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The undeniable reality of systemic racism in America – The Bethel Citizen

The May 25 death of George Floyd has caused white America to re-examine its view of race and policing to an extent thats unparalleled since the height of the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s.

Why has it taken so long to raise public awareness on the issue of racism in society, in general, and in law enforcement, in particular?

Part of the reason is certainly due to willful blindness by those who gain politically or financially from inequality. However, the major reason, I believe, is a phenomenon known as the availability heuristic or availability bias the psychological sleight of hand that makes our brain believe an idea to be true based solely on the number of supporting examples we can immediately recall from our own experience.

Simply put, few white Americans have had personal experience with unwarranted scrutiny or excessive force by police, while for most Black Americans, its a routine part of life.

Mass protests and a national outcry for change in law enforcement practices were triggered by the video of a white Minneapolis police officer nonchalantly kneeling on the 46-year-old Floyds neck for nearly nine minutes an image so powerful it ranks with those of the bloated, mutilated body of Emmett Till, a 14-year-old African-American lynched by whites in Mississippi in 1955, and the Birmingham, Alabama, civil rights demonstrations of May 1963 where local police aimed high-power hoses at and unleashed snarling dogs on, Black men, women and children.

In public discourse, the debate over the meaning of Floyds death has been reduced to two competing slogans. Either it was the product of pervasive systemic racism in law enforcement, which can only be resolved only through a thoroughgoing overhaul of the system, or it was the result of isolated misconduct by a bad apple cop, which merely requires disciplining the bad apples.

Unsurprisingly President Donald Trump and congressional Republicans have opted for the latter. The bad apple theory allows Republicans to advocate cosmetic changes to law enforcement such as a partial prohibition against choke holds and creating a national register for officers who have been disciplined without unduly upsetting the law and order crowd, police unions or the former Confederate states of the GOP South.

But is the bad apple theory objectively valid?

If so, it should be reflected in statistics, which show trends of human behavior over a large swath of population rather than in isolated individuals. In other words, there should be no significant statistical disparity between the incidences of deadly police force against African Americans as opposed to white people. Yet quite the opposite is true.

A recent Washington Post study revealed that, though African-Americans constitute less than 13% of the nations population, between 2015 and 2020 they are shot to death by police at a rate more than twice that of white Americans (31 versus 13 per million).

While the interpretation of this statistic is controversial, additional studies bolster the notion of systemic racism in law enforcement and criminal justice. At least one study found that Black people were 2 times more likely to be killed by police while unarmed. Others showed they were far more likely to be pulled over for traffic stops than white people and three to four times more likely to be searched following stops.

Theyre more apt to be jailed pending trial due to inability to make bail. They represent over 50% of juvenile offenders bound over for trial as adults. Theyre incarcerated at more than five times the rate of white people, and their prison sentences are approximately 10% longer. They represent almost a third of the sentenced prison population and about 30% of those on probation or parole.

Few white people, myself included, have had the chance to walk in the shoes of African-Americans, so, unlike our Black counterparts, we recall few examples of police mistreatment and have experienced almost none first-hand.

I grew up in a largely white New Jersey suburb just outside New York City. My high school yearbook displayed pictures of only about two dozen people of color in a senior class of 746. I attended college in at Georgetown University, located in an affluent white enclave of Washington, D.C. Black people accounted for about 71% of Washingtons total population, yet my college yearbook depicted just three in a graduating class of about 650. In 1975, I moved to Maine, one of the whitest states in the country, where Black people constitute 2% of the population.

In those environments, my sporadic interactions with police have always turned out to be benign, brief and respectful. Ive certainly never been arbitrarily stopped and frisked, clubbed, kicked, cuffed, tasered, carted off to jail or had a gun pointed, let alone fired, at me. Therefore, I have no personal experiences of abuse by law enforcement officers to draw upon.

Its not that Ive been totally unaware of the plight of African-Americans. During my high school years, my brain was imprinted with the dramatic television news scenes of violent Southern white mob and police violence against Civil Rights protestors.

While I was a college student, Black sections of the District of Columbia boiled over in anger in the wake of Martin Luther King, Jr.s assassination in April 1968 and became the scene of rioting, looting and arson. Later the same year, working as an assistant to an ABC network news reporter, I waded into the Poor Peoples Campaign tent city on the Washington Mall and sensed the simmering resentment of thousands of African-Americans protesting the miserable living conditions of Black America. Besides what Ive personally observed, Ive read extensively about the history of slavery and segregation in America and, as an attorney, have worked for over 40 years in the justice system that has produced racially skewed racial results.

Yet my own lifes experience persuaded me that, though racism still had its stubborn pockets, flare-ups and bad apples, the United States offered at least a rough equality of justice for all. It was the availability heuristic at work.

For me, and probably for millions like me, it took the gripping video of George Floyds death to break through the distorted prism of the availability heuristic and drive home that systemic racism isnt a slogan but an undeniable reality.

Elliott Epstein is a trial lawyer with Andrucki & King in Lewiston. His Rearview Mirror column, which has appeared in the Sun Journal for 10 years, analyzes current events in an historical context. He is also the author of Lucifers Child, a book about the notorious 1984 child murder of Angela Palmer. He may be contacted at [emailprotected]

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The undeniable reality of systemic racism in America - The Bethel Citizen

Reddit asked our medical expert, director of reporting about coronavirus. Heres what they said. – 9News.com KUSA

9Health Expert Dr. Payal Kohli and 9NEWS Director of Reporting Chris Vanderveen hosted a Reddit AMA.

