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What COVID-19 Means for the Economy: Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market 2020-2024 | Technological Advances to Boost Growth | Technavio -…

LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Technavio has been monitoring the neuroscience antibodies and assays market and it is poised to grow by USD 1.36 billion during 2020-2024, progressing at a CAGR of 8% during the forecast period. The report offers an up-to-date analysis regarding the current market scenario, latest trends and drivers, and the overall market environment.

Technavio suggests three forecast scenarios (optimistic, probable, and pessimistic) considering the impact of COVID-19. Request for Technavio's latest reports on directly and indirectly impacted markets. Market estimates include pre- and post-COVID-19 impact on the Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market Download free sample report

The market is fragmented, and the degree of fragmentation will accelerate during the forecast period. Abcam Plc, Bio-Rad Laboratories Inc., Cell Signaling Technology Inc., F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd., GenScript Biotech Corp., Merck KGaA, Rockland Immunochemicals Inc., Santa Cruz Biotechnology Inc., Tecan Group Ltd., and Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. are some of the major market participants. The technological advances will offer immense growth opportunities. To make the most of the opportunities, market vendors should focus more on the growth prospects in the fast-growing segments, while maintaining their positions in the slow-growing segments.

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Technological advances has been instrumental in driving the growth of the market.

Technavio's custom research reports offer detailed insights on the impact of COVID-19 at an industry level, a regional level, and subsequent supply chain operations. This customized report will also help clients keep up with new product launches in direct & indirect COVID-19 related markets, upcoming vaccines and pipeline analysis, and significant developments in vendor operations and government regulations. https://www.technavio.com/report/report/neuroscience-antibodies-and-assays-market-industry-analysis

Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market 2020-2024: Segmentation

Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market is segmented as below:

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Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market 2020-2024: Scope

Technavio presents a detailed picture of the market by the way of study, synthesis, and summation of data from multiple sources. The neuroscience antibodies and assays market report covers the following areas:

This study identifies high growth potential in emerging countries as one of the prime reasons driving the neuroscience antibodies and assays market growth during the next few years.

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Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market 2020-2024: Key Highlights

Table of Contents:

PART 01: EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

PART 02: SCOPE OF THE REPORT

PART 03: MARKET LANDSCAPE

PART 04: MARKET SIZING

PART 05: FIVE FORCES ANALYSIS

PART 06: MARKET SEGMENTATION BY PRODUCT

PART 07: CUSTOMER LANDSCAPE

PART 08: GEOGRAPHIC LANDSCAPE

PART 09: DRIVERS AND CHALLENGES

PART 10: MARKET TRENDS

PART 11: VENDOR LANDSCAPE

PART 12: VENDOR ANALYSIS

PART 13: APPENDIX

PART 14: EXPLORE TECHNAVIO

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What COVID-19 Means for the Economy: Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market 2020-2024 | Technological Advances to Boost Growth | Technavio -...

The neuroscience of optical illusions, explained – Vox.com

Fix your gaze on the black dot on the left side of this image. But wait! Finish reading this paragraph first. As you gaze at the left dot, try to answer this question: In what direction is the object on the right moving? Is it drifting diagonally, or is it moving up and down?

Remember, focus on the dot on the left.

It appears as though the object on the right is moving diagonally, up to the right and then back down to the left. Right? Right?! Actually, its not. Its moving up and down in a straight, vertical line.

See for yourself. Trace it with your finger.

This is a visual illusion. That alternating black-white patch inside the object suggests diagonal motion and confuses our senses. Like all misperceptions, it teaches us that our experience of reality is not perfect. But this particular illusion has recently reinforced scientists understanding of deeper, almost philosophical truths about the nature of our consciousness.

Its really important to understand were not seeing reality, says neuroscientist Patrick Cavanagh, a research professor at Dartmouth College and a senior fellow at Glendon College in Canada. Were seeing a story thats being created for us.

Most of the time, the story our brains generate matches the real, physical world but not always. Our brains also unconsciously bend our perception of reality to meet our desires or expectations. And they fill in gaps using our past experiences.

All of this can bias us. Visual illusions present clear and interesting challenges for how we live: How do we know whats real? And once we know the extent of our brains limits, how do we live with more humility and think with greater care about our perceptions?

Rather than showing us how our brains are broken, illusions give us the chance to reveal how they work. And how do they work? Well, as the owner of a human brain, I have to say its making me a little uneasy.

My colleague Sigal Samuel recently explored the neuroscience of meditation. During her reporting, she found good evidence that a regular meditation practice is associated with increased compassion. That evidence, she writes, feel[s] like a challenge, even a dare. If it takes such a small amount of time and effort to get better at regulating my emotions ... am I not morally obligated to do it?

Perception science, for me, provokes a similar question. If the science tells us our brains are making up a story about reality, shouldnt we be curious about, and even seek out the answers to, how that reality might be wrong?

Its not about doubting everything that comes through our senses. Its about looking for our blind spots, with the goal of becoming better thinkers. It can also help with empathy. When other people misperceive reality, we may not agree with their interpretation, but we can understand where it comes from.

To approach this challenge, I think it helps to know that the brain is telling us stories about the smallest things we perceive, like the motion of objects. But it also tells us stories about some of the most complex things we think about, creating assumptions about people based on race, among other social prejudices.

Lets start with the small.

In 2019, Cavanagh and his colleagues Sirui Liu, Qing Yu, and Peter Tse used the above double drift illusion of the two dots to probe how our brains generate the illusory diagonal motion.

To figure this out, Cavanagh and his colleagues ran a neuroimaging study that compared how a brain processes the illusory animation with how it processes a similar, non-illusory animation. In this second animation, the object on the right really is moving diagonally. Trace it with your finger again.

With fMRI neuroimaging, which allows researchers to map brain activity, Cavanagh and his team could ask the question: If we perceive each animation similarly, what in our brains makes that happen? Whats the source of the illusion in the first animation? We want to find where the conscious perception diverges from the physical sensation, Cavanagh says.

One possibility is that the illusion is generated in the visual cortex. Located at the back of your head, this is the part of your brain that directly processes the information coming from your eyes. Maybe the visual system sees it wrong. The alternative is that the visual system sees it just fine, but some other part of the brain overrides it, creating a new reality.

The experiment included only nine participants but collected a lot of data on each of them. Each participant completed the experiment (and was run through the brain scan) 10 times.

Heres what the analysis found. That visual system in the back of the brain? It doesnt seem fooled by the illusion. Each animation produces a different pattern of activation in the visual cortex. In other words, the visual system thinks they are different, Cavanagh says.

Okay, the visual system correctly sees these two animations differently. Then why do we perceive them as being the same?

The patterns of activation in the frontal lobes of the participants brains the higher-level thinking area dedicated to anticipation and decision-making were similar. That is: The front of the brain thinks both animations are traveling in a diagonal direction.

