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‘Humans are not prepared to protect nature’ – DW (English)

Peter Sloterdijk describes change as the modern name for something that classical philosophy called becoming, because everything that is, is not given in stable, everlasting forms but has to become what it is. He says modernity is all about interfering with this process of becoming, and puttingit or pushing it into a direction that fits better with human purposes.

DW: So we are always changing then?

Peter Sloterdijk: Yes. Nature as such is a self-changing entity. And all we can do is as it were keep riding on the wave of change.

As we look to the future and that wave gets bigger and bigger with regard to the danger of climate change, there are some big changes that we have to make as a species. And it seems at the moment we're not able to make them. Why?

Human beings are not prepared to protect nature in any sense. Because in all our history as a species, our deepest conviction always was that we are the ones who have to be protected by the powers of nature. And we arenot really prepared for this inversion. Just as a baby cannot carry his or her mother, human beings are not prepared or not able to carry nature. They must learn to deal with this immensity. This is a huge challenge because there is no longer the classical excuse that we are too little or too small in order to deal with such immensities.

Not prepared, or not willing to protect nature?

Is it a narcissism that is preventing it? What is the problem?

I sense the problem is one of scale. We are almost physiologically unable to add up the results of our own behavior to cosmic consequences. We are deeply convinced that all we do could and should be forgiven. From an ecological point of view, we are living in a period of time of lost innocence.

Read more:Am I a narcissist?

Have I understood you correctly that on a planetary scale, we're all looking for a sense of forgiveness? That we want to purge ourselves of what we've done?

And there will be lots of sins to be forgiven. And the more we understand that the higher the likelihood thatone day we will develop patterns of behavior to cope with the new situation.

One of the questions we've been thinking about in this interview series is the idea of comparing the two crises. Our response to the pandemic was immediate, almost unbelievably fast and unified. And then our response to the climate crisis seems to be stymied or stalled. Is there any way to look at these two forms of crisis in a similar light?

What our response to the coronavirus is proving is that the globalization through media is an almost accomplished project. The world as a whole is more or less synchronized and pulls together into one hothouse for contagious news. The infection by information is as strong, even stronger, than the infection by the virus. And so we have two pandemics at the same time: one, a pandemic of fear, and the other of real contagion.

Coronavirus has dominated headlines for months

You say that modernity has stopped us from becoming who we are. Can we change who we are?

Yeah. So I do not think that we can change our DNA simply by changing our thoughts. But we can change the grammar of our behavior. And that is what the 21st century will teach to the global community

What does that mean to change the grammar of our being?

Not of our being, but behavior. The grammar of our behavior.

What is that?

Everything we do adheres to a structure similar to a language. And acting is something that is ruled by hidden structures, such as every sentence we produce is ruled by grammar and lexicon. And I think that we are still uneasy on the level of lexical change. So we are now learning new terms, a new vocabulary, but, by and by, we shall also learn a new grammar.

Read more:Disinformation and propaganda during the coronavirus pandemic

So we're in the process of putting the building blocks of language together. Do you think we'll be able to speak before the destruction written on the wall comes true?

What I have found especially impressive in the behavior of the masses during this crisis is the incredible docility with which vast parts of the population in the West as in the East were ready to obey the new rules of precaution and distance. These are already new elements of a different social grammar.

Read more:Rutger Bregman: 'The virus is contagious, and so is our behavior'

But that can also be quite scary, right? That we in a matter of weeks were able to give up very basic freedoms

Oh yes. At the same time, it shows that we must not underestimate the plasticity of the human element. But who knows how long this patient behavior will last. I think we should continue our reflections in one year or so. I would be surprised if you are not a little bit more intelligent.

According to Sloterdijk, we are already witnessing elements of a new social grammar

Thinking about the human element, has our response to the coronavirus something none of us has really encountered beforechanged your outlook on humanity in any way?

Yes and no. Certainly, I'm as surprised as many contemporaries are. But at the same time, it also confirms something I have been developing for decades on a theoretical level. What I mean is that it confirms my assumption that the human race has reached a situation of synchronicity on the basis of a stream of information. We really are globally connected and are living more and more in the same time dimension. There's something like the eternal presence of globalization, and this has been an important feature of this crisis. Everything happens more or less at the same time. And the only differences we see are delays between different foci of events. But, on the whole, there is one big chain of events and connectedness.

Read more:'The time has come for humanity to go through its next evolution'

On a personal level, Peter, can you remember the last time you felt a change within yourself?

Yeah, I experienced a deep change in my existential mood at the age of about 33. I went to India and spent approximately four months there. That was a disruptive event in my own life. But the most similar event and the most comparable to now, even if it sounds quite unlikely, were those sublime days when the Berlin Wall fell down. For a span of time of approximately two months, I was not able to hear or see anything else but news from the political front.

And this was the sublime as it were music of reunification. And when that was over, I understood that it was over only when I was able to watch an ordinary movie for the first time afterwards. And right now I am still waiting for the moment when I will be able to listen to the music and to watch movies as I could before.

Peter Sloterdijk is one of Germany's most influential thinkers.Over the course of his career, he has published dozens of books that run the gamut of philosophical inquiry.Now retired from university instruction, he regularly contributes to public debate through interviews published in leading periodicals around Europe, among them Germany's Die Zeit, Spain's El Pais, and France's Le Point.

France hit record temperatures this summer, and the urban heat island effect means cities are particularly hot. While vegetation releases water into the atmosphere, cooling things down, concrete and asphalt trap heat. During a heat wave, Paris can be 10 degrees hotter than the surrounding countryside. Pollution also builds up in slow-moving summer air another reason urban heat waves can kill.

In August 2005, Hurricane Katrina tore apart one of America's most iconic cultural heartlands. Even though it's rebuilt, New Orleans has been battered again and again by powerful storms. A government report last year said the US southeast was "exceptionally vulnerable to sea-level rise, extreme heat events, hurricanes and decreased water availability." Trump's response? "I dont believe it."

This year India's monsoon was the second driest in 65 years, leaving 44% of the country suffering from drought. In Chennai, things have become desperate: its main reservoir has dried up, residents are queuing for hours at pumps, water is being trucked in and hospitals are under pressure. As the planet heats up, more and more cities could run out of water.

Arctic temperatures are rising faster than anywhere else on Earth. This is taking its toll on cities in Russia's far north, as the permafrost beneath building foundations begins to melt. Cities like Norilsk and Yakutsk are already seeing serious subsidence, and scientists expect their infrastructure to become at least 25% less stable by mid-century.

Rising seas threaten coastal cities the world over, but Jakarta, with 13 rivers, suffers more floods than most. Limited access to water means residents pump it from underground aquifers, causing subsidence. By 2050, 95% of North Jakarta could be submerged. Indonesia is building the world's biggest seawall to protect its capital, but that could leave thousands of fishermen without homes or income.

Some 28% of the population of Bangladesh lives on the coast, and high tides are rising 10 times faster than the global average. In 2018, natural disasters displaced 78,000 people, with riverbank erosion expected to increase as Himalayan ice melts moving many more. Already one of the world's most densely populated cities, the capital of Dhaka takes in 1,000 new migrants every day.