DENVER 9NEWS Director of Reporting Chris Vanderveen and 9Health Expert Dr. Payal Kohli hosted a Reddit Ask Me Anything (its generally called an AMA) on Thursday to answer a wide range of questions about the COVID-19 pandemic.

Those ran the gamut from everything about why the media isnt reporting good news about hospitalizations and recoveries (spoiler alert: it actually is) to if its safe for schools to reopen in Denver.

Dr. Kohli and Vanderveen have been reporting on the COVID-19 pandemic for months, and offered their insights about the trends theyre seeing, when its right to be skeptical, and where we go from here. Check out some of the questions and answers below.

Questions about numbers

Question: "Cases have been spiking but deaths have been steadily falling. Obviously we should expect a delay in deaths, but when should we expect to see deaths start to rise again?"

Answer:"Remember that death is a lagging metric. So there is a lag at every step of the way. First exposure ... then lag ... then positive case ... then lag ... then hospitalizations ... then lag ... then come deaths. So deaths can occur three to four weeks after infection exposure and two to three weeks after case counts increase." - Dr. Kohli

Question:"Do you have any insight into why Dr. Samet's COVID model for Colorado has been consistently one of the most dire predictions for our state but has been the least accurate as well?"

Answer:"A few thoughts of mine I want to share on models:

1. No model is perfect, by definition. It is full of intelligent scientific assumptions, but assumptions nonetheless.

2. Models are meant to be adaptive. So one of the biggest inputs in the models is human behavior, which keeps changing. So as the inputs change, the outputs change.

3. Models are meant to predict the worst case scenario. A good model makes us change our behavior so that the future predictable by the model is never actually realized."

Is a clear face shield safe?

Question:"Hello. I have a clear plastic face shield. Are there any situations in which this more comfortable option could stand in for a face mask?"

Answer:"There is evidence that face shields do provide barrier protection and have some efficacy in protecting the wearer from droplets getting in as they cover the portals of entry (mouth, eyes, nose). Whether they offer protection from droplets getting out (protect others) is not as well established.

"Face shields offer a number of advantages. While medical masks have limited durability and little potential for reprocessing, face shields can be reused indefinitely and are easily cleaned with soap and water, or common household disinfectants. They are comfortable to wear, protect the portals of viral entry, and reduce the potential for autoincoculation by preventing the wearer from touching their face. People wearing masks often have to wear them to communicate with others around them; this is not necessary with face shields. The use of a face shield is also a reminder to maintain social distancing, but allows visibility of facial expressions and lip movements for speech perception.

"Most importantly, face shields appear to significantly reduce the amount of inhalation exposure to influenza virus, another droplet-spread respiratory virus." - Dr. Kohli

States that are seeing surges in cases

Question:"If you were to describe the situations in Arizona, Texas, Florida, etc ... who are spiking using terms non-medical people can understand, how would you do that? What's the score/quarter of the game so far?"

Answer:"What happened in those states is relatively straightforward. These states opened too early without following the White House gating criteria (which were checkpoints). They also opened aggressively with an "all or nothing" approach to opening up everything at once.

"It's simple: if you put people together, the virus spreads. If the virus is around, it spreads. If you have both situations occurring together, the virus spreads exponentially." - Dr. Kohli

Bonus Answer:"I think it's still early. Minus a vaccine, we are going to see some states pop at various -- and oftentimes unpredictable ways. I'm a firm believer in taking a note of hospitalizations, ICU utilization, vents and positivity. I know it seems like a tired cliche, but I really do want to see what happens with hospitalizations and ICU use in two weeks in those states. I know some cities are already popping (Houston, for example), but the key is can the system handle the influx of patients. As for what quarter we are in? I'd say midway through second quarter. But hey... I'm just a journalist :)" - Chris Vanderveen

Question:"Why in the world are we even discussing re-opening in the middle of a pandemic?"

Answer: "I think there is general consensus that keeping the economy closed carries with it massive problems as well. Millions and millions out of work with no way to pay rent or bills. That's not insignificant. And people will die as a result of that as well. The key is to handle it in a way that doesn't overwhelm the medical system. We can't eradicate it, but we can keep it at a low level that poses a more insignificant risk." - Chris Vanderveen

Disinformation about the virus

Question: "What do you say to people who believe all the disinformation that is downplaying the seriousness of the situation and arguing against preventative measures such as wearing masks and shutdowns of public places (restaurants, theme parks etc ...)?

"I am in Upstate NY and while were not NYC, we took most of the same preventative measures that NYC did and shut down early. Weve never had a massive blow up in cases/hospitalizations because of those measures and it has a lot of people in my area believing that COVID-19 is over-hyped or a hoax.

"I really struggle when talking with people that I like/love and they tell me 'masks dont do anything' or 'this is the mainstream media trying to make sure Trump doesnt get re-elected.' People that I used to respect and value their opinions have almost instantly lost that from me due to these comments and their behaviors regarding our current situation."

