Imaging assessment of the right atrium: anatomy and function – DocWire News

This article was originally published here

Eur Heart J Cardiovasc Imaging. 2022 Jan 25:jeac011. doi: 10.1093/ehjci/jeac011. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

The right atrium (RA) is the cardiac chamber that has been least well studied. Due to recent advances in interventional cardiology, the need for greater understanding of the RA anatomy and physiology has garnered significant attention. In this article, we review how a comprehensive assessment of RA dimensions and function using either echocardiography, cardiac computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging may be used as a first step towards a better understanding of RA pathophysiology. The recently published normative data on RA size and function will likely shed light on RA atrial remodelling in atrial fibrillation (AF), which is a complex phenomenon that occurs in both atria but has only been studied in depth in the left atrium. Changes in RA structure and function have prognostic implications in pulmonary hypertension (PH), where the increased right ventricular (RV) afterload first induces RV remodelling, predominantly characterized by hypertrophy. As PH progresses, RV dysfunction and dilatation may begin and eventually lead to RV failure. Thereafter, RV overload and increased RV stiffness may lead to a proportional increase in RA pressure. This manuscript provides an in-depth review of RA anatomy, function, and haemodynamics with particular emphasis on the changes in structure and function that occur in AF, tricuspid regurgitation, and PH.

PMID:35079782 | DOI:10.1093/ehjci/jeac011

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Imaging assessment of the right atrium: anatomy and function - DocWire News

This Lost Star Nearly Played Izzie Stevens on Greys Anatomy Instead of Katherine Heigl – Yahoo Lifestyle

Even though Isobel Izzie Stevens was fired from Seattle Grace Hospital in the fifth season of Greys Anatomy, she remains one of the most beloved characters in the series. Despite her questionable decisions (just to name one, cutting Dennys LVAD wire), fans had a tough time adjusting to a show where Izzie wasnt a part of it.

Portrayed by Katherine Heigl, Izzie made her on-screen debut with the original five surgical interns, which included Meredith Grey (Ellen Pompeo), Cristina Yang (Sandra Oh), George OMalley (T.R Knight) and Alex Karev (Justin Chambers). Though devoted fans probably can't picture anyone else playing the surgical oncologist, there was another actress who almost snagged the role instead of Heigl.

Before joining the cast of ABCs hit drama Lost, Yunjin Kim could have been sporting a set of hospital scrubs instead of fighting for survival on a mysterious island.

In an exclusive interview with Entertainment Weekly, Kim revealed that she originally auditioned for the role of Izzie. At the time, she was transitioning her acting career from Korea to America. A secured deal with ABC allowed her to audition for some roles in the networks show lineup.

Lost was one of my first auditions but Grey's Anatomy was my first. I did not audition for Sandra Ohs character [Cristina], it was for Izzie. And I got a callback, she explained.

During that time, Kim also auditioned to play Kate Austen on Lost. Although she didnt get the part, creator and executive producer J.J. Abrams wrote the character, Sun-Hwa Kwon, specifically for her. Yet, Kim still wanted to keep Greys Anatomy on the table. But, she eventually changed her mind after making plans to film the pilot for Lost.

My agents were like, Why? You got cast on an amazing show. You should pack up and try to find a place in Hawaii. I was like, 'I don't know, I might like Greys Anatomy more. she added. I didn't want to put all my eggs in one basket. What if this falls out, you know? I had no guarantee. But anyway, I ended up not going back to the callback.

Story continues

In the end, the role went to Heigl, who played the character for six seasons. In 2010, she made her final on-screen appearance as Izzie and left the show.

As the saying goes, everything happens for a reason.

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RELATED: The 30 Best Greys Anatomy Episodes of All Time

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This Lost Star Nearly Played Izzie Stevens on Greys Anatomy Instead of Katherine Heigl - Yahoo Lifestyle

Anatomy of the Seventh NFC – The News International

The National Finance Commission is locked in a stalemate. Constitutionally mandated to give an Award for distribution of federal tax revenues, it has succeeded only sporadically. The last successful NFC Award was arrived at vide the 7th NFC in 2010. The 8th NFC expired on account of inaction. The 9th NFC went into freeze after the federal government put a proposal on the table for the provinces to finance some of federal expenditures which the provinces unanimously opposed.

