Category Archives: Human Behavior

Apply Now to Study Abroad on the Classics in Italy Program This Summer – University of Arkansas Newswire

R. G. Vennarucci

UA students explore the remains of an ancient Roman bath complex in Ostia Antica, Italy.

This program, which isopen to all students with an interestin studying abroad in Italy, will explorehow the built environment shapes human behavior through aclose "on the ground" comparison of the urban landscapes of modern Italian and ancient Roman cities.

Students will learn how to "read" the urban environment as a reflection of society and group identities, using the architectural, art historical, and archaeological remains they encounter to reconstruct and visualizethe lifeways and lived experiences of ancient Romans.

While based in Rome where students will explore iconic sites(e.g. Colosseum, Pantheon) and museums (e.g. Vatican Museums), students will also visit Naples, Pompeii, Herculaneum, Sperlonga, Tivoliand Ostia. Part of the program involvesfield research for theVirtual Pompeii and Virtual Roman Retailprojects, for which students will developphotogrammetry and basic3D modeling skills.

Application deadling is Feb. 1. To apply, go to the Hogs Abroad Classics in Italy page.

If you have any questions, please contact Rhodora Vennarucci at rhodorav@uark.edu.

Read more from the original source:
Apply Now to Study Abroad on the Classics in Italy Program This Summer - University of Arkansas Newswire

Peoples Gas receives top regional score in national utility study focusing on brand trust and customer engagement – Yahoo Finance

Utility ranks first for natural gas companies in Midwest

CHICAGO, Jan. 29, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Peoples Gas earned the highest score among Midwestern natural gas utilities in a 2019 national customer satisfaction survey conducted by Escalent, a top human behavior and analytics firm.

The Cogent Syndicated Utility Trusted Brand & Customer Engagement Residential study tracks the performance of the 140 largest electric, natural gas and combination electric/natural gas utilities in the U.S. in brand trust, product experience and service satisfaction.

Peoples Gas achieved the highest Engaged Customer Relationship (ECR) score among natural gas utilities in the Midwest, earning 763 out of 1,000 points. The company ranked fourth nationally among natural gas utilities.

"Our research finds that Peoples Gas is among the industry's best on engaging customers with world class service, caring about the communities they serve and providing customers options that add real value," said Chris Oberle, senior vice president at Escalent.

"It's an honor to be recognized by those we serve as a utility customer champion," said Larry Szumski, vice president customer relations for Peoples Gas. "While we have made great strides, we will continue to look for new ways to evolve and exceed our customers' expectations."

Earlier in 2019, Peoples Gas received the Most Trusted Brand award from Escalent, based on communications effectiveness, increased customer engagement, and expanded community partnerships and corporate giving. The company also was recognized by its customers as one of the easiest utilities in the nation with which to conduct business in the 2019 Cogent Reports Utility Trusted Brand & Customer Engagement Residential study.

Peoples Gas, a subsidiary of WEC Energy Group (NYSE: WEC), is a regulated natural gas delivery company that serves more than 867,000 residential, commercial and industrial customers in the city of Chicago. You can find more information about natural gas safety, energy efficiency and other energy-related topics at peoplesgasdelivery.com. Follow us on Twitterand Facebook@peoplegaschi.

About Utility Trusted Brand & Customer Engagement: Residential Escalent conducted surveys among 67,379 residential electric, natural gas and combination utility customers of the 140 largest U.S. utility companies (based on residential customer counts). The sample design uses a combination of quotas and weighting based on U.S. census data to ensure a demographically balanced sample of each evaluated utility's customers based on age, gender, income, race and ethnicity. Utilities within the same region and of the same type (e.g., electric-only providers) are given equal weight in order to balance the influence of each utility's customers on survey results. Escalent will supply the exact wording of any survey question upon request.

About Escalent Escalentis a top human behavior and analytics firm specializing in industries facing disruption and business transformation. As catalysts of progress for more than 40 years, we tell stories that transform data and insight into a profound understanding of what drives human beings. And we help businesses turn those drivers into actions that build brands, enhance customer experiences and inspire product innovation. Visit escalent.coto see how we are helping shape the brands that are reshaping the world.

View original content:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/peoples-gas-receives-top-regional-score-in-national-utility-study-focusing-on-brand-trust-and-customer-engagement-300995698.html

SOURCE Peoples Gas

Read this article:
Peoples Gas receives top regional score in national utility study focusing on brand trust and customer engagement - Yahoo Finance

2019-nCoV: Just a Stop on the Zoonotic Highway – Medscape

Emerging viruses that spread to humans from an animal host are commonplace and represent some of the deadliest diseases known. Given the details of the Wuhan coronavirus (2019-nCoV) outbreak, including the genetic profile of the disease agent, the hypothesis of a snake origin was the first raised in the peer-reviewed literature.