Answer:"Here's where I say skepticism is better than cynicism. I think it's healthy in our time to want to question why we would shutter the economy for weeks in order to try to quash a virus. But it's not ok to be cynical here. Makes for bad decisions. Here in Colorado we are doing quite well, and, I believe, that has something to do with our early decisions to close along with an early spike. I would say handle this like anything these days. Have a civil conversation and when someone elects to continue to stay uncivil, maybe it's time to walk away." -Chris Vanderveen

Question:"Why is the USA taking the virus so lightly compared to the rest of the world? I see people walking in the streets without protection, bars opened, no social distance ... Are U.S. people less prone to contract the virus?"

Answer:"Great point! I think one of our biggest challenges here in the U.S. has been lack of consistent messaging from the leadership about the risks of the virus and the advantages of wearing masks.

"Imagine this.. if you could actually see the virus particles coming out of someone's cough or see the virus floating around in the air, wouldn't you want to cover your mouth and nose and socially distance from others? Of course you would!

"So I think one of the reasons for the lack of compliance is a plain and simple lack of understanding and the second among some others is a lack of belief in the science or what the experts are saying." - Dr. Kohli

Question: "Why do you and the others in the media continually post stories about spikes and surges rather than talking about falling deaths and how the ICUs are not overloaded?

"Does the media have an incentive to continually push fear with so-called spikes and surges? What numbers quantify a 'surge' or a 'spike' to NEWS 9 - or are those completely arbitrary words with no numbers behind them?

Do good news stories about non-overloaded ICUs and falling death counts bring fewer views than those about spikes and surges?"

Answer: "I think the key (and honestly something us in the press have not done a great job with) is always trying to add perspective to a story. Numbers without context can seem scary. I will say here in Denver -- a state that right now is doing quite well -- we have not shied away from good stories. Stories on recovery. Stories that our hospitals are well below capacity. It's one of the reasons why I also stay away from case counts alone. Cases alone don't mean much. I want to see hospitalizations, vent use and positivity. That's where I go... Thanks for question." - Chris Vanderveen

The COVID-19 recovery period

Question:"I know someone who has corona virus, but claims to be better over a week and a half period. In the past 48 hours they have been downtown Denver, had drinks at DIA and got on a plane. What can I do? Im sure they didnt recover so fast? Is it possible to recover completely in a week and a half?"

Answer:"The 'recovery period' for coronavirus is highly variable and largely depends on how sick you even got with the virus. Some people who are asymptomatic don't really need to 'recover' because they didn't have significant symptoms. On the other hand, some have been reporting symptoms for months after infection.

This is different from the period that someone is infectious or 'shedding virus' in their secretions which can infect others. In general, before we call someone 'noninfectious' the CDC recommends a 'testing-based strategy' that they have two consecutive negative tests for coronavirus and then we can be sure that they are likely not actively infectious to others. -Dr. Kohli

The psychological toll of the virus

Question:"Hi, thanks for doing this AMA! My question is regarding the psychological toll of the virus. Personally, I have noticed an intense fear about my familys health, worry about finances, anger at political entities for not doing more, and frankly missing the physical contact of people I love. I imagine most people have experienced a higher amount of anxiety and depression. Do you have any recommendations for how to cope? Most of what I have seen comes down to 'self care' and meditation but it barely scratches the surface of something so stressful. Thank you!"

Answer: "Great question. [It's] one that I have pondered for some time as a journalist working this remarkable story. I think it's best to give yourself some time to take a break. It's become a cliche, but this really will be a marathon, not a sprint. And -- based upon what's happening in TX and AZ, for example, we still have months to go. Rely on support systems. Take care of yourself. And don't hesitate to take a day off (if you can)... I have actively encouraged our staff here to do that. We need some time away." - Chris Vanderveen

Contact tracing

Question:What barriers are preventing app-based contact tracing in the U.S.? I'm aware that the apps struggle to fill the entire niche of support that people-based contact tracing provides, but it seems at this point that app + people will be needed to fulfill the massive spikes in cases across the country.

Answer:One of the biggest barriers has been privacy concerns about using such technology and whether the American people would allow this type of surveillance on their phones/devices. - Dr. Kohli

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Reddit asked our medical expert, director of reporting about coronavirus. Heres what they said. - 9News.com KUSA

Everything to Know About Netflixs Love on the Spectrum – Screen Rant

Netflix is all set to launch Love on the Spectrum that follows young adults on the autism spectrum through their dating lives on July 22.

It doesnt matter whether youre on the spectrum or not, everyone has a basic human right and a basic human need of connection and love, says Jodi Rodgers, the relationship specialist from Netflixs soon to launch dating reality show, Love on the Spectrum. The streaming giant has now acquired global streaming rights to Northern Pictures Love on the Spectrum, an ABC-commissioned docuseries that follows individuals whoare on the autism spectrum and showcases their dating experiences.Arriving on July 22, the show that first debuted on ABC Australia in November 2019 is all about love and the fact that it doesnt discriminate.