The fate of the 10th NFC is uncertain. However, there appears to be a move to revive the federal governments case and an op-ed in The News (Is the NFC Award sustainable? January 22, 2022) has made a case in that regard. It begins by laying out four considerations: fairness, equity and flexibility to ensure financial functionality of the federal system.

There can be no dispute with any of the considerations; the problem arises with the interpretation of the federal income-expenditure balance sheet. The fiscal case is presented as follows: Budget 2021-22 estimates FBR tax collection at Rs5.8 trillion, of which Rs3.3 trillion is the provincial share vide the NFC Award, leaving the federation with Rs2.5 trillion. Adding Rs2.0 trillion of non-tax revenues, net federal revenues amount to Rs4.5 trillion.

Out of this amount, the federation has to undertake expenditures of Rs4.4 trillion for debt servicing and defence, leaving a balance of Rs0.1 trillion to cover a gap of over Rs3.5 trillion of expenditures on civil government, pensions, subsidies, PSDP and grants all of which have to be covered from loans. The conclusion drawn is that the 7th NFC Award is neither fair nor sustainable and the 18th Amendment has rendered it inflexible, resulting in a financially non-functional federal system.

Thenceforth, the novel argument: the federation encompasses the provinces, which it is implied renders them liable for sharing federal expenditures. To quote, the Rs3 trillion in debt service payments are made on debt taken by the state of Pakistan, not just Islamabad the Rs1.4 trillion for defense is to defend the state of Pakistan, not just Islamabad ....

All the above arguments are problematic. The 18th Amendment and the 7th NFC were concluded almost simultaneously. The understanding in the NFC where the federal government is also represented and is the chair was that the abolition of the Concurrent List would reduce federal expenditures and increase that of the provinces. Consequently, the change in the vertical shares reduction of the federal share and the concomitant increase in the share of the provinces was made on that understanding. However, the federal government has not followed up on that constitutional requirement. Accordingly, it is itself responsible for its financial dysfunctionality.

Rather, there is no restraint in federal fiscal profligacy. The first half of the current year shows double-digit growth in revenues and slowdown in development spending and yet a 29 percent jump in the budget deficit due to growth in current expenditure. The provinces cannot be asked to bear the burden of irresponsible federal fiscal mismanagement.

The argument that federal expenditures are not just for Islamabad is facetious and dangerous. If provinces are to bear their part of federal development expenditures, then there has to be an accounting over the last 50 years of the inter-provincial distribution of development expenditures and the corresponding debt service burden created thereof. If provinces are to bear their part of defence expenditures, then there can be a call for an accounting of inter-provincial composition of personnel.

Rather, if provinces are to pay for federal outlays, they can ask for the right to audit federal accounts. And if provinces are to pay for their share of federal expenditures, then the rationale for federal collection of revenues disappears and the case emerges for provinces to collect all tax and non-tax revenues and pay a percentage to Islamabad for its upkeep. In the event, the state of Pakistan will, de facto, convert from a federation into a confederation.

Any attempt to roll back the 18th Amendment or the 7th NFC Award also can be dangerous. The Sindh case offers an insight, where there has existed a nationalist movement with elements of secessionism, largely rooted in anti-Punjab sentiment. The 2010 devolution served to demolish this aspect of Sindhs politics. Evidence for this change emerges from the fact that post-2010, almost all nationalist parties and groups in Sindh aligned themselves with the Punjab-based PML-N and one of them even merged with it. Any undermining of the 18th Amendment or the 7th NFC Award is likely to provide fresh oxygen to the nationalist politics of yore.

The writer was a member of the 7th NFC and is now a member of the 10th NFC.

