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Highest-resolution observations yet from the surface of Earth

Space and time from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 7:50am
Astronomers have achieved the highest resolution ever obtained from the surface of Earth. They managed this feat by detecting light from distant galaxies at a frequency of around 345 GHz, equivalent to a wavelength of 0.87 mm. They estimate that in future they will be able to make black hole images that are 50% more detailed than was possible before, bringing the region immediately outside the boundary of nearby supermassive black holes into sharper focus. They will also be able to image more black holes than they have done so far. The new detections are part of a pilot experiment.
Categories: Science

Will mpox become a global pandemic like covid-19?

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 7:50am
A new variant of mpox is surging in Central Africa, raising concerns about how quickly it could spread further afield
Categories: Science

How much microplastic are you drinking? New tool can tell you in minutes

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 7:50am
Micro- and nanoplastics are in our food, water and the air we breathe. They are showing up in our bodies, too. Now, researchers have developed a low-cost, portable tool to accurately measure plastic released from everyday sources like disposable cups and water bottles.
Categories: Science

Scientists develop AI-driven method to enhance electron microscopy imaging capabilities of complex biological systems

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 7:50am
Electron microscope (EM) has revolutionized our ability to visualize the intricate details inside cells. The advancement to 3D electron microscopy, known as volume EM (vEM), has further expanded this three-dimensional, nanoscale imaging capacity. However, trade-offs between imaging speed, quality, and sample size still limit the achievable imaging area and volume. Concurrently, artificial intelligence (AI) is emerging as a pivotal force across various scientific domains, driving breakthroughs and serving as a vital tool in the scientific process.
Categories: Science

Video gaming improves mental well-being, landmark study finds

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 7:50am
A pioneering study titled 'Causal effect of video gaming on mental well-being in Japan 2020-2022,' published in Nature Human Behaviour, has conducted the most comprehensive investigation to date on the causal relationship between video gaming and mental well-being. This research, the first to demonstrate this relationship using real-life data, challenges commonly held views about the effects of gaming.
Categories: Science

Hidden magmatism discovered at the Chang'e-6 lunar landing site

Space and time from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 7:50am
Lunar igneous activities including intrusive and extrusive magmatism, and their products contain significant information about the lunar interior and its thermal state. Their distribution is asymmetrical on the nearside and farside, reflecting the global lunar dichotomy. In addition to previously returned lunar samples all from nearside (Apollo, Luna, and Chang'e-5), samples from the South Pole-Aitken (SPA) basin on the farside have long been thought to hold the key to rebalancing the asymmetrical understandings of the Moon and disclosing the lunar dichotomy conundrum.
Categories: Science

Six new rogue worlds: Star birth clues

Space and time from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 7:49am
The James Webb Space Telescope has spotted six likely rogue worlds -- objects with planet-like masses but untethered from any star's gravity -- including the lightest ever identified with a dusty disk around it. The elusive objects offer new evidence that the same cosmic processes that give birth to stars may also play a common role in making objects only slightly bigger than Jupiter.
Categories: Science

AI spots cancer and viral infections at nanoscale precision

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 7:49am
Researchers have developed an artificial intelligence which can differentiate cancer cells from normal cells, as well as detect the very early stages of viral infection inside cells. The findings pave the way for improved diagnostic techniques and new monitoring strategies for disease. The AI can detect rearrangements inside cells as small as 20nm, or 5,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair. These alterations are too small and subtle for human observers to find with traditional methods alone.
Categories: Science

Metal baseball bats still help Little Leaguers hit a little better

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 7:49am
While meant to simulate wood bats, regulation USA Baseball metal bats are more forgiving than wood for young players who might not connect with the ball on a bat's optimal 'sweet spot.' After testing wood bats and two types of metal bats with youth players, researchers found that the exit speed of a hit ball was as much as 5% faster with metal bats over wood. Analyzing the data, they found that the performance of the USA Baseball metal bats at the sweet spot was similar to wood. It was when the hits were on less optimal areas that there was a bigger difference: there was more of a penalty with wood bats when the hitters were not on the sweet spot than with the metal bats.
Categories: Science