Theres a whole world of visual analysis and computation and prediction that is happening outside of the visual system, happening in the frontal lobes, Cavanagh says. Thats where the story of reality is constructed at least in this one example, as evidenced by this one small study. (To be sure: Vision is a vastly complex system involving around 30 areas of the brain. There are other illusions that do seem to fool the visual cortex, because no story about the brain can be simple.)

But you dont need an fMRI to conclude that some part of your brain is overriding the plain truth about the path of the object. You can see it for yourself. The remarkable thing is that even when you are told what is happening you still see it in the illusory form, Justin Gardner, a Stanford University neuroscientist who wasnt involved in this study, said in an email. You cant seem to consciously override the wrong interpretation.

The lesson: The stories our brains tell us about reality are extremely compelling, even when they are wrong.

Why are we seeing a story about the world a story and not the real deal? Its not because evolution made our minds flawed. Its actually an adaptation.

We dont have the necessary machinery, and we wouldnt even want it, to process carefully all of the amount of information that were constantly bombarded with, says Susana Martinez-Conde, a neuroscientist and illusion researcher at SUNY Downstate Medical Center.

Think about what it takes to perceive something move, like the objects in the above animations. Once light hits the retinas at the back of our eyeballs, its converted into an electrical signal that then has to travel to the visual processing system at the back of our brains. From there, the signal travels forward through our brains, constructing what we see and creating our perception of it. This process just takes time.

The dirty little secret about sensory systems is that theyre slow, theyre lagged, theyre not about whats happening right now but whats happening 50 milliseconds ago, or, in the case for vision, hundreds of milliseconds ago, says Adam Hantman, a neuroscientist at Howard Hughes Medical Institutes Janelia Research Campus.

If we relied solely on this outdated information, though, we wouldnt be able to hit baseballs with bats, or swat annoying flies away from our faces. Wed be less coordinated, and possibly get hurt more often.

So the brain predicts the path of motion before it happens. It tells us a story about where the object is heading, and this story becomes our reality. Thats whats likely happening with Cavanaghs illusion. It happens all the time.

Dont believe it? See for yourself. Heres a simple illusion that reveals our visual system is a bit lagged.

Its called the flash-lag illusion. The red dot is moving across the screen, and the green dot flashes exactly when the red dot and green dot are in perfect vertical alignment. Yet its incredibly hard to see the red dot and the green dot as being vertically aligned. The red dot always seems a little bit farther ahead.

This is our brain predicting the path of its motion, telling us a story about where it ought to be and not where it is. For moving things we see them ahead on their path of motion, Cavanagh explains, by just enough. The illusion, he says, is actually functional. It helps us overcome these delays and see things ... where they will be when we get there.

In Hantmans view, what we experience as consciousness is primarily the prediction, not the real-time feed. The actual sensory information, he explains, just serves as error correction. If you were always using sensory information, errors would accumulate in ways that would lead to quite catastrophic effects on your motor control, Hantman says. Our brains like to predict as much as possible, then use our senses to course-correct when the predictions go wrong.

This is true not only for our perception of motion but also for so much of our conscious experience.

The brain tells us a story about the motion of objects. But thats not the only story it tells. It also tells us stories about more complicated aspects of our visual world, like color.

For some meta-insight, look at the illusion below from Japanese psychologist and artist Akiyoshi Kitaoka. You can observe your own brain, in real time, change its guess about the color of the moving square. Keep in mind that the physical color of the square is not changing. You might look at this illusion and feel like your brain is broken (I did when I first saw it). It is not. It just reveals that our perception of color isnt absolute.

Color is an inference we make, and it serves a purpose to make meaningful decisions about objects in the world. But if our eyes acted as scientific instruments describing precise wavelengths of light, theyd constantly be fooled. Red may not appear red when bathed in blue light.

Our brains try to account for this. Were not trying to measure wavelengths, were trying to tell something about the color, Sam Schwarzkopf, a vision scientist at the University of Auckland, says. And the color is an illusion created by our brain.

When we think an object is being bathed in blue light, we can filter out that blue light intuitively. Thats how many of these color illusions work. We use surrounding color cues and assumptions about lighting to guess an objects true color. Sometimes those guesses are wrong, and sometimes we make different assumptions from others. Neuroscientists have some intriguing new insights into why our perceptions can diverge from one another.

You remember The Dress, yes?

In 2015, a bad cellphone photo of a dress in a UK store divided people across the internet. Some see this dress as blue and black; others see it as white and gold. Pascal Wallisch, a neuroscientist at New York University, believes hes figured out the difference between those two groups of people.

Wallischs hypothesis is that people make different assumptions about the quality of light thats being cast on the dress. Is it in bright daylight? Or under an indoor light bulb? By unconsciously filtering out the color of light we think is falling on an object, we come to a judgment about its color.

Wallisch believes people who see this image differently are using different filtering schemes. Most interestingly, he suggests that life experience leads you to see the dress one way or the other.

His study of 13,000 people in an online survey found a correlation that at first seems odd. The time you naturally like to go to sleep and wake up called a chronotype was correlated with dress perception. Night owls, or people who like to go to bed really late and wake up later in the morning, are more likely to see the dress as black and blue. Larks, a.k.a. early risers, are more likely to see it as white and gold. Whats going on?

Wallisch believes the correlation is rooted in the life experience of being either a lark or a night owl. Larks, he hypothesizes, spend more time in daylight than night owls. Theyre more familiar with it. So when confronted with an ill-lit image like the dress, they are more likely to assume it is being bathed in bright sunlight, which has a lot of blue in it, Wallisch points out. As a result, their brains filter it out. If you assume its daylight, you will see it as white and gold. Because if you subtract blue, yellow is left, he says.

Night owls, he thinks, are more likely to assume the dress is under artificial lighting, and filtering that out makes the dress appear black and blue. (The chronotype measure, he admits, is a little crude: Ideally, hed want to estimate a persons lifetime exposure to daylight.)

Has Wallisch solved the mystery of The Dress?

The owls versus lark data seems quite compelling for explaining a large part of the individual differences, Schwarzkopf says. But not all of it. There are still lots of other factors that must have a strong influence here. It could be prior experience with the subject matter, or related to other aspects of peoples personality, he says. Yes, the dress continues to mystify.

The mystery isnt totally solved, but the lesson remains: When confronted with ambiguity like the odd lighting in the photo of The Dress our brains fill in the ambiguity using whatever were most familiar with. People assume what they see more of, Wallisch says. If were more familiar with bright, sunny light, we assume thats the default lighting.

But we have no way of knowing how our experiences guide our perception. Your brain makes a lot of unconscious inferences, and it doesnt tell you that its an inference, he explains. You see whatever you see. Your brain doesnt tell you, I took into account how much daylight Ive seen in my life.