Author: Ruby Russell

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'Humans are not prepared to protect nature' - DW (English)

‘Social Unrest: Resolving The Dichotomies Of Me/You And Us/Them’ On Monday’s Access Utah – Utah Public Radio

Monday's Access Utah episode.

Derrik Tollefson is Professor of Social Work and head of the Department of Sociology, Social Work and Anthropology at Utah State University. He also directs the I-System Institute for Transdisciplinary Studies at USU.

The I-System Model, which provides the foundation for both Mind-Body Bridging and Productive Mind, was developed by Stanley H. Block, MD, together with his wife, Carolyn Bryant Block in the late 1990s to optimize heath, wellness, and human performance. The I-System Model presents a view of individual and collective psychosocial human functioning and embraces a holistic approach to healing and wellness.

Derrik Tollefson is a co-author, with Stanley Bock, Carolyn Bryant Block and Guy du Plessis, of Social Unrest: Resolving the Dichotomies of Me/You and Us/Them: The I-System Model of Human Behavior.

This episode is a part of UPRs Project Resilience made possible with support from the USU Center for Persons with Disabilities and The Family Place in Logan.

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'Social Unrest: Resolving The Dichotomies Of Me/You And Us/Them' On Monday's Access Utah - Utah Public Radio

‘The Biggest Bluff’ is the nuts – Sports – Maine Edge

Play the man, not the cards. Its an adage that has been circulating in the poker world since there has been a poker world in which it could circulate. But how true is it?

Thats one of the fundamental questions explored in Maria Konnikovas new book The Biggest Bluff: How I Learned to Pay Attention, Master Myself, and Win (Penguin Press, $28). Konnikova is the perfect person to explore such a question, combining a longtime study of psychology and human behavior and a complete lack of knowledge regarding poker. Through answering that question, she sought to get a firmer grasp on the role of chance in the way our worlds operate.

She gained that understanding, to be sure, but that was far from all.

The pitch was simple go from utter neophyte to the World Series of Poker in one year. But while she achieved her goal, Konnikova also wound up completely changing the trajectory of her life, both personally and professionally. Her voyage through the poker world opened her eyes to a number of truths about herself and her perceptions and proclivities.

It also turned her into a hell of a player. A good player and a surprisingly successful one.

Maria Konnikovas idea came from a run of bad luck in her life; that stretch made her question just how much of an impact chance has on our lives. She wanted to learn what she could control and what she could not. But how to judge such a thing? The eureka moment came via the work of legendary game theorist John von Neumann, who viewed poker as perhaps the most elegant and effective real-world example of something striking the balance between skill and luck. The only problem? She didnt know how to play.

Thats where Eric Seidel came in.

Seidel is one of the legends of poker, someone who has been among the best player in the world for decades. He is also a noted polymath, a man of myriad interests and ideas that extend far beyond the felt of the poker table. Certainly the sort of open-minded freethinker that might consider taking part in such a wild experiment.

And this was wild. Konnikova had literally never played a hand of poker when she first approached Seidel about serving as her poker coach/tutor/guru. Her plan go from knowing nothing to the World Series of Poker Maine Event in a single year seemed absurd on its face. But again Seidels thoughtfulness and unconventional outlook made him the perfect candidate to help. Lucky for her, he said yes.

What followed was a months-long quest into the weird and insular world of poker. From learning the basics what beats what, betting etiquette, that sort of stuff to gradually climbing the competitive ladder, Konnikova immerses herself in the game, bringing her PhD in psychology and her longtime study of human behavior to the table.

It was never about making money. Rather, this journey was intended to give Konnikova insight into the role that chance plays in our lives and the illusion of control that we as humans tend to project onto the world around us. She had her share of epiphanies about behavior both her own and that of others.

She also started to win.

The initial year-long commitment led to legitimate success, including a title at one of the circuits touring stops. In the space of 12 months, she went from total donkey to full-on poker pro cashing in tournaments, receiving sponsorships, the whole shebang. In fact, this books release was delayed because of her mounting success. All in all, she got a good deal more than she bargained for.

The Biggest Bluff is a wonderful read, a piece of engaging experiential nonfiction reminiscent of the participatory work of George Plimpton. Konnikovas prose gifts are on full display throughout, capturing vivid snapshots of the poker world moments seedy and sublime alike. She also does incredible work in making her personal journey accessible; anyone who has ever sought to learn something new will see reflections of their own quest in these pages.

We spend lots of time with Seidel, a fascinating dude who becomes invested in Konnikovas success even as he continues his own work as one of the worlds best players. Hes not the only poker person we meet, though theres a wonderfully weird cast of characters sprinkled throughout the book.

Konnikova is also unafraid to introduce autobiographical elements into the mix, giving us a glimpse into how her time at the poker table is impacting her life outside the game. We see her self-awareness and self-worth grow. We meet members of her family, both supportive (her husband) and not-so-much (her frankly hilarious Russian grandmother). And we watch as the journey gradually but firmly alters her perspective on the world.

In terms of poker storytelling, The Biggest Bluff is probably the best weve seen since James McManuss incredible Positively Fifth Street. Even making the comparison borders on heresy, considering the esteem in which that book is held, but Id argue that what Konnikova has done here might even be its equal. A different sort of story, but one that is just as compelling.

The Biggest Bluff is a hell of a book. Anyone who has ever sat down at a poker table will love this tale of beneficial breaks, bad beats and yes, big bluffs. Its the literary equivalent of pocket aces with two more on the flop the absolute nuts.

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'The Biggest Bluff' is the nuts - Sports - Maine Edge

Lyft is Tapping its Drivers to Collect Data for Improving its Self-Driving Vehicles and Build HD Maps – FutureCar

Author: Eric Walz

The robust software powering today's self-driving vehicles is not static, its continuously evolving and being refined using AI and machine-learning algorithms so autonomous vehicles (AVs) can better handle unexpected driving scenarios.

However, in order to do this, massive amounts of real-world data is needed to train AI-powered autonomous driving systems, so they can be improved over time. Ride-hailing company Lyft, is turning to its drivers for assistance in gathering all of this data. Turns out that simple dash cams used by Lyft's drivers are an ideal way to collect data while driving through urban areas.

Some drivers on Lyft's ride-hailing platform are using small, low-cost dash cameras to collect footage of intersections, bicyclists, pedestrians, as well as the behavior of other drivers while the Lyft driver is out and about picking up passengers.

By collecting the driver data, Lyft is helping to accelerate the development of autonomous driving technology as its highly valuable to improve the software and AI that powers the self-driving development vehicles.

Since Lyft's service its accessible to 95% of the U.S. population, it's one of the largest datasets in the world of real world driving scenarios.

The real-world data is used to train machine learning models so Lyft's engineering teams can better understand how human drivers behave in various traffic situations. For example, Lyft's data can be used to better predict how fast drivers travel on a particular stretch of road, or the probability that a human driver will enter an intersection when the traffic signal turns yellow.

The data can also be used to produce highly detailed 3D maps, which are an essential tool for self-driving vehicles to navigate with.

Using Driver Data to Improve HD Maps

Using rideshare data, Lyft was able to build city-scale 3D geometric maps using technology developed by Blue Vision Labs, an augmented reality software company acquired by Lyft in 2018.