Insights from satellite data pave the way to better solar power generation

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 7:49am
Fluctuations in solar radiation are a problem for solar power plants as they cause problems in the power grid and other reliability issues. In a recent study, scientists aimed to deepen our understanding of variations in solar irradiance in time and space over the Asia Pacific region by analyzing satellite data. Their findings provide valuable insights that could help us optimize the position of future solar power plants.
Categories: Science

A human-centered AI tool to improve sepsis management

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 7:49am
A proposed artificial intelligence tool to support clinician decision-making about hospital patients at risk for sepsis has an unusual feature: accounting for its lack of certainty and suggesting what demographic data, vital signs and lab test results it needs to improve its predictive performance.
Categories: Science

New photoacoustic probes enable deep brain tissue imaging

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 7:43am
Neuroscientists have sought to better understand brain function but lacked the capability to observe neuronal activity deep within the brain. Scientists have applied rational molecular engineering to develop photoacoustic probes that can be used deep within brain tissue to label and visualize neurons. This imaging approach expands significantly on what neuroscientists have been able to see with conventional light microscopy, offering the potential to report on deep neuron activity and better understand brain function.
Categories: Science

What can governments do about online disinformation from abroad?

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 7:25am
A cyberterrorism charge in Pakistan connected to riots in the UK illustrates how authorities are reaching across borders to tackle disinformation, but bringing overseas suspects to justice won't always be possible
Categories: Science

Helen Pluckrose — Principled Strategies for Surviving and Defeating Critical Social Justice

Skeptic.com feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 7:00am
https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/sciencesalon/mss461_Helen_Pluckrose_2024_08_27.mp3 Download MP3

The stated goals of diversity, equity, and inclusion programs are often reasonable, if not noble—to create a more welcoming and inclusive environment for all. Yet, as more and more people are discovering, DEI as commonly practiced isn’t a natural extension of past civil rights movements or an ethical framework for opposing discrimination on the grounds of race, sex, etc. Rather, it is inextricably connected with an illiberal and authoritarian ideology—Critical Social Justice—that demands adherence to its tenets and punishes any dissent from its dogma.

Even the mildest questions about Critical Social Justice claims—that all white people are racists, that all underrepresented minorities are oppressed, that sex and gender differences have no biological basis, that censorship is a necessary good—are regularly met by DEI trainers and HR officers with pat commands: “Educate yourself,” “Do the work,” “Listen and learn.” At work, raises, promotions, and future employment often depend on our nodding approval of such claims. At school, grades, nominations, and awards are often contingent upon our active agreement with these beliefs. In our daily lives, Critical Social Justice ideology poses a genuine threat not only to our fundamental rights but also to the future of our democratic systems, but if we suggest this, we risk being canceled or shunned by community members. When facing a choice between silent submission and risky if ethical opposition, what is a person to do?

While a growing number of groups concerned about the nature of Critical Social Justice have begun to attack it from the top down through legal, financial, and political means, The Counterweight Handbook takes a decidedly different and novel approach. It works from the bottom up and is written to empower individuals who wish to combat Critical Social Justice in their personal and professional lives. Based on the author’s years of experience studying, exposing, and fighting Critical Social Justice ideology and advising individuals and organizations struggling with it, The Counterweight Handbook is designed to help people address Critical Social Justice problems in the most ethical and effective way possible. It not only offers principled responses to the main claims of Critical Social Justice but also teaches individuals what to do when they are asked to affirm beliefs they do not hold, undergo training in an ideology they cannot support, or submit to antiscientific testing and retraining of their “unconscious” minds. In short, it is for all of us who believe in freedom of speech and conscience, who wish to push back against the hostile work and educational environments Critical Social Justice has created, and who want to stand up for our individual liberties and universal rights.

Helen Pluckrose is a liberal political and cultural writer and was one of the founders of Counterweight. A participant in the Grievance Studies Affair probe that highlighted problems in Critical Social Justice scholarship, she is the coauthor of Cynical Theories and Social (In)justice. She lives in England and can be found on X @HPluckrose

Shermer and Pluckrose discuss:

  • the problem to be solved?
  • origin of the problem: post-modernism and Critical Social Justice ideology
  • Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI)
  • what it means to “Educate yourself,” “Do the work,” “Listen and learn.”
  • top-down (Chris Rufo, Ron DeSantis) vs. bottom-up counter measures
  • gender pronoun declarations
  • race reckoning
  • White supremacy accusations and White guilt
  • antiracism
  • gender ideology
  • Blackness
  • Critical Race Theory (CRT)
  • decolonize
  • discourse
  • dismantle
  • fragility
  • intersectionality
  • normativity
  • positionality
  • privilege
  • problematic
  • woke.