He tweets @kaiserbengali

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Anatomy of the Seventh NFC - The News International

These are the must-watch television shows of 2022: from Bridgerton to Anatomy of a Scandal – Tatler

No show does aristocratic escapism quite like The Great. Tatler cover star, Elle Fanning, and Nicholas Hoult, star as Empress Catherine the Great and Emperor Peter III, in this flamboyant and wild rendition of their lives. Superb comic timing and fiercely witty comebacks make for an energetic and hilarious retelling of the escapades (and weren't they just) of the imperial Russian couple. It is advised that you do not, however, watch this in the hope of educating yourself on the countrys colourful history as the show describes itself as an occasionally true story. The 10-part-series is an aesthetic feast of extravagance, and the costumes, setting and makeup provide a cocktail of over-the-top indulgence, so much so, that one begins to understand the incitement of a revolution, caused by the country's monumentous disparity of wealth, in the coming century

Season three of The Great will air in late 2022 on Hulu

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These are the must-watch television shows of 2022: from Bridgerton to Anatomy of a Scandal - Tatler

Anatomy of a Failure: The Demographic Mistargeting That Doomed Scion – InsideHook

Targeting youthful dollars has been a sound strategy for dozens of industries, with the marketing creation of the American teenager in the 1950s giving birth to a kaleidoscope of entertainment, fashion, food and lifestyle brands catering exclusively to the countrys newest consumers.

In the automotive world, things have always been a little different. New cars are expensive, often well beyond the budgets of even the hardest working high schooler or college student, which means advertising campaigns that skewed towards entry-level buyers traditionally took into account a wider demographic. It was easier, and more profitable, to make older folks feel young by feeding them a line or two about the rejuvenating effects of a vehicle than it was to build something exclusively for the sub-25 set.

In the early 2000s, Toyota turned this conventional wisdom on its ear by launching not just a sales campaign, but an entire brand built on a perceived gap in youth-oriented automobiles. Dubbed Scion, it was intended to sop up dollars from teens and twenty-somethings, who had given the Japanese manufacturer the cold shoulder due to its apparent frumpiness, by importing quirkier fare from the motherland. The effort even went so far as to target preteens before they had a chance to form their auto-brand affiliations.

Miraculously, for a very short period of time, the gambit worked. A few years after its debut, however, it became clear that Toyota had seriously miscalculated Scions appeal.

Once the initial surge of youth energy had been absorbed, a new demographic infiltrated showrooms, intent on rewarding themselves with a funky-looking, affordable automobile that would counter some of the salt-and-pepper streaking their once-full heads of hair.

Toyota was completely unprepared for the invasion of elders who suddenly appeared at dealerships, AARP membership cards in hand, eager to cash in on Scions no-haggle pricing model. Always wary of being told what they should find cool in the first place, and detecting the distinct odor of Werthers Originals wafting from the lot, the younger generations Toyota had once courted with Scion evaporated quickly, leaving behind leadership too stunned to steer into the skid.

The coolest toaster youve ever seen.

Toyota

At the outset, it appeared as though Toyota was making all the right moves with Scions market position. The quirky, toaster-shaped xB hatchback was an immediate success, followed closely by the flat-roofed tC coupe. After a soft launch in limited U.S. markets, by 2004 the company was selling 100,000 units total, a number that crested 173,000 sales by 2006.

So what if Scions full lineup numbers didnt match half a good year for the Toyota Camry? And pay no attention to the fact that the utilitarian xA subcompact trailed its more attractive siblings by as much as 75% on the sales sheet. There was plenty of time to convince Scions fresh-blooded customers to merge into Toyotas lane down the road and upgrade to something a little more adult (and more profitable). Until that day, Scions momentum seemed to be trending ever upward.

Then, the unthinkable. The brands sales began to plummet. In 2007, the company bled a quarter of its customers, and the following years global recession took most of the rest. By 2010, the company was down nearly 70% from where its tumble began, with a mere 45,678 units heading out the door.

What teen wouldnt want individual DVD players in the headrests?

Toyota

What happened? On the outside, it appeared as though the combination of an unpopular redesign of the standard-bearing xB (puffing it out past its previously cute proportions) plus the financial chaos of 2008-2009 were the primary culprits for Scions tumble. A closer look reveals a company that was unwilling to confront an uncomfortable truth about who its buyers actually were.

While it was accurate that back in 2004, the average age of its customer was roughly 35 years old (considerably younger than both Toyota and industry averages at the time), the crossover appeal of both the xB and the tC were already starting to dilute that figure. Media reports at the time were happy to turn the lens towards the drivers in their 40s, 50s, and 60s who were drawn in by Scion, a process that created a feedback loop that attracted the curiosity of an increasingly middle-aged clientele. In the space of just three years, Scions average customer was pushing 43, with some models skewing closer to 50.

