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Nine Out of Ten Visual Neurons Don’t Work The Way We Thought – Technology Networks

A new survey of the activity of nearly 60,000 neurons in the mouse visual system reveals how far we have to go to understand how the brain computes. The analysis, led by researchers at the Allen Institute, reveals that more than 90% of neurons in the visual cortex, the part of the brain that processes our visual world, dont work the way scientists thought and its not yet clear how they do work.

We thought that there are simple principles according to which these neurons process visual information, and those principles are in all the textbooks, said Christof Koch, Ph.D., Chief Scientist and President of the Allen Institute for Brain Science, a division of the Allen Institute, and co-senior author on the study along with R. Clay Reid, M.D., Ph.D., Senior Investigator at the Allen Institute for Brain Science. But now that we can survey tens of thousands of cells at once, we get a more subtle and much more complicated picture.

Nearly 60 years ago, two neuroscientists, David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel, made groundbreaking discoveries about how mammals brains perceive the visual world around us. Their work uncovered individual neurons that switch on only in response to very specific kinds of images.

Hubel and Wiesel made their discoveries by showing simple pictures things like a black bar or dot on a white background to cats and monkeys. The general principle they uncovered says that as you view the world around you, specific neurons in your brain are responsible for recognizing exact parts in a particular region of that scene and the recognition gets more specialized and fine-tuned in higher-order parts of the brain.

Say youre in a park: One set of neurons will fire a rapid electrical response to a dark tree branch in a precise spot in your line of sight. Other neurons switch on only when a bird flies across your field of vision from left to right. Your brain would then stitch together information from the tree branch neurons and the moving bird neurons to get a complete picture of the world around you, or so the theory goes.

Hubel and Wiesels findings were recognized by a Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine and formed the backbone of the neural networks that underlie most computer vision applications. In the past decade, with the advent of new neuroscience methods that enable the study of more and more brain cells at once, scientists have come to understand that this model of how our brains see is likely not the whole story some neurons clearly dont follow the classic model of tuning into specific features.

But it wasnt clear just how incomplete the story was.

Brain activity variability

The new study is the first large-scale analysis of the publicly available data from the Allen Brain Observatory, a broad survey that captures the activity of tens of thousands of neurons in the mouse visual system. The researchers analyzed the activity of nearly 60,000 different neurons in the visual parts of the cortex, the outermost shell of the brain, as animals see different simple images, photos and short video clips including the opening shot from the classic Orson Welles movie Touch of Evil (chosen because it has a lot of movement and is a single shot with no cuts).

1950s and 60s neuroscience studies, by necessity, were like fishing expeditions researchers hunted through the brain with a single electrode until they found a neuron that reliably responded to a certain image. Its akin to trying to watch a widescreen movie through a few scattered pinholes, Koch said it would be impossible to get a complete picture. The Allen Brain Observatory dataset doesnt capture the activity of every neuron under every scenario, but it allows researchers to study more neurons at once, including those with more subtle responses.

The researchers new analysis found that less than 10% of the 60,000 neurons responded following the textbook model. Of the rest, about two-thirds showed some reliable response, but their responses were more specialized than the classic models would predict. The last third of neurons showed some activity, but they didnt light up reliably to any of the stimuli in the experiment its not clear what these neurons are doing, the researchers said.

Its not that the previous studies were all a big mistake, its just that those cells turn out to be a very small fraction of all neurons in the cortex, said Saskia de Vries, Ph.D., an Assistant Investigator at the Allen Institute for Brain Science who led the study along with Jrme Lecoq, Ph.D., and Michael Buice, Ph.D. It turns out that the mouse visual cortex is much more complex and richer than we previously thought, which underscores the value of doing this type of survey.

That these more variable, less specific neurons exist is not news. But it was a surprise that they dominate the visual parts of the mouse brain, the researchers said.

How the brain computes

Its not yet clear how these other neurons contribute to processing visual information. Other research groups have seen that locomotion can drive neuron activity in the visual part of the brain, but whether the mice were running or still only explains a small amount of the variability in visual responses, the researchers found.

Their next steps are to run similar experiments with more natural movies, offering the neurons a larger set of visual features to respond to. Buice has made a 10-hour specialized reel of clips from pretty much every nature documentary he could get his hands on.

The researchers also point out that the classic model came from studies of cats and primates, animals which both evolved to see their worlds in sharper focus at the center of their gaze than did mice. Its possible that mouse vision is just a completely different ballgame than ours. But there are still principles from these studies that might apply to our own brains, said Buice, an Associate Investigator at the Allen Institute for Brain Science.

Our goal was not to study vision; our goal was to study how the cortex computes. We think the cortex has a structure of computation thats universal, similar to the way different types of computers can run the same programs, Buice said. In the end, it doesnt matter what kind of program the computer is running; we want to understand how it runs programs at all.

Reference

de Vries et al. (2019) A large-scale standardized physiological survey reveals functional organization of the mouse visual cortex. Nature Neuroscience. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41593-019-0550-9

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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Nine Out of Ten Visual Neurons Don't Work The Way We Thought - Technology Networks

Seattle Genetics Announces U.S. FDA Grants Breakthrough Therapy Designation for Tucatinib in Locally Advanced or Metastatic HER2-Positive Breast…

BOTHELL, Wash.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Seattle Genetics, Inc. (Nasdaq:SGEN) today announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted Breakthrough Therapy designation to tucatinib, in combination with trastuzumab and capecitabine, for treatment of patients with locally advanced unresectable or metastatic HER2-positive breast cancer, including patients with brain metastases, who have been treated with trastuzumab, pertuzumab, and T-DM1. The positive topline results of the pivotal HER2CLIMB clinical trial were announced in October 2019, and additional data were presented at the 2019 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium (SABCS) on December 11, 2019 and were simultaneously published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM). Tucatinib is an oral, small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) that is highly selective for HER2.

The FDAs Breakthrough Therapy process is intended to expedite the development and review of promising drug candidates intended for serious or life-threatening conditions. Designation is based upon preliminary clinical evidence of the potential for substantial improvement over existing therapies on one or more clinically significant endpoints.

The addition of tucatinib to the commonly used combination of trastuzumab and capecitabine demonstrated superior activity compared to trastuzumab and capecitabine alone in patients with unresectable locally advanced or metastatic HER2-positive breast cancer, including those with and without brain metastases, said Roger Dansey, M.D., Chief Medical Officer at Seattle Genetics. The decision by the FDA to grant Breakthrough Therapy designation to tucatinib recognizes the urgent need for new medicines that can impact the lives of those with HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer. We intend to submit a New Drug Application to the FDA and an MAA to the EMA by the first quarter 2020, with the goal of making tucatinib available to patients in this setting as soon as possible.

This Breakthrough Therapy designation was based on data from the pivotal HER2CLIMB clinical trial, which compared tucatinib in combination with trastuzumab and capecitabine to trastuzumab and capecitabine alone in patients with locally advanced unresectable or metastatic HER2-positive breast cancer. Patients had previously received trastuzumab, pertuzumab and ado-trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1). Patients had received a median of four prior lines of therapy overall and three in the metastatic setting. Forty-seven percent of the patients enrolled in the trial had brain metastases at the time of enrollment.

Data presented at SABCS and published in NEJM include the primary endpoint of progression-free survival (PFS) as assessed by blinded independent central review (BICR) in the first 480 patients enrolled in the trial. The primary endpoint of PFS showed that the addition of tucatinib was superior to trastuzumab and capecitabine alone, with a 46 percent reduction in the risk of disease progression or death (hazard ratio (HR)=0.54 (95% Confidence Interval (CI): 0.42, 0.71); p<0.00001). The trial met the two key secondary endpoints at interim analysis. The tucatinib arm demonstrated an improvement in overall survival, with a 34 percent reduction in the risk of death (HR=0.66 [95% CI: 0.50, 0.88]; p=0.0048), compared to the control arm. For patients with brain metastases at baseline, the tucatinib arm also demonstrated superior PFS, with a 52 percent reduction in the risk of disease progression or death, compared to the control arm (HR=0.48 [95% CI: 0.34, 0.69]; p<0.00001).