Wuhan seafood market closed after the new coronavirus was detected there for the first time in 2020. SISTEMA 12/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY-SA 4.0

It is a highly controversial origin story, however, given that mammals have been the sources of all other such zoonotic coronaviruses, as well as a host of other zoonotic diseases.

An animal source for emerging infections such as the 2019-nCoV is the default hypothesis, because "around 60% of all infectious diseases in humans are zoonotic, as are 75% of all emerging infectious diseases," according to a United Nations report. The report goes on to say that, "on average, one new infectious disease emerges in humans every 4 months."

To appreciate the emergence and nature of 2019-nCoV, it is important to examine the history of zoonotic outbreaks of other such diseases, especially with regard to the "mixing-vessel" phenomenon, which has been noted in closely related coronaviruses, including SARS and MERS, as well as the widely disparate HIV, Ebola, and influenza viruses.

The mixing-vessel phenomenon is conceptually easy but molecularly complex. A single animal is coinfected with two related viruses; the virus genomes recombine together (virus "sex") in that animal to form a new variant of virus. Such new mutant viruses can be more or less infective, more or less deadly, and more or less able to jump the species or even genus barrier. An emerging viral zoonosis can occur when a human being is exposed to one of these new viruses (either from the origin species or another species intermediate) that is capable of also infecting a human cell. Such exposure can occur from close proximity to animal waste or body fluids, as in the farm environment, or from wildlife pets or the capturing and slaughtering of wildlife for food, as is proposed in the case of the Wuhan seafood market scenario. In fact, the scientists who postulated a snake intermediary as the potential mixing vessel also stated that 2019nCoV appears to be a recombinant virus between a bat coronavirus and an originunknown coronavirus.

Coronaviruses in particular have a history of moving from animal to human hosts (and even back again), and their detailed genetic pattern and taxonomy can reveal the animal origin of these diseases.

Bats, in particular, have been shown to be a reservoir species for both alphacoronaviruses and betacoronaviruses. Given their ecology and behavior, they have been found to play a key role in transmitting coronaviruses between species. A highly pertinent example of this is the SARS coronavirus , which was shown to have likely originated in Chinese horseshoe bats. The SARS virus, which is genetically closely related to the new Wuhan coronavirus, first infected humans in the Guangdong province of southern China in 2002.

Scientists speculate that the virus was then either transmitted directly to humans from bats, or passed through an intermediate host species, with SARS-like viruses isolated from Himalayan palm civets found in a live-animal market in Guangdong. The virus infection was also detected in other animals (including a raccoon dog, Nyctereutes procyonoides) and in humans working at the market.

The MERS coronavirus is a betacoronavirus that was first reported in Saudi Arabia in 2012. It turned out to be far more deadly than either SARS or the Wuhan virus (at least as far as current estimates of the new coronaviruss behavior). The MERS genotype was found to be closely related to MERS-like viruses in bats in Saudi Arabia, Africa, Europe, and Asia. Studies done on the cell receptor for MERS showed an apparently conserved viral receptor in both bats and humans. And an identical strain of MERS was found in bats in a nearby cave and near the workplace of the first known human patient.

However, in many of the other locations of the outbreak in the Middle East, there appeared to be limited contact between bats and humans, so scientists looked for another vector species, perhaps one that was acting as an intermediate. A high seroprevalence of MERS-CoV or a closely related virus was found in camels across the Arabian Peninsula and parts of eastern and northern Africa, while tests for MERS antibodies were negative in the most-likely other species of livestock or pet animals, including chickens, cows, goats, horses, and sheep.

In addition, the MERS-related CoV carried by camels was genetically highly similar to that detected in humans, as demonstrated in one particular outbreak on a farm in Qatar where the genetic sequences of MERS-CoV in the nasal swabs from 3 of 14 seropositive camels were similar to those of 2 human cases on the same farm. Similar genomic results were found in MERS-CoV from nasal swabs from camels in Saudi Arabia.

HIV, the viral cause of AIDS, provides an almost-textbook origin story of the rise of a zoonotic supervillain. The virus was genetically traced to have a chimpanzee-to-human origin, but it was found to be more complicated than that. The virus first emerged in the 1920s in Africa in what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo, well before its rise to a global pandemic in the 1980s.

Researchers believe the chimpanzee virus is a hybrid of the simian immunodeficiency viruses (SIVs) naturally infecting two different monkey species: the red-capped mangabey (Cercocebus torquatus) and the greater spot-nosed monkey (Cercopithecus nictitans). Chimpanzees kill and eat monkeys, which is likely how they acquired the monkey viruses. The viruses hybridized in a chimpanzee; the hybrid virus then spread through the chimpanzee population and was later transmitted to humans who captured and slaughtered chimps for meat (becoming exposed to their blood). This was the most likely origin of HIV-1.

