NASA watches the Sun put a stop to its own eruption – Phys.Org

August 11, 2017 by Lina Tran

On Sept. 30, 2014, multiple NASA observatories watched what appeared to be the beginnings of a solar eruption. A filamenta serpentine structure consisting of dense solar material and often associated with solar eruptionsrose from the surface, gaining energy and speed as it soared. But instead of erupting from the Sun, the filament collapsed, shredded to pieces by invisible magnetic forces.

Because scientists had so many instruments observing the event, they were able to track the entire event from beginning to end, and explain for the first time how the Sun's magnetic landscape terminated a solar eruption. Their results are summarized in a paper published in The Astrophysical Journal on July 10, 2017.

"Each component of our observations was very important," said Georgios Chintzoglou, lead author of the paper and a solar physicist at Lockheed Martin Solar and Astrophysics Laboratory in Palo Alto, California, and the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado. "Remove one instrument, and you're basically blind. In solar physics, you need to have good coverage observing multiple temperaturesif you have them all, you can tell a nice story."

The study makes use of a wealth of data captured by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, NASA's Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph, JAXA/NASA's Hinode, and several ground-based telescopes in support of the launch of the NASA-funded VAULT2.0 sounding rocket. Together, these observatories watch the Sun in dozens of different wavelengths of light that reveal the Sun's surface and lower atmosphere, allowing scientists to track the eruption from its onset up through the solar atmosphereand ultimately understand why it faded away.

The day of the failed eruption, scientists pointed the VAULT2.0 sounding rocketa sub-orbital rocket that flies for some 20 minutes, collecting data from above Earth's atmosphere for about five of those minutesat an area of intense, complex magnetic activity on the Sun, called an active region. The team also collaborated with IRIS to focus its observations on the same region.

"We were expecting an eruption; this was the most active region on the Sun that day," said Angelos Vourlidas, an astrophysicist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, principal investigator of the VAULT2.0 project and co-author of the paper. "We saw the filament lifting with IRIS, but we didn't see it erupt in SDO or in the coronagraphs. That's how we knew it failed."

The Sun's landscape is controlled by magnetic forces, and the scientists deduced the filament must have met some magnetic boundary that prevented the unstable structure from erupting. They used these observations as input for a model of the Sun's magnetic environment. Much like scientists who use topographical data to study Earth, solar physicists map out the Sun's magnetic features, or topology, to understand how these forces guide solar activity.

Chintzoglou and his colleagues developed a model that identified locations on the Sun where the magnetic field was especially compressed, since rapid releases of energysuch as those they observed when the filament collapsedare more likely to occur where magnetic field lines are strongly distorted.

"We computed the Sun's magnetic environment by tracing millions of magnetic field lines and looking at how neighboring field lines connect and diverge," said Antonia Savcheva, an astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and co-author of the paper. "The amount of divergence gives us a measure of the topology."

Their model shows this topology shapes how solar structures evolve on the Sun's surface. Typically, when solar structures with opposite magnetic orientations collide, they explosively release magnetic energy, heating the atmosphere with a flare and erupting into space as a coronal mass ejectiona massive cloud of solar material and magnetic fields.

But on the day of the Sept. 2014 near-eruption, the model indicated the filament instead pushed up against a complex magnetic structure, shaped like two igloos smashed against each other. This invisible boundary, called a hyperbolic flux tube, was the result of a collision of two bipolar regions on the sun's surfacea nexus of four alternating and opposing magnetic fields ripe for magnetic reconnection, a dynamic process that can explosively release great amounts of stored energy.

"The hyperbolic flux tube breaks the filament's magnetic field lines and reconnects them with those of the ambient Sun, so that the filament's magnetic energy is stripped away," Chintzoglou said.

This structure eats away at the filament like a log grinder, spraying chips of solar material and preventing eruption. As the filament waned, the model demonstrates heat and energy were released into the solar atmosphere, matching the initial observations. The simulated reconnection also supports the observations of bright flaring loops where the hyperbolic flux tube and filament metevidence for magnetic reconnection.

While scientists have speculated such a process exists, it wasn't until they serendipitously had multiple observations of such an event that they were able to explain how a magnetic boundary on the Sun is capable of halting an eruption, stripping a filament of energy until it's too weak to erupt.

"This result would have been impossible without the coordination of NASA's solar fleet in support of our rocket launch," Vourlidas said.

This study indicates the Sun's magnetic topology plays an important role in whether or not an eruption can burst from the Sun. These eruptions can create space weather effects around Earth.

"Most research has gone into how topology helps eruptions escape," Chintzoglou said. "But this tells us that apart from the eruption mechanism, we also need to consider what the nascent structure encounters in the beginning, and how it might be stopped."

Explore further: Image: NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory watches a sunspot

More information: Georgios Chintzoglou et al. Magnetic Flux Rope Shredding By a Hyperbolic Flux Tube: The Detrimental Effects of Magnetic Topology on Solar Eruptions, The Astrophysical Journal (2017). DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/aa77b2

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NASA watches the Sun put a stop to its own eruption - Phys.Org

US blockchain company in tie-up on medical artificial intelligence – Reuters

NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. technology company The Bitfury Group has formed a partnership with Insilico Medicine, a Baltimore-based medical artificial intelligence (AI) firm, to create new applications for the healthcare industry using blockchain, Bitfury's chief executive officer said on Friday.

Blockchain is a digital ledger of transactions that gained prominence as the software underpinning the digital currency bitcoin. The technology, being developed in the public and private sectors, has gained attention globally for its ability to permanently record and track assets or transactions across all industries.

The two companies signed a memorandum of understanding last month for collaboration to study and develop blockchain and AI solutions for sharing, managing, tracking and validating healthcare data, said Bitfury founder and CEO Valery Vavilov in an email to Reuters. The collaboration is in an early stage and there were no details available about potential projects or specific uses.

Artificial intelligence in the healthcare sector uses algorithms and software to mimic human ability in analyzing complex medical data. Vast amounts of healthcare data are pushing the development of AI applications.

Vavilov said both companies will use Bitfury's Exonum blockchain platform to store and secure health data in a system compatible with artificial intelligence.

"AI has not reached its full potential for the healthcare industry yet because it requires a large and diverse range of data to learn from in order to ensure accuracy and provide actionable results," said the Bitfury chief executive.

Healthcare AI is expanding by an annual rate of 40 percent, research firm Frost & Sullivan said in a recent study. It said global revenue generated by artificial intelligence systems will soar to $6.7 billion by 2021 from $811 million in 2015.

"A blockchain-based medical records system could safeguard patient data and allow for improved interoperability between doctors and hospitals, while also giving patients more ownership over their own records," Vavilov said.

Reporting by Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss; Editing by David Gregorio

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US blockchain company in tie-up on medical artificial intelligence - Reuters

Richard Dawkins on artificial intelligence, agnosticism, and utopia – Boing Boing

Evolutionary biologist and "passionate rationalist" Richard Dawkins has a new anthology of essays out today, titled Science in the Soul. Over at Scientific American, John Horgan posted an interview with Dawkins in which the two discuss a range of topics, from A.I. to agnosticism. From SciAm:

At the Templeton (Foundation) meeting, you described yourself as an agnostic, because you cannot be certain that God does not exist, correct?

This is a semantic matter. Some people define atheism as a positive conviction that there are no gods and agnosticism as allowing for the possibility, however slight. In this sense I am agnostic, as any scientist would be. But only in the same way I am agnostic about leprechauns and fairies. Other people define agnosticism as the belief that the existence of gods is as probable as their nonexistence. In this sense I am certainly not agnostic. Not only are gods unnecessary for explaining anything, they are overwhelmingly improbable. I rather like the phrase of a friend who calls himself a tooth fairy agnostichis belief in gods is as strong as his belief in the tooth fairy. So is mine. We live our lives on the assumption that there are no gods, fairies, hobgoblins, ghosts, zombies, poltergeists or any supernatural entities. Actually, it is not at all clear what supernatural could even mean, other than something which science does not (yet) understand....