Tucatinib in combination with trastuzumab and capecitabine was generally well tolerated. The most common adverse events occurring in more than 20 percent of patients in the tucatinib arm vs. the control arm included diarrhea, palmar-plantar erythrodysaesthesia syndrome (PPE), nausea, fatigue, and vomiting. Discontinuation of tucatinib and placebo due to adverse events was 5.7 percent in the tucatinib arm and 3.0 percent in the control arm. Greater than or equal to Grade 3 diarrhea was seen in 12.9 percent of the patients in the tucatinib arm vs. 8.6 percent in the control arm. Antidiarrheal prophylaxis was not required per protocol. Antidiarrheals were used in less than half of all cycles where diarrhea was reported. In both treatment arms, when used, the duration of antidiarrheal treatment was short (median of 3 days/cycle). Greater than or equal to Grade 3 aspartate aminotransferase (AST) was seen in 4.5 percent of the patients in the tucatinib arm vs. 0.5 percent in the control arm, and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) elevation in 5.4 percent vs. 0.5 percent, respectively. Discontinuations due to liver transaminase elevations were infrequent in both arms (ALT: 1.0 vs. 0.5 percent; AST: 0.7 vs. 0.5 percent).

About HER2-Positive Breast Cancer

Patients with HER2-positive breast cancer have tumors with high levels of a protein called human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2), which promotes the aggressive spread of cancer cells. An estimated 271,270 new cases of invasive breast cancer will be diagnosed in the U.S. in 2019.1 Between 15 and 20 percent of breast cancer cases worldwide are HER2-positive.2 Historically, HER2-positive breast cancer tends to be more aggressive and more likely to recur than HER2-negative breast cancer.2, 3, 4 In patients with metastatic breast cancer, the most common site of first metastasis is in bone, followed by lung, brain, and liver.5, 6 Up to 50 percent of metastatic HER2-positive breast cancer patients develop brain metastases over time.2, 7 Despite recent treatment advances, there is still a significant need for new therapies that can impact metastatic disease, especially brain metastases. There are currently no approved therapies demonstrating progression-free survival or overall survival benefit for the treatment of patients with HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer after progression on T-DM1.8, 9, 10

About HER2CLIMB

HER2CLIMB is a multinational randomized (2:1), double-blind, placebo-controlled, active comparator, pivotal clinical trial comparing tucatinib in combination with trastuzumab and capecitabine compared with trastuzumab and capecitabine alone in patients with locally advanced unresectable or metastatic HER2-positive breast cancer who were previously treated with trastuzumab, pertuzumab and T-DM1. The primary endpoint of the trial was PFS per Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) v1.1 as determined by blinded independent central review (BICR) in the first 480 patients enrolled in the trial. HER2CLIMB enrolled a total of 612 patients to support the analyses of key secondary endpoints, including overall survival, PFS per BICR in patients with brain metastases at baseline and confirmed objective response rate. Safety data were evaluated throughout the study.

About Tucatinib

Tucatinib is an investigational, orally bioavailable, potent tyrosine kinase inhibitor that is highly selective for HER2 without significant inhibition of EGFR. Inhibition of EGFR has been associated with significant toxicities, including skin rash and diarrhea. Tucatinib has shown activity as a single agent and in combination with both chemotherapy and other HER2 targeted agents such as trastuzumab.1,2 Studies of tucatinib in these combinations have shown activity both systemically and in brain metastases. HER2 is a growth factor receptor that is overexpressed in multiple cancers, including breast, colorectal and gastric cancers. HER2 mediates cell growth, differentiation and survival. Tucatinib has been granted orphan drug designation by the FDA for the treatment of breast cancer patients with brain metastases.

In addition to HER2CLIMB, tucatinib is being evaluated in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multi-center phase 3 trial of tucatinib in combination with T-DM1 compared to T-DM1 alone, in patients with unresectable locally advanced or metastatic HER2-positive breast cancer, including those with brain metastases, who have had prior treatment with a taxane and trastuzumab. The primary endpoint is progression-free survival per RECIST criteria. Secondary endpoints include overall survival, objective response rate and duration of response. The trial is being conducted in North America and is expected to enroll approximately 460 patients. More information about the phase 3 trial, including enrolling centers, is available at http://www.clinicaltrials.gov.

Tucatinib is also being evaluated in a multi-center, open-label, single-arm phase 2 clinical trial known as MOUNTAINEER, which is evaluating tucatinib in combination with trastuzumab in patients with HER2-positive, RAS wildtype metastatic or unresectable colorectal cancer. The primary endpoint of the trial is objective response rate by RECIST criteria. Progression-free survival, duration of response, overall survival and safety and tolerability of the combination regimen are secondary objectives. Results for 26 patients were evaluated in an analysis and presented at the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) 2019 Congress. Enrollment is ongoing. More information about the MOUNTAINEER trial, including enrolling centers, is available at http://www.clinicaltrials.gov.

About Seattle Genetics

Seattle Genetics, Inc. is an emerging multi-product, global biotechnology company that develops and commercializes transformative therapies targeting cancer to make a meaningful difference in peoples lives. ADCETRIS (brentuximab vedotin) utilizes the companys industry-leading antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) technology and is currently approved for the treatment of multiple CD30-expressing lymphomas. Beyond ADCETRIS, the company has a late-stage pipeline including enfortumab vedotin for metastatic urothelial cancer, currently being reviewed for approval by the FDA, and tisotumab vedotin in clinical trials for metastatic cervical cancer, which utilize our proprietary ADC technology. In addition, tucatinib, a small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitor, is in late-stage development for HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer and in clinical development for metastatic colorectal cancer. We are also leveraging our expertise in empowered antibodies to build a portfolio of proprietary immuno-oncology agents in clinical trials targeting hematologic malignancies and solid tumors. The company is headquartered in Bothell, Washington, and has a European office in Switzerland. For more information on our robust pipeline, visit http://www.seattlegenetics.com and follow @SeattleGenetics on Twitter.

Forward Looking Statements

Certain of the statements made in this press release are forward looking, such as those, among others, relating to the therapeutic potential of tucatinib, including its possible efficacy, safety and therapeutic uses; anticipated development activities including ongoing and future clinical trials; and intended regulatory actions, including the plan to submit an NDA to the FDA and a MAA to the EMA by the first quarter of 2020. Actual results or developments may differ materially from those projected or implied in these forward-looking statements. Factors that may cause such a difference include the difficulty and uncertainty of pharmaceutical product development, the risk of adverse events or safety signals, the possibility of disappointing results in ongoing or future clinical trials despite earlier promising clinical results, the possibility of delays in the submission of an NDA to the FDA and a MAA to the EMA, the possibility that data from the HER2CLIMB trial may not be sufficient to support approval of tucatinib, the possibility of adverse regulatory action. More information about the risks and uncertainties faced by Seattle Genetics is contained under the caption Risk Factors included in the companys Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2019 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Seattle Genetics disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by law.

References:

1. American Cancer Society, Cancer Facts and Figures 2018-2019.

2. Loibl S, Gianni L (2017). HER2-positive breast cancer. The Lancet 389(10087): 2415-29.

3. Slamon D, Clark G, Wong S, et al. (1987). Human breast cancer: correlation of relapse and survival with amplification of the HER-2/neu oncogene. Science 235(4785): 177-82.

4. American Cancer Society (ACS) (2018). Breast cancer HER2 status. Accessed: December 10, 2018.

5. Kennecke H, Yerushalmi R, Woods R, et al. (2010). Metastatic Behavior of Breast Cancer Subtypes. Journal of Clinical Oncology 28(20): 3271-7.