High-definition maps contain much more detailed information compared with traditional maps. For instance, the maps used by self-driving vehicles contain the exact position of each lane and traffic light information of intersections, such as if an intersection has a traffic light that allows vehicles to make protected turn lefts. The HD maps even include elevation data and the location of street signs.

Lyft generates this information from its rideshare data by using a combination of 3D computer vision and machine learning to automatically identify traffic objects from the camera feed, such as other vehicles, pedestrians and road signs.

All of this information helps Lyft's engineers understand how drivers behave in risky situations, like a driver running a particular red light or failing to properly yield.

Lyft said it mapped thousands of miles using the wide geographic coverage of the vehicles on its ride-sharing network. Lyft continuously updates its maps from data collected from each trip. After it's collected, the data is immediately logged each time a ride is completed.

While mapping operations teams can build 3D maps for AVs, keeping them up-to-date is a challenge without continuously updated information. For example, a lane closure due to construction needs to be included in the 3D maps and pushed out to Lyft's autonomous vehicles for navigation. By using real data from driver's that traverse this area, Lyft can better train its AVs to better navigate through the hazard.

In addition to assisting Lyft to build 3D geometric maps, data rideshare network data helps the company to better understand human driving patterns. Using visual localization technology, Lyft is able to track the real-world trajectories that Lyft drivers follow when making turns or traveling in a lane with a greater level of accuracy.

This helps Lyft's self-driving vehicles to maintain the optimal location in their lane based on human driving patterns, so the software more closely mimics how drivers navigate urban road environments.

The data helps Lyft determine the optimum lane position for its AVs that more closely match how human drivers behave.

The data also helps Lyft's autonomous vehicles to better handle aggressive drivers and those who don't always obey road rules.

For example, if drivers are constantly being cut near a busy intersection where traffic merges, the data can be used to tune the software to anticipate this behavior and determine the appropriate deceleration profile, instead of having to slam on the brakes after being cut off by an aggressive driver.

This enables Lyfts's AVs to respond more safely in similar situations and behave more like a human driver, lessening the anxiety for passengers that will one day ride in Lyft's self-driving vehicles.

For developers of self-driving vehicles, building highly detailed maps and better understanding human driving behavior is critical. This data driven approach can help accelerate AV development, allowing developers to better address motion planning challenges of navigating in an urban environment.

By using this approach, Lyft is not just solely relying on previous AV trips or computer simulation simulation environments to determine how its vehicles should behave. Instead the company is leveraging real data from one of the largest ride-sharing networks in the world.

Lyft is not alone in its efforts. Waymo, which spun out of Google's self-driving car project, is also sharing its vehicle data with researchers.

In August 2019, Waymo released its "Waymo Open Dataset" for researchers and developers working on autonomous driving and other related mobility projects. Waymo says its dataset is the largest, richest, and most diverse self-driving dataset ever released for research purposes.

Like Lyft, the data was collected by a fleet of Waymo self-driving vehicles that traveled over 10 million miles in 25 different cities.

The dataset includes high-resolution sensor data covering a wide variety of environments, including dense urban areas and suburban streets. That data was also collected in a wide variety of real-world conditions, including day and night, bright sunlight and rain.

Waymo's own engineers use the same dataset to develop self-driving technology and innovative machine learning models and algorithms. With the release of Waymo's dataset, engineers outside of Waymo are getting access to the same data the Waymo's uses for the first time ever.

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Lyft is Tapping its Drivers to Collect Data for Improving its Self-Driving Vehicles and Build HD Maps - FutureCar

Cryptic 30,000-year-old burial cave reveals special afterlife treatment, long before the Egyptians – SYFY WIRE

Funeral rites emerged at the dawn of humanity. Rituals involved in the passage into the afterlife and proper care of the dead have always been sacred, but the reasons behind many funerary practices remain buried in time.

Deep in a French cave lies an unusual Mid-Upper Paleolithic burial site whose passages almost seem to echo with voices from the past. Most of the rites carried out some 25,000-30,000 years ago are still not well understood. Mysterious drawings of horses, oxen, and mammoths gallop across the rocky walls. Skeletal remains rest in graves smudged with red ochre, but why some of the bones are missing is still unexplained, as is the significance of who was buried there. Archaeologist Eline M.J. Schotsmans and her team are trying to demystify these secrets.

Grotte de Cusac in Dordogne, France, can only be studied by observation, since the French Ministry of Culture has designated the cave as a national heritage site with restricted access. Schotsmans recently published a study on her team's observations in PNAS.There has not yet been an excavation.

Though even gloved hands are barely allowed to touch anything, one aspect of the cave that could handle a more in-depth approach has been the intricate artwork. Figural drawings of animals are superimposed onto other animals, with horses and oxen dominant on the upper halfs, while woolly mammoths rule the lower halfs. It is known that there was a Paleolithic association of mammoths with women. Men during this era were the ones who would hunt such beasts, while women were relegated to the domestic realm, so the explicitly female representation remains unclear. So does the rest of the mural.

The meaning of the drawings must be a link with the human remains found in the cave," Schotsmans tells SYFY WIRE. Many of the engravings are superimposed and there are additions made to the engravings which indicate that the parietal art was not a final result. It was probably part of a narrative, of an art performance. It was meant to connect people and to exchange.

But who was the audience? Was it the living commemorating those who had gone before them, or the spirits of the dead?

It is possible there was some sort of mystical connection made with this visual narrative, like other forms of interaction with the dead. It was not uncommon for ancient tombs to be illustrated, but when pyramids rose in the Egyptian desert millennia later, their grand visions of the afterlife would be sealed away after the burial of a pharaoh. This much earlier example suggests that the drawings, for one reason or another, were constantly being added to. Perhaps the superimposed animals were symbolic of lines of ancestors who had already taken the journey to the underworld. These were the bodies that had been buried in and possibly painted with red ochre.

Ochre is a sign of symbolism. It shows that the deposition is deliberate and not just a dead body abandoned in the cave, Schotsmans explains. In general, the use of ochre is a sign of modern human behavior and cognitive development in the middle Stone Age. This is not usually questioned, as many burials from this time period have ochre, but it does say something about symbolism.

The Red Lady of Paviland is one of the most famous examples of bodies symbolically painted in red ochre. This partial skeleton dates to around the same time period the bodies at Grotte de Cusac were laid to rest, and named for the brilliant red color of the bones, which were later analyzed and found to be male. There is a suggestion of social status by the other artifacts buried with this man, which reveal that he may have been a hunter. He also appeared to have received preferential treatment. Evidence indicates that this was a ceremonial burial, and the Grotte de Cusac burials also appear to have involved ceremony and possibly special treatment of some sort.

We first have to do an excavation to study the age and sex of these individuals. The upper paleolithic society is considered as relativelyegalitarian, so I would not say that their burial indicates social status. It indicates social differentiation, but it is not sure on what this is based, Schotsmans says. This is still speculation. It could be related to ancestry. That certain individuals become ancestors. But it is unclear on what this is based.

Many found some way to keep their ancestors presence around. The Chinchorro people of what is now Chile would mummify their dead and bring these mummies into their homes to keep their ancestors alive. Every skeleton at Grotte de Cusac (with the exception of one) is missing a skull though the teeth were curiously left behind. The skeletons are thought to have been moved to this burial chamber (which was actually a series of abandoned bears nests) postmortem, and interacted with regularly. Could it be that the living also took certain bones into their homes so it would be as if the dead had never really left them?

