Grey’s Anatomy: 10 Relationships That Should Have Happened But Never Did – Screen Rant

There are many iconic and memorable romances on Grey's Anatomy. However, have fans ever thought that a character was better suited with someone else?

The popular primetime medical drama Grey's Anatomy has been around for what seems like an eternity now. The show has, over the years, given fansa gamut of human emotions with a barrageof relatable characters, navigating a complex range of relationships.

RELATED:Grey's Anatomy Characters & Their Disney Counterparts

From couples that make no sense, like Jackson Avery and Maggie Pierce, to those that are absolutely adorable together such as Callie and Arizona, Jackson and April, and of course, Derek and Meredith, relationships on Grey'shave been an integral part of the show's astounding success and record run.

FHowever, do fans ever feel like there is often great chemistry between other characters that largely goes unexplored? Could these relationships have become the show's greatest romance ever? Here are some great contenders that unfortunately never happened.

Owen Hunt joined the hit medical drama early on and was introduced as Cristina Yang's love interest. Upon first impression, Owen seemed like the perfect match for Cristina as they both shared the same passion for medicine and their work.

However, over the years Owen's storyline went haywire, as he went from one woman to another, first cheating on Cristina, then hurriedly married Amelia, and getting Teddy pregnant by appearing at her door out of nowhere. Even at present, his relationship with Teddy is on the rocks with the latter having cheated on him. Owen might be a Grey's veteran but one wonders if, after Cristina, he might have beenbetter off alone. At least for a little while or until he figures things out.

Erica Hahn was the brilliant cardiothoracic surgeon who came like a gush of wind after Preston Burke left Seattle Grace and then left as hurriedly as she came.

However, in that brief period of time, she was shown to have developed a relationship with fan-favorite, Callie Torres. For both of them, a casual hook up turned out to be an eye-opener for the two women as Erica realized that she was happier dating women and Callie started exploring her bisexuality. Erica and Callie's story ended abruptly but it would have been interesting to watch them navigate their new-found sexuality together.

The 'Ortho god' Atticus Lincoln seems to be in a stable relationship with Amelia Shepherd at the moment although knowing Amelia, things could blow up at any moment.

RELATED:Grey's Anatomy: The 10 Hardest Hitting Break-Ups

But Link also sharesa pleasant, friendly equation with Jo Wilson, who he happened to know in the past. And seeing how things turned out between Jo and Alex, maybe Link would have been a better option, for he seems more anchored and understanding than Alex ever was. However, given that this is Grey's, there might be hope for Link and Jo still.

Another couple that seemed to be on the verge of happening but never culminated was Alex and Addison. For those who forgot, it was Addison who tried to mellow down the arrogant surgical intern in his early days and drew Alexinto pediatrics, which heultimately excelled.

The two were attracted to each other and sparks flew, which led to the couple hooking up. Of course, Alex was way too immature to be in a serious relationship with someone like Addison but that in itself would have been fun to watch. Addison'spartnership with Derek, although complicated, was never meant to be, so maybe she could have been in a quirky relationship with the smartmouth Alex Karev.

Mark and Callie were best friends with benefits and Callie even got pregnant with Mark's daughter. The two were very comfortable with each other and their camaraderie was mostly uncomplicated and fun.

As always, life and relationships are complex in Grey's Anatomy.So the two people who were best fit for each other don't end up together. Still, if Callie had decided she wanted to start a relationship with Mark, fans wouldn't have complained.

In season 4, young Lexie Grey encountered a patient with a giant tumor in his carotid artery, Nick Hanscom. Nick had a sense of humor, was flirtatious, and soon struck up a bond with Lexie who seemed to enjoy talking to him.

RELATED:Grey's Anatomy: 10 Couples That Shouldn't Have Worked, But Did

In fact, there were definite signs of chemistry between the two. After all, Lexie was soft by nature and Nick was the kind of guy who could make light of a very serious situation. Hewas also the first patient Lexie was entrusted with and his tragic death hit her hard. Had Nick survived, the writers might have considered giving the two a chance.

Grey's Anatomy is as much about the patients as it is about the doctors and staff at Grey Sloan Memorial. Meredith has saved numerous lives in the course of seventeen long seasons, but very few patients have dared to flirt with her.

One such patient was Nick Marsh in season 14, a handsome transplant doctor who had just undergone a kidney transplant himself. He might not have been 'McDreamy' but he was quite charming in his own way and was clearly hitting on Meredith, who didn't seem to mind the interest. Meredith and Nick would have made a really cute couple together, but that never happened.

Meredith went on a blind date in season 15 after her matchmaker patient, Cece, convinced her to start going out again. And who should she meet butHow I Met Your Motheralum, JoshRadnor, who appeared as software engineer Jon here.

The two connected instantly and Meredith even seemed okay with giving Jon a chance, canceling her afternoon to spend time with her date. However, once Jon mentioned that he wasn't comfortable with single moms, this ended her interest in him. Although the writers didn't take the narrative further, fans adored Jon with Meredith and wouldn't mind seeing him make a comeback.

Actor Martin Henderson appeared in season 14 as Nathan Riggs, an ex-colleague and former friend of Owen's and a potential love interest for Meredith Grey.

RELATED:Grey's Anatomy 10 Famous Actors You Forgot Were In The Series

Nathan seemed like a fitting replacement for Derek Shepherd although Meredith didn't give him a chance at first. And by the time she did, Nathan's ex-fiance Megan was back in the picture. Meredith and Nathan only had a few moments together but it wouldhave been fun to see them as a couple.

Remember the adorable George O'Malley, who died a devastating death in season 5 after throwing himself in front of a bus to save a random stranger? For those who don't remember, Lexie Grey had a phase when she was infatuated by George right after she joined Seattle Grace as a surgical intern.

The two even became roommates for some time, with Lexie trying to draw George's attention with her kind and thoughtful ways. But George's storyline had already become chaotic by the time and for some reason, he never noticed Lexie. Could one have imagined how sweet this pairing would have been ifGeorge had recognized how great Lexiewas?Unfortunately, fans never got to see them together.

NEXT:10 Medical Dramas That Are Better Than Grey's Anatomy

Next Parks And Recreation: The Main Characters' Story Arcs, Ranked From Worst To Best

Surangama, or Sue, as she is called by many, has been writing on films, television, literature, social issues for over a decade now. A teacher, writer, and editor, she loves nothing better than to curl up on a lazy afternoon with her favorite book, or with a pen and a notebook (a laptop would have to do!) and a foaming cuppa tea on the side.

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Grey's Anatomy: 10 Relationships That Should Have Happened But Never Did - Screen Rant

The American Med Spa Association (AmSpa) Acquires the Academy for Injection Anatomy (AIA) – Yahoo Finance

The American Med Spa Association (AmSpa) today announced that it has acquired the Academy for Injection Anatomy (AIA), a clinical training program created by renowned plastic surgeon and anatomist Chris Surek, DO, that provides unique, hands-on facial anatomy education for injectors.

CHICAGO, Jan. 11, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- The American Med Spa Association (AmSpa) today announced that it has acquired the Academy for Injection Anatomy (AIA), a clinical training program created by renowned plastic surgeon and anatomist Chris Surek, DO, that provides unique, hands-on facial anatomy education for injectors.

"AmSpa has always wanted to provide best-in-class hands-on clinical and didactic training but, until now, we hadn't found the right partner," says AmSpa Founder and CEO, Alex R. Thiersch, JD. "When the opportunity to bring Dr. Surek and his team to AmSpa presented itself, I jumped at the opportunity, with enthusiasm. Dr. Surek's Academy for Injection Anatomy is unquestionably the gold standard in the industry for injectable training."

Unlike other anatomy-based injectable training programs, the AIA allows all course participants to take part in actual injection and dissection activities, directly under the instruction of Dr. Surek and the other renowned members of the AIA faculty. The program is perfectly in keeping with AmSpa's dedication to improving the medical aesthetic industry through compliance and safety, making the combination of the two organizations a natural fit.