6. Berman AT, Thukral AD, Hwang W-T, et al. (2013). Incidence and Patterns of Distant Metastases for Patients With Early-Stage Breast Cancer After Breast Conservation Treatment. Clinical Breast Cancer 13(2): 88-94.

7. Duchnowska R, Loibl S, Jassem J (2018). Tyrosine kinase inhibitors for brain metastases in HER2-positive breast cancer. Cancer Treatment Reviews 67: 71-7.

8. Verma S, Miles D, Gianni L, et al. (2012). Trastuzumab Emtansine for HER2-Positive Advanced Breast Cancer. New England Journal of Medicine 367(19): 1783-91.

9. Geyer CE, Forster J, Lindquist D, et al. (2006). Lapatinib plus Capecitabine for HER2-Positive Advanced Breast Cancer. New England Journal of Medicine 355(26): 2733-43.

10. Blackwell KL, Burstein HJ, Storniolo AM, et al. (2012). Overall Survival Benefit With Lapatinib in Combination With Trastuzumab for Patients With Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer: Final Results From the EGF104900 Study. Journal of Clinical Oncology 30(21): 2585-92.

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Seattle Genetics Announces U.S. FDA Grants Breakthrough Therapy Designation for Tucatinib in Locally Advanced or Metastatic HER2-Positive Breast...

‘Levels Of The Game’: Looking At Human Behavior Through Tennis – Tennis TourTalk

International Blog Michael Dickens

With another tennis season finished and the decade almost complete, Ive been enjoying a brief, holiday respite from the Centre Courts of the world by reading a book Ive been wanting to re-visit for a long time,Levels of the Gameby John McPhee. Published in 1969, contents of the book originally appeared as an essay in The New Yorker magazine. Levels of the Game hasbeen a part of my personal library for many years and its arguably the best book ever written about tennis.

Yet,Levels of the Gameisnt really as much a book about tennis as it is a battle of wills and ideals between two very different American gentlemen and what each symbolizes in a sport that was just opening itself to a brand new Open era in 1968.

On one side of the net on the outdoor grass courts at the West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills, New York, then the home of the US Open, is Clark Graebner. Hes 25 years-old, rich, white, conservative. On the other side opposite him is Arthur Ashe Jr., also 25, striving middle class, black and open to new ideas. There is a sense of tension between these two talented individuals that goes far beyond the fact that both are college-educated athletes and competitors Graebner, conservative scion and only-son of a dentist who matriculated from Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., and Ashe, a liberal who grew up in Richmond, Va., then migrated west and graduated from UCLA in Los Angeles, Calif. Despite being rivals, they are also friends even U.S. Davis Cup teammates.

Over the course of this brilliant 150-page narrative, from first ball to last ball during an epic semifinal-round match at the 1968 US Open, the Princeton and Cambridge-educated McPhee develops a sense of tension between Graebner and Ashe on the court. He goes inside the mind and game of these two great players. Through a stroke-by-stroke description of this singular match, McPhee examines their socio-economic backgrounds and attitudes touching on both race and politics which molds each player, mentally and physically.

Heres how Graebner describes his style of play with Ashes, filled with both racial and political undercurrents that prevailed at the time:

Ive never been a flashy stylist, like Arthur. Im a fundamentalist. Arthur is a bachelor. I am married and conservative. Im interested in business, in the market, in childrens clothes. It affects the way you play the game. Hes not a steady player. Hes a wrists slapped. Sometimes he doesnt even know where the ball is going. Hes carefree, lackadaisical, forgetful. Negroes are getting more confidence. They are asking for more and more, and they are getting more and more. They are looser. Theyre liberal. In a way, liberal is a synonym for loose. And thats exactly the way Arthur plays.

And in contrast, heres how Ashe analyzes Graebner:

There is not much variety in Clarks game. It is steady, accurate, and conservative. He makes few errors. He plays still, compact, Republican tennis. Hes a damned smart player, a good thinker, but not a limber and flexible thinker. His game is predictable, but he has a sounder volley than I have, and a better forehand more touch, more power. His forehand is a hell of a weapon. His moves are mediocre. His backhand is under spin, which means he cant hit it hard. He just cant hit a heavily top-spun backhand. He hasnt much flair or finesse, except in the lob. He has the best lob of any of the Americans. Hes solid and consistent. He tries to let you beat yourself.

One reviewer described McPhees approach as a highly original way of looking at human behavior. After all, as the author notes, When physical assets are about equal, psychology is paramount to any game.

Consider the attention to detail McPhee provides readers from the very beginning of Levels of the Game:

Arthur Ashe, his feet apart, his knees slightly bent, lifts a tennis ball into the air. The toss is high and forward. If the ball were allowed to drop, it would, in Ashes words, make a parabola and drop to the grass three feet in front of the baseline. He has practiced tossing a tennis ball just so thousands of times. But he is going to hit this one. His feet draw together. His body straightens and tilts forward far beyond the point of balance. He is falling. The force of gravity and a muscular momentum from legs to arm compound as he whips his racquet up and over the ball. He weighs a hundred and fifty-five pounds; he is six feet tall, and right-handed. His build is barely full enough not to be describable as frail, but his cordination is so extraordinary that the ball comes off his racquet at furious speed. With a step forward that stops his fall, he moves to follow.

On the other side of the net, the serve hits the grass and, taking off in a fast skid, is intercepted by the backhand of Clark Graebner. Graebner has a plan for this match. He does not intend to hit out much. Even if he sees the moon, he may decide not to shoot it. He will, in his words, play the ball in the court and make Arthur play it, because Arthur blows his percentages by always trying a difficult or acute shot. Arthur sometimes tends to miss easy shots more often than he makes hard shots. The only way to get his confidence down is to get every shot into the court and let him make mistakes. Graebner, standing straight up, pulls his racquet across and then away from the ball as if he had touch something hot, and with this gesture he blocks back Ashes serve.

Later in the book, McPhee delves inside the mind of each player with great insight:

Graebner happens to be as powerful as anyone who plays tennis. He is six feet two inches tall; he weighs a hundred and seventy-five pounds. The firmly structured muscles of his legs stand out in symmetrical perfection. His frame is large, but his reactions are instant and there is nothing sluggish about him. He is right-handed, and his right forearm is more than a foot in circumference. His game is built on power. His backswing is short, his strokes are compact; nonetheless, the result is explosive. There have to be exceptions to any general strategy. Surely this particular shot is a setup, a sitter, hanging there soft and helpless in the air. With a vicious backhand drive, Graebner tries to blow the ball crosscourt, past Ashe. But it does into the net. Fifteen-love.

Graebner is nervous. He looks down at his feet somberly. This is Forest Hills, and this is one of the semifinal matches in the first United States Open Championships. Graebner and Ashe are both Americans. The other semifinalists are a Dutchman and an Australian. It has been thirteen years since an American won the mens singles final at Forest Hills, and this match will determine whether Ashe or Graebner is to have a chance to be the first American since Tony Trabert to win it all. Ashe and Graebner are still amateurs, and it was imagined that in this tournament, playing against professionals ,they wouldnt have much of a chance. But they are here, close to the finish, playing each other. For Graebner to look across the net and see Ashe and the reverse is not in its unusual. They were both born in 1943, they have known each other since they were thirteen, and they have played tournaments and exhibitions and have practiced together in so many countries and seasons that details blur. They are members of the United States Davis Cup Team and, as such, travel together throughout the year, playing for the United States and also entering general tournaments less as individuals than en bloc, with the team.

