Category Archives: Human Behavior

CNYs restart after coronavirus hinges on a number you never heard of and cant count – syracuse.com

Syracuse, N.Y. The opening of Central New Yorks economy will depend on measuring a largely unmeasurable value once known only to epidemiologists.

At Upstate Medical University on Tuesday, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced that one of two gates to open the economy was how fast the novel coronavirus is spreading. Thats known as the rate of transmission, or Rt for short. It might be the first time that value has been used to guide government actions, said an Upstate scientist.

Rt is the average number of people who catch the virus after being exposed to an infected person. An Rt of 2, for example, means that every infected person infects two more. Cuomo has said the rate needs to fall to 1 or below for a region to reopen and stay open.

You wouldnt start reopening unless you had a transmission rate below 1.1; really below 1, Cuomo said. If the transmission rate hits 1.1, thats what they call outbreak. That means its going to spread much, much faster. Youre in trouble.

When Rt is 1, the virus keeps spreading. People will recover at the same rate others are getting sick, so the virus will hover in the background. When the Rt drops below 1, the epidemic slows down and will, theoretically, die out over time.

Rt cant be directly measured. Its not a blood test that gives clear results, or a simple count of the number of people lying in the hospital. Its a scientific concept critical to predicting how fast a disease spreads, but it can only be derived from computer models that rely on imperfect data and assumptions.

Its not clear if Central New York has met Cuomos threshold. Cuomo said Sunday that Upstates rate was 0.9, but he did not break it down by region nor explain how it was calculated. His office did not reply to questions.

Upstate has devised its own model of the viruss spread locally, which two weeks ago estimated the Rt value at 1.3. That would still be too high for a restart under Cuomos requirements.

The Upstate model will likely be updated this week, said Dr. Kathryn Anderson, one of six Upstate professors who created it.

Cuomos decision to use the rate of transmission makes sense and might be unique, Anderson said.

As a scientist I find his approach reasonable, she said. Im not aware of other disease where people used Rt as a metric for guiding policy decisions with this level of impact.

Cuomo said the other number the state will track for a reopening is the percentage of open hospital beds. A region would need to have at least 30% of its beds open in case of a surge in patients suffering from COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus.

The percentage of hospital beds is easy to measure: Count the number of beds with patients in them and divide by the total beds.

Likewise, its easy to do a nasal swab to see if someone is infected, or a finger prick to see if someones blood has antibodies.

The rate of transmission isnt like that. Theres no test, no simple count. The swirling movement of people in society makes it impossible to know for sure how many got sick from every sick person.

Its very rare that we have a situation where we can study this person infected this person who infected these people and onwards, Anderson said.

Figuring out the Rt for other diseases is more straightforward. For example, HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, is transmitted only through direct contact, primarily sex and sharing of intravenous needles.

A respiratory virus like the new coronavirus, called SARS-CoV-2, can also be spread unknowingly through air or on surfaces. A person sneezing in a restaurant or touching an office door handle can pass it on. To take that into account, epidemiologists have to consider dozens of questions: How many people were in close proximity to the infected person? How far away, and for how long? Did the people exposed then touch their face before washing their hands?

There is no way to know those things, so they have to be assumed based on previous studies of viruses and of human behavior. Scientists can only estimate Rt by plugging those assumptions and current data into a computer model.

Every day (Onondaga County executive) Ryan McMahon shows the number of new cases per day, and with some assumptions we can look at the data and get a sense of what R is, Anderson said. We see a rise in cases over time and we have to make some pretty powerful inferences with our data.

One of those assumptions is how long it takes for someone to become sick after being exposed. The Upstate model assumes four to five days. Another assumption is how well residents are abiding by social distancing measures like avoiding gatherings. Cell phone tracking data is a proxy for that, but its not perfect.

Upstates model and the cell phone data have shown that Central New Yorks Rt number has been consistently too high for Cuomos cutoff of 1.1. The latest Upstate modeling in mid-April showed the Syracuse area at R of 1.3, meaning the virus was still spreading too fast for a reopening.

Upstate will issue new model updates this week, Anderson said.

Cuomo has said that regions of the state where the virus was under control could start reopening businesses as long as social distancing rules were enforced. McMahon has said he and several other counties are working on a regional plan to submit to the governor.

Scientists have estimated that without social distancing measures, the Rt for the coronavirus would initially be 2 to 3. The seasonal flu is about 1.3, a high enough rate to cause about 8% of Americans to get the flu each year.

At the other end of the scale is measles, in which an infected person can pass the virus to 12 to 18 others. That explains why measles can spread so quickly when children arent vaccinated.

The rate of transmission of a disease falls as more people become immune from getting a vaccination or the disease itself. Those people then cant catch and pass on the virus.

Its too soon to know if people who have had the novel coronavirus will develop immunity. That doesnt matter much right now in Central New York because only about 1.3% of us have had it, according to state testing. That means nearly 99% of us are still susceptible to catching, and transmitting, the virus.