...Do you share the concerns of billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk, who has said that artificial intelligence might pose an existential risk to humanity?

Elon Musk is a 21st-century genius. You have to listen to what he says. I am philosophically committed to mechanistic naturalism, from which follows the conclusion that anything humans can do, machines can in principle do, too. In many cases we already know they can do it better. Whether they can do it better in all cases remains to be seen, but I wouldnt bet against it. The precautionary principle should lead us to behave as though there is a real dangera danger we should take immediate steps to forestall. Unless, that is, we think robots could to a better job of running the world than we can. And a better job of being happy and increasing the sum of sentient happiness...

Why we secretly love our cords. Tamara Warren: Theres a certain security in the cord. Its the idea of connection, perhaps even dating back to our days in the womb. A battery, no matter how sophisticated, is fleeting. When we have our cords with us, we are in constant pursuit of power, even when []

The classic beatbox not an expensive clone or a collection of cleverly-tweaked samples is back. Rolands TR-08 directly models the original machines analog circuits to recreate its sound as accurately as possible with modern digital technology, and joins revived versions of the TR-909[Amazon] and TB-202[Amazon] in the companys lineup of boutique boxes. The []

Coming after improvements to Firefox and continued unease at Googles life-pervading insight, this image is outperforming the Virality Control Group today (via). It got me thinking about all the promises that were made. Heres the earliest article in Google News to contain Big browser in its headline, published by Time Magazine on Nov. []

This project management bundle will help you get organized and learn how to lead a team to success. You can pay what you want for these five courses when you pick them up from the Boing Boing Store.To help you become an invaluable asset for your company, this bundle includes a curated collection of professional []

Despite the push towards USB-C as the one connector to rule them all, most peripherals in the wild are still largely USB-A. Since theres little reason to upgrade all of your old flash drives, wired keyboards, and game controllers, youll need a decent hub to keep them all talking to your new computer.The MondoHub Master []

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Artificial intelligence and creativity: If robots can make art, what’s left for us? – ABC Online

Posted August 11, 2017 11:58:38

Artificial intelligence is becoming commonplace, from your smartphone and your Amazon account to the driverless cars that will soon grace public roads in Australia.

Often, the response to this reality is one of trepidation and concern, about mass unemployment and the dominance of Big Tech. But that's not always the case.

"Art is one of the last domains in AI where there is an optimistic view on how humans and machines can work together," says Dave King, founder of Move 37, a creative AI company.

He says creativity is not a God-given thing. It's a process, and it takes practice.

"One of the most interesting aspects of creativity is that ability to combine ideas or to draw things together," he says.

"If you have an algorithm that is working for you in the way you want it to it can source and discover lots and lots of different things."

AI is already being used in a range of artistic fields. Algorithms trained on millions of pages of romance novels have been used to write poems, and the recent Robot Art Competition showed a range of paintings with brushwork so sophisticated it could have been done by a human hand.

Jon McCormack is an artist and professor of computer science at Monash University whose work incorporates algorithms.

His series Fifty Sisters (2012) featured images of futuristic-looking plants that were "algorithmically grown" from computer code. In another work, titled Eden, he created an installation featuring "virtual creatures" whose movements were influenced by gallery visitors entering the space.

McCormack says when there is concern about AI, it is understandable.

"We're naturally scared of anything where we take away something from people, particularly something as precious as being creative and art, which we associate with being the most fundamental human [trait] that thing that differentiates us from every other species on the planet," he said.

After all, as AI expert Professor Toby Walsh notes: "We have one of the most creative brains out there."

"One of the oldest jobs on the planet, being a carpenter or an artisan, we will value most [in the future] because we will like to see an object carved or touched by the human hand, not a machine."

Artists have always used tools to create their work: for Van Gogh, it was a paint brush; for Henri Cartier-Bresson, a Leica camera.

With AI, however, the question becomes one of authorship.

"I see myself as being the artist," McCormack says of his compositions. "The computer is still very primitive it doesn't have the same capabilities as a human creative, but it's capable of doing things that complement our intelligence.

King says AI currently can only bring a limited perspective to artistic practice.

"They can only draw on what they've been trained on," he says, referring to the reams of data used to create artificial intelligence. "Whereas the human condition is expansive and broad and brings a lot more depth of perspective to it."

By itself, AI can certainly generate things that look like art, McCormack says. Whether you could consider it art is a harder question.

"So much of what we think about art is humans communicating to each other," he says.

"As soon as you bring a computer into the mix, suddenly you've got a non-human entity trying to fulfil the role that used to be occupied exclusively by people."

Soon, however, it may be possible to go further; to consider the machine not just a tool, but a partner or collaborator, with its own ability to create.

"We always think of Lennon and McCartney as being the great musical creative partnership," McCormack says.

"Will we eventually see a point in time where we have a human and computer partnership that we acknowledge as being more than the sum of its parts?

"If the art was really, really good if it moved us emotionally in the way the best art does then I think we would come to start to accept art that's made by machines."

Topics: arts-and-entertainment, robots-and-artificial-intelligence, science-and-technology, australia

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Artificial intelligence and creativity: If robots can make art, what's left for us? - ABC Online

Artificial Intelligence Is Likely to Make a Career in Finance, Medicine or Law a Lot Less Lucrative – Entrepreneur

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Growing up, theres a good chance you heard the mantra go to a good school, get a good job, and make lots of money. On the surface, that seems like sound advice. After all, college graduates, on average,earn almost $1 million morein their lifetimes than those with only a high school education.

Perhaps you were encouraged to get a professional degree to land a high paying job like a doctor, dentist, lawyeror something similar.This also seems like great advice, considering a professional degree holder typically earns more than $2 million more in their lifetimes than the average college graduate.

But that was then, and this now.

Related: The Future of Productivity: AI and Machine Learning

Thanks to rapid advances in robotics, automation and artificial intelligence, jobs are falling to machines left and right. And its not just blue-collar jobs that are being taken over by automation. It's white-collar professions as well. According to an Oxford study, 47 percentof U.S. jobs could fall to automation in the next 20 years.

The safe, high paying jobs of the past are starting to look much less secure going forward. If youre currently in one of the following professions, or going to school to get into these fields, you should think twice before continuing.

If Wall Street is known for anything, its known for crazy high salaries and bonuses. For those who have wanted to get rich quickly post-college, there have been few better industries than finance. Alas, finance is one of the industries with the highest risk of automation.

Bridgewater Associates, the worlds largest hedge fund, announced late last year that it was going to be cutting staff in favor of more automation. Its getting harder to compete with AI driven hedge funds like Sentient and high-frequency traders in general, and an impressive swath of financial management services are now being handled by robo-advisors like Betterment and Wealthfront, both of which are growing rapidly.

In fact, according to Angel List, there are more than 15,000 finance startups right now working to actively disrupt finance, many of them utilizing artificial intelligence and other forms of automation. If youre in this field or planning to enter it, you might want to reconsider.

So, if not finance, then what? If youre good with numbers and detail-oriented, you should consider getting into data science. Data scientist salaries are rising rapidly, and theyre considered the new rock stars of the tech world. Of course, you could always try getting into venture capital to ride the massive transitional wave thats coming, but being a VC isnt all its cracked up to be either. Either way, traditional finance jobs are on the way out.