HIV-1 also shows one of the major risks of zoonotic infections. They can continue to mutate in its human host, increasing the risk of greater virulence, but also interfering with the production of a universally effective vaccine. Since its transmission to humans, for example, many subtypes of the HIV-1 strain have developed, with genetic differences even in the same subtypes found to be up to 20%.

Ebolavirus, first detected in 1976, is another case of bats being the potential culprit. Genetic analysis has shown that African fruit bats are likely involved in the spread of the virus and may be its reservoir host. Further evidence of this was found in the most recent human-infecting Bombali variant of the virus, which was identified in samples from bats collected from Sierra Leone.

It was also found that pigs can also become infected with Zaire ebolavirus, leading to the fear that pigs could serve as a mixing vessel for it and other filoviruses. Pigs have their own forms of Ebola-like disease viruses, which are not currently transmissible to humans, but could provide a potential mixing-vessel reservoir.

The Western world has been most affected by these highly mutable, multispecies zoonotic viruses. The 1957 and 1968 flu pandemics contained a mixture of gene segments from human and avian influenza viruses. "What is clear from genetic analysis of the viruses that caused these past pandemics is that reassortment (gene swapping) occurred to produce novel influenza viruses that caused the pandemics. In both of these cases, the new viruses that emerged showed major differences from the parent viruses," according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Influenza is, however, a good example that all zoonoses are not the result of a mixing-vessel phenomenon, with evidence showing that the origin of the catastrophic 1918 virus pandemic likely resulted from a bird influenza virus directly infecting humans and pigs at about the same time without reassortment, according to the CDC.

The first 2 decades of the 21st century saw a huge increase in efforts to develop an infrastructure to monitor and potentially prevent the spread of new zoonoses. As part of a global effort led by the United Nations, the U.S. Agency for International AID developed the PREDICT program in 2009 "to strengthen global capacity for detection and discovery of zoonotic viruses with pandemic potential. Those include coronaviruses, the family to which SARS and MERS belong; paramyxoviruses, like Nipah virus; influenza viruses; and filoviruses, like the ebolavirus."

PREDICT funding to the EcoHealth Alliance led to discovery of the likely bat origins of the Zaire ebolavirus during the 2013-2016 outbreak. And throughout the existence of PREDICT, more than 145,000 animals and people were surveyed in areas of likely zoonotic outbreaks, leading to the detection of more than "1,100 unique viruses, including zoonotic diseases of public health concern such as Bombali ebolavirus, Zaire ebolavirus, Marburg virus, and MERS- and SARS-like coronaviruses," according to PREDICT partner, the University of California, Davis.

PREDICT-2 was launched in 2014 with the continuing goals of "identifying and better characterizing pathogens of known epidemic and unknown pandemic potential; recognizing animal reservoirs and amplification hosts of human-infectious viruses; and efficiently targeting intervention action at human behaviors which amplify disease transmission at critical animal-animal and animal-human interfaces in hotspots of viral evolution, spillover, amplification, and spread."

However, in October 2019, the Trump administration cut all funding to the PREDICT program, leading to its shutdown. In a New York Times interview, Peter Daszak, president of the EcoHealth Alliance, stated: "PREDICT was an approach to heading off pandemics, instead of sitting there waiting for them to emerge and then mobilizing."

Ultimately, in addition to its human cost, the current Wuhan coronavirus outbreak can be looked at an object lesson a test of the pandemic surveillance and control systems currently in place, and a practice run for the next and potentially more-deadly zoonotic outbreaks to come. Perhaps it is also a reminder that cutting resources to detect zoonoses at their source in their animal hosts before they enter the human chain is perhaps not the most prudent of ideas.

Mark Lesney is the managing editor of MDedge.com/IDPractioner. He has a PhD in plant virology and a PhD in the history of science, with a focus on the history of biotechnology and medicine. He has served as an adjunct assistant professor of the department of biochemistry and molecular & celluar biology at Georgetown University, Washington.

This article originally appeared on MDedge.com.

Go here to see the original:
2019-nCoV: Just a Stop on the Zoonotic Highway - Medscape

How to Reduce Bias in Hiring and Human Resource Decisions – Morningstar.com

Samantha Lamas

Most financial professionals know that investors suffer from behavioral biases when making financial decisions, and some may even catch themselves making the same mistakes from time to time. But when it comes to their job, professionals must also be on the lookout for other behavioral biases that can impact a companys greatest asset: their people.

Just like with investing, behavioral biases can lead peopleand companiesto underperform. For example, companies might fail to hire the best candidate for the job or lose a highly skilled employee to a competitor. Though everyone wants the best people on their team, many dont realize how the language in a job advertisement affects the candidate pool or how some diversity trainings have adverse effects.

Based on existing behavioral research, we created a guide and checklist that highlights techniques and lessons people can leverage to avoid behavioral bias in hiring and human resource decisions.