It could well be that they took the crania with them so that the dead could stay in the world of the living, Schotsmans says. From ethnological examples, we see that it is not unusual that the dead continue their life with the living until a certain point through the manipulation of certain body parts. This could potentially point to some form of ancestry veneration. Of course, this is an interpretation of the observations and all speculative.

Until Schotsmans and others can shine more than just a flashlight on these mysteries, they will wait in the shadows.

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Cryptic 30,000-year-old burial cave reveals special afterlife treatment, long before the Egyptians - SYFY WIRE

Wet wipes and sanitary towels may end up as microplastic fibers in the sea – News-Medical.Net

Reviewed by Emily Henderson, B.Sc.Jun 23 2020

Researchers from Earth and Ocean Sciences and the Ryan Institute at NUI Galway have carried out a study on the contribution of widely flushed personal care textile products (wet wipes and sanitary towels) to the ocean plastic crisis.

Dr. Liam Morrison led the study, which showed that sediments adjacent to a wastewater treatment plant are consistently strewn with white microplastic fibers that are comparable to those from commercially available consumer sanitary products (wet wipes and sanitary towels). The article has been published in the international journal Water Research and was co-authored by NUI Galway Ph.D. student Ana Mendes and Maynooth University graduate Oisn Briain.

In most studies to date, white fibers are likely underestimated, because of the commonly used filtration procedure to capture microplastic fibers as filters are commonly white, making visual identification of microscopic white fibers against a white background difficult. This is significant given the global growth of non-woven synthetic fiber products and their ubiquity in wastewater.

Our University has made sustainability a strategic priority, and for the world to address climate change, we have a duty to examine the behavior of individuals and corporations that can help our planet. This research highlights the need for us to adapt our behaviors and tackle the ubiquity of plastic in so many products."

Professor Ciarn hgartaigh, President of NUI Galway

An urban rural gradient involving three locations from Galway City (close to Mutton Island and adjacent to a wastewater treatment plant) to counties Clare (Bell Harbour) and Mayo (Bellacragher) were investigated in this study. The total number of fibers found near Mutton Island was 6083 microplastics fibers per kilogram of sediment, while the rural sites had much lower levels (Bell Harbour, 1627 and Bellacragher 316). The total number of white fibers was 5536, 788, and 265 per kilogram of sediment for Mutton Island, Bell harbor and Bellacragher respectively. Incredibly, 91% of microplastic fibers at Mutton Island are likely derived from wet wipes and sanitary towels.

Lead researcher of the study, Dr Liam Morrison from Earth and Ocean Sciences and Ryan Institute at NUI Galway, said: "COVID-19 may have brought its own challenges for the oceans including the increased use of disinfectant wipes during the pandemic which potentially may end up as microplastic fibers in the sea. It is widely known that microplastics can act as vectors for contaminants including bacteria and viruses and are potentially harmful for public health and marine life."

The nearby intertidal zone at Mutton Island is prone to the accumulation of high volumes of washed-up sewage-derived debris on a frequent basis. Excessive microplastic loading in sediments in December 2017 was likely induced by heavy precipitation episodes during a south-westerly storm front. Elevated debris loading on this occasion may result from combined sewer overflows, where excessive input of drainage water exceeds wastewater treatment effluent capacity and is released untreated in the overflow. Dr Morrison said: "This was significant in the context of climate change, where we are likely to see increased rainfall events and flooding."

While most microplastics may be removed by the wastewater treatment process, combined sewage overflows associated with periods of heavy rainfall give rise to the release of sewage waste containing wipes and sanitary towels, impacting on public health and the environment. Combined sewer overflows and the subsequent shoreline deposition of sanitary waste have not previously been thoroughly investigated as a source of white microplastic fibers in the marine environment. The study found that wet wipes and sanitary towels are a source of unaccounted white microplastic fibers in the marine environment and not all flushable wipes are biodegradable. In fact 50% of the wipes labeled "flushable" in this study were shown to contain microplastics. The lack of regulation for hygiene and sanitary products results in a failure to identify the plastic composition of these materials. This demonstrates the consequences of misleading labeling of non-woven textile personal care products.

The samples of sanitary-related macro debris (wipes and sanitary towels) collected from the intertidal zone near Mutton Island in Galway City following a heavy rainfall event were mostly comprised of the plastic polyethylene terephthalate (PET), with only a quarter of the samples analyzed presenting as a mix of PET and cellulose, and over 80% of the wipes in the shoreline waste were identified as non-flushable due to their polymer composition following the International Water Services Flushability Group and non-woven textile industry guidelines (INDA/EDANA, 2018; IWSFG, 2018).

Given the global distribution and projected growth of the non-woven textile industry (as non-woven textiles form the base material of many sanitary products), this is a concern. European production of non-woven textiles for hygiene and sanitary products exceeded one million tonnes in 2016 alone and these products frequently cause blockages in sewage systems globally, incurring significant technical and financial costs to wastewater utilities.

These products are a consistent feature of global plastic pollution surveys and in comparison, microplastic fibers from clothing are generally colored or multi-colored. To date the role of these white microplastic fibers as significant components of wastewater effluent remained poorly understood. The quantities of wet wipes washing up on beaches in the UK has increased 400% in the last decade (Marine Conservation Society, 2019).

Dr Morrison added: "There is a need for increased public awareness of microplastic pollution in the environment and human behavior should shift away from the inapt disposal of sanitary products down the toilet and instead divert to alternative land-based waste management."

Source:

Journal reference:

Briain, O.O., et al. (2020) The role of wet wipes and sanitary towels as a source of white microplastic fibres in the marine environment. Water Research. doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2020.116021.

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Wet wipes and sanitary towels may end up as microplastic fibers in the sea - News-Medical.Net

The General Education Curriculum We Need | Higher Ed Gamma – Inside Higher Ed

The time to rethink and reimagine general education is long past due.

Surveys suggest that students view gen ed requirements as little more than a checklist. Certainly, the value of gen ed isnt self-evident to many students, who consider it an obstacle course and a diversion from the true interests.

"Irrelevant" is a word that crops up again and again. And I can assure you, irrelevant won't cut it following this summer's protests.

Some students also point to the hypocrisy of baby boomer faculty imposing requirements that they themselves didnt have to fulfill during their college days.

Distribution requirements remain the dominant form of general education, and were all familiar with the criticisms:

Even those academics who are sympathetic to the view that students should receive a well-rounded liberal education and be introduced to subjects that they havent previously encountered often concludes that the dominant approach to gen ed results in the worst of all worlds: unmotivated, disengaged students; overly complex, prescriptive and confusing requirements; and an overabundance of narrow, disciplinary-focused courses that do little to advance the true goal of general education, to provide sweeping introductions to the texts, ideas, methodologies and modes of analysis and interpretation that every educated person should be familiar with.

The history of the college curriculum has, for the past century and a half, involved swings between programs emphasizing choice and courses of study mandating certain requirements.

In a reaction against the rigid, highly prescriptive curriculum of the early American college, the late-19th-century research university embraced electives. Indeed, in 1900, Harvard had just one required class, English composition.

