Wellness Wednesday: Working from home? Here are some tips to help you with this new ‘normal’ – 12news.com KPNX

PHOENIX At a time when many are working from home, kids are being homeschooled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, some wellness tips come handy.

If you were like me, you probably complained about traffic on the way to work. It was the best thing ever to be able to get out of work at non-rush hour times and have a smooth drive back home, what a good way to end your day.

Since were so used to living a life in a hurry, we might feel like well go crazy if we dont go back to our normal lives soon.

Lets stop right there for a minute and try to make the best out of what we have right now.

Here are some tips that you can put into practice to help you keep mental, emotional and physical wellbeing.

Harpreet Gujral, Program Director of Integrative Medicine at Johns Hopkins Sibley Memorial Hospital shared some recommendations to help you while working from home during the pandemic.

RELATED: Social distancing may need to continue to 2022, Harvard study finds

Its time to adapt and create new routines. Let's start with the first part of our day, the morning.

I recommend spending 10 to 15 minutes on self-care. I take a moment to think about three things Im grateful for, suggests Dr. Gujral.

Some might be stressed before their day begins, practicing stress-relieving breaths can help you cope with your day better.

There is a technique called 4-7-8 breathing, or relaxing breath, which helps you concentrate on deep breaths. The practice is simple: Breathe in for a count of 4, hold for a count of 7 and breathe out for a count of 8, says Gujral.

She recommends practicing this breathing exercise four times a day to help relieve anxiety.

Walking, jogging, dancing, stretching, do something that you enjoy. If youre tired of being indoors, you can take some time before you start your day or towards the end to take a walk and enjoy the beautiful spring weather while practicing social distancing.

Dr. Gujral recommends trying about 10 minutes to 15 minutes of some kind of activity, but some experts recommend 30 minutes. You can increase the minutes at your own pace.

Its so easy to eat and eat and eat while youre home, I feel is even worst when youre working because you are concentrating on something else.

Plan your meals if you can, using healthier ingredients.

Eat meals rich in plant-based foods, especially leafy vegetables and fruit, work in the whole rainbow of produce colors to get all the phytonutrients, she said.

Its recommended to choose healthy snacks as well and drink plenty of water.

RELATED: Working from home? Here are 7 tips to help keep your electric bill down

It might be difficult to concentrate when working from home especially if you have kids around you.

If you do well with aromatherapy, she said eucalyptus or jasmine can make your work area more conducive to calm productivity.

Dr. Gujral also said oils can help create a relaxing environment.

For some people relaxing music - instrumental, piano, etc. helps them concentrate.

During these difficult times stay in touch with people that are going to bring something positive to your life and lift your spirits when you need to.

Be grateful for what you have and remember that constantly.

When you wash your hands, take a moment and say to yourself, I fill my heart with gratitude for whats going well. Sprinkle this affirmation through your day, with every hand-wash, said Dr. Gujral.

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Wellness Wednesday: Working from home? Here are some tips to help you with this new 'normal' - 12news.com KPNX

CSIR to test its new sepsis drug for severe patients of Covid-19 – Livemint

NEW DELHI :Raising hopes for a potential treatment of Covid-19, Indias premier research organization Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) has decided to test its new drug against Sepsis to treat critical patients of Covid-19.

The drug has recently been approved for marketing in India and would be available commercially as Sepsivac from Ahmedabad-based Cadila Pharmaceuticals Limited. The pharmaceutical company was supported by CSIR laboratories led by Indian Institute of Integrative Medicine (IIIM), Jammu in development of this drug, which has also found effective for leprosy patients.

This is a moment of pride for all of us as, as it is the only such drug in the global market which has been approved to treat Gram-negative sepsis. If it works against Covid-19, it will be a major breakthrough. But we have to be patient, and wait, as clinical trials are yet to begin," said Shekhar Mande, Director General, CSIR, New Delhi.

Sepsis is a serious life-threatening condition caused when bodys response to any kind of infection goes out of balance, triggering changes that can lead to multi-organ failure. According to scientists, there are some clinical similarities between patients suffering from gram-negative Sepsis and Covid-19.

A Covid-19 infection leads to a cytokine storm, quite similar to the one seen in Sepsis, when there is a heightened immune response and over production of immune cells because of which body starts attacking its own cells. There is inflammation and it reduces lungs capacity to absorb oxygen.

This drug can help boost the immunity of our body, so that this cytokine storm does not take place. It does so, by activating what is called a Th1 pathway, which helps our body to generate a very specific immune response against the virus. In short, it increases our ability to fight the infection," said Mande.

The drug which contains heat-killed mycobacterium has shown to reduce the mortality of critically ill patients of Sepsis by more than half and enables their faster recovery.

CSIR has already tied up multiple hospitals to start a randomized, controlled clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy of the drug in critically ill COVID-19 patients. An approval for the same has already been granted by the Drugs Controller General of India (DCGI).

According to the team, the drug has been found to be extremely safe in patients and no systemic side effects have been associated with its use and hope that it shows positive results against Covid-19.

The plan is also to evaluate the drug in providing prophylaxis to persons coming in contact with COVID-19 infected patients like family members and health care workers.

The entire development effort including the pre-clinical and clinical studies of the drug was supervised by CSIR appointed Monitoring Committee.

As of now, there are no confirmed drugs or vaccines against Covid-19, though several clinical trials are underway.

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CSIR to test its new sepsis drug for severe patients of Covid-19 - Livemint

Nutrigenomics Market 2020 Global Analysis and Opportunity Assessment | Danone, Genomix Nutrition Inc., Cura Integrative Medicine and Others Cole…

Futuristic Reports, The growth and development of Global Nutrigenomics Market Report 2020 by Players, Regions, Type, and Application, forecast to 2026 provides industry analysis and forecast from 2020-2026. Global Nutrigenomics Market analysis delivers important insights and provides a competitive and useful advantage to the pursuers. Nutrigenomics processes, economic growth is analyzed as well. The data chart is also backed up by using statistical tools.

Simultaneously, we classify different Nutrigenomics markets based on their definitions. Downstream consumers and upstream materials scrutiny are also carried out. Each segment includes an in-depth explanation of the factors that are useful to drive and restrain it.

Key Players Mentioned in the study are Danone, Genomix Nutrition Inc., Cura Integrative Medicine, Nutrigenomix, Metagenics Inc, Nutrigenomics New Zealand, WellGen Inc., GX Sciences, BASF SE, XCODE Life Sciences Pvt. Ltd., DSM N.V., DNALIFE, NutraGene

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On the basis on the applications, this report focuses on the status and Nutrigenomics outlook for major applications/end users, sales volume, and growth rate for each application, including-

Comprises Obesity Diabetes Anti-Aging Chronic Diseases Others

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Reagents & Kits Pharmaceutical Food and Nutrition Services

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NOTE : Our team is studying Covid-19 impact analysis on various industry verticals and Country Level impact for a better analysis of markets and industries. The 2020 latest edition of this report is entitled to provide additional commentary on latest scenario, economic slowdown and COVID-19 impact on overall industry. Further it will also provide qualitative information about when industry could come back on track and what possible measures industry players are taking to deal with current situation.

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You just drop an Email to:[emailprotected] us if you are looking for any Economical analysis to shift towards the New Normal on any Country or Industry Verticals.

Nutrigenomics Market Regional Analysis Includes:

Asia-Pacific (Vietnam, China, Malaysia, Japan, Philippines, Korea, Thailand, India, Indonesia, and Australia) Europe (Turkey, Germany, Russia UK, Italy, France, etc.) North America (the United States, Mexico, and Canada.) South America (Brazil etc.) The Middle East and Africa (GCC Countries and Egypt.)

Nutrigenomics Insights that Study is going to provide:

Gain perceptive study of this current Nutrigenomics sector and also possess a comprehension of the industry; Describe the Nutrigenomics advancements, key issues, and methods to moderate the advancement threats; Competitors In this chapter, leading players are studied with respect to their company profile, product portfolio, capacity, price, cost, and revenue. A separate chapter on Nutrigenomics market structure to gain insights on Leaders confrontational towards market [Merger and Acquisition / Recent Investment and Key Developments] Patent Analysis** Number of patents filed in recent years.

Table of Content:

Global Nutrigenomics Market Size, Status and Forecast 20261. Market Introduction and Market Overview2. Industry Chain Analysis3. Nutrigenomics Market, by Type4. Nutrigenomics Market, by Application5. Production, Value ($) by Regions6. Production, Consumption, Export, Import by Regions (2016-2020)7. Market Status and SWOT Analysis by Regions (Sales Point)8. Competitive Landscape9. Analysis and Forecast by Type and Application10. Channel Analysis11. New Project Feasibility Analysis12. Market Forecast 2020-202613. Conclusion

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Developers: This new tool spots critical security bugs 97% of the time – TechRepublic

Microsoft claims a machine learning models its built for software developers can distinguish between security and non-security bugs 99% of the time.

Microsoft plans to open-source the methodology behind a machine learning algorithm that it claims can distinguish between security bugs and non-security bugs with 99% accuracy.

The company developed a machine learning model to help software developers more easily spot security issues and identify which ones need to prioritized.

By pairing the system with human security experts, Microsoft said it was able to develop an algorithm that was not only able to correctly identify security bugs with nearly 100% accuracy, but also correctly flag critical, high priority bugs 97% of the time.

Learn the latest news and best practices about data science, big data analytics, and artificial intelligence. Delivered Mondays

The company plans to open-source its methodology on GitHub "in the coming months".

According to Microsoft, its team of 47,000 developers generate some 30,000 bugs every month across its AzureDevOps and GitHub silos, causing headaches for security teams whose job it is to ensure critical security vulnerabilities don't go missed.

While tools that automatically flag and triaged bugs are available, sometimes false-positives are tagged or bugs are classified as low-impact issues when they are in fact more severe.

To remedy this, Microsoft set to work building a machine learning model capable of both classifying bugs as security or non-security issues, as well as identifying critical and non-critical bugs "with a level of accuracy that is as close as possible to that of a security expert."

This first involved feeding the model training data that had been approved by security experts, based on statistical sampling of security and non-security bugs. Once the production model had been approved, Microsoft set about programming a two-step learning model that would enable the algorithm to learn how to distinguish between security bugs and non-security bugs, and then assign labels to bugs indicating whether they were low-impact, important or critical.