MORE ON CORONAVIRUS

How many Central New Yorkers infected with coronavirus? Cuomo provides some math

Cuomo says Syracuse hospitals eligible to restart elective surgery

Onondaga County coronavirus: 35 new cases, more ongoing infections now than ever; 30th death

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CNYs restart after coronavirus hinges on a number you never heard of and cant count - syracuse.com

The top 10 podcasts we all need in our lives right now, according to a psychotherapist – CNBC

We each have our own different challenges to deal with, but if there's one thing we can all agree with, it's that there's never been a more urgent need for laughter, inspiration and escapism.

Luckily, we have podcasts to keep us informed but not to an excessive degree about the coronavirus pandemic, while also helping to pass the time and ease stress.

As a psychotherapist, lots of patients have been asking me for recommendations. So here are 10 great podcast we all need in our lives right now:

Listen here

I can't get enough of Bren Brown, so I was thrilled when theauthor and speaker announced her new podcast in March. (If you haven't seen her TEDx talk "The Power of Vulnerability,"one of the most popular in TED history, I highly recommend watching.)

In "Unlocking Us," Brown interviews a mix of interesting individuals, from musician Alicia Keys to grief expert David Kessler. I love this podcast because it emphasizes topics I often discuss with my patients: Giving ourselves permission to fall apart, processing negative emotions, embracing vulnerability and finding meaning, especially during hard times.

Listen here

Abby Medcalf is an author and psychologist who has helped thousands of people create connection, happiness and fulfillment in their relationships whether it's with a partner, family member, friend, co-worker or roommate.

If you're like me and quarantining with your spouse, you've likely experienced a handful of disagreements and frustrations. Medcalf offers simple yet effective tools to help you manage common relationship problems, such as dealing with people who get on your nerves or communicating with someone who refuses to listen.

Listen here

While it's important to stay informed, too much news can be more harmful than helpful. So if you're feeling overwhelmed to the point where you're making decisions based on fear, and not facts then it's time to cut back.

I've found "Coronavirus Daily" to be just the right amount. Each episode is approximately 10 minutes long. You'll stay up to date on what's happening through stories and interviews from NPR's reporting teams.

Listen here

"The Daily" is another option for staying on top of pandemic-related news, although the episodes are a little longer (about 20 minutes).

I recommend listening to"24 Hours Inside a Brooklyn Hospital,"in which a public health correspondent shadows a doctor at Brooklyn Hospital Center's intensive care unit for a day.Hearing the voices of medical workers, patients and their families really humanizes the experience of being on thefrontlines of a pandemic.

Listen here

I've always been intrigued by how our brain works and what motivates our thoughts and actions.

Hosted by social science journalist Shankar Vedantam, "Hidden Brain" combines research and storytelling to explain the patterns that drive human behavior, influence our choices and shape our relationships. Each episode really helps you see things from different perspectives, which is essential to understanding the power of empathy.

Listen here

Adam Grant is an organizational psychologist and author of best-selling books, including "Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World" and "Option B" (which he co-wrote with Facebook COOSheryl Sandberg).

This podcast is basically a guide to making work less miserable. You'll learn how to embrace criticism and harness the power of frustration. Whether you're trying to adjust to working from home or struggling with the job of lookingfor a job, "Work Life" will give you a more confident and hopeful outlook on the future of your career.

Listenhere

If you're a music lover, "Dissect" is the perfect escape. This serialized music podcast examines a single album per season, one song per episode.

After listening to the episodes about Beyonce's "Lemonade" album (Season 6), I was hooked. Each "dissection" explores everything from the artist's background and career to the lyrics and production behind every song.

Listen here

Let's be honest: It's nice to take a break from our own realities and dive into reality television. Comedian Heather (best-known as a writer and performer on "The Chelsea Handler Show") offers all things "juicy," from celebrity gossip to recaps of "Real Housewives" and "90 Day Fiance."

I'm not the only person who turns to "Juicy Scoop" for some laughter and entertainment. The show has over9,000 five-star reviews on iTunes and is ranked in the top 10 comedy podcasts.

Listen here

"How I Build This" is all about founders and CEOs who had a vision, and how they worked through the challenges of building it into a company.

I run my own practice, and this podcast has gotten me through some difficult times. At such an unprecedented time for entrepreneurs, we really need inspirational stories about facing adversity and building resilience.

Listen here

Therapist and best-selling author Esther Perel's new podcast explores the "invisible forces" that shape our connections, conflicts and dynamics at work. Each episode is essentially a one-time therapy session with co-workers and co-founders.

I recommend listening to "Laid Off and Starting Over,"which is about two people who were let go from their jobs and are now starting new company together. Perel helps them find ways to build over their past traumas so they can heal and begin a new, healthy chapter.

Tess Brighamis a San Francisco-based psychotherapist. She has more than 10 years of experience in the field and primarily works with millennials and millennial parents.

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The top 10 podcasts we all need in our lives right now, according to a psychotherapist - CNBC

Global economy could be reshaped for the better post Covid-19 – Verdict

As the world continues to suffer the implications of the severe Covid-19 pandemic, it is worth examining how the global economy can be reshaped for the better

As the lockdown has expanded throughout the world a number of critical industries have been damaged, possibly beyond repair. Oil and gas, travel and tourism and most services and retail industries are unlikely to be reformed in the same way in which they existed in the past.