A persons tennis game begins with his nature and background and comes out through his motor mechanisms into shot patterns and characteristics of play. If he is deliberate, he is a deliberate tennis player; and if he is flamboyant, his game probably is, too. A tight, close match unmarried by error and representative of each players game at its highest level will be primarily a psychological struggle, particularly when the players are so familiar with each other that there can be no technical surprises There is nothing about Ashes game that Graebner does not know, and Ashe says that he knows Graebners game like a favorite tune. Ashe feels that Graebner. Plays the way he does because he is a middle-class white conservative. Graebner feels that Ashe plays the way he does because he is black. Ashe, at this moment, is nervous. He is famous for what journalists have called his majestic cool, his towering, calm, his icy elegance. But he is scared stiff, and other tennis players who know him well can see this, because it is literally true. His legs are stiff. Now, like a mechanical soldier, he walks into position to serve again. He lifts the ball, and hits it down the middle.

Ashes principal problem in tennis has been consistency. He has brilliance to squander, but steadiness has not been characteristic of him. He shows this, woodenly hitting three volleys into the net in this first game, letting Graebner almost break him, then shooting his way out of trouble with two serves hit so hard that Graebner cannot touch them. Ashe wins the first game. Graebner shrugs and tells himself, He really snuck out of that one.

In a 2014 review of Levels of the Game for the London Guardian, William Fiennes suggests that McPhees use of tenses are a subtle source of power. He notes how the author uses past tense for history and backstory, present tense for the match and for the comments and reactions of those watching it.

For instance: When, after an account of (Robert) Johnsons first meeting with Ashe (he wondered if the child had been a victim of rickets, he was so bony and frail), McPhee cuts back to the semifinal at Forest Hills, the reversion to the present tense is an electric quickening. Sometimes these transitions are bold and imaginative, as when McPhee shows us two of Johnsons trophy-winning students watching television, and the match theyre watching is Ashe vs. Graebner at Forest Hills, and suddenly were back in the game, spirited via a wormhole, Graebner serving an ace that splits the court.

Another example: Both Ashe and Graebner have a great deal of finesse in reserve behind their uncomplicated power, but it surfaces once or twice a game rather than once or twice a point. Ashe is a master of drop shots, of drop half volleys, of miscellaneous dinks and chips. He is, in the idiom of tennis, very tough at cat-and-mouse the texture of the game in which both players, near the net, exchange light, floppy shots, acutely angled and designed for inaccessibility. Graebner is a deft volleyer, reacting quickly and dangerously at the net, but in general although the two players technically have the same sort of game Graebner does not have the variety of shots or the versatility that Ashe has. Ashe says that Graebner could use a little more junk in his game.

Throughout this fun-to-read book, it becomes apparent how freely and honestly Ashe and Graebner discuss race and personal politics and the changing landscape of the tennis world. We find out what makes each succeed on and off the court and looking back, the book remains a great historical document. Remember, the Open Era of professional tennis was just starting to take shape and some of the greats of the game that we feel deep admiration for today, like Rod Laver, were still playing. Also, in terms of U.S. history, this match took place in the same year as the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy, and the United States was in the height of fighting the Vietnam War. Worth noting is Ashe was a second lieutenant stationed at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., when he won the 1968 US Open.

Of many things Ive come to appreciate from reading Levels of the Game is how much McPhee admires both Ashe and Graebner and throughout, he maintains a sense of impartiality. However, its apparent that McPhee assumes that the reader will side with Ashe more than Graebner and, its Ashe who not only wins the match 4-6, 8-6, 7-5, 6-2 but also goes on to win the 1968 US Open, defeating Tom Okker of the Netherlands, 14-12, 5-7, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, in the championship final. Still an amateur and unable to accept the $14,000 first-prize money awarded to the winner, it was Ashes first career Grand Slam singles title and his only US Open singles championship. He became the first African-American man to win the US Open.

Looking back at this clash of conservative values versus liberal ideals, one of the primary take aways after re-reading McPhees Levels of the Gameis simple: You are the way you play.

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'Levels Of The Game': Looking At Human Behavior Through Tennis - Tennis TourTalk

PSFK Retail Conference Preview: Tomorrow’s Store Will Sell Feelings, Not Things – PSFK

What will the future retail store look like? One of the founders of award-winning experiential design agency YourStudio shares his vision based on emerging trends, describing a retailscape defined by real-life fulfillment, wellbeing for the mind and soul, and human spaces to fuel the imagination.

What are the weak signals you see emerging in retail right now?

Human behavior is driving all of the best new retail experiences. We are seeing retail and digital integration to help remove friction, new fulfillment models to give time back, and experiences that nourish and elevate the human spirit.

Shoppers have been using the store partly as a showroom to order online, so new smart offers create this showcase with no need for direct sales. Samsungs space at Coal Drops Yard is a good example of this: leave without a product, but with a huge baptism into what Samsung means to your life and how it can make it better. Were moving into an era of selling emotions and feelings, not things.

Retail spaces will continue to shift away from focus around stuff, moving towards real-life fulfillment, wellbeing for the mind and soul, and human spaces to fuel the imagination. Generation selfie is declining; people are looking to retail spaces to connect, find a sense of purpose, and enrich their knowledge and point of view.

How do you see innovative retailers delivering on these new demands?

Stores are experimenting with different formats. The legacy department stores are creating smaller capsule spaces. Galleries Lafayette Champs-Elyses is a perfect example. Big brands are slicing up what they do so, instead of large multi-format stores, they are creating more specialized, local branches. To stay competitive and keep up, we need to build architecture thats agile, from our digital to our physical brand moments. Storytelling and keeping up the connections with our audiences is key to survival. All of this depends on great creative minds to understand and empathize with what people need as well as creating material people feel drawn to.

Can you guess what the store experience five years from now will be like?

The film Her creates a vision of the future thats not all space rockets and levitating furniture, but has a soul through its touch of the familiar augmented with some new and clever tech. This is how I see the store in five years' time. We will still appreciate the human qualities of touch and visual language that soothes or stimulates us, but we will see more services and dwell spaces customized to us, our moods and anticipating our every desire.

What do you plan to share at the Future Of Retail 2020 Conference?

Driven by PSFKs insight, I will be presenting three future retail concepts that pioneer thinking around loyalty, brand connection and the next generation of experience design. I will be showing what the future of fresh food might look like at a supermarket scale, how luxury loyalty can be unpacked at home and how whole-life fulfillment might be experienced at a place-making scale for a mall of the future. Cant wait!

YourStudio

To learn more from Howard, come see him take the stage at PSFK's upcoming Future Of Retail conference 2020, tickets available now!

What will the future retail store look like? One of the founders of award-winning experiential design agency YourStudio shares his vision based on emerging trends, describing a retailscape defined by real-life fulfillment, wellbeing for the mind and soul, and human spaces to fuel the imagination.

What are the weak signals you see emerging in retail right now?

Human behavior is driving all of the best new retail experiences. We are seeing retail and digital integration to help remove friction, new fulfillment models to give time back, and experiences that nourish and elevate the human spirit.

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PSFK Retail Conference Preview: Tomorrow's Store Will Sell Feelings, Not Things - PSFK

26 Questions I Had While Watching the Cats Movie – Vogue

The Cats movie is finally out, after months of anticipation, and believe me when I say it more than lives up to the hype. One thing I must admit, though, is that Cats is...confusing.

Below, find an in-no-way-exhaustive list of the questions that Cats raised for me, in real time.

Did everyone else in the theater also turn to their movie companion and whisper "Those are the cats" when the cats first came onscreen? Because I did.

Why did this British woman put a cat in a pillowcase and throw it in an alley? Are there no no-kill shelters in London? This seems like a less-than-ideal method of cat removal.

Is it normal that I find some of the cats hot? Jason Derulo, a.k.a. Rum Tum Tugger, and his hip thrusts in particular, stand out to me.

If the cats can speak, then why can they also hiss? What does hissing connote to a cat blessed with the faculty of language?

Why in God's name is Rebel Wilson, a.k.a. Jennyanydots, splaying her legs in that borderline-perverse manner? This is not cat behavior, nor is it appropriate human behavior, and it's raising a whole lot more questions for me about cat anatomy that I'd prefer not to think about.