Wallisch says the disagreements around The Dress, as well as other viral illusions like Yanny and Laurel, arise because our brains are filling in the uncertainties of these stimuli with different prior experiences. We bring our life histories to these small perceptions.

Its believed another textbook illusion, the Kanizsa triangle, works a bit like this, too. In this illusion, the Pac-Man-like shapes give the impression of a triangle in our minds. It seems like a triangle is there because were used to seeing triangles. We only need the suggestion of one implied via the corners to fill in the rest of the picture with our minds.

In 2003, the journal Nature Neuroscience published an article on the case of a man (called Patient MM) who lost his vision at age 3 and had it restored by surgical intervention in his 40s. In a study, he didnt fall for an illusion like this one. He couldnt see the illusory triangle (in the case of that experiment, it was a square). It may be that a lifetime of looking at triangles is what makes the rest of us see one so plainly in this image. Patient MM didnt build up a lifetimes worth of visual experiences to make predictions about what he saw. He had to build them from scratch.

More than two years after his operation, Patient MM told researchers, The difference between today and over two years ago is that I can better guess at what I am seeing. What is the same is that I am still guessing.

Some of these examples may seem frivolous. Why does it matter that one person sees a dress as black and blue and another sees it as white and gold?

It matters because scientists believe the same basic processes underlie many of our more complicated perceptions and thoughts. Neuroscience, then, can help explain stubborn polarization in our culture and politics, and why were so prone to motivated reasoning.

Sometimes, especially when the information were receiving is unclear, we see what we want to see. In the past, researchers have found that even slight rewards can change the way people perceive objects. Take this classic image used in psychological studies. What do you see?

Its either a horse or a seal, and in 2006, psychologists Emily Balcetis and David Dunning showed they could motivate study participants to see one or the other. In one experiment, the participants played a game wherein they had to keep track of animals they saw on screen. If they saw farm animals, theyd get points. If they saw sea creatures, theyd lose points. In the end, a high score meant getting a candy treat (desirable!), and a low score meant theyd eat canned beans (kind of weird).

The very last thing the participants saw was the above image. If seeing the horse meant theyd win and get the candy, theyd see the horse.

In a more complex example, Balcetis has found that when she tells study participants to pay attention to either an officer or a civilian in a video of a police altercation, it can change their perception of what happened (depending on their prior experience with law enforcement and the person in the video with whom they more closely identified). That instruction changes what their eyes do, Balcetis told me last summer. And it leads them to a different understanding of the nature of the altercation.

You cant completely remove bias from the brain. You cant change the fact that weve all grown up in different worlds, Balcetis said. But you can encourage people to listen to other perspectives and be curious about the veracity of their own.

The neuroscientists I spoke to said the big principles that underlie how our brains process what we see also underlie most of our thinking. Illusions are the basis of superstition, the basis of magical thinking, Martinez-Conde says. Its the basis for a lot of erroneous beliefs. Were very uncomfortable with uncertainty. The ambiguity is going to be resolved one way or another, and sometimes in a way that does not match reality.

Just as we can look at an image and see things that arent really there, we can look out into the world with skewed perceptions of reality. Political scientists and psychologists have long documented how political partisans perceive the facts of current events differently depending on their political beliefs. The illusions and political thinking dont involve the same brain processes, but they follow the similar overarching way the brain works.

In a way, you can think of bias as a social illusion. Studies find that many people perceive black men to be bigger (and, therefore, potentially more threatening) than they actually are, or generally associate darker skin tones and certain facial features with criminality. Cops can confuse people removing wallets from their pockets with people reaching for guns, often with tragic consequences. This isnt to say that all instances of prejudice are mindless many are enacted with clear malignant intention, but they can also be built from years of experience in an unjust society or as the result of systemic racism.

Our brains work hard to bend reality to meet our prior experiences, our emotions, and our discomfort with uncertainty. This happens with vision. But it also happens with more complicated processes, like thinking about politics, the pandemic, or the reality of climate change.

Wallisch has come up with a name for phenomena like The Dress that generate divergent perceptions based on our personal characteristics. He calls it SURFPAD. Spelled out, its an absolute mouthful: Substantial Uncertainty combined with Ramified or Forked Priors and Assumptions yields Disagreement. (Lets stick with SURFPAD.) Simply, SURFPAD is a consequence of bias, or motivated perception. When an image, event, or some other stimulus isnt perfectly clear, we fill in the gaps with our priors, or presumptions. And because we have different priors, that leads to disagreement about the image or event in question. Wallisch sees it everywhere in society.

I recently tweeted some frustration over how mass protests against police brutality might be perceived if it seems as though they led to increased Covid-19 cases.

If there is a spike, it will be hard to discern whether it was reopening or protests, so people will go with their prior, Wallisch replied. As the priors are different, there will be massive disagreement. ... Whats truly terrifying is that given this framework, no matter what happens, [people] will feel vindicated, reinforcing the strength of the prior and increasing polarization.

Later, I emailed him and asked whether his inclination to see SURFPAD in these current events was just an instance of his own priors (that SURFPAD is a real and influential phenomenon) coloring his perception.

Of course, he says. Its SURFPAD all the way down.

I dont want people to read this and think we cant believe our eyes, or we cant incorporate evidence into our thinking. We can seek out verified sources of information. We can turn to expertise and also earnestly question it. (Dont let people gaslight you, either another phenomenon that preys on the brains tendency to generate illusory thoughts.)

Instead, the illusions and the science behind them raise a question: How do we go about our lives knowing our experiences might be a bit wrong?

Theres no one answer. And its a problem were unlikely to solve individually. Id suggest that it should nudge us to be more intellectually humble and to cultivate a habit of seeking out perspectives that are not our own. We should be curious about our imperfections, as that curiosity may lead us closer to the truth. We can build cultures and institutions that celebrate humility and reduce the social cost for saying, I was wrong.

This isnt easy. Our psychology makes it hard. We have this naive realism that the way we see the world is the way that it really is, Balcetis told me last year. Naive realism is the feeling that our perception of the world reflects the truth.

But illusions remind us it does not. This is why illusions arent just science theyre provocative art. They force us to reinterpret our senses, and our sense of being in the world. They tell us about the true nature of how our brains work: The same neurological machinery that leads us to discover the truth can lead us to perceive illusions, and our brains dont always tell us the difference.

Navigating this is the challenge of being a living, thinking person. But simply acknowledging it and trying to put it into practice is a good place to start.

I know I will try to keep remembering that reality always seems real. Even when I mess it up.

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The neuroscience of optical illusions, explained - Vox.com

The reality of COVID-19 with researcher Sameerah Wahab – Out In Jersey

Voices in Solidarity Part 5

People are nervous. The fear induced by shifts of concern from overall health and safety to the reopening of the economy has become a hazy whirlwind for the American people. As a result of this fear, it is necessary to question if we are ready to take such a leap when we as a country have not yet stabilized the spread of COVID-19.

