All posts by medical

Faculty Recognized for Achievements at Awards Recognition Ceremony – Southern Miss Now

University of Southern Mississippi faculty members were honored for achievements in teaching, research, service and leadership at the annual Faculty Awards Recognition Ceremony, held May 5 at the Trent Lott Center on the Hattiesburg campus. The event was sponsored by USMs Office of the Provost and Faculty Senate.

Faculty members and their awards/recognition include the following:

*Higher Education Appreciate Day-Working for Academic Excellence (HEADWAE) - Dr. Jiu Ding, Mathematics.

*Nina Bell Suggs Endowed Professorship (2016-17) Dr. Allison Abra (History), Dr. Matthew Casey, History; Dr. Song Guo, Chemistry and Biochemistry; Dr. Donald Sacco, Psychology.

*USM nominee, IHL Diversity Award for Excellence Dr. Mohamed Elasri, Biological Sciences.

*University Excellence Awards Tisha Zelner, Excellence in Service; Dr. Mac Alford, Excellence in Teaching.

*Grand Marshal Dr. David R. Davies, Mass Communication and Journalism.

*USM nominees, National Endowment for the Humanities Award Dr. Matthew Casey History, Dr. Andrew Ross, History.

*Faculty Senate Junior Faculty Awards Dr. Alexandra Valint, English (Teaching); Allen Chen, Psychology (Creative Activity); Dr. Donald Sacco, Psychology (Faculty Research). *Aubrey Keith and Ella Ginn Lucas Endowment for Faculty Excellence Awards Dr. Dan Capper, Religion; Dr. Matthew Casey, History; Dr. Westley Follett, History; Dr. Joshua Haynes, History; Dr. Mark Huff, Psychology; Dr. Shalid Karim, Biological Sciences; Dr. Lucas Keefer, Psychology; Dr. Webb Parker, Music; Dr. Ann Blankenship, Educational Research and Administration; Dr. Jonathon Pluskota, Mass Communication and Journalism; Dr. Stephanie Smith, Psychology; Dr. Timothy Tesh, Music; Dr. Kimberly Ward, Speech and Hearing Sciences; Dr. Matthew Ward, Anthropology and Sociology; Dr. Fei Xue, Mass Communication and Journalism.

*Summer Grants for Improvement of Instruction Dr. Hugh Broome, Chemistry and Biochemistry; Dr. Max Grivno and Dr. Jill Abney, History; Dr. James Lambers, Mathematics; Cynthia Littlejohn and Melissa Gutierrez, Biological Sciences; Dr. Andrew Ross, History; Dr. Jeremy Scott, Physics and Astronomy; Dr. Katie Smith, Anthropology and Sociology; and Dr. Alan Thompson, Criminal Justice.

*Association for College and University Educators (ACUE) Faculty Development Institute Certificate in Active Learning Dr. Cindy Blackwell, Mass Communication and Journalism; Dr. Ann Blankenship, Educational Research and Administration; Dr. Hugh Broome, Chemistry and Biochemistry; Dr. Nick Ciraldo, Music; Dr. Mike Davis, Biological Sciences; Haley Dozier, doctoral student, Mathematics; Dr. Mary Funk, Interdisciplinary Studies; Dr. Max Grivno, History; Melissa Gutierrez, Biological Sciences; Linda Hanson, Chemistry and Biochemistry; Dr. Katie James, Anthropology and Sociology; Dr. Sungsoo Kim, Economic Development, Tourism and Sport Management; Cynthia Littlejohn, Biological Sciences; Dr. Courtney Luckhardt, History; Candice Mitchell, graduate student, Mathematics; Marlene Naquin, Mathematics; Dr. Rebecca Newton, Nursing; Dr. Jennifer Osborne, Curriculum, Instruction and Special Education; Dr. Jonathon Pluskota, Mass Communication and Journalism; Dr. Jennifer Regan, Biological Sciences; Renee Rupp, Nutrition and Food Systems; Dr, Gregory Smith, Curriculum, Instruction and Special Education; Dr. Katie Smith, Anthropology and Sociology; Corwin Stanford, Mathematics; Dr. Steven Stelk, Finance, Real Estate and Business Law; Dr. Gallayanee Yaoyuneyong, Marketing and Merchandising; Dr. Zhu Huiqing, Mathematics; Melissa Ziegler, Kinesiology.

*Innovation in Online Teaching Award Dr. James T. Fox, Educational Research and Administration.

*University Research Council Innovation Awards Dr. Donald Sacco, Psychology, Basic Research Award; Dr. Philip Bates, Chemistry and Biochemistry, Applied Research Award; Mark Rigsby, Art and Design; Creative Activities Award; Dr. Robson Storey, Polymers and High Performance Materials, Academic Partnership Award; Dr. Vijay Rangachari Chemistry and Biochemistry, Multidisciplinary Award; Dr. Marie Danforth, Anthropology and Sociology, Research Advocate Award; Khem Raj Budachetri, Biological Sciences, Graduate Student Award.

USM Faculty Senate Resolutions announced at the ceremony included those honoring recently deceased faculty members Dr. Stan Kuczaj, Psychology; Dr. Ed Nissan, Economics; and Dolly Loyd, Marketing.