Did Jennyanydots just...eat an anthropomorphized, sentient cockroach?

Why are mice and cockroaches roughly the same size in the Cats universe? Shouldn't the mice be bigger than the cats? I feel like the scale is off.

So Jennifer Hudson, a.k.a. Grizabella, has a tattered shawl on, and James Corden, a.k.a. Bustopher Jones, wears a full suit. How exactly do cats acquire or earn clothes?

Continued here:
26 Questions I Had While Watching the Cats Movie - Vogue

How to Win on Women, Peace and Security – smallwarsjournal

How to Win on Women, Peace and Security

Rosarie Tucci

New strategies employing behavioral science may help push governments to implement National Action Plans.

For almost 15 years, Jacqueline ONeill, now Canadas first ambassador for women, peace and security, pondered a question that dogs policymakers everywhere and bears heavily on her work: How can governments speed up the implementation of major shifts in policy?

For ONeill, the problem was specific. In 2000, the United Nations Security Council approved U.N. Resolution 1325, which calls for every nation to recognize the particular impact of war on women and girls and to ensure that women have a central role in peacemaking efforts. Five years later, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan asked the worlds governments to create National Action Plans to bring the promise of 1325 to fruition. ONeill, who advised dozens of countries on 1325, observed a frustrating phenomenon: Many governments had robust plans, but key components of them remained little more than words on paper. (USIP has worked on the issue for a decade.)

ONeills quest for a more effective way to get NAPs implemented coincided with expanding research by social scientists into why things door do notget done within every type of organization be it a government, business or nonprofit. The emerging answer wasin simplest termsbecause normal human behavior tends toward inertia when translated to an organizational setting. Building off the growing use of behavioral science to inform policy and improve public services, ONeill figured insights from the expanding field, such as the much-discussed Nudge Theory, might help solve her NAP problem.

ONeill recalled what Paul Cairney and Richard Kwiatkowski, leading scholars in public policy and behavioral science, said about policymakers: They need to gather information quickly and effectivelyand often in highly charged political environmentsand that pushes them to rely on mental shortcuts such as ingrained perceptions and emotions. Scholars recognize that while shortcuts, known in behavioral science as heuristics, can be useful, they can also cause policymakers to fall back on the status quo.

We need to better understand and navigate these human tendencies in order to make more rapid progress toward implementation of the NAPs, Neill said.

So, she gathered experts in both behavioral science and inclusive security to explore how behavioral insights might be used to advance National Action Plans. The group turned to a framework for policymakers known by the acronym EASTmaking change Easy, Attractive, Social and Timelythen customized elements of it to the NAP challenge.

As the 20th anniversary of 1325 approaches, heres the advice they came up with for WPS practitioners and policymakers.

Make It Easy

To ease people into new processes, the EAST framework advises harnessing the power of defaults and reducing the hassle factor. That can include simple steps: Maximize the repeated use of templates or employ a box-check to habituate officials to collecting new information. For example, does analysis of protests against government policy include estimates of the gender distribution of demonstrators? A prompt such as a single, required click or tag can yield sex-disaggregated data. Such items can usually be added to existing standard forms.

The importance of simplifying messages cant be overstated; ultimately, the NAP is also a communications document. Jargon and confusing, lengthy language cause readers and viewers to disengage. Consistent and accurate use of terms help create clarity.

NAPs should be customized to reflect, and integrate with, national priorities and policymakers interests. Most of the worlds 84 NAPs, for example, are structured around 1325s four strategic pillars: protection, participation, prevention, and relief and recovery. Yet no government is organized that way. Several countries are now reframing their WPS commitments. For example, a key priority in Jordans NAP relates to violent extremism. In Tonga, the strategic-level focus is on climate change.

Implementation is also more likely when the benefits are spelled out clearly and driven home. An example particularly germane to conflict zones might be stressing that research shows women often raise issues addressing the root of a conflicta key to sustainable peacewhen they are meaningfully involved in peace negotiations.

Make It Attractive

Effective communications help attract attention for NAPs and lend urgency to their implementation. To a significant degree, that means invoking human narratives that illustrate the importance and impact of the plans for women. With such a backdrop, sympathetic policymakers can then reinforce NAP messages in policy documents and speechesincluding those delivered by unconventional messengers such as military officers or economists. A specialized fund devoted to initiatives linked explicitly to NAP creates another avenue to strengthen implementation efforts.

Rewards and sanctions can shift behavior as well. A manager who says NAP is an important policy yet fails to score subordinates work in the area in job evaluations isnt promoting increased attention. Likewise, recognizing progress and achievements on a NAP is a crucial tool for encouraging implementation. USAID, for example, established an annual agency-wide WPS award.

Finally, governments often respond to pressure from oversight bodies. Encouraging hearings or inquiries by lawmakers can create an opportunity to publicly highlight obstacles to action or a lack of commitment. Similarly, engaging civil society organizations to offer praise as well as highlight ongoing shortcomings can be another way to mobilize public officials.

Make It Social

As social beings, humans tend to follow the herd, amplifying behavior for better or worse. Pointing out negative behavior, therefore, should be done sparingly. For instance, WPS practitioners repeatedly cite the paucity of women at negotiating tables (in peace processes, women are 2 percent of mediators, 5 percent of witnesses and signatories, and 8 percent of negotiators globally). Understanding the extent of the problem is important, of course, but over-emphasizing the scale of exclusion might be counterproductive. Practitioners might do better to highlight what those few women have achieved. Offering concrete examples to emulate is one of the most effective ways to move people in a desired direction.

Sharing material online is perhaps the simplest form of social interaction. Through social media, practitioners can discuss successful means for developing and implementing plans, such as how to engage civil society or create a steering committee for a NAP comprised of policymakers from relevant government departments.

Contacts in the analog world can be even more powerful. WPS practitioners should nurture networks of gender specialists, promote gatherings at conferences, encourage engagement in community activities, and establish opportunities for academics, civil society, other gender points of contact within those organizations to exchange experiences and expertise. In 2020, for example, Canada and Uruguay will co-chair the Women, Peace and Security Focal Points Network, and co-host its annual gathering in Ottawa.

Creating opportunities or safe space for people to ask authentic questions or test assumptions might be helpful. At times, policymakers implementing NAPs hesitate to ask challenging questions or express doubts about policy options, fearful of giving offense in a time of fast-changing cultural and social norms.

Finally, commitments made in face-to-face meetings create a sense of shared responsibility and greater urgency for action whether they are expressed through a job description, evaluation or promises by senior-level officials.

Make It Timely

Applying principles like prompting people when they are likely to be most receptive can help accelerate change.

Periods of transitionfrom elections to waroften disrupt hard-to-alter behaviors and end in a period of reform. When such events are predictable, the lead up phase may be an optimal time to create a NAP. Conversely, NAP advocates may foresee regression coming out of a disruptive time. In that case, the best strategy may be designing NAPs that span government administrations (often four to six years), the idea being to force a new government that opposes a plan to cancel it outright rather than making the politically easier choice of simply failing to adopt one.

Furthermore, by emphasizing the linkages between WPS and current events, implementers can more effectively stimulate action. This may work best when preparation is possible, such as getting ready to counter arguments typically used to stymie action on WPS (for example: The situation is too complex to bring more actors to the table now; we can do that once a peace agreement is reached). Other forms of preparation might include scenario-based trainings for practitioners and women in civil society to react in real-time to events like terrorist attacks, peace talks or rising inter-communal tensions.

Finally, stressing short-term advantages that flow from a NAP may expedite action because people are more likely to respond to immediate costs and benefits. A convincing case in point: Naming a woman as lead negotiator of the Philippines government team in 2012 immediately resulted in an increase in Filipinos public trust in the peace process between the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front.