"This is going to be a very special partnership," says Dr. Surek. "Over the past few months, behind the scenes, I have been working with my faculty, including our newest member, Steven Weiner, MD, to develop a fresh, unique and fully comprehensive one-stop-shop training course for injectors of all skill levels. This comprehensive injection training course will include full face anatomy, injection technique, rheology, toxin science, complication management and ultrasoundall assembled in a high-yield two-day course including our world-class, one-of-a-kind, hands-on cadaver lab curriculum. I am so excited to team up with AmSpa and take this vision and passion nationally and internationally."

Story continues

Dr. Surek is a board-certified plastic surgeon and internationally recognized facial anatomist. He is an assistant professor of anatomy at Kansas City University in Kansas City, Missouri, and is a clinical assistant professor of plastic surgery at the University of Kansas Medical Center. He specializes in cosmetic surgery of the face, breast and body, as well as non-invasive facial rejuvenation procedures. He has co-authored several book chapters and published original research in facial cosmetic surgery, facial anatomy and filler injection. Dr. Surek is also the co-author of Facial Volumization: An Anatomic Approach, an anatomy-based textbook for filler injections. He serves as a key opinion leader for several companies within the aesthetic industry and teaches cadaver-based facial anatomy courses nationally and internationally.

"Not only is Dr. Surek an incredibly dynamic and passionate teacher, but also his training as both an anatomist and board-certified plastic surgeon makes him one of the most qualified and sought-after instructors of aesthetic injections in the world," says Thiersch. "His knowledge of anatomy and aesthetic technique, coupled with a passion for teaching and a desire to get the most out of his students, makes him the unquestioned leader in injectables training worldwide. I am so excited to bring Dr. Surek and his incredible faculty into the AmSpa family."

The AIA is based in Kansas City, Missouri and, until now, injectors who wished to participate in the course had to travel there to do so. However, now that the AIA is part of AmSpa, it will be available to injectors throughout the country in conjunction with AmSpa's Boot Camps. Additional seating for the AIA two-day trainings in Kansas City on February 13-14, March 13-14, April 17-18 and May 15-16 will be released in the very near future. To register for these events, visit https://www.americanmedspa.org/page/injectionanatomy.

"Our goal in acquiring the AIA was not to change what Dr. Surek is doing, because he is already the best at what he does, but to add to it by increasing the scope and breadth of his offerings, all while keeping the course affordable and accessible to everyone in the industry," Thiersch says. "AmSpa will help pass his knowledge to more people, in more locations, than ever before."

About the American Med Spa Association (AmSpa) The American Med Spa Association (AmSpa) provides business, legal, and clinical training and resources to medical spas and aesthetic practices throughout the country. AmSpa's eventsincluding Medical Spa & Aesthetic Boot Camps, Academy of Injection Anatomy trainings and Medical Spa Showprovide business and legal best-practices to anyone entering the medical spa space or looking to improve their existing practice. AmSpa members receive access to legal summaries of laws governing medical spas in their state, discounts, a robust and growing webinar library, and many other benefits. For more information visit http://www.americanmedspa.org, call 312-981-0993, or email info@americanmedspa.org.

Media Contact

Michael Meyer, American Med Spa Association, (312) 801-5436, mike@americanmedspa.org

Twitter, Facebook

SOURCE American Med Spa Association

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The American Med Spa Association (AmSpa) Acquires the Academy for Injection Anatomy (AIA) - Yahoo Finance

Fujitsu Leverages Deep Learning in World’s Most Accurate Recognition of Complex Behaviors – HPCwire

TOKYO, Jan. 13, 2021 Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd. has announced the development of a technology that utilizes deep learning to recognize the positions and connections of adjacent joints in complex movements or behavior in which multiple joints move in tandem. This makes it possible to achieve greater accuracy in recognizing, for instance, when a person performs a task like removing objects from a box. This technology successfully achieved the worlds highest accuracy against the world standard benchmark in the field of behavior recognition, with significant gains over the results achieved using conventional technologies, which dont make use of information on neighboring joints.

By leveraging this technology to perform checks of manufacturing procedures or unsafe behavior in public spaces, Fujitsu aims to contribute to significant improvements in public safety and in the work place, helping to deliver on the promise of a safer and more secure society for all.

Fujitsu will present the details of this technology at the 25th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR 2020), which is being held online from January 10th, 2021 (Sunday) to January 15th, 2021 (Friday).

Background

In recent years, advances in AI technology have made it possible to recognize human behavior from video images using deep learning. This technology offers a variety of promising applications in a wide range of real-world scenarios, for example, in performing checks of manufacturing procedures in factories or detecting unsafe behavior in public spaces. In general, human behavior recognition utilizing AI relies on temporal changes in the position of each of the skeletal joints, including in the hands, elbows, and shoulders, as identifying features, which are then linked to simple movement patterns such as standing or sitting.With time series behavior-recognition technology developed by Fujitsu Labs, Fujitsu has successfully realized highly-accurate image recognition using a deep learning model that can operate with high-accuracy even for complex behaviors in which multiple joints change in conjunction with each other, such as removing objects from a box during unpacking.

About the Newly Developed Technology

Complex movements like unpacking involve hand, elbow, and shoulder joints moving in tandem with the arm bending and stretching. Fujitsu has developed a new AI model for a graph convolutional neural networks that performs convolution operation of the graph structure by adopting a graph consisting of edges connecting adjacent joints based on the structure of the human body with the joint position as a node (Vertex). By training this model in advance using the time series data of joints, the connection strength (Weight) with neighboring joints can be optimized, and effective connection relationships for behavior recognition can be acquired. With conventional technologies, it was necessary to accurately grasp the individual characteristics of each joint. With an AI model that has already been trained, the combined features of the adjacent joints that are linked can be extracted, making it possible to achieve highly-accurate recognition for complex movements.

This technology was evaluated against the world standard benchmark in the field of behavior recognition using skeleton data, and in the case of simple behaviors such as standing and sitting in the open data set, the accuracy rate was maintained at the same level as that of conventional technology that does not use information on neighboring joints. In the case of complex behaviors like a person unpacking a box or throwing an object, however, the accuracy rate improved greatly, to achieve an overall improvement of more than 7% over the conventional alternative to reach the worlds highest recognition accuracy.

Future Plans

By adding the newly developed AI model for recognizing complex behaviors obtained with this technology to the 100 basic behavior already accommodated by Fujitsus behavioral analysis technology Actlyzer,, it will become possible rapidly deploy new, highly-accurate recognition models. Fujitsu ultimately aims to leverage this new capability to roll out the system in fiscal year 2021, and contribute to the resolution of real-world issues to deliver a safer and more secure society.

About Fujitsu

Fujitsu is a leading Japanese information and communication technology (ICT) company offering a full range of technology products, solutions and services. Approximately 130,000 Fujitsu people support customers in more than 100 countries. We use our experience and the power of ICT to shape the future of society with our customers. Fujitsu Limited (TSE:6702) reported consolidated revenues of 3.9 trillion yen (US$35 billion) for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2020. For more information, please see http://www.fujitsu.com.

About Fujitsu Laboratories

Founded in 1968 as a wholly owned subsidiary of Fujitsu Limited, Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd. is one of the premier research centers in the world. With a global network of laboratories in Japan, China, the United States and Europe, the organization conducts a wide range of basic and applied research in the areas of Next-generation Services, Computer Servers, Networks, Electronic Devices and Advanced Materials. For more information, please see: http://www.fujitsu.com/jp/group/labs/en/.

Source: Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd.