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Faculty Recognized for Achievements at Awards Recognition Ceremony - Southern Miss Now

Grey’s Anatomy Season 14 Details – POPSUGAR

Grey's Anatomy Season 14 Is Shaping Up to Be Pretty Dramatic

Even though we only just witnessed the season 13 finale of Grey's Anatomy, it's never too soon to look ahead. In the wake of everything that has happened, it's clear there are plenty of planted seeds that will surely bloom once the show returns in the Fall. Granted, Stephanie will no longer be with us, but with a few new faces, a couple of new flames, and that trademark drama we've always loved, there's plenty to look forward to. There isn't much available information about the 14th season of Grey's, but we do have potential things figured out.

Owen's sister is alive! At the very end of the finale, Owen reconnects with his long-lost sibling, Megan. This could cause all kind of upheaval. It will certainly change Owen's entire life. Then there's Riggs, who was in love with Megan before she vanished. The timing is terrible: Meredith has just opened herself up romantically to Riggs, and now she risks losing him. Will Megan and Riggs be able to pick up where they left off?

There's also a chance Megan will join the ranks at Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital. Once she recovers from the years of trauma, obviously. But if she does end up on the hospital staff, it'll be interesting to see what kind of ripple effect it has on everyone else.

And by "might" we mean "almost definitely." By the time the finale rolled around, the show had been dropping hints that Maggie and Jackson would pair up. Even in the last episode, April tells Maggie that she's pretty sure Jackson has feelings for her. The question is, will either of them act on it? Call us crazy, but we're still holding out hope for Japril.

Now that Minnick has been fired, there's a strong chance she's leaving Seattle. It seems like Arizona is about to have another wound to tend to unless, for some strange reason, Minnick sticks around. We'll admit, we didn't exactly love Minnick, but it was nice to see Arizona happy!

The storyline with Jo's husband has only heated more and more since we first found out. At the end of the season, Alex meets him in person but fails to follow through with any actual action. The thing is, the show wouldn't have put a face to the name unless we're going meet him again. We have a feeling he's going to be a major player in the episodes to come.

We caught a glimmer of love remaining between Owen and Amelia near the end of season 13 when they embrace and cry it out together in the elevator. Is there a chance Amelia is coming around? Could Owen's sister have softened his hard shell? It's absolutely possible.

ABC has already released the Fall TV lineup for 2017, and Grey's will continue to dominate the Thursday night spot. The show has almost always kicked off the season near the end of September, so we've just got four months to wait.

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Grey's Anatomy Season 14 Details - POPSUGAR

Anatomy of a hunger strike – News24

On May 10th the Ahmed Kathrada Foundation issued a statement by its late founders fellow former Robben Islander, 86-year old Laloo Isu Chiba, that called on South Africans to join a 24-hour food strike in solidarity with the more than thousand Palestinian political prisoners on hunger strike for improved prison conditions.

The prisoners demands include the right to higher education study, appropriate medical care, and an end to solitary confinement, imprisonment without trial and the denial of family visits.

As a prisoner on Robben Island for 18 years from 1964, and a detainee subsequently under South Africas 1985 State of Emergency, these demands have a painful echo for Isu and his own hunger strikes to improve prison conditions.

I am duty bound today to support the Palestinians who are in the same condition that we were in all those years ago, Isu says in the statement by the foundation. And he adds in conversation with me that he cannot but feel for political prisoners held fundamentally unjustly anywhere in the world.

I had the privilege of being detained with Isu for the length of the 1985/86 State of Emergency, and participated with him in two hunger strikes at Johannesburg Prison. The Palestinians hunger strike, and Isus solidarity with it, inevitably evokes our own experience of hunger strikes. These took place under the guidance of Isu and felt imbued as if with fatherly bequest by our leaders on the Island.

We had already been in detention for about four months when a well-known student leader was brought in.

Hunger strike! Hunger strike! he began shouting, literally within the very first hour of his detention, as the scores of us queued for some or other reason, perhaps for food, in a passageway in the bowels of the prison. Isu was visibly irritated.

This is not the way to behave, he muttered. Its ill-discipline.

Sure enough. A hunger strike, as Isu imparted, is a tool of struggle to be strategically deployed, requires proper preparation, and should not be undertaken on a whim with feigned militancy.

First, the need for consultation and mobilisation. The two full and a bit dormitory cells in which we were locked up, 23 hours a day, buzzed with intense small group discussions on the proposal to embark on a hunger strike, the demands it would be in support of, and the personal sacrifice it in turn would demand.

Our demands ranged from tables and chairs for eating, more time out of our cells and visitor rights, to our unconditional release, the withdrawal of troops from the townships, and the end of the State of Emergency.

Not a morsel of food was to be consumed during the strike. Only water was to be drunk, periodically a little at a time to ensure life-saving hydration, with one mug in the evening taken with a spoon of sugar. This was to offset, to a minimal extent at least, the expenditure of stored energy. Boy, did I look forward to that glass of sugar water at the end of every day! It tasted so good and sweet, and the prospect anchored each hungry day.

