Category Archives: Human Behavior

Concerns over goose poop may lead this Bay Area city to kill off hundreds of Canada geese – San Francisco Chronicle

Activists and concerned residents in Foster City plan to protest the citys proposal to potentially euthanize more than 300 Canada geese and goslings that some say are taking over and contaminating the city.

The animal activists behind the protest, planned for Tuesday evening outside of City Hall, said the citys interest in partnering with the U.S. Department of Agricultures Wildlife Services to control the citys swelling goose population would be a massacre that is both inhumane and temporary at best.

From 2020 to 2021, Foster Citys goose population doubled to the largest its ever been, city officials said, with 323 reported as of last June. The overpopulation has sparked ire from residents who say the birds, and their droppings in particular, are posing a threat to health and safety. Foster City officials said they intend to reserve euthanization as a last resort.

Where theres water, theres waterfowl, said protester and Larkspur resident Erik Allen, who organized Tuesdays protest along with the group In Defense of Animals. Its a waste of taxpayers dollars to do this, and its also horribly cruel, Allen said.

Protest affiliates such as Allen say the city, which has increasingly struggled over the last decade like many others to control its goose population, should only focus on nonlethal strategies, such as changing human behavior, landscape modifications, and more practical things, like purchasing a tow and collect machine to clean up droppings.

At least 14,000 people have signed a petition to stop the city from euthanizing the geese, according to In Defense of Animals campaigns director Lisa Levinson. The Marin County organization formed a National Goose Protection Coalition in 2019.

Activists say theyre worried city officials in Foster City, who have said in the past that euthanization is their last resort, will soon contract with the USDA to move forward with a depredation plan.

In 2021, the City Council voted to allow both nonlethal and lethal options to control the geese, and in last fall, the city applied for a permit with the U.S. Department of Fish and Wildlife Service to move forward with a step that could include depredation or killing the geese because the birds are protected under federal law. The U.S. Department of Fish and Wildlife Services did not respond to a request for comment.

None of the members of the Foster City Council, including Mayor Richa Awasthi, responded to requests for comment, but they told news organizations that residents have long complained about goose droppings around public spaces, near their homes and schools, and in the water.

High bacteria levels in the water have been identified in the Foster City lagoon areas and have resulted in at least several temporary closures of beaches, including Erckenbrack Park Beach, said Foster City parks manager Frank Fanara. The city is also spending more money each year $21,500 from 2019 to 2020 to power-wash areas of the city besmirched by goose poop, Fanara said.

In a document titled Canada Geese Population Mitigation Plan, the city detailed several of its nonlethal strategies to control the geese population, which include dog hazing (where dogs harass and stalk geese to scare them away); strobe lights (placed at one of the citys parks); egg addling (a type of birth control); fence barriers (to block the geese from entering water); and goose deterrent (liquid placed on lawns that is repulsive to geese). The city has tried all of these methods already, officials said.

According to the document, nearly all of those methods, except for the strobe lights, worked, but only temporarily. Egg addling, a method of birth control, is a promising option that other cities, such as Santa Clara, have also experimented with, but its effects can take years.

City Council members have also said theyre concerned about greater health risks such as avian flu in the future if the droppings continue to proliferate around highly trafficked areas of the city.

The city says its planning to contract with a lagoon water management company to attempt several methods at clearing bacteria out of the water.

But activists such as Allen seem unfazed by the concerns and say that there are still cheaper options the city could consider, like ultrasonic repellers. Or better yet, Allen says, reconsider whether the geese, no matter how annoying, are a problem worth spending thousands to eradicate at all.

One of my earliest memories is my grandma taking me to feed the geese and ducks at Roberts Lake, said Allen, who added that the potential for hundreds of them being taken away was a thought he couldnt bear.

Annie Vainshtein (she/her) is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: avainshtein@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @annievain

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Concerns over goose poop may lead this Bay Area city to kill off hundreds of Canada geese - San Francisco Chronicle

PhD. Thesis Presentation – "The Behavior of Pitfires" by Veronica Kimmerly – WPI News

Fire Protection Engineering Department

PhD Thesis Presentation

9:00-10:00am

Zoom:https://wpi.zoom.us/j/320855113

The Behavior of Pit Fires

Veronica Kimmerly

WPI Fire Protection Engineering

In the past few years research has emerged that identifies open-air waste fires as a significant contributor to global greenhouse emissions and human health hazard with long-term consequences from exposure. Clearly these fires need to be addressed but the context of these fires in low-infrastructure or impoverished regions limits the potential solutions. Given that for many people open-air fires are the only way they can dispose of their waste besides landfilling, it is unlikely that these fires can be eliminated. So, if these fires can't be stopped is there a way they can be improved? Open-air waste fires are typically burned in a pit to limit fire spread and provide thermal protection. Previous research into the effects of a fire in a partially filled pit (ullage is the term for the distance between the fill level and the top of the pit) has found burning is enhanced for some ullage to diameter ratios. If altering the pit geometry and the fuel location within in the pit can improve these fires, either by reducing emissions or reducing exposure time, then it is a highly implementable solution to this hazard.