Behavioral research finds that human behavior is highly variable, and small details of presentation can have unexpected influence. For example, having too many job requirements can impact your candidate pool, especially since men are more likely to apply if they fit at least 60% of the requirements, whereas women are more likely to feel that they need to fill all of them before applying.

Mitigating bias in hiring starts with the job advertisement: how it looks, what it says, and where its placed. Here are a few quick tips to optimize your job advertisement:

Almost everyone has been guilty of this: talking to a job candidate in their interview, connecting about a random topic that has nothing to do with the job they applied for, and then, almost subconsciously, giving them a good review. This is just one way that biases make their way into peoples decisions when it comes to reviewing job candidates or current employees.

Everyone can be unintentionally swayed by a persons gender, ethnicity, age, or personality when evaluating an individual for a job or a raise. Plus, hiring professionals can be subject to their own environmentfor example, maybe its been a crazy week and making hiring decisions at 4 p.m. on a Friday is not a good idea.

To combat the impact of bias in hiring and compensation decisions, research has a identified a few techniques:

Even though we are all prone to behavioral biases, it doesnt mean we have to be subject to them. By implementing a few research-based techniques and processes, you can learn to make more logical decisions.

In the full paper, we discuss more ways in which biases can be problematic when making human resource decisions and how to avoid them. We also include a checklist to help professionals begin implementing behavioral techniques when it comes to finding, vetting, and hiring job candidates.

Get My Copy

Original post:
How to Reduce Bias in Hiring and Human Resource Decisions - Morningstar.com

What is quantum cognition? Physics theory could predict human behavior. – Livescience.com

The same fundamental platform that allows Schrdinger's cat to be both alive and dead, and also means two particles can "speak to each other" even across a galaxy's distance, could help to explain perhaps the most mysterious phenomena: human behavior.

Quantum physics and human psychology may seem completely unrelated, but some scientists think the two fields overlap in interesting ways. Both disciplines attempt to predict how unruly systems might behave in the future. The difference is that one field aims to understand the fundamental nature of physical particles, while the other attempts to explain human nature along with its inherent fallacies.

"Cognitive scientists found that there are many 'irrational' human behaviors," Xiaochu Zhang, a biophysicist and neuroscientist at the University of Science and Technology of China in Hefei, told Live Science in an email. Classical theories of decision-making attempt to predict what choice a person will make given certain parameters, but fallible humans don't always behave as expected. Recent research suggests that these lapses in logic "can be well explained by quantum probability theory," Zhang said.

Related: Twisted Physics: 7 Mind-Blowing Findings

Zhang stands among the proponents of so-called quantum cognition. In a new study published Jan. 20 in the journal Nature Human Behavior, he and his colleagues investigated how concepts borrowed from quantum mechanics can help psychologists better predict human decision-making. While recording what decisions people made on a well-known psychology task, the team also monitored the participants' brain activity. The scans highlighted specific brain regions that may be involved in quantum-like thought processes.

The study is "the first to support the idea of quantum cognition at the neural level," Zhang said.

Cool now what does that really mean?

Quantum mechanics describes the behavior of the tiny particles that make up all matter in the universe, namely atoms and their subatomic components. One central tenet of the theory suggests a great deal of uncertainty in this world of the very small, something not seen at larger scales. For instance, in the big world, one can know where a train is on its route and how fast it's traveling, and given this data, one could predict when that train should arrive at the next station.

Now, swap out the train for an electron, and your predictive power disappears you can't know the exact location and momentum of a given electron, but you could calculate the probability that the particle may appear in a certain spot, traveling at a particular rate. In this way, you could gain a hazy idea of what the electron might be up to.

Just as uncertainty pervades the subatomic world, it also seeps into our decision-making process, whether we're debating which new series to binge-watch or casting our vote in a presidential election. Here's where quantum mechanics comes in. Unlike classical theories of decision-making, the quantum world makes room for a certain degree of uncertainty.

Related: The Funniest Theories in Physics

Classical psychology theories rest on the idea that people make decisions in order to maximize "rewards" and minimize "punishments" in other words, to ensure their actions result in more positive outcomes than negative consequences. This logic, known as "reinforcement learning," falls in line with Pavlonian conditioning, wherein people learn to predict the consequences of their actions based on past experiences, according to a 2009 report in the Journal of Mathematical Psychology.

If truly constrained by this framework, humans would consistently weigh the objective values of two options before choosing between them. But in reality, people don't always work that way; their subjective feelings about a situation undermine their ability to make objective decisions.

Consider an example:

Imagine you're placing bets on whether a tossed coin will land on heads or tails. Heads gets you $200, tails costs you $100, and you can choose to toss the coin twice. When placed in this scenario, most people choose to take the bet twice regardless of whether the initial throw results in a win or a loss, according to a study published in 1992 in the journal Cognitive Psychology. Presumably, winners bet a second time because they stand to gain money no matter what, while losers bet in attempt to recover their losses, and then some. However, if players aren't allowed to know the result of the first coin flip, they rarely make the second gamble.