Sameerah Wahab works and lives in San Diego. Wahab is trained in Cellular Biology and Neuroscience research, and is now working within Pediatric Neuro-Oncology laboratory and clinical research. At this time, Wahabs studies involve creating patient-derived xenografts (cellular mice models of patient tumors). The research is used to study subtyping and test drug responses. Passionate about both community building and quality medical care accessibility across social stratifications, Wahab works toward practicing holistic medicine in the future and within communities where she is needed most.

Working from home due to COVID-19, the labs researchers have stepped up to be where they are well needed in this timeprioritizing experiments and needs. The cellular biology and neuroscience researcher said the lab has thankfully gone into maintenance mode with essential research including COVID-19 on the same floor she would framework treatment for children with brain cancer.

Although our world is paused, the disparities between social and economic classes continue to widen

With a large homeless population in San Diego, Wahab said that with COVID-19 typical channels of care have changed. The homeless population is in danger as PPEProtective Personal Equipmentand general sanitation means are less accessible, and/or overpriced. There is the question of an end to COVID-19 too. Once the economy opens up people will struggle more than ever to keep up with our nations cost of living. If the economy is a singular focus then stimulating isolating capitalistic consequence: rendering less focus on the livelihood of folks suffering and more focus on the country making money.

More than half of the people that I know here have specifically lost their jobs or have been furloughedleading to many fearful for what their future will look like when things start to return to a state of normalcy. Without savings, what does this new emerging situation come into? Questioned Wahab, Although our world is paused, the disparities between social and economic classes continue to widen.

The sooner the country reopens, the sooner the aftermath settles for those left jobless. There is no back-up plan for this consequence that will continue to divide inadequate disparity for folks left behind in the thicket of the pandemic.

Wahab has lost both of her grandparents to COVID-19. Her family lives in Georgia where Governor Kemp has reopened nonessential businesses as COVID-19 numbers are on the rise. The suddenness of loss was unnerving. I felt quite helpless. With this being said, I found solidarity in knowing many are grieving loss around me. So I attempted to reconstruct the loss into something productive. I am lucky that I have been able to secure essential needs, and I can say the same for my family.

Wahabs immediate family remains safe. Although businesses are permitted by the state government to open, companies are neither necessarily reopening in Georgia nor expecting their employees to return to work. However, this leaves the people of Georgia with a difficult choice to make. A choice Wahab emphasizes as one of either prosperity or safety. Left speechless by the divide this pandemic leaves, Wahab feels as if she is in a film as she navigates just how it is public health has become a political debate.

With a background in Virology and Cellular Biology, Wahab finds herself at odds with the conflicting messages from our governmental organizations and scientific networks across the globe. Wahab stands firm in the belief that our lives must come first, before economics referencing the re-opening of businesses throughout the country.

I believe what people must keep in mind is how easy it is for the virus to spreadand that masksalthough decreasing the probability of contracting the virus are not in of themselves principally effective. RNA viruses (what the Coronavirus is) are increasingly unstable and prone to mutations, said Wahab. What this means is that the virus, as known with RNA viruses, are prone to change and may have variances.

For example, cardboard has been shown to hold viable viruses for 24 hours, plastics for longer than 72 hours, glass for about 96 hours, cloth for about 24 hours. I think what we must do as a whole is to think of what this means beyond the statistics.

From grocery shopping, to reckless social distancing, COVID-19 is knocking on doors every step of the way. If there is more opportunity for the virus to spread then there is more opportunity for it to mutate. This is especially important if the country is reopening in haste. We need more stability of testing, more treatment, and a vaccine.

Wahab also points out the fragility of face coverings. Although a face mask may act as a net and keep out larger respiratory droplets, the masks are permeable and dont at all blockade the virus from entering. In simple terms, if you have touched something with the virus and then touch the front of your mask with your hands, you might as well not be wearing a mask, said Wahab.

While it is easy to translate information as fear, Wahab has taken to educating the public. At the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, Wahab found a local organization, MonsterAid that has since made it their mission to deliver masks to those in need at affordable and fair prices. I stepped in and began to volunteer my time as their Public Health Educator in this role, and have been assisting to provide a scientific framework and principle justification for control and protective measures, said Wahab.

Wahab lives her days in hope. Although she believes we are approaching a new state of normalcy for the next year, she believes the people will recover with a new sense of compassion and passion for life. I hope we will emerge full of life and love. Many of us will reemerge in vastly different states, and I believe the inequity among our population will be evident. I am hoping that we will emerge willing to assist those around us. This is to be determined, but I will continue to remain an optimist.

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The reality of COVID-19 with researcher Sameerah Wahab - Out In Jersey

What the NBAS $300 COVID-Detecting Rings Can Actually Accomplish – Slate

This ring will not rule them all (because the NBA is also taking several conventional anti-COVID measures).

Oura

This article is part ofPrivacy in the Pandemic, a Future Tense series.

The NBA, which will tentatively restart its season on July 30, is hoping that a futuristic titanium ring will help to mitigate the spread of the coronavirus. When players get to Disney World to finish out the rest of the regular season and the playoffs, theyll have a number of gadgets at their disposal to keep the disease at bay, such as thermometers, pulse oximeters, and a wearable proximity alarm that beeps if youre within 6 feet of another person for more than five seconds. Players and staff will live in a bubble largely isolated from the rest of the world and undergo daily tests.

Theyll also have an option to wear a $300 ring made by the Finnish company Oura that measures temperature, pulse, respiratory rate, and other physiological data that could theoretically be helpful for detecting whether someone has COVID-19, even before they start exhibiting symptoms. By plugging these variables into an algorithm, the ring will provide the players with an illness probability score that tells them whether they should seek a medical examination. A smartphone app linked to the ring will present the score and other information the device has collected. The inner surface of the ring has three sensors: an infrared photoplethysmography sensor for respiration and heart rate, a negative temperature coefficient for body temperature, and a 3D accelerometer for movement.

While the Oura Ring was originally designed to track sleep patterns, the company is now funding studies at West Virginia Universitys Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute and the University of California San Francisco to determine whether the device could be useful for early COVID-19 detection. A Gizmodo investigation found that the pandemic has prompted a number of similar studies on other wearable technologies including Fitbits, the Apple Watch, and the Whoop fitness trackerwhich have thus far seemed promising, but far from conclusive. Early findings suggest that a higher resting heart rate, respiratory rate, and skin temperature could possibly signal the onset of an infection before the symptoms become noticeable. This is partly due to the fact that bodys immune system produces a substance called C-reactive protein during an infection, which is correlated with higher heart rates and other physiological signs. The Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute recently announced preliminary results from a study observing 600 healthcare professionals and first responders, indicating that the Oura Ring may be able to detect illness up three days before symptoms with 90 percent accuracy.