Crucially, security experts were involved with the production model through every stage of the journey, reviewing and approving data to confirm labels were correct; selecting, training and evaluating modelling techniques; and manually reviewing random samples of bugs to assess the algorithm's accuracy.

Scott Christiansen, Senior Security Program Manager at Microsoft and Mayana Pereira, Microsoft Data and Applied Scientist, explained that the model was automatically re-trained with new data to it kept pace with the Microsoft's internal production cycle.

"The data is still approved by a security expert before the model is retrained, and we continuously monitor the number of bugs generated in production," they said.

"By applying machine learning to our data, we accurately classify which work items are security bugs 99 percent of the time. The model is also 97 percent accurate at labeling critical and non-critical security bugs.

"This level of accuracy gives us confidence that we are catching more security vulnerabilities before they are exploited."

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Developers: This new tool spots critical security bugs 97% of the time - TechRepublic

Microsoft: Our AI can spot security flaws from just the titles of developers’ bug reports – ZDNet

Microsoft has revealed how it's applying machine learning to the challenge of correctly identifying which bug reports are actually security-related.

Its goal is to correctly identify security bugs at scale using a machine-learning model to analyze just the label of bug reports.

According to Microsoft, its 47,000 developers generate about 30,000 bugs a month, but only some of the flaws have security implications that need to be addressed during the development cycle.

Microsoft says its machine-learning model correctly distinguishes between security and non-security bugs 99% of the time. It can also accurately identify critical security bugs 97% of the time.

SEE: 10 tips for new cybersecurity pros (free PDF)

The model allows Microsoft to label and prioritize bugs without necessarily throwing more human resources at the challenge. Fortunately for Microsoft, it has a trove of 13 million work items and bugs it's collected since 2001 to train its machine-learning model on.

Microsoft used a supervised learning approach to teach a machine-learning model how to classify data from pre-labeled data and then used that model to label data that wasn't already classified.

Importantly, the classifier is able to classify bug reports just from the title of the bug report, allowing it to get around the problem of handling sensitive information within bug reports such as passwords or personal information.

"We train classifiers for the identification of security bug reports (SBRs) based solely on the title of the reports," explain Mayana Pereira, a Microsoft data scientist, and Scott Christiansen from Microsoft's Customer Security and Trust division in a new paper titled Identifying Security Bug Reports Based Solely on Report Titles and Noisy Data.

"To the best of our knowledge this is the first work to do so. Previous works either used the complete bug report or enhanced the bug report with additional complementary features," they write.

"Classifying bugs based solely on the tile is particularly relevant when the complete bug reports cannot be made available due to privacy concerns. For example, it is notorious the case of bug reports that contain passwords and other sensitive data."

SEE: Zoom vs Microsoft Teams? Now even Parliament is trying to decide

Microsoft still relies on security experts who are involved in training, retraining, and evaluating the model, as well as approving training data that its data scientists fed into the machine-learning model.

"By applying machine learning to our data, we accurately classify which work items are security bugs 99% of the time. The model is also 97% accurate at labeling critical and non-critical security bugs. This level of accuracy gives us confidence that we are catching more security vulnerabilities before they are exploited," Pereira and Christiansen said in a blogpost.

Microsoft plans to share its methodology on GitHub in the coming months.

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Microsoft: Our AI can spot security flaws from just the titles of developers' bug reports - ZDNet

Who knows the secret of the black magic box? Boffins seek the secrets of AI learning by mapping digital neurons – The Register

Roundup OpenAI Microscope: Neural networks, often described as black boxes, are complicated; its difficult to understand how all the neurons in the different layers interact with one another. As a result, machine learning engineers have a hard time trying to interpret their models.

OpenAI Microscope, a new project launched this week, shows that it is possible to see which groups of neurons are activated in a model when it processes an image. In other words, its possible to see what features these neurons in the different layers are learning. For example, the tools show what parts of a neural network are looking at the wheels or the windows in an image of a car.

There are eight different visualisations that take you through eight popular models - you can explore them all here.

At the moment, its more of an educational resource. The Microscope tools wont help you interpret your own models because they cant be applied to custom neural networks.

Generating the millions of images and underlying data for a Microscope visualization requires running lots of distributed jobs, OpenAI explained. At present, our tooling for doing this isn't usable by anyone other than us and is entangled with other infrastructure.

The researchers hope that their visualisation tools might inspire people to study the connections between neurons. Were excited to see how the community will use Microscope, and we encourage you to reuse these assets. In particular, we think it has a lot of potential in supporting the Circuits collaborationa project to reverse engineer neural networks by analyzing individual neurons and their connectionsor similar work, it concluded.

Don't stand so close to me: Current social distancing guidelines require people to stay at least six feet away from each other to prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus.

But how do you enforce this rule? Well, you cant really but you can try. Landing AI, a Silicon Valley startup led by Andrew Ng, has built what it calls an AI-enabled social distancing detection tool.

Heres how it works: Machine learning software analyses camera footage of people walking around and translates the frames into a birds eye view, where each person is represented as a green dot. A calibration tool estimates how far apart these people or dots are from one another by counting the pixels between them in the images. If theyre less than six feet apart, the dots turn red.

Landing AI said it built the tool to help the manufacturing and pharmaceutical industries. For example, at a factory that produces protective equipment, technicians could integrate this software into their security camera systems to monitor the working environment with easy calibration steps, it said.

The detector could highlight people whose distance is below the minimum acceptable distance in red, and draw a line between to emphasize this. The system will also be able to issue an alert to remind people to keep a safe distance if the protocol is violated.

Landing AI built this prototype at the request of customers whose businesses are deemed essential during this time, a spokesperson told The Register.

The productionization of this system is still early and we are exploring a few ways to notify people when the social distancing protocol is not followed. The methods being explored include issuing an audible alert if people pass too closely to each other on the factory floor, and a nightly report that can help managers get additional insights into their team so that they can make decisions like rearranging the workspace if needed.

You can read more about the prototype here.

Amazon improves Alexas reading voice: Amazon has added a new speaking style for its digital assistant Alexa.

The long-form speaking style will supposedly make Alexa sound more natural when its reading webpages or articles aloud. The feature, built from a text-to-speech AI model, introduces more natural pauses as it recites paragraphs of text or switches from one character to another in dialogues.

Unfortunately, this function is only available for customers in the US at the moment. To learn how to implement the long-form speaking style, follow the rules here.

Zoox settles with Tesla over IP use: Self-driving car startup Zoox announced it had settled its lawsuit with Tesla and agreed to pay Musks auto biz damages of an undisclosed fee.

Zoox acknowledges that certain of its new hires from Tesla were in possession of Tesla documents pertaining to shipping, receiving, and warehouse procedures when they joined Zooxs logistics team, and Zoox regrets the actions of those employees, according to a statement. As part of the settlement, Zoox will also conduct enhanced confidentiality training to ensure that all Zoox employees are aware of and respect their confidentiality obligations.

The case [PDF], initially filed by Teslas lawyers last year, accused the startup and four of its employees of stealing proprietary documents describing its warehouses and operations, and attempting to get more of its employees to join Zoox.

NeurIPS deadline extended: Heres a bit of good news for AI researchers amid all the doom and gloom of the current coronavirus pandemic: the deadline for submitting research papers to the annual NeurIPS AI conference has been extended.

Now, academics have until 27 May to submit their abstracts and 3 June to submit their finished papers. It can be hard to work during current lockdown situations as people juggle looking after children and their jobs.

Due to continued COVID-19 disruption, we have decided to extend the NeurIPS submission deadline by just over three weeks, the program chairs announced this week.

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OnDemand Webinar | Embracing Machine Learning & Intelligence to Improve Threat Hunting & Detection – BankInfoSecurity.com

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SAP Makes Support Experience Even Smarter With ML and AI – AiThority

SAP SE announced several updates, including the Schedule a ManagerandAsk an Expert Peerservices, to its Next-Generation Support approach focused on the customer support experience and enabling customer success. Based on artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning technologies, SAP has further developed existing functionalities with new, automated capabilities such as theIncident Solution Matching service and automatic translation.

When it comes to customer support, weve seen great success in flipping the customer engagement model by leveraging AI and machine learning technologies across our product support functionalities and solutions, saidAndreas Heckmann, head of Customer Solution Support and Innovation and executive vice president, SAP. To simplify and enhance the customer experience through our award-winning support channels, were making huge steps towards our goal of meeting customers needs by anticipating what they may need before it even occurs.

Recommended AI News: Kofax Presents Partner of the Year Awards

AI and machine learning technologies are key to improving and simplifying the customer support experience. They continue to play an important role in expanding Next-Generation Support to help SAP deliver maximum business outcomes for customers. SAP has expanded its offerings by adding new features to existing services, for example:

Recommended AI News: Kyocera Selects Skyhook to Power Precision Location Services for Rugged DuraXV Extreme

Customers expect their issues to be resolved quickly, and SAP strives toward a consistent line of communication across all support channels, including real-time options. SAP continues to improve, innovate and extend live support for technical issues by connecting directly with customers to provide a personal customer experience. Building on top of live support services, such asExpert ChatandSchedule an Expert, SAP has made significant strides in upgrading its real-time support channels. For example, it now offers the Schedule a Manager service and a peer-to-peer collaboration channel through the Ask an Expert Peer service.

By continuing to invest in AI and machine learningbased technologies, SAP enables more efficient support processes for customers while providing the foundation for predictive support functionalities and superior customer support experiences.

Customers can learn more about the Next-Generation Support approach through theProduct Support Accreditation program, available to SAP customers and partners at no additional cost. Customers can be empowered to get the best out of SAPs product support tools and the Next-Generation Support approach.

Recommended AI News: O.C. Tanner Recognized as a Leader in Everest Group PEAK Matrix Rewards & Recognition Solutions Assessment 2020

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Has Harvard’s David Sinclair Found the Fountain of Youth?

Health

Not yetbut he sure is getting rich, famous, and having a blast while trying.

Portrait by Ken Richardson

Like any dreamer, David Sinclair has a tendency to live in the future. The first time that thought crossed my mind, we were hurtling toward Worcester in his Tesla, on our way to visit one of his many companies working on an antidote to aging. Sinclair told me hed recently discovered, using a health-tracking device, that hes shaved a decade off his life: Biologically speaking, he is now 40, not 50. I took a good look at him. Except for the pillow he sat on while he drove, the wrinkles that formed around his eyes when he flashed his mischievous grin, and the note scrawled on the back of his hand (lest he forget something he has to do), there was no way in hell he looked anywhere near 50. He is slight of build, with nary a gray hair, and bears a passing resemblance to that forever child Alfred E. Neuman. He even says he feels like a kid, too.