It was crucial to have virtually everyone on board. Eating by anyone would be exploited by the prison authorities and the security police to undermine the strike as a whole as sham. Of course, the frail, much older and very much younger among us were offered exemption from the strike. No one chose to be exempt. But the few Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) aligned activists detained with us refused as was their wont, to join with us as United Democratic Front (UDF) and African National Congress (ANC) aligned activists in any joint action. We were, however, more than sufficient in number and cohesion as a detainee population to go ahead with the hunger strikes.

Among the decisions was to determine and commit in advance to the period to go without food. Our first hunger strike, in November 1985, was for three days, and the second, in February 1986, for ten days. On neither occasion was this planned period of strike revealed to the authorities. They were to be left with the impression that it was open-ended and ongoing so as to apply maximum weight to its impact. We knew, again from the lessons of Robben Island shared with us by Isu, that to go beyond 10 days was to begin to do harm to our internal organs.

It is an irony that the hunger strike appeals to concern for the imprisoned by the very ones that harmfully imprison them. Considerations like the spotlight of the media and public backlash may motivate political concern, but the hunger strike is truly a Gandhian tactic of self-sacrifice to harm, to force the oppressors to confront their conscience and the brutalisation of their humanity.

The prison doctors in particular, who daily weighed us and tested our urine, openly expressed their concern for our health and exhorted us to end the strike. This even as the prison authorities put out statements saying we were falsely claiming to be on a hunger strike while in fact eating much like the tactics being employed by the Israeli state against the Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti and his fellow hunger strikers. Food was still served daily and even left at the entrances of our cells to tempt.

The Gandhian motive of the hunger strike was most forcefully brought home to me in 1989 during the later open-ended hunger strike by detainees held under the following State of Emergency, which was declared in June 1986. Then hundreds of detainees across the country went on a hunger strike for up to 24 days before its end was negotiated with the Minister of Law and Order by Archbishop Desmond Tutu and the Reverend Allan Boesak. Many were hospitalised, facing risk to their lives.

I remember sitting at the time with the struggle lawyer Krish Naidoo at his offices near the Carlton Centre, and said to him: If they have any humanity, theyll respond to the demands of the detainees to be released.

Adriaan Vlok, the then Minister of Law and Order, indeed did begin to release detainees. This stirred in me the first hope that oppressor and oppressed, black and white, could find one another. When post-apartheid Vlok went about, in penance and atonement, to wash the feet of those who had been harmed by his incumbency and complicity in apartheid, it came as no surprise to me.

The dates for the start of our hunger strikes were projected weeks in advance and necessary planning and organisation was undertaken in the lead up. This included establishing channels of communication with comrades and solidarity organisations like the Detainees Parents Support Committee on the outside to organise solidarity support action and mobilise the press; drafting statements and memoranda and arranging for their smuggling out; building up and storing rations of sugar for that all important once daily drink; and most vitally, psyching up and preparing ourselves mentally.

The first of our hunger strikes, for three days, with no food whatsoever, morning, day and night, seemed a formidable undertaking for those of us for whom it was an absolute first. I recall an apprehension too about how the authorities would respond to our defiance, and total uncertainty about it as a whole new terrain of our relationship with them. But we were now doing something about our situation; about the hopeless, helpless, stifling conditions of imprisonment; feeling power and agency course through our bodies just as fat, muscle mass and strength left it.

Isu must have known that three days was a necessary first step, preparatory for a bigger, longer strike to come; and strategically an opening gambit that allowed for escalation.

The hardest part of the second hunger strike was the first three days. Thereafter we seemed to settle on some track of quiet, peaceful, ongoing gravitation, the feelings of hunger dissipating. Our bodies gave way to dramatic weight loss and ever more weakness. My body memory serves an image of movement like that of a chameleon.

In some way, I think of this state as a dangerous one, for when the 10th day of no food whatsoever came, we could easily just have gone on. This may be because ones stomach shrinks and hunger is not felt as acutely. Researchers say the body begins burning fat stores instead of glucose and this is accompanied by the cessation of hunger pains and feelings of well-being, even of euphoria.

Thankfully we began to win some of our immediate demands, including the delivery of steel tables and benches to the kitchen, and called off the hunger strike after the planned 10 days. Isu negotiated with the prison head to provide us with oats on the morning after, not something we had ever had in prison and which I was not particularly familiar with. To this day, I relish oats - and it always takes me back to that morning of its blessed offering.

At the time of writing the Palestinian political prisoners have gone without food for almost 40 days. A Palestinian media committee covering the hunger strike reports that many are in a critical health condition, which includes vomiting, loss of vision and fainting.

Isu is deeply concerned for the Palestinian political prisoners in the face of a stubborn Israeli government. He is outraged at the denial of basic rights to them in their suffered imprisonment, and hopes that a tragedy is averted. The Israelis seem to have expressed some favour for the Thatcher option, he says. Margaret Thatcher, then British Prime Minister, intransigently allowed the death by hunger strike of Bobby Sands and nine other Irish Republican Army prisoners in 1981.

The Palestinian political prisoners will either win some of their demands or expose the Israeli states brutalisation. For the hunger strike is an assertion of humanity, for humanity.