However, theres no substantial proof that wearables like the Oura Ring are useful for early detection and plenty of reason to be skeptical. Various medical experts told CNN that theres still very little information about the devices potential and that many of the studies conducted have been funded and published by the manufacturers themselves. Its also unclear whether wearables would be able to distinguish between the presence of the coronavirus or another viral infection, like influenza. People are most likely to transmit diseases to others in the period prior to experiencing symptoms, so the devices might not be all that helpful for predicting when someone is going to be highly infectious. The accuracy of readings for measurements like skin temperature can often fluctuate depending on how tightly someone is wearing a device. And, importantly, the FDA has yet to approve any wearables for sensing COVID-19. Simply put, wearable devices are not by themselves an adequate coronavirus-prevention measure as of now.

Some players have also been voicing concerns that the Oura Ring could violate their privacy. Lakers forward Kyle Kuzma wrote of the ring on Twitter, Look like a tracking device. Although in this case team staff reportedly wont have access to the health data unless the illness probability score is high enough to trigger intervention from a doctor, legislation in the U.S. like HIPAA generally hasnt caught up to regulate the rapidly-advancing field of medical data. Its often unclear who owns that medical data from a legal standpoint, and when certain people should be allowed to have access. The league has said that it will delete the data within four weeks after the end of the season.

The NBA isnt staking the health of its league on what may potentially turn out to be a high-tech boondoggle. As Gizmodo points out, the association is also implementing a number of measures that have been proven to impede the spread of the coronavirus, like regular testing and social distancing measures. It probably doesnt hurt, then, to try out experimental methods like Oura Rings, especially since the NBA can afford to. If these clunky rings do any harm, itll probably be the aesthetic kind.

Future Tenseis a partnership ofSlate,New America, andArizona State Universitythat examines emerging technologies, public policy, and society.

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Neil deGrasse Tyson talks the neuroscience of drone pilots – DroneDJ

Neil deGrasse Tyson has once again sat down with NURK to discuss drone racing. This time looking at the brains of drone racing pilots and NASCAR drivers. The interesting conversation covers the similarities and differences between the two sports.

The conversation starts off with a quick introduction of drone racer NURK and NASCAR driver Anthony Alfredo. The video also includes co-hosts Gary OReilly and Chuck Nice along with neuroscientist Heather Berlin.

Neil deGrasse Tyson first asks both how fast they travel when in their respective races. NURK shares that the racing drones travel at around 90 mph and are able to get to that speed within a second. NASCAR cars are able to travel at 200 mph but take a little longer to get to the speed. Tyson then asks if traveling at 200 mph is the same as traveling the speed you would on the highway. The short answer is yes, due to the aerodynamics of the car and the ones around it.

The conversation continues into some more questions about what it is like to race the drones and cars around the tracks and what its like to have the other racers being so close to you. Heather Berlin is then asked a few questions on the brains of the racers and how they are able to have fast reaction times like they do. Be sure to watch the full video below for a really interesting discussion and to find out what exactly goes on inside their heads.

Last time NURK was on the show is when the two were having an in-depth discussion about drone racing and more specifically the racing drones themselves. In the discussion, NURK was able to teach Neil and the other hosts about the benefits of having a different number of blades on the propellers, the low latency video feeds used, and talk about the drones used in theDrone Racing Leagues competitions.

Photo: StarTalk Sports Edition

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Overcoming the psychological impact of Sleep in the time of a Pandemic – Doral Family Journal

By: Leslie Ruiz M.S. Doctoral Candidate Albizu University &

Dr. Isaac Tourgeman Assistant Professor Albizu University/ Clinical Neuropsychologist Design Neuroscience Center

During such unprecedented times, feelings of anxiety, stress, and lack of control are on the rise. Recognizing how these feelings not only affect our mood, but our sleep is imperative to our health. The COVID-19 pandemic has presented us with an overload of information and uncertainty that has made even sleep stressful. Recently, an increased number of people have shared persistent sleep disturbances or sleep dissatisfaction.

While the diagnosis of a sleep disorder requires a multi-dimensional assessment, the significance attributed to sleep disruption is more frequent when individuals are presented with adverse events. Currently, our arousal is increased beyond normal throughout the day with fear, anxiety, or other negative emotions caused by the novel Coronavirus. As this increased arousal continues through the night, there is excessive activation of the brain resulting in deregulation. The concern then becomes how our bodys deregulated sleep cycle begins to affect us. Cognitive distortions, panic, and in extreme cases, even hallucinations may develop as this arousal becomes more deregulated. As a result, persistent sleep disruption develops, and the ability to fall asleep at the desired time and awaken at a conventionally acceptable time becomes increasingly more difficult.

In an attempt to relieve excessive sleepiness or fatigue throughout the day, one may take frequent naps or consume high amounts of caffeine to regulate this pattern. However, an alteration of the bodys circadian rhythm develops. The circadian rhythm is essentially the bodys internal clock and is responsible for the alignment between our physical environment and stabilizing sleep/wakefulness. The bodys internal clock is regulated by light, melatonin, and activity. When the bodys internal clock is irregular, the results are immediate and long-term negative effects.

The Relationship Between Sleep Deprivation and Mental Health

There is no denying the negative effects sleep deprivation has on the body and mental health. Sleep disorders are often linked to various physical health problems. These changes in sleep patterns interfere with the ability of healthy aging and development.

Persistent patterns of poor or irregular sleep habits contribute to a vicious cycle of stress about sleep and incidences of stress-related symptoms such as headaches, muscle tension, or gastrointestinal discomfort. More importantly, the risk of emerging psychiatric disorders may become more prevalent.

Disorders such as Insomnia can lead to a progression of a first depressive episode.

Significant dysfunction or impairments in social, occupational, or other areas of functioning also develop. Consequences of persistent Insomnia include poor concentration, reduced productivity, increased anxiety, irritableness, and other reduced quality of life factors. Other grave consequences of Insomnia disorder can include a high risk of substance abuse, coronary heart disease, diabetes, or other chronic pain conditions.

Good Sleep Habits

While our lives are currently being impacted, maintaining our sleep quality is imperative for our psychological and physical health. Maintaining a regulated sleep cycle helps reduce negative physiological responses caused by stress and fear. Additionally, sleep plays a significant role in our cognitive process. In a few words, a good nights sleep improves all aspects of our health. Establishing a good sleep routine helps preserve a sense of consistency during challenging times while facilitating our eventual transition back to normalcy. Although six to eight hours of sleep per night is the recommended amount by experts, the amount of sleep an individual may need varies. The following are activities and recommendations to promote a healthy sleep cycle:

When to Contact a Professional

While you do not have to be in a crisis to seek professional help, if you or someone you know is having difficulty coping with life stressors, a mental health disorder, or feeling suicidal, it is important to seek help immediately. Know that you are not alone, and mental health professionals are available to assist with effective treatment.