Partially, this is because of the length of time it will take to overcome the virus. However, the worst aspects of human behavior are also clearly demonstrated in these types of industries. Kick-starting those with huge government stimulus packages would be a squandered opportunity to reshape for the better.

Despite constant reminders over the past few decades of the impact that our use of fossil fuels has on the environment, consumption levels have done nothing but climb. Now as the world economy pauses, millions of barrels of oil are left unburned and cities all over the world have been breathing easier for weeks.

Using this opportunity to change consumption patterns and nurture alternative energy with serious investment could result in current climate goals becoming achievable, which at present they are not.

Cheap holiday flights and weekly business trips have helped to bring the world together but they have also resulted in excessive business practices that have encouraged millions of unnecessary trips every day, burning jet fuel.

The coronavirus pandemic has shown that the majority of office based jobs can function at the same level of operating efficiency working from home, with none of the travel. Businesses are beginning to see that endless travel around the world and even commutes in and out of the office are largely obsolete.

Most societies have been organized around encouraging massive consumption of items such as clothing, food and all manner of disposable goods. The success of a countrys economy can largely be measured, by modern standards, as purely the cash amount of goods bought and sold.

As shopping and consumption levels have been reduced to a minimum, consumers have had a glimpse into what products are necessary for their wellbeing and what are not. There are vast swathes of retail companys that it might not be beneficial to support with government aid after COVID-19 ends.

Already central banks have prepared and given out huge amounts of cash to these failing industries. However, it should be noted that even during crisis, many troubled businesses have been giving out dividend payments and maintaining executive bonus.

A good portion of these industries wont actually be able recover or even operate at their previous capacity. Taking on nation debt to protect industries highly likely to fail is not operating in the general interest.

MarketLine is a sister company of this website.

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Global economy could be reshaped for the better post Covid-19 - Verdict

How COVID-19 is changing the face of college admissions | – University Business

Strategies for driving engagement with prospectsand providing flexibility for decision-making

KristenCapezza is vice president of enrollment and university communications atAdelphiUniversity in New York.

Flashback. Its September 2019 and higher education is facing one of the largest disruptions to date; theNational Association for College Admission Counselingvotes to remove long-standing provisions of the Code of Ethics and Professional Practices (CEPP), drastically changing the landscape of college admission. Institutions are left worrying what the future holds and race to remain competitive. Words like sweepstakes are introduced to the college process.

Read:Admissions ethics code now allows student poaching

Fast-forward. The bustling spring season approaches, and this year, its not business as usual. Contrary to expectations, this springs challenges are not a result of fall CEPP changes. The global coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) disrupts all of higher education, forcing campuses to close and operations to resume remotely. Enrollment teams scramble to make class and create strong connections with admitted students, some of whom never set foot on campus.

It feels like the perfect storm.

Read:Updated: 89 free higher ed resources during coronavirus pandemic

Many of us would claim our institutional culture becomes undeniably apparent through our on-campus events, bringing to life the words found in our glossy viewbooks. At Adelphi University in New York, our visitors experience the personalized interaction between our faculty, staff and students, and they feel the safety and energy of the possibilities that await them on our breathtaking campus, an award-winning registered arboretum.

For many, COVID-19 stole those visit experiences this spring. But Adelphi pivoted to recreate those feelings in our virtual campus environment, as did many others. And while no online interaction can replace the feeling of pulling onto campus, our honest and innovative responses may help us long into the future. Here are four considerations for enrollment leaders now:

We must acknowledge social, financial and other priorities that guide human behavior, and we must work extra hard to reflect them in an empathetic approach to college enrollment.

Read:How these colleges are marketing to admitted students during COVID-19

Our team here at Adelphi will continue to meet students where they are. As a result of CEPP changes and the challenges of COVID-19, our team has planned the following.

Read:Schools offer summer scholarships to cope with disruptions

The fall enrollment picture is uncertain for colleges coast to coast. Students are delaying decisions, and many are asking for deposit extensions as they consider their options. We anticipate a large number of students will change plans and opt to stay local, seeking comfort in being near to home. There are students who will request gap semesters and years, waiting to start a campus experience uninterrupted by thermal scans and face masks.

As we look to the months ahead, they are filled with challenges, difficult decisions and unpredictability. Through it all, we must keep our students and institutional missions at the core of our decisions, offering flexibility and accessibility to those who need it most.

Kristen Capezza is vice president for enrollment and communications at Adelphi University in Garden City, New York.

UBs coronavirus page offers complete coverage of the impacts on higher ed.

Interested in technology? Keep up with the UB Tech conference.

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How COVID-19 is changing the face of college admissions | - University Business

Warm summer weather likely wont end the coronavirus pandemic – Vox.com

Some Americans are hoping for a natural reprieve to social distancing as the coronavirus pandemic drags on: that sunnier, warmer, and more humid weather in the summer will destroy the Covid-19 virus as it does with other viruses, like the flu and let everyone go back to normal.

There is some evidence that heat, humidity, and ultraviolet light could hurt the coronavirus an idea that President Donald Trump bizarrely leaned into when he suggested the use of ultraviolet or just very powerful light inside the body to treat people sickened by Covid-19 (an idea with no scientific merit, as experts have repeatedly stated).