More Research

Existing research explores the impact of behavioral processes on peace, including the influence culture has on the ways in which people negotiate to end conflicts. Further explorations are underway on how to operationalize these insights, one of them being USIPs partnership with ideas42, an organization focused on applied behavioral science.

As we learn more about how best to effectuate change, it is clear that behavioral science complements the various strategies used to drive the larger, transformational accomplishments so far on the Women Peace and Security agenda.

Tinu Luu is a senior program assistant for the Inclusive Peace Process Program at the U.S. Institute of Peace.

This article is cross-posted here with the permission (on agreement) from the United States Institute of Peace.

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How to Win on Women, Peace and Security - smallwarsjournal

Deciphering Artificial Intelligence in the Future of Information Security – AiThority

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is creating a new frontline in information security. Systems that independently learn, reason and act will increasingly replicate human behavior. Like humans, they will be flawed, but also capable of achieving great things.

AI poses new information risks and makes some existing ones more dangerous. However, it can also be used for good and should become a key part of every organizations defensive arsenal. Business and information security leaders alike must understand both the risks and opportunities before embracing technologies that will soon become a critically important part of everyday business.

Already, AI is finding its way into many mainstream business use cases. Organizations use variations of AI to support processes in areas including customer service, human resources, and bank fraud detection. However, the hype can lead to confusion and skepticism over what AI actually is and what it really means for business and security. It is difficult to separate wishful thinking from reality.

Read More: How AI and Automation Are Joining Forces to Transform ITSM

As AI systems are adopted by organizations, they will become increasingly critical to day-to-day business operations. Some organizations already have, or will have, business models entirely dependent on AI technology. No matter the function for which an organization uses AI, such systems and the information that supports them have inherent vulnerabilities and are at risk from both accidental and adversarial threats. Compromised AI systems make poor decisions and produce unexpected outcomes.

Simultaneously, organizations are beginning to face sophisticated AI-enabled attacks which have the potential to compromise information and cause severe business impact at a greater speed and scale than ever before. Taking steps both to secure internal AI systems and defend against external AI-enabled threats will become vitally important in reducing information risk.

While AI systems adopted by organizations present a tempting target, adversarial attackers are also beginning to use AI for their own purposes. AI is a powerful tool that can be used to enhance attack techniques or even create entirely new ones. Organizations must be ready to adapt their defenses in order to cope with the scale and sophistication of AI-enabled cyberattacks.

Security practitioners are always fighting to keep up with the methods used by attackers, and AI systems can provide at least a short-term boost by significantly enhancing a variety of defensive mechanisms. AI can automate numerous tasks, helping understaffed security departments to bridge the specialist skills gap and improve the efficiency of their human practitioners. Protecting against many existing threats, AI can put defenders a step ahead. However, adversaries are not standing still as AI-enabled threats become more sophisticated, security practitioners will need to use AI-supported defenses simply to keep up.

The benefit of AI in terms of response to threats is that it can act independently, taking responsive measures without the need for human oversight and at a much greater speed than a human could. Given the presence of malware that can compromise whole systems almost instantaneously, this is a highly valuable capability.

The number of ways in which defensive mechanisms can be significantly enhanced by AI provide grounds for optimism, but as with any new type of technology, it is not a miracle cure. Security practitioners should be aware of the practical challenges involved when deploying defensive AI.

Questions and considerations before deploying defensive AI systems have narrow intelligence and are designed to fulfill one type of task. They require sufficient data and inputs in order to complete that task. One single defensive AI system will not be able to enhance all the defensive mechanisms outlined previously an organization is likely to adopt multiple systems. Before purchasing and deploying defensive AI, security leaders should consider whether an AI system is required to solve the problem, or whether more conventional options would do a similar or better job.

Read More: Artificial Intelligence in Restaurant Business

Questions to ask include:

Security leaders also need to consider issues of governance around defensive AI, such as:

AI will not replace the need for skilled security practitioners with technical expertise and an intuitive nose for risk. These security practitioners need to balance the need for human oversight with the confidence to allow AI-supported controls to act autonomously and effectively. Such confidence will take time to develop, especially as stories continue to emerge of AI proving unreliable or making poor or unexpected decisions.

AI systems will make mistakes a beneficial aspect of human oversight is that human practitioners can provide feedback when things go wrong and incorporate it into the AIs decision-making process. Of course, humans make mistakes too organizations that adopt defensive AI need to devote time, training and support to help security practitioners learn to work with intelligent systems.

Given time to develop and learn together, the combination of Human and Artificial Intelligence should become a valuable component of an organizations cyber defenses.

Computer systems that can independently learn, reason and act herald a new technological era, full of both risk and opportunity. The advances already on display are only the tip of the iceberg there is a lot more to come. The speed and scale at which AI systems think will be increased by growing access to big data, greater computing power and continuous refinement of programming techniques. Such power will have the potential to both make and destroy a business.

AI tools and techniques that can be used in defense are also available to malicious actors including criminals, hacktivists and state-sponsored groups. Sooner rather than later these adversaries will find ways to use AI to create completely new threats such as intelligent malware and at that point, defensive AI will not just be a nice to have. It will be a necessity. Security practitioners using traditional controls will not be able to cope with the speed, volume, and sophistication of attacks.

To thrive in the new era, organizations need to reduce the risks posed by AI and make the most of the opportunities it offers. That means securing their own intelligent systems and deploying their own intelligent defenses. AI is no longer a vision of the distant future: the time to start preparing is now.

Read More: How Artificial Intelligence Can Transform Influencer Marketing

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Deciphering Artificial Intelligence in the Future of Information Security - AiThority

‘When people speak up, its taken seriously:’ Charlize Theron on playing Megyn Kelly in ‘Bombshell’ – Desert Sun

The floodgates atFox News broke open in 2016.

Former anchor Gretchen Carlson suedformer Fox News chairman and CEO, the late RogerAiles,forsexual harassment.Other female employees, including anchorMegyn Kelly, also began speaking out abouta toxic culture in their workplace.

In Kelly's2016 memoir, "Settle for More," the anchorsaid Ailes"made sexual comments" and "offers of professional advancement in exchange for sexual favors.

Kelly also Business Insiderthat she reported Ailes' sexual advances to a supervisorbut was toldto simply steer clear of him.

The film "Bombshell," starring Charlize Theron asKelly,Nicole Kidman asCarlson andMargot Robbie as a composite character producer Kayla Pospisil chronicles thewomen's journey to expose the abuse.

Ailes resigned in July 2016, reportedly witha severance package of$40 million, and denied all allegations.

Charlize Theron stars as Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly in "Bombshell."(Photo: Hilary B Gayle)

But a culture of silencebegan to splinter.

A year later, film producer and Miramax co-founder Harvey Weinstein was embroiled in sexual abuse allegations,and #MeTootrended widely on social mediaas other men and women went public about surviving sexual harassment and abuse. Actors Louis C.K. and Kevin Spacey,Boston Symphony Orchestra music director James Levine,PBS and CBS host Charlie Rose, and Democratic Sen. Al Franken weresome of the high-profile starsaccused of sexual misconduct.

While the scandal at Fox News the most-watched news network in America with a reputation for conservative political commentary didn't surprise Theron,the women who spoke out did.

"There was a moment of thinking, Wow, what an unusual group of women to bring forth something like this and get thisresult," said Theron, who will receive the International Star Award, Actress for her performance in "Bombshell" at the 2020 Palm Springs International Film Festival.

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The actress, who has publicly discussed being sexually harassed during her first audition, saidHollywood is better because of the #MeToo movement.

"Weve seen real consequences for a lot of this behavior," Theron said in a recent interview with The Desert Sun."People are definitely trying to re-educate themselves and be more sensitive as to how they are on a set, and human resources is more involved. When people speak up, its taken seriously."