But the early 20th century witnessed a reaction, with the advent of the first general education requirements. Gen eds founding principles were twofold:

A few institutions, led by Columbia, embraced a common core of required courses. A few others, like Reed, introduced a core course, to be taken by every undergraduate. Still others instituted thematic or problem-oriented courses, like the University of Chicagos interdisciplinary classes on American political institutions, personality and culture, and freedom and order.

But most institutions adopted distribution requirements as the most scalable and cost-effective way to ensure that students acquired a basic understanding of humanities and the arts, contemporary social issues, and mathematics and science.

With the turn toward mass higher education following World War II, general education struck many as more important than ever. Reports from Columbia, Harvard, the University of Chicago and a presidential commission upheld gen ed as a way to give coherence to a fragmented curriculum, familiarize undergraduates with liberal and humanistic traditions, and cultivate responsible citizenship.

But by the late 1960s and early 1970s, choice was ascendant again, with many institutions abandoning distribution requirements. Many students and faculty did not lament their disappearance. A 1977 Carnegie Foundation report concluded that general education had become so "poorly defined and so diluted with options that it has no recognizable substance of its own."

Then the tide shifted yet again, with many campuses reviving gen ed requirements, partly in response to the increasing diversity and perceived academic unpreparedness of entering students and in part to ensure breadth, a common skill set and exposure to topics deemed essential by faculty.

UC Santa Cruzs gen ed curriculum illustrates the extensive range and specificity of such requirements. It includes courses in composition; cross-cultural analysis; ethnicity and race; the interpretation of arts and media; mathematical, statistical and formal reasoning; scientific inquiry; and textual analysis and interpretation, plus a choice of classes in such areas as collaborative endeavor, the creative process, environmental awareness, human behavior, service learning and technology and society.

Many states and many public university systems have standardized the gen ed curriculum to make it easier for students to transfer from one institution to another -- often provoking resistance from faculty who consider this a threat to their control over the curriculum.

At the same time, a number of private colleges, like Hiram College, have looked to gen ed as a way to differentiate their institution within the highly competitive higher education marketplace. Hirams Urgent Challenge Curriculum is organized around skills and themes: ways of knowing (which includes creative, interpretive, modeling, experimental scientific and social and cultural analysis methods); responsible citizenship (including an understanding of international issues, foreign cultures and diversity within the United States); and meaning, ethics and social responsibility.

However quixotic the idea may seem, the time has come, I am convinced, to radically rethink gen ed and increase student choice once again. But this need not mean abandoning the idea of a uniform undergraduate experience altogether. We need to give students attractive options.

At public colleges and universities, where curricular coherence is a pipe dream, some Purdue University faculty found a workaround. Their Cornerstone certificate program offers first-year students an experience somewhat analogous to that provided by Honors Colleges. Students take two courses on transformative texts, followed by three courses that address cultural impact and representation in one of five areas: science and technology, environment and sustainability, health care and medicine, management and organization, and conflict resolution and justice.

Georgetown initiated a series of modular courses that engage in interdisciplinary topics and projects and give students the opportunity to work with faculty from a variety of disciplines. Current topics include challenges in childhood and society, climate change, and social justice immersion experiences.

A number of faculty at CUNYs Hunter College have taken another different tack. Humanities 20100 combines off-campus arts experiences at museums and archives, and dance, music, theater and opera performances with a signature seminar led by a faculty mentor, along with visits by New York Citys cultural professionals, in which students investigate the historical contexts and the aesthetic, cultural and philosophical significance of the works they see and hear.

Students encounter both contemporary and canonical works that address timely and timeless issues involving justice, identity, power and privilege, prompting insights into ethics, psychology and the dynamics of social and cultural change.

If I am right, if the history of general education has been a pendulum swaying between choice and prescription, then the time has come to break the cycle and draw on the best of the past and imagine something new. We might consider replacing distribution requirements with:

In my studies of the history of childhood, I argue that contemporary upper-middle-class society has juvenilized and segregated the young and given them few ways to demonstrate their growing competence, apart from sports. Their parents worry incessantly about their mental and physical well-being and whether they are bored and fail to recognize that children, even young children, are far more capable than we generally assume. To perpetuate their class status, these parents shower their children with adult-directed enrichment activities.

Lets not juvenilize our college students. Lets give them options that do precisely what gen ed is supposed to do: promote student development along multiple vectors -- cognitive, emotional, interpersonal and ethical -- expose them to a variety of methodologies and interpretive strategies; and teach them to look, listen, read, think, speak and write critically and analytically.

Lets not dictate a single path, no matter how carefully considered or well intentioned. Let a thousand flowers bloom.

Steven Mintz is professor of history at the University of Texas at Austin.

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The General Education Curriculum We Need | Higher Ed Gamma - Inside Higher Ed

How Framing Coronavirus Risks Impacts A States Willingness To Reopen Its Economy – Forbes

Dr. Joshua Liao explains why it is important for citizens to pay attention to how leaders frame reopening plans because willingness to take risks can depend on how it is being framed.

Kathia Joseph, Blue Paris Bistro owner, poses for a photo during an interview with the AFP in Miami ... [+] Beach, Florida. Florida is reporting record daily totals of new coronavirus cases, but you'd never know it looking at the Sunshine State's increasingly busy beaches and hotels.

Few deny the immense tragedy of lost lives and livelihoods due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Yet many argue that the best way to stop the loss of either lives or livelihoods will require increasing the loss of the other. Public health experts assert that economic restrictions are needed to minimize deaths until states have robust data surveillance systems to guide reopenings. But even though only a few states are actually prepared by these criteria to reopen, every single one has started reopening decisions driven by calls to stop throttling the economy.

Of course, economic hardship factors prominently into this willingness to risk personal and public health in order to reopen the country. Many Americans already face significant financial losses, and dire financial straits have driven some to defiantly protest stay-at-home orders.

But there is more than just economics driving these decisions. Policies and behaviors are shaped by how leaders frame reopening solutions to themselves and their constituents. As a behavioral principle, framing describes how humans tend to make decisions using the framework within which choices are presented. The phenomenon has been observed in many different situations, but perhaps none more relevant to the current situation than seminal experiments conducted by economists nearly four decades ago.

In those tests, participants were asked to imagine that the U.S. was considering two solutions to combat an unusual disease outbreak from Asia that was expected to kill 600 people. The first solution would guarantee that 200 people survived. The second solution would have a 1 in 3 chance of saving all 600 and a 2 in 3 chance that all 600 would die. Faced with the certainty of saving some and the possibility of saving all, over 70% of participants favored the former.

The experiment was repeated using the same scenario but different solutions. Participants were asked which they favored: a solution that would result in the death of 400 people, or one that had a 1 in 3 probability of no one dying and a 2 in 3 probability of all 600 people dying. Nearly 80% of participants chose the latter, favoring the potential to save everyone over the certainty of losing some.

The insight is two-fold: framing matters, and our willingness to take risks can depend on how it is being framed. When solutions were framed as the prospect of gains (definitely saving 200 people versus potentially saving all 600), most participants were risk-averse and took the proverbial bird in hand. But when solutions were framed as the prospect of losses (definitely losing 400 people versus potentially losing all 600), most people were more willing to take risks and roll the dice.