But even if heat, humidity, and light help slow the viruss spread, sunny, hot, and humid weather alone wont be enough to end the epidemic. Experts point to the examples of Singapore, Ecuador, and Louisiana, all of which have recently had growing numbers of Covid-19 cases despite temperatures hitting 80-plus degrees Fahrenheit and humidity levels reaching more than 60, 70, or even 80 percent.

High levels of heat, UV light, and humidity can help prevent more widespread infections of the flu or colds in the summer, along with medical treatments and vaccines (when available). But the Covid-19 coronavirus is still new to humans, so we dont have as much immune protection built up against it so the virus seems able to overcome summer-like weather and still cause big outbreaks.

For the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, we have reason to expect that like other betacoronaviruses, it may transmit somewhat more efficiently in winter than summer, though we dont know the mechanism(s) responsible, Marc Lipsitch, an epidemiologist at Harvard, wrote. The size of the change is expected to be modest, and not enough to stop transmission on its own.

Still, the studies on heat, light, and humidity, plus the fact coronavirus has a harder time spreading in open-air areas, suggest that the outdoors may be a safe target for a slow reopening as transmission of the virus slows, as long as precautions like physical distancing and mask-wearing are followed. So outdoor activities could offer a respite to lockdowns and quarantines one thats also, potentially, good for physical and mental health.

It also means that if Covid-19 becomes endemic (a disease that regularly comes back, like the flu or common cold), then heat, sunlight, and humidity could restrict bigger outbreaks to fall and winter. But that possibility is likely still years away, experts say.

So summer weather may make the outdoors a little safer, but it wont be enough to quash coronavirus on its own. That means well likely need to continue social distancing to some degree in the coming months, and continue working on getting more testing, aggressive contact tracing, and medical treatments up to scale before places can safely reopen their economies.

There are a few ways that summer weather could have an effect on SARS-CoV-2. Higher temperatures can help weaken the novel coronaviruss outer lipid layer, similar to how fat melts in greater heat. Humidity in the air can effectively catch virus-containing droplets that people breathe out, causing these droplets to fall to the ground instead of reaching another human host making humidity a shield against infection. UV light, which theres a lot more of during sunny summer days, is a well-known disinfectant that effectively fries cells and viruses.

There are multiple coronaviruses out there that affect our population, and many of them, if not most of them, exhibit a seasonal influence, Mauricio Santillana, the director of the Machine Intelligence Lab at Boston Childrens Hospital and a researcher on the effects of the weather on coronavirus, told me. The hypothesis postulated for Covid-19 is that it will have a similar behavior.

But thats hypothetical. How does it play out in reality?

So far, the coronavirus has largely spread in the Northern Hemisphere, where its been winter and early spring. Its not clear if the weather is a reason for that, because data on its spread in the Southern Hemisphere particularly poorer countries in Africa and South America is largely lacking due to weak public health infrastructure.

Still, we have some evidence. The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine one of Americas top scientific evidence reviewers summarized the research earlier in April. It looked at two kinds of studies: those that tested the effects of summer-like temperatures in a laboratory, and those that attempted to tease out the effects of heat, UV light, and humidity in the real world.

In the lab, researchers use sophisticated tools to see how the virus fares in different conditions. Generally, theyve found more heat, UV light, and humidity seem to weaken the coronavirus although one preliminary study suggested that coronavirus may fare better in the more summer-like conditions than the flu, SARS, and monkeypox viruses.

This is the kind of study Bill Bryan, the undersecretary for science and technology at the Department of Homeland Security, presented at the April 23 White House press briefing. That study found that coronavirus seemed to die off much more quickly in hotter, more humid environments with a lot of UV light.

As the National Academies noted, however, this evidence comes with big caveats. Perhaps most importantly, these studies havent yet been peer reviewed. So they could have big methodological errors that we just dont know about yet. (This Wired article does a good job breaking down the concerns with such early research.)

But even if these studies are well-conducted, the real world is simply a lot messier than a laboratory setting. For example, the lab-grown virus used in these studies may act at least somewhat differently than the natural virus in the real world.

People can also act differently in summer than they do in winter, and the lab studies dont account for how those behaviors affect coronaviruss spread. People are more likely to stay indoors during the winter to avoid the cold but indoor spaces are generally more poorly ventilated and cramped, both of which make it easier for the coronavirus to spread. Warmth and sunshine also could impact the immune system, though that relationship is still unclear.

Well get more evidence on real-life seasonal effects as the months go by especially if more places take potentially dangerous risks. In Georgia, where they are opening back up without really any concrete measures to encourage distancing, we might be able to better evaluate how [the coronavirus] spreads in the summer months, Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at Columbia, told me.

But there is some early real-world research already, which the National Academies also reviewed. These studies looked at whether the SARS-CoV-2 virus was affected by different climates in real-world settings, and if it spread more easily in places where it was colder and less humid and there was less UV light. Some researchers also developed models based on data from different outbreaks in different parts of the world.