When known, the first flip does not sway the choice that follows, but when unknown, it makes all the difference. This paradox does not fit within the framework of classical reinforcement learning, which predicts that the objective choice should always be the same. In contrast, quantum mechanics takes uncertainty into account and actually predicts this odd outcome.

"One could say that the 'quantum-based' model of decision-making refers essentially to the use of quantum probability in the area of cognition," Emmanuel Haven and Andrei Khrennikov, co-authors of the textbook "Quantum Social Science" (Cambridge University Press, 2013), told Live Science in an email.

Related: The 18 Biggest Unsolved Mysteries in Physics

Just as a particular electron might be here or there at a given moment, quantum mechanics assumes that the first coin toss resulted in both a win and a loss, simultaneously. (In other words, in the famous thought experiment, Schrdinger's cat is both alive and dead.) While caught in this ambiguous state, known as "superposition," an individual's final choice is unknown and unpredictable. Quantum mechanics also acknowledges that people's beliefs about the outcome of a given decision whether it will be good or bad often reflect what their final choice ends up being. In this way, people's beliefs interact, or become "entangled," with their eventual action.

Subatomic particles can likewise become entangled and influence each other's behavior even when separated by great distances. For instance, measuring the behavior of a particle located in Japan would alter the behavior of its entangled partner in the United States. In psychology, a similar analogy can be drawn between beliefs and behaviors. "It is precisely this interaction," or state of entanglement, "which influences the measurement outcome," Haven and Khrennikov said. The measurement outcome, in this case, refers to the final choice an individual makes. "This can be precisely formulated with the aid of quantum probability."

Scientists can mathematically model this entangled state of superposition in which two particles affect each other even if theyre separated by a large distance as demonstrated in a 2007 report published by the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence. And remarkably, the final formula accurately predicts the paradoxical outcome of the coin toss paradigm. "The lapse in logic can be better explained by using the quantum-based approach," Haven and Khrennikov noted.

In their new study, Zhang and his colleagues pitted two quantum-based models of decision-making against 12 classical psychology models to see which best predicted human behavior during a psychological task. The experiment, known as the Iowa Gambling Task, is designed to evaluate people's ability to learn from mistakes and adjust their decision-making strategy over time.

In the task, participants draw from four decks of cards. Each card either earns the player money or costs them money, and the object of the game is to earn as much money as possible. The catch lies in how each deck of cards is stacked. Drawing from one deck may earn a player large sums of money in the short term, but it will cost them far more cash by the end of the game. Other decks deliver smaller sums of money in the short-term, but fewer penalties overall. Through game play, winners learn to mostly draw from the "slow and steady" decks, while losers draw from the decks that earn them quick cash and steep penalties.

Historically, those with drug addictions or brain damage perform worse on the Iowa Gambling Task than healthy participants, which suggests that their condition somehow impairs decision-making abilities, as highlighted in a study published in 2014 in the journal Applied Neuropsychology: Child. This pattern held true in Zhang's experiment, which included about 60 healthy participants and 40 who were addicted to nicotine.

The two quantum models made similar predictions to the most accurate among the classical models, the authors noted. "Although the [quantum] models did not overwhelmingly outperform the [classical] ... one should be aware that the [quantum reinforcement learning] framework is still in its infancy and undoubtedly deserves additional studies," they added.

Related: 10 Things You Didn't Know About the Brain.

To bolster the value of their study, the team took brain scans of each participant as they completed the Iowa Gambling Task. In doing so, the authors attempted to peek at what was happening inside the brain as participants learned and adjusted their game-play strategy over time. Outputs generated by the quantum model predicted how this learning process would unfold, and thus, the authors theorized that hotspots of brain activity might somehow correlate with the models' predictions.

The scans did reveal a number of active brain areas in the healthy participants during game play, including activation of several large folds within the frontal lobe known to be involved in decision-making. In the smoking group, however, no hotspots of brain activity seemed tied to predictions made by the quantum model. As the model reflects participants' ability to learn from mistakes, the results may illustrate decision-making impairments in the smoking group, the authors noted.

However, "further research is warranted" to determine what these brain activity differences truly reflect in smokers and non-smokers, they added. "The coupling of the quantum-like models with neurophysiological processes in the brain ... is a very complex problem," Haven and Khrennikov said. "This study is of great importance as the first step towards its solution."

Models of classical reinforcement learning have shown "great success" in studies of emotion, psychiatric disorders, social behavior, free will and many other cognitive functions, Zhang said. "We hope that quantum reinforcement learning will also shed light on [these fields], providing unique insights."

In time, perhaps quantum mechanics will help explain pervasive flaws in human logic, as well as how that fallibility manifests at the level of individual neurons.

Originally published on Live Science.