Related: How AI Machines Coudl Save Wall Street Brokers' Jobs

The work that doctors do is tremendously important, and on average, theyre very well paid for it. That said, there are numerous areas of medicine that are ripe for automation and improved efficiencies. One key example would be medical imaging and the fields of radiology, pathology and dermatology.

Using AI, IBMs Watson is now considered at least on-par with a professional radiologist in terms of ability to analyze an image and diagnose a patient, and it can do the analysis much faster while considering vastly larger amounts of information than any human could ever hope to. This is fantastic news for the people who need a diagnoses, but not so great for medical imaging jobs. If youre already in the field, or working to get into it, you could consider transitioning into some aspect of computer vision, be it research or training. If you cant beat the machines, you can always help to make them better.

There are numerous other technologies, such as telemedicine and mobile medical devices, that will also heavily disrupt this field going forward. And while there will still be a strong need for certain medical skills going forward, youll need to be highly selective in what you choose.

Ahh, lawyers. The world could probably use far fewer lawyers, and the machines are well on their way to making that a reality. While you can still make a pretty penny as a lawyer, depending on your specialty, its worth noting that lawyers spend a lot of time gathering and parsing data, creating or reviewing legal documentsand numerous other mundane tasks. For most lawyers, its far from a glamorous profession.

Much of this grunt work has already been automated, and there are more than 1,500 startups out there trying to streamline the legal world even further. While this wont immediately eliminate all legal jobs, it means that it will take far fewer lawyers -- and especially paralegals --to handle the same level of work.

Because lawyers tend to pay excellent attention to detail, and are highly versed in logic, a good alternative field would be programming. Programming languages are built around logicand require every bit as much attention to detail as any contract. Best of all, there are a ton of courses online that can help you learn, including some from top-tier universities like Stanford, MITand even Harvard.

And of course, programmers are incredibly well paid and in high demand virtually everywhere. Here are a few of the most in-demand programming languages to help you along if you decide to make the switch.

Related: Advancing Automation Means Humans Need to Embrace Lifelong Learning

There have been numerous times throughout history when a large number of old jobs have gone away, only to be replaced by new jobs as new technologies came along. Sometimes the transition from old to new is protracted enough to make a semi-smooth transition possible. That may or may not be the case this time around.

Sam McRoberts is the CEO ofVUDU Marketing, and the author ofScrew the Zoo. He has delved deep into the worlds of philosophy, cognitive psychology and neuroscience to better help his clients achieve their goals. When he isn't...

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Artificial Intelligence Is Likely to Make a Career in Finance, Medicine or Law a Lot Less Lucrative - Entrepreneur

Artificial intelligence identifies plant species for science – Nature.com

Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

Digitizing plant specimens is opening up a whole new world for researchers looking to mine collections from around the world.

Computer algorithms trained on the images of thousands of preserved plants have learned to automatically identify species that have been pressed, dried and mounted on herbarium sheets, researchers report.

The work, published in BMC Evolutionary Biology on 11 August1, is the first attempt to use deep learning an artificial-intelligence technique that teaches neural networks using large, complex data sets to tackle the difficult taxonomic task of identifying species in natural-history collections.

It's unlikely to be the last attempt, says palaeobotanist Peter Wilf of Pennsylvania State University in University Park. This kind of work is the future; this is where were going in natural history.

Natural-history museums around the world are racing to digitize their collections, depositing images of their specimens into open databases that researchers anywhere can rifle through. One data aggregator, the US National Science Foundations iDigBio project, boasts more than 150 million images of plants and animals from collections around the country.

There are roughly 3,000 herbaria in the world, hosting an estimated 350 million specimens only a fraction of which has been digitized. But the swelling data sets, along with advances in computing techniques, enticed computer scientist Erick Mata-Montero of the Costa Rica Institute of Technology in Cartago and botanist Pierre Bonnet of the French Agricultural Research Centre for International Development in Montpellier, to see what they could make of the data.

Bonnet's team had already made progress automating plant identification through the Pl@ntNet project. It has accumulated millions of images of fresh plants typically taken in the field by people using its smartphone app to identify specimens.

Researchers trained similar algorithms on more than 260,000 scans of herbarium sheets, encompassing more than 1,000 species. The computer program eventually identified species with nearly 80% accuracy: the correct answer was within the algorithms top 5 picks 90% of the time. That, says Wilf, probably out-performs a human taxonomist by quite a bit.

Such results often worry botanists, Bonnet says, many of whom already feel that their field is undervalued. People feel this kind of technology could be something that will decrease the value of botanical expertise, he says. But this approach is only possible because it is based on the human expertise. It will never remove the human expertise. People would also still need to verify the results, he adds.

This approach can help herbaria process new samples, simplifying an arduous taks that sometimes requires hours of work. And similar efforts could help with other projects, such as a current crowdsourcing project that asks people to manually tick off which herbarium specimens feature a flower or a fruit. Researchers would certainly welcome an automated way of doing that, says botanist Gil Nelson of Florida State University in Tallahassee and a digitization specialist at iDigBio.

The algorithm could also aid smaller herbaria with their species identifications, Bonnet says. His team found that algorithms trained on large data sets from big herbaria improved the identification of plants from relatively data-poor regions of the world a finding that could be particularly useful for areas that are rich in biodiversity but have smaller plant collections.

And this deep-learning approach will allow researchers to perform additional analyses. Herbaria samples contain a wealth of data: when and where the sample was collected, for example, and characteristics such as whether the plant was flowering or fruiting at collection time and how densely clustered the flowers were. Because some samples are centuries old, that data can paint a portrait of how plants have adapted to shifting climates an area of growing interest in the face of concerns about climate change.

Such efforts, including the identification study, are the next phase of digitization, Nelson says. Weve been trying to transition to methods that we can use to mine those images and to pull out useful data, he says. Thats our focus right now.

The projects aren't limited to herbaria. Nelson points to ongoing efforts to automate the identification of fly larvae, and Wilf is working with collaborators to carry out a similar analysis on plant fossils. Such fossils pose other problems, in part because they come in a variety of forms fossilized fruits and flowers, petrified tree trunks or impressions of leaves in rock. Herbarium sheets, by contrast, are mercifully uniform: flat, dry and typically mounted on a standardized size of paper.

Still, Wilf has no doubt that the field will eventually work out these details. Its just going to get better, he says. Someday well have students who wont be able to remember when we didnt have these sorts of tools.

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DeepMind is Teaching AIs How to Manage Real-World Tasks Through Gaming – Futurism

In BriefGoogle's DeepMind Labs has partnered with BlizzardEntertainment to release an application program interface thatenables artificial intelligence researchers to develop their own AIagents for playing StarCraft II. The hope is that the release willspur innovation in deep reinforcement learning and related areas ofAI research. Glorious Combat Is Upon Us

Last year, Googles DeepMind announced a partnership with Blizzard Entertainment to develop and test artificial intelligence (AI) agents in the popular real-time strategy game StarCraft II. Now, DeepMind has released a series of tools theyre calling StarCraft II Learning Environment (SC2LE)to test their agents against human competitors, as well as enable researchers to develop their own agents for the game.

Testing our agents in games that are not specifically designed for AI research, and where humans play well, is crucial to benchmark agent performance, DeepMinds team wrote in a blog post. The large pool of online StarCraft II players will provide a huge variety of extremely talented opponents from which the AI can learn.

Details of DeepMinds research werepublished in a paperalongside the released toolset, which includes a machine learning API; a dataset of game replays; an open source version ofPySC2, the Python component SC2LE;and more.

Artificially intelligent systems have already beaten humans in a number of games, including chess and some Atari games, and DeepMind has already succeeded at creating an AI that could dominate humans in the ancient Chinese game of Go.