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Fujitsu Leverages Deep Learning in World's Most Accurate Recognition of Complex Behaviors - HPCwire

3 ways to turn that failing New Year’s resolution into a habit – 4029tv

Have a bad relationship with New Year's resolutions? Many people start strong and then peter out by mid-January as work deadlines, home chores and the latest Netflix binge takes precedence over good intentions. Some even thought this year would be different due to being homebound. (Laughable!)Instead of a resolution, it may be worth trying a "tiny habit," a term coined by behavioral science expert B.J. Fogg, who founded and directs research and innovation at Stanford University's Behavior Design Lab. As Fogg explains in his best-selling book "Tiny Habits: The Small Changes That Change Everything," the key to building a better habit is tying each action to something you already do while also matching location, frequency and theme. Fogg's tips are based, he said, on mountains of research on human behavior modification and the many people he has coached over some 40 years.Here's a look at how tiny habits work:CNN: What's the secret sauce to making a new behavior a habit?B.J. Fogg: Emotion is what forms the habit. It's not repetition. It's not willpower. It's not discipline. It's the emotions you feel when you do a behavior. If you have a feeling of success when doing that behavior, it will start wiring as a habit. If it's an intense feeling of success, it will substantially wire.What doesn't work is trying to get somebody to do something they don't want to do. You can nag them into compliance, maybe but that's not a habit.What also doesn't work is picking a habit that's painful, or causes you to feel awkward or causes you to feel negative. You want to do the opposite you want the habit to help you feel successful or give you joy or pleasure or satisfaction in some way.CNN: A lot of the habits we want to do for our health are not necessarily enjoyable, at least at first. Fogg: If someone wants to exercise or feels they should, the key is to find an exercise that makes them feel successful or they find enjoyable one or the other.The third approach is to redesign your environment so the only way you can get to work is walking or biking, so you must do it. That's an environmental change sell your car. Then the only way you can do something is by walking or biking so you'll get exercise. That's not really practical for most people.In reality, the only habits that wire in readily are behaviors you already want to do, and you feel successful doing them.CNN: What are your three criteria for a successful habit?Fogg: My method is a system. As you're picking a new habit, it's got to match three criteria.Number one: It needs to be effective. Take meditation as stress reduction. For a lot of people meditation is not effective for reducing stress because all they do is become aware of how scattered their mind is, so that's a bad idea for those people.For me, what's effective is going out into nature. Even a short little walk to the ocean or a short walk into the garden is very effective.Number two: It needs to be behavior people want to do. If you don't want to do that behavior, maybe you can manipulate yourself into it a few times but it won't become a habit.Number three: It needs to be a behavior you can do. So I talked about walking out and looking at the ocean or looking at tadpoles. Well, I live in a place I can do that.If someone can't do that, they've got to pick something else, like hanging out with their dog.CNN: You say the new behavior has to fit into your routine to become a habit. I want to start drinking more water, so how should I do that?Fogg: That's one of the keys in my work. It's not just about picking the habit, you have to design it into your routine. And that means, what will that action come after naturally? Starting the coffee maker happens in the kitchen, it happens in the morning, and it happens once a day.After I start the coffee maker, after I feed the dog, then I will drink a glass of water. if you can design it into your routine, if you know what this habit comes after, then your chances of succeeding go way up.I call that an anchor. You want the anchor and the new habit to happen in the same location. If the new habit can be associated with the kitchen, then find a kitchen anchor for it. What doesn't work is like, "Oh, I start the coffee maker then I have to go out to the garage to do the new habit." That does not work. Location matters.Next is frequency. If you want the habit to happen once a day, then you want an anchor routine that happens once a day. Like, in my life I want to do push-ups throughout the day. So I attached that behavior to when I have to pee. So after I go to the bathroom, I do two push-ups because then I get to do push-ups throughout the day.The next thing that matters is the theme. Now this matters the least the first two matter more but if I see feeding the dog as a nurturing ritual, a good habit to follow would be a way that I nurture myself.You're looking for same location, same frequency, and if you can, the same theme. And if you get those lined up, then the habit can just click into place.CNN: Why doesn't your approach include such typical recommendations as repeating the behavior for 66 days so it becomes automatic?Fogg: There are a bunch of things that aren't required to create habits that people think they must do like, "Oh, you have to write, set a goal." You don't have to set a goal. That's not true.The whole thing about repetition is misguided. It's the emotion that wires the habit in if you repeat it and you hate it, it does not wire in as a habit. It will never become a habit.Or people say only work on one habit at a time. No, that's not true at all. You have to have an accountability partner is another recommendation. You don't have to.There are all these myths out there around habits and change. My work is saying, "No, people. Here's how to do it quickly and easily, and all those other old things are either wrong or optional."CNN: How did you come to choose these criteria for habit building?Fogg: In 2007, I discovered what I called the behavior model all human behavior comes down to only three things: Is there motivation to do that behavior? Is there an ability to do the behavior? Is there a prompt for that behavior?A prompt is something that reminds you, and you use an existing routine to prompt you. Feeding the dog is going to be my prompt. It's not going to be a Post-It note; it's not going to be an alarm; it's not going to be just trying to remember.You're hacking the prompt by using an existing routine to remind yourself.When you see how the pieces work, it's like, "Oh my gosh, is it really that simple?" And the answer is yes. CNN: You've launched a tool that people can use on their smartphones to help them form healthy habits. How does it work?Fogg: The tool provides "recipes" for successful tiny habits. It can be found at recipemaker.tinyhabits.com. It just launched and is still being tweaked but It's free, open to all. It's designed for mobile phones so people can use it anywhere.Along the top are various categories you might want to choose from, such as nutrition, fitness, brain health, productivity. Those aren't random, those are informed by my research at Stanford that finds these are the things that people want most. There is a lot of data and research behind it, but we keep the tool itself really simple.Under each category, you can swipe through the top cards to look at the new habits you might choose. I'm only including habits that I think are effective. And once you settle on one that you like, you go to the cards below and say, "When am I going to do this? When is it going to fit into my routine?'You can choose the card "think of something I'm grateful for" and pair that with the card representing an existing habit like "put my head on my pillow." And that's your recipe for a new habit you're going to practice. You're not going to be perfect, but you're going to practice and see if it works for you.The tool can be used without signing up for emails, but if you want to hear more from me about that habit, you can enter your email.The ultimate goal is anybody in the world can benefit from this without installing anything, without giving up your email. It's a tool to help me with my life's mission to help people to be happier and healthier.

Have a bad relationship with New Year's resolutions? Many people start strong and then peter out by mid-January as work deadlines, home chores and the latest Netflix binge takes precedence over good intentions. Some even thought this year would be different due to being homebound. (Laughable!)

Instead of a resolution, it may be worth trying a "tiny habit," a term coined by behavioral science expert B.J. Fogg, who founded and directs research and innovation at Stanford University's Behavior Design Lab.

As Fogg explains in his best-selling book "Tiny Habits: The Small Changes That Change Everything," the key to building a better habit is tying each action to something you already do while also matching location, frequency and theme.

Fogg's tips are based, he said, on mountains of research on human behavior modification and the many people he has coached over some 40 years.

Here's a look at how tiny habits work:

CNN: What's the secret sauce to making a new behavior a habit?

B.J. Fogg: Emotion is what forms the habit. It's not repetition. It's not willpower. It's not discipline. It's the emotions you feel when you do a behavior. If you have a feeling of success when doing that behavior, it will start wiring as a habit. If it's an intense feeling of success, it will substantially wire.

What doesn't work is trying to get somebody to do something they don't want to do. You can nag them into compliance, maybe but that's not a habit.

What also doesn't work is picking a habit that's painful, or causes you to feel awkward or causes you to feel negative. You want to do the opposite you want the habit to help you feel successful or give you joy or pleasure or satisfaction in some way.

CNN: A lot of the habits we want to do for our health are not necessarily enjoyable, at least at first.

Fogg: If someone wants to exercise or feels they should, the key is to find an exercise that makes them feel successful or they find enjoyable one or the other.

The third approach is to redesign your environment so the only way you can get to work is walking or biking, so you must do it. That's an environmental change sell your car. Then the only way you can do something is by walking or biking so you'll get exercise. That's not really practical for most people.

In reality, the only habits that wire in readily are behaviors you already want to do, and you feel successful doing them.

CNN: What are your three criteria for a successful habit?