Here is the original post:
What is quantum cognition? Physics theory could predict human behavior. - Livescience.com

Study shows lower speed limits don’t save wildlife – Wyoming Business Report

POWELL Efforts to reduce the number of wildlife vehicle collisions by dropping speed limits arent paying off as expected, according to a new study. The problem? People arent obeying the law.

The Wyoming Department of Transportation recently started lowering speed limits in six active zones across the state. Locally, North Fork speed limits between Cody and the Shoshone National Forest were lowered from 65 mph limits during the day to 55 mph at night to protect wildlife.

But a study of similar speed limit reductions in southwest Wyoming conducted by The Nature Conservancy and sponsored by WYDOT concluded that, on average, drivers slowed down by only 3-5 mph rather than the required 15 mph. They also found no evidence that the reduced speed limit led to fewer wildlife collisions.

We recommend that reduced posted speed limit is not an effective measure to reduce wildlife vehicle collisions on high speed rural two-lane highways, concluded The Nature Conservancy scientist Corinna Riginos.

Researchers compared the number of collisions at six test sites before and after the speed limit change. They also tested for differences in vehicle speed in the reduced speed limit zones and in adjacent locations where the speed limit was not reduced.

The Nature Conservancy concluded that lowering speed limits doesnt work and the organization is now calling for expanded construction of wildlife crossing structures.

The only sure way to significantly reduce these accidents is to build over- or underpasses that allow animals to cross roads without touching the pavement, said Riginos. Changing human behavior is challenging.

The structures are pricey, but so is the cost of no action, the conservancy said in a news release.

In Wyoming, wildlife-vehicle collisions cost more than $50 million in human injury, property damage and wildlife loss every year. About 85% of wildlifevehicle collisions in the state involve mule deer, and at an average cost of $10,500 per accident (twice that if you hit an elk) the cost of this problem adds up quickly, the organization wrote.

This year, the State of Wyoming and the federal government have committed about $18 million toward building crossing structures. The Wyoming Game and Fish Commission has contributed $2.5 million, WYDOT $1 million and a U.S. Department of Transportation Better Utilizing Investments to Leverage Development (BUILD) grant kicked in $14.5 million. No structures are planned for Park County at this point.

WYDOT spokesman Cody Beers said the new speed limits have to be given time to work.

These speed limits work if you incorporate education and enforcement, he said.

As for what WYDOT has planned for the Wapiti Valley, with the known hurdles that nighttime speed limits bring, we are trying a new technology that has not been used in the mitigation of wildlife-vehicle collisions, Beers said. The animals are in the valley in high numbers from late fall through late spring, and the animals generally move out of the valley in the summer. The dead-end nature of the North Fork Highway in the winter [when Yellowstone is closed] gives us a unique opportunity to do this nighttime speed limit work [including education and enforcement] with mostly local drivers.

Beers pointed out that The Nature Conservancy didnt study the North Fork and that the area has its own unique wildlife issues.

Each wildlife collision has an impact on the animal and presents a safety issue for the motorist, he said. We are invested in finding solutions to reduce crashes to limit these impacts.

See original here:
Study shows lower speed limits don't save wildlife - Wyoming Business Report

You can recover from the New Year’s slip – Florida Weekly

HODGES UNIVERSITY

By Florida Weekly Staff | on January 29, 2020

Florida Weekly Audio Stories brought to you by Broadway Palm Dinner Theatre. Visit broadwaypalm.com to book show tickets today!

Youre celebrating and pumped to carry out your New Years resolution.

However, did you know there is a day called Quitters Day? Each year Strava predicts the day when most people will quit New Years resolutions. For 2020 it was predicted for Jan. 19. The 19th has come and gone, and perhaps your resolution has passed with it.

In order to get yourself back on track you need to understand how you are motivated.

Psychology is the study of human behavior and helps explain why we do the things we do, and what motivations trigger our behaviors. Motivations can be intrinsic or extrinsic. When your behavior is driven by an external reward, it is a motivation that arises from outside of yourself. The motivation that arises from within you is intrinsic. People who are intrinsically motivated perform for the sense of personal satisfaction. Which is more important when it comes to keeping those annual resolutions? The answer is intrinsic motivation. This is because intrinsic motivation is linked to changes that happen within us. Essentially, it involves the desire to focus our attention in a particular way that originates from our inner selves. Tapping into your intrinsic motivation is very powerful when it comes to fulfilling promises or completing goals. The reason it is so powerful is that is linked to personal efficacy and purpose. So in order to be more successful it would be helpful to know your purpose for completing your goals.

BUSHEY

Intrinsic motivation is also linked to self-determination, and involves focusing on the tasks that carry you toward your goal. Engaging in these tasks will carry you through your goals, and result in energized emotions and enjoyment. Intrinsic motivation also involves a high degree of autonomy. Ultimately, you are doing this for that feeling of personal satisfaction.