However, StarCraft II presents a different challenge. The game is designed to be won by a single player who must successfully navigatean extremely challenging environment. AI agents have to be capable of managing sub-goals gathering resources, building structures, remembering locations on a partially revealed map, etc. in pursuit of a win, and when combined, these various tasks challenge its memory and ability to plan.

DeepMinds initial StarCraft II tests with AI agents showed that they can manage mini-games that focus on broken-down tasks, but when it came to the full game, the agents werent so successful. Even strong baseline agents [] cannot win a single game against even the easiest built-in AI, according to DeepMinds blog. If they are to be competitive, we will need further breakthroughs in deep [reinforcement learning] and related areas.

The release of the SC2LE toolset is DeepMinds way of asking the AI community for additional help in this endeavor. Our hope is that the release of these new tools will build on the work that the AI community has already done in StarCraft, encouraging more DeepRL research and making it easier for researchers to focus on the frontiers of our field, according to the blog post.

Of course, training AI agents to excel atStarCraft II isnt done just for glorys sake. The idea is that an AI will be more capable of managing real-world tasks if it can successfully navigate a gaming environmentthat requires it to perform layers of computation while engaging a human agent. In that respect, todays expert StarCraft II agent could be tomorrows AIcashierorcustomer service rep.

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DeepMind is Teaching AIs How to Manage Real-World Tasks Through Gaming - Futurism

North Korea saber rattling lights up aerospace & defense ETFs – Fox Business

Following Pyongyang's threats and President Donald Trump's pledge to bring "fire and fury" on North Korea, aerospace and defense sector-related exchange traded funds are coming back under the spotlight as a Trump play.

Despite geopolitical risks weighing on the markets, many are putting a renewed focus on the aerospace and defense industry as a means to play Trump's more hawkish rhetoric and plans to expand U.S. military operations. For instance, the White House has proposed a nearly 10% hike in the military budget to $603 billion for the fiscal 2018 year in February.

"This budget will be a public safety and national security budget," Trump in late February, calling for a "historic increase in defense spending to rebuild the depleted military of the United States of America at a time we most need it."

The latest round of saber rattling has fueled the outlook on defense spending after North Korea promised to "turn the U.S. mainland into the theater of a nuclear war" at the first sign of U.S. aggression and Trump's threat of "fire, fury and frankly power the likes of which this world has never seen before."

Looking ahead, the aerospace and defense sector may have more room to fly. Increasing geopolitical tensions that fuel the news cycle around the Mideast, North Korea and Russia could continue to support defense spending. The budget is expanding over the next few years after the recent contraction.

The sector also looks attractive on a technical basis.

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The positive outlook could drive "total return of ~12%, consisting of ~10% annual EPS growth and ~2% dividend yields, which should sustain relative valuations, according to a recent Morgan Stanley note.

Potential investors interested in the aerospace and defense segment have a few ETF options to choose from, including the iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF (NYSEArca: ITA), PowerShares Aerospace & Defense Portfolio (NYSEArca: PPA) and the SPDR S&P Aerospace & Defense ETF (NYSEArca: XAR).

ITA is a cap-weighted ETF, meaning it has larger weights to big-name defense stocks, including Dow components Boeing (NYSE: BA) and United Technologies (NYSE: UTX). XAR is an equal-weight ETF. PPA holds 50 stocks involved in the development, manufacturing, operations and support of US defense, homeland security and aerospace operations.

Additionally, the recently launched Direxion Daily Aerospace & Defense Bull 3x Shares (NYSEArca: DFEN) has experienced some rising demand among the trading community as a way to play the heightened tensions. DFEN, which was launched in May 2017, has $13.0 million in assets under management, and the ETF was trading at 77,000 shares Thursday, compared to its average daily volume of around 19,000 shares, according to Morningstar data.

This article was provided courtesy of our partners at etftrends.com.

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North Korea saber rattling lights up aerospace & defense ETFs - Fox Business

Northstar Aerospace Workers Occupy Plant Over Pension Cuts – Chief Investment Officer

Northstar Aerospace workers have occupied their plant in Milton, Ontario, Canada, demanding that the company fulfill its pension obligations, after it announced the facility would be shuttered due to the loss of a major Boeing contract.

According to Unifor, the union representing the workers, current retirees, some of whom had worked for Northstar for more than 40 years, could face a 24% cut to their income because of Northstars insufficient funding of the companys pension plan, said Unifor.

This action sends a clear message to Northstar that the company cannot short-change workers and the pension of retirees that have made it profitable for so many years, said Jerry Dias, president of Unifor National in a statement. There is no financial reason for refusing to fund the plan. The only excuse is corporate greed.

The occupation began at 4 am on Aug. 10, and the workers said they have stopped production at the facility until Northstar holds up its end of a commitment to fully fund their pensions. After months the company has refused to discuss the matter, said Scott McIlmoyle, president of Unifor Local 112. Time is running out Northstar needs to do the right thing.

Although Unifor acknowledged that the loss of the Boeing contract makes it difficult to avoid closure, the union said the company is still very healthy and there is no financial excuse not to supplement the pension plan in order to protect future and current retirees.

The union said that the closure was unexpected by the facilitys 200 employees because Northstar workers had been assured that the Milton operation was on solid footing .

Our members helped build Northstar Aerospace into what it is today, said Scott McIlmoyle, president of Unifor Local 112. This is not right; the company has a moral obligation and the financial ability to make up the pension short fall. Northstar is a financially stable and profitable company.

Last week, more than 40 workers and Unifor members from the Greater Toronto Area picketed outside the Northstar facility in Milton, Ontario to pass out leaflets and speak with employees and management arriving for the morning shift. Unifor National President and Local 112 member Jerry Dias addressed the crowd.

We have blood and sweat in this place, and there is no way that theyre taking the machinery out of here and cutting our members pensions, Dias told the crowd. When we say my sisters and my brothers, we mean it and we will fight for you.

Northstar first announced the Milton plants closure in January, which it blamed on the loss of its contract with Boeing for gears.

This facility closure is the result of market factors, not the facilitys performance, said Thomas Smith, Northstars vice president and general manager, in a bulletin to the workers. The closing of the Milton facility is the result of the loss of content on the Boeing AH-64E Apache program. There is not sufficient additional new work to make up for the drastic loss of content on the Apache program for the operation to remain open.

Tags: Northstar Aerospace, pension, strike

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Northstar Aerospace Workers Occupy Plant Over Pension Cuts - Chief Investment Officer

Aerospace and Defense ETFs Soar Amid Rising North Korea Tensions – Zacks.com

Defense stocks have been rising with escalation of tensions between the US and North Korea, while the broader stock rally has stalled. Raytheon (RTN - Free Report) , Lockheed Martin (LMT - Free Report) and Northrop Grumman (NOC - Free Report) hit record highs after President warned North Korea against making any more threats to the US.

Trump said North Korea faces fire and fury like the world has never seen before and the rogue nation responded by threatening to launch a missile strike on Guam.

The sentiment for Aerospace & Defense stocks improves with rising geopolitical tensions. They surged after US missile strikes on Syria. And, that is one of main reasons why these stocks performed well in the last few years, despite defense budget cuts in the US and Europe.

Many developing countries including India, UAE, Saudi Arabia and Brazil have increased their defense spending over the past few years. Of late, Japan and South Korea have also boosted their defense spending in response to increased military spending by China. Trumps budget proposals call for a boost in US defense spending, which would be positive for these stocks.

Most aerospace & defense companies reported excellent earnings for Q2 and have seen continued positive momentum in earnings estimates. Aerospace & Defense ETFs have significantly outperformed the broader market this year.