These are useful lessons amid Covid-19. As states progress through phases of reopening, leaders and communities will face many decisions and data points, all of which are affected by framing. Recognizing this reality can help leaders thoughtfully choose frames that fit local circumstances, and the rest of us make better decisions for ourselves and our loved ones.

Leaders can also recognize that solutions framed around loss (rapid reopenings could cost more lives) may resonate differently than those framed around gain (gradual reopenings could save more lives). The same can be true of economic recovery (the difference between jobs lost through closures and families benefiting from reopenings).

These are not trivial distinctions: by affecting Americans risk tolerance, framing can affect behavior and the actual risks we create for our communities as they are reopened. Getting the framing right is doubly important because of the connection between health and finances business viability requires a healthy workforce, and an unstable economy can cause health problems.

To be clear, appropriate framing is not a panacea; strong science, policy and public health measures remain critical for sustainable recovery. But human behavior not science or politics is the final common pathway to all interventions, and the psychology behind those behaviors may determine the success of our recovery efforts. Addressing that psychology means not just grappling with challenging health and economic issues, but paying attention to how we talk about them.

Full coverage and live updates on the Coronavirus

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How Framing Coronavirus Risks Impacts A States Willingness To Reopen Its Economy - Forbes

THROUGH THE LENS: An interview with Kathy Triolo – The Union of Grass Valley

Its no wonder Kathy Triolo is elected President of the Nevada County Camera Club.

After years of adventure and pursuit of career and family, Kathy returned to the passion she had as a 7-year-old kid with a Brownie camera, and reignited it into a stunning photography presence. Her reentry is highlighted by the multi-award winning Starry Night at the Fair.

Competing with thousands of photographers statewide, she won the coveted Best of Show in Photography at the California State Fair (2018) and received the Golden Bear award (a bronze casting of the CA state bear symbol). After that, she won first place and Best of Division at the Nevada County District Fair.

This photo represents her mastery of digital photo processing with the compositing of three photos into one can you recognize them? Before I reveal her technique, consider her beginnings, which became a basis for photographic achievement.

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BACK TO THE BEGINNING

While a teen, Kathy kept photographically active and built a dark room for processing color slides, the then affordable medium. Although growing up in San Francisco provided unlimited subject matter, especially for the street photography genre, going off to college expanded her view. Humboldt State University offered a photography major and enabled a year of travel abroad; Europe and Israel were her photographic school ground. But the Eureka area also offered photo opportunities.

The early photo Fishing in Eureka (1973) is delightful and shows her sense of humor with two fishermen appearing to abandon ship at days end.

However, a photography major didnt look like a viable career path, so Kathy got a degree in psychology. Well, psychology didnt look very promising either without an advanced degree, so she went on to get a MS in rehabilitation counseling at San Francisco State University. You might wonder what this has to do with photography, but studying human behavior does influence ones photographic sensitivity.

Kathy took her counseling work very seriously. For example, she took a challenging position doing psychiatric triage in locked wards in Redwood City and San Jose. Experiencing the depths of human behavior can deepen ones sensitivity to photographic subjects. Consider this photo of Rodney, juried into the California State Fine Arts Exhibition at the State Fair. This portrait has enduring appeal arising from portraying lifes struggle in the spirit of the great master painters, like Rembrandt.

TRAVELING FAR AND NEAR

Kathy and her camera (and her husband) have traveled to the far reaches of the world which often inspires her to combine photos from totally different locations (photographers call it compositing, using software such as Photoshop). Recently, she developed a noir theme to the delight of many subjects who ended up in exotic settings. This example, A Night in Barcelona, has a sinister couple (taken in Kathys studio) on the streets of Barcelona, Spain. Staging photos like this is not only intriguing but entertaining.

With Kathys penchant for travel we are fortunate to have her home in Nevada City for this interview. But the real reason for her availability is not so fortunate: COVID-19, which has halted most travel.

Earlier this year, when the pandemic wreaked travel havoc, she and her husband almost didnt make it back home. She laments, We traveled a long way to Sydney, Australia, for a Royal Caribbean cruise to New Zealand only to find out that the borders had closed right before we sailed. They had to quickly fly back, leaving Australia just in time.

Many of Kathys trips are in our region such as the eastern Sierras. Heres a photo that magnificently illustrates another popular genre, night photography.

The photo, Convict Lake Night Beauty, required positioning at the perfect place and time with tripod set up for a long exposure (which cant be too long or the stars will look like streaks). This photo took the photographic community by storm and was juried into California State Fair 2017 Fine Arts Competition, which accepts very few photos. It also won Photo of the Year for Nevada County Camera Club (2018), and was celebrated at the Clubs annual dinner.

ADDING ART TO ARTISTRY

Artistry is subjective and can be difficult to define, but we know it when we see it. De Chambeau Hotel, Bodie is an illustration of Kathys photographic artistry, and captures part of the Bodie ghost town (Bodie CA State Historic Park near the Nevada border) in a spectacular sunset. In contrast to other art forms, photography depends upon shooting at the exact right moment to capture natural light. In this case, the composition also contributes to a terrific photo. Notice the leading lines from the lower left into the colorful sunset above a blue sky.

This photo was featured in the 2018 Bodie Foundation Calendar and was made into a postcard for sale in the Bodie Foundation Gift Shop. It also won Best Color Photograph at the Nevada County District Fair in 2018.

Kathy has taken the art of photography to inspiring levels through her use of compositing. For Starry Night at the Fair (see our first photo), she combined a night sky photo of the Milky Way and a sunset shot of the California State Fair ride and then applied a color filter (selectively enhances colors) in Photoshop.

In the photo Wild Iris, the wild describes the iriss leaping out of a picture frame. This whimsical addition along with the other photographic elements renders the photo a work of art in our opinion.

SHARING THE SPOTLIGHT

Kathys presence in the photographic community includes shows, competitions and awards too numerous to mention here. But her work goes far beyond personal photography to leading and inspiring the Camera Club. She enables numerous shows, competitions and activities for members.

We are delighted at opportunities she creates working with her club board, such as shows at Nevada City Picture Framing and Gallery (571 Searles Ave., Nevada City) running through August, and a show at the office of Edward Jones Investments (580 Brunswick Road, Grass Valley) running now through July.

Sometimes the spotlight is all hers as with Underworld, which received the 2019 Award of Merit at the California State Fair Photography Competition. This photo then was then accepted for the KVIE Auction, a regional TV show airing in October. As noted in previous articles, printing photos is a surprisingly challenging process. Underworld not only creates a mysterious mood but the sharpness, tonal range and subtle lighting make it a winning print.

This just in: another example of Kathys awesome artistry, Butterfly Ballet, has been selected to show at Blue Line Arts, a prominent gallery in Roseville (405 Vernon St.) June 12 July 25. Kathy has created a dreamlike fantasy with many elements including flora, fauna, and young girls with color coordinated egrets.

I invite you to peruse Kathys compelling creations on her website:http://www.ktriolo.wixsite.com/triolography, Facebook, and Instagram.

Jim Bair, a former VP of the Nevada County Camera Club, has many of his award winning photos onhttp://www.JimBairPhotography.comand in this newspaper athttp://www.theunion.com/news/through-the-lens-a-qa-with-photographer-featured-artist-jim-bair.