Extrinsic motivation relies on and is fueled by the praise of others and an external reward. That comes in the form of positive affirmation and support in your journey. So what happens if you dont receive that extrinsic motivation? You could lose heart. Even if your 2020 resolutions fell flat, it is not too late.

Instead, here are some questions to ask yourself in order to help you get back on track. After all, you have 11 months left in 2020.

What is your purpose?

What would be the most satisfying element of achieving your goal?

How can you boost your inner autonomy in order to stay on track?

When will you begin again?

Remember that your New Years resolution is something you can still achieve.

Dr. Kelly Bushey is the as sociate professor of applied psychology at Hodges University.

See more here:
You can recover from the New Year's slip - Florida Weekly

Body-on-Chip system mimics the behavior of 10 connected organs – New Atlas

The development and eventual approval of modern drugs is hugely reliant on animal models and human clinical trials, but for some time now scientists have been working on an alternative and more expedient approach. By recreating the functions of various organs on small devices known as Organ Chips or Organs-on-a-chip, researchers hope to greatly reduce the time and cost of testing new drugs for safety and efficacy. Now, scientists at Harvards Wyss Institute have pieced together 10 of them to create a functioning Body-on-Chips platform that can offer new and comprehensive insights into how prospective drugs will behave throughout the human body.

The aim of the research project was to not just recreate the complicated functions of 10 different human organs, but to connect them up via fluidic pathways to observe how the flow of simulated blood impacts the entire system. A drug may appear safe when screened in the kidneys, for example, but could create side effects in other organs. The idea with these Body-on-Chips systems is to sniff out such dangers earlier on in the testing process.

Back in 2017, we looked at a Body-on-a-Chip" system from scientists at Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine, which combined several organ models into the one system. The Wyss Institutes builds on this by offering a more complete picture, with the scientists focusing on two aspects of drug behavior in particular.

The first is known as pharmacokinetics (PK), which revers to how a drug is absorbed, distributed, metabolized and excreted by the human body, which ultimately determines the drug levels left in the blood. The other is known as pharmacodynamics (PD), which refers to the way a drug impacts its target organs, including both the mechanics of how it works and any potential side effects.

Like others weve looked at in the past, the Organ Chips making up the Body-on-Chips system are microfluidic devices around the size of a memory stick. A pair of parallel channels are separated by a porous membrane, with cells specific to the organ populating one side and vascular cells mimicking a blood vessel on the other.

These organs-on-chips are connected by vascular channels that transfer fluid between them to mimic blood flow through the human body. In this way, scientists are able to observe how drugs impact PK and PD, with the team using computational modeling to predict how they might impact the entire human body.

In this study, we serially linked the vascular channels of eight different Organ Chips, including intestine, liver, kidney, heart, lung, skin, bloodbrain barrier and brain, using a highly optimized common blood substitute, while independently perfusing the individual channels lined by organ-specific cells, says co-first author Richard Novak. The instrument maintained the viability of all tissues and their organ-specific functions for over three weeks and, importantly, it allowed us to quantitatively predict the tissue-specific distribution of a chemical across the entire system.

In one experiment, the scientists used the modular platform to connect Organ Chips simulating the gut, the liver and a kidney. Nicotine was added to gut chip to mimic oral administration of the drug, from where it was passed through the intestinal wall, through the vascular system to the liver to be metabolized, and onward to the kidney where it was excreted. An analysis using mass spectrometry followed, with the team confirming the drugs journey and its effects closely resembled that seen in actual humans.

Wyss Institute at Harvard University

The resulting calculated maximum nicotine concentrations, the time needed for nicotine to reach the different tissue compartments, and the clearance rates in the Liver Chips in our in vitro-based in silico model mirrored closely what had been measured previously in patients, says Ben Maoz, a co-first author.

In another experiment, the team observed the effects of a common chemotherapy drug called cisplatin that can cause toxicity in kidney and bone marrow. The Body-on-Chips platform again proved to be an accurate model.

Our analysis recapitulates the pharmacodynamic effects of cisplatin in patients, including a decrease in numbers of different blood cell types and an increase in markers of kidney injury, says co-first author Anna Herland.

The research was published across two studies in the journal Nature Biomedical Engineering (1, 2), and the video below offers a look at the Body-on-Chips platform in action, with an instrument called the Interrogator linking together the various Organ Chips making up the system.

Interrogator: Human Organ-on-Chips

Source: Wyss Institue

Go here to read the rest:
Body-on-Chip system mimics the behavior of 10 connected organs - New Atlas

Rev. Jim Watkins and Roxie column: Preaching to the chickens – South Strand news

Roxie was hard at work on her Human Watchers Guide. She has finally taught herself to use her nose to type on the computer, but it still takes concentration and time.

Hi Roxie. You sure are pounding away. Some human behavior must have set off this flurry of activity.