- Feizel Mamdoo is a filmmaker and heritage, arts and culture practitioner.

Disclaimer: News24 encourages freedom of speech and the expression of diverse views. The views of columnists published on News24 are therefore their own and do not necessarily represent the views of News24.

24.com encourages commentary submitted via MyNews24. Contributions of 200 words or more will be considered for publication.

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Anatomy of a hunger strike - News24

The anatomy of a drug website: 5 pharma tactics to be wary of – HealthNewsReview.org

Imagine you have an amazing office visit with Dr. Wunderbarwho offers the following:

Clearly, Dr. Wunderbar is wonderful.

Problem is there is no Dr. Wunderbar.

But there are plenty of drug websites that offer all this and more using the slickest of graphics, videos, and eye-catching statistics andwithout having to deal with that crowded waiting room, stodgydoctor, and ho-hum degrees on the wall.

Direct-to-consumer marketing of prescription drugs was approved(New Zealand 1981, US 1997, and Brazil 2008 ) for the most part before the internet emerged as the most far-reachingmarketing tool of ourtime. After all, the internet isin our office, home, car, phone, andeven our wristwatch.

It has proven to be a target-rich venue for the pharmaceutical industry, and one they have capitalized on with techniques that are sometimes informative but can also be manipulative, misleading, and even potentially harmful.

Lets look at a few drug websites to see what sort of strategiesare commonly employed and how they can be hazardous to your health.

About a week ago I wrote a story about the only FDA-approved drug to treat a condition called pseudobulbar affect, or PBA. That drug is called Nuedexta and like so many new drugs that pharma companies are heavily invested in it has its own website: http://www.nuedexta.com.

The website is a virtual blueprint for the 5 marketing tools I see most commonly used to hook customers (pharma would likely counter they are 5 tools to educate). Here they are:

The primary goal of these websites is not hard to spot. Theyare clearly trying to expand the pool of people who are eligible tobe diagnosed with the condition their drug treats. The companies will counter that this is simply an attempt to identify the undiagnosed. But, it not only increases the demandfor their drug, but also runs the hugerisk of diagnosing people without the condition. For example, I took the Neudexta quiz and it looks like I may have pseudobulbar affect:

And here are the 7 questions, of which I answered occasionally to all 7 because thats my honest reply. Of note, had I answered rarely to all 7 questions Iwould have scored >13 and still been considered a possible candidate for PBA:

After convincing you that you may have a disease or that you need their medication for the condition youve already been diagnosed with its typical for drug websites to offer a helping hand in paying for their drug.

Ad for type 2 diabetes drug, Farixa (dapagliflozin)

Financial support tabs (or co-pay calculators) are on most drug websites and seem harmlessenough. ButAlan Cassels, a drug policy researcher at the University of Victoria and a regular contributor toour blog, says thats not necessarily the case:

Co-pay or coupon programs have the veneer of charity and corporate philanthropy but they are only giving deals on marginal newer drugs, when there areoften cheaper and more effective generic drugs available like metformin instead of Farixa. Also, once a patient enters one of these programs they become a data point. Youve now established a direct line between the drug company and the patient. Patients can become dependent on that company for their supply of drugs. And the company can turn around and use your data for further marketing, patient reminders, gifts, and other types of largesse.

Cassels goes on to point out that most of these drugs are usually third line treatment options. In other words, clearly not the safest, most affordable, or most effective drugs available.

If a drug isnt worth taking, says Cassels, then making it cheaper doesnt make it any more attractive or worthwhile.

Andas veteran health care journalist Trudy Lieberman wrote on this blog, what on the surface may look like a win-win with patients paying less and drug companies gaining a loyalcustomer actually shieldsus from knowing the true price of the drugs. While a select few patients may see savings, the high cost of the drug will be shifted to someone else.

I cant tell whether this Allergan website for Chronic Dry Eye disease or CDE is incredibly sexy, bizarre, or ingenious.

Its called Eyepowerment and uses a video (soundtrack is the song Bette Davis Eyes popularized by Kim Karnes in 1981) featuring famous women to inform us that: Before We Had Our Voice, We Had Our Eyes. After a parade of recognizable faces were told: Burning, itchy, dry eyes may send the wrong message. These are symptoms of Chronic Dry Eyes.

Were led to believe this is a medical disease when its actually a symptomassociated with some very serious illnesses. Andit affects a lot of people. How many?

Well, in 2014, Allergan said20 million people were affected by CDE. In 2015, it was 25 million people. This year it jumped to 33 million people. And one ophthalmologist (who in 2015 made over $33,000 consulting for Allergan and other companies) claims over 60 million people worldwide may suffer from CDE.

Drug companies have a business to run. So whats the matter with using these 5 common strategies to reach consumers? Lets answer that question with these questions:

These websites are high budget and very sophisticated. They can be visually stunning and when you combine that with the effective tactics mentioned above they have tremendous potential to influence both medical opinion and health behavior. All the more reason that we as consumers need to stay wary of both their intent and content.

Why? Because these sites can be hazardous to your health just ask your doctor.