Link:
THROUGH THE LENS: An interview with Kathy Triolo - The Union of Grass Valley

Scholarly Perspectives on COVID-19, Part 1: This Was Only a Matter of Time – Southern Newsroom

In retrospect, December 2019 seems like an altogether different era now. For most of the U.S. population, at least, those were the halcyon days when students were doggedly completing final exams and papers, teachers were grading and looking forward to winter break, shoppers were checking off gift lists online and in stores, the faithful were making pilgrimages to holy sites, families were crisscrossing states and oceans to visit loved ones, football fans were celebrating the NFL playoffs, tourists were crowding into theaters on and off Broadway, crafters were selling their wares at holiday bazaars, farmers were repairing their equipment, and friends were meeting up for peppermint and eggnog latts.

On New Years Eve, meanwhile, the China Country Office of the World Health Organization (WHO) received reports that a cluster of pneumonia cases had presented in the city of Wuhan, in Hubei Provinceplace names that have since become ominously familiar but were then still unknown to many Americans. Six days later, the cause of the illness was still obscure, but by January 7, 2020, scientists in China had already isolated the pathogen and shared its full genetic sequence with the global scientific community. They identified it as a novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV).

Combining visual metaphor and perhaps not a little irony, coronaviruses are named for their crown- or halo-like appearance when peered at through an electron microscope; corona in Latin denotes an honorific garland worn on the head or else a halo encircling a celestial body, such as the sun. The pathogens, of which there are currently four main types known to affect humans, were first characterized in 1965 and are the source of mild to serious upper respiratory syndromes; some coronaviruses, for example, are known to cause the common cold (as do more than 200 other viruses, such as rhinoviruses). This newest coronavirus, however, had within a week caused 44 patients to seek in-hospital care, with 11 reported as severely ill.

Back in Georgetown, Texas, microbiologist Martn Gonzalez was just one Southwestern scientist who was carefully following updates on the epidemic as news emerged each day in the popular media and within the scholarly community. A novel virus is always cause for keen interest among researchers and healthcare practitioners alike, certainly, but its not necessarily a source of surprise. After all, in reflecting on the long history of human disease, researchers started predicting a pandemic like COVID-19 decades ago and more recently in articles such as The Next Plague Is Coming; Is America Ready? by science journalist Ed Yong and in the 2020 Netflix documentary series Pandemic: How to Prevent an Outbreak (whose first episode, Gonzalez says, is the one to watch if you want an accessible explanation of how a global disease affects communities, how researchers and healthcare providers approach them, and how difficult it is to develop vaccines).

With all the past epidemics and pandemics that weve seen, this was only a matter of time, Gonzalez says. I think most people in the sciences realized this was the case.

Gonzalez was teaching microbiology in January. On the first day of class, he posed the same question he asks at the beginning of every lecture: Has anybody heard anything going on in science? That day, he received a lot of blank stares; his students, like most people across the nation, had not yet started paying attention to the 2019-nCoV coverage, blissfully unaware of how the virus and the disease it causes would soon take center stage during classroom discussions and, of course, disrupt their very lives. But Gonzalez knew that the virus was one to watch: the first case of a 2019-nCoV infection in the U.S. was confirmed on January 20, in Snohomish County, Washington; by the end of the same month, the infected were numbering nearly 10,000 in at least 21 countries, and the WHO had declared a public health emergency of international concern. So he asked his students to start sharing the latest information at the top of each class meeting.

It didnt take long, he says, for students to start realizing that this was going to be much bigger than we originally thought.

Transmission electron microscopic image of an isolate from the first U.S. case of COVID-19. The spherical viral particles, colorized blue, contain a cross-section through the viral genome, seen as black dots. Credit: CDC Image Library, ID# 23354.

On February 11, 2020, the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) announced that, given the genetic relationship between the novel coronavirus and the coronavirus responsible for the 2003 outbreak of SARS, the new pathogen would be named severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, or SARS-CoV-2. The same day, the WHO christened the disease caused by SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus disease 2019, or COVID-19.

Meanwhile, Gonzalez and his students discussed how viruses, the smallest of all microbes, consist of DNA or RNA surrounded by a protein coat called a capsid and sometimes, as with SARS-CoV-2, by a lipid envelope that can be dissolved with soap, thereby destroying the entire particle (TL;DR? wash those hands!). They knew how viruses attach to the plasma membranes of living host cells and hack the cells mechanisms to replicate before detaching and invading other cells, usually destroying those cells, damaging tissues, and sickening or even killing the host organism. They discussed how viruses spread through the human population in many ways. For example, some can be passed on by skin-to-skin contact. Others can be transmitted via contaminated surfaces (disinfect those countertops!). They can spread through exposure to others bodily fluids and secretions, such as through sharing needles, sexual contact, or coughing and sneezing (again, wash those hands! but also wear masks to keep from infecting others!). And viruses can be carried by vectors, or disease-bearing organisms, such as mosquitoes, fleas, or bats, the last of which may have served as a reservoir for SARS-CoV-2 before it jumped to an intermediate host and then eventually infected humanswho are also possible vectors.

It was a great learning experience, Gonzalez reflects.

But he noticed that as the days went by, his students began expressing frustration about the governmental and public responses to the outbreak. By late February, the number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 had topped approximately 84,000 in at least 56 countries, and the death toll had climbed to 3,900, but many nations, including the U.S., were slow to react and failed to implement a unified, strategic approach to testing and prevention based on classic epidemiological models.

Gonzalezs students wanted to know why. And I told them, We can talk about politics, but I have no idea why were approaching this the way we are, he remembers.

They also wondered aloud whether the novel coronavirus was something to be worried about considering comparisons that were being drawn between COVID-19 and seasonal influenza. Gonzalezs response was to remind them of the flus grave statistics: the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), for example, estimates that in the U.S. in 20162017 alone, 29 million people contracted symptoms of the seasonal flu, with 14 million seeking medical care, 500,000 requiring hospitalization, and 38,000 dying. Moreover, many people worldwide have developed immunity to seasonal flu strains, and flu vaccines exist to combat infection. By contrast, although mortality rates are impossible to confirm while an epidemic or pandemic is ongoing, the risk of death from COVID-19 appears to be higher than that from the flu. In addition, it remains unclear even now whether those who have survived COVID-19 have developed immunity, how long that immunity lasts, when a safe vaccine will be available, and when a large enough swathe of the global population will be inoculated to develop herd immunity.

Gonzalez says that his students became more educated in all this. They became aware of the power of knowledge. And they became aware of the stress of knowledge.

Given the store of knowledge scientists have developed based on previous epidemics, including the more recent outbreaks of coronavirus-caused diseases such as SARS (in 2003) and MERS (Middle East respiratory syndrome, in 2012), you would think that we would have been more prepared and known how to respond more quickly. And countries such as Taiwan, New Zealand, Costa Rica, Iceland, Norway, and Denmark have been highly successful in limiting both infection and mortality because they relied on science, prioritized public health, coordinated responses among institutions, acted swiftly, and garnered the trust and cooperation of its citizens.

But elsewhere, as in the U.S., Gonzalez says, its been clear we havent learned the lessons of past outbreaks. A significant etiology of the chaotic and ineffective response has been misinformation, and he believes that platforms such as Nextdoor, Facebook, Twitter are just some of the vectors to blame for the spread of false or misleading information. One of the things that concerns me is were very much a social-media society now, he explains. Social media can be an incredible tool to get your message out, but if your message is filled with misinformation, its devastating to the cause . Lives are at stake here.

