain axis, says the studys author, Katerina Johnson. Most research has been conducted in animals, whilst studies in humans have focused on the role of the gut microbiome in neuropsychiatric conditions. In contrast, my key interest was to look in the general population to see how variation in the types of bacteria living in the gut may be related to personality.

The new research grew out of a number of recent studies linking gut bacteria with autism. Not only have specific gut bacteria been associated with autism, but fecal transplants have been found to influence autistic behaviors in both animal and human studies. Johnsons study hypothesized that if certain types of gut bacteria had the capacity to influence autistic behaviors, then those same bacteria may be linked with certain basic personality traits such as sociability or neuroticism.

The studys conclusions did indeed back up the initial hypothesis. A number of species of gut bacteria previously linked with autism also correlated with sociability traits in healthy adults. Individuals with high sociability presented abundant levels of Akkermansia, Lactococcus and Oscillospira bacteria. All three genera have been identified in lower than average levels in autistic subjects.

On the other hand, Desulfovibrio and Sutterella were two genera found in high levels in those less sociable individuals with tendencies toward introversion. Again, both genera of bacteria have been identified in abundance in subject with autism.

More neurotic personalities could be detected by correlating lower levels of Streptococcus and Corynebacterium bacteria. Corynebacterium in particular has been linked to depression in animal models.

In general, the study detected a consistent correlation between gut microbiome diversity and individual sociability. So essentially, the larger a persons social network, the more diverse their gut microbiome. On this point Johnson hypothesizes a certain degree of social transmission of some micro-organisms may be at play.

The relationship between gut microbiome diversity and human social networks has not previously been explored but the positive relationship found here suggests that social interactions may also influence the microbiota of human societies, Johnson writes in the study. Interestingly, a study of gut microbiome composition and temperament in infants reported an association between gut microbiome diversity and sociability.

Other more general, and somewhat unsurprising, findings in the study suggest greater microbiome diversity is associated with frequent international travel. And, greater diversity was also linked with diets high in fermented and prebiotic foods.

Interestingly, probiotics taken in the form of supplements correlated with decreased microbiome diversity. Johnson points out this unexpected correlation is most likely due to the tendency of persons with gut health problems to be taking probiotic supplements.

Ultimately, the study does not intend to imply direct causation between gut bacteria and personality traits, but instead Johnson stresses the relationships seen here are most likely bi-directional. As she notes in the studys conclusion, gut bacteria can affect behavior and behavior can in turn influence the composition of the gut microbiome.

Still, this fundamental, almost symbiotic relationship, between a persons microbiome and their overall behavior or well-being is what Johnson suggests is the takeaway from the comprehensive study. If we accept a growing body of research associating extreme traits seen in psychiatric disorders with gut bacteria, then it is not unreasonable to link moderate behavioral variations in general healthy adults with the microbiome. However, it certainly isnt as simple as a single bacterial species causing a person to exhibit an extroverted personality.

Our modern-day living may provide a perfect storm for dysbiosis of the gut, says Johnson. We lead stressful lives with fewer social interactions and less time spent with nature, our diets are typically deficient in fibre, we inhabit oversanitized environments and are dependent on antibiotic treatments. All these factors can influence the gut microbiome and so may be affecting our behavior and psychological well-being in currently unknown ways.

The new study was published in the Human Microbiome Journal.

Source: Oxford University

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Oxford study explores links between personality and the gut microbiome - New Atlas

Unlocking the Secrets of Organ and Limb Regeneration From a Tiny Salamanders Genetics – SciTechDaily

Since humans possess similar genes to the axolotl, the researchers say, scientists may one day discover how to activate them to help speed wound repair or regenerate tissue.

The type of salamander called axolotl, with its frilly gills and widely spaced eyes, looks like an alien and has other-worldly powers of regeneration. Lose a limb, part of the heart or even a large portion of its brain? No problem: They grow back.

It regenerates almost anything after almost any injury that doesnt kill it, said Parker Flowers, postdoctoral associate in the lab of Craig Crews, the John C. Malone Professor of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology and professor of chemistry and pharmacology.

If scientists can find the genetic basis for the axolotls ability to regenerate, they might be able to find ways to restore damaged tissue in humans. But they have been thwarted in the attempt by another peculiarity of the axolotl it has the largest genome of any animal yet sequenced, 10 times larger than that of humans.