To learn more about top ranked Aerospace & Defense ETFs--the iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF (ITA - Free Report) , the SPDR S&P Aerospace & Defense ETF (XAR - Free Report) and thePowerShares Aerospace & Defense Portfolio (PPA - Free Report) , please watch the short video above.

Will You Make a Fortune on the Shift to Electric Cars?

Here's another stock idea to consider. Much like petroleum 150 years ago, lithium power may soon shake the world, creating millionaires and reshaping geo-politics. Soon electric vehicles (EVs) may be cheaper than gas guzzlers. Some are already reaching 265 miles on a single charge.

With battery prices plummeting and charging stations set to multiply, one company stands out as the #1 stock to buy according to Zacks research.

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Aerospace and Defense ETFs Soar Amid Rising North Korea Tensions - Zacks.com

ETH vs. BTC Split: What Ethereum Hard Fork Says About Bitcoin Cash Price 2018

Bitcoin Hard Fork and Ethereum Hard Fork
Stock splits are not uncommon. Usually undertaken when a company’s shares rise to an undesirable value that is too high—and therefore may dissuade smaller investors—stock splits are a great way to create hype around a company and also encourage investment. In cryptocurrencies, however, splits are entirely different.

Between the Bitcoin hard fork (the term used to describe a split in cryptocurrencies) and the Ethereum hard fork, we’ve seen two of the heaviest hitters on the market place fracture into entirely new coins, which only creates more volatility and presents more options to investors. Seeing as how the Ethereum (ETH).

The post ETH vs. BTC Split: What Ethereum Hard Fork Says About Bitcoin Cash Price 2018 appeared first on Profit Confidential.

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ETH vs. BTC Split: What Ethereum Hard Fork Says About Bitcoin Cash Price 2018

Sermorelin Acetate Cost, Review of Benefits and Comparison …

hGH Replacement Therapy has been a popular Anti-Aging and performance enhancing treatment since as early as 1990, but unfortunately, use of hGH does not come without risks.

Sermorelin acetate has become a popular alternative as it enables you to obtain the benefits of hGH Therapy, without the associated risks.

This article looks more closely at Sermorelin injections as a hGH alternative.

To begin with, it is a good idea to have an understanding of what sermorelin acetate is and what role it plays when administered via injection. Scientifically sermorelin acetate is referred to as growth hormone releasing factor 129 NH2-acetate, this is because it is a peptide which contains the first 29 amino acids that make up growth hormone produced in our bodies.

This contributes to sermorelins function as a growth hormone secretagogue (a substance which causes another substance to be secreted Wikipedia) in this case, the substance whose secretion is promoted is growth hormone. For this reason, sermorelin is often also referred to as an hGH stimulator and is considered an excellent alternative to hGH.

One important thing to understand about Sermorelin is that it promotes healthy function of the pituitary (the gland responsible for our bodys production of hGH) during the aging process. This is a far cry from aggressive administration of hGH which can, in fact, negatively impact normal pituitary function.

There are many advantages of using sermorelin for hGH replacement therapy rather than hGH itself, both in terms of safety as well as accessibility and sermorelin price.

With regards to safety, it has long been known that administration of hGH is associated with a range of adverse side-effects. These include, but are not limited to, bone and tissue growth abnormalities, diabetes, heart disease and even cancer.

Add to this the possibility of overdose, a shutting down of normal growth hormone production and the possibility of a sudden reduction in response to hGH injections (a phenomenon known as Tachyphylaxis) and you may start to wonder if hGH is worth the risk.

Sermorelin on the other hand, has not been associated with the same long list of side-effects as hGH. Overdose is considered to be very difficult, if not impossible, and administration of sermorelin results in a release of growth hormone more in line with our bodys natural process rather than having consistently high levels as is the case with hGH injections.

Sermorelin peptides do not shut down the bodys own production of hGH but instead supports pituitary function and promotes natural production of hGH. For this reason, increased hGH production is noted for a period even after sermorelin therapy has stopped.

Check out this table comparing Peptide Therapy and hGH

Then there are the safety concerns surrounding use of hGH which arise from its status as a controlled substance. Legally doctors can only prescribe hGH for children with human growth hormone deficiency, medically diagnosed hGH deficiency in adults and individuals with HIV. This makes accessing hGH very difficult and has contributed to the illegal sale of hGH.

As with any illegally produced and purchased drug, the consumer has no way of knowing the quality of drug they are injecting into their body. At best, you may inject inert (and therefore useless) hGH, at worst a lethal cocktail of contamination produced in somebodies garage. And even if you do find what appears to be a reputable seller of hGH outside of the US, import it and you face the legal implications of importing a controlled substance.

Sermorelin, by comparison, is not governed by the same strict laws of medical use and this is largely due to its safety profile. For this reason, sermorelin is much more accessible and is commonly prescribed by doctors in anti-aging and wellness clinics in conjunction with other growth hormone releasing peptides such as GHRP-2 and GHRP-6.

Sermorelin is still a pharmaceutical and therefore a prescription is required to purchase it but there are legitimate online portals which match patients and doctors making it very easy for you to purchase sermorelin and have it delivered to your home.

Another distinct advantage of using sermorelin instead of hGH is cost. hGH typically costs $1000+ per month of treatment, sermorelin is a much more affordable option with 3 months treatment of sermorelin costing significantly less than just one month on hGH.

Check the Cost of 1 Month and 3 Months Supply of Sermorelin

Besides the obvious advantages of sermorelin injections detailed above, you may want to know how you can benefit from using this therapy. Perhaps the easiest way to understand the potential benefits of hGh replacement therapy is to look at the symptoms of hGH decline and the effect hGH replacement has on those symptoms. These are detailed below:

1. Changes in Body Composition

Changes in body composition due to decreasing levels of hGH are reflected by a decrease in lean body mass (muscle) and an increase in fat mass. Correcting hGH levels has been shown to reverse this state by improving muscle mass and reducing fat.

2. Bone Mineral Density

Research indicates that hGH deficiency in adults contributes to a reduction in bone density and therefore increased risk of osteoporosis. It has also been shown that hGH replacement therapy for greater than 12 months results in improved bone mineral density and hence, lower risk of osteoporosis.

3. Muscle Strength

Due to changes in body composition detailed above, muscle strength is understandably compromised. As hGH therapy corrects body composition and improves muscle mass, muscle strength also improves. The best results are gained after 12 months of hGH therapy.

4. Joint Health

By improving bone mineral density and increasing muscle mass and strength, hGH therapy can help to prevent joint deterioration that is a feature of arthritis. Optimal growth hormone levels are also essential for health of connective tissue such as the synovium found in joints.

5. Exercise Performance

Exercise performance is reduced in individuals with growth hormone deficiency. This appears to be partially due to reductions in bone density and muscle mass but also in part due to a reduction in oxygen uptake. hGH therapy for 6 months has been shown to improve exercise performance by improving muscle mass and also oxygen uptake

6. Heart Health

There is evidence of a greater risk of heart disease in individuals with growth hormone deficiency and it has been hypothesized that this is due to a greater propensity to develop premature atherosclerosis (a build-up of plaque inside the arteries which increases risk of heart attack and stroke). Growth hormone deficiency also results in changes in heart size and function. These changes have been demonstrated to be reversed after 6 months hGH therapy.

7. Metabolism

Growth hormone deficiency results in a reduced resting metabolism and replacement therapy reverses this decrease. hGH therapy has also been shown to increase protein synthesis, increase fat oxidation, normalize carbohydrate metabolism and reduce LDL (bad) cholesterol. These favorable effects on metabolism may in part explain some of the other benefits of hGH including improved hearth health and body composition.