Netflixs original unscripted dating reality shows have slowly become a staple of the platforms programming, with the team now open to exploring interestingness in its content. Be it with Dating Around that keeps things simple without relying on gimmicks and plot twists or The Circle, which acts as a social experiment more than a competition, Netflix has aced the unscripted dating show genre by providing content that isnt just entertaining but also aspirational. Then there are Love Is Blind that had couples falling in love despite never having seen each other and Too Hot to Handle with hot singles that arent allowed to indulge in any sexual touching- not to each other, and not even to themselves - without incurring a literal fine from a collective $100k. Concepts such as these came as a refresher to Netflixs audience, especially after being stuck at home and looking for something new to watch in the lockdown. The formula of taking something familiar and giving it an unexpected twist has helped the popular platform forage a new path not just for dating shows, but unscripted content in general. Be it picking up Tidying Up With Marie Kondo, that most broadcast companies and also cable has passed on, or creating a reboot of Bravos feel-good Queer Eye, Netflix made all the right moves to spark a buzz in the progressively crowding reality TV space. Although dating shows usually are known to thrive on drama and the OMG factor, it is refreshing to see Netflix further venture into diverse, non-scandalous experiences with the latest Say I Do and upcoming shows like Indian Matchmaking or Love on the Spectrum. After all its high time reality TV got a taste of "real," isnt it?

Related:Netflix To Get Two New Unscripted Dating Shows In July

All set to launch worldwide come July 22, Love on the Spectrum is a four-part documentary series following young adults on the autism spectrum as they explore the unpredictable world of love, dating and relationships. With an objective to combat the misconception that autistic people cant have meaningful relationships, the show features a bunch of 20-somethings that are new to dating, and also those who are navigating long term relationships. The Aussie dating series has already won major accolades for shedding light on what love is like when youre not neurotypical and has also been reviewed for a second season. The most unique aspect of Love on the Spectrum is how the show beautifully explores each cast members unique experience of autism, thereby giving the audience a much broader understanding of the subject of neurodiversity. What all of them have in common though, is the fact that theyre all looking for love. By making the audience realize that most people on the spectrum also have the same desires for intimacy and belonging as the rest of the world, the show also speaks about how social interaction and communication is what makes finding love a difficult experience for the individuals. As well as following individuals seeking love, the makers have also included couples in the series because they felt it was important to tell positive stories that can serve as inspiration for people out there who are struggling to find someone special. The participants receive advice on social skills and dating tips from the show's experts Jodi Rodgers, and Dr Elizabeth Laugeson. Dr Laugeson is a licensed clinical psychologistand an Associate Clinical Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences at the UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior. She is also the Founder and Director of the UCLA PEERS Clinic, which is an outpatient hospital-based program providing parent-assisted social skills training for preschoolers, adolescents and young adults with Autism Spectrum Disorders and other social impairments. Meanwhile, relationship coach and specialist Jodi Rodgers started her career as a special education teacher and spent twelve years with ASPECT (Autism Spectrum Australia). Since then, she has worked in Australia and internationally for over 20 years helping people equip themselves with life tools that will move them out of the rut and towards finding life and work relationships that are true to who they are. The casting process too, has been extensive with the team speaking to hundreds of people who were interested in being a part of the show, which confirmed the real need for assistance. They also worked closely with autism and disability organisations to ensure the production was sensitive to the needs of people on the spectrum. You can watch the show's trailer here:

As the participants on the show invite the cameras into their lives and allow the audience to get up close and personal with their love stories, they also clear out any misconceptions about autism and romance. For instance, the first episode features Ruth 22, and Thomas, 25, both of whom are on the spectrum and have been engaged for over a year. They are a unique couple who compliment and accept each others quirks. As they approach their fourth anniversary, Thomas has a surprise planned. Theres 19-year-old Chloe, who hopes to find someone that sees beyond her disabilities, and who like many women, wasn't diagnosed with ASD until the end of primary school. She doesnt know what it feels like be in love or have a crush, but she does know that she wants to experience it. Sadly, it is common for people with autism to be bullied and as a young girl on the spectrum with a hearing impairment Chloe was not immune from being a target. Then theres Michael, 25, who makes the viewers smile and go "aww"with everything that he says. His greatest dream in life is to become a husband but admits to have not been on any dates in spite of being a romantic person. He already has a ring selected for his future wife, one shaped like a crown, to symbolize that she will be the queen of his heart.

To sum it up, their stories are diverse, personal, and the couples are warm, generously open, with a great sense of humor. There are awkward moments, yes, especially ones that would be expected from two people going on a date for the very first time, but the show handles them delicately and makes them endearing. Like series producer and director, Cian OClery adds, As a storyteller, I felt we had an opportunity to explore this issue by shining a light on the struggles many people on the spectrum face in seeking out meaningful relationships. I hope this series will start conversations, help bring about understanding and acceptance, and ultimately inspire people with Autism, their families and society at large to find ways to help people on the spectrum find love. OClery, who also created an Australian series titled Employable Me that features neurodiverse job seekers had expressed that he got the idea of making Love on the Spectrum because he kept encountering the myth that people on the spectrum arent interested in love. The representation of autism on our screens is fairly limited, he thinks and hopes that Love on the Spectrum will help broaden the picture.

Next:How to Nominate Someone to Be on Queer Eyes Next Season

All episodes of Love on the Spectrum will be streaming on Netflix starting July 22.

Source: ABCTV

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Saylee Padwal is a blogger, social media manager, photographer, and now a Reality TV Features Writer for Screen Rant.Over the years, she has worked in the content creation process for many well-known brands, while growing her passion towards all things pop-culture. Apart from being a full-time food lover, you can always find her double-tapping her way through Instagram, reading mysteries and thrillers, and listening to her latest obsession - BTS - on loop.