To investigate the effects of ullage on pit fire behavior, a series of small-scale and meso-scale experiments are performed in conjunction with the development of a one-zone model. The small-scale experiments (9 cm and 10 cm diameters) decoupled the burning rate from the air flow by using a methane gas burner. The first set of experiments analyzed the characteristics of a fire in a pit using an experimental set up comprising of a square burner with fuel (methane) injected into the burner at different ullages (U) with three flow rates (2, 4, and 6 g/min) to vary the heat release rate. The flame dynamics are captured using high-definition video. Air entrainment is measured using a vent hood, where the products of combustion are collected and detailed temperature measurements within the hood are used to determine the location of the steady smoke layer height. At all fuel flow rates, the flame fluctuates inside the ullage, opening up at the central portion at one time instant and closing down to a conical flame at another time instant. Based on the value of fuel flow rate and ullage value, the frequency of this flame fluctuation varies. At a fuel flow rate of 2 g/min, the flame is diffusion controlled. As the fuel flow rate is increased, convection begins to dominate. Based on the ullage and fuel flow rate, partial premixing of air and fuel occurs within the ullage and a bluish flame is observed showing highly efficient combustion behavior. In summary, for a given ullage, there is a range of fuel flow rates where the airflow into the ullage is strong enough to impart partial premixing. Thus, based on the fuel flow rate or the heat release rate, an appropriate ullage can be chosen to improve the burning performance. The air entrainment depends directly on the heat release rate and inversely on the ullage and fluctuation frequency values. Based on this an engineering correlation based on a similarity analysis is proposed and experimental and theoretical values of air entrainment are within reasonable agreement. The correlation is limited because assumptions of negligible radiation and decoupling of mass transfer are made when using a gas burner in the experiments. However, the correlation is valuable as it led to a systematic study of air entrainment effects on heat release rate in a pit.

The second set of small-scale experiments are conducted to study the effect of pit depth on flame pulsation, anchoring, oxygen penetration, and temperature in buoyant diffusion flames of methane in a cylindrical burner. Depending upon the ullage (i.e., pit depth), four stages of flame behavior are identified. Stage I exhibits stable flames anchored close to the porous plate with vertical pulsation. At higher ullages, the flame also exhibits a U-shaped flame with a certain pulsation frequency (termed as stage II). At even higher ullages, the anchoring location begins to vertically oscillate in the pit while still exhibiting both vertical and U-shape pulsation (termed stage III). At the highest ullages, oxygen cannot penetrate very far into the pit, causing the flame to anchor towards the top of the pit and only exhibit small vertical oscillations (termed Stage IV). Temperature, vertical pulsation frequency, flame height, and penetration depth determine that Stage III flames are the optimal flame stage and exhibit enhanced burning. A parameter characterization study has also been conducted to explain the diffusive and convective time scales in pit fire. This work indicates that an open-air pit fire can be designed with a certain ullage to diameter ratio that could have Stage III flame behavior and enhance the efficient burning of waste in these pits.

Then meso-scale experiments (57 cm diameter) were conducted with a condensed fuel (kerosene) where mass loss rate is coupled to the air entrainment and radiative heat flux. A constantly replenishing pool system was used to maintain a constant ullage below the fire. These experiments were conducted to determine if stage II fires are still enhanced at the meso-scale and if the trends in plume temperatures from the small-scale persist. The results confirm that stage II flames are enhanced, with comparable mass flux to that seen at 0D (pool fire) but with shorter flames, indicating reduced flame necking leading to a cylindrical shaped flame. The temperature profiles showed a similar trend to that seen at the small-scale with 0.75D having the highest plume temperature despite the shortest flames (and thus further from the TC tree). Finally, the experimental results are compared to data from a simple 1-D model and the model is shown to be accurate enough to use as a tool for designing future large scale experiments with condensed fuels.

In the future, more experiments are needed to determine the fire behavior at the large scale (D 1 m) and what ullage to diameter is optimal, to better visualize and model the flow field of the flame with PIV and advanced modelling, to further the understanding of radiative heat flux in the pit with more temperature measurements inside the pit cavity, and finally to determine the chemistry behind the reduction in CO production and if this reduction is significant enough to impact the health and environmental hazards presented by waste fires.

Committee

Prof. Ali Rangwala, WPI Fire Protection Engineering

Prof. Albert Simeoni, Department Head, WPI Fire Protection Engineering

Prof. Michael Timko, Chemical Engineering, WPI

Prof. Jose Torero

Prof. Laureen Elgert, Department Head, WPI The Global School

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PhD. Thesis Presentation - "The Behavior of Pitfires" by Veronica Kimmerly - WPI News

Heart Rhythm 2022 Highlights | DAIC – Diagnostic and Interventional Cardiology

May 17, 2022 Heart Rhythm 2022 has come to a close, and the Heart Rhythm Society has released some stats regarding this year's conference.More than7,700+ heart rhythm professionals from around the worldwhose participation during Heart Rhythm 2022, along with their shared ideas and expertise, helped make this year's annual meeting a success.

Here is a look at the conference by the numbers:

The Top 10 sessions included:

During Heart Rhythm 2022, more than 750 international experts from the field will serve as faculty and abstract presenters for over 250 sessions. Meeting highlights include:

10 Education Tracks: Attendees will be able to choose sessions from 10 tracks with topics including Allied Professionals, Basic/Translational Science, Cardiovascular Implantable Electronic Devices (CIEDs), Catheter Ablation, Clinical EP, Digital Health & Innovation, Health Policy, Heart Failure, Pediatrics & Adult Congenital Heart Disease, and Practice Management.

Keynote Speaker, Dr. Steve Robbins: Special keynote speaker Dr. Steve Robbins will explore the neuroscience of transformational change during the Opening Day Ceremony on Friday, April 29, from 3:30 4:30 p.m. PT. Robbins, author of What If? and artful storyteller, captivates audiences worldwide with his keen insight into human behavior. His presentation style has been described as a mix of Bill Nye the Science Guy, Saturday Night Live, and The Big Bang Theory.

Improved Online Experience: HRS will livestream select sessions from San Francisco from Friday, April 29 Sunday, May 1. The remaining sessions (100+ hours) presented will be available on-demand within 24 hours of their initial presentation time, which means attendees may watch the full suite of educational programming on demand as early as May 2, 2022.

Heart Rhythm TV: Coverage of Heart Rhythm 2022 science, including interviews and commentary, will air on HRS flagship YouTube channel.

For more information: http://www.HRSonline.org

Find more information on HRS22

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Heart Rhythm 2022 Highlights | DAIC - Diagnostic and Interventional Cardiology

AwareGO Announces the Release of Human Risk Assessment for Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises – Business Wire

SAN ANTONIO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Human cyber risk and awareness company AwareGO announced today the release of Human Risk Assessment (HRA) for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). Created by cybersecurity experts, behavioral scientists and interaction designers, the Human Risk Assessment continuously observes top human attack vectors, identifies vulnerable departments and roles, and offers actionable insights to create informed security strategies to improve any organizations overall cyber defense and reduce cybersecurity risks.