At Design Neuroscience Center we have integrated telehealth services across all our specialties to meet the needs of current times and ensure patient safety. For more information, call us 305-653-5155, or visit http://www.dncneurology.com/

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"Synthetic Smells" Help Reveal How the Brain Perceives Odor – Technology Networks

Scientists have further decoded how mammalian brains perceive odors and distinguish one smell from thousands of others.In experiments in mice, NYU Grossman School of Medicine researchers have for the first time created an electrical signature that is perceived as an odor in the brain's smell-processing center, the olfactory bulb, even though the odor does not exist.

Because the odor-simulating signal was manmade, researchers could manipulate the timing and order of related nerve signaling and identify which changes were most important to the ability of mice to accurately identify the "synthetic smell."

"Decoding how the brain tells apart odors is complicated, in part, because unlike with other senses such as vision, we do not yet know the most important aspects of individual smells," says study lead investigator Edmund Chong, MS, a doctoral student at NYU Langone Health. "In facial recognition, for example, the brain can recognize people based on visual cues, such as the eyes, even without seeing someone's nose and ears," says Chong. "But these distinguishing features, as recorded by the brain, have yet to be found for each smell."

The current study results center on the olfactory bulb, which is behind the nose in animals and humans. Past studies have shown that airborne molecules linked to scents trigger receptor cells lining the nose to send electric signals to nerve-ending bundles in the bulb called glomeruli, and then to brain cells (neurons).

The timing and order of glomeruli activation is known to be unique to each smell, researchers say, with signals then transmitted to the brain's cortex, which controls how an animal perceives, reacts to, and remembers a smell. But because scents can vary over time and mingle with others, scientists have until now struggled to precisely track a single smell signature across several types of neurons.

For the new study, the researchers designed experiments based on the availability of mice genetically engineered by another lab so that their brain cells could be activated by shining light on them a technique called optogenetics. Next they trained the mice to recognize a signal generated by light activation of six glomeruli known to resemble a pattern evoked by an odor by giving them a water reward only when they perceived the correct "odor" and pushed a lever.

If mice pushed the lever after activation of a different set of glomeruli (simulation of a different odor), they received no water. Using this model, the researchers changed the timing and mix of activated glomeruli, noting how each change impacted a mouse's perception as reflected in a behavior: the accuracy with which it acted on the synthetic odor signal to get the reward.

Specifically, researchers found that changing which of the glomeruli within each odor-defining set were activated first led to as much as a 30 percent drop in the ability of a mouse to correctly sense an odor signal and obtain water. Changes in the last glomeruli in each set came with as little as a 5 percent decrease in accurate odor sensing.

The timing of the glomeruli activations worked together "like the notes in a melody," say the researchers, with delays or interruptions in the early "notes" degrading accuracy. Tight control in their model over when, how many, and which receptors and glomeruli were activated in the mice, enabled the team to sift through many variables and identify which odor features stood out.

"Now that we have a model for breaking down the timing and order of glomeruli activation, we can examine the minimum number and kind of receptors needed by the olfactory bulb to identify a particular smell," says study senior investigator and neurobiologist Dmitry Rinberg, PhD.

Rinberg, an associate professor at NYU Langone and its Neuroscience Institute, says the human nose is known to have some 350 different kinds of odor receptors, while mice, whose sense of smell is far more specialized, have more than 1,200.

"Our results identify for the first time a code for how the brain converts sensory information into perception of something, in this case an odor," adds Rinberg. "This puts us closer to answering the longstanding question in our field of how the brain extracts sensory information to evoke behavior."

This article has been republished from the following materials. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source.

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In new documentary, ‘rewilding’ a home painstakingly crafted in the Alaska Bush – Anchorage Daily News

This week, 360 North will screen Rewilding Kernwood, the concluding documentary in a trilogy by Jean Aspen and Tom Irons. Their story is one of the many family tales about leaving civilization to build a cabin and live in the Alaska Bush. Because of the way they lived and how they left, this story is unlike any other.

It begins with Aspens early childhood in the wilderness. My belonging to wild places and the urge to explore my dreams was a legacy from my parents, Aspen said in a recent interview.

Her story was featured in a story in the 1953 issue of Life Magazine (Back Home to the Arctic: A couple that fought wilderness now embrace it and settle down). One full-page photo pictured 2-year-old Aspen on snowshoes, toddling behind her mother. In another, she watches her father skin a polar bear at the familys camp on the pack ice. She was also featured in the 1953 documentary Jeanie of Alaska, shown on national lecture tours.

The filmmakers were her parents, Bud and Constance Helmericks. Readers of Alaska adventure know the Helmericks through their books about their explorations in Alaskas remote Brooks Range and along the North Coast, including Connies 1944 book, We live in Alaska, and Buds 1969 The Last of the Bush Pilots.

In 1972, Aspen took a break from college and with her boyfriend, Phil Beisel, canoed down the Yukon River and lined upriver into the Brooks Range, where they built a cabin and lived off the land for almost four years. It was through her book about this experience, Arctic Daughter: A Wilderness Journey that I first came to know her. She told me that she chose the name Aspen, because unlike spruce trees, aspens are always changing.

In 1990, Aspen, her husband Tom Irons and their 4-year-old son Lucas paddled down Aspens familiar old river, stopping to visit her old cabin site. Around campfires, they talked about their dreams. One evening, camped at a spot they would later call Kernwood, and they imagined returning to build a cabin.

There were good reasons to leave the idea of living in the Bush to the realm of memory and dream. Irons was 44 and had never lived in the wilderness; Aspen was 40, soft and a bit chubby now. They had little in the way of savings and would have to sell much of what they owned. Letting go of security was like prying my fingers from a ledge, Aspen said. The venture didnt seem sensible, But we burned our bridges and never looked back, Irons said.

They returned in the spring of 1992 for a year-and-a-half sojourn. A chartered bush plane flew them to Kernwood with everything theyd need for building a woodcutters cottage out of a fairytale. But this time, We didnt come to live off the land, Jean said, but to live with it.

The family decided to cut no living trees an ethic they lived by for the next 26 years. Over those years they would have to travel further and further upriver to find and cut the right trees, carry them to the river, then raft them back to Kernwood. Their standard required more work and strain on aging bodies, but the effort provided the satisfaction of minimizing their effect on the community of life here, of which we became a part.

The family brought most of their food with them but caught grayling and pike and harvested six moose over the years. Wildlife became accustomed to their presence and seemed to be drawn into their yard. A pair of weasels would scamper over their feet and follow them around. Gray jays landed on their shoulders. For nearly 20 years, a raven family, the Blackhearts, were their curious neighbors. A white wolf sometimes denned across the river. They lived in respectful peace with Goldilocks, a grizzly bear who occasionally investigated their yard. When one lives harmlessly in nature, Jean said, the land knows.