When Theron first received the offer to play the role of Kelly, however, she was uncertainbecauseof the anchor's well-known personality.

"I asked,Is that even feasible?Will I even be able to do this in a way where the movie will still shine and Im not distracted thinking, Does that even look like Megyn Kelly?" Theron said. "Its all those things,and it just took (director) Jay Roach as a filmmaker to get me to cross that line."

Charlize Theron (left) as Megyn Kelly and Liv Hewson (right) as Lily Balin in "Bombshell."

(Photo: Hilary B Gayle)

While it's common foractors to meet the subjects they are playing in biographical moviesespecially if the person is still aliveTheron chose not to meet withKelly.

"It was my choice. It just felt like too much pressure," Theron said."I had access to so much information that it would have been weird for her and too much pressure for me. If I didnt have access to what I had and all the sources I did, it might have been different. But I had a lot to work from."

To take on the role of Kelly, Theron used the same physical actingmethodshe did for the 2003 film, "Monster," in which shewon an Oscar for her performance asconvicted serial killerAileen Wuornos.Critics not only praised Theron's physical transformationfor that film, but also how well she portrayed someone with antisocial and borderline personality disorders.

Just as she focused onWuornos'physicality and body language, she found ituseful to do the same for"Bombshell."

"Theres a lot of the physical things on both Megyn and Aileen, their physicality told a lot of their emotional story," Theron said."It takes months to get to that conclusion, how someone is hearing themselves and how it expresses their emotional journey.

"You just try to get access to as muchinformation as you can," Theron continued."You look at it from an investigative angle and try to get anything you possibly can, and sit with it as long as you can tostart deciphering it and live with it, so what youre reading on a page might start to tell you a different story or you start seeing behaviorforming youto who the person is."

There aredifferences to playing a serial killer and a famed female news anchor, but Therontried to expressthe humanity of both despite their infamous personas.

Charlize Theron and Christina Ricci in a scene from the motion picture "Monster."(Photo: XXX NEWMARKET FILMS)

"I told Aileen'sstory during the last two years of her life with a few flashbacks, but its condensed into those last couple years of her life where circumstances came into play andshe found herself informed byher humanity," Theron said.

"Its the same of Megyn.The year and half we focus on atFox News, her circumstances were rough. She was a rock star thereand she was re-negotiating one of the biggest deals in their history. She put this thing behind her that happened 10 years earlier and didnt want to be defined by it."

(Before Kelly left Fox in 2017, she was re-negotiatingher contract andthe networkwas prepared to pay her more than $20 million a year,according to the New York Times.)

"(Kelly) had a moral dilemma of liking(Ailes) and thought he was someone who elevated her to where she was," Theron said."All those things come into play when you deal with a human being. Those are human conflicts I can wrap my head around. I might not necessarily agree with everything she says and does, but the circumstances are whats interesting to me."

Charlize Theron (left) as Megyn Kelly and John Lithgow (right) as Roger Ailes in the 2019 film "Bombshell."

(Photo: Courtesy of Hilary B Gayle)

'Pushing the envelope' with physicality

Before becomingan actress, Theronpursued a career in ballet but her knees gave out while studying at the Joffrey Ballet School in New York. She moved to Los Angeles in 1994 and was discovered by talent agent John Crosby.

Havingtrained as a ballet dancer,Theron said she finds iteasy to tell a character's story through physicality as she didto embody characters like Wuornos and Kelly.

"Physicality is something I pay more attention to than what theysay," Theron said."I think characters are like human beings. We dont always say whats going on and we tend to say whats not going on. Were deflecting and not talking about the things that are really going on. Its your body, its your postureand those things tell you way more about a person than whats coming out of their mouths."

Charlize Theron is a stressed-out mom whose perspective is changed when she receives a gift: a nanny named "Tully."(Photo: Kimberly French/Focus Features)

Butthisfocus on physicality can have consequences.In 2005, Theron starred in an action film based on the animated series "on Flux"and injured herself while performing a stunt in the movie.

"I did a back-handspring and I landed on my neck and I herniated a disk between fiveand six," Theron said. "You can always get hurt. Youre pushing the envelope with this physical stuff. Its the work you put in before, its the many months youve trained for something and you get it perfect."

"Theres always a chance somethingcan go wrong. You work around it and thats part of what those movies are."

For Theron, physicality is a window into a character's humanity. Throughout her career, she's taken on roles that allow for honest dialogue peopledealingwith real-life situationsthat only seem to get worse, or don't resolve by the end credits.

Prior to "Bombshell," Kellyworked on two films with director Jason Reitmanknown for "Juno" and "Up in the Air" who she says "taps into interesting human behavior." She playedan alcoholic, young adult series writerin the 2011 movie"Young Adult" and a pregnant struggling mother of twoin last year's "Tully."

"I tend to have to push on directors the not-so-human behavior because its much easier to do things that are easier to swallow and wrap your arms around," Theron said."A lot of directors are in the business to tell those stories because its easier. The more the audience likesyou, the better the movie is."

Charlize Theron (left) stars as Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly in the film, "Bombshell."(Photo: HILARY B. GAYLE)

As a mother of two adopted children, and having friends who struggled with postpartum depression, she found her role in "Tully" to be important in educating the public about anotherreal-life subject affecting women.

"That story was very personal to me," Theron said."It was her experience with her third child and I had a friend while I was making that film who was going through severe postpartum. Its something we dont talk about enough. I thought she represented so much of what motherhood is and nobody wants to admit."

Throughout her career, Theron hasn'tshiedawayfrom roles that offer an honest, unflinching look atcontroversial issues including those affecting women that may not be widely talked about, frompostpartum depression to sexual harassment.

"I can see a lot of change," Theron said of the #MeToo movement's effect onHollywood."It doesnt mean we dont have a long way to go, but I think where we are today versus five years ago is night and day."

What: Palm Springs International Film Festival Film Awards Gala

Where: Palm Springs Convention Center,277 N. Avenida Caballeros, Palm Springs

When: Jan. 2, 2020

Catch up on all the action at deserts.co

Charlize Theron in "Bombshell."

(Photo: Hilary B Gayle/SMPSP)

Desert Sun reporter Brian Blueskye covers artsand entertainment. Hecan be reached at brian.blueskye@desertsun.com or (760) 778-4617. Support local news, subscribe to The Desert Sun.

Originally posted here:
'When people speak up, its taken seriously:' Charlize Theron on playing Megyn Kelly in 'Bombshell' - Desert Sun

Is Nothing Sacred? Religion and Sex – Psychology Today

After being raised in a Mormon family in a devoutly religious Mormon community in Idaho, Jordan Moon went on the traditional Mormon mission. He then attended Brigham Young Universitys Idaho campus, where a strict code of conduct prohibited not only alcohol consumption, but even facial hair.Jordan excelled as a psychology student there, and even published a paper on the psychology of moral judgments.

After graduating from BYU, Jordan (who now sports a long beard, and likes to drink an occasional beer) came to Arizona State to study the psychology of religion with my colleague Adam Cohen.Although he is only midway through graduate school, Jordan has already distinguished himself by publishing several papers in prestigious journals.One of Jordans papers, recently released inCurrent Directions in Psychological Science, has the provocative title Is Nothing Sacred: Religion, sex, and reproductive strategies.

The paper argues that people often think about religion in terms of profound supernatural and spiritual ideas: concepts about eternal afterlife, immortal battles of good versus evil, transcending the flesh and devotion to the divine. Those interested in the psychology of religion have also studied the rituals designed to lift peoples thoughts and behaviors out of the metaphorical gutter of sex and selfishness toward lives full of meaning, contemplation, and community service.

But the papers argument is that maybe those high and holy religious beliefs and practices are often secretly serving base selfish and sexual motivations. Religion may, on this view, be an instrument of peoples preferred reproductive strategies.

Do religions cause monogamy, or do monogamous people choose to be religious?