All businesses need to address the human side of cybersecurity. That means being able to measure the risk and to mitigate it. Many small and medium-sized enterprises have had difficulties finding effective and efficient cybersecurity solutions that can comprehensively address the human side of cybersecurity risk. Such smaller enterprises do not have access to the large consultancy firms or the capacity to build up an internal security team, said AwareGO Chief Executive Officer Ari K. Jonsson, Ph.D. AwareGO is addressing this challenge for smaller and medium-sized businesses with a comprehensive solution. By using our Human Risk Assessment, all businesses can now continuously track the risk levels associated with the human side of cybersecurity across a broad range of threats. Then, with our unique 1-minute live action awareness training videos, they can strengthen their cyber resilience by making employees aware of threats and able to respond correctly. Most importantly, our solution is affordable, easy to use, highly effective and loved by employees.

Based on human-behavioral science, this secure cloud-based solution allows companies to measure employees knowledge and behavior across several recognized human threat vectors, such as phishing, remote/hybrid work, passwords, and more, ultimately quantifying the companys cyber resilience. Its interactive experience, friendly environment, and instant feedback make AwareGOs Human Risk Assessment a transformative and indispensable tool for organizations striving to educate employees better and reduce cybersecurity risks.

For small and medium businesses, the HRA product provides numerous benefits, including:

Among numerous other accolades, AwareGOs Human Risk Assessment has already earned the Highly Commended distinction in the SC Awards Europe 2021, in the programs Best Behaviour Analytics/ Enterprise Threat Detection category. The SC Awards Europe program is the information security industrys most prominent recognition and honors the cybersecurity professionals working behind the scenes, as well as the products and services that help protect the corporate world from countless, ever-changing threats.

About AwareGO

AwareGO is a global provider of human cyber risk and awareness solutions that help enterprises, and SMEs identify, quantify and remediate the human risk factor when it comes to cybersecurity. To date, AwareGO has successfully trained more than 8 million employees worldwide. Based in Iceland, the company has locations in the United States, Czech Republic, and Croatia. For more information, visit awarego.com.

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AwareGO Announces the Release of Human Risk Assessment for Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises - Business Wire

Finding A Place In Science – Texas A&M Today – Texas A&M University Today

Texas A&M senior biology major Annabel Perry 22 is graduating with a bachelor of science in biology.

Courtesy photo

Every picture tells a story. One of Annabel Perrys childhood favorites features her as a grinning 10-year-old clutching a gigantic bullfrog, a slightly out-of-focus snapshot of both place and time that captures her budding interest in the natural world and her future as a scientist a career path and underlying passion accelerated by undergraduate research and key faculty mentors at Texas A&M University.

This little girl with the bullfrog, however, didnt start out with all the tools she needed to succeed as a scientist. Perry, who was homeschooled as a child in Milford, Texas, grew up believing that women were less logical than men, evolution was not real and human behaviors were not biologically determined. She didnt seriously question those beliefs until, at the age of 16 after researching disordered eating in a dual-credit course, she realized she had a serious eating disorder an awakening that not only propelled Perry to seek professional mental health treatment, but also instilled in her a desire to understand the biological underpinnings of psychiatric disorders.

This early experience with mental health care taught me that science can explain behavior and improve lives, Perry said. So, in fall 2018, I entered Texas A&M University with a plan to scientifically study psychiatric disorders. Experiences at Texas A&M and beyond developed this curiosity into a passion for cognitive evolution and showed me there is a place in the world of science for the little girl with the bullfrog.

Although Perry had planned to research disordered eating as a freshman at Texas A&M, she found no professors working on the topic. However, she soon discovered an intriguing alternative in Texas A&M psychologist and neuroscientistBrian Andersons laboratory, which explores how reward and punishment influence learning and attention.

In this lab, I monitored an automated shock machine and recorded results as human subjects completed attention-intensive tasks, Perry said. During the course of such work, I discovered that I am interested not only in psychiatric disorders, but in all manner of cognitive traits.

Perry at age 10.

Courtesy photo

Because Perrys interest extended far beyond the proximate causes of behavior, she enrolled in Texas A&M biologistDuncan MacKenzies honors freshman biology course. In addition to learning about evolution for the first time, she says she fell in love with the interconnected mechanisms, puzzle-solving and predictive power of evolutionary theory and wanted to pursue that passion by researching evolution.

I particularly wanted to research the evolution of sex differences, as Id been raised on stereotypes about cognitive differences between the sexes and wanted to learn their biological truth, Perry said. So I joined Texas A&M biologistGil Rosenthals laboratory, which studies sexual selection and mating behavior in swordtail fish.

After learning to use the labs tracking software used to study sex differences in swordtails, Perry realized that computational skills would be integral to her success as an evolutionary biologist. When the COVID-19 pandemic forced the Rosenthal lab to work from home, Rosenthal encouraged all members to begin learning the Python coding language. Rosenthal recognized Perrys potential as a computational biologist and asked her to spearhead a bioinformatics project to detect variable DNA regions in hybrid swordtail fish.

I took this opportunity to prove to the little girl with the bullfrog that gender does not determine her analytic ability, Perry said. I spent summer 2020 teaching myself R and C++. Since there was no existing program that could detect the DNA regions, I taught myself R to create my own. But R could not process such large data, so I taught myself the more robust but notoriously daunting language C++. The C++ version of my program, Polly, ran successfully but categorized the wrong regions as polymorphic. So, I fixed Polly, getting it to correctly detect these regions in February 2021.