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Everything to Know About Netflixs Love on the Spectrum - Screen Rant

Meteorological factors may influence COVID-19 transmission and spread in the US, according to research by App State and NCICS – Appalachian State…

BOONE, N.C. A new study by a multidisciplinary team of researchers at Appalachian State University and the North Carolina Institute for Climate Studies (NCICS) indicates a significant association between COVID-19 transmission and humidity in some U.S. cities.

The study titled Short-term effects of specific humidity and temperature on COVID-19 morbidity in select US cities, was recently published in the journal Science of the Total Environment.

Our results suggest that weather should be considered in infectious disease modeling efforts. Future work is needed over a longer time period and across different locations to clearly establish the weather-COVID19 relationship.

the papers authors from Appalachian State University and the North Carolina Institute for Climate Studies (NCICS)

The authors wrote that, compared to solar radiation and temperature, the humidity was the most predominant predictor of COVID-19 transmission in U.S. cities considered among early hot spots in the pandemic.

Specifically, there was a higher risk of transmission in ranges of lower humidity and which resulted in as much as a two-fold increased risk of transmission in some areas. Early research in China and other international locations reported a similar relationship, according to the researchers.

With respiratory viruses, humidity is often a main driver of transmission and we had hypothesized this may be the same for the coronavirus, which is a type of respiratory virus. Our results identified a significant relationship between COVID-19 transmission and humidity in three cities: Albany, Georgia, New Orleans and Chicago, said author Dr. Maggie Sugg, an assistant professor in Appalachian State Universitys Department of Geography and Planning who studies climate and health.

Exposureresponse curves for temperature (left), specific humidity (middle) and solar radiation (right) for 30 days in New Orleans, Louisiana, after adjusting for social distancing. Image courtesy of Dr. Maggie Sugg

Other cities included in the study were Seattle, New York City, Detroit, Pittsfield, Massachusetts, and Bridgeport, Connecticut.

The studys results may be helpful in informing public health interventions, the authors said.

Our study is in many ways preliminary, but our results suggest that even though weather is secondary there are behaviors such as handwashing, wearing a mask, adhering to social distancing guidance that are more important, weather is a factor. And, weather is a factor that is often omitted in infectious disease modeling, said Dr. Jennifer Runkle, an environmental epidemiologist at NCICS and research assistant professor at Appalachian.

Dr. Maggie Sugg, assistant professor in Appalachian State Universitys Department of Geography and Planning. She studies climate and health. Photo by Chase Reynolds

Dr. Jennifer Runkle, an environmental epidemiologist at North Carolina Institute for Climate Studies and research assistant professor at Appalachian. Photo submitted

The researchers analyzed 266,760 cases and 19,729 deaths during a 40-50 day period across the cities in association with environmental factors, using data from the Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering repository, which continually assembles global COVID-19 cases, and meteorological data from the European Center for Median Range Weather Forecast (ECMWF) atmospheric reanalysis dataset. Results varied among the cities despite researchers accounting for social distancing measures.

Sugg said her groups paper is the first published study in the U.S. using methods beyond simple correlation to examine weather parameters and COVID-19.

As an initial step, the authors generated density heatmaps that plotted daily cases across all eight cities against different combinations of daily air temperature and humidity for various lead times between the observed weather condition and the observed case count. These heatmaps suggested that COVID-19 cases were more common in conditions with low humidity (26 g/kg) and low temperature (35.6 51.8F).

To explore these associations in more detail, the team then applied an innovative research design that used each person as their own control during a short window of exposure and allowed the researchers to measure the delayed effect of weather on COVID-19 transmission. The research design accounted for the presence or absence of social-distancing measures on a daily basis.

The authors wrote in the published paper, Our results suggest that weather should be considered in infectious disease modeling efforts. Future work is needed over a longer time period and across different locations to clearly establish the weather-COVID19 relationship.

Sugg and Runkle said they soon plan to expand the study to more cities and for longer timeframes.

Dr. Maggie Sugg, assistant professor in Appalachian State Universitys Department of Geography and Planning. She studies climate and health. Photo by Chase Reynolds

Dr. Jennifer Runkle, an environmental epidemiologist at North Carolina Institute for Climate Studies and research assistant professor at Appalachian. Photo submitted

Share your feedback on this story.

July 17, 2018

Drs. Maggie Sugg and Jennifer Runkle, the grant recipients, said they plan to translate the studys findings into new prevention strategies that would ensure optimal worker performance and protection in such environments.

Nov. 11, 2019

With its 201819 awards, the College of Arts and Sciences recognized members of its faculty and staff for their teaching excellence, outstanding service, scholarly work and engagement efforts.

Aug. 26, 2016

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has awarded $10,356 to Dr. Margaret Sugg, a professor in Appalachians Department of Geography and Planning.

May 1, 2020

Nearly 40 members of Appalachians faculty are working collaboratively to address topics related to the global COVID-19 pandemic. Such topics include the viruss economic impact on the region and how to support rural, socially vulnerable community members living alone.

The Department of Geography and Planning promotes the understanding of the spatial dimensions of human behavior within the physical and cultural systems of the earth, and the role of planning in achieving improvement in those systems. The department offers degrees in geography and in community and regional planning. Learn more at https://geo.appstate.edu.