One upcoming study from a group of researchers at the University of Nebraska Medical Center tried to model the effects of heat, humidity, and UV light, finding that they mitigated the spread of the virus. UV light seemed to play a bigger role, although the researchers cautioned that their findings will need to be replicated and verified with, ideally, years of data. This is a very new virus, and there are lots of things we dont know about it, Azar Abadi, one of the researchers, told me.

But this aligns with the evidence that the National Academies reviewed.

There is some evidence to suggest that SARS-CoV-2 may transmit less efficiently in environments with higher ambient temperature and humidity, Harvey Fineberg, author of the National Academies report, wrote. [H]owever, given the lack of host immunity globally, this reduction in transmission efficiency may not lead to a significant reduction in disease spread without the concomitant adoption of major public health interventions.

This is the point experts emphasized again and again: Its one thing for the weather to have some sort of effect on coronavirus; its another thing for that effect to be enough to actually halt the viruss widespread transmission. We have early evidence the weather has an effect, but we also have early evidence that it wont be enough.

The problem: Other factors, besides the weather, play a role in the spread of diseases. In the case of coronavirus, these other factors seem to play a much bigger role than weather.

The mayor of Guayaquil, Ecuador, where its regularly 80-plus degrees Fahrenheit, described her citys experience with Covid-19 like the horror of war and an unexpected bomb falling on a peaceful town. Ecuador now has one of the worst coronavirus death tolls in the world a sign that warm, sunny, and humid weather cant make up for struggling public health infrastructure in a still-developing country.

Singapore, which is nearly on the equator, managed to contain coronavirus at first, but it has seen a growing outbreak recently. The problem, it seems, is the government neglected migrant workers in its initial response letting Covid-19 spread in the cramped and sometimes unsanitary conditions many migrants live in. Warm, humid weather alone wasnt enough to overcome preexisting issues and an overly narrow public policy response.

Meanwhile, Louisiana is suffering a significant coronavirus outbreak, with the fifth-most deaths per 100,000 people out of all the states. According to experts, Mardi Gras held on February 25 may have accelerated that. The massive celebration seemed to cause a lot of transmission, even as New Orleans saw temperatures up to the 70s, and cases continued to climb even as temperatures reached the 80s. Maybe the weather made things better than they would be otherwise, but it was, again, no match for human behaviors effects on the spread of Covid-19.

The bigger problem is too many people in the US are still vulnerable to the virus. While we see some influence [of the weather], the effect that were seeing if theres any effect is eclipsed by the high levels of susceptibility in the population, Santillana said. Most people are still highly susceptible. So even if temperature or humidity could play a role, theres not enough immunity.

That made it extremely easy for the virus to spread, regardless of the weather, especially since SARS-CoV-2 appears to be so contagious relative to other pathogens. In contrast, if you think about the viruses that are more affected by the seasons the flu and colds humans have been dealing with them for hundreds if not thousands of years. Thats let us build some population-level protection that we just dont have for Covid-19, making other factors besides our actions, like the weather, a bit more important for the seasonal viruses.

So down the line, if Covid-19 becomes endemic a possibility if, for example, immunity to it isnt as permanent as wed like its possible that seasons will have a much stronger sway over when it pops up again.

Even then, its worth acknowledging that seasons dont fully determine when the flu and colds hit. As the National Academies pointed out, some flu pandemics have started in the summer: There have been 10 influenza pandemics in the past 250-plus years two started in the northern hemisphere winter, three in the spring, two in the summer and three in the fall.

In fact, some of this research could be taken to mean that coronavirus will be even more dangerous eventually: If the colder, dryer weather this fall and winter empowers the virus, that could lead to a bigger outbreak. The National Academies noted, as an example, that a second spike is typical for flu pandemics: All had a peak second wave approximately six months after emergence of the virus in the human population, regardless of when the initial introduction occurred.

But, as is true in the reverse, other factors besides the weather likely play a bigger role in the spread. So if governments and the public do the right thing through the fall and winter, theres still a good chance that there wont be a big spike.

The upshot of all of this: The changing weather likely wont be enough on its own to relax social distancing. Given that theres still a lot about Covid-19 we still need to learn, experts dont know this for certain. But its what they suspect, based on the data that weve seen in the research and real world so far.

If the only concern is the health of people, its irresponsible to go back to relaxing social distancing anytime soon, Santillana said. Were not done, even if summer starts.

So as the plans to end social distancing indicate, the world will likely need at least some level of social distancing until a vaccine or a similarly effective medical treatment is developed, which is possibly a year or more away. That may not require the full lockdown that several states are seeing today, but it will mean restrictions on larger gatherings and some travel, while perhaps continuing remote learning and work.

Weather could help determine how safe it is to go outside, even as social distancing continues. Some states, for example, are considering opening parks and beaches during the earlier phases of reopening their economies. Experts warn that summer weather wont allow large gatherings 50 people or more is often cited as way too many but it could give people some assurance that they can go outdoors as long as they keep 6 feet or more of distance from others they dont live with, avoid touching surfaces and their faces, and wear masks.

Otherwise, however, how much social distancing will be relaxed in the coming months wont come down to the weather but likely how much the US improves its testing and surveillance capacity. Testing gives officials the means to isolate sick people, track and quarantine the people whom those verified to be sick came into close contact with (a.k.a. contact tracing), and deploy community-wide efforts if a new cluster of cases is too large and uncontrolled otherwise.