I had skipped breakfast that morning to get a feel for what its like to be Sinclair, whose habit of not eating anything until the afternoonalong with ingesting a mysterious medley of pillsis one of his many life-extending practices. When I asked about one of the drugs he takes, he reached into his pocket and pulled out a capsule filled with a white powder that he packages himself in his lab. He has told reporters that the substance inside is a miracle molecule. I plucked it from his hand and put it in my own. It felt so light in my palm. So easy to believe. And that is precisely the problem.

From time immemorial, people have been on a fantastical quest for a substance that would extend life, or even grant immortality. The medieval alchemists sought the elixir of life. Explorer Ponce de Leon looked for the fountain of youth in what is now the southern United States but, in an ironic twist of fate, found Florida, a place where people go to grow old and die. As the centuries wore on, traffic in life-extending substances and practices became the clear bailiwick of snake-oil salesmen, charlatans, and quacks.

More recently, though, longevity has become the stuff of legitimate science. Sinclair is a superstar among a group of researchers who have harnessed science and technologys latest advances in an effort to parse out, for the very first time, the biological mechanisms of aging in hopes of slowing or even reversing the process. The goal of this field is not to make us young for youths sake, but to address the single greatest risk factor for heart disease, cancer, diabetes, dementia, and many other forms of modern-day suffering: aging. This radical new thinking about medicine maintains that if we can address the upstream cause of these diseases, we can cure them all at once (instead of relying on the current Whack-a-Mole approach) and increase the number of years people live with good health. But it is also true, experts say, that eliminating all of these diseases of aging will make people live longer. We are on the verge of a public health breakthrough of the kind we have never seen before, says S. Jay Olshansky, a professor of public health who studies demographics and aging at the University of Illinois at Chicago. It is not trivial. This is bigtime.

Sinclair deserves much of the credit for getting the field to where it is today. The Australian-born Harvard Medical School professor of genetics has had countless discoveries published in the most respected scientific journals in the world and has received dozens of scientific prizes and honors. Last year he was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia for his contributions to humanity. Wealthy investors, including WeWork cofounder Adam Neumann, have bet hundreds of millions of dollars on his science and invested in the 17 companies hes founded. When Sinclairs book, Lifespan: Why We Ageand Why We Dont Have To, was released in September, it reached number 11 on the New York Times bestseller list in just over a week.

At the same time, Sinclair is one of sciences most controversial figures, regarded by many as a slick salesman who overhypes his work and its potential. Some critics cringe when he speaks of miracle molecules and everlasting life. Others whisper that his science may not be completely sound. Still others roll their eyes over his habit of taking drugs that havent been proven to delay aging in anyone who isnt a mouse. The prevailing wish among his doubters is for him to simply keep his mouth shut. He is a complicated guy, says Steven Austad, a professor of biology who studies aging at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and is a friend of Sinclairs. Hes a superb scientist, as well as a superb salesman. You talk to him about science and you wont find many more knowledgeable, incisive experimentalists as David. And then you can listen to the stuff he says on TV and be like, What the hell is he talking about?

Sinclairs bold statements and pill-popping habits have ruffled feathers closer to home, tooat the very institution that employs him. He does do research and he gets it published in peer-reviewed journals, and if he just did that, itd be fine, says a Harvard Medical School professor who asked to remain anonymous. But then he speaks out about how he makes himself young and says stuff that would be embarrassing for any normal scientist to say.

In other words, in an increasingly legitimate field of science desperate to distance itself from the alchemists and quacks of yore, Sinclair presents somewhat of a problem. As a brilliant scientist in the lab, he is a major asset to his fields eternal quest for legitimacy. Let loose in the world, though, the self-described Star Trek wannabe, whos eager for the future to arrive as fast as possible, is somewhat of a liability. He may very well be the man who will unlock the secret to extending life some 10, 20, or even 30 yearsso long as he doesnt get lost searching for the fountain of youth along the way.

David Sinclair hanging out with Joe Rogan after appearing on his podcast. / Photo from Instagram

Sinclair can remember with startling clarity the day he first learned about death. He was with his beloved grandmother at her home in Turramurra, a leafy suburb of Sydney on the edge of the bush. They were seated on the floor playing when she told him his cat would only live to about 15. He was shocked. And the news only got worse. Everybody dies, she told him.

It is not surprising for children to be disturbed when they learn about mortality, but most of them move on, squirreling away the fear and dread until it comes bubbling back to the surface with the appearance of gray hairs, knee pain, and mental lacunas. Sinclairs trajectory was slightly different. In a sense, he never got over it.

While his biochemist parents worked, Sinclair spent most of his childhood with his fun-loving, free-spirited grandmother, who admonished him to never grow up. By the time he enrolled at the University of New South Wales to study biochemistry, he was convinced that science would one day catch up with his grandmothers ideas and people would be able to stay young forever. He believed, however, that he had been born too early to see it. He told his friends at school over coffee that they were likely to be the last of thousands of generations to live the sad existence of such a short life. But no sooner had he thought it, he says, than he considered the fact that maybe he was wrong. Maybe it could happen in his lifetime, and maybe he could be a part of it. Sinclair had found his lifes purpose.

His next stop was 10,000 miles away at MIT, where at the tender age of 24 he became a postdoc in the lab of Leonard Guarente, who had just started studying aging in yeast. Sinclairs colleagues remember him as someone who was aggressive, ambitious, and tireless: He was often the first to come into the lab and stayed as long as he could before dashing to catch the last train of the night. His colleague Shin-ichiro Imai, a professor of developmental biology at the Washington University School of Medicine who first met Sinclair in Guarentes lab, says Sinclair had a keen eye for capturing novel concepts and, based on that foundation, building new lines of research faster than anyone else.

At the time, aging research, once considered a fringe science, was still in its infancy, but Sinclair was determined to propel it to legitimacy. Three years into his time at MIT, he made a groundbreaking discovery that explained, for the first time, a mechanism of aging in yeast and opened up the possibility of one day manipulating the process in humans.

From there, Sinclairs career took off like a rocket. He soon left MIT to run his own lab at Harvard Medical School and became an assistant professor of genetics, continuing to build on discoveries made at Guarentes lab about sirtuins, a family of proteins that exists in all living beings. These proteins are usually dormant, but when activated through stressors (such as restricting calories), they can enhance health and extend life in yeast. Sinclair was determined to find a substance that could mimic the effects of restricting calories in yeast, something that could one day be turned into a medicine that cures aging.

True to form, he got to work, harder and faster than anyone else, Imai says. He screened some 20,000 substances until, one day, his collaborator called to say that hed gotten a hit: resveratrol, a molecule found in red wine that has long been suspected to play a role in human health. Sinclair couldnt believe what he was hearing and knew others wouldnt, either. So he set out to disprove the finding right on his dining room table, where he lined up a series of petri dishes filled with yeast that had been fed different substances. When he discovered that the dish with yeast that lived 50 percent longer had been fed resveratrol, he cried out to his wife, I think we have found something important here.

The discovery was the start of another phase in Sinclairs career, one in which wealthy investors played as much of a role as the scientific community. In 2004, with the help of serial biotech entrepreneur Christoph Westphal, he founded a company called Sirtris Pharmaceuticals to pursue clinical-stage drugs inspired by the resveratrol molecule. At the time, it was almost unheard of for a scientist in the aging field to start a company. David was a pioneer in merging academic and commercial research, Austad says. A lot of scientists would have liked to do what David did, but they didnt know how, or have the appropriate skills to raise the money and convince the investors that this science was promising a revolution in health. David did.

Meanwhile, in his lab, Sinclair pushed his studies up the evolutionary chain into mice, and in 2006 published the paper that would change his life: a study showing that overweight rodents fed resveratrol aged slower and stayed healthier than ones that did not consume the substance. It was an instant sensation, landing on the front page of the New York Times. Sinclair gave a few dozen interviews before sitting down, relaxed and charming, for the Charlie Rose show. A 60 Minutes special on resveratrol wasnt far behind, and soon he was telling Morley Safer we could expect an FDA-approved pill in five years time. Resveratrol, he once boasted to a reporter from the magazine Science, was as close to a miraculous molecule as you can find.

In no time, Sinclair went from being a scientist toiling away in a lab to someone whom strangers recognized on the street. He became a longevity guru to legions of people hoping to glean insight about how to forestall their own mortality. And, he became rich. Sirtris went public in 2007, and one year later, pharma giant GlaxoSmithKline snatched it up for an astounding $720 million. Resveratrol had made Sinclair famous and wealthy beyond what he had ever imagined, but it was also about to turn him into one of modern sciences most polarizing figures.

David Sinclair in his lab at Harvard Medical School. / Portrait by Ken Richardson

Sinclair was sitting at his desk at Harvard one day in 2010 when a colleague called to offer his heartfelt sympathies: Pfizer scientists had just released a paper essentially saying that Sinclairs work on sirtuins was bunk. When he finally got hold of the document himself, Sinclair couldnt believe his eyes. It wasnt clear to me at all that we were wrong, he told me. We had data that showed we were right.

And yet, it wasnt the first time Sinclairs science had been challenged. A couple of years after his initial groundbreaking yeast study on resveratrol, two of his former colleagues from Guarentes lab published a paper reporting on their inability to replicate it, suggesting his conclusions were wrong. A few years later, scientists from the pharma company Amgen also raised doubts, claiming Sinclairs findings were erroneous. The Pfizer paper, though, was different. Not only did one of the biggest pharma companies in the world claim he was wrong on resveratrol, it also stated his entire theory on sirtuins was completely off. In response, Sinclair publicly questioned whether the Pfizer scientists had made mistakes running their experimentwhich didnt exactly go over well. I was criticized for saying that Pfizer doesnt know how to make a molecule right, he explained.

As the scientific community continued to raise doubts and gossip behind his back, Sinclair sank to a dark place. I spent a week in bed, he told me. I couldnt get out. My lab shrunk to, like, four people. When I asked his assistant if she remembers what it was like when the Pfizer paper came out, she sighed, looked down, and shook her head from side to side: That was devastating.