The College of Arts and Sciences is home to 16 academic departments, one stand-alone academic program, two centers and one residential college. These units span the humanities and the social, mathematical and natural sciences. The College of Arts and Sciences aims to develop a distinctive identity built upon our university's strengths, traditions and unique location. The colleges values lie not only in service to the university and local community, but through inspiring, training, educating and sustaining the development of its students as global citizens. There are approximately 6,100 student majors in the college. As the college is also largely responsible for implementing Appalachian's general education curriculum, it is heavily involved in the education of all students at the university, including those pursuing majors in other colleges. Learn more at https://cas.appstate.edu.

As the premier public undergraduate institution in the state of North Carolina, Appalachian State University prepares students to lead purposeful lives as global citizens who understand and engage their responsibilities in creating a sustainable future for all. The Appalachian Experience promotes a spirit of inclusion that brings people together in inspiring ways to acquire and create knowledge, to grow holistically, to act with passion and determination, and to embrace diversity and difference. Located in the Blue Ridge Mountains, Appalachian is one of 17 campuses in the University of North Carolina System. Appalachian enrolls more than 19,000 students, has a low student-to-faculty ratio and offers more than 150 undergraduate and graduate majors.

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Meteorological factors may influence COVID-19 transmission and spread in the US, according to research by App State and NCICS - Appalachian State...

Human Genetics Market Growth By Manufacturers, Type And Application, Forecast To 2026 – 3rd Watch News

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It assists in making informed business decisions by performing a pin-point analysis of market segments and by having complete insights of the Human Genetics market.

This report helps the readers understand key product segments and their future.

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In the end, the Human Genetics market is analyzed for revenue, sales, price, and gross margin. These points are examined for companies, types, applications, and regions.

To summarize, the global Human Genetics market report studies the contemporary market to forecast the growth prospects, challenges, opportunities, risks, threats, and the trends observed in the market that can either propel or curtail the growth rate of the industry. The market factors impacting the global sector also include provincial trade policies, international trade disputes, entry barriers, and other regulatory restrictions.

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New study finds love of affection heavily attributed to genetics in women – Arizona Daily Wildcat

Nature versus nurture: A debate that may only be applicable to women when it comes to a love of affection. A new study found a "latent genetic factor" accounting for up to 48% variance in affection for women with null effects in men.

Genes play a really important role in how affectionate women become as adults, said Kory Floyd, a professor of communication at the University of Arizona, specializing in the study of affection. It appears to play virtually no role in how affectionate men become we still are trying to figure out why.

According to Floyd, the original goal of the study was to answer the broad question of why many people are more affectionate than others. He described that throughout life, it is easy to observe levels of affection among people; some are very affectionate, some are somewhere between and some are just not comfortable with a lot of affection.

Even though the team assumed that environmental factors such as affectionate or non-affectionate households would play a big role, they also wanted to see how much of this trait is genetic.

The question wasnt which one is it is it nature or is it nurture we assumed that it would be a combination of both of those things, Floyd said.

To gather this information, Floyd worked with two other professors to find answers to their questions. The first professor Colter Ray was a former Ph.D. student of his who is now an interpersonal communication professor at San Diego State University. The second Chance York was an interpersonal professor at Kent State University specializing in behavioral genetics.

The three set off to find answers to their questions on the genetics of affection through surveying 464 pairs of twins, all ages 19 to 84, according to UANews.

Some of the pairs were identical twins, meaning that they inherited 100% of the same genes and some were fraternal twins, meaning that they inherited about 50% of the same genes.

The team assumed that if affection has a strong genetic component to it, then identical twins would likely show more similar levels of affection than fraternal twins.

What we expect to find is that the scores of twins who are identical are more similar to each other than the scores of twins who are fraternal because they are more closely related genetically, Floyd said.

In the survey sent out, every participant was able to report on their levels of affection using a measurement system that would assess it. Essentially, Floyd and the team wanted to find how similar scores would be within pairs.

Through the survey, it was found that for the female participants alone, around 48% of affection levels could be attributed to genetics and 52% could be attributed to environmental factors. In the males, genetic components played absolutely no role.

Floyd explained that this study brings the discipline of communication into a new realm.

In my field, we have a very strong assumption that differences between people in terms of their social behavior are almost entirely environmental, Floyd said. Unlike fields like psychology, for example, we dont have a history of looking at biology or genetics or heritability as explanations for social behavior.

He believes that this study could lead people to question the assumption in the communication discipline that most social behaviors are purely products of an environment.

Recently, Floyd has also participated in research on the concept of skin hunger. According to Psychology Today, skin hunger is a deep longing and aching desire for physical contact with another person.

During the times of COVID-19, the concept of skin hunger could not be more relevant.

I think a lot of people right now are really feeling like, I miss getting hugs, I miss holding hands or kissing or putting my arm around somebody, Floyd described. Its really the one thing that social media and Skype and Zoom dont allow us to do.

In research on deprivation of touch in the past, Floyd has found that it can definitely increase negative feelings like loneliness, anxiety, sleep issues and even a depressed immune system.

Though Floyd has not found any solutions to this issue, he believes that there are many ways to cope with the deprivation of physical attention. A major coping mechanism that Floyd suggests for those struggling with such a type of deprivation is to be around animals.

Petting a dog, petting a cat, petting a horse can have some of the same benefits in terms of calming us, in terms of anxiety reduction, in terms of stress reduction, Floyd said.