At the same time as Scion was attracting a more experienced crowd, the initial groundswell of support from the younger set was fading as its occasionally bare-bones sales model failed to catch on. Instead of options, Toyota had counted on its extensive accessory program to fill coffers, figuring that a more energetic and engaged buyer base would want to soup up or otherwise customize their vehicles to reflect their individual tastes.

This revenue stream failed to materialize, as Toyota didnt understand that its original batch of Scion customers were attracted to bargain basement pricing and didnt necessarily have the means to explore fancy exhaust kits or decal sets. That went double for the increasingly silver-haired clientele elbowing out Scions disenchanted youth.

The compact Scion tC started off hot but sales numbers started to dip in 2007 and never fully recovered.

Toyota

By 2007, it should have been clear that Scions initial pitch to the under-30 crowd had failed in two crucial aspects.

Rather than seeing these vehicles as a blank canvas for self-expression via accessorizing, college grads and minimum-wage workers alike perceived the Scion badge as the mark of basic transportation, a budget-conscious sub-brand of Toyota rather than anything new or exciting. Toyota conflated youth spending on CDs and clothes in malls across America as an indication that maybe there was enough left under their mattresses for anything other than a reliable ride to work in the morning.

At the same time, Scions appeal to more experienced drivers should have made it abundantly clear that it was time to shift gears and start outfitting its automobiles with the kind of features that could keep this momentum going. The older crowd appreciated the easy-to-get-into xBs ride height and practicality, as well as the tCs comfortable ride matched with sporty looks that recalled their glory days without requiring them to open their wallets too wide. Packing more features into these models, including modern infotainment, and eliminating the accessory catalog in favor of a traditional options sheet could have helped squeeze lemonade from the increasingly sour sales reports.

Maybe Scion should have stuck with the original xB.

Toyota

As history has shown, Toyota made almost no effort to deviate from its youthful focus/senior results dichotomy. As late as 2011 it was introducing a (legitimately fun to drive) sports coupe in the form of the FR-S, followed by the curious iQ hatchback (a pint-size vehicle outshone by the more capable, and cheaper, Toyota Yaris), two vehicles that couldnt have been more different. The former was designed to tackle Japans mountain roads, while the latter seemed destined to be towed behind an RV being driven by a retired couple discovering America on a fixed income.

The message inside Scion showrooms was likewise confusing at best, as also-rans like the iA were sourced from Mazdas entry-level dregs and the iM did its best Corolla impression in the companys final years. The tC and the xB languished, each receiving only a single redesign during nearly a decade of existence. Young buyers had by that point defected almost entirely to Toyota, which had rehabbed its image and the lower limits of its lineup to compete harder for first-timers. Scion was dragged down-market in the eyes of potential shoppers even as the mothership accrued greater respect, with the net effect of Toyota stealing sales from itself.

Golden-agers continued to power Scions sales throughout this period, but
the returns were clearly diminishing; sales climbed briefly to 73,000 for 2012, yet as of the 2016 date of execution they had once again tumbled to just over 56,000 units. By the time younger buyers began to circle back to Scions rock-bottom pricing and claw the average customer age down from its mid-century crisis, it was too little, too late. With little money to be made from its unusual combination of skinflint Boomer devotees and blood-from-a-stone entry-level kids, Toyota shuttered Scion at the end of that year.

Not even the tantalizing FR-S could revive Scion.

Toyota

Corporate inertia is a powerful force, none more so than when its backed up by an unrealistic appraisal of how a market perceives a product. Unlike Amazons same-era Kindle, which wholeheartedly embraced the unexpected boon of elderly readers drawn by the devices promise of easy access to endless Danielle Steel ebooks, Toyota was unwilling to concede that it had missed the boat on who was really buying Scions.

How much did this single-minded focus hurt Toyota? In the long run, the effects were likely minimal. Scions portfolio was either based on JDM models or farmed out to corporate partners, which kept production costs minimal especially considering that only a million or so models were sold over the course of its entire existence. What few popular models were left after the shutdown were shunted off to other areas of the Toyota lineup, and with dealers sharing space on the Toyota lot the American investment was also far from onerous, making this an embarrassing, but not altogether financially painful experience for the automaker overall.