Still, its hard to keep Sinclair down for long; after all, he lives by the very idea of never say die. When he finally got out of bed, he went back into the lab to prove his naysayers wrong. The day I visited his lab, he stood with his arms crossed and a look of satisfaction on his face as he showed me a framed copy of a 2013 scientific paper that he says settled the debate and proved he was right about resveratrol activating sirtuins. In it, he showed that when scientists genetically engineered cells to change a single amino acid on a sirtuin, resveratrol had no effect on the cells. In the control cells with intact sirtuins, however, resveratrol did have an effect.

Not everyone, though, was convinced. There are lots of people in the field who harbor suspicions [about Sinclairs science], one researcher told me. It is hard to explain how the same lab on multiple occasions over a decade or so can publish multiple pieces of data that other labs cant reproduce. Whats more, GlaxoSmithKline halted a Sirtris trial in humans because of potential negative side effects and then shut the company down altogether just five years after buying it. Today, resveratrol is known as the miracle drug that wasnt.

To Sinclairs credit, none of his scientific papers have ever been retractedand none of the people who spoke to me about their suspicions of Sinclair wanted their names used. One of them admitted that it might not be his data that critics object to, but rather the way Sinclair talks about his findings. While his colleagues in the aging field overwhelmingly stick to a safe script, describing their research as a quest to extend years of health, Sinclair talks freely and excitedly about extending mortality to 150 years by the end of the centuryto say nothing of death eventually becoming a rarityboth of which critics say there is zero science to support. From his exalted platform as a scientist featured on TV and in the New York Times, Sinclair is promising the world that one day soon well be able to get a shot that reverses aging, and when it wears off and the gray hairs sprout again, well simply get a booster. Does that sound like science fiction? Something that is very far out in the future? Sinclair asks readers in his book. Let me be clear: its not.

Even the title of his bookthe part that says we dont have to ageelicited an exasperated groan from the Harvard Medical School professor. What is wrong with the guy that he is compelled to do this? he asks. Seen in the best possible way, he is totally convinced that he is the savior of mankind developing the fountain of youth. But you dont have to hype to do that. Just let the facts play out. Even his friends call him out for how he talks about his science. David is a good friend, Austad says, but I do think hes been guilty of making excessive claims.

Despite the resveratrol fiasco, Sinclair hasnt shied away from making other grandiose promises. One of his more recent molecules of interest is called NMN. It is found in every living cell and boosts levels of something called NAD+, which regulates the mitochondria, or powerhouses, in all of our cells. NAD+ declines with ageunless, that is, scientists like Sinclair can find a way to increase it. Last year, he told Time magazine that NAD+ is the closest weve gotten to a fountain of youth.

If Sinclairs public comments push past the limits of what most scientists would say, it is also true that his accomplishments in the lab continue to push the limits of science itself. When I met with Sinclair, he told me he is gearing up to publish a paper about how his lab reversed aging in rodents. He described a series of experiments using gene therapy in which he and a group of scientists were able to restore vision in mice with glaucoma as well as in other mice who had their optic nerves (which cannot grow back after the newborn period) crushed. Sinclairs team had made a handful of old mice young again.

In light of the cutting-edge experiments and advances he is making in his lab, I was surprised that Sinclair also continues to study resveratrol. It seems so yesterday. When I asked about it, he assured me with a self-confident nod that he is still bullish on resveratrol. The 2013 paper, the one on his wall he believes vindicated him, didnt get the word out far and wide enough, he says. Thats why his lab did another experimentthis time deactivating a spot on the sirtuin protein in miceto show that resveratrol does, in fact, work. He tells me hes really looking forward to that study coming out to restore faith in resveratrol. And, it seems, perhaps to restore faith in Sinclair, too. When that one comes in, he says of the forthcoming paper, Im going to dropthe mike.

If Sinclairs public comments push past the limits of what most scientists would say, it is also true that his accomplishments in the lab continue to push the limits of science itself.

As Sinclair and I neared our destination in Worcester, I had my head down, furiously scribbling in my notebook, when I felt the car swerve abruptly to the right. I looked up to see Sinclair, visibly frustrated, struggling with the Teslas steering wheel. My car appears to have been set to Mad Max mode, he said in his pitch-perfect Australian accent. I promise not to get us killed. Then he added wryly, That would be ironic.

It would, indeed. After all, Sinclair is planning on being around for a lot longer than most people think they will. He convinced his dentist to fix some wear on his teeth, a procedure that she told him shed normally reserve only for teenagers. He dedicated his book to his great-great-grandchildren, whom he is very much looking forward to meeting.

To make it until then, he practices calorie restriction, eats a mostly vegetarian diet, and tries to avoid sugar and carbs. On weekends, he exercises at the gym and then sits in a hot sauna before plunging himself into an ice-cold pool, because temperature extremes also kick our cells survival instincts into action, he says. Sinclair tracks his biomarkers regularly and takes vitamin D, vitamin K2, and aspirin. And he takes three other substances each morning: resveratrol, NMN, and metformin, a diabetes drug currently being studied for its potential anti-aging effects. The problem, critics say, is that unlike cancer drugs, for instance, nearly anyone can buy something close to the NMN and resveratrol capsules Sinclair is downing at places like the local GNC, where theyre sold as supplements alongside multivitamins and protein powder.

Sinclair diligently points out that he is not a medical doctor; that he is not recommending anyone do what he does; and that there is no definitive evidence that any of it helps humans. Still, critics say that when a scientist such as Sinclair tells people what he is taking, it is nothing short of a celebrity endorsement, those caveats notwithstanding. In his defense, he told me he gets dozens of emails and messages every day from people asking him what theyor their petsshould be taking, and that he never makes recommendations. But its also hard to imagine people would write to ask him at all if he werent talking so publiclyand so oftenabout his daily regimen. I like David a lot. Were very good friends. However, I dont think that what hes doing is right, says Felipe Sierra, the director of the aging biology division at the National Institute of Aging. I dont think that people should try it on themselves. And if they do, they shouldnt publicize it. Researchers do have a responsibility toward the public, and we should be careful about what we tell the public.

Sinclair knows he ruffles feathers: At one point during our day together, I asked him where his family members get their pills from. He raised his eyebrows at me and then said in a Big-Brother-might-be-listening kind of whisper that we were in territory that could get me called into the office, and it wouldnt be the first time. Still, he says he is prepared to deal with the consequences of being honest.

Whats more, Sinclair says he has nothing to do with the supplement industry, a claim that is mostly true. All of the companies he has started are working on creating FDA-approved drugs, not supplements. True, years ago he did work as a paid adviser to a resveratrol supplement company, Shaklee, though Sinclair says he cut off that relationship when the company started using his name for marketing.

Even if Sinclair isnt directly profiting when people buy supplements after hearing him speak, he may still be benefiting financially from talking about what he takes. Think about what the optics would be if someone says, Ive got this great potential therapeutic intervention, and then says theyre not taking it. Suddenly you are putting up red flags about your own science, Olshansky, the Illinois professor, says. So I can see why somebody who has a financial interest in a molecule would take it and brag about it. If it helps them get more money to do research, that may be one of the reasons they do it. Sierra, for his part, admits that as much as he dislikes when Sinclair shares what he is taking, it is probably good for commercial purposes.

Whether or not his personal habits have helped Sinclairs bottom line, theres no doubt hes raised a ton of funding and used it to start a slew of companies. Seven of them fall under the umbrella of Life Biosciences, a Boston holding company he cofounded with Australian investor Tristan Edwards with the goal of building clinical-stage biotech companies by harnessing the best science in the aging field. Edwards had been interested in the longevity space and searched for a scientist to work with. He had a call with Sinclair and was so convinced by what he heard that before he got off the phone, he had already booked a flight to Boston. The firm raised $25 million while in stealth mode in 2017 and has since raised $500 million more.

Another company, MetroBiotech (which falls under the holding company EdenRoc Sciences), is pursuing drugs inspired by the NAD+ booster NMN. Thats the one we were on our way to visit when Sinclairs Tesla tried to kill us. Upon our arrival, two men looking slightly disheveled and both wearing Hawaiian shirts greeted us; these were the organic chemists tasked with developing molecules that may one day become an FDA-approved drug. As they took me back to their lab, I noticed the paunch on one of them, the wrinkles on the other, and the fact that what little hair either of them had left on their heads was somewhere between gray and white. I lowered my voice and asked, So are you guys, you know, taking the stuff?

Of course not. We are scientists! one of them exclaimed, looking at me like I was the mad scientist in the room.

It doesnt take a PhD to know that the fact that two guys who arent taking NMN look old proves absolutely nothing. But it did make me feel a little more hopeful to learn that they were not. And the funny thing is that later in the day, when I asked Sinclair why he takes unapproved drugs knowing that there could be risks (and how much it pisses people off), he said the very same thing: I take them because I am a scientist.

Then, in total deadpan, he gave me another reason.

And because I would like to outlive my enemies.

David Sinclair with his wife, Sandra Luikenhuis, at the Time 100 party after the publication named him one of the worlds most influential people in 2014. / Getty Images

Sinclair and I were supposed to be at the gym at 5 p.m. to meet up with his 12-year-old son, Ben, and his about-to-be-80-year-old father. Because we were running late, he asked his wife to send his gym clothes with his dad. When we arrived, Sinclair came out of the locker room in his dress shoes. His wife, despite taking NMN herself, had forgotten to send his sneakers. Luckily, the trainer had an extra pair, and the Sinclair family got down to business.

First up were dead lifts. Ben had a go and did pretty well for a kid his age. Then Sinclair went. He started to wince midway into the second set but made it through. Finally, his father had his turn, dead-lifting 95 and then 115 pounds like it was nothing. The trainer told me most of his 80-year-old clients are working on maintaining their balance and lifting themselves out of chairs. Sinclairs dad is killing it in the gym. Well, I suppose the only thing this proves is how useless I am, Sinclair told me, frowning.

Of course, he is hoping it means something else. His father has been taking NMN for two years, and since starting, Sinclair said, it has changed his life, his attitude, and his energy levels. It has returned to him his joie de vivre.

When I asked Sinclairs dad directly how the pills are going for him, I realized that Sinclair definitely did not get his salesmanship skills from his father. Cant tell, he told me flatly, with a shrug. But all my friends are dying or going downhill and Im not.