Baking shed at Kernwood (Photo from Jean Aspen and Tom Irons)

While preparing for the move, the couple had borrowed money to buy professional video equipment and taught themselves to use it. They wanted to share their experiences and whatever insights might emerge. Arctic Daughter: A Lifetime of Wilderness and Arctic Son: Fulfilling the Dream are the first two of what has become a trilogy of documentaries. All chronicle life in the wilderness, but their message is more about families, dreams and living purposefully. We hope to inspire others to live authentic lives, honor the Earth, and be kind to one another, Aspen said

Between stays at Kernwood, Aspen finished a nursing degree and worked as a travel nurse. Irons worked in hospice. At 17, their son Lucas set out to obtain a degree in nursing, later taking a position in Washington. Irons and Aspen settled into a rural Alaskan community with a small hospital, where Aspen got a job that enabled them to return to the river every summer.

But each year, their knees and backs sent more reminders that the couples days of carrying logs, hauling water and backpacking the high ridges were limited. The time was coming when the demands of Bush life would exceed their capabilities.

When Aspen and Beisel left their cabin in 1976, they had followed the old Alaskan standard of leaving it set up for others to use. However, when Aspens family floated by, they were saddened to find the deteriorating cabin surrounded by gas cans and the trash of airplane hunters. They shuddered to think of that future for Kernwood.

Alaska has become a different place and its a different world now, Aspen said. In the 1970s, she seldom saw planes. Now, every fall, hunters and hunting guides arrive in numbers: flying the river, spotting game and sometimes illegally shooting the same day or wasting meat. Irons and Aspen reported violations and cleaned up messy camps along the river. We became concerned that Kernwood would be used as a portal for exploiting the area, Irons said.

The Kernwood cabin site after restoration (Photo from Jean Aspen and Tom Irons)

Jean Aspen during the deconstruction of Kernwood (Photo from Jean Aspen and Tom Irons)

Tom Irons during the deconstruction of Kernwood (Photo from Jean Aspen and Tom Irons)

And humans are rapidly changing the planet, Aspen added. Tom and I came to view our relationship with Kernwood from this larger perspective. The couple tells of how the river and creek have warmed, ice is forming later, theres more smoke from forest fires, the permafrost is melting, and muskegs and ponds are drying up. Human behavior is degrading the systems that support life, Aspen said. We need to recognize that we each change the world by the choices we make.

In the summer of 2015 these concerns led Tom and Jean to a decision: They would rewild Kernwood, then leave. We decided to give the land back to itself, Tom said. Rewilding meant dismantling the cabin and other structures they had painstakingly built, removing everything not natural to the area and replanting the ground with sod from the roofs.

I visited Kernwood, and mentioned that it seemed a shame to tear down such beautiful work. Irons had become an artist with logs; seldom had a bush cabin exhibited such whimsy and artistry. It was a bittersweet decision, he explained. Yes, well miss our life here, he said, looking out over the river. But dreams have a lifespan. We feel it is our responsibility to restore the areas wildness while we are still physically able.

In 2016 they began by taking down the storehouse. The following year they dismantled their cabin, and by the fall of 2018 the bakehouse/smokehouse, outdoor kitchen and outhouse were all gone. They pulled every nail and backed out every screw. Logs with spikes that couldnt be pulled with a crowbar were split and burned for firewood. Others were carried down to the river so, as Irons said, they could continue the journey we interrupted when we borrowed them. They were carried, not dragged, because the vegetation here is delicate and heals slowly.

They carefully cut sod from the roofs and used it to revegetate areas where the buildings had stood. Aspen spent countless hours on hands and knees preparing the disturbed ground by burying cabin logs with wet composted sawdust, chinking moss and dirt. Then she meticulously fit each piece of sod over the irregular surface to restore the tundra mat. A few rotting logs were carefully inserted to mimic nature and support growth.

During their final years, they flew out about 8,000 pounds of supplies, metal, tools, and books for recycling and reuse, using each flight that came in to also take things out. Nothing that wasnt native to the area was left behind. We never had a trash pile, Irons said, and we were always careful about what we brought in.

Handcrafted rocking chair left behind at the Kernwood cabin site (Photo from Jean Aspen and Tom Irons)

On July 24, 2018, they floated downriver one last time. Now, its hard to tell that Kernwood had once existedexcept for one thing: facing the place where the cabin had been, a rocking chair, crafted from a single dead tree, remains. I couldnt bring myself to take it apart, Irons said, so we left it as a memento to the years we spent there. Its only wood, so it will return to the Earth.

We should strive to enrich the future, not use it up, Aspen said. The children of tomorrow dont need our moldering edifices. They need a healthy, living world in which to envision their own dreams.

ReWilding Kernwood will be aired on 360 North at 8 p.m., June 24 and 4 p.m., June 25.

For more of Jean Aspen and Tom Irons:

Their earlier documentaries are available at jeanaspen.com. Also available are Aspens books, Arctic Daughter, Arctic Son, and Trusting the River. Aspen is currently working to get six of her mothers early books back into print.

[Because of a high volume of comments requiring moderation, we are temporarily disabling comments on many of our articles so editors can focus on the coronavirus crisis and other coverage. We invite you to write a letter to the editor or reach out directly if youd like to communicate with us about a particular article. Thanks.]

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Coloradans are nearly moving around at pre-pandemic levels. Will a second coronavirus wave follow? – The Colorado Sun

In Larimer County, as June barrels into July and Colorado nears the end of its fourth month mired in the coronavirus pandemic, Colorado State University professor Jude Bayham has noticed a trend: There are a lot more people visiting restaurants than there were in April and May.

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This observation comes not so much from his personal life as from his professional one. Bayham is an economist who studies avoidance behavior how people respond to known risks. During the pandemic, he has become one of the experts looking at mobility data for the states epidemiological modeling team, the group that is creating predictions about how the virus will spread so that policymakers like Gov. Jared Polis can decide how to respond. Bayham charts these mobility numbers on graphs comparing them to mobility patterns from 2019.

And what he has seen in the last couple of weeks is clear. Coloradans across much of the state are almost back to moving around at pre-pandemic levels. At restaurants, salons and clothing stores, Coloradans in many counties are approaching near-normal levels of activity.

There is clearly an increase in these mobility measures, however you want to cut it, Bayham said. People are spending more time out in public.

The trend comes as Colorado increasingly allows the reopening of businesses seen as among the riskiest for spread of the coronavirus places like casinos and bars, both of which are now able to operate at limited capacity.

And it also comes as states that began reopening their economies around the same time as Colorado are seeing worrying spikes in COVID-19 cases. In a recent Twitter thread, Andy Slavitt, the former Obama administration health official who has become a wonky celebrity for his nightly pandemic summaries, lumped Colorado with 13 other states in a group he called the rabbits the states that reopened first. Through mid-June, the rabbits had seen a 26% increase in case growth, he wrote. Only two states in the group Colorado and Indiana had defied the trend and seen their daily case numbers decline.