Bolstered by her burgeoning confidence in both coding and research, Perry excelled in graduate-level courses on experimental design and evolution as a junior and senior, respectively. In addition to beginning another C++ program for calculating linkage disequilibrium scores, she was accepted into a summer 2021National Science Foundation Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) programat Florida Atlantic University. As fate would have it, she worked with Erik Dubou andAlex Keene who coincidentally accepted a new position as head of theTexas A&M Department of Biologywhile she was in Florida to study the evolution of anxiety in cavefish. Together, they developed a computational neural network for classifying behaviors and used it to quantify anxiety in the Mexican tetra model organism.

During this project, I was simultaneously making Polly more biologist-friendly by making it accessible through an easier-to-use coding language, Perry said. By the end of summer 2021, I finished both the REU and Polly projects. I am first author on the Polly manuscript, which is currently under peer review atMolecular Ecology Resources.

By the time Perry returned to Texas A&M for her senior year in August, Rosenthal had moved to Italy, and Keene had begun his appointment as head of Texas A&M Biology. While simultaneously completing her Rosenthal lab projects remotely, Perry began conducting anUndergraduate Research Scholars thesiswith Keene and fellow Texas A&M biologist/computational evolutionary geneticistHeath Blackmonas one of the College of Sciences 12 inauguralScience Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (SUROP)awardees. For this project, she coded a web-based tool, dubbedCaveCrawler, to analyze genetics data in the Mexican tetra, an emerging model system to study the evolution of sleep and potentially many other cognitive and physiological traits. A preprint of the resulting publication, CaveCrawler: An interactive analysis suite for cavefish bioinformatics, was uploaded to the open access repositorybioRXivin December and since has been accepted for publication by the Genetics Society of America journalG3: Genes | Genomes | Genetics.

Annabel is remarkably talented, and her productivity was at the level of a senior graduate student, Keene said. What really sets her apart is her enthusiasm for science and her ability to elevate everyone around her.

In between semesters in January, Perry traveled to central Mexico to conduct field research with Rosenthal and fellow swordtail lab members at the Centro de lnvestigaciones Cientificas de las Huastecas Aguazarca, also known asCICHAZ. Roughly a month later, she was the only undergraduate who presented her research at the7th annual Cavefish Meeting, held February 27-March 4 in San Antonio. She also presented on her research and life-changing undergraduate experience at the April 1 College of Science External Advisory and Development Council spring meeting.

On Saturday (May 14), Perry will graduate from Texas A&M with her bachelor of science in biology with honors along with double minors in neuroscience and philosophy. In addition to being recognized as a University Scholar, Undergraduate Research Scholar and Honors Fellow, she was a finalist for the 2022 Brown Foundation-Earl Rudder Memorial Outstanding Student Award honoring the top graduating seniors across the entire Texas A&M campus. This fall, she will head to Harvard University to pursue her Ph.D. working withDavid Reich in the Department of Human Evolutionary Biology,

Working with someone like Annabel could rekindle anyones enthusiasm for science, Rosenthal said. When the pandemic hit, we did a weekly Python workshop as a lab over zoom. We went through the wonderful Rosalind website, which presents every new technique as a puzzle. She left the rest of us in the dust as she solved each puzzle with ever-growing enthusiasm, till she was out of puzzles that other people had already solved. Now shes applying her full intellect and creativity to problems no one knows the answer to. Her infectious curiosity and her intellectual humility are just what Harvard needs.

As she prepares to walk the Reed Arena stage, Perry says she is not only grateful for being able to stand on the shoulders of many, including her mentors at Texas A&M, but also eager to pay those opportunities forward to benefit other aspiring scientists in the making.

A neuroscientists job is not just to investigate the innerworkings of the human brain, but also to help other people realize the power of their own minds, Perry said. In graduate school, I plan to start coding workshops for rural children. My eventual goal is to run my own lab where I mentor budding young scientists and use computational approaches to research cognitive evolution. Once I have my own lab, I will continue this mentorship to show them that they, like the little girl with the bullfrog, can achieve their intellectual potential.

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Finding A Place In Science - Texas A&M Today - Texas A&M University Today

National Science Foundation grant will help researcher develop better models to predict spread of an epidemic – University of Dayton – News Home

An epidemic spreads differently through the rural Midwest than through a big city. So University of Dayton researcher Subramanian Ramakrishnan will use $231,185 of a $650,000 National Science Foundation grant to develop better models to predict the spread locally and regionally rather than a one-size-fits-all national approach.

"It might be too ambitious to try one model for the entire country, any country," said Ramakrishnan, UD associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering. "It's not like constructing a universal model for the laws of gravity, which apply to everything in the universe. The dynamics of epidemics differ by location, so creating models specific to the dynamics in question is very important.

"The limitations of existing predictive models, as evident during the COVID-19 outbreak in the U.S., underscore the need for new knowledge in this area. As we saw, everything was marshaled on a war footing to respond early to COVID-19, and yet we were not prepared enough or, at least we could have been much better equipped with fundamental knowledge."

Ramakrishnan, project lead, will be working with University of Cincinnati mechanical engineering professor Manish Kumar, and Shelley Erhlich, a medical doctor and epidemiologist at Cincinnati Childrens Hospital Medical Center. They will focus on how uncertainties in human behavior and disease transmission drive an epidemic and the challenges of prediction, given the limitations of procuring reliable early data. Even within local areas, they want to produce a suite of models that range from best-case to worst-case scenarios in the short-term and the medium-term.

"You're not entirely sure how much to trust early data. There's always that inevitable time lag between an infection spread happening on the ground and the public health system collecting that data," Ramakrishnan said. "So we also need to create models that can be flexible enough to interact with and learn from the data in as close to real time as possible."

Doing so will allow local and regional public health officials to appropriately prescribe early interventions like physical distancing and masking, according to Ramakrishnan.

To secure the grant, the group showed a proof of concept using COVID-19 transmission data from the state of Ohio and Hamilton County, Ohio, for the month of April 2020. They found their preliminary models worked well for the state data and even better for county data, which Ramakrishnan said "reinforces this notion that these models are probably more effective for smaller geographical regions, which is again a very important thing to know."