Social scientists have traditionally presumed that ones religious upbringing is a powerful determinant of ones sexual behavior. Most religions indeed have strong rules prohibiting premarital sex, extramarital sex, and even private erotic thoughts.I was in Catholic school when pubescent hormones rudely disruptedthe innocence of my childhood, and I remember feeling intense guilt about my sinful desires to look inside the provocative covers of the pornographic magazines on sale at the local newsstand. Aregular Saturday ritual was to stand in line outside the confessional boxes at St. Josephs Catholic church, awaiting Father McNamaras absolution for those evil thoughts, contingent on my saying five Our Fathers and ten Hail Marys as penance.

But some analyses by my colleague Jason Weeden suggest that, rather than religion dictatorially determining ones attitudes toward sex, the causal arrow often goes in the opposite direction.For adults, their sexual strategies appear to determine their level of commitment to religion.People who are inclined toward monogamy choose to be religious, because traditional religions provide supportfor a family lifestyle, and discourage promiscuity.Promiscuity poses problems for family life from both the husbands and the wifes perspective. If there is a lot of promiscuity in the local society, then husbands (and their resources) may be easily tempted away from the responsibilities of fathering and family.

Men are, after all, notoriously easy, as attested to by data suggesting they have very low thresholds for a one-night stand, for example (Clark & Hatfield; Li & Kenrick, Kenrick et al., 1990; 1993).But if so, why would men, married or otherwise, want promiscuity discouraged?Weeden links that to paternal uncertainty: a married man is investing heavily in his offspring, and in a totally promiscuous society, the odds would be higher that his female partners children might not be his.

Not everyone wants strong constraints on sexuality, though.Highly educated people often wait many years past puberty to settle down, as they delay starting a family for up to a decade while attending college and graduate school. Those individuals do not want strong prohibitions against premarital sexuality and birth control because it would mean theyd need to remain celibate for many years, and completely suppress their post-pubertal sexual urges until they get their Ph.D., M.D., or law degree, and then wait a little longer until theyfind a partner with whom to settle down.Weeden has suggested that the links between religion and reproductive strategy account for many of the heated moral conflicts between the religious right and the irreligious academically elitists on the left.

Several large data sets now provide results consistent with this view of reproductive religiosity, suggesting that peoples preferred mating strategies strongly influence their attraction toward, or repulsion from, religion. Weeden finds that the normally high correlations between religious beliefs and other moral attitudes shrink if you control for peoples attitudes towards sex.And Mike McCullough, another prominent expert on the psychology of religion, finds that many people tend to become especially religious during the years when they have children, and then to become less devout later in life.

The reproductive religiosity model helps solve another logical puzzle.It has often been presumed that men use religiosity to control womens sexuality. But then why is it that women are much more likely to embrace religious beliefs than are men? This becomes less puzzling when one considers that, because of their intrinsically higher initial investment in offspring, women are less likely to benefit from a sexually unrestricted strategy, and more likely to benefit if mens unrestricted inclinations are kept in check.On this view, women may be actively choosing religion rather than being passively enslaved by it.

Anti-atheist bias may be linked to anti-promiscuity bias

Jordan Moon has contributed to another thought-provoking body of literature, on the prejudice against atheists. People really dont trust atheists.Its not just that religious people trust people who share their beliefs; they trust people of other religions more than they trust atheists.Even atheists themselves trust religious people more than they do other atheists (Gervais, 2013).

Moon and his colleagues have shown, consistently, that people trust religious people more than non-religious people.However, they did a clever study in which they gave judges information not only about someones religious beliefs, but also about their mating strategy. The results suggest that, if you know an atheist also happens to be a committed monogamist, you wouldtrust that person more than youd trust a religious person who is non-monogamous.Those findings suggest that the distrust of atheists is driven in large part by presumptions about their mating strategies (Moon, Krems, & Cohen, 2018).

Standing in the gutter looking up at the stars

We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking up at the stars.Oscar Wilde

Thinking about human thought and behavior in evolutionary terms often involves mucking around in the gutter, taking a hard look at the underside of human nature.It might seem unseemly to explore the connections between religion and sex.But evolutionary psychologists delve into these topics with one eye on the stars, trying to integrate what we learn about the good, the bad, and the ugly aspects of human nature with what we know about the good, the bad, and the sometimes shocking behaviors of other animal species, from barking hyenas to resplendent peacocks.

Yes, everything human beings do can ultimately be connected to reproduction.My students and other evolutionary psychologists have done research connecting lowly reproductive motives to charity, artistic creativity, self-actualization, and even the search for meaning in life (Kenrick, 2010; Griskevicius, et al., 2006; 2007; Krems, Neel, & Kenrick, 2017).But understanding how such exalted human pursuits connect with the rest of the natural world does not diminish them, any more than does understanding the displays of peacocks or the beautiful songs of hermit thrushes.Its also important to remember that, for human beings, successful reproduction is about more than just sex (see What drives us more? Sex or Family Values?).

Our ancestors reproductive success depended not only on finding a mate, but also on maintaining a long-term relationship with that mate, caring for their children, developing a network of friends and relatives to protect and assist one another, and winning the respect and trust of those friends and relatives. And religion has intimate connections to every one of these fundamental human goals.

For some additional background on the Reproductive Religiosity Model

More:
Is Nothing Sacred? Religion and Sex - Psychology Today

End-of-the-year book and podcast suggestions from Stanford Law School | The Dish – Stanford Report

by Stanford Law School Communications on December 19, 2019 3:52 pm

If you are still in search of the perfect winter break book or podcast, here are a few suggestions from the faculty at Stanford Law School.

For instance, RALPH RICHARD BANKS, the Jackson Eli Reynolds Professor of Law, suggests The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead:

The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead is a good one. This book has relatable characters who experience the cruelty and unpredictability of life, and form a bond that carries them through.

NORA FREEMAN ENGSTROM, professor of law, recommends Alas, Babylon by Pat Frank:

Alas, Babylon

Each family vacation we pick one book to read aloud and last summer we enjoyed a stunner my husband had remembered fondly from his youth, Alas, Babylon. Part Swiss Family Robinson atomic age survival tale, part Cold War history lesson, part (even) comedy, we loved every page. Full of pluck, daring and heart, the book is captivating for young and old alike.

WILLIAM GOULD, the Charles A. Beardsley Professor of Law, Emeritus, suggests In Hoffas Shadow by Jack Goldsmith:

The big hit of recent months wasIn Hoffas Shadow by Harvard law Professor Jack Goldsmith, whose stepfather was Teamster boss and Hoffas gofer and the FBIs prime suspect as the man who drove Hoffa to his killers. It is written well, in a style that you wouldnt expect from a law professor. Its about Goldsmiths relationship with his stepfather, his reconciliation with the man he had rejected as an impediment to his own advancement and his search for the truth about Hoffas disappearance. Its a book about Hoffa, his hard and violent struggle in the Teamster leadership, his clashes with RFK (whom Goldsmith despises), and his criminal trials. The book gets as close as any to figuring the whodunnit in Hoffas death. The description of the day of his disappearance will have your heart in your mouth.

PAMELA KARLAN, the Kenneth and Harle Montgomery Professor of Public Interest Law, recommends Silicon City: San Francisco in the Long Shadow of the Valley by Cary McClellan, JD15:

You might think you know the place but Carys book will show you things youve never seen before in an almost cinematographic way. Funny, heartbreaking, unforgettable.

DEBORAH SIVAS, the Luke W. Cole Professor of Environmental Law, recommends the NPR podcast Hidden Brain:

Each episode explores the science behind human behavior, but does so in a narrative storytelling fashion that engages a non-expert audience, sometimes making me laugh, sometimes making me cry, but always making me think.

Read more suggestions on the Stanford Law School website.

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End-of-the-year book and podcast suggestions from Stanford Law School | The Dish - Stanford Report