Fogg: My method is a system. As you're picking a new habit, it's got to match three criteria.

Number one: It needs to be effective. Take meditation as stress reduction. For a lot of people meditation is not effective for reducing stress because all they do is become aware of how scattered their mind is, so that's a bad idea for those people.

For me, what's effective is going out into nature. Even a short little walk to the ocean or a short walk into the garden is very effective.

Number two: It needs to be behavior people want to do. If you don't want to do that behavior, maybe you can manipulate yourself into it a few times but it won't become a habit.

Number three: It needs to be a behavior you can do. So I talked about walking out and looking at the ocean or looking at tadpoles. Well, I live in a place I can do that.

If someone can't do that, they've got to pick something else, like hanging out with their dog.

CNN: You say the new behavior has to fit into your routine to become a habit. I want to start drinking more water, so how should I do that?

Fogg: That's one of the keys in my work. It's not just about picking the habit, you have to design it into your routine. And that means, what will that action come after naturally? Starting the coffee maker happens in the kitchen, it happens in the morning, and it happens once a day.

After I start the coffee maker, after I feed the dog, then I will drink a glass of water. if you can design it into your routine, if you know what this habit comes after, then your chances of succeeding go way up.

I call that an anchor. You want the anchor and the new habit to happen in the same location. If the new habit can be associated with the kitchen, then find a kitchen anchor for it. What doesn't work is like, "Oh, I start the coffee maker then I have to go out to the garage to do the new habit." That does not work. Location matters.

Next is frequency. If you want the habit to happen once a day, then you want an anchor routine that happens once a day. Like, in my life I want to do push-ups throughout the day. So I attached that behavior to when I have to pee. So after I go to the bathroom, I do two push-ups because then I get to do push-ups throughout the day.

The next thing that matters is the theme. Now this matters the least the first two matter more but if I see feeding the dog as a nurturing ritual, a good habit to follow would be a way that I nurture myself.

You're looking for same location, same frequency, and if you can, the same theme. And if you get those lined up, then the habit can just click into place.

CNN: Why doesn't your approach include such typical recommendations as repeating the behavior for 66 days so it becomes automatic?

Fogg: There are a bunch of things that aren't required to create habits that people think they must do like, "Oh, you have to write, set a goal." You don't have to set a goal. That's not true.

The whole thing about repetition is misguided. It's the emotion that wires the habit in if you repeat it and you hate it, it does not wire in as a habit. It will never become a habit.

Or people say only work on one habit at a time. No, that's not true at all. You have to have an accountability partner is another recommendation. You don't have to.

There are all these myths out there around habits and change. My work is saying, "No, people. Here's how to do it quickly and easily, and all those other old things are either wrong or optional."

CNN: How did you come to choose these criteria for habit building?

Fogg: In 2007, I discovered what I called the behavior model all human behavior comes down to only three things: Is there motivation to do that behavior? Is there an ability to do the behavior? Is there a prompt for that behavior?

A prompt is something that reminds you, and you use an existing routine to prompt you. Feeding the dog is going to be my prompt. It's not going to be a Post-It note; it's not going to be an alarm; it's not going to be just trying to remember.

You're hacking the prompt by using an existing routine to remind yourself.

When you see how the pieces work, it's like, "Oh my gosh, is it really that simple?" And the answer is yes.

CNN: You've launched a tool that people can use on their smartphones to help them form healthy habits. How does it work?

Fogg: The tool provides "recipes" for successful tiny habits. It can be found at recipemaker.tinyhabits.com. It just launched and is still being tweaked but It's free, open to all. It's designed for mobile phones so people can use it anywhere.

Along the top are various categories you might want to choose from, such as nutrition, fitness, brain health, productivity. Those aren't random, those are informed by my research at Stanford that finds these are the things that people want most. There is a lot of data and research behind it, but we keep the tool itself really simple.

Under each category, you can swipe through the top cards to look at the new habits you might choose. I'm only including habits that I think are effective. And once you settle on one that you like, you go to the cards below and say, "When am I going to do this? When is it going to fit into my routine?'

You can choose the card "think of something I'm grateful for" and pair that with the card representing an existing habit like "put my head on my pillow." And that's your recipe for a new habit you're going to practice. You're not going to be perfect, but you're going to practice and see if it works for you.

The tool can be used without signing up for emails, but if you want to hear more from me about that habit, you can enter your email.

The ultimate goal is anybody in the world can benefit from this without installing anything, without giving up your email. It's a tool to help me with my life's mission to help people to be happier and healthier.

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3 ways to turn that failing New Year's resolution into a habit - 4029tv

Seeing opportunity in every difficulty | Community | southernminn.com – Southernminn.com

Moods are a very real part of our daily lives but also an area we need to discern carefully. We seldom think about human behavior and why we fall into certain attitudes but I believe it would be worth our time to examine our thoughts on a regular basis. The Bible and psychology has much to say about the ups and downs of our emotions and its critical to understand how our human nature can resist and oppose our relationship with God. The fine line between our mental impulses and our spiritual line of communication with the Lord are difficult to understand, however this battlefield of the mind has everything to do with whether God or our feelings are controlling us. Whether you are beaming with happiness today or walking around in a melancholy fog, may you embrace the Lords goodness and recognize His mercy and love is all around you. Yes, much of the world is saturated with hatred and confusion but there is always perfect peace in His presence. I enjoy taking long walks where I can quietly talk with Him. I know that God loves us and wants us to live in His Spirit and truth.

His desire is that we learn how to know the difference between His voice and all the other voices in the world including our own. When we find ourselves in the valley of despair, the last thing we desire to do is to worship God, but praising and trusting Him is exactly what we need to do. There is no place so hopeless that God cannot deliver you! He is never distracted or too busy to hear your cries and there is no darkness where Gods light cannot find and save you! Jesus wants you and I to be filled with His confidence and reassurance but this includes ignoring the opinions of our emotions and embracing His truth. Be encouraged today in knowing that God desires to hold you in His arms of love but is waiting for you to trust Him. Yes, the three Hebrew children were in the fiery furnace but remember that Christ was also in there with them. Winston Churchill is quoted as saying, The pessimist sees difficulty in every opportunity, while the optimist sees opportunity in every difficulty.

We realize that life is filled with disappointments but we cannot remain curled up in a fetal position with the blanket over our head. After a season of prayer and receiving a more clear understanding, we are to arise, wash our face, put our armor back on and return to the battlefield in the faith that God will continue to heal, guide, and empower us. The apostle Paul wrote, It was for freedom that Christ set us free; therefore keep standing firm and do not be subject again to a yoke of slavery Galatians 5:1. This verse might sound confusing, but when a person is born again, they are delivered spiritually and are given the opportunity to be set free from mental and emotional deception. As Christians, let us remember our bodies and our minds are to be our servant not our master. We are an eternal spirit and have the opportunity to live victorious no matter how we feel or what is going on around us.

The Rev. William F. Holland Jr., DD., C.ED.D., is a Minister, Chaplain, and author. Learn more at billyhollandministries.com

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UofSC faculty work to counteract the emotional power of misinformation – @UofSC

Posted on: January 14, 2021; Updated on: January 14, 2021By Carol JG Ward, ward8@mailbox.sc.edu, 803-777-7549

Don't believe the news.

I dont trust the media.

Im not going to look up anything. I have my opinion which is just as valid as yours.

How is fact checking possible within 48 hours of an incident? We believe what we believe.

These are actual comments posted on social media in the days following the Jan. 6 insurrection in which supporters of President Donald Trump breached the U.S. Capitol. They illustrate the gargantuan task of combatting mis- and disinformation that is circulated, consumed and believed by the public.

One of the challenges is that people connect and react emotionally to questionable information that aligns with their opinions.

As educators we can give people all of the skills, tips and techniques in the world, but it's going to come down to how they feel about the person or the source. That is going to have a really huge influence on whether or not they believe that information, says professor Nicole Cooke, the Augusta Baker Chair in the School of Information Science.