If you enjoy the podcast, please show your support by making a $5 or $10 monthly donation.

Categories: Critical Thinking, Skeptic

The Hardest Bias in Astronomy

Universe Today Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 5:53am

A nasty sort of bias called Malmquist bias affects almost every astronomical survey, and the only solution is to…keep doing surveys.

Back in the 1970’s and 80’s astronomers first began to identify a structure known as the Great Attractor, which is defined by the common motion of all the galaxies in our nearby vicinity of the cosmos.

But for over a decade, however, many astronomers weren’t exactly convinced that the Great Attractor existed. Their skepticism was well justified because of a common observational effect in astronomy known as Malmquist bias. Named after the Swedish astronomer Gunnar Malmquist, who first elucidated a discussion of this effect in 1922, this bias is a specialized version of a much more common statistical effect known as selection bias.

Most astronomical surveys are limited in brightness. There is a certain floor representing the dimmest possible object that a given telescope with a given exposure will be able to see. But objects in the universe can be dim for two separate reasons: because they are well and truly dim intrinsically, or simply because they are far away. So a typical survey of astronomical objects, like galaxies, will preferentially select for closer and/or brighter ones. In the case of galaxies, the farther out we look from the Milky Way, there more likely we’ll only catch the brightest galaxies at that distance, and miss all of their dimmer siblings.

This bias could potentially distort our understanding of the wider universe, especially if we’re trying to use the velocities of galaxies to map out their bulk motion. In those first surveys in the 1970’s and 80’s, many astronomers argued that we were only seeing the movements of the brightest galaxies, giving the illusion of a general flow towards the Great Attractor, and a more complete census of the local universe would average everything out.

The solution? Even more surveys, with more depth and more completeness, which eventually revealed the reality of the Great Attractor.

The post The Hardest Bias in Astronomy appeared first on Universe Today.

Categories: Science

Tuesday: Hili dialogue

Why Evolution is True Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 5:22am

Meanwhile, in Dobrzyn, Hili is eating herself healthy:

A: What are you eating?
Hili: Grass, it helps with digestion.

Ja: Co ty jesz?
Hili: Trawę, wspomaga trawienie.

Categories: Science

Roleplaying Games May Help Autistic People

neurologicablog Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 4:51am

Gotta love the title of this paper: “A critical hit: Dungeons and Dragons as a buff for autistic people“. Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) is a tabletop roleplaying game where a small group of people each play characters adventuring in an imaginary world run by the dungeon master (DM). (That explanation was probably not necessary for the majority of readers here, but just to be thorough.) The game has just celebrated its 50th anniversary, which was even commemorated by official US stamps.

The game certainly has a very different reputation today than it did in the 70s and 80s. Back then it was seen as the exclusive domain of extreme geeks and nerds, mostly males who needed a distraction from the fact that they had no chance of finding a girlfriend. This was never true, but that was the reputation. In the 80s things got even worse, with D&D being tied to the “satanic panic” of that decade. The game was blamed, mostly by fundamentalist religious groups, for demon worship, witchcraft, and resulting in suicides and murder. I still remember when the school board in our town had a debate about whether or not the game should be banned from school grounds. The adults having the conversation had literally no idea what they were talking about, and filled the gaps in their knowledge with their own vivid imaginations.

In reality D&D and similar roleplaying games are perfectly wholesome and have a lot of positive attributes. First, they are extremely social. They are especially good for people who may find social interactions challenging or at least very demanding. While roleplaying you are in a social safe-space, where you can let aspects of your personality out to play. The game is also mostly pure imagination. Other than a few aids, like dice for random outcome generation, maps and figures, the adventure takes place in the minds of the players, helped along by the GM. The game can therefore help people develop social connections and social skills, and to learn more about themselves and close friends.