The true impact of Scions legacy is likely to be a kibosh on any future attempts to harness the alleged spending power of Millennials/Gen Z/whoevers next in line to bear the brunt of the generational hype. A sticker package here, an outdoorsy trim level there why not? An entire brand dedicated to scooping up dollars that simply dont exist?

Can we instead interest you in this fine, uh, Toyota?

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Anatomy of a Failure: The Demographic Mistargeting That Doomed Scion - InsideHook

Anatomy of a Clinical Trial: The Purpose, People, and Phases of Clinical Research – Pfizer

From 2010 to July 2021, ClinicalTrials.gov reports that the number of registered clinical trials more than tripled, growing from 100,208 to 384,288 and counting.1

The race for a COVID-19 vaccine made clinical trials headline news in 2020 and 2021, with thousands of people worldwide volunteering to take part in vaccine studies. Still, for some, the details of what clinical trials do and how they work may not be clear.

Judy Sewards, Head of Clinical Trial Experience at Pfizer, offers some insight into the purpose, people, and phases of clinical trials.

Clinical trials study whether potential new therapies are safe for humans and that they work as intended.

Some clinical trials study whether investigational therapies may help prevent disease, and others help scientists understand whether these therapies may treat disease. No matter the type of trial, Sewards says they all have one thing in common.

Clinical trials are designed to prioritize protecting the participants, she says. Trials are examined by entities that provide oversight of the research study, such as institutional review boards, data and safety monitoring committees, and regulatory agencies or health authorities, to ensure it stays that way throughout the trial.

Establishing and maintaining participants' trust is important to successfully conducting clinical trial studies, but it's just one piece of a much bigger commitment to upholding the highest ethical standards and principles in the exploration of safe and effective ways to prevent or treat diseases..

Clinical trials operate from an infrastructure of ethics, Sewards says. You don't want to design a clinical trial that disadvantages somebody from getting standard of care treatment theyd otherwise get if they werent in the trial. For example, in cancer we know that patients are unlikely to benefit from a placebo so this wouldnt generally be an option. Cancer trials typically compare the potential treatment with the existing treatment or add something new onto the existing treatment to see if the potential treatment an improve outcomesover what is available outside of the trial.

Behind every clinical trial is a team of people who keep research on track:

As a participant, your primary relationship is with the study doctor, the stucy coordinator, and the staff who work at the site where you go to participate in the trial, Sewards says.

Clinical trials take place in several phases. Phase 1 helps scientists understand the safety of a particular medicine or vaccine. Phase 2 begins to understand early efficacy. Phase 3 focuses on broader efficacy and dosing in preparation for health authority approval. And Phase 4 continues to monitor and collect data after a drug has been approved.

Your experience in the trial can vary by phase, Sewards says, adding that while early-phase drug trials often include healthy volunteers, late-stage research typically involves study activities for a specific health problem. In later phases, and depending on the type of study or disease, youre the patientbut instead of getting the current standard of care, you might receive a potential new solution.

No matter the phase, participants can expect to be monitored throughout their participation in the study. Monitoring can take place through checkups at the research site or remotely.

Ultimately, Sewards says participating in clinical research supports the greater good. Participants can help to bring progress to science, medicine, and, in some cases, to the world at large.

When you volunteer for a clinical trial, its a wonderful gift to society and something were all grateful for, including people that are patiently waiting for breakthroughs, she says.

And as more people take an interest in participating in clinical trials, it also stands to make research more diverse.

Representation across different ages, genders, races, and ethnicities in clinical trials makes a difference, Sewards says. The more diverse a group of clinical trial participants, the more we can learn about how a potential medicine or vaccine works within those populations. Participation in clinical trials by people of all backgrounds can make a difference by reducing health disparities among underrepresented populations and improving the development of medicines and vaccines for everyone.

When you participate," she says, "youre representing people like you.

References:

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Anatomy of a Clinical Trial: The Purpose, People, and Phases of Clinical Research - Pfizer

[Latest] Human Reproduction MCQ | Assertion | CaseStudy 2022

Human Reproduction MCQ Chapter 3

Below are some of the very important NCERT Human Reproduction MCQ Class 12 Biology Chapter 3 with Answers. These Human Reproduction MCQ have been prepared by expert teachers and subject experts based on the latest syllabus and pattern of term 1 and term 2. We have given these Human Reproduction MCQ Class 12 Biology Questions with Answers to help students understand the concept.