Cooke and her colleagues in the College of Information and Communications have conducted research to help improve media literacy, to teach people how to evaluate quality sources and to recognize clues for misinformation.

School of Information Science professor Nicole Cooke encourages critical news consumption.

A huge part of the threat and power of fake news, mis- and disinformation is that people tend to believe what they want to believe, Cooke says. It's very hard to overcome that emotional barrier, so the challenge becomes showing them how to be a more critical news consumer.

We've seen a lot of partisanship and politicization of sources, she says. I might believe The New York Times is a credible source, and someone else may say its biased and wont read it. I don't necessarily care where you get your information, but I do want you to have tips and techniques to transcend the source.

While there are plugins and tools that can be used to help identify fake news, Cooke says she wants to help news consumers build that capacity for themselves. For example, she recommends a technique called triangulation: Have you seen the information in at least three different places? She also suggests maintaining a healthy dose of skepticism. Pay attention if your instincts are telling you something looks or sounds questionable. Check out the credentials of the person writing or sharing. Dont get caught up in the moment; dig a little deeper to verify information before sharing it.

Cooke also recommends getting outside our filter bubbles and echo chambers. One way to recognize what those are is to keep a news consumption log for 24 hours. Note the news sources you rely on, the time youre reading or watching, the headlines and the source. As you see patterns for example, if you notice you get news only from social media or from podcasts you might want to start reading a newspaper or watching a nightly newscast.

The purpose is not necessarily to judge a source as good or bad; it's just a tool for taking a deeper dive into our habits to become more cognizant of our news environment, Cooke says.

Andrea Hickerson, School of Journalism and Mass Communications professor, says deepfakes are practically undetectable.

Technology in the form of deepfakes presents a different and perhaps more challenging disinformation dilemma for not only the public but for journalists as well.

Deepfakes are artificially rendered videos that are so believable they are undetectable.

Weve heard the phrase seeing is believing. Deepfakes turn that upside down because we could see things that aren't actually real, says Andrea Hickerson, director of the School of Journalism and Mass Communications. As deepfakes continue to get more sophisticated, the challenge in detecting them grows.

Hickerson is working with Matt Wright and John Sohrawardi, researchers at the Rochester Institute of Technology in New York, to build cloud-based software that will help journalists ferret out deepfakes. They are concentrating on journalists because they are seen as important arbiters of the truth and credibility and because they have a large outreach.

DeFake allows journalists to cut and paste a video link into a tool on a website to receive a score of the likelihood the video has been faked. The research team has been working in newsrooms to see how journalists will incorporate the software as a tool in news-gathering.

Some local reporters may think deepfakes are an issue that doesnt apply to them, Hickerson says. But what if its the mayor or a local hospital or financial executive who is being misrepresented. Deepfakes can be in any context, and there are a lot of local implications. Everyone should be on guard.

While deepfakes are often imperceptible to the human eye, Hickerson says the same questions for assessing the veracity of any information can be still be useful in deciding whether to believe what youre seeing: Where is this video coming from? Who is sharing it? Why are they sharing it? What are the implications of it? Is there an alternative explanation for what the person is saying? What are reputable reporters saying about it?

Deepfakes are created, obviously, to influence public opinion and perception. False information can diminish our decision-making capacity, manipulate emotions, beliefs, opinions and maybe even actions, Hickerson says. Thats not good for democracy or community.

School of Information Science professorAmir Karami researches bot activity on social media.

As with deepfakes, the strategy behind bots is to influence public opinion. This can be done with good intentions sharing links to reputable news sources or health information, for example or with a more malevolent agenda such as trying to sow division or influence an election.

Bots are developed with computer programming to produce content and emulate human behavior. They may use complex algorithms that analyze the content of a post and tailor a response, or they may use an algorithm that simply looks for a specific word in a post and then generates a standard reply. Bots also may automatically retweet all the posts from a celebrity or politician.

Human trolls who do nothing from morning to night but share misinformation and disinformation also fall into the bot category, says Amir Karami, a professor in the School of Information Science.

Karami has done research on bot activity following the 2018 mass shooting at a high school in Winter Park, Florida, and more recently analysis of bot-produced tweets related to the COVID-19 vaccine, the opioid crisis, abortion, LGBTQ issues, trust in science and government, and the effect of dis- and misinformation on mental health. The more harmful of these tweets use strategies such as baiting and spreading conspiracy theories to elicit emotional responses.

People are aware of bots, but they dont understand them or know how to identify them, Karami says. If you dont understand what a bot is, you cant understand the impact of sharing their disinformation.

Tipoffs that an account is a bot include a large difference between the number of followers and the number followed; no profile image or a suspicious image such as an animation (to check the validity of a real image, do a Google search); unusual activity such as hundreds of tweets per day or accounts that retweet only. For public figures accounts, check for the blue verified badge. Karami also recommends Botometer, an online tool that measures the probability an account is fake.

Brooke McKeever, School of Journalism and Mass Communications professor,says it's important to counteract misleading impressions from social media.

Sometimes simply the volume of social media posts by actual real people can create misinformation.

Brooke McKeever, associate dean for research in the College of Information and Communications, and Robert McKeever, a professor in the School of Journalism and Mass Communications, have studied communication and dis- and misinformation in relation to vaccinations. Their research shows that mothers who do not support or have reservations about childhood vaccinations are more likely to communicate about the issue both on social media and in person.

This outsized social media presence could give the impression of a false consensus, and people could start to believe that anti-vaccine sentiment or vaccine hesitancy is the norm when its really not, Brooke McKeever says.

In addition, some of the McKeevers research with others found that widespread social media posts about the myth that vaccines are linked to autism drove some mainstream media coverage, giving further credence to misinformation.

School of Journalism and Mass Communications professor Robert McKeeverresearcheshealth topics in social media.

To counteract these misleading impressions, McKeever says it is important for people who believe vaccines are safe and effective to speak out, to acknowledge concerns and answer questions by sharing trusted and legitimate sources, and to do so civilly dont pounce.

A lot of us have considered childhood vaccinations standard and never found the need to say, I just got my kids vaccinated, McKeever says. For those who are strongly anti-vaccine or adhere to conspiracy theories, you're probably not going to change their mind, but there's a whole swath of people who are somewhere in the middle.

With the unprecedented rapid development of the COVID vaccine, sharing accurate information is imperative for people who are nervous and have questions, McKeever says, but perhaps even more influential will be for citizens to see leaders, friends and neighbors in their own communities getting vaccinated themselves.

The more that people get correct information from trusted local sources and experts even in local Facebook groups dedicated to fact-sharing it will become a layering effect, she says, echoing her colleagues emphasis on encouraging the public to become more discerning in their media consumption.

The College of Information and Communications has a role to support democracy and should be the leader of the discussion about mis- and disinformation on campus and in the state, faculty members say.

We have a really important obligation to serve the public of our state by taking on the role of public editor or ombudsperson for news and information that reaches citizens in South Carolina, says Hickerson.

Believing misinformation and disinformation can hinder how people make decisions and can lead to wrong or even harmful conclusions.

We want to provide guidance so people can use information to their advantage and not be led astray, Cooke says. You can still make the bad decision if you want to, but at least you would have all of the possibilities at your disposal.

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UofSC faculty work to counteract the emotional power of misinformation - @UofSC

US suffers bleak January as Covid rages and vaccination campaign falters – The Guardian

More Americans are dying of Covid-19 than at any time during the pandemic, the most complex mass vaccination campaign in history is off to a rocky start, and more transmissible strains of the coronavirus are emergent. January is going to be a bleak month.

The most pessimistic outlook published by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) predicts up to 438,000 people may be killed by Covid-19 by the end of the month in a staggering upward trend.

However, even in this bleak outlook, epidemiologists said there are still reasons for optimism, buoyed by the power of changing human behavior.

My hope is this month will be the peak and things will start to look better in February, said Caitlin Rivers, an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins University whose work focuses on pandemic response. I dont think it will be vaccination that will bend the curve. It will be washing your hands and staying home.