While the US has seen some gains in testing, the number of new tests a day still fall below estimates of whats needed (500,000 on the low end and tens of millions on the high end) to safely ease social distancing.

Along with testing, America will need aggressive contact tracing, as countries like South Korea and Germany have done, to control its outbreak. A report from the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and Association of State and Territorial Health estimated the US will need to hire 100,000 contact tracers far above what states and federal officials have so far said theyre hiring. A phone app could help mitigate the need for quite as many tracers, but its unclear if Americans have the appetite for an app that will effectively track their every move.

These are, really, the things everyone has been hearing about the entire time during this pandemic. Its just worth emphasizing that the summer weather likely wont be enough on its own to mitigate the need for these other public health strategies.

The best-case scenario is if were doing that [social distancing] and theres a dampening [in the summer], maybe there is a possibility of limiting this virus here in the United States and other places, Jesse Bell, one of the University of Nebraska Medical Center researchers, told me. But then again we just dont know.

So were very likely going to need social distancing, testing, and contact tracing for the foreseeable future, regardless of how warm, sunny, and humid it is outside.

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Warm summer weather likely wont end the coronavirus pandemic - Vox.com

David Letterman Offers Words Of Inspiration Amid Virus Crisis From His ‘Y2K’ Bunker – The Daily Wire

David Letterman was the first comedian to return to the air after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attack on America, which killed nearly 3,000.

Toward the end of his opening monologue, Letterman said on Sept. 17, 2001: Its very simple there is only one requirement for any of us, and that is to be courageous, because courage, as you might know, defines all other human behavior.

His appearance helped calm a skittish America. And hes doing so again with his take on the coronavirus sweeping across the U.S..

In an appearance on the Howard Stern show, the former Late Show host said the resilience of the human spirit is unlike any other mechanism on the planet.

You take a look. All around the world, there is hell like this going on every day that we either know about and dont care about or dont know about. But were not the only ones suffering hell now, the famously cynical talk show host said.

Weve been through it before: We were attacked, we lived through the AIDS epidemic, in 1957 there was a flu that killed nearly a million people. There was World War Two. There was the Holocaust. There are people killing other people on a routine basis. And yet, built into the human spirit is a resilience unlike any other mechanism on the planet and this will pass and we will survive.

Co-host Robin Quivers asked Letterman if any good would ultimately come from the virus. We have too much as Americans and we take so much for granted and we dont need it, he said. Lets dont be so goddamned selfish and so goddamned greedy. Were all the same, for craps sake, and were all carbon-based lifeforms and were all breathing the same air.

The 73-year-old comedian, who said he was hunkered down in his Y2K bunker, said hes appreciating the quality time hes getting to spend with his 16-year-old son Harry.

For me its great because since Harry started school, this is the most time Ive been able to spend with him, uninterrupted, Letterman said. I see this giant figure walking through our kitchen and I thought, Holy crap, were being robbed! But, you know, its my son. Youre just not used to seeing him on a Wednesday shuffling through the kitchen.

Letterman also took off his hat to reveal a cleanly shaved head. My son, this is what he did for my birthday. He shaved my head.

Are you a different father to your own son? Stern asked.

I try to be, Howard, Dave said. God, I just love having him around. Hes just a goofball and I love him. Hes very entertaining and Im very lucky to have my family with me.

The Daily Wire, headed by bestselling author and popular podcast host Ben Shapiro, is a leading provider of conservative news, cutting through the mainstream medias rhetoric to provide readers the most important, relevant, and engaging stories of the day. Get inside access to The Daily Wire by becoming a subscriber.

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David Letterman Offers Words Of Inspiration Amid Virus Crisis From His 'Y2K' Bunker - The Daily Wire

‘We can’t go back to life as it was.’ Whitmer ‘hopeful’ Legislature will extend State of Emergency – WXYZ

(WXYZ) In a one-on-one interview with 7 Action News, Governor Gretchen Whitmer discussed the state's effort to reopen the economy while mitigating the spread of COVID-19.

Whitmer noted that officials are going to have to measure every step of the way in order to reopen sectors of the economy.

"As we reengage a sector of our economy, we've got to watch and make sure we don't have another increase in cases," she said.

She said the state cannot put a hard and fast timeline on re-opening the economy.

"A lot of this depends on human behavior," she said. "No one's as eager to keep turning that dial forward as I am. We have taken a deep dive into the data and assessed risks, so when it is safe to dial it up, we will be prepared.

The governor noted that offices are densely populated areas, and said people who are currently working from home should plan to continue.

Regarding the upcoming standoff with the Legislature, Whitmer said she is "hopeful" they will extend the state of emergency.

"We can't go back to life as it was," she said. "We could have a second wave of COVID-19 and it could necessitate a second stay-at-home order."

On Monday, Attorney General William Barr directed federal prosecutors across the country to be on the lookout for state and local coronavirus-related restrictions that could be unconstitutional.

Whitmer said Michigan's unique situation with COVID-19 required aggressive action.

"Michiganders did the right thing," she said. "We took this seriously and saved lives in the process."

"We can save lives and adhere to the spirit of the constitution," she said.