8. Skin Thickness

A reduction in skin thickness and all-important skin collagen is another result of growth hormone deficiency. Both conditions are improved by hGH therapy.

9. Immune Function

Although adults with growth hormone deficiency are not normally considered to have a compromised immune system, there is some evidence to suggest that hGH therapy can help regulate immune function.

10. Libido

It has been demonstrated that people with growth hormone deficiency have more difficulty with sexual relationships and reportedly, lower energy levels. Many individuals have found an improvement in energy, libido and sexual performance following hGH therapy, some men even claiming an improvement in problems with premature ejaculation.

11. Quality of Life

Reduced psychological well-being has been reported in individuals with growth hormone deficiency and hGH replacement has resulted in improvements in mood, energy and general feelings of well-being.

As discussed, sermorelin peptides are a pharmaceutical product requiring prescription and purchase from a pharmacy.

There are online portals which can connect you with a physician who specializes in prescribing hGH therapy via phone/internet chat. You can then purchase and be sent the sermorelin via the mail.

This is all done in one easy order that includes the consultation with the prescribing doctor (via phone or internet chat), your hGH replacement therapy and ongoing support all in the upfront sermorelin price.

Beware of websites that offer sermorelin for sale without a prescription. Chances are you are not getting the real deal and could be jeopardizing your health.

Compare Available Sermorelin Programs Here

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Not Just For Summer Tips For A Fit And Healthy Lifestyle – Markets Insider

LOS ANGELES, Aug. 11, 2017 /PRNewswire/ --

Featured Expert:Samantha Clayton, personal trainer, former Olympian, and senior director of Worldwide Fitness and Education at Herbalife Nutrition, is responsible for all activities relating to exercise and fitness education for Herbalife Nutrition Independent Distributors and employees. Through in-person training sessions, educational tools and materials, and her blog (www.discovergoodfitness.com), she ensures that the important role of exercise as part of a healthy, active life is understood by all. She also helps create, organize and promote employee fitness programs and activities as an integral part of the company's corporate wellness program.

Experience the interactive Multichannel News Release here: https://www.multivu.com/players/English/79307242-herbalife-nutrition-samantha-clayton-fitness/

Before joining the corporate ranks, Samantha was a professional athlete. She represented Great Britain in the 2000 Sydney Olympics in both the 200m and the 4x100m relay events. Prior to the Olympics, she won two medals in the Olympic AAA trials a silver medal for the 200m and a bronze for the 100m as well as a silver medal in the 4x100m relay during the European Junior Championships in 1997. Her personal records include 11.40 seconds in the 100m and 23.02 seconds in the 200m.

Samantha is a personal trainer and group exercise coach through the American Fitness and Aerobics Association (AFAA) and International Sport Science Association (ISSA).

Source:Samantha Clayton, senior director of Worldwide Fitness and Education at Herbalife Nutrition is available for interviews.

Background:Many people train hard to get fit for summer and then tend to slow down once October comes around. But I'm here to let you know that balanced nutrition and moderate exercise can easily be done year round.

3 simple tips that will help make nutrition and exercise a permanent part of your lifestyle:

Where can viewers go for more information?We challenge our members to participate in the Herbalife Nutrition Weight Loss Challenge and they've lost more than one million pounds by committing to living a healthy, active lifestyle and focusing on balanced nutrition and exercise.

To learn more about nutrition and fitness, find a nutrition club to participate in the weight loss challenge, or just learn how to live in a healthy, active lifestyle, visit Herbalife.com.

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David Steenblock Offers Beauty, Anti-Aging and Wellness in One Therapy – GlobeNewswire (press release)

August 09, 2017 07:37 ET | Source: David Steenblock, D.O. Inc.

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif., Aug. 09, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- David Steenblock, an osteopathic physician based in San Clemente, CA, uses a 30-minute therapy that enhances a bodys detoxification from pathogens, metals and chemicals. More significantly, hes able to offer beauty, anti-aging and wellness all in one therapy.

The therapy is called HOCATT, and its all part of premier technology offered at his San Clemente based Personalized Rejuvenative Medicine Clinic. HOCATT amazingly provides health, wellness and beauty all in one treatment, through a multi-modality health device that provides up to 10 effective therapies without stepping out of the unit.

It looks and almost feels like a steam bath.

HOCATT enhances beauty, by helping to eliminate cellulite in legs, and making skin feel much younger, firmer, and beautiful. And, its been shown that men and women of all ages feel increased energy, physical and sexual stamina, and enhanced mental clarity and stress reduction.

HOCATT is available at Personalized Rejuvenative Medicine at the offices at Dr. David Steenblock. Dr. David is a leading-edge physician in many fields of medicine, from stroke care, to acute brain trauma, to generative and cell-based medicine in the treatment of ALS, Cerebral Palsy and other chronic and degenerative diseases.

For more information about Dr. David Steenblocks work in anti aging and stem cell therapies, visit http://www.stemcellmd.org.

David Steenblock, D.O. Inc.

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Empire Medical Training Calendar Updates for August – Markets Insider

AUSTIN, Texas, Aug. 10, 2017 /PRNewswire/ --Empire Medical Training offers over 270 accredited workshops and training programs for physicians and health care professionals like nurse practitioners and dentists including DO and DDS professionals. Empire Medical Training offers courses each year throughout the United States, Asia, and South America with topics ranging from Aesthetics, Anti-Aging and Regenerative Medicine, Pain Management, Surgery, as well as business topics for practice growth and compliance.

Empire Medical Training places a strong emphasis on the hands-on training portion of each procedural workshop to ensure the attendee is proficient in each technique. This month, they will visit states across the nation as well as Canada.

The first round of courses for the month will be held in Austin, TX. These courses are ideal for those looking to expand their medical practice to include aesthetic services. The weekend will kick off on August 11, 2017, with Platelet Rick Plasma training, which includes boosting the body's natural healing process. Other courses this weekend will be Botulinum Toxin Training, Complete, Hands-On Dermal Fillers, and Advanced Botox and Dermal Fillers (Level II).

In addition to Austin, Empire Medical Training will be in Philadelphia, PA that same weekend. This location will include the following courses: Mesotherapy Training, Botulinum Toxin Training, Complete, Hands-On Dermal Filler, and Platelet Rich Plasma for Aesthetics.

Empire Medical Training is proud to offer courses in Toronto, Canada this month as well. The aesthetic courses will be held from August 25-27, 2017. These three-day workshops will include Platelet Rich Plasma for Aesthetics, Botulinum Toxin Training, and Complete, Hands-On Dermal Filler.

Other cities available this month include Orlando, FL, Nashville, TN, and Costa Mesa Orange County, CA. Each of these cities will include Platelet Rich Plasma for Aesthetics. Orlando, FL will exclusively offer courses in Pain Management such as Ultrasound Guided Interventional Pain Management Procedures. As President, Dr. Stephen Cosentino, states, "These courses would be ideal for healthcare professionals looking to expand their practice and grow their revenue."

Empire Medical Training has been training Physicians and Health Care Practitioners since 1998, one of the longest procedural training institutions to date. With over 45,000 graduates in specialties such as Aesthetics, Anti-Aging and Weight Management Medicine, and Pain Management, Empire Medical Training is renowned throughout the United States and abroad as the premier academy for providing academic excellence. Dr. Stephen Cosentino pioneered ways to add new procedures and services as well as business strategies to a practice and improve patient care. As a result of Dr. Cosentino's commitment and dedication to the specialty and the field of medicine, Empire Medical Training is steadfast to developing new training programs and topics to broaden the scope of the primary care practitioner. All Empire courses are created through mainstream medicine using the most current technologies and standards of care.

For more information on the courses offered during February, or to register for a class, please visit our website, Facebook page, or call 866-366-1576.