Not only are Sinclairs dad and wife taking NMN, but so are his two dogs. His younger brother grew gray hairs and developed wrinkles before he accused Sinclair of using him as a negative control in his little family experiment. Sinclair admits the thought did cross his mind, but blood is thicker than science, and now his brother is on the regimen, too. Even several of his graduate students are taking some of the pills. When the postmenopausal mother of one of those grad students also began taking it, she started menstruating again. (Perhaps unsurprisingly, Sinclair has a fertility company, too.)

There was one person who never got the chance to take NMN, however, and it seems to haunt Sinclair. His mother was diagnosed with lung cancer at age 50 and had a lung removed. She managed to live another 20 years with one lung, which Sinclair says he would like to think had something to do with the fact that she took resveratrol. At the end of her life, when she took a turn for the worse, Sinclair packed some NMN in his suitcase and boarded a flight to Australia. When he got there, she started doing so much better that the doctors took her off her respirator, and she never took the NMN. She died unexpectedly 12 hours later. I thought the NMN would save her, he admits. Wouldnt anybody do whatever they can to try to save their mother?

As their workout wore on, Sinclairs son Ben had something he wanted to tell me. He wanted me to know that he would like to continue his fathers work if he ever dies. I was distracted from the tenderness of this statement by the presence of a single preposition.

If? I asked.

He may never die, he said.

I shrugged and smiled, but inside I was thinking that if he isnt joking, someone is in for a real shocker. Earlier in the day, Sinclair told me he was such a straight-talker that he had ruined the illusion of Santa Claus for his childrenand yet here his son could be thinking his father might never die. Such is life in the Sinclair household.

Still, not everyone in the family wants to see people live forever. Sinclairs oldest daughter doesnt agree with his work and has zero qualms about letting her dad know it. She has asked him why, when previous generations have screwed up this planet so royally, he thinks its a good idea to have the people who did the damage hang around any longer. She is not the only one. Emory University bioethicist Paul Root Wolpe, for instance, has called the longevity field a narcissistic quest and points out that generational shifts are necessary for innovation, progress, and social change.

As if in response, Sinclairs book has an end section in which he delves into many ways to fix the world he wants to create. There is, he argues, a solution to everything in a reality where people live to 150overpopulation, inequality, natural-resource limitationsif you are as hopeful as he is. Just as I was finishing up this piece, in fact, scientists published a study linking optimism to longevitymeaning Sinclair could stand to add even more years to his life. Indeed, if I squint hard enough, I can practically see him growing younger before my very eyes.

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Has Harvard's David Sinclair Found the Fountain of Youth?

Anthony Galanda Highlights Living A Healthy Lifestyle and Achieving Success – Thrive Global

Anthony Galandais a born and bred New Yorker, with work experience as diverse as the city itself! Raised in the borough of Queens, Anthony has a diverse professional background in the fields of hospitality, retail, and real estate. His decision to switch careers led him to enroll in LaGuardia Community College (CUNY) as a Communications/Public Relations Major.

Anthony excelled academically at LaGuardia. He continuously earned and maintained a spot on the Deans List with a 4.0 GPA. He was inaugurated intoboth Phi Theta Kappa () and the National Communication Associations Sigma Chi Eta Honor Society.Anthony availed himself of the many extracurricular activities offered at LaGuardia, serving as the Social Media Coordinator of the Health and Nutrition Club. He showcased his stellar communication skills during his persuasive speech about healthy living, placing second in LaGuardias Annual Public Speaking Contest. Upon graduation, he earned his Associate of Arts degree with High Honors. His academic efforts awarded him the CUNYPathways Monetary Scholarship to pursue his baccalaureate degree.

Anthony Galanda chose to continue his education at CCNY, The City College of NY. He enrolled as a Communications Major, with a specialization in Advertising and Public Relations. During his junior year, Anthony interned at VMLY&R Miami as a junior account executive and gained valuable insight in the world of advertising and client relations. During his senior year, Anthony was inducted into CCNYs Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society ()andthe National Society for Leadership and Success. Anthony was a finalist in the 2020 Zahn Innovation Centers Startup Competition. He pitched a prototype and marketing strategy for his hospitality app, StaffToGO.

Anthony consistently maintained Deans List throughout his academic journey at CCNY and earned his Bachelor of Arts degree with High Honors from CCNY. As a recent college grad, Anthony Galanda is excited to pursue a career in his field. With his previous experience in client relations and account management, he is ready to begin his future career in corporate communications and advertising!

What do you love most about the industry you are in?

What I love the most about the industry I am in is that it allows us to begin tailoring advertising campaigns to fit a clients needs and help them better reach a larger audience. Advertising helps bring a companys mission to life through both words and art. Working for companies I am already passionate about is a bonus and sparks my creative thought process.

What does a typical day consist of for you?

I would say that a typical day could consist of many things. I often enjoy playing tennis, living a healthy lifestyle, following stock trends, keeping up with the advertising/public relations industry, staying organized, riding my electric scooters, renting exotic cars, and trying new foods/restaurants.

What keeps you motivated?

I get motivated by traveling to places I have never been. The world has a lot to offer and I love exploring new places. Warm weather and sunshine keep me going and in the best mood possible. Also, improving as a tennis player and becoming the best I can be is the ultimate motivation.

How do you motivate others?

I encourage them to live in the present moment and not let their past define them. Life is short and I motivate others to live their best lives by maintaining a positive attitude.

Where do you get your inspiration from?

I draw inspiration from those who are handicapped in any capacity that continue to carry out their lives without their limitations stopping them. Many of us often forget how many blessings we have in our life, and it all starts with our mental/physical health.

Who has been a role model to you and why?

My grandmother has been a role model to me with her hard work ethic, financial intelligence, and her strength of raising four children and two grandchildren.

How do you maintain a solid work life balance?

Time management is key to maintaining a solid work life balance. Equally prioritizing important deadlines at work, rest and relaxation, and physical/mental health is everything.

What traits do you possess that makes a successful leader?

Im charismatic, hardworking and organized. I encourage public speaking and am not shy to voice my opinion. I enjoy helping others succeed and feel good about themselves.

What suggestions do you have for someone starting in your industry?

I highly suggest being well versed in all social media platforms. The advertising industry is shifting to digital; it is important to be technologically sound.

What has been the hardest obstacle youve overcome?

Enrolling back in college as an adult. Its not how you start, but how you finish and now I have my bachelors degree.

What is one piece of advice that you have never forgotten?

You need a little bit of insanity to do great things. This applies to real life situations where you must step outside of your comfort zone sometimes to get amazing things done.

What is your biggest accomplishment?

Maintaining straight As in college while working multiple jobs.

Whats one piece of advice you would give to others?

I would tell people if that they can dream it, you can do it. Dont let anyone who gave up on their dreams talk you out of yours.

Outside of work, what defines you as a person?

My positive attitude and drive to succeed. What also defines me is my ability of making people laugh and being a pleasure to be around.

What trends in your industry excite you?

I am excited by the shift to digital advertising (social media) as opposed to traditional advertising methods (billboards etc). There are so many different ways to reach an audience through the digital sector.

Explain the proudest day of your professional life.

My proudest moment was achieving my bachelors degree and creating/pitching a prototype of my hospitality app idea StaffToGO, in the 2020 Zahn Innovation Center Startup Competition.

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Anthony Galanda Highlights Living A Healthy Lifestyle and Achieving Success - Thrive Global

Taking heart medications? Don’t forgo healthy habits – Harvard Health

Published: May, 2020

People may let healthy eating and exercise habits slide after starting prescription heart medications, according to a study in the February 18 Journal of the American Heart Association.

The study involved more than 40,000 Finnish people whose average age was 52. From 2000 to 2013, researchers surveyed them at least twice every four years about their body mass index and their exercise, smoking, and drinking habits. They used pharmacy records to track if the participants began taking blood pressure drugs or statins.

People who started taking those heart-protecting drugs were more likely to gain weight and exercise less than those who didn't take the medications.

Because the study involved mostly white women living in Finland (where a large public health effort to prevent diabetes began during the study period), the findings may not be generalizable to all people. Still, it's a good reminder to be vigilant about healthy habits, especially after starting heart medications.

Disclaimer:As a service to our readers, Harvard Health Publishing provides access to our library of archived content. Please note the date of last review or update on all articles. No content on this site, regardless of date, should ever be used as a substitute for direct medical advice from your doctor or other qualified clinician.

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Taking heart medications? Don't forgo healthy habits - Harvard Health

Healthy Living: Mother unprepared for first encounter with special education – Norwich Bulletin

By Kathleen Stauffer, For The Bulletin

Dawn remembers the bad old days.

Her son Jaime, now an adult working as The Arc Eastern Connecticuts professional advocate, had just entered first grade. I was not prepared for the school not to educate him, she says. They accepted him. They all thought he was adorable. He got away with anything. They treated him and others in his class like babies.

I have to say, I know these people meant well, she says. But the philosophy was very different then. They had kids with IDD, Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, sit on the floor and sing songs, and I wanted my son to get an education. He could hold a pencil and write his name. At a meeting with school administrators, Dawn insisted that Jaime receive proper schooling, but she didnt feel heard. So, I got up and walked out.

It is very different now. Parents have more of a voice. And I know some pretty strong parents. I was at the Special Olympics talent show rehearsal last night. And I just stood there and looked around and saw all those parents who have worked so hard to get their kids up there on stage.

There was a time, about 70 years ago, that public schools turned children with IDD away. Ignorance led many educators to conclude that people with IDD couldnt learn.

Angered and fully aware that their children could learn, parents all over the country founded educational programs for their children with IDD. The movement took off when country and western star Dale Evans wrote a book called Angel Unaware about her daughter, Robin Elizabeth, who had Down syndrome. Evans donated all book royalties to this new national parents organization, The Arc of the United States.

Like Dawn and other Arc parents, Evans changed lives forever by speaking on behalf of children with IDD and encouraging parents to demand equal treatment for their children.

Dawn says parents and people with IDD must be tenacious. Dont give up, she says. Dont ever give up!

Note: The Special Olympics talent show at Killingly High School slated for April has been canceled.

Kathleen Stauffer is chief executive officer of The Arc Eastern Connecticut. For more information on The Arcs microbusinesses, go to http://www.TheArcECT.org. For more articles by this author, visit http://www.kathleenstauffer.com

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Healthy Living: Mother unprepared for first encounter with special education - Norwich Bulletin

Healthy living: Three training trends set to take off in 2020 – The South African

Here are some training trends for 2020. The best part is, for most of them you dont even need a gym (which is good news considering the lockdown situation).