Predictions of a horrific death toll come from the CDCs ensemble forecast, which takes in predictions from three dozen academic centers, all considering different criteria. Ensemble forecasts are known to be more accurate than single forecasts.

It is this ensemble model which shows between 405,000 and 438,000 Americans may be killed by Covid-19 by the end of January. Predictions are made in four-week increments.

Forecasting further into the future is considered unreliable, because the pandemic can change course so quickly. For example, majorities of Americans across the political spectrum are changing their behaviors to wear masks every time they leave the house, according to a recent tracking poll from the Kaiser Family Foundation.

But growing discontent could undermine these improvements. In a counter example, some restaurants are breaking indoor dining bans in defiance of government regulations, arguing they cannot survive another lockdown. The CDC considers indoor dining particularly high risk.

Further, a mass vaccination campaign now underway holds the promise of altering the pandemic, though it has stumbled. The vaccination campaign is not likely reflected in existing forecasts, because only about 3% of the population has been vaccinated.

US officials had planned to vaccinate 20 million people before the end of 2020, a goal they have since walked back. To date, only about 9 million people have been vaccinated, representing about one-third of all vaccine doses distributed.

Experts attribute this failure to a disengaged White House which pushed vaccine planning to states, a lack of timely federal funds, and failure to conduct public education campaigns to combat vaccine hesitancy. These failures have led to wide discrepancies between states.

The differences are, not a red versus blue state thing, Dr Ashish K Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health, said on Twitter. Its a lack of federal leadership thing.

Herd immunity, likely requiring near-universal vaccine uptake among US adults, is seen as the ultimate goal of the vaccination campaign. But a tipping point, when the vaccine has observable positive effect, is likely to come earlier. If the Biden-Harris administration can successfully speed up vaccinations, it is possible a reduction in deaths could be the first positive outcome of the vaccination campaign.

We will likely see the positive effects of the vaccination campaign in deaths before new cases, said Rivers. That is because, we are specifically targeting people who are at highest risk of severe illness for vaccination.

The Biden-Harris administration is also likely to have more vaccines at their disposal. Janssen Pharmaceuticals is expected to report clinical trial data at the end of January. That data could lead to emergency authorization.

Further, a vaccine candidate developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University which is already in use in the UK is expected to report trial data in February. If it is favorable, that could bring two more vaccines online in the US.

The emergence of new, highly transmissible Covid-19 variants is likely to strain these optimistic developments. The B117 variant discovered in the UK is thought to be up to 70% more transmissible, and has been in the US perhaps as early as October. That will require even greater adherence to social distancing measures.

Its very early days in the US, but we should expect this to be the dominant variant in certain areas of the US (eg, CA) within the next 6-8 weeks (late February/early March), said Professor Kristian G Andersen, a professor of immunology at Scripps Research Institute on Twitter.

While there are 72 lab-confirmed cases of B117 in the US according to the CDC, the true prevalence is unknown. To find that out, the US would need to have a systematic genomic sequencing surveillance program. That is not happening. And B117 is not the only variant of concern.

Im also quite worried about B1351, said Rivers. There is early evidence it is more transmissible [than dominant strains] and were looking for that one even less than B117, she said.

The future of Covid-19 outbreaks in the long-term is difficult to predict. The majority of scientists believe Covid-19 will not be eliminated right now it is too widespread and transmissible. However, several factors could influence the severity of future outbreaks.

That includes unknowns, such as whether infection by other coronaviruses confers immunity or partial immunity to Covid-19, the length of time vaccines protect people against the coronavirus, and seasonal variations of the virus.

Those unknowns may require, prolonged or intermittent social distancing into 2022.

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US suffers bleak January as Covid rages and vaccination campaign falters - The Guardian

Letters to the Editor: January 15, 2021 – West Hawaii Today

Time to catch up

Last Fridays front page article showcased an upcoming Sustainability Summit, which will address food insecurity and ways our island can become more self-sustainable. This was followed by a Sunday article on Covid Cluckers, which lays (ha ha) out many good reasons for people on this island to have backyard chickens, which would seem to address these issues.

But, unless you live on AG land, you will be breaking the law if you have even one egg-layer at your house. This pandemic is illustrating the need for more food self-sufficiency on our island, but it doesnt matter whether you have a large lot, whether your chickens are cooped, or that you dont own a rooster. To have a chicken lay an egg for your breakfast is forbidden.

Thats this island.

Our neighbor island to the north allows backyard chickens anywhere in Honolulu as long as they are not a nuisance. And, in fact, many (if not most) major cities allow chickens, though with varying restrictions as to the number that are acceptable. Portland, Houston, Los Angeles even New York City; all permit chickens in urban areas. Seattle, for example, allows up to eight chickens and only requires that coops be placed at a minimum distance from houses. Chicago. Denver. Minneapolis. Dallas. Nashville. Anchorage. The list goes on.

Over the years, various council members have been contacted about this issue and none has been interested in getting this law changed. What a pity because what a lost opportunity. Chickens are easy to raise, they require little special food, being quite happy with table scraps, stale bread, old cereal, and are willing to eat bugs and the occasional coqui. They provide fertilizer for gardens, take up little space and seldom roam. Best of all, a happy hen produces an egg every day or two during laying season.

Isnt it time for the Big Island to catch up with the rest of the country by allowing backyard chickens and thus further promoting this important concept of food security?

P. Hanson

Keauhou

How its done

After all thats happened in the past four years, its good that people are asking the question, How do you get millions of Americans to believe things that arent true? Psychologists, sociologists, neuroscientists, marketers, cult specialists, scammers, political analysts, historians, dictators, conspiracy theory website designers all know the answer to that question.

There are numerous books that explain such techniques; gaslighting where doubt is conveyed that what you perceive as truth is actually false, propaganda where lies are repeatedly broadcast, reverse projection where you accuse others of doing exactly what youre doing, subliminal messaging and dog whistles where thinking is influenced with stealthily planted words or ideas.

Whats known is that none of these techniques will be successful unless our thinking brain is derailed by a flood of emotion. The scammer calls with a story about your grandson being in trouble. You send money because you feel fear and concern. The marketer insists youre smart for buying their product and your ego kicks in. Fox News tells you that immigrants are ruining this country and youre mad. Trump tells you that Democrats will tax your wealth or that they stole the election and youre outraged. Trump tells anarchists and racists that he loves them and they feel empowered.

Gaslighting was possible after Trump and Republicans first fueled emotions of loyalty and patriotism. Then they could successfully raise suspicion and disdain (feelings) against mainstream media and Democrats. Consequently, their voters would doubt any information (facts) that revealed the lies and psychological subterfuge. What it boils down to is that people will believe lies when emotions that they neither recognize or admit are put in play. Experts on human behavior understand how people can be made to believe lies but getting those believers to grasp that their emotions have been manipulated is a very different story.

Martha Hodges

Kailua Kona

Letters policy

Letters to the editor should be 300 words or less and will be edited for style and grammar. Longer viewpoint guest columns may not exceed 800 words. Submit online at http://www.westhawaiitoday.com/?p=118321, via email to letters@westhawaiitoday.com or address them to:

Editor

West Hawaii Today

PO Box 789

Kailua-Kona, HI 96745

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Letters to the Editor: January 15, 2021 - West Hawaii Today

Self-Driving Cars Safety And The Curious Thought Of Steering Wheels With Tullock Spikes – Forbes

A gripping thought experiment -- suppose steering wheels had a steel spike.

One of the most fascinating thought experiments about the safety of how we all drive our cars is the legendary Tullock spike idea.

Heres how it goes.

Imagine that on the steering wheel of every car there was a steel spike protruding toward the driver. Upon sitting down in the drivers seat, you would be within a fraction of an inch of the endpoint of the spike. While driving such an equipped car, you would be continually under the threat of piercing your own chest by any driving action that caused you to lurch forward in the drivers seat.

This is a crafty and yet quite simple device that would seemingly get your attention.