So, regardless of sex and your level of genetic cravings for affection, a reliable coping mechanism for the skin hunger you may be facing during these times could be to invest in a dog or cat.

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New study finds love of affection heavily attributed to genetics in women - Arizona Daily Wildcat

Why Seattle Genetics Shares Climbed 48.7% in the First Half – The Motley Fool

What happened

Seattle Genetics (NASDAQ:SGEN) shares rose 48.7% in the first half, according to data provided by S&P Global Market Intelligence, after the company gained U.S. regulatory approval for its second drug in less than six months.

Image source: Getty Images.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration in April approved Tukysa for patients with metastatic HER2-positive breast cancer after approving Padcev in December for locally advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer. In Padcev's first full quarter of commercialization, the drug generated $34.5 million in net sales, the company reported.

Urothelial cancer is the most common form of bladder cancer, and according to Grand View Research, the global drug market for the disease is growing at a 22.9% compound annual growth rate and is set to reach $3.6 billion by 2023. The global HER2-positive breast cancer market, at a 4.4% compound annual growth rate, may reach nearly $10 billion by 2025, a Global Data report shows. With these growing markets, Tukysa and Padcev have plenty of room to deliver sales increases.

Seattle Genetics' drug Adcetris, for Hodgkin lymphoma, was approved in 2011. Adcetris sales climbed 22% in the first quarter, and the company forecasts more growth as it works to further establish the drug as part of a frontline treatment, or first treatment given to patients.

The European Medicines Agency is currently reviewing Tukysa, so investors will be watching for a possible approval in Europe. Sales figures from Padcev's second quarter on the market will be another factor that could offer the stock direction in the second half of the year.

In more positive news, Seattle Genetics recently reported encouraging data from its phase 2 trial of tisotumab vedotin for recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer. The biotech company plans to speak with the FDA about the possibility of an accelerated approval process for the drug candidate. If the FDA agrees to an accelerated pathway, that likely will be another positive driver for Seattle Genetics' shares.

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Why Seattle Genetics Shares Climbed 48.7% in the First Half - The Motley Fool

Shrimp stalwart hands over to Hendrix – The Fish Site

Dr Chamberlain has been leading the Hawaiian company for over 20 years and will continue his role as president of The Global Aquaculture Alliance.

Chamberlains career in aquaculture started in 1990 when he joined Ralston Purina Company directing their aquaculture feed programme in the Americas, Europe and Asia. After eight years, he moved to Monsanto, directing a programme on genetically selected marine shrimp, soy-based feed, and sustainable pond systems for marine shrimp.

His days as an entrepreneur started in 1999, when he established developed Black Tiger Aquaculture, an integrated shrimp farm in Malaysia, with Ken Morison. And in 2004, they established Integrated Aquaculture International, a technology company owning the Kona Bay L. vannameibreeding centre in Hawaii and operating a P. monodon breeding centre and farm in Brunei.

Over the last decade Chamberlain and his management team have built Kona Bay shrimp genetics into one of the leading brands in SPF shrimp broodstock, supporting shrimp farmers in achieving better performance in major shrimp producing countries. In addition, its food shrimp production under the Kauai Shrimp brand enjoys a reputation for premium quality in the Hawaiian and mainland US markets.

George Chamberlain commented: My career in the shrimp farming business has been deeply fulfilling. I owe whatever success our company has experienced to the support of colleagues, friends and family. Now its time to leave this enterprise in the capable hands of Hendrix Genetics whose leader, Thijs Hendrix, embodies the values and culture that our team so much admires.

Neil Manchester, managing director of aquaculture in Hendrix Genetics, said: We owe an immense amount to George, not just for bringing us into the shrimp breeding business with a world class operation like Kona Bay, but by sharing his knowledge, experience and contacts in the global industry that allows us to expand our reach and develop the Kona Bay brand in every shrimp production region. George will remain a friend and advisor, and we wish him an enjoyable retirement from shrimp breeding.

Hendrix Genetics acquired a majority shareholding in Kona Bay in 2017, as an entry point into shrimp breeding concentrating on acceleration of the breeding programme, strengthening the sales and technical support teams in Asia, and establishing a nucleus breeding and PL hatchery operation in Ecuador in 2019.

The company is investing heavily to realise a world class L.vannamei shrimp breeding operation in Hawaii, selling high quality Kona Bay broodstock to all major markets globally. The shrimp operations of Hendrix Genetics are expected to grow with the Ecuador development being a precursor to similar expansion in the major Asian markets. With the retirement of Chamberlain, Hendrix will acquire the remaining management shares in Kona Bay and subsidiaries, converting this to a 100 percent ownership.

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Shrimp stalwart hands over to Hendrix - The Fish Site

Wickham ’21 Speaks on the Black Student Experience in STEM – Wesleyan Connection

As the Black Lives Matter movement continues to shine a light on the Black experience in America, one Wesleyan student is doing his part to foster better understanding for students of color in STEM fields.

On July 2, Fitzroy Pablo Wickham 21 participated in a panel discussion on Black Lives Matter and Neuroscience: Why This Moment Matters. The event, hosted by the Society for Neuroscience and moderated by Trinity College President Joanne Berger-Sweeney, provided a forum to discuss hurdles faced by Black students and faculty in STEM and ways to enhance recruitment, mentoring, and retention in STEM fields.