MCQ Questions for Class 12 Biology Chapter 3 are very important for the latest CBSE term 1 and term 2 pattern. These MCQs are very important for students who want to score high in CBSE Board.

We have put together these NCERTQuestions Human Reproduction MCQ for Class 12 Biology Chapter 3 with Answers for the practice on a regular basis to score high in exams. Refer to these MCQs Questions with answers here along with a detailed explanation.

1. Pouch in which testes are suspended outside the abdominal cavity is

(a) tunica albuginea(b) inguinal canal(c) epididymis(d) scrotum

2. Tested are extra abdominal in position. Which of the following is the most appropriate reason?

(a) Narrow pelvis in male(b) Special protection for testes(c) Prostrate gland and seminal vesicles occupy maximum space(d) Require lower temperature than normal body temperature

3. Temperature of human testes is

(a) 2-2.5oC below body temperature(b) 38oC (c) 33oC (d) 2.25oC above body temperature

4. Testicular lobules contain

(a) 3-5 seminiferous tabules(b) 2-6 seminiferous tabules (c) 5-7 seminiferous tabules(d) 3-5 seminiferous tabules

5. Approximate length and width of testis are

(a) 4-5 cm and 2-3 cm(b) 5-6 cm and 3-4 cm(c) 6-7 cm and 4-5 cm(d) 7-8 cm and 8-9 cm

6. The seminiferous tabules of the testis is lined on its inside by

(a) spermatocytes(b) spermatogonia(c) cells of Sertoli(d) both (b) and (c)

7. Interstitial cells secretes

(a) androgen(b) oestrogen(c) FSH(d) inhibin

8. The vas deferens recieves duct from the seminal vesicle and opens into urethra as

(a) epididymis(b) ejaculatory duct(c) efferent ductule(d) ureter

9. The vasa efferentia exit the testis and open into the A located along the B surface.

Here, A and B refer to

(a) A-rete testis, B-epididymis(b) A-epididymis, B-rete testis(c) A-epididymis, B-posterior(d) A-epididymis, B-anterior

10. Choose the correct option.

(a) A-Testis-possesses 3-4 testicular lobules(b) B-Seminal vesicle-storage of sperm(c) C-Vas deferens-helps in sperm transfer(d) D-Prostrate gland-secretes seminal fluid

11. Read the following statements.

(I) Each testis has about 25 compartment called testicular lobules(II) Each testicular lobule contains one to three highly coiled seminiferous (III) Sertoli cells act as nurse cells of testicles(IV) Sertoli cells are activated by FSH secreted

Which of the above statements are incorrect?

(a) I & III(b) Only I(c) II & IV(d) III & IV

12. Select the correct sequence for transport of sperm cells in male reproductive system.

(a) Testis Epididymis Vasa efferentia Rete testis Inquinal canal Urethra(b) Seminiferous tubules Rete testis Vasa efferentia Epididymis Vas deferens Ejaculatory duct Urethra Urethral meatus(c) Seminiferous tubules Vasa efferentia Epididymis Iquinal canal Urethra(d) Testis Epididymis Vasa efferentia Vas deferens Ejaculatory duct Inquinal canal Urethra Urethral meatus

13. Urethral meatus refers to the

(a) urinogenital duct(b) openings of vas deferens into urethra(c) external openings of the urinogenital duct(d) muscles surrounding the urinogenital duct

14. Given below diagram refers to the TS of testis showing few seminiferous tubules.

A, B, C and D in the above diagram represent.

(a) A Sertoli cells, B Secondary spermatocyte, C Interstitial cells, D Sperms(b) A Interstitial cells, B Spermatogonia, C Sertoli cells, D Sperms(c) A Sertoli cells, B Spermatozoa, C Interstitial cells, D Sperms(d) A Sertoli cells, B Spermatogonia, C- Interstitial cells, D Sperms

15. Seminal plasma, the fluid part of semen, is contributed by

(I) Seminal vesicle(II) Prostrate(III) Urethra (IV) Bulbourethral gland

(a) I and II(b) I, II and IV(c) II, III and IV(d) I and IV

16. Function of bulbourethral gland is

(a) lubrication of penis(b) to increase motility of sperm(c) to enhance the sperm count(d) all of the above

17. The ovaries are located one on each side of the A . Each ovary is about 2-4 cm in length connected to the B wall by C . Fill the suitable choices for A-C.