Two UD graduate students will assist in the research, running models and simulations and performing mathematical analysis under the team's guidance. They also have the opportunity to be listed as authors in articles publishing results of the research. Ramakrishnan hopes to add UD undergraduate students by applying for an NSF Research Experience for Undergraduates grant.

"Advances in research would be much slower and much less exciting without the contributions of student researchers," Ramakrishnan said. "Academic research thrives on the opportunity to inspire and train students. It's a fundamental part of what we do."

Click here to read the NSF's complete award abstract. For more information on the research, contact Ramakrishnan at sramakrishnan1@udayton.edu.

For interviews, please contact Shawn Robinson, associate director of news and communications, at srobinson1@udayton.edu.

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National Science Foundation grant will help researcher develop better models to predict spread of an epidemic - University of Dayton - News Home

The Importance of Studying Sociology in Colleges and Its Significance for Students – Aviation Analysis Wing

Sociology deals with the social rules and processes that unite and separate individuals as members of society. Due to the scientific method employed with empirical research, data collection and analysis, it can be regarded as a science of society.

Sciences are commonly divided into Natural Sciences and Social Sciences. Natural Science studies natural phenomena. Biology, Physics, Chemistry and Geology are all the instances of natural sciences. On the other hand, Social science is the study of various aspects of human society. Social sciences include Sociology, Anthropology, Political Science etc. Sociologyis generally concerned with study of human behavior, social life of human beings and structure of society. A well known sociologist, Kingsley Davis states that Sociology is a general science of society.

The importance of studying sociology

Not all young people realise how Sociology could benefit them. Most students are not willing to spend their time on this discipline as it doesnt lead to a definite career path. In other words, this is one of the disciplines that is not vocationally oriented, which stops individuals from pursuing a major in this field. However, it can be a big mistake! Lets discuss the reasons why you should consider pursuing a degree in Sociology.

Wide outlook

The experience you have in college is not just about the job you are going to get at the end. Its also about the peers you meet along the way. Not surprisingly, Sociology is a degree with a diverse studentship as it attracts individuals from different walks of life. That means you can find an extremely unique group of people at your faculty. Probably, more unique than in any other place.

And what does it have to do with an outlook? Well, having so many versatile life experiences in one place means that you are introduced to a number of different ways of thinking. By exchanging opinions with your peers, you can learn about a variety of perspectives on the same subject. Its the same as when you use our sociology essay examplesthat offer multitude views on one topic. You can start looking at the world in different ways and significantly expand your outlook.

Constant development

For worse or better, Sociology is not rooted in the past. This science keeps adapting to suit the society that its trying to study. Whats more, sociology is also about looking forward to alterations coming on the horizon. It constantly changes, accepting newly-emerged minorities and subcultures, as well as creates new concepts that aim to deepen our understanding of the world. So sociology is all about growth and dynamic development. Arent those the most important things in the modern fast-paced world? By studying Sociology you will never get stuck in the past.

Making a difference

For sure, Sociology is one of those sciences that make a difference in the world. This discipline provides a number of opportunities for students to change the community. It equips young people with an understanding of what affects us on local, national and international levels. Sociology gives you a chance to build a career within government and local programs as well as in charities. Hence, you can enforce real changes in peoples lives. Besides, you can also impact individuals on a personal level. The role of a youth worker or family support officer would be a perfect fit for this aim.

Transferable skills

School and university are mostly about gaining new skills. And pursuing a degree in Sociology could be a great way to broaden your skill set. You can learnso many things in Sociology classes, and most of them are applicable in different fields and aspects of life. This discipline looks at diverse topics, including culture, politics and identity. Such an extensive background opens doors to a wide range of career options, so you can apply for job roles across multiple industries.

Summing up

Sociology is considered as a multifaceted science. In this branch of social sciences, researchers are interested in understanding the interactions between humans and how human behavior is shaped by social structures, institutions and communities.

There are many different reasons to dig deeper into this fascinating discipline. A few of them have been mentioned above. For example, Sociology helps to broaden your outlookand develops a large set of transferable skills. Also, it can teach you how to make a difference in the world we are living in. And on top of that, this constantly evolving science encourages your development. Hopefully, this article has proven the importance of sociology to you and inspired you to study this field.

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The Importance of Studying Sociology in Colleges and Its Significance for Students - Aviation Analysis Wing

Allowing Human Nature to Work Successfully | Jean Liedloff – Mad In America – Mad in America

From ContinuumConcept.org: Jean Liedloff was a Manhattan socialite with a fascination for the wild. In the 1950s and 60s, she made a series of expeditions to the Venezuelan rainforest and spent several years living with the Yequana people. What she observed about how they lived, and especially how they raised their babies and children, resulted in her book The Continuum Concept: In Search of Happiness Lost, which spurred the attachment parenting movement and influenced evolutionary psychology and the home-schooling movement. According to her biographer, The glaring contrast between the richly connected way of life in tribal villages and the relative alienation of our culture caused her to question some of our most basic assumptions about human nature. Over time, she became convinced that humans are innately cooperative and hard-wired for happiness. She cites our ignorance of this fact as the underlying cause of all our psychosocial ills. Here she is interviewed by Michael Mendizza, filmmaker and founder of Touch the Future, an organization whose goal is to bring about a deep change in the way adults view and relate to the developmental needs of children.

The jungle represented something you felt was missing from your New York background. Can you reach back and help me understand this?

As a child I was attracted to Tarzan and everything that had to do with jungles. It seemed to me and this is in retrospect that there was something primal, something right about it.

. . . I suppose I was looking for what I found and shouldnt have been so surprised when I found it, which wasnt until the fourth expedition. It was then I realized that I had unlearned a great many assumptions that I had about human nature.

It became clear that we have made a terrible mistake about what human nature is. We are under the misapprehension that were born bad, or in the official words of the Church of England,innately depraved, and that is simply not true.