It regenerates almost anything after almost any injury that doesnt kill it. Parker Flowers

Now Flowers and colleagues have found an ingenious way to circumvent the animals complex genome to identify at least two genes involved in regeneration, they report today (January 28, 2020) in the journal eLife.

The advent of new sequencing technologies and gene-editing technology has allowed researchers to craft a list of hundreds of gene candidates that could responsible for regeneration of limbs. However, the huge size of the axolotl genome populated by vast areas of repeated stretches of DNA has made it difficult to investigate the function of those genes.

Lucas Sanor, a former graduate student in the lab, and fellow co-first author Flowers used gene editing techniques in a multi-step process to essentially create markers that could track 25 genes suspected of being involved in limb regeneration. The method allowed them to identify two genes in the blastema a mass of dividing cells that form at the site of a severed limb that were also responsible for partial regeneration of the axolotl tail.

Flowers stressed that many more such genes probably exist. Since humans possess similar genes, the researchers say, scientists may one day discover how to activate them to help speed wound repair or regenerate tissue.

Reference: Multiplex CRISPR/Cas screen in regenerating haploid limbs of chimeric Axolotls by Lucas D Sanor, Grant Parker Flowers and Craig M Crews, 28 January 2020, eLife.DOI: 10.7554/eLife.48511

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Unlocking the Secrets of Organ and Limb Regeneration From a Tiny Salamanders Genetics - SciTechDaily

South Africa: wild animals at risk of ‘genetic pollution’ – The Guardian

Lions, rhinos and cheetahs are among the wild species at risk of irreversible genetic pollution from breeding experiments, scientists have warned.

South African game farmers have increasingly been breeding novel trophy animals, including some freakishly-coloured varieties such as the black impala, golden wildebeest or pure-white springboks.

Some hunters pay more to bag unusual trophies, but now the South African government is under fire for permitting further gene manipulation ventures that scientists say could have a damaging effect on the continents wildlife.

Writing in the latest issue of the South African Journal of Science, a group of 10 senior wildlife scientists and researchers have criticised the government for quietly amending the countrys Animal Improvement Act last year to allow for the domestication and genetic improvement of at least 24 indigenous wildlife species including rare and endangered animals such as rhino, cheetah, lion, buffalo and several antelope species.

The researchers warn that: A logical endpoint of this legislation is that we will have two populations of each species: one wild and one domesticated domesticated varieties of wildlife will represent a novel, genetic pollution threat to South Africas indigenous wildlife that will be virtually impossible to prevent or reverse.

Lead author Prof Michael Somers, a senior researcher at the Mammal Research Institute at the University of Pretoria, says the government should scrap the controversial law amendment which lumps together rare and endangered species such as rhinos with rabbits and domesticated dog breeds.

Somers and his colleagues say the act typically provides for domesticated species to be bred and genetically improved to obtain superior domesticated animals with enhanced production and performance.

These animals can also be used for genetic manipulation, embryo harvesting, in-vitro fertilisation and embryo transfers, say the scientists.

They argue that the law will not improve the genetics of the affected wildlife species but rather will pose ecological and economic risks as it will be expensive and almost impossible to maintain a clear distinction between wild and domesticated species.

Somers and his colleagues say the government did not appear to have consulted either scientists, government wildlife agencies or the general public about the controversial move.

Last year, in response to concerns that the legal amendment would remove the listed species from the ambit of conservation legislation, the governments environment department issued a statement to emphasise that that game breeders would still have to comply with the National Environmental Management Biodiversity Act and regulations concerning threatened or protected species.

But Somers and his co-authors remain concerned, saying that in the province of KwaZulu-Natal, where there is close cooperation between game breeders and the provincial conservation organisation, the authorities still had difficulty keeping track of what happens on game farms and in enforcing legislation.

This new law will add to this difficulty, and will likely be less controlled in some other provinces, they said, adding that the genetic consequences of intensive or semi-intensive breeding of wildlife species were negative and considerable.

Intensive breeding through artificial (non random) selection of individuals for commercially valuable traits (eg horn size/shape, coat colour) represents humans taking over this natural process. Such artificial selection by humans is even more powerful than natural selection in creating distinct phenotypes within very short time frames.

Michael Bruford, a professor of biodiversity at the University of Cardiff and co-chair of the Conservation Genetics Specialist Group of the IUCN Species Survival Commission, added his support to the concerns raised. The Convention on Biological Diversitys 2020 targets clearly state that signatory countries should minimise genetic erosion (loss of genetic diversity) in domestic, socio-economically and culturally valuable species, he said.