Some of the biggest fitness and training trends of the year in 2019 included high-intensity interval training (HIIT), wearable workout technology and garments like waist trainers, as well as all-natural protein bars.

According to leading market analysts, these are the main wellness patterns of 2020:

Working out at home is more innovative and fun than ever in 2020. Smart technology goes way beyond workout bikes; this area has expanded exponentially and now contains a variety of fitness equipment, including advanced rowing machines and weightlifting devices. There are also full-length exercise mirrors that act as a personal trainer its a whole different type of personal training.

Home fitness lets users pick whatever class they want, any time they want. Trainers who dont have access to equipment have the benefit of following popular and trusted YouTube trainers. There are plenty of video challenges and follow-along videos on YouTube.

Household exercises have a lot of opportunities you can do them indoors on a rainy day, they dont need you to travel far after a long day at work and they are extremely easy.

Active recovery is a low-intensity fitness activity performed after a hard workout or physical activity is done. As paradoxical as it may seem, exercising at a lower intensity rather than remaining still is the best way to recover from a marathon or any other sports competition.

Since active recovery encompasses anything and everything that can help Canadians feel better, move better and perform better, it should be something you focus on daily, said Mo Hagan, chief operating officer of canfitpro.

Examples of active recovery training are:

Although this isnt a recent trend, group training has gone to another level in 2020. Apart from training, it gives friends, family and couples time to bond while exercising.

Despite the influx of boutique group training offerings, it is no wonder that group training made it to this list. Group exercise instructors educate, guide and inspire individuals through intentionally planned group exercise classes. Group exercises are designed to be motivational, beneficial and effective for people who are at different levels in fitness, with coaches using coaching strategies that help individuals in their classes achieve their health and fitness goals.

If you dont know which trend youd like to follow, you can find a health coach that can advise you, or select a workout that best suits your fitness level.

This content has been created as part of our freelancer relief programme. We are supporting journalists and freelance writers impacted by the economic slowdown caused by #lockdownlife.

If you are a freelancer looking for a small fee to contribute to The South African,read more here.

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Healthy living: Three training trends set to take off in 2020 - The South African

Houstonians with disabilities know the only way through isolation is through – Houston Chronicle

In the midst of a pandemic, examples of mental fortitude and courage can be found. Yet social media is filled with anxious people wondering who is a coronavirus carrier, who can be trusted, how to get through this time of relative isolation. We are social creatures, so the longer shelter-in-place orders stretch on, the more our untested isolation skills will be frayed.

Some know all too well what it takes to cope with isolation: Houstonians with disabilities. For much or all of their lives, those with a wide variety of conditions have had to retreat because their bodies or minds required it for their health, or a mistrusting society gave them the side eye and made them feel othered.

People with disabilities are in a unique position to offer advice to Greater Houston residents who are new to feelings of isolation and a shaky sense of well-being. The Houston Chronicles A Special World asked six such individuals for their perspective on resilience in the era of COVID-19. Here are their responses.

38, father and former adaptive tennis professional; birth defect resulting in amputation above right knee and tethered spinal cord syndrome diagnosed in childhood, neurological and immunodeficiencies

During these times and other disruptions of daily life, I have had to remember to pace myself. I take a clay-court mentality: Life is slower and requires patience!

Growing up living with a disability taught me the importance of keeping a positive mindset. It can prove challenging especially, in my case, during disruptions that can result from medical complications.

I have learned to acknowledge that there will be things that are out of my control. While I may not be able to do certain things anymore, I am still able to do other things that make me happy. In addition, make sure to be open with others, no matter how humbling. There is definitely a balancing act of self-reliance with when to ask for help.

Something prevalent in the adaptive community that others may be experiencing for the first time, or at a more extreme level than before, are feelings of loneliness from new social distancing guidelines. It can be very taxing, mentally and emotionally. It is OK to talk about your feelings. I have found seeking help from a licensed therapist as well as confiding in a friend or family member very helpful. You are not alone.

I hope that after we begin to settle into the new normal, we all have a new sense of self, life and humility to continue to be better humans.

40, IT professional for the Census Bureau who also analyzes convict-leasing historical research data for the Texas Criminal Justice Coalition; autism (Asperger Syndrome) diagnosis at 29

For a crowd is not company; and faces are but a gallery of pictures; and talk but a tinkling cymbal, where there is no love.

MORE A SPECIAL WORLD: Friendswood woman develops a teddy bear to empower nonverbal children

This was spoken by Francis Bacon in the 16th century. People with disabilities often find themselves in exile in their own homeland. Thanks to the coronavirus, people will get a deeper insight into what one who is isolated may feel like left out for no other reason than being different.

Its like Quasimodo, the main character in The Hunchback of Notre Dame. From a distance, he would get to see his neighbors celebrate, engage, interact and he wasnt welcomed. The blessing in this time is to view life from a different perspective, and what you do with that information is entirely up to you.

My hope and prayer is everyone will grow from this experience. My advice is to celebrate and give thanks.

19, native Houstonian, performer with Theatre Under The Stars The River and disability advocate who has appeared on The View and Great Day Houston; cerebral palsy from premature birth

I dont allow my disability to define me in or out of these unusual times that we find ourselves in right now.

My life has thrown me many curveballs, but the best way I know how to deal with them is to take it one day at a time and use it to my advantage. To lift me up and try harder the next time. Even through these challenging times, we must be as strong as we can and dont let it bring you down.

As someone in the special-needs community, I think the one thing that all of us, even typical people, are struggling with is life without a schedule. Filling your days with activities that you enjoy at home seems to make the days go by faster. Yes, its been challenging through this new normal, but I really hope we learn to be more compassionate to others and appreciate the little things a lot more.

71, directs the independent living research program at TIRR Memorial Hermann and is professor of biomedical informatics and rehabilitation at UTHealth, as a policy expert was key in drafting the Americans with Disabilities Act; spinal cord injury in college

In some respects, people with disabilities are better prepared to shelter in place than those without disabilities. More than two-thirds of people with disabilities were unemployed before the pandemic struck; more than half live below the poverty line; and many have limited transportation options. For these reasons and more, people with disabilities are generally accustomed to spending more time at home than other people.

MORE A SPECIAL WORLD: Rice Universitys Paralympic swimming hopeful has eyes on Olympics

People with disabilities are typically resilient, but this virus is testing all of us.

Practicing Stay Home and Stay Safe may create feelings of isolation and loneliness. Those of us with disabilities who have faced these sensations before would suggest: maintain a regular daily schedule; dont make a habit of sleeping in each day; put limits on your workday just as you would if you were at your ordinary workplace; if you cant do your work at home, adopt a hobby or take an online educational course; get outside at least once a day and exercise; use a web meeting platform like Zoom to meet with a family group or friends; and limit online and TV bingeing try reading a book. One other possibility no one should ignore: Consult an online mental health counselor or therapist for professional assistance coping.

54, Houston disability activist, author, artist and professional public presenter known as the Goddess on Wheels; disabled because of childhood polio

As COVID-19 forces all of us into isolation, society begins to adapt in order to survive. Social contact has moved to an online platform where virtual hugs will have to be soothing enough, and learning to navigate life almost entirely from home slowly begins to feel like the new normal.

For many people with significant disabilities, this has been the normal for their entire lives. We have been experts at surviving isolation. We have been experts in constructing networks of support and solidarity, existing in our disabled bodies while building bridges and communities whether we realize it or not. We have, all along, known how to endure the silence and invisibility imposed upon our disabled lives.

When people say there is no precedent to what they are having to live right now, they must remember that disabled peoples struggle for social inclusion our experience with having been isolated, shunned, silenced and sentenced to social invisibility is the precedent.

And what do we say to the nondisabled world that feels the blues of social distancing and isolation? Dont worry. We got you. You can lean on us, and learn from our survival.

32, architectural designer at PDR Corp.; autism (Asperger Syndrome) diagnosis at 27

I have autism and while I do enjoy being social, sometimes the outside world can be overwhelming. As a result, I retreat to my comfort zone. I have developed ways to cope in isolation. My autism superpower is my interest in art. Art is a healthy outlet and a constant companion.

In addition to having interests, I have a strong support system. No matter how short the correspondence, through technology we can feel less alone. I am transitioning to working from home. First, I had to find a work location in my apartment with minimal distractions and optimal natural lighting. (Besides) workspace, I developed new daily routines, which can be a challenge for many on the (autism) spectrum.

Take it one day at a time. Focusing on your routine and accomplishing your small goals can give you purpose.

A Special World shares programs and experiences by and for the disabled community in Greater Houston.

suzanne.garofalo@chron.com

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Houstonians with disabilities know the only way through isolation is through - Houston Chronicle

Dr. Nicole Saphier: Coronavirus projections this is what the models couldn’t measure – Fox News

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When we look back on how the COVID-19 pandemic affected the United States, it will be clear who led the charge to defeat it: the American people.

Less than two months ago, epidemiological modeling from the Imperial College of London suggested nearly 2 million Americans could die during the COVID-19 crisis. The earliest model from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) suggested the number of U.S. deaths couldrange from 200,000 to as many as 1.7 million.

Thanks to the ingenuity of Americans everywhere, we are currently proving them wrong.

BETSY MCCAUGHEY: CORONAVIRUS MASKS WHAT WORKS, NEW RULES AND EXPLAINING THE SHORTAGE

Now, in an update published lastweek, the University of Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) lowered its projection of total deaths from 68,841 to just over 60,308 (with an estimated range of 34,063 to 140,381).

Why were the prior models so off?

Models have no control over our country, but Americans do.

Epidemiological estimates can be useful tools but should not be over-interpreted as we need to allow them to be fluid, accounting for important and unanticipated effects, which makes them only useful in the short term. So, the models of last month, last week and maybe even yesterday will be wrong, because they underestimate the resolve of the American people.

The scientific side of modeling is straight-forward, but model outcomes vary extensively depending on the characteristics and transmission of a pathogen. In the case of COVID-19, the spread of the virus hinges on exactly what is done to stop cases from doubling, hence the stay-at-home orders to slow community transmission.

We are beating all the projections by taking common-sense steps to protect ourselves and the people we care for. Heres the thing: thats not something weve ever tried before.

The abysmal estimates were based on the reality that Americans frequently depend on doctors and medications to save them, rather than taking charge of reducing their individual risk of illness.We know this because of the alarming rate of preventable, chronic illness throughout the country.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), six in 10Americans live with at least one chronic disease, such as heart disease, stroke, canceror diabetes. Not only are these the leading driver in health care costs in our country, but they also are the leading causes of death and disability.