Lets go back. You said that you started to have a series of insights.

I was taking my assumptions apart, thinking, gosh, if this isnt true then that isnt true. I was living for more than two years with these Indians, looking straight at them and not really seeing them, because I was so blinded by preconceptions. I didnt even notice that, amazingly, the children never fought. They played together all day unsupervised, all ages, from crawling, to walking to adolescence. Not only did they not fight, they never even argued. This is not at all what we have been taught human nature is boys will be boys. So I thought well maybe,boys wont be boys.

It was a long time before I began to notice what was before my eyes. One thinks, Well, these are savages. They wear red paint and feather loin cloths, so theyre not people. But theyre exactly the same species as we are, except they are behaving the way we all evolved to behave. We, on the other hand, are mistreated as infants and children, treated inappropriately for our species.

As a result, we keep re-creating an anti-social population. Nobodys born rotten. You just dont have bad kids. Its not true. There is no such thing. But we can make them bad.

Ironically, the reason its possible to make these profoundly social animals bad or anti-social is because we aresosocial. Our parents, our tribesman, our authority figures, clearly expect us to be bad or anti-social or greedy or selfish or dirty or destructive or self-destructive. Our social nature is such that we tend to meet the expectations of our elders. Whenever this reversal took place and our elders stopped expecting us to be social and expected us to be anti-social, just to put it in gross terms, thats when the real fall took place. And were paying for it dearly.

Just imagine the neurotic and psychopathic people that we have become. Why do we have a 50% divorce rate? Why do we have so many police? Its not just Americans, its the whole of Western civilization laboring under a misapprehension of what human nature truly is. Thats what I learned from my experiences.

. . .I dont mean to be disrespectful to ourexperts. They may be able to distinguish a measle from a mump, which is very useful if you have one or the other. But that doesnt, for one minute, give them deep knowledge of correct human behavior.

Researchers faithfully try to document what isnormal. Nobody I know really wants a normal child. Just look at normal. It includes whats called the terrible twos, which are sort of wild, bossy tantrum-prone con-men. Luckily theyre small otherwise wed really be in trouble. And weve got God knows what kinds of drudgery and alienation for children and parents.

We use the wordnormalas though it were a synonym fornatural, which it is not.

. . .Todaynormalisadversarial. The baby arrives and has an innate expectation that it will be among trustworthy allies. Thats not what happens. From the babys point of view he or she feels like theyre not on my side.

Whatever I want, they say no. I want to be with my mother. I want to be close. I want to be safe. I want to be with someone alive, whos breathing and warm and smells right and feels right and who touches me and helps me feel my own flesh appropriately, not a lifeless box with a lifeless cloth. I dont want to hear myself screaming in my own ears, and hear other people screaming around me and get no response. When I scream I expect something to happen. Not just to scream but because Im waiting. Im expecting something and it doesnt come and I scream until Im exhausted.

So normal is adversarial. I hope people realize that what theyre doing with all the love in their hearts, and I have no doubt of that,isadversarial.

. . .Its easy to see how this normal but unnatural behavior perpetuates itself. When a baby girl is born and her mother doesnt answer her cries, she feels that she has no power to signal and summon help. Unfortunately, human nature is such that she cannot blame the parent. So she feels shes not good enough, not lovable enough, I havent done the right thing. Im not worth responding to. This is universally the reaction of babies. They feel that they havent got it right or theyre not good enough because theyre so social, ironically. They believe in the authority of their elders, their parents. If parents dont come, they feel that their instinct to cry wasnt right. They dont know anything else, and it doesnt work.

As they grow older and look under blades of grass to see whats growing, or cutting up worms, or tasting things, and they hear, dont do that, no dont do that, bad, naughty. Their faith in their own instincts are constantly undermined. Dont touch that, youll hurt yourself. Dont get up on that, youll fall. If babies were allowed to trust and develop their innate wisdom and intelligence they wouldnt fall into the swimming pool. They wouldnt dream of it.

Lets talk about trust. How could we have gotten to this place where when the babys screaming we deny our natural innate tendencies to respond and pick it up? Both in the medical field and as mothers?

Our faith in our own instincts is undermined right from birth. The first job we have on Earth, which is dictated innately, is that of an explorer. We go around sniffing and tasting and touching and looking at everything. And people say, Dont touch, its dirty, Dont touch that; be careful, youll hurt yourself, Dont do that, youll break it! all of which constantly undermines our feeling of competence, our trust in our instincts.

When you get to school people say, sit still, fold your hands, dont talk to your neighbor.

Whatever children are doing is learning. Theyre learning like little sponges, all the time. But theyre told, Stop it because this is worthless. What is important is this. Pay attention. A is for apple. Everything else is undermined and pronounced worthless. A isnt even for apple. It could be for aardvark, it could be for God knows what, anything you like. But they arbitrarily tell you that A is for apple. Nothing else counts. And they persist. All your authority figures tell you that your nature, which is to explore, is worthless. If theydontteachyou, its not learning.

Ive recently come to the startling but obvious conclusion that learning occurs naturally, but teaching isnt natural at all. I cant remember ever seeing any of the people Im talking about, who live so successfully,teaching. The little ones are learning from the older children or from the adults, but nobodys teaching.

Theyre learning on their own initiative, which is so powerful. You dont have to augment it. In fact you cant really augment it. Theres no way you can make a child learn better than he would if he or she wants to.

By the time we have our first child, were so conditioned not to believe our innate feelings that we have total strangers in the hospital tell us what to do and we dont know any better. Its tragic. We have an exquisitely evolved innate knowledge of how to do things. Mothers know that the baby should not be taken away at birth but they have been so conditioned to believe in anauthorityand not themselves, that they deny their own wisdom.

. . .We act as though human nature were something to be afraid of; to constrain, modify or fight; to subdue and overcome. Somehow we have gotten away from believing that we evolved in a way that works. We believe that our nature has to be modified, opposed and controlled from the very beginning . . .