Wickham, a neuroscience and theater double major, is the Class of 2021 president and a College of Integrative Sciences summer research student. A native of Jamaica, Wickham prefaced his comments by acknowledging that as a West Indian Black his experience does not necessarily reflect the full breadth of experiences had by African American students in science. But for his part, Wickham hopes that in sharing his perspective as a neuroscience undergraduate, he can help move the conversation forward in terms of how we can make the field more inclusive and equitable and in particular to voice some of the challenges Black students encounter when navigating STEM.

Although the panel was convened to discuss issues faced by Black students and faculty in the field of neuroscience, the topics addressed stretched beyond scientific disciplines, touching on issues that affect people of color in all aspects of academia, including lack of representation, the misperception that rewards are dispensed based on race rather than merit, and questions of tokenism. Over the course of the hourlong panel, participants talked about their own experiences, the obstacles they themselves had faced in their varied career paths, and the individuals who had helped to mentor them and advocate for them along the way.

Nii Addy, associate professor of psychiatry at Yales School of Medicine, encouraged participants to look outside their individual departments for mentorship and support when there are few available options in their own field and said that he, himself, makes mentoring others and connecting individuals with potential mentors a priority.

Marguerite Matthews, a health program specialist in the Office of Programs to Enhance Neuroscience Workforce Diversity at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), works on diversity initiatives and programs that provide research training and career development opportunities for students from underrepresented backgrounds. She emphasized the need for academia to work in tandem with government programs to make sure underrepresented students and faculty are getting the necessary support to create an equitable situation with their peers, citing the importance of seeing diversity as something that is not an add-on. It is not an extra, not a bonus, not something special that you are doing. It is something that should be considered through every single process.

Fitzroy Pablo Wickham 21 is a neuroscience and theater double major, president of the Class of 2021, and a College of Integrative Sciences summer intern.

When asked about signs of progress and change, Wickham noted Wesleyans public support of the Black Lives Matter movement and encouraged the University to continue moving forward by supporting Black businesses and by setting a new standard for action among peer institutions.

Although the panel didnt necessarily have solutions for every issue brought up during the discussion and Q&A, Wickham did find the overall discussion itself to be a powerful first step.

This conversation is so important to so many people. I was overwhelmed by the number of registrants for the webinarboth in America and internationally, he said. The BLM movement has the undivided attention of the world right now and people are listening. These discussions are needed! The many questions posed by the attendees were very thought-provoking and show that we need more opportunities like this to hash out the matter and figure out how we will move forward, because one hour is not enough.

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Wickham '21 Speaks on the Black Student Experience in STEM - Wesleyan Connection

New Study Examines Recursive Thinking – ScienceBlog.com

Recursion the computational capacity to embed elements within elements of the same kind has been lauded as the intellectual cornerstone of language, tool use and mathematics. A multi-institutional team of Carnegie Mellon University researchers, for the first time, show this ability is shared across age, species and cultural groups in a new study published in the June 26 issue of the journal Science Advances.

Recursion is a way to organize information that allows humans to see patterns in information that are rich and complex, and perhaps beyond what other species see, saidJessica Cantlon, the Ronald J. and Mary Ann Zdrojkowski Professor of Developmental Neuroscience at CMU and senior author on the paper. We try to trace the origins of our complex and rich intellectual activities to something in our evolutionary past to understand what makes our thinking similar to and distinct from other species.

The team set up a series of experiments with U.S. adults, adults from an indigenous group in Bolivia that largely lacks formal education, U.S. children and non-human primates. After training on the task, the researchers provided each group with sequences to order. They studied how each group conducted this task, either in a recursive or non-recursive way (listing) and looked to see which order they naturally chose.

The researchers found that the human participants from all age and cultural groups spontaneously ordered content from a recursive approach by building nested structures. The non-human primate subjects more commonly used a simpler listing strategy but with additional exposure began using the recursive strategy, eventually ending up in the range of performance of human children.

This ability to represent recursive structures is present in children as young as three years old, which suggests it is there even before they use it in language, said Stephen Ferrigno, a post-doctoral fellow at Harvard University and first author on the paper. We also saw this ability across people from widely different human cultures. Non-human primates also have the capacity to represent recursive sequences, given the right experience. These results dispel the long-held belief that only humans have the capacity to use this rule.

The team found that working memory was an important factor affecting the sequencing abilities of participants. A strong correlation exists between working memory and the use of the hierarchical strategy.

Some of the errors were due to working memory, because participants had to remember which objects went first and relate that to other objects later in the list, said Ferrigno. Children and non-human primates had more errors, which may be due to lower working memory capacity.

The authors note that this work offers a simplified version of a recursive task using visual cues. A more complex series of tasks may not yield the same results.

There is something universal of being a human that lets our brains think this way spontaneously, but primates have the ability to learn it to some degree, said Cantlon. [This research] really gives us a chance to sort out the evolutionary and developmental contributions to complex thought.

Cantlon and Ferrigno were joined by Samuel Cheyette and Steven Piantadosi at the University of California, Berkeley on the study titled, Recursive sequence generation in monkeys, children, US adults, and native Amazonians. This work received support from the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, the James S. McDonnell Foundation, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and the University of Rochester.

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New Study Examines Recursive Thinking - ScienceBlog.com