With the cost of medications approaching stratospheric levels, criticisms of the drug industry have been

In December the Chicago Tribune published an expos, the third in a three-part series on

Last week the FDA approved two more pricey new drugs labeled breakthroughs by some news

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The anatomy of a drug website: 5 pharma tactics to be wary of - HealthNewsReview.org

Grey’s Anatomy comes of age, Entertainment News & Top Stories … – The Straits Times

Those who tuned into Grey's Anatomy when it first aired in 2005 may remember the constant shenanigans of its junior doctors, which became a hallmark of the popular show. But after 12 seasons, those surgical interns have grown up, so do not expect them to be too preoccupied with getting frisky in a supplies closet.

Star Jesse Williams, who has played plastic surgeon Jackson Avery on the show since 2009, says: "You've seen a lot of characters go through 13 years of growth and they're not kids anymore."

This is why the new season, which debuts in Singapore on Friday at 9pm (Star World, Singtel TV Channel 301 and StarHub TV Channel 501), will tackle more grown-up problems such as "what is it like to be an adult with a marriage or divorce and kids who are growing up".

"They're not 20something interns making out in the closet. This year, we've really embraced the evolution of the characters," the actor tells reporters in Los Angeles earlier this year.

Williams, 35, confirms that this will also be true of Jackson and his ex-wife and colleague April Kepner, played by Sarah Drew, who joined the cast in 2009 too. "We are getting older and dealing with the divorce, while also having a lot of responsibility in the hospital," he says.

Over the years, the long-running show has seen an expanding cast of players, thanks to a soap opera-esque string of deaths, estrangements and secret relatives coming out of the woodwork at the fictional Grey-Sloan Memorial Hospital in Seattle.

But for Season 13, the series will refocus on two of the original characters, Meredith Grey (Ellen Pompeo) and Alex Karev (Justin Chambers) - the only two left of the group of five surgical interns from Season 1.

This was a welcome development for some of the older cast.

"There's a lot of us on the show - there are multiple generations represented," says Williams. "So we're all behind that idea of returning a little bit to what made the show so great in the beginning, which was following these characters."

Another consequence of being on TV for so long is that the show's fan base is evolving too.

Some viewers have been watching for more than a decade, while others are only just discovering the series because of re-runs or the availability of older seasons on Netflix in the United States.

Drew, 36, says: "I feel like most of the people that stop me on the streets are 13-year-old girls. My niece, who's about to turn 16, just streamed the whole series over her summer break two summers ago and became an immediate, diehard fan. And I've heard so many stories like that."

The actress, who is married to academic Peter Lanfer and has children aged two and five, adds: "It's neat to see how this show can inspire a whole generation of people and then pick up a whole new generation of people and inspire them as well."

Williams notes that not a lot of television series "can make that claim right now".

"And I think there are more new fans than there are existing fans, who have always been with the show," says the star, who has two children, aged one and three, with real-estate broker wife Aryn Drake-Lee, 34.

Some of the younger Grey's Anatomy viewers are even contemplating careers in medicine as a result.

"With a lot of them whom I hear from, it really opens a lens into the medical world and (makes them think) maybe being a doctor is something they should add to their list of possibilities," Williams says.

"Because you're catching them at an age where they don't know what they want to do with their life."

Drew cites figures showing that since 2005, "the number of women who have gone into surgical training" in the US has risen and she would like to think the show has something to do with it.

"They have seen a growth in women pursuing this field of work, starting from when the show came out. It's pretty cool."

Grey's Anatomy Season 13 premieres with a double episode on Friday at 9pm on Star World (Singtel TV Channel 301 and StarHub TV Channel 501). New double episodes will air at 9pm on subsequent Fridays.

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Grey's Anatomy comes of age, Entertainment News & Top Stories ... - The Straits Times

New to Netflix this June: Grey’s Anatomy, Orange Is the New Black, and more – EW.com

With the temperature spiking, you might find yourself seeking some shade indoors, and Netflix is here to make sure youre making the most of your time out of the sun.

Come June, the digital oasis will boast season 13 ofGreys Anatomy,Disneys Oscar-nominatedMoana, and Mel Brooks classicYoung Frankenstein, to name a few. Netflix will also be premiering their new original film,Okja, as well as the first seasons of original seriesGLOWand Gypsy. Plus, the ladies of Litchfield will be back forOrange Is the New Blackshotly anticipated fifth season.

Take a look at the full list of everything comingto Netflix in June.