Social media can be an incredible tool to get your message out, but if your message is filled with misinformation, its devastating to the cause . Lives are at stake here.

Ironically, one flagrant inaccuracy Gonzalez saw floating about was a comment about vaccines in which the poster opined that scientists were lying. Understandably, Gonzalez had to refrain from responding, and he now limits his media diet to reporting by the CDC and the BBC, the British news channel. I havent checked it recently, but I can imagine my blood pressure is up a little bit, he laughs.

In the absence of accurate and clear communicationnot to mention the lack of other standard epidemiological strategies, including widespread reliable testing, quick diagnosis and quarantine, and contact tracing and isolationthe U.S. federal response to the disaster has been, well, disastrous. The most glaring symptom of this failure is that the countrys tally of infections and deaths far surpasses that of any other country: on May 24, the U.S. exceeded 1.6 million confirmed cases and 100,000 deaths, and at the time of this publication, a day shy of one month later, that death toll has risen to 120,225, with well more than 2.29 million confirmed cases. Another complication of the U.S.s messy response has been a host of avoidable draconian interventions with wide-ranging impacts on human behavior and the economy, such as social distancing, stay-at-home mandates, and school and business closuressacrifices that became necessary to flatten the curve (i.e., reduce the number of infections to prevent overburdening the healthcare system) but would also lead to upheaval in the lives and learning of Southwesterns own staff, faculty, and students.

But one other adverse effect of the lack of a coordinated national response has been a shortage of life-saving medical supplies. States, for example, were left to compete for ventilators, and healthcare providers were forced to reuse or go without personal protective equipment (PPE), jeopardizing the lives of the very people who can actually treat the disease. I think what is most frustrating is were putting people on the frontlines of this pandemic in danger, Gonzalez shares. He felt so strongly about the supply crisis, in fact, that he broached to his colleagues in the Biology Department a way they could help. I said, We have all these gloves were not going to be using because were not having labs or classes, and we have a good stock, so we can donate them! he recalls. The biology faculty consulted with Southwesterns administration, and their colleagues in the Chemistry Department volunteered to donate their equipment as well. Its one of those things where youre saying, I shouldnt have to be doing this, but were doing it, Gonzalez adds.

Despite his and his students deep concerns about the way the COVID-19 pandemic has been handled, Gonzalez saw some glimmers of positivity and hope when stay-at-home orders were in effectfrom the community wanting to support local restaurants by ordering takeout and neighbors offering to pick up items from the grocery store to help protect those who are greater risk of developing serious illness, such as those 65 years and older or those with underlying medical conditions, such as diabetes, heart disease, or compromised immunity. From that standpoint, its been very uplifting for me, he says. Some of the community is wanting to make a difference and looking to help.

He also celebrates the many breakthroughs of his STEM colleagues around the world, who have worked tirelessly in the past few months to advance knowledge of COVID-19 and over the years and decades to improve our learning about infectious diseases more broadly. He loves seeing publications such as Nature encouraging scientists to share their latest findings to expand our understanding and build this knowledge base. And he looks forward to discoveries that might be just around the corner, such as a universal vaccine that provides long-term immunization against all influenza types or a platform vaccine, long advocated by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony Fauci, which would enable researchers to begin the first phase of clinical trials for new vaccines within months rather than years. You have no idea how much pride I had when it was less than two weeks after [the COVID-19 pandemic] started rolling that the global scientific community came out with a genetic sequence for [SARS-CoV-2], he says excitedly. Thats why I fell in love with science: its truly a community. When we publish papers, we police each other by doing peer review, and people will try to reproduce some of your results. Weve been doing this for a long time, and its worked. Ive been really happy with that.

You have no idea how much pride I had when it was less than two weeks after [the COVID-19 pandemic] started rolling that the global scientific community came out with a genetic sequence for [SARS-CoV-2].

Gonzalez says that we still have much to learn about SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19, but even after the current pandemic ends, we cannot be complacent going forward; instead, we must apply the lessons of yesterday and today. We can look at some of the earliest Old World infectious diseasesthings like dengue fever, yellow fever, and malaria. It took something like 300 years for those three diseases to be found on most places on this planet, he explains. And then you look at the global society we are now and look at some of these new emerging infectious diseases, such as West Nile virus, Zika virus, and Chinkungunya virus. Its taken them less than 16 years to be found pretty much on a very large percentage of this Earth.

Moreover, Gonzalez adds, we have yet to fully comprehend the many twists and turns of infectious disease. For example, how might climate change accelerate or exacerbate the spread of such illnesses? When will the next single mutation in a known virus enable the sudden transmission of the pathogen from animals to humans, as was the case of SARS-Co-V-2? We were fortunate that the coronavirus that causes MERS, a disease with a 35% casefatality rate, did not easily transfer between human beings, but what if a more robust MERS-CoV-2 were to emerge? And what if Ebolaa fast-spreading disease with quickly manifesting symptoms and a shocking mortality rate as high as 90% in some WHO estimateswere suddenly contagious when carriers were asymptomatic (i.e., not exhibiting symptoms)?

We need to be prepared for this, he asserts. This is not something where we can sit there and say, As soon as this starts happening, well jump. We need to be working at this right now.

However, scientific discovery and innovation require opportunity and resourcesincluding both money and time. The medias pursuit of big stories and eye-catching headlines might suggest that scientific progress happens by leaps and bounds within days or weeks; the anxious public may be impatient for answers about a public-health crisis that is shaping individual lives. Nevertheless, good science requires time: time for research and development, time for experimentation and failure, time for correcting errors and replicating results, and time for collaboration and peer review. Yes, [scientists] can figure it out, but it takes time, Gonzalez says. Science is not do one experiment and have a result. It just didnt work that way. I wish it did! he laughs.

And with the COVID-19 pandemic, that scientific progress is actually happening fairly quickly, regardless of what naysayers might think or say. But because of the relatively rapid pace of research on SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19, scientific findings and recommendations shared with the public can change, sometimes in the course of just weeks. After all, scientists are constantly expanding on previous work, discovering new phenomena, and drawing conclusions from the latest evidence. Their work can also be misinterpreted and misreportedaccidentally or intentionallyby journalists, pundits, and social-media frequenters. And in a heightened atmosphere characterized by fear of the unknown and suspicion of the very science we should be relying on, Gonzalez knows moving forward will require a lot of education.

As Ive always said, trust the science, he says. The science will police itself and will let you know if theres something you shouldnt be listening to.

Gonzalez will continue urging his students to use the communication skills theyve gained at Southwestern to share their scientific knowledge with their families, friends, and communities.

In the meantime, Gonzalez will continue urging his students to use the communication skills theyve gained at Southwestern to share their scientific knowledge with their families, friends, and communities. Its a practice that he hopes will prevent his students from caving to fear, will keep their circle of connections informed, and will ensure the health and safety of their loved ones. Says Gonzalez, Thats the one thing Ive really told my students: Whether this [pandemic] was going on or not, youre going to be part of a community, and there are times when a community requires a voice of reason. Your job is to go out there, use what youve learned, and bring that voice. I hope they do it; I really do.

Bibliography/further reading

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