Ten workers, who are regional coordinators for the Military Veterans Affairs Agency, say they won't have a job come May 15 due to budget cuts. They've said they are concerned about the veterans they help.

Whitmer noted that the budget cuts were a decision made at the department level and she is concerned about them.

She also said state government will have to make a lot of tough decisions.

"It is my hope that those aren't long-term cuts that have been made and that the needs of our veterans can be met one way or another," she said.

Additionally, Whitmer said she does not know what college students can expect come fall.

"What I do know is that we have to be really smart about how we re-engage," she said.

She noted that events and activities that have a lot of people in one closed-in space will probably be the last to come online safely. She said universities and colleges are doing an "incredible" amount of work to understand the pandemic and make decisions.

FEMA Region 5 Administrator James Joseph said he thinks there will be several months ahead for FEMA to work in response and recovery. Joseph said FEMA will continue to plan and be prepared for whatever it is Michigan needs.

Whitmer said the state's hope is that FEMA can leave Michigan when it's safe, but that they don't leave too early.

"We've really got to be smart and avoid the second wave at all costs," she said. "None of us want to be back here come August or September. I'd love to see FEMA leave and not come back, and that's precisely why we have to get this right.

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'We can't go back to life as it was.' Whitmer 'hopeful' Legislature will extend State of Emergency - WXYZ

Dr. Oz optimistic on warm weather slowing coronavirus, but says US must be ‘better prepared’ for winter surge – FOX 35 Orlando

Dr. Mehmet Oz said on Tuesday that warmer weather should slow down the spread of coronavirus, but cautioned that Americans will have to brace for the second wave of infections next winter.

Human behavior changes when it is warmer outside so you can naturally socially distance a little bit more, the stability of the virus and transmission rates are altered when it is warmer. The virus doesnt want to be in warm weather, it likes to be in cold weather, it can travel further in the air, the host of "The Dr. Oz Show" told Fox & Friends.

MORE NEWS:Florida coronavirus cases pass 32,800; death roll surges to 1,171, Florida Department of Health says

Oz reacted to White House Task Force member Dr. Deborah Birx's appearance on "Fox & Friends," where she said that officials will be watching how the coronavirus spreads in warm weather in Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.

"Our job in the White House is to ensure for whatever happens [to the U.S.] in the fall," Birx said.

The novel coronavirus that has ravaged the globe and brought the world's economy to a standstill may not diminish significantly in warmer weather, according to a report from a panel convened by the National Academy of Sciences.

MORE NEWS:If you think you had coronavirus, new antibody test available without trip to doctor's office

The findings, from a report presented to the White House on Tuesday, are an attempt to determine how COVID-19 may or may not behave once temperatures start to warm up in late spring and summer. But there's a lot about the virus that is still not understood by scientists.

"The laboratory data available so far indicate reduced survival of SARS-CoV-2 at elevated temperatures, and variation in temperature sensitivity as a function of the type of surface on which the virus is placed. However, the number of well-controlled studies available at this time on the topic remains small," the report states.

Oz pressed the need for watching the coronavirus as it impacts the Southern Hemisphere in order to prepare for another wave of spread in the winter.

MORE NEWS:Trump suggests schools should open for a 'short period of time' before academic year ends

We want to see what happens in the Southern Hemisphere so we can predict what might be coming back to us in the winter. There's no reason to think we won't get more of an impact from the virus this winter, especially when you add influenza. So we want to be better prepared, Oz said.

He added that many Americans may have one or more "risk factors" for contracting a severe case of COVID-19, but are not aware of it. Oz stressed that a significant number of people suffer from pre-diabetes or unknowingly have hypertension, complicating the efforts to fully reopen the country.

"If you don't know that you're vulnerable, you won't be able to distance yourself. ... Social distancing is critically important for the well-being of society. We need it desperately. This is an explosive infection. One person can spread it to six," he noted.

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Here’s the best way to lead a team brainstorm online – Business Insider – Business Insider

Today's current business climate hasshifted many aspects of work online including team brainstorms.

And that may be for the better.

Research in the journal Computers in Human Behavior finds employees reach more creative solutions and ideas via virtual brainstorms. Unlike in-person meetings, where one extrovert can hog the talking time, Harvard Business Review speculates employees feel more anonymous online, leading more people to speak up and participate in the brainstorm.

"Virtual brainstorming retains the original postulate of traditional brainstorming that teams can crowdsource creativity by curating the ideas they collectively produce in an informal, free-flowing, stream-of-consciousness, session but overcoming the main, originally unforeseen, barriers," HBR author and psychologist Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic wrote.

If you're hosting an online brainstorming meeting, here are some tools and tricks to make sure all team members are engaged and participating.

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Some tools, like online whiteboards, help create the virtual version of a team brainstorm meeting.

For a more seamless brainstorming meeting, use tools that exist within the software you already use. Online whiteboards let meeting participants draw and write freely on a shared screen. And since some entrepreneurs previously told Business Insider whiteboards help conceptualize major themes and keeps them focused, teams would benefit from bringing the old-school trick online.