Available June 11 Night 13 Going on 30 Amor.com (Love.com) Arrow: Season 5 Burlesque Catfight Catwoman Chingo Bling: They Cant Deport Us All Days of Grace Devils Bride Full Metal Jacket How the Grinch Stole Christmas Intersection: Season 2 Kardashian: The Man Who Saved OJ Simpson Little Boxes Mutant Busters: Season 2 My Left Foot Off Camera with Sam Jones: Series 3 Playing It Cool Rounders Spring (Primavera) The 100: Season 4 The Ant Bully The Bucket List The Queen The Sixth Sense Vice West Coast Customs: Season 3 Yam Young Frankenstein Zodiac

Available June 2Comedy Bang! Bang!: Season 5, Part 2 Flaked: Season 2 NETFLIX ORIGINAL Inspector Gadget: SEason 3 NETFLIX ORIGINAL Los ltimos de Filipinas Lucid Dream NETFLIX ORIGINAL FILM Saving Banksy The Homecoming: Collection

Available June 3 Acapulco La vida va Blue Gold: American Jeans Headshot Three Tunnel War on Everyone

Available June 4TURN: Washingtons Spies:Season 3

Available June 5Suite Franaise

Available June 7Disturbing the Peace Dreamworks Trolls

Available June 9My Only Love Song: Season 1 NETFLIX ORIGINAL Orange Is the New Black: Season 5 NETFLIX ORIGINAL Shimmer Lake NETFLIX ORIGINAL FILM

Available June 10Black Snow (Nieve Negra) Daughters of the Dust Havenhurst Sword Master

Available June 13Oh, Hello On Broadway NETFLIX ORIGINAL

Available June 14Quantico: Season 2

Available June 15Marco Luque: Tamo Junto NETFLIX ORIGINAL Marvels Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.: Season 4 Mr. Gaga: A True Story of Love and Dance

Available June 16Aquarius: Season 2 Counterpunch NETFLIX ORIGINAL El Chapo: Season 1 The Ranch: Part 3 NETFLIX ORIGINAL World of Winx: Season 2 NETFLIX ORIGINAL

Available June 17Greys Anatomy: Season 13 Scandal: Season 6 The Stanford Prison Experiment

Available June 18Shooter: Season 1

Available June 20Amar Akbar & Tony Disneys Moana Rory Scovel Tries Stand-Up For The First Time NETFLIX ORIGINAL

Available June 21Baby Daddy: Season 6 Young & Hungry: Season 5

Available June 23American Anarchist Free Rein: Season 1 NETFLIX ORIGINAL GLOW: Season 1 NETFLIX ORIGINAL Nobody Speak: Trials of the Free Press NETFLIX ORIGINAL You Get Me NETFLIX ORIGINAL FILM

Available June 26No Escape

Available June 27Chris DElia: Man on Fire NETFLIX ORIGINAL

Available June 28Okja NETFLIX ORIGINAL FILM

Available June 30Chef & My Fridge: Collection Gypsy: Season 1 NETFLIX ORIGINAL Its Only the End of the World Little Witch Academia: Season 1 NETFLIX ORIGINAL The Weekend

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New to Netflix this June: Grey's Anatomy, Orange Is the New Black, and more - EW.com

Robotic Imitation of Human Behavior Just Took a Big Step Forward … – Inverse

Artificial intelligence research firm OpenAI took inspiration from infants for its latest project, specifically the stunning ability for a newborn to mimic a person minutes after birth. The result is a robot that learns by example, and if you squint, you can see a future where helper robots mimic a person doing household chores once, and then repeats them forever.

The nonprofit of which Elon Musk is a founder and whose mission is discovering and enacting the path to safe artificial general intelligence revealed Tuesday the system that uses two neural networks to train a robot how to mimic behavior performed in virtual reality. The example behavior was simple: stacking blocks a certain way.

The robot uses two brains to get this done, which work in sequential order. One brain (the vision network) uses information from a camera and transfers what it sees to the second brain (the imitation network) that controls the robotic block-stacking arm.

Our system can learn a behavior from a single demonstration delivered within a simulator, then reproduce that behavior in different setups in reality, OpenAI explains in a blog post. You might be thinking to yourself, why does the demonstration have to be delivered within a simulator? Wouldnt it be easier if a human stacked up actual blocks in real life, instead of doing it all in virtual reality? Itd be easier on the human, sure, but processing those images would be glacially slow.

Heres why: Traditional vision networks (most of them around today) are programmed to merely classify images and do nothing else. OpenAIs Jack Clark offers Inverse this example: Take 10,000 photos of dogs. Some photos have labels, perhaps by breed, while others do not. When all the images are fed through a vision network, it will determine how to sort any unlabeled photos under the right label.

But thats just classifying images, not taking action on them.

If we used real-world images wed need the robot to be storing a real-world image of every single action it took and appropriately labeling them, Clark explains. This is extremely slow.

Instead, researchers at OpenAI use simple virtual reality simulations of objects the A.I. already knows. And thats why this robot needs to learn from VR for its real-life block-stacking.

Belows an animation of block-stacking that a human does using a VR headset and controller, which the robot learns from before imitating it in the real world. Check it out:

The announcement from OpenAI builds on two recent developments from the research firm. The first was vision-based and announced in April: An A.I. trained in VR was used in a real-world robot to successfully identify and pick up a can of Spam from a small table of groceries and throw it in the garbage. It was, naturally, dubbed a Spam-Detecting A.I. That was a fairly simple task, though.

The researchers combined the vision-based learning you see above with so-called one-shot imitation learning, wherein robots should be able to learn from very few demonstrations of any given task. This one-shot learning ability means a human only has to perform a task in this case stacking blocks in a certain order one time for the robot to nail it.

Belows a video released by OpenAI about the project. So while speedy robot butlers may not be right around the corner, training robots in VR to do basic physical tasks is something thats happening right now.