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On Friday, Dr. Rachel Herlihy, Colorados state epidemiologist, said health officials here are watching case spikes in neighboring states like Arizona and Utah warily.

The modeling data has been quite favorable in Colorado recently, she said. But we certainly are being cautious. We know from the experience of those states that were really dependent on human behavior.

An outbreak last week of more than 100 new cases in Boulder tied to University Hill parties and anti-racism protests has pushed Colorados numbers slightly higher in recent days and shows how quickly the virus could surge anew.

But, when the state released its daily case counts Friday, the numbers continued to show good news overall. Hospitalizations for COVID-19 have dropped to their lowest number since March. The rate of people testing positive for the virus remained below public health benchmarks.

So, as Colorado continues to reopen while avoiding a second wave of the virus, it raises a question: Are we actually good at coronavirus life or are we just lucky?

I think were both, said Dr. Mark Johnson, the executive director of Jefferson County Public Health. And I think we dont know the answer to that question.

Experts say that people moving around more is not necessarily a bad thing. Its all about how people move around.

It doesnt matter so much what the government does in terms of relaxing stay-at-home measures if people are still adhering to the guidelines, said Dr. Eric Toner, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security in Baltimore. If people are wearing masks and maintaining social distance, then you wouldnt expect to see a huge increase in cases as things reopen.

So it may be, Toner added, that Coloradans are just really good people and are following advice.

Bayham, the CSU prof, agreed that could be the case. The mobility figures he looks at only capture where people go and for how long. They dont show what people do when they get where they are going.

The data are collected from a sample of mobile devices smartphones, mostly, but also smart watches and similar gear. The figures are anonymized, meaning they are stripped of identification information, and then they are also aggregated at the census block level. Bayham said he cant track any individual persons movements nor does he want to. The value is in the big picture.

Early on in the pandemic, Bayham said the connection between mobility and viral transmission was really clear. The more people moved around, the more the virus spread.

But, after a big crash in mobility around the time Polis issued the statewide stay-at-home order, the state has actually been seeing increasing mobility since late-April, Bayham said. And, this time, increased movement didnt closely correspond with increased viral transmission.

Bayham said this is likely because people in Colorado are venturing forth into a changed world. They are more cautious. The places they are visiting are cleaner. Everything is better geared toward stopping the virus.

For instance, while visits to restaurants have almost returned to normal in many places, Bayham said its possible that the visits now are mostly quick stops to pick up takeout as opposed to longer visits for eat-in dining, pre-pandemic. (He hopes to dig deeper into this question soon.)

You can think about these mobility patterns as a pre-condition for transmission, Bayham said. Its necessary for transmission to occur. But just because people are in a place where the virus is present is not sufficient for transmission.

Toner said the states that havent kept control of the virus after reopening have a few things in common. They tend to have weaker health systems where many people struggle to access care. While Colorado has specifically tried to get coronavirus testing sites into underprivileged communities, other states have not.

And Colorados weather also may play a factor, Toner said. We are a state that generally goes outdoors in the summer instead of huddling inside in the air-conditioning to avoid oppressive heat and humidity. The risk of transmission is dramatically lower outdoors, Toner said.

But one trait stands above the rest.

I think the states that are doing poorly now are the states where their governors have been more relaxed about public health messaging, more eager to open things up, and not strictly adhering to the guidance about the pace at which things should open up, Toner said.

And a big part of that public health messaging the elasticized flashpoint in the latest public health culture war is encouraging people to wear masks. Ever since he donned one at a news conference in the first week of April, Polis has been a frequent and fervent champion of the face mask.

The science on homemade masks and coronavirus is still a work in progress, said May Chu, an internationally renowned disease researcher who teaches at the Colorado School of Public Health. But she said the overwhelming consensus is that wearing masks in public is safer than not.

She put the benefit at a few percentage points of difference. If a person in a given situation has a 25% chance of being infected by the coronavirus, Chu said wearing a mask might knock the risk down closer to 20%. But thats only if people are also washing their hands and following distancing guidelines.

If you dont do all the other practices, its probably not statistically significant, she said.

And homemade masks can actually be quite good. Think of the now-familiar N95 masks as being 95% efficient, she said. The throw-away surgical masks that doctors often wear are about 30% efficient. But a homemade mask with enough layers of the right material could get to 50% efficiency.

Its why shes a big believer that diligent mask-wearing can make a meaningful impact as life returns to normal-ish. And, though she said there is no detailed data on Coloradans mask-wearing behavior, she said shes been encouraged seeing widespread adoption when she goes out in public.

Within the community, wearing a mask should be a sign of respectfulness, Chu said. You are respecting the dangers (the virus) might cause to others.

Johnson, with Jefferson County Public Health, praised Polis for making decisions based on data and science including promoting mask-wearing. That doesnt mean hes not a little nervous about Colorados reopening economy. Johnson said he wished the state had moved more incrementally instead of reopening large chunks at once which will make it more difficult to know what is to blame if cases spike.

It appears that some of the things that opened up quicker were because people screamed the loudest, he said.

But Johnson also said everybody is learning as they go. And, as the states reopening goes right now, its so far, so good.

People are going to be studying this for at least the next 100 years, he said, trying to figure out what did we do right and what did we do wrong.

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Letter to the Editor: The human nature dilemma – Northern Virginia Daily

Editor:

There seems to be no one, regardless of political stripe or racial creed, who is OK with the actions of police officer Derek Chauvin as they relate to the death of George Floyd on May 25. We all see it as a human behavior that was despicably cruel and unjust under the moral standards that we expect from a police officer. We see it as a behavioral dilemma that should never be accepted.

And we wonder what could have been going on in Mr. Chauvin's mind as the event transitioned from arrest and submission to tragic death. What could have justified such behavior? Was it racial hatred, mental imbalance or simply some very poor judgment regarding human frailty?

As always, there will be questions about why it happened and what should be done to prevent a recurrence. Further investigation and police reform currently lead the list of efforts needed to prevent such tragedies but bad apples are a part of human nature as were the ethos and mindset of Derek Chauvin and others like him.

Of the 800,000 police officers in the United States, the overwhelming majority are considerate, well trained and professional. There's another one tenth of one percent that are sometimes inconsiderate and unprofessional but unfortunately that may never change because human nature is not a constant. Human nature is different for each individual and it changes constantly. There are and always will be a few bad apples among us even as they seem to be like everyone else.

I sincerely hope that laws are passed by Congress and that changes are made within police training facilities to weed out the bad apples and further enhance the services provided by police departments across America. With police reform and continued oversight, policing services, which are vital to the security of all Americans, should improve, but I doubt that we will ever see the perfection we expect simply because of the dilemma we call human nature.

Leroy Donald, Stephens City

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Letter to the Editor: The human nature dilemma - Northern Virginia Daily