Yep. Im glad that its almost time for happy hour. I need a break. Well get to the curious part of human behavior later. Right now Im describing humanity at its best. There are some good things that humans do. Dr. King is an example of that. He has often been quoted. Im including one of his quotes in my guide. We are all caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied into a single garment of destiny. Canines, as well as humans, understand that. We are all connected, whether we know it or not. When you think of Dr. King, what first comes to mind?

Thanks for asking Roxie. The first thing? Dr. Kings impact on those who followed him. As you know, Dr. Kings life was cut short by an assassins bullet. During his last sermon, he said that he might not get to the promised land, but the people would get there. His influence lives on and on through others, I had the honor of getting to know one of Dr. Kings recruits, Congressman John Lewis. The Congressional district where I was staff director was next tp Johns district. John is the most courageous and most humble person Ive ever known. He will let you rub his head and you can feel the bumps that are still there from the horrific beating he received as he tried to cross the Pettus bridge in Selma. Called the Conscience of Congress, he is highly regarded by both sides of the aisle. A Baptist minister, he grew up on his familys farm in Alabama. As a youngster, he would practice sermons by preaching to the chickens. Whenever I saw John I would ask him if he was still preaching to the chickens. His reply would be, Now more than ever.

Roxie, John reminds us that the celebration of Dr. Kings life begins the day after the holiday. Will we live out his call to empower the marginalized? Will we welcome the stranger? Will we elect folks to public office who understand that the most religious thing they do is pass budgets that reflect a concern for the poor.? Will we strive to live by love rather than hate?

Well said Jim. As we break for happy hour lets toast John.

Great idea Roxie and as we do, lets say a prayer for him. John is in a different kind of fight. Hes fighting cancer.

Amen, Jim.

The Rev. Dr. Jim Watkins and Roxie live in Pawleys Island.

Follow this link:
Rev. Jim Watkins and Roxie column: Preaching to the chickens - South Strand news

UB Department of Theatre and Dance Presents Forbidden: Undocumented and Queer in Rural America – UB News Center

BUFFALO, N.Y. The University at Buffalo Department of Theatre and Dance presents a free film screening of, "Forbidden: Undocumented and Queer in Rural America," a feature length documentary about an inspiring young man whose story is exceptional, although not unique.

"Forbidden: Undocumented and Queer in Rural America" reflects the life of Moises Serrano. As a baby, his parents risked everything to flee Mexico in search of the American dream.Forbidden to live and love as an undocumented gay man in the country he calls home, Serrano saw only one option to fight for justice.

The screening will take place at the Center for the Arts Screening Room in Amherst, New York on Wednesday, Feb. 5 at 7 p.m. and will be followed by a Q-and-A with the director and subject of the film, Moises Serrano.

Forbidden was produced by Sisters Unite Productions and Pony Pictures. The small team of local and national filmmakers were inspired to produce the film after a chance encounter with Serrano. The award-winning documentary is directed by filmmaker and guest dance artist Tiffany Rhynard, who will be in residence with UB Theatre and Dance from Feb. 2-7, 2020.

Rhynard is an artist, dancer, and filmmaker compelled to make work that examines the complexity of human behavior and addresses social issues. Having created numerous works for stage and screen, Rhynards choreography, dance films, and documentaries have been presented nationwide and internationally.

Her recent dance documentary short, "Black Stains," about black male identity in the United States, is currently screening at film festivals. The film was created in collaboration with Trent D. Williams, Jr.

As a performer, Rhynard has danced for choreographers including Gerri Houlihan, Laura Dean Dancers and Musicians, and Chavasse Dance and Performance Group. She taught at colleges and universities throughout the country and currently is an assistant professor in the School of Dance at Florida State University.

Moises Serrano served as a producer and one of the cinematographers for the film. He is an openly queer and undocumented activist and storyteller. His mission is to de-criminalize and humanize the issue of migration while advocating for immediate relief to migrant communities. Serrano quickly became one of the most requested speakers in the state of North Carolina. Described as a"consummate orator,"his advocacy has led him to lead a TedX talk in Greensboro and to be named a notable Latino of the triad.

"Forbidden" is currently available on Amazon Prime, Kanopy, and Pragda, and has aired on LogoTV with sponsorship from the American Civil Liberties Union. The film earned the first ever Social Justice Film Award from the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Freedom Award from Outfest Film Festival.

Date and Time: Wednesday, Feb. 5 at 7 p.m.

Location:UB Center for the ArtsScreening RoomUniversity at BuffaloNorth CampusDirections: ubcfa.org/directions-maps2019

Tickets:FreeAdvance reservations required by email: rachelol@buffalo.edu

General Information:716-645-6897

Media Inquiries:Jackie Hausler 716-645-6775 hauslerj@buffalo.edu

Group Sales: Mike Formato716-645-0611formato@buffalo.edu

theatredance.buffalo.edu

View original post here:
UB Department of Theatre and Dance Presents Forbidden: Undocumented and Queer in Rural America - UB News Center