However you regard these species and they cannot reasonably be classified as domestic animals South Africas proposal will very likely lead to genetic erosion, in contravention of the CBD target, he added. This proposal also comes at a time of rapid environmental deterioration, when we need to be increasing the resilience of our species by ensuring they retain as much genetic diversity as possible.

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South Africa: wild animals at risk of 'genetic pollution' - The Guardian

Mota Ventures gets access to Canada"s largest live genetic cannabis library via deal with Phenome One – Proactive Investors USA & Canada

Phenome One is a private genetic and seed preservation company with over 350 cultivars and access to around 1,700 unique genetics

Corp () (OTCMKTS:PEMTF) announced a new agreement Tuesday that gives the firm access to Canadas largest live genetic cannabis library.

The Vancouver-based company signed a licensing and royalty agreement with Phenome One Corporation, a private genetic and seed preservation company with over 350 cultivars and access to around 1,700 unique genetics in its seed bank.

Under the terms of the deal, Mota has the right to propagate, cultivate, harvest and process at least 10 selected cultivars from Phenomes genetic library and to sell anything it produces from the selections.

The agreement also grants unlimited access to the intellectual property and catalogue of Norstar Nutrients, a wellness company that offers blends of macro and micro-nutrients formulated for essential oils.

Mota may also tap into Phenomes farming intellectual property, the company said in a statement. Phenomes unique CBD strains have profiles ranging from 1:1 up to 150:1 CBD.

"We are excited to have finalized a licensing agreement with Phenome, as it gives us access to a significant genetic cannabis library, with some unique CBD strains having profiles of up to 150:1, Motas CEO Joel Shacker said in a statement.

The transaction sees Mota issuing 1 million shares to Phenome once the firm completes seed registration in Colombia. It will also make a monthly royalty payment to Phenome of 5% of gross sales of any product produced from Phenomes genetics.

Mota will also issue 1 million shares to Phenome if it is acquired by a third party or there is a material breach in the licensing agreement, it said in a statement.

The cannabis company also said it has terminated the previously announced acquisition of Tropical Verde Coast Ltd with no liabilities.

Contact Angela at [emailprotected]

Follow her on Twitter @AHarmantas

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Mota Ventures gets access to Canada"s largest live genetic cannabis library via deal with Phenome One - Proactive Investors USA & Canada

Eisai and PGDx jointly start R&D of cancer genetics panel test – BSA bureau

Eisai and Personal Genome Diagnostics (PGDx) will use liquid biopsy to accelerate Next-Generation drug discovery and development

Japanese firm Eisai Co., Ltd., has entered into a joint research and development agreement with Personal Genome Diagnostics Inc., Maryland, for cancer genetics panel test, and it has initiated the research.

In this joint research and development, Eisai and PGDx will create a kitted cancer gene panel test that enables comprehensive analysis of mutation in more than 500 cancer gene using liquid biopsy with blood samples. Additionally, the kit will be used in our drug discovery and development.

In Eisai's medium term business plan EWAY2025, Eisai is pursuing creating innovation focused in neurology area and oncology area aimed at realizing prediction / prevention and cure. Aiming to acquire next-generation sequencing technology for realizing personalized cancer medicine, Eisai has concluded a joint research and development agreement with PGDx, a US bio-venture with liquid biopsy genomic expertise.

By analyzing the circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in the blood using its own created gene panel testing technology, Eisai will investigate the Cancer Evolution, which is a series of process such as developments of cancer cells, recurrence / metastasis and the appearance of acquired drug resistance. Eisai will also identify genetic abnormalities of drug resistance to existing anti-cancer agents that will be the targets of a new drug discovery and use a kitted cancer gene panel test for clinical trials to develop new anticancer drugs. Eisai will continue to work on cancer genome medicine for realizing early detection of cancer, and providing personalized cancer medicine and cures for cancer patients in the future.

In addition to accelerating cancer genome medicine based on the latest liquid biopsy technology, Eisai aims to build an oncology ecosystem, in which a longitudinal trajectory of cancer patients will be monitored, to lead to the creation of cures for cancer patients as well as diagnosis for prediction and prevention of cancer. Eisai will make continuous efforts to meet diversified needs of, and increasing the benefits provided to, patients with cancer, their families, and healthcare professionals.

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Eisai and PGDx jointly start R&D of cancer genetics panel test - BSA bureau