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Google worker says women don't advance in tech because of biology – CBS News

Last Updated Aug 7, 2017 7:51 PM EDT

LONDON -- Silicon Valley faces another tempest over the status of women in the work place, this time at Google (GOOG).

The search giant's new head of diversity has rejected an internal commentary from an employee who suggested women don't get ahead in tech jobs because of biological differences.

Danielle Brown, who was named a vice president at the search giant only a few weeks ago, said Google is "unequivocal in our belief that diversity and inclusion are critical to our success," according to a copy of her response obtained by technology news website Gizmodo.

The employee memo, titled "Google's Ideological Echo Chamber," begins by saying that only honest discussion will address a lack of equity.

But it also asserts that women "prefer jobs in social and artistic areas" while more men "may like coding because it requires systemizing," fueling a smoldering debate about sexism in Silicon Valley.

"I'm simply stating that the distribution of preferences and abilities of men and women differ in part due to biological causes and that these differences may explain why we don't see equal representation of women in tech and leadership," the memo stated, according to Gizmodo. "Many of these differences are small and there's significant overlap between men and women, so you can't say anything about an individual given these population level distributions."

The employee was described in news reports as a software engineer. The employee's identity has not been released.

Google, like other tech companies, has far fewer women than men in technology and leadership positions. Fifty-six percent of its workers are white and 35 percent are Asian, while Hispanic and Black employees make up 4 percent and 2 percent of its workforce, respectively, according to the company's latest diversity report.

While the issue of diversity is getting a lot of attention in Silicon Valley, these numbers are barely changing. But the companies say they are trying, by reaching out to and interviewing a broader range of job candidates, by offering coding classes, internships and mentorship programs and by holding mandatory "unconscious bias" training sessions for existing employees.

But, as the employee memo shows, not everyone at Google is happy with this.

The issue of gender has long roiled California's technology sector. Earlier this year, the U.S. Department of Labor accused Google of underpaying female employees, saying it found "systemic compensation disparities against women" at the company.

In another controversy, a former female engineer's claims of widespread sexual harassment at Uber in June led the ride-hailing firm to fire more than 20 employees.

In another incident, venture investor Dave McClure was forced to publicly apologize for making "inappropriate advances" toward several women in workplace situations.

2017 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Google worker says women don't advance in tech because of biology - CBS News

MVC selects ISU's Goy for Hall of Fame – Bloomington Pantagraph

ST. LOUIS Former Illinois State All-American and NCAA champion Christian Goy was selected as one of six inductees in the 21st Missouri Valley Conference Hall of Fame class, MVC Commissioner Doug Elgin announced Thursday.

Joining Goy in the 21st MVC Hall of Fame class are track/cross country standout Mary Ellen Hill-Schupbach (Bradley), longtime administrators Bill Rowe (Missouri State) and Lois Patton (Evansville), softball Olympian Dani Tyler of Drake and Southern Illinois basketball star Darren Brooks, the only player in league history to win both the Larry Bird Trophy and Defensive Player of the Year honor twice.

Goy is the 12th ISU representative in the MVC Hall of Fame. Others are Kenneth "Buzz" Shaw (1998), Doug Collins (1998), Cathy Boswell (2003), Will Robinson (2003), Jill Hutchison (2008), John Coughlan (2009), Linda Herman (2014), D.A. Weibring (2015), Dave Bergman (2016), Sue Daggett Miller (2016) and Charlotte Lewis (2017).

Christian Goy absolutely deserves this honor to be inducted into the MVC Hall of Fame, Illinois State Director of Athletics Larry Lyons said. He is a multiple-time MVC champion and a NCAA national champion. He is a high character guy and a born leader. He represented Illinois State and the MVC with the highest degree of class and dignity, and continues to do so today.

Goy was the second Redbird at the time to be an NCAA track champion when he claimed the 2002 indoor mile in a school-record time (3:59.43). The Rheinsberg, Germany, native holds the MVC championship indoor mile record of 4:02.10 in 2001.

"I'm speechless and feel like a little child, doing somersaults in my head, Goy said of the honor. One never aspires to be selected into the Missouri Valley Conference Hall of Fame. I simply wanted to win championships. I wanted to be the best, to work hard, to persevere, and then to do it all over again.

"When I was done running, I hoped I had raised the bar a bit higher and inspired a few who would follow. Being selected among the greatest means nothing, but it means everything at the same time.

Goy was a three-time All-American, won 12 Missouri Valley Championships in the 800, 1,500, mile, 3,000 and cross country, received three Verizon All-American honors, two Academic Athlete of the Year awards, was the 2002 State Farm Scholar Athlete of the Year and in 2003 received the Dr. Charlotte West Scholar-Athlete of the Year Award.

He earned the 2001 and 2002 Milt Weisbecker Illinois State Male Athlete of the Year Award and the Doug Collins Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year recognition. He was the MVCs Cross Country Athlete of the Year in 2002, the leagues Most Valuable Track Athlete in 2001-02 and the MVCs Most Outstanding Track Athlete in 2000-01.

Goy currently manages the Behavioral Science Lab (of which he is co-founder) and serves as Vice President on the Gazelle Foundation Board in Austin, Texas.

The induction ceremony will be March 2, 2018 in St. Louis as part of the State Farm Missouri Valley Mens Basketball Championship. There will be an 8 a.m. breakfast followed by the induction ceremony at 8:30 a.m. in the Peobody Opera House adjacent to Scottrade Center. Tickets for the Hall of Fame event can be obtained by calling the league office at (314) 444-4300.

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Veteran's Disability Payments Compromised in Cyber Attack – NBC Chicago

Peter Kelly last wore a United States Air Force uniform in the mid-1980s, but his time in the service has had a lasting impact. He started as a behavioral science specialist before entering the private health care field to work with Alzheimers and dementia patients.

I think veterans should be proud of who they are what they did, Kelly said.

However, Kelly said his time in the Air Force was marred by witnessing several traumatic events. He also said it was his job to perform psychological testing to determine who was gay so the military could start the discharge process.

Me, thinking, oh my gosh, Im gay, and now Im kicking people out, Kelly said. So theres a lot of guilt involved.

Kelly said he was later diagnosed with major depression and cognitive deficits. He now attends a weekly gay support group at Hines VA.

In recent years, Kelly was approved to receive government disability payments. His funds, which he called his lifeline, were loaded on to a debit card.

I was so happy about that because I felt like I was a burden on the whole world, Kelly said. I was more used to being independent.

Still a proud veteran, Kelly chose to show his support last year by purchasing an Air Force license plate frame from an online company. He used his disability debit card to pay for it, but last December he noticed his account was nearly wiped out.

Kelly learned that someone had obtained his payment information to order $13,479 worth of items, including jewelry, shoes and dozens of pizzas.

The day that I found out that that had happened to me, I mean, my heart was crushed, Kelly said.

Kelly closed his disability debit card account and filed a claim. He also transferred his disability payments to a traditional bank account. Kelly also received a letter in January from the online company that sold the license plate frame, saying they were victims of a cyberattack and warning that the security of his payment information could be at risk.

Months later, however, Kelly said he still had not received an update on his claim. He said every time he contacted the card reseller, he could not get through to an investigator.

NBC 5 Responds contacted the Social Security Administration, which handles disability payments, However, the agency said identity theft was not within its purview.

But after NBC 5 Responds reached out to card reseller SVM, a representative immediately checked into Kellys claim. According to SVM, the claim was legitimate but had fallen through the cracks and should have been resolved earlier this year.

The card reseller then mailed Kelly a check for $13,479.

Im really happy to at least have that buffer to have back there in case theres an emergency or something, Kelly said.