And presumably would be a sizable and constant reminder to drive safely.

That is the underlying crux of the thought experiment ostensibly dreamed-up by Professor Gordon Tullock of George Mason University sometime in the early 1960s (this can be found mentioned in the 1962 book entitled The Calculus of Consent that was co-authored by Tullock and James Buchanan, which, by the way, some also believe that the idea was potentially also conceived by Armen Alchian of UCLA). In any case, the popularity of the steel spike notion has garnered Tullocks name and is typically referred to as Tullocks spike.

Would you be a safer driver if you had such a steel dagger that was always threatening your existence?

It seems patently obvious that you would be.

All of us would drive as though our lives depended upon it. Indeed, the beauty, or perhaps the ugliness of the spike concept is that you would be more conscious of the dangers involved in driving a car. The act of driving a car carries grave risks all of the time, yet we enormously downplay those risks.

Driving recklessly is easy to do.

There is a huge mental gap between thinking about how to safely drive and the potential result of driving poorly. Those drivers that zip along on the freeway, weaving in and out of lanes, do not make a mental connection between their speed and their chaotic driving actions. While inside the bubble of a car, the outside world at times appears to be a simulation as though you are playing at driving while inside a video game or maybe inside The Matrix.

The spike would reset that way of thinking.

Acting as a front-and-center reminder of the dangers of driving, the abstract elements of driving safely would become exceedingly tangible. Tapping the brakes with any sudden movement would likely cause your chest to take a sharp nick from the tip of the dagger. Fortunately, not enough of a bleeder to do full harm. Nonetheless, those occasional cuts and pokes would add to the reminder of what happens when you arent driving safely.

On the surface, this steel spike seems quite telling.

Though if you try to carry this thought experiment to further mental reaches, the whole thing begins to somewhat unravel. Suppose you are a really safe driver and another car careens out of nowhere and rams into your car. There was nothing you could do to avoid the collision. No matter how attentive you were, the other vehicle mercilessly swung out of traffic and managed to steer into your car. The sad result is that you are fatally gored on the spike, albeit due to no particular cause of your own doing.

One supposes that it could be argued that you shouldnt have used a car at all. The safest way to avoid a car accident is to entirely avoid using cars.

That doesnt seem like a satisfactory way to look at things.

Perhaps you are supposed to only drive on side streets and drive slowly. Even in that context, there are still opportunities for you to get caught on the spike. A dog runs out from a wooded area onto the street, doing so without notice, and startlingly occurs in a few split seconds. Even though you were going only 15 miles per hour, and upon hitting the brakes, your body is tossed forward and once again the dagger claims a driver.

Setting aside those gruesome thoughts, there is still something useful about the steel spike concept.

Heres the deeper meaning.

This thought experiment arose during the time that seat belts were still coming into being. For those of you that perchance were around during those times, you might recall the heated debates about wearing a seat belt. Some insisted they would never wear one. One argument was that it constrained your ability to drive and thus would make you get into car accidents, rather than aiding in avoiding them. Another argument was that they were unsightly and marred the joyful experience of driving.

People came up with some real doozy of reasons to keep from putting on a seat belt. Today, we all seem to readily agree that wearing seat belts makes sense. The advent of seat belt usage control indicators served ably as a means to readily convert people into becoming seat belt wearers. Still, there were people then and likely still some people today that insist on trying to subvert the requirement by buckling the seat belt and then sitting atop it, or trying other outlandish ways to subvert a seat belt.

As they say, where theres a will, theres always a way to mess things up.

The topic of seat belts is not solely rosy.

Researchers pointed out that there was an oddball or ironic adverse consequence that undercut the safety-gaining basis of seat belts. The rub was that people would believe themselves to be safer, and therefore they would drive less safely.

Work by Sam Peltzmann had derived an economic theory of risk compensation and it was seemingly evident in the case of seat belts. He contended that attempts to increase safety measures will inexorably lead to heightened behaviors of risk-taking. This led to numerous studies that tried to figure out whether the use of seat belts by drivers was producing more car crashes and more fatalities, or whether it was reducing those numbers. The results of those studies have been mixed, sometimes making one claim and then a different study undermining that stated result.

We can seem to agree that a seat belt is an innocent device and poses no outsized threat. In theory, its primary purpose is to keep you at the wheel and in control of the car. Also, if you did get struck by another vehicle, it keeps you from flying around inside the vehicle or being ejected out onto the street.

The qualm about this added safety is that it might inspire you to drive recklessly. In your mind, you know that the seat belt allows you to stretch things to the dire edge. Without a seat belt, you would be unable to take such chances.

In short, something intended to make us safer can inadvertently spark us to be riskier in our behavior.

A one-for-one correspondence would imply that we are equally safer and equally riskier, and perhaps the net result is a balance that means the added safety measure made no difference. That would be a darned shame given the cost to implement the safety measure. Worse still, the riskiness might go off the charts, far exceeding the added safety, and ergo we become more deadly in our driving.

Thats quite a dose of irony when including a new safety contraption.

If a safety measure leads to worse results, presumably the right step involves removing the added safety apparatus. Things would then go back to normal. Well, not necessarily. It could be that the genie was let out of the bottle. People got used to driving like maniacs and they do not according readjust their behavior when the safety measure is removed. You could argue that the behavior would gradually readjust, though that has some debatable contentions too.

Economist Sanford Ikeda noted in a presumed tongue-in-cheek retort that you could replace some of the steel spikes with identical-looking rubber ones. This would be randomly undertaken. When you got into a car, you (in theory) would not have any means to ascertain whether the vehicle had the relatively harmless rubber spike, or whether it had the life usurping steel spike. People would potentially be spared when they had the rubber spike, though all would presumably drive more safely since they had to assume that the steel spike was in their car.

Another twist that has been floated involves removing the brakes on cars. Yes, if brakes are a form of safety, and if safety leads to riskier driving, might as well remove any and all mechanisms of safety including the brakes. In that case, the driving behavior would no longer be as risky, or so the absurdity extremism would imply.

Shifting gears, as it were, we can ponder what the future of cars and car driving will likely consist of.

The emergence of self-driving cars would appear to eliminate the need for a steel spike at the steering wheel, for the obvious reason that there will no longer be steering wheels at all. The eventual path of self-driving cars entails removing all the driving controls from the interior and thus preventing any human attempts to drive the vehicle.

Does this imply that we put to rest the Tullock steel spike and call it a day?

Turns out that there are still some handy insights that arise by considering the vaunted steel spike, even for the revered arrival of AI-based true self-driving cars.

Lets unpack the matter and see.

Understanding The Levels Of Self-Driving Cars

As a clarification, true self-driving cars are ones that the AI drives the car entirely on its own and there isnt any human assistance during the driving task.

These driverless vehicles are considered a Level 4 and Level 5 (see my explanation at this link here), while a car that requires a human driver to co-share the driving effort is usually considered at a Level 2 or Level 3. The cars that co-share the driving task are described as being semi-autonomous, and typically contain a variety of automated add-ons that are referred to as ADAS (Advanced Driver-Assistance Systems).

There is not yet a true self-driving car at Level 5, which we dont yet even know if this will be possible to achieve, and nor how long it will take to get there.

Meanwhile, the Level 4 efforts are gradually trying to get some traction by undergoing very narrow and selective public roadway trials, though there is controversy over whether this testing should be allowed per se (we are all life-or-death guinea pigs in an experiment taking place on our highways and byways, some contend, see my coverage at this link here).

Since semi-autonomous cars require a human driver, the adoption of those types of cars wont be markedly different than driving conventional vehicles, so theres not much new per se to cover about them on this topic (though, as youll see in a moment, the points next made are generally applicable).

For semi-autonomous cars, it is important that the public needs to be forewarned about a disturbing aspect thats been arising lately, namely that despite those human drivers that keep posting videos of themselves falling asleep at the wheel of a Level 2 or Level 3 car, we all need to avoid being misled into believing that the driver can take away their attention from the driving task while driving a semi-autonomous car.