Does this lack of basic trust permeate our entire culture?

In the broadest terms we have lost trust in our own essential nature. We dont just mistrust children, we mistrust ourselves. We mistrust human nature itself. The reason Im always talking about babies and children is because this is where the mistrust first manifests itself, where it is formed. But Im talking about all human beings. Im talking about society as it is.

Society is unpleasant, dangerous, unhappy, alienated, and unstable because in childhood our nature being confident, joyous and loving has been undermined and we simply live the way we are expected to. What we believe is what we make our experience into. And what we believe is what we have been taught to believe by our parents and our experiences.

. . . These beliefs are instilled in us in infancy, before were able to judge anything. We cannot look in the mirror and say, Well Im a nice little girl. Ive got all my fingers and toes and Im a sweet little thing. Im intelligent and charming and I got a little pink party dress and Im just fine. We cant do that. We can only get our feeling of worth about ourselves and everything else from our authority figures. And this is what children do. They take the authority of these people and believe it. Whatever it is. This becomes the basic feeling we have about self and also about the relationship between self and other.

How can we empower children and then later adults to trust their nature?

We dont need to empower children to trust their nature. The tendency to trust is there. We simply need to allow them to do so.

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Allowing Human Nature to Work Successfully | Jean Liedloff - Mad In America - Mad in America

Daniel Negreanu Gets Bluffed Out Of $311K Cash In A Wild Hand With Phil Ivey And Patrik Antonius – BroBible

The latest high-profile clash on High Stakes Poker features some of the games biggest names. Between these three pros, theyve won sixteen World Series of Poker bracelets (10 for Phil Ivey and 6 for Daniel Negreanu) and theyve won tens and tens of millions in poker tournaments.

But this is a cash game. Theyre playing with cash out of their own bankroll. When you see Daniel Negreanu with $223K next to his name thats the actual amount of cash money he had on the table. Phil Ivey had $244K and Patrik Antonius was sitting with $184K.

As I mentioned in the headline, Daniel Negreanu is bluffed out of a $311,500 hand here. What makes this truly remarkable and is also mentioned by the announcers is if this was a typical home game with even above average players there wouldve been at least two players with all their chips in the middle. If this was my home game there wouldve been all three players with their money in the middle.

So its interesting to see how this plays out when its pros vs. amateurs. Lets check out the latest clip from PokerGos High Stakes Poker.

Im still a little shocked that Daniel Negreanu folded that hand. Daniels won over $42,000,000 in prize money playing tournaments and has a preternatural understanding of human behavior at the poker table.

Hes twice been named the World Series of Poker Player of the Year (2004 and 2013). And the reason Im mentioning this is because hes a very, very wealthy man.

Daniel making a decision for his remaining $138K is very different from someone where $138K is a life-changing amount of money. So remove the stress of money and Daniel was staring down at a board where only 10d-10s, 10c-9, or QQ would beat him and at no point did Patrik Antonius play the hand like he was holding those cards, did he?

Id go as far as saying Patrik Antonius seemed as shocked as anyone after Daniel folded but what were missing here is the context of the night. Without going back to watch the full episode of High Stakes Poker to get a sense of how Patrik Antonius was playing all night were looking at this hand without context.

For all we know, Patrik couldve been playing incredibly conservative all night and it was all leading up to this one moment.

Side note: I have to respect Phil Ivey immediately leaving the table and going to get snacks from the mini bar after folding and exiting that massive hand. I too would be stress eating in that situation.

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Daniel Negreanu Gets Bluffed Out Of $311K Cash In A Wild Hand With Phil Ivey And Patrik Antonius - BroBible

Impact of COVID-19 on User and Entity Behavior Analytics Market ; Segmented:: By Component, By Deployment Type, By End user, And Region Global…

New York, May 05, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "Impact of COVID-19 on User and Entity Behavior Analytics Market ; Segmented:: By Component, By Deployment Type, By End user, And Region Global Analysis of Market Size, Share & Trends For 20192020 And Forecasts To 2031" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p06272881/?utm_source=GNW Product Overview Banking fraud, insider threat, & targeted attacks can all be detected using user and entity behavior analytics. This method is used to analyze human behavior patterns and then find deviations using statistical analysis and algorithms. When end users collaborate, malware might become dormant and go undiscovered. Rather than trying to figure out where the outsider got in, user and entity behavior analytics uses algorithms to detect internal threats, allowing for faster detection. In big data platforms like Apache Hadoop, user and entity behavior analytics solutions are utilized to analyze petabytes of data, detect insider risks, and detect sophisticated persistent threats. The collected data is evaluated to identify various human behavioral patterns used to identify odd behavior and threats.

Market Highlights Global User and Entity Behavior Analytics market is expected to project a notable CAGR of 40.6% in 2031.

Increased cyber threats faced by insiders in businesses, as well as the inability of standard security systems to detect such insider threats, are driving the global market. Furthermore, the global market is expected to be driven by a lack of skilled security professionals who understand the privacy risk faced by users, as organizations have been expected to prefer behavior analyticsolutions that rely on MLto identify such threats with minimal human interaction.

Global User and Entity Behavior Analytics: Segments Solution component segment to grow with the highest CAGR during 2021-31

Based on Component, User and Entity Behavior Analytics Market has been segmented Solution and Services. Threats, compromised identities, data loss protection, and other solution segments are used to classify the market. Insider threats in the Solution segment are providing the highest share of the global user & entity behavior analytics market during the forecast period. Because firms know the crucial need of preventing insider breaches, insider threat measures are in a growing market. Organizations are significantly spending on hazard detecting analytical solutions to disclose security concerns that cybercriminals may abuse, which is driving the economy for UEBA solutions, which is driving the market for smart technology and security solutions.