Published at 10:37 PM CDT on Aug 10, 2017 | Updated 32 minutes ago

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Veteran's Disability Payments Compromised in Cyber Attack - NBC Chicago

Wayde van Niekerk, the anti-Usain Bolt, on way to athletics immortality – iNews

Wayde van Niekerk is half-way to becoming an athletics icon. As if he needs any more help, after the fastest man in the world endorsed him.

The man who Usain Bolt believes has the chops and charm to take over track and field blasted apart a stellar field on Tuesday night in a 400 metre race overshadowed by the controversy concerning Botswanas Isaac Makwala being ruled out of the race by the IAAF on suspicion of norovirus despite the athlete and his coach saying he was healthy to form the first part of his ambitious World Championships 400m-200m double.

You can see why Bolt is so impressed. Van Niekerk sauntered into the London Stadium on Tuesday to the strains of Guns and Roses Welcome to the Jungle with a laconic grin on his face, before cantering to victory in 43.98 seconds, almost half a second clear of Stephen Gardiner of the Bahamas, with Qatars Abdelah Haroun in third.

He barely smiled after his victory. After all, he goes again on Wednesday, in the 200m. He later said the dank London summer evening was a little freezing.

But Bolts anointment of the South African goes beyond him being able to run fast.

The Jamaican, whose reach is so broad that he has been hailed in some circles as the man who saved athletics, knows a thing or two about how to transcend a sport.

And since Van Niekerk broke Michael Johnsons ancient 400-metre record at the 2016 Olympics, he has steadily moved from the confines of athletics into the public consciousness, bringing with it sponsorship deals totalling seven figures with brands including Audi and Visa.

He has even become a household name in his native country, where usually you have to chuck a rugby ball or wield a cricket bat to move beyond the back pages.

His rise to prominence is no doubt connected with the fact that Bolt named Van Niekerk as his heir apparent.

There is a story that after his first World Championship victory, in 2015, Van Niekerks mother was the only person to meet him at the airport.

If he does the double in London and becomes the first person to achieve the feat since Johnson in 1995 you can bet there will be a few more to greet him.

Van Niekerk has little of the swagger and showmanship of Bolt. You wont see dance moves at the start line as his name is being called out.

In fact on Tuesday night, as he normally does, he merely held his hands together in prayer. Whoever he spoke to must have listened.

Nor will you hear bon mots that we have become used to from Bolt the Jamicans admission that he ate chicken nuggets all through the 2008 Olympics still stands out from Van Niekerk.

In place of Bolts cheeky chutzpah, there is modest politeness and prolific mentions of the Almighty from Van Niekerk. But one thing they do share is an ability to run darn fast.

And if things go to plan on Wednesday and Thursday, Van Niekerk will get ever closer to Bolts exalted status.

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Wayde van Niekerk, the anti-Usain Bolt, on way to athletics immortality - iNews

Gene-Editing Success Brings Pig-to-Human Transplants Closer to Reality – Scientific American

The idea of solving the human organ shortage with pigs has tantalized surgeons for decades. More than 117,000 Americans are currently on a transplant wait-list in the U.S., according to federal figures, and 22 people die every day awaiting a match.

Pig organs are similar in size and function to our own, and people are less squeamish about harvesting body parts from an animal raised for meat than they would be about a primates. Yet one major hurdle that has continued to vex any such cross-species transplants, or xenotransplants, has been the threat of transmitting viruses that can infect people and pigs alike: The latters genome includes 25 so-called retroviruses that apparently do nothing to porkers but might transmit diseases to peopleespecially immune-compromised transplant patients.

That concern, particularly amid the HIV epidemic, has helped stall such research for the past couple decades (with the exception of pig heart valves that are used in humansdead tissue that doesnt pose the same transmission risks). Recent gene editing advances, however, are rejuvenating interest in pig-to-human transplants.

Today scientists in Massachusetts announced that by using the CRISPRCas9 gene-editing system they were able to inactivate all 25 viruses in the pig genome, yielding seemingly healthy piglets and moving research one step closer to a future of xenotransplantation. Our animal is probably the most [genetically] modified animal on the Earth, says Luhan Yang, co-founder and chief science officer of eGenesis, the Cambridge, Mass.based start-up that led the research. We are pushing the envelope of technology day by day. I think that such innovation is required to tackle as challenging a problem as xenotransplantation.

At four months oldroughly the age the pig would need to be for its organs to be large enough to use in peoplethe animals seem perfectly normal, says George Church, a Harvard Medical School geneticist who co-founded eGenesis and is a co-author of the paper. Its a very, very nice piece of work, says Joseph Tector, a transplant surgeon and professor of surgery at the University of Alabama School of Medicine, who was not involved in the research, published in todays Science.

Church says he was surprised the piglets turned out to be so healthy. CRISPR can be toxic to cells because it causes breaks in DNA strands, which can lead cells to self-destruct. Whats more, retroviruses replicate by inserting a copy of their genome into their hosts so those viruses may have been part of the pig genome for the roughly 25 million years that pig species have existed. As a result, Church had wondered if they play an essential role in the pigs survival and whether the animals could develop properly without them.

Another pleasant surprise, Church adds, is that the piglets did not get reinfected with the viruses in the womb. I generally hesitate to say weve solved a two-decade-old problem, but in this case, we have, he notes. So far the team has only made female pigs, raised in a lab. They are now repeating the process to engineer male pigs, which Church says he doesnt expect to be any more complicated.

The next stage of the research, Church and Yang say, will be to essentially humanize the pigsmodifying them enough that their organs can function in the human body. This involves immunological changes as well as making the tissues compatible and fixing blood-clotting issues. They have already begun such work and are writing it up for submission to a peer-reviewed journal, Church adds.

Other teams, including Tectors at Alabama, are working along a similar path, hoping to get the pig parts ready to be tested in the first people within the next two to three years. Researchers expect to start by transplanting kidneys, where the human waiting list is the longest, followed by other organs like the heart and liver; pancreatic islet cells to combat type 1 diabetes; skin; and corneas.

Studying the eGenesis-edited pigs will also give researchers the opportunity to see whether editing a significant number of genes with CRISPR causes any long-term problems in mammals. Pigs are the biggest animals that have undergone CRISPR, he says, and he wants to see what happens when they are allowed to grow to a ripe old age of over 20. There has been some speculation that CRISPR might lead to cancers, but that has not been adequately tested, he says.

Whether or not pig retroviruses would truly pose a risk of causing disease in humans remains controversial. In their new work the Yang team performed experiments confirming that pig retroviruses can infect human cellsjust as another retrovirus, HIV, does with people. In a lab dish the pig viruses infected human cells, and those infected cells were able to infect other human cells that had not been directly exposed to pig cells.

But other researchers say the risk of infecting humans with pig retroviruses is not that clear and that, on balance, unnecessarily editing the pig genes would add to the complexity and cost of a xenotransplant. Tector says his own team stopped worrying about the viruses years ago, because it is not clear whether the U.S. Food and Drug Administration will require the viruses to be removed prior to transplantation. And eGenesiss lab tests did not prove the viruses would be a risk to patients, says Muhammad Mansoor Mohiuddin, a professor of surgery and director of Xenoheart Transplantation at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, who was not part of the new study. The viruses ability to infect cell lines is not enough to be of concern, he says. I fail to understand the significance of this [infectivity] unless it is shown that it can cause some kind of disease.

Still, Tector says, if the FDA does require the viruses to be removed, then the eGenesis teams approach will be useful. If you need to knock [these viruses] out, this is the way to do it, no question, he says.

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Gene-Editing Success Brings Pig-to-Human Transplants Closer to Reality - Scientific American