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Joris Janssens, a company-culture consultant with the IDEA Consult, developed a step-by-step guide on how to virtually brainstorm with 60 teammates. Aside from getting everyone on a video platform and taking notes, a major part of Janssens's guide recommended breaking your team into working groups made up of six to eight people.

"In the working groups, several questions needed to be answered," Janssens wrote on Medium. "The participants were asked to take notes intuitively, and one idea per cell, as if each cell was a sticky note. Different sets of questions were divided over different 'tabs' in the sheet, relating to the different stages of their exercise."

On video meetings, meeting organizers can separate assigned groups into "conference rooms," or meetings with a handful of participants. Hosts can toggle back and forth between the Zoom conference rooms to check in on conversations.

Janssens recommends organizing the groups ahead of time and preparing questions to work on in a shared document.

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Unspoken rules for collaborating in your office include not speaking over someone else, politely listening to presentations, and giving your undivided attention to the task at hand.

Working from home might be more distracting, but you must maintain the same etiquette for brainstorming sessions to remain effective, according to Ordua from Vodafone.

"I would recommend you start with these four areas to lead in an agile virtual environment: create a safe environment to fail and learn fast, use collaboration tools, encourage continuous feedback and deepen your relationships," Ordua told Inc. "This approach can benefit small businesses up to the CEO of a multinational organization."

Proper etiquette includes arriving to virtual meetings on time, muting your microphone when you're not speaking, using your camera, and actually participating in the workshop.

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Eye Pupil Size Changes Are Linked to Decision-making – Technology Networks

A team of US Army and academic researchers are investigating how eye-pupil size changes can indicate a person's cognitive state as a means to enable teaming with autonomous agents.The future Army battlespace will require humans and AI agents to team effectively to accomplish mission-critical goals. Although AI agents can fill gaps in human performance, they are rigid and lack the flexibility inherent to human behavior, which could interfere with teaming.

"Humans' brains are amazing, adaptable systems that automatically apply the right cognitive processes to complete a task and initiates each process at the right time," said Dr. Russell Cohen Hoffing, a scientist at the U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command's Army Research Laboratory. "However, our brain's resources are limited. Being able to predict a Soldier's mental status before resources are maxed out is an opportunity for an autonomous agent to deploy capabilities to aid the Soldier. To make progress on enabling this technology, we wanted to better understand how physiological signals, such as pupil size changes, are related to performance and cognitive states."

A joint effort between researchers from the Army and the Institute of Collaborative Biotechnologies at the University of California, Santa Barbara, the Cognitive Resilience and Sleep History, or CRASH, project seeks to understand how variations in state (as measured by physiological sensors) influence subsequent performance. PLOS ONE published the team's research on a subset of the data set.

In this research, the team sought to understand the cognitive processes that affect pupil size changes and the reliability of these relationships as a foundation to estimate how human cognitive processes and performance can vary in real-world, cognitively challenging tasks, Cohen Hoffing said. The pupil is a unique data source, as it is the only internal organ of the body that brain networks directly modulate and is visible to the outside world.

"The potential of this research is exciting because eye tracking technologies are becoming universal in both commercial and military contexts," Cohen Hoffing said. "Inherent to eye tracking algorithms, pupil size is estimated but rarely used for analytics. Our research program aims to generate knowledge products that enhance usability of this type of data to have greater insight into cognitive processes such as attention and decision making."

The researchers collected repeated measurements from participants on eight separate occasions over four months. The data provided insights into the consistency of the pupil response and relationships to behavior both within and between individual with a unique glimpse into cognitive processes over time rather than in single-session studies, Cohen Hoffing said.

The findings of the study demonstrated that researchers can use pupil features to index both static and rapid-time varying aspects of cognition to understand how cognitive processes influence performance. Results indicated that at the trial-level, the time that each participant took to answer a mental arithmetic question correlated with the time to maximum pupil dilation and the size of the pupil. The relationship between performance and rapid pupil features indicated that a latent pupil response correlated with the process of reaching an answer, while pupil response increases correlated with the amount of attention applied to provide an answer. In contrast, average pupil size correlated with variability in how fast participants completed questions suggesting that average pupil size indicates a readiness to perform the mental arithmetic task.

Results of the study confirm and extend previous research, showing that cognition reliably influences the pupil on at least two time-courses: a rapid, transient influence and a longer-lasting, sustained influence.

"These findings allow us to further understand in which cases pupil data may be useful for human and agent teaming," said Dr. Steven Thurman, Army scientist and senior author on the manuscript. "For example, it may be the case that pupil size is most reliable in complex, real-world contexts only when averaging data over the course of several seconds or minutes. Such a case would enable the ability to track longer timescale changes in mental states, like vigilance, workload or fatigue, but potentially limit its use for tracking moment-to-moment decisions. It is important to employ longitudinal studies like this to understand the utility of pupil data on these varying timescales."

Future studies will examine how to apply this research in real-world contexts, such as using virtual reality to test whether pupil size features can be exploited in dynamic contexts. This will be a steppingstone to test the efficacy of adaptive autonomous agents that use pupil size as an effective measure of hidden human states.ReferenceHoffing et al. (2020). Dissociable mappings of tonic and phasic pupillary features onto cognitive processes involved in mental arithmetic. PLOS One. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230517

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