Nick is deputy editor at Inverse. Email him at nick@inverse.com

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Robotic Imitation of Human Behavior Just Took a Big Step Forward ... - Inverse

Exercise, genetics and the fat gene – Irish Times

According to the World Health Organization, after high blood pressure, tobacco use and high blood sugar, physical inactivity is the fourth leading risk factor for global mortality. So its fitting a physically active lifestyle is promoted in global public health policies. But does physical activity confer the same benefits on everyone to the same extent?

In the early 1990s, five universities in the United States and Canada recruited 90 Caucasian families and 40 African-American families including both parents and three or more biological adult offspring to the Heritage Family Study. The study investigated the role of genetics in the cardiovascular, metabolic and hormonal responses to the same 20-week programme of aerobic exercise the families undertook.

Although age, sex and race had a minimal impact on the training responses, researchers noted in a 2007 report in the American Journal of Epidemiology that there are marked inter-individual differences in the response . . . to regular exercise, and these differences are not randomly distributed but clearly aggregate in families.

For example, the heritability estimates for changes in cardiovascular and diabetes risk following a programme of endurance training ranged from 20 to 60 per cent.

And, this year, a review in the journal Sports Medicine concluded: Shared familial factors, including genetics, are likely to be a significant contributor to the response of body composition and cardiorespiratory fitness following physical activity.

The studys lead author, Joshua Zadro, is a physiotherapist and PhD candidate at the University of Sydney, with an interest in researching the relationship between genetics, physical activity and low back pain.

The results of our study demonstrate that our genes influence how well our bodies respond to increased physical activity, he told The Irish Times. Moreover, our genes play a larger role in dictating changes in our body composition after a diet and exercise programme such as our weight, body mass index, or percentage of body fat compared to how our fitness changes after an exercise programme.

This means some individuals who are physically active and have a calorie-restricted diet may not demonstrate significant improvements in their body composition or fitness, with genetics potentially being to blame for these disappointing results.

With genetics playing an important part in exercise, what is the role of the recently identified fat mass and obesity-associated gene (FTO) in shaping our response? A leading Irish researcher is part of a team investigating the impact of personalised nutrition advice on healthy eating and lifestyle in the Food4 Me study.

Eileen Gibney, a lecturer/assistant professor in nutrition in the UCD Institute of Food and Health, and School of Agriculture and Food Science, explained what is meant by the so-called obesity gene.The term refers to variations within our genetic make-up that may predispose an individual and by this I mean make someone more susceptible to to obesity.

Dr Gibney said that for certain diseases, the variation and incidence of the disease is direct. For example, with cystic fibrosis a defect in one gene causes one disease. Obesity, however, is caused by many factors that vary from one individual to another.

With respect to obesity, she said, there are some genetic variations, which are rare but do have a direct impact on risk of obesity. Take, for example, the metabolism of leptin, a hormone secreted by our fat cells, and which influences weight control. However, most other obesity-associated genetic variations so far discovered are more subtle, and present a risk that is small.

Ongoing research in may reveal more variations within our genes that are potentially obesity-associated, she said. If we can bring these all together, then together they may explain some of the risk of obesity. But it is important to note this is a risk or risk of increased predisposition; it is not a determinant. So its not as if obesity is unavoidable. It may simply mean you need to work harder; exercise more and be more vigilant with your diet. Even individuals with a genetic predisposition to obesity can and should maintain a healthy weight through healthy eating and exercise.

The emerging field of nutrigenomics investigates the relationship between food and genetics, with a view to devise diets based on an individuals genetic profile.

Dr Gibney is one of a team of international experts engaged in the European Food4Me project, which aimed to explore the applications of personalised nutrition. She was co-author of a recent Food4Me study published in the journal Obesity, which investigated the effect of physical activity levels on obesity traits among European adults with a variant of the FTO gene.

Within the Food4Me study, over 1,600 individuals across Europe took part in a six-month personalised nutrition study, she said. One area of investigation, led by Drs Celis-Morales and Marsaux, was to examine the FTO gene, where there is a known variant associated with risk of obesity. By this we mean that if someone has this specific genetic variant, they are more likely to be overweight than someone without this variation.

Researchers within the Food4Me team measured physical activity in the study group and allocated these individuals into three groups: low, medium and high.

Drs Celis-Morales and Marsaux then looked to see if there was a difference in weight/obesity in each of these groups between those who had the genetic variant or not, she said. They showed in the low-exercise group that those with the FTO variant were more obese than those without, as expected. But in the high-exercise group there was no difference in obesity between those with the risky genetic variation and those without.

This means that being active as recommended in many healthy eating and lifestyle campaigns removed the risk of obesity.

With the World Health Organization implicating physical inactivity in 21-25 per cent of cases of breast and colon cancer, 27 per cent of diabetes and 30 per cent of ischaemic heart disease, there is no doubting the importance of exercise, irrespective of ones genetic profile.

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Exercise, genetics and the fat gene - Irish Times

Genetics and animal science added to Fieldays Innovation Awards – Stuff.co.nz

Last updated16:31, May 23 2017

There are 71 entries in this years Innovation Awards at Fieldays including entries in animal science and genetics.