When you get deeper into the game (and for older players), especially when you DM, the game is very creative. It can involved various knowledge and skills sets, such as history, literature, geology and geography, culture, language, art, and whatever science you want to use to add depth and flavor to your game. For example, I learned a great deal about the nature and structure of language from an article in Dragon Magazine, written by a linguist, designed to help DMs write more believable and realistic fake languages. The game can also be very tactical – literally simulating combat in any scenario imaginable.

Over this same time psychologists and therapists have realized the potential benefits of roleplaying in the therapy setting. Roleplaying can be used to do cognitive behavioral therapy, teach new skills, identify negative patterns, build confidence, and even treat trauma.

So it is no surprise that today roleplaying, including games like D&D, are being studied for their potential therapeutic benefits. The autistic population also makes sense as a target for this approach. The study essentially had autistic subjects play D&D with a researcher acting as DM for 6 weeks. They were then interviewed to explore their experience and any potential effects. Study author Dr Gray Atherton, says about the results:

“There are many myths and misconceptions about autism, with some of the biggest suggesting that those with it aren’t socially motivated, or don’t have any imagination. Dungeons and Dragons goes against all that, centering around working together in a team, all of which takes place in a completely imaginary environment. Those taking part in our study saw the game as a breath of fresh air, a chance to take on a different persona and share experiences outside of an often-challenging reality. That sense of escapism made them feel incredibly comfortable, and many of them said they were now trying to apply aspects of it in their daily lives.”

This simultaneously confronts potential misconceptions about autism and roleplaying games. Many autistic people are very social, they just find it very demanding and challenging to navigate social interactions. So they have a desire they find hard to satisfy, which can be frustrating and isolating. Roleplaying games gives them the opportunity to have the social interaction they crave, in a manageable small group, in a semi-structured format they find easier to handle. This gives them the opportunity to build social skills and confidence they otherwise would not have.

Of course, these potential benefits can apply to everyone. Public speaking really is the number one fear in the world, affecting up to 75% of people by some surveys. Roleplaying can build confidence in performing in front of others, and not panicking when the spotlight is on you. Live action roleplaying (LARP) games can give you this experience in front of larger audiences, with the “protection” of playing, not yourself, but another character. I have experienced this myself, and attribute part of my ease with public speaking to my LARPing experience.

Having lived through the 50 year arc of roleplaying games as an active participant, I am happy to see it now being celebrated for its many positive aspects, and having shed much of the shame and stigma previously attached to it. This is probably largely because today’s adults likely played the game when they were younger. The simple fear of the unknown is no longer very relevant. Also, D&D has benefited from the overall rise in geek culture. There are extremely popular shows like Stranger Things, which features a group of kids, bonding over D&D, translating skills they learned in the game to deal with real-life monsters and mysteries.

I also hope that studies like this one will increase the application of roleplaying games to help the autistic community deal with the challenges they face.

 

Side note: In this article I refer to “autistic people” rather than following the more common format of “people with autism”. This is at the request of people in the autism community, who see themselves not as “typical people with autism” but “neurodiverse autistic people”. It is not something they have, but central to who they are.

The post Roleplaying Games May Help Autistic People first appeared on NeuroLogica Blog.

Categories: Skeptic

JWST found rogue worlds that blur the line between stars and planets

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 2:00am
The James Webb Space Telescope has spotted six strange worlds the size of planets that formed like stars – and the smallest may be building its own miniature solar system
Categories: Science

Skeptoid #951: Dying of Excited Delirium

Skeptoid Feed - Tue, 08/27/2024 - 2:00am

Turns out that the cause of death known as excited delirium is not an actual cause of death at all.

Categories: Critical Thinking, Skeptic

Preventing counterfeiting by adding dye to liquid crystals to create uncrackable coded tags

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 5:12pm
A research group has developed an innovative approach to creating anti-counterfeiting labels for high-value goods. Their findings enhance the security of the currently used cholesteric liquid crystals (CLCs) by adding fluorescent dyes to produce florescent CLCs (FCLCs). Using this unique technology, the group created unique labels with almost impossible-to-counterfeit security features. These advanced labels are designed to protect valuable items, important documents, and sensitive products by generating distinctive visual patterns that are difficult to replicate without specialized tools and knowledge.
Categories: Science

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