The nations aging population, coupled with existing risk factors (tobacco use, poor diet, sedentary lifestyles), coupled with medical advances that extend longevity, tell us that the chronic disease problem will only worsen as our population ages. A recent Milken Institute analysis estimates that modest reductions in unhealthy behaviors could delay or evenprevent 40 million cases of chronic sickness per year.

Although it feels like an eternity, less than a month after stay-at-home orders were enacted, the courageous actions of our country have made a tremendous difference as we see promising signs of flattening the curve

If we learn how to effectively prevent chronic conditions through lifestyle changes, thus avoiding hospitalizations and serious complications, the health care system would be better equipped to handle any recurrent spikes in COVID-19 cases and future pandemics. Not to mention that decreasinghospitalizations would reduce the cost burden we all share in addition to improving the quality of life for millions of Americans.

Although it feels like an eternity, less than a month after stay-at-home orders were enacted, the courageous actions of our country have made a tremendous difference as we see promising signs of flattening the curve. But we cant do this forever.

As our unemployment is ticking closer 20 percentfrom people staying home, we must be reminded of a grave reality: based on information from the National Bureau of Economic Research: with every 1 percentincrease in unemployment, we can see up to a 3.6 percentincrease in overdose deaths and a 1 percentincrease in suicide across the country.If unemployment hits 32 percentthe worst-case scenario prediction of a St. Louis Federal Reserve economistsome 77,000 Americans may die in addition to those who were stricken with COVID-19.

Just as the threat of staying shut down is absolute, the danger in reopening and relaxing measures, however, is also very real. Singapore experienced a spike in new COVID-19 cases lastweek after initially seeing major successes as a result of its lockdown measures. Thiscould happen here as well

But a national shutdown is not a sustainable long-term solution.

That means, absent a vaccine or effective COVID-19 treatment, reopening must be gradual andspecific to individual states.Reopening measures can only occur when the rate of new infections has slowed substantially, hospital capacity is manageable, effective outpatient testing is in place and we are consistently able to contact trace and quarantine the infected and potentially infected.

In addition to securing adequate personal protective equipment, another key to maintain hospital preparedness for reopening is by lessening the burden on the system through healthy lifestyle choices such as improving our diets, increasing physical activity and getting our recommended wellness screenings for early disease detection.

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Social distancing measures and healthy behaviors recommended by health officials dont just lower disease mortality, they can reduce a pandemics long-term adverse economic effects.Unlike the secular stagnation that plagued America during the Great Depression, our country is chomping at the bit to reopen with people even protesting to be able to leave their homes again.

As our government attempts to put together the most appropriate opening strategy, the best economic package will be the best public health one. Even when stay-at-home orders are lifted the only way to improve the economy is to make Americans feel safe enough to go out and spend money rather than continuing to remain in the protection of their homes.

Until we have a vaccine ortreatment to lessen the severity of this novel coronavirus, we must rely onwhat we do have right now:theamazing ingenuity of the American people.I look tothe private business sector to implement measures that ensure proper sanitization, enhancecontact-free delivery and payment systems, and encourage digital platform utilization to limit unnecessary crowding of small spaces.

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For the rest of us, we can all contribute to a healthier America through continued useof social distancing, common-sense measures likeavoiding large crowds, staying home when sick, washing hands frequently throughout the day, wearing a mask if in close contact with others, and living the healthiest lives we can.

The renaissance will come, and it will be in an America with better hygiene and less chronic disease. I am counting on you, America, to make it happen.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE BY DR. NICOLE SAPHIER

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Dr. Nicole Saphier: Coronavirus projections this is what the models couldn't measure - Fox News

This is really why most people go vegetarian – Ladders

Vegetarianism has become more and more popular in recent years. But, why are so many people making the switch and avoiding burgers, chicken, and pork? If you asked a long-time vegetarian why they originally adopted such a lifestyle, the most common answers youll hear would be related to concern for the environment and climate change, animal rights, or just looking after ones health.

What about non-vegetarians, though? Researchers from the University of California, Davis set out to uncover what motivates most meat-eaters to put the steak knife down. Somewhat surprisingly, they found that individual health is by far the main motivator for people to try out a vegetarian lifestyle.

A stereotype has emerged over the past ten years or so of vegetarians and vegans being particularly judgmental of carnivores, but these findings dont back up that depiction. Reasons connected to animal rights or the environment werent nearly as common among surveyed study participants.

In all, 8,000 people were surveyed for this research across both the United States and Holland. Various age groups and ethnicities were represented as well.

Of course, these results shouldnt be totally shocking. There are tons of recent studies that have linked meat consumption, particularly red meat, to an increased risk of many health problems. Cardiovascular issues, like a predisposition towards a heart attack or stroke, are especially connected to meat-eating.

So, most people switch to vegetarianism for their health. Okay, but what keeps people committed to these diets? Heres where the study starts to become a paradox.

While more people try out being vegetarian for their health, those who are motivated by ethical reasons (animals, climate change) tend to be much more committed to a vegetarian diet. Just like any other diet, it seems many people just cant resist the occasional cheeseburger or chicken parm hero.

The most common reason people say they would consider being vegetarian has to do with health However, people driven primarily by health motives may be least likely to respond to vegetarian advocacy, in general, says study co-author Christopher J. Hopwood, professor of psychology, in a university release.

Professor Hopwood goes on to ponder what these findings mean for vegetarian advocacy groups and advertising campaigns. Should they be emphasizing the health benefits of avoiding meat, or focusing more on the good it will do for the planet and animals? A health-minded campaign may encourage more people to try vegetarianism, but messaging centered on the ethics of the movement will likely result in more life-long vegetarians.

The studys authors suggest a combination of campaigns that target different beliefs among different people. The surveys also noted that most people who cited health as their primary reason associated going vegetarian as a way to achieve a more conventionally attractive body. Conversely, those who went vegetarian due to their beliefs were observed to be more artistic, open to new experiences, curious, and likely to volunteer for causes close to their heart. With these findings in mind, vegetarian advocacy groups may want to advertise health benefits at gyms, while emphasizing the ethical benefits of vegetarianism at concerts or museums.

The same idea can be applied to online awareness measures as well; fitness messaging for people who showed an interest in exercise and ethics-based campaigns for people who showed an interest in the arts, stopping climate change, etc.

These findings just go to show that its never a good idea to lump an entire group of people together and assume they all think alike. Its clear that vegetarians vary in their personal beliefs and reasons for avoiding meat.

The full study can be found here, published in PLOS ONE.

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This is really why most people go vegetarian - Ladders

Coronavirus threat to global Testosterone Replacement Therapy Market Research Report Released with growth, latest trends & forecasts till 2031 -…

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A new market study published by Market Research Reports Search Engine (MRRSE) suggests that the global Testosterone Replacement Therapy market is slated to grow at a CAGR of ~XX% over the assessment period (20XX-20XX). Further, the report takes into consideration the different market aspects that are likely to shape the future prospects of the Testosterone Replacement Therapy market by assessing the historical and current market trends.

The Testosterone Replacement Therapy market study is a valuable tool for market players and emerging players who are vying to solidify their presence in the global Testosterone Replacement Therapy market. Further, the report ponders over the underlying trends and price trend analysis that are likely to impact the growth potential of the Testosterone Replacement Therapy market during the assessment period.

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Coronavirus threat to global Testosterone Replacement Therapy Market Research Report Released with growth, latest trends & forecasts till 2031 -...

He Should Do Something Other Than Thinking About Himself Cris Cyborg Hits out at Dana White – Essentially Sports

Cris Cyborg and Dana White never had a steady relationship. The former UFC Womens Featherweight champion is not very fond of Dana Whites idea of Fight Island.

The current Bellator Womens Featherweight champion, Cyborg, appeared on The No-Sports Report with Jensen Karp. She mentioned that the rules of quarantine are uniformly applicable to everyone. Furthermore, Justino accused her former boss, Dana White, of being self-obsessed.

Everybody has to be quarantined, said Justino. Its the rules for everyone. You know a lot of people dont want to be home. A lot of people are struggling now, and I think he should do something (other) than just think about himself and boxing and MMA fights. I think its better to wait, like everyone respect everyone,she added.

Dana White floated the idea of fight island when state regulations forced him out of conducting events. However, it has remained an enigmatic thought as of yet. Fighters and analysts have discussed at lengths about it. But until there is a much more concrete announcement, there will be a shroud of uncertainty over the concept.

Before Cyborg, Bellators President Scott Coker also expressed his displeasure with Whites plans. Danas competitor, Scott, asserted that there are more important things in life right now than fighting. He also ridiculed the idea by comparing it to the Bruce Lee movie, Enter the Dragon.

The Bellator Womens Featherweight champ kept her views in-sync with that of the organization she fights for. She added that the plan can put the health of many people in jeopardy.

A fighter steps inside the Octagon all alone. However, the preparation before the fight involves interaction with other people. Furthermore, the fighter will get back together with his/her family after fighting.

Therefore, all such interactions will bring along with them the risk of the spread of the virus.

Even though the fighters have to be together for training, you could say, OK, Im going to make an event now. Do you think if you (did) say, OK, Cris, youre going to have a fight, Im going to have to make my team?

You know, I have to put my team together. We are going to be together, training. Then you put the risk of the family around you. You know, I think you had to wait and have respect for the process. Be patient.

Cyborgs split with the UFC happened after her loss against Amanda Nunes. The Brazilian decided against renewing her contract. From the time she has been in Bellator, she had argued that her current employer is much more employee-friendly than the UFC.

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He Should Do Something Other Than Thinking About Himself Cris Cyborg Hits out at Dana White - Essentially Sports

Cris Cyborg Reveals Superfight but Not Where You’d Expect – Heavy.com

Bellators newly crowned womens featherweight champion Cris Cyborg still hopes to track down her white whale before calling it a career. Cyborg, whose real name is Cristiane Justino, revealed on The No-Sports Report podcast with Jensen Karp that shed love the chance to square off against Ronda Rousey in either a cage fight or pro wrestling ring.

Imagine if this happened, Cyborg said. The fans would go crazy I think is going to be great.

Cyborg and Rousey were once bitter rivals that seemed to be on a collision course. But what would have been one of the most massive superfights in womens MMA history was complicated by the fighters competing in different weight classes and then derailed after Rousey shockingly suffered stoppage losses to Holly Holm and Amanda Nunes.