Genetics, animal science and chemical-based innovations are being addedfor the first time to the Fieldays Innovations Awardsthis year.

Competition organisers had expanded the criteriabecause of an increase of focus in thefields,Fieldays Innovations event manager Gail Hendricks said.

As a result, the competition has included two new judges tojudge the science behind theinnovations, she said.

Award organisershave received 71 entriesincluding innovations in fencing, irrigation, pasture management and animal health. Agricultural technology would also be on show, with several app-based innovations entered and a virtual reality innovation.

READ MORE: * Exciting fortunes ahead for the Waikato as it prepares for Fieldays *Steve Hansen talks rugby at Fieldays *Fieldays a chance to learn

The entries are displayed at theFieldays Innovations Centre, which showcases agricultural inventions and new applications with the potential to lead change in the rural sector.

The theme of Fieldaysis 'leading change'.Hendricks said the awards wereat the cutting edge of what was happening in agriculture, and the future of the industry.

"Originally, the Fieldays Innovation Awards was about widgets, gadgets and devices to improve farming, and now, more and more we are seeing how science and technology is impacting agriculture," Hendricks said.

The main entry categories are the Fieldays Prototype Award, Fieldays Launch NZ Award and Fieldays International Award.

Other awards up for grabs include categories for the bestYoung Inventor of the Year, technology innovation, research innovation, agri-innovation, intellectual propertyand commercialisation and intellectual property.

Hendricks said there was always public, business and agricultural industry interest in the innovation awards.

"The Innovations Centre is probably the busiest space at Fieldays and always attracts a lot of attention," said Hendricks. Every year, there is always broad media interest and the television breakfast shows broadcast from the Innovations Centre during Fieldays. The place is just buzzing."

Judges considerinventiveness, design and originality, the process of coming up with the innovation, commercial opportunities, intellectual property protection, technical viability and its benefit to New Zealand agriculture beforedeciding the winners.

The winners will be announced on June 15. Hendricks said they wouldreceive the kudos of winning the awards and any resulting publicity, but also access to expert support and business advice fromcompanies sponsoring each award.

Hendricks said entrants receiveda lot of value from entering the awards, as Fieldays provided access to a large group of potential customers and it gavethem a chance to do valuable market research.

Entrants also have exclusive access to business advisors, legal experts and product development consultants at a dedicated space in the Innovations Centre.

In addition, they have a chance to meet with potential investors at an invitation-only evening, Fieldays Innovations Capitalon June 15.

"The Innovations Centre is an exciting place to be at Fieldays. People visiting will see all sorts of interesting inventions and ideas that have practical and commercial application, to help streamline work on the farm."

-Stuff

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Genetics and animal science added to Fieldays Innovation Awards - Stuff.co.nz

Medway Public Library announces events – Wicked Local Medway

MEDWAY The following events will take place at Medway Public Library, 26 High St. For information and to register for events and programs, visit medwaylib.org. Contact childrens librarian Lucy Anderson with any questions at landerson@minlib.net or 508-533-3217.

Toddler Jam: 11 a.m. Tuesdays and Wednesdays. For newborns to age 3. This drop-in program will include stories, fingerplay and songs accompanied by mountain dulcimer. Children must be accompanied by a parent/caregiver.

Its Story Time!: 11 a.m. Thursdays and Fridays. For ages 10 months to 5 years. A drop-in story time with songs, stories and craft. All children must be accompanied by a caregiver. These ages are flexible.

PAWS to Read: 6 to 7:15 p.m. June 7. Each child will get a 15-minute one-on-one reading session with a visiting therapy dog. Children must be able to read independently, as this is not a tutoring session but rather an opportunity to practice reading skills with a good listener. For grades two to six.

Junior Lego Duplo Club: 11 a.m. June 10. Participants can enjoy an hour of free play with Duplos, easier than Legos for little hands. For ages 3-6.

Parachute Playgroups: 11 a.m. June 6 and 13. Participants will listen to a story, play parachute games, learn new songs, strengthen muscles, sharpen listening skills and make a craft. For ages 2 and older.

Embryology Club: 4 p.m. Thursdays, June 8 through July 13. Participants can learn all about the development and hatching of chicks. Participants can join for a six-week 4-H Impact Club on Embryology. Each child will be assigned an egg to watch over while the group learna about what is happening inside, how to candle the eggs to see them growing and the basics of caring for the baby chicks after they hatch. Registration is required.

BFG Breakout Box: 3:30 p.m. June 12. For ages 8-11. Advanced registration is required.

Summer Reading Kickoff with Davis Bates and Roger Tincknell: 3 p.m. June 27 This is a program for families celebrating reading and the cultural heritage of the United States. Award winning performers Roger Tincknell and Davis Bates share participatory stories and songs designed to amuse, inspire and create a feeling of community, while encouraging reading and awareness of the natural world. The program includes trickster stories, international folktales and folk songs and contemporary childrens songs. Instruments played will include banjo, guitar, mandolin and spoons.

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Medway Public Library announces events - Wicked Local Medway