Financial services and insurance segment to grow with the highest CAGR during 2021-31

By End-users the market is segmented into Government and Defense, Energy and Utilities, Healthcare, Retail and e-commerce, Financial Services, and Insurance, IT and Telecom, Others. The risk of cyber-crime increases as the number of customers in the insurance, accounting, and finance industries expands. As a result, these businesses generally use the UEBA because it provides customers with instant access to deposit & payment services. UEBA systems enable rapid threat detection and notify the organization of a wide range of behavioral patterns and potential insider threats, attracting end-users to the market.

Market Dynamics Drivers

Increasing demand for real-time analytics.

The usage of User & Entity Behavior Analytics broadens the security perimeter to include closed networks, users, cloud service providers, as well as weird and smartendpoint devices. User behaviors are monitored and assessed using UEBA systems, which provide real-time & continuous monitoring. More on the COVID-19 epidemic Many industries have been pushed to operate online as a result of the impact, which has increased the risk of cyber security &thus the demand for UEBA.

Rising adoption of a user-centric approach

The requirement to prevent insider risk faced by users is one of the markets beneficial elements. As a result of the growing volume of data breaches and enormous investment in threatsprevention technologies, demand for user & entity behavior analytics is likely to rise rapidly throughout the projection period. With the increased demand for advanced security solutions, businesses are heavily investing in attacks detection analytical solutions to reveal security concerns that criminals may exploit, which is driving demand for user & entity behavior analytics solutions. Insider threats, information security, external attacks, & identity, and access management are all covered by this system.

Restraint Scarcity of trained security personnel and a lack of public awareness

The dearth of qualified security personnel and lack of awareness of advanced insider threats are two challenges that hinder the growth of the user & entity behavior analytics industry. In addition, the global markets growth is hampered by a user-centric approach and insufficient budget allocationfor user and behavior analytics solutions.

Global User and Entity Behavior Analytics: Key Players Amazon Web Services, Inc. Company Overview, Business Strategy, Key Product Offerings, Financial Performance, Key Performance Indicators, Risk Analysis, Recent Development, Regional Presence, SWOT Analysis

Bay Dynamics, Inc. Dtex Systems Inc. Exabeam, Inc. Gurucul Rapid7 Inc. Securonix, Inc. Splunk, Inc. Varonis Systems, Inc. Other Prominent Players Global User and Entity Behavior Analytics: Regions Global User and Entity Behavior Analytics market is segmented based on regional analysis into five major regions: North America, Latin America, Europe, Asia Pacific, and the Middle East and Africa. Because of the rising use of consumer and organizational functional analytics solutions, the North American region is expected to hold the greatest share of the worldwide market throughout the forecast period. The increase in user behavior analytics security can be attributed to the rising usage of mobile & online apps in the sector, as well as the need for security solutions capable of spotting data risks. Due to increased investment in safety surveillance technology for the protection of citizens, the marketis expected to rise during the forecasted period. In addition, the government is investing in ArtificialIntelligence, 5G, cloud, IoT, and networking.

Impact of Covid-19 on User and Entity Behavior Analytics Market

The devastating impact of the widespread COVID-19 pandemic has stifled the User & Entity Behavior Analytics Markets growth potential. As a result of the COVID-19 outbreak, many sectors have been forced to operate online, raising the risk of cyber security therefore, as a result, the need for UEBA has expanded. The International User and Entity Behavior Analytics (UEBA) Technology Market is expected to grow fast as a result of the growing digital presence, offering new opportunities over the anticipated period.

Global User and Entity Behavior Analytics is further segmented by region into:

North America Market Size, Share, Trends, Opportunities, Y-o-Y Growth, CAGR the United States and Canada Latin America Market Size, Share, Trends, Opportunities, Y-o-Y Growth, CAGR Mexico, Argentina, Brazil and Rest of Latin America Europe Market Size, Share, Trends, Opportunities, Y-o-Y Growth, CAGR United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Hungary, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Poland, NORDIC, Russia, Turkey and Rest of Europe Asia Pacific Market Size, Share, Trends, Opportunities, Y-o-Y Growth, CAGR India, China, South Korea, Japan, Malaysia, Indonesia, New Zealand, Australia, and Rest of APAC the Middle East and Africa Market Size, Share, Trends, Opportunities, Y-o-Y Growth, CAGR North Africa, Israel, GCC, South Africa and Rest of MENA Global User and Entity Behavior Analytics report also contains analysis on: User and Entity Behavior Analytics Segments:

By Component Solution (Insider Threats, Compromised Credentials, Data Loss Prevention, and Others) Services (Implementation and Ongoing Optimization) By Deployment Type On-Premises Cloud By End-user Financial Services & Insurance Retail & Ecommerce Energy & Utilities IT & Telecom Healthcare Defense & Government Others User and Entity Behavior Analytics Dynamics User and Entity Behavior Analytics Size Supply & Demand Current Trends/Issues/Challenges Competition & Companies Involved in the Market Value Chain of the Market Market Drivers and Restraints User and Entity Behavior Analytics Market Report Scope and Segmentation Report Attribute Details The market size value in 2021 USD 645.6 million The revenue forecast in 2031 USD 19,481.6 million Growth Rate CAGR of 40.6% from 2021 to 2031 The base year for estimation 2020 Quantitative units Revenue in USD million and CAGR from 2021 to 2031 Report coverage Revenue forecast, company ranking, competitive landscape, growth factors, and trends Segments covered Component, Deployment Type, End-User, and Region Regional scope North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, Middle East & Africa (MEA) Key companies profiled Amazon web services Inc., Bay Dynamics, Inc., Dtex Systems Inc., Exabeam, Inc., Gurucul, Rapid7 Inc., Securonix, Inc., Splunk, Inc., Varonis Systems, Inc., and Other Prominent PlayersRead the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p06272881/?utm_source=GNW

About ReportlinkerReportLinker is an award-winning market research solution. Reportlinker finds and organizes the latest industry data so you get all the market research you need - instantly, in one place.

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Impact of COVID-19 on User and Entity Behavior Analytics Market ; Segmented:: By Component, By Deployment Type, By End user, And Region Global...