You are the responsible party for the driving actions of the vehicle, regardless of how much automation might be tossed into a Level 2 or Level 3.

Self-Driving Cars And Safety

For Level 4 and Level 5 true self-driving vehicles, there wont be a human driver involved in the driving task.

All occupants will be passengers.

The AI is doing the driving.

As mentioned earlier, the belief is that all the human accessible driving controls will ultimately be removed from true self-driving cars. Today, there are many efforts underway that have supplemented a conventional car with the self-driving suite of capabilities. In those instances, the steering wheel and pedals remain, though they are generally AI-controlled to avert a double-driver occurrence (some believe we will always keep the driving controls, while others insist that they have to be removed, see my analysis at this link here).

Assume for the moment that the preponderance of true self-driving cars will not have any steering wheels in them. This means there is also no steel spike either.

The underlying crux of the spike concept was that it got us to think about safety and human behavior. This was prompted too by the supposition that as a safety measure is added, there is a potential consequent reaction that drivers would become riskier in their driving.

Lets put that same overall notion into reuse.

Imagine that you are a passenger inside a self-driving car. You know that the AI is a highly safe driver, especially in comparison to a human driver (this has yet to be shown, and we might end-up with AI driving systems that are only as good as human drivers in terms of safety, perhaps worse, see my explanation at this link here).

Would your actions as a passenger inside a true self-driving car be less risky, equally risky, or riskier than if you were riding in a human-driven car?

Well, per the theory about safety and risk, the odds are that you would behave in a riskier manner.

Your first comment might be that it doesnt matter since you are not driving the car. That is indeed the case, namely, you arent driving the vehicle, but you are nonetheless inside an automobile and for which you can still get injured or killed. Suppose the self-driving car is zipping along on the freeway and all of a sudden has to jam on the brakes. If you are not wearing a seat belt, due to the belief that there was no need to do so, you might go flying and end-up getting badly hurt.

Take another example.

You opt to reach outside of the self-driving car and wave at pedestrians on the sidewalk. That might be the full extent of your attempts at outreach, but since you are comfortably nestled inside a true self-driving car, you extend further out the window. About half of your body is now clinging to the outside of the car. I trust you can see where this is going. Another car comes along and perhaps sideswipes the self-driving car, crushing you, or maybe you entirely fall out of the self-driving car, doing so while the vehicle is underway.

The point is that there is a potential danger that passengers inside self-driving cars will believe themselves to be in a safer posture than when inside a conventional human-driven car, thusly leading to untoward behaviors with sad and severe consequences.

Some assert that a conceptualized steel spike-like reminder might need to be included into self-driving cars, possibly sensors that keep tabs on what passengers are doing and sternly caution them accordingly.

There is another angle to the human behavior conundrum.

We have to expect that there will be both human-driven cars and self-driving cars on our roadways, both mixing together, and doing so for likely many decades to come. Keep in mind that today there are about 250 million conventional cars in the United States alone, and they will not simply disappear overnight due to the advent of self-driving cars.

Ive written extensively that we are already beginning to witness human drivers that opt to play dirty tricks on self-driving cars. These roadway bullies like to force self-driving cars to make a sudden braking action, sometimes just for fun and sometimes because they (the human bully) are driving erratically. In more subtle ways, you can get ahead in traffic by rapidly switching lanes and cutting in front of a self-driving car. The AI is usually programmed to let you in, plus the AI will slow down the self-driving car to try and regain the proper driving distance between vehicles.

Why do people believe they can get away with this kind of risky driving behavior?

Because they assume that the AI self-driving car is a safe driver. Were the AI to be a rogue or rude driver, which is akin to what humans do, those human daredevils would be less likely to pull those kinds of stunts (so one would assume).

Again, the safety and risk equation rears its head. We can anticipate that as more and more self-driving cars enter into the roadway mix, and assuming they are sufficiently safe at driving, the human drivers might increase their riskiness of driving practice under the belief that it okay to do so, similar to the logic used about wearing seat belts.

Conclusion

We can add one additional example to this plateful of safety and risk heightened behavioral stew.

AI self-driving cars are ostensibly being programmed to be safe drivers. Part of this safety element involves being able to contend with human drivers. Some assert that perhaps self-driving cars should not be so gentle and therefore by being less safe (or appearing to be so), would curtail the risk increase by human drivers (see my explanation at this link here).

Assume that eventually there are hardly any human-driven cars and the mainstay of traffic is entirely self-driving cars.

Could the self-driving cars be amped up to take more extreme driving measures?

Sure, it seems logical, given that the other surrounding cars are all safer than before (we are so assuming), and thus the risk of driving at the edge is presumably lessened. An example would be that we could lift the existing speed limits and let the self-driving cars go as fast they so deem. Part of the basis for speed limits was to reduce the severity of car crashes, but if there are going to be very few such car accidents, maybe we can do away with the speed limits.

This doesnt fully pencil out, so dont get overly excited. Pedestrians can still step into the street and ruin everyones day. In any case, on freeways and open highways, there is some logic to letting those self-driving cars run with the wind.

You can imagine how elated the AI would be, asking you as a passenger whether it is okay to put the pedal to the metal. Might as well let the AI have some fun, and meanwhile, you can get to your destination in record time.

Just hope the AI keeps its steely eyes peeled on the road ahead and there arent any steel spikes laying on the pavement.

Visit link:
Self-Driving Cars Safety And The Curious Thought Of Steering Wheels With Tullock Spikes - Forbes

Top Doctor Talks Antibodies And How Long The Virus May Last – kicks1055.com

Dr. Rajeev Fernando is one of New York's top infectious disease specialists, and this week, he answers your COVID-19 questions about antibodies, and how long the virus may last with the vaccine, and with wearing masks.

When you need to know what's happening with the coronavirus, join KICKS 105.5 every Thursday morning. Dr. Rajeev Fernando answers your COVID-19 questions.

We touched on this last week about antibodies, you said that you have seen patients who had the COVID-19 virus have antibodies for up to 6 months, how long do those antibodies last?

"There's some newer studies that say that at 6 months there are still antibodies but their only about 50% by that time. One question is do you have antibodies, and the second question is the durability, in other words do you have enough antibodies to fight the infection. Most people have antibodies present, but they do get significantly lower then they are immediately after the infection".

Al who listens on the KICKS 105.5 mobile app in Franklyn Square on Long Island, and he wants to know that if everyone got on the same page and wore masks, could we knock out the virus without a vaccine?

"That's a great question, the battle contribute to a certain amount of heard ammunity is about 30%. In order to eradicate this virus we really need the vaccine as well, we need at least 70% of people to be vaccinated. Wearing a mask will decrease the number of infections. Now we have new infectious strains which are much, much, more transmissible, but there really is no way around vaccines, it's basically the only way".

Joann in Bethel has a similar question, she wants to know how long this virus will take to run it's course with the vaccine?

"It's not just the vaccine, we need behavior. This is all going to be controlled by our behavior. Human behavior and civic responsibility is what's needed to end this pandemic. We see early numbers that say we should be done with this by the summer, but I think it's going to go on longer. I know a lot of people are doing a great job following the guidance, but there's also a lot of people who aren't, and that's what's continuing the spread. We're going to see the Christmas and New Years spike of cases pretty soon, but it really is everyones civic responsible. Everyone needs to get the vaccine, everyone needs to wear a mask, and everyone needs to social distance. To put it in perspective, I think lockdowns are very important, it's critical. This week there's some new cases of COVID-19 in China and immediately the government put 22 million people in a lock down where people cannot even leave their house, and that's what has stopped the spread in that country because of their very strict measures, where as a lot of the western countries didn't follow that, and that's why we're in this plight right now".

** NEED A FREE MASK? **

Dr. Rajeev is offering free masks if you need some. There's no charge, and he'll even pick up the shipping charge. Just visit maskupearth.org and place your order.

Link:
Top Doctor Talks Antibodies And How Long The Virus May Last - kicks1055.com