Rousey retired from MMA after her last loss in 2016.

VideoVideo related to cris cyborg reveals superfight but not where youdexpect2020-04-15T14:09:53-04:00

While Cyborg said shed still be willing to face Rousey in MMA, it seems the 34-year-old Brazilian knows that the possibility of a Cyborg vs. Rousey fight at this stage is a longshot at best, and that her top chance at getting her hands on Rousey would be in a pro wrestling ring.

Its going to be nice, you know, I think its cool, Cyborg said. If, you know, we have the opportunity to have [the match] in MMA, to have the opportunity to in pro-wrestling, I think is going to be great.

Rousey, 33, was one of the highest-paid WWE performers between 2017 and 2018 before taking time off from the grind to be with her family. While shes been in the news as of late for what some consider dissing WWE fans and the sports entertainment business as a whole, its also possible shes been leaning into inflammatory comments as part of a return storyline.

And it sounds as if Cyborg would love to be part of that return.

Yeah, Im open to do it, Cyborg said. I know shes already there. I know she likes to do it, and here we can do something cool. I think for the fans, for them, I think its going to be very cool. Epic.

Follow the Heavy on UFC Facebook page for the latest breaking news, rumors and content!

Cyborg said she was up to the challenge that competing as a WWE superstar would bring. While shes currently one of Bellators divisional champs and also has plans to compete as a boxer against undisputed welterweight champion Cecilia Braekhus, Cyborg also aims someday to add pro wrestling to her impressive list of credentials so long as it doesnt interfere with her true calling as a mixed martial artist.

I like challenging my career and my fans like that, Cyborg said. They know theyre gonna follow me wherever were going, but I dont think Im going to let us stop doing MMA for the WWE, but if we could have the opportunities be there at some point in my career, it is going to be nice.

READ NEXT: Ronda Rousey Rips WWE Fans and Wrestlers

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Cris Cyborg Reveals Superfight but Not Where You'd Expect - Heavy.com

Scientists create tiny devices that work like the human brain – The Independent

A major computing breakthrough has allowed researchers to develop ultra-low power devices capable of operating at the same voltage level as a brain.

Scientists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst figured out a way to use biological, electricity conducting filaments to make an electronic memory device known as a memristor.

Using protein nanowires developed from the bacterium Geobacter, the scientists realised they could create a device as power-efficient as a human brain synapse. Details of the new technology were published in the journalNature Communications.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

"People probably didn't even dare to hope that we could create a device that is as power-efficient as the biological counterparts in a brain, but now we have realistic evidence of ultra-low power computing capabilities," said computer engineering researcher and co-author Jun Yao.

"It's a concept breakthrough and we think it's going to cause a lot of exploration in electronics that work in the biological voltage regime."

Russia has launched a humanoid robot into space on a rocket bound for the International Space Station (ISS). The robot Fedor will spend 10 days aboard the ISS practising skills such as using tools to fix issues onboard. Russia's deputy prime minister Dmitry Rogozin has previously shared videos of Fedor handling and shooting guns at a firing range with deadly accuracy.

Dmitry Rogozin/Twitter

Google celebrates its 21st birthday on September 27. The The search engine was founded in September 1998 by two PhD students, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, in their dormitories at Californias Stanford University. Page and Brin chose the name google as it recalled the mathematic term 'googol', meaning 10 raised to the power of 100

Google

Chief engineer of LIFT aircraft Balazs Kerulo demonstrates the company's "Hexa" personal drone craft in Lago Vista, Texas on June 3 2019

Reuters

Microsoft announced Project Scarlett, the successor to the Xbox One, at E3 2019. The company said that the new console will be 4 times as powerful as the Xbox One and is slated for a release date of Christmas 2020

Getty

Apple has announced the new iPod Touch, the first new iPod in four years. The device will have the option of adding more storage, up to 256GB

Apple

Samsung will cancel orders of its Galaxy Fold phone at the end of May if the phone is not then ready for sale. The $2000 folding phone has been found to break easily with review copies being recalled after backlash

PA

Apple has cancelled its AirPower wireless charging mat, which was slated as a way to charge numerous apple products at once

AFP/Getty

India has claimed status as part of a "super league" of nations after shooting down a live satellite in a test of new missile technology

EPA

5G wireless internet is expected to launch in 2019, with the potential to reach speeds of 50mb/s

Getty

Uber has halted testing of driverless vehicles after a woman was killed by one of their cars in Tempe, Arizona. March 19 2018

Getty

A humanoid robot gestures during a demo at a stall in the Indian Machine Tools Expo, IMTEX/Tooltech 2017 held in Bangalore

Getty

A humanoid robot gestures during a demo at a stall in the Indian Machine Tools Expo, IMTEX/Tooltech 2017 held in Bangalore

Getty

Engineers test a four-metre-tall humanoid manned robot dubbed Method-2 in a lab of the Hankook Mirae Technology in Gunpo, south of Seoul, South Korea

Jung Yeon-Je/AFP/Getty

Engineers test a four-metre-tall humanoid manned robot dubbed Method-2 in a lab of the Hankook Mirae Technology in Gunpo, south of Seoul, South Korea

Jung Yeon-Je/AFP/Getty

The giant human-like robot bears a striking resemblance to the military robots starring in the movie 'Avatar' and is claimed as a world first by its creators from a South Korean robotic company

Jung Yeon-Je/AFP/Getty

Engineers test a four-metre-tall humanoid manned robot dubbed Method-2 in a lab of the Hankook Mirae Technology in Gunpo, south of Seoul, South Korea

Jung Yeon-Je/AFP/Getty

Waseda University's saxophonist robot WAS-5, developed by professor Atsuo Takanishi

Rex

Waseda University's saxophonist robot WAS-5, developed by professor Atsuo Takanishi and Kaptain Rock playing one string light saber guitar perform jam session

Rex

A test line of a new energy suspension railway resembling the giant panda is seen in Chengdu, Sichuan Province, China

Reuters

A test line of a new energy suspension railway, resembling a giant panda, is seen in Chengdu, Sichuan Province, China

Reuters

A concept car by Trumpchi from GAC Group is shown at the International Automobile Exhibition in Guangzhou, China

Rex

A Mirai fuel cell vehicle by Toyota is displayed at the International Automobile Exhibition in Guangzhou, China

Reuters

A visitor tries a Nissan VR experience at the International Automobile Exhibition in Guangzhou, China

Reuters

A man looks at an exhibit entitled 'Mimus' a giant industrial robot which has been reprogrammed to interact with humans during a photocall at the new Design Museum in South Kensington, London

Getty

A new Israeli Da-Vinci unmanned aerial vehicle manufactured by Elbit Systems is displayed during the 4th International conference on Home Land Security and Cyber in the Israeli coastal city of Tel Aviv

Getty

Russia has launched a humanoid robot into space on a rocket bound for the International Space Station (ISS). The robot Fedor will spend 10 days aboard the ISS practising skills such as using tools to fix issues onboard. Russia's deputy prime minister Dmitry Rogozin has previously shared videos of Fedor handling and shooting guns at a firing range with deadly accuracy.

Dmitry Rogozin/Twitter

Google celebrates its 21st birthday on September 27. The The search engine was founded in September 1998 by two PhD students, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, in their dormitories at Californias Stanford University. Page and Brin chose the name google as it recalled the mathematic term 'googol', meaning 10 raised to the power of 100

Google

Chief engineer of LIFT aircraft Balazs Kerulo demonstrates the company's "Hexa" personal drone craft in Lago Vista, Texas on June 3 2019

Reuters

Microsoft announced Project Scarlett, the successor to the Xbox One, at E3 2019. The company said that the new console will be 4 times as powerful as the Xbox One and is slated for a release date of Christmas 2020

Getty

Apple has announced the new iPod Touch, the first new iPod in four years. The device will have the option of adding more storage, up to 256GB

Apple

Samsung will cancel orders of its Galaxy Fold phone at the end of May if the phone is not then ready for sale. The $2000 folding phone has been found to break easily with review copies being recalled after backlash

PA

Apple has cancelled its AirPower wireless charging mat, which was slated as a way to charge numerous apple products at once

AFP/Getty

India has claimed status as part of a "super league" of nations after shooting down a live satellite in a test of new missile technology

EPA

5G wireless internet is expected to launch in 2019, with the potential to reach speeds of 50mb/s

Getty

Uber has halted testing of driverless vehicles after a woman was killed by one of their cars in Tempe, Arizona. March 19 2018

Getty

A humanoid robot gestures during a demo at a stall in the Indian Machine Tools Expo, IMTEX/Tooltech 2017 held in Bangalore

Getty

A humanoid robot gestures during a demo at a stall in the Indian Machine Tools Expo, IMTEX/Tooltech 2017 held in Bangalore

Getty

Engineers test a four-metre-tall humanoid manned robot dubbed Method-2 in a lab of the Hankook Mirae Technology in Gunpo, south of Seoul, South Korea

Jung Yeon-Je/AFP/Getty

Engineers test a four-metre-tall humanoid manned robot dubbed Method-2 in a lab of the Hankook Mirae Technology in Gunpo, south of Seoul, South Korea

Jung Yeon-Je/AFP/Getty

The giant human-like robot bears a striking resemblance to the military robots starring in the movie 'Avatar' and is claimed as a world first by its creators from a South Korean robotic company

Jung Yeon-Je/AFP/Getty

Engineers test a four-metre-tall humanoid manned robot dubbed Method-2 in a lab of the Hankook Mirae Technology in Gunpo, south of Seoul, South Korea

Jung Yeon-Je/AFP/Getty

Waseda University's saxophonist robot WAS-5, developed by professor Atsuo Takanishi

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Waseda University's saxophonist robot WAS-5, developed by professor Atsuo Takanishi and Kaptain Rock playing one string light saber guitar perform jam session

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A test line of a new energy suspension railway resembling the giant panda is seen in Chengdu, Sichuan Province, China

Reuters

A test line of a new energy suspension railway, resembling a giant panda, is seen in Chengdu, Sichuan Province, China

Reuters

A concept car by Trumpchi from GAC Group is shown at the International Automobile Exhibition in Guangzhou, China

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A Mirai fuel cell vehicle by Toyota is displayed at the International Automobile Exhibition in Guangzhou, China

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Scientists create tiny devices that work like the human brain - The Independent