(a) A-inner medulla, B-peripheral cortex, C-ligaments(b) A-lower abdomen, B-pelvic, C-ligaments(c) A-pelvic wall, B-lower abdomen, C-ligaments(d) A-inner medulla, B-peripheral cortex, C-lower abdomen

18. Identify A, B, C and D.

(a) A-Oviduct, B-Uterus, C-Cervix, D-Ovary(b) A-Cervix, B-Uterus, C-Ovary, D-Tumour(c) A-Uterus, B-Uterine Cavity, C- Oviductal Funnel, D-Ovary(d) A-Cervix, B-Uterine Cavity, C-Fallopian Tube, D- Ovary

19. Human fallopian tube is about

(a) 8-9 cm long(b) 9-10 cm long(c) 10-12 cm long(d) 12-17 cm long

20. Match the following.

(a) (A) 2, (B) 1, (C) 3, (D) 4(b) (A) 1, (B) 2, (C) 3, (D) 4 (c) (A) 4, (B) 3, (C) 1, (D) 2(d) (A) 2, (B) 3, (C) 4, (D) 1

Click Below To Learn Biology Term-1 Chapter Wise MCQs

21. The main function of fimbriae of Fallopian tube is

(a) help in development of ovary(b) help in collection of the ovum after ovulation(c) help in development of ova(d) help in fertilisation

22. The external genitalia of female reproductive system are collectively called

(a) vagina(b) vulva(c) cervix(d) clitoris

23. Identify the odd one out from the following.

(a) labia minora(b) fimbriae(c) infundibulum(d) isthmus

24. Fleshy folds of tissue which extends down to the mons pubis and surround the vaginal opening is called

(a) labia minora(b) labia majora(c) hymen(d) clitoris

25. Cushion of fatty tissue by skin and pubic hair is called

(a) mons pubis(b) labia majora(c) clitoris(d) vagina

26. The uterus opens into the vagina by a canal called

(a) cervical (b) canal (c) ampulla (d) oviduct

27. Sectional view of mammary gland shows

(I) nipple and areola(II) mammary lobes (alveolus) and duct(III) ribs(IV) ampulla and lactiferous duct

Choose the correct option

(a) I, II, III and IV(b) I, II and III(c) III, IV and II(d) I, IV and III

28. Several mammary duct join to form a wider mammary ampulla, which is connected to

(a) lactiferous duct (b) seminiferous duct (c) seminiferous tubules (d) lactiferous canal

29. The spermatogonia undergo division to produce sperm by the process of spermatogonesis.

(a) true (b) false (c) cannot say (d) partially true or false

30. Which of the following cells of haploid number of chromosomes?

(a) 1o spermatocytes (b) 2o spermatocytes (c) Spermatid (d) Both (b) and (c)

31. Which among the following has 23 chromosomes?

(a) spermatogonia(b) zygotes (c) secondary oocyte (d) oogonia

32. Find out spermatid and sertoli cell in given below diagram.

(a) D and E(b) E and F(c) A and C(d) B and E

33. Spermiogenesis or spermatiliosis is

(a) changing of spermatid to spermatozoa (b) changing of spermatid to sperm (c) both (a) and (b) (d) changing of spermatid to secondary spermatocyte

34. In the formation of spermatozoa, the spermatids attach to

(a) Leydig cells(b) corona radiata cells(c) sertoli cells(d) first polar body

35. The difference between spermatogenesis and spermiation is

(a) in spermiogenesis, spermatozoa from sertoli cell are released into the cavity of seminiferous tubules, while in spermiation, spermatozoa are formed (b) in spermiogenesis, spermatozoa are formed, while in spermiation, spermatids are formed (c) in spermiogenesis, spermatids are formed, while in spermiation, spermatozoa are formed (d) in spermiogenesis, spermatozoa are formed, while in spermiation, spermatozoa released through seminiferous tubules

36. The release of _________ leads to initiation of spermatogenesis.

(a) GnRH (b) lactin (c) testosterone (d) oestrogen

37. Everytime copulation does not lead to fertilization and pregnancy because of failure of sperm to reach the

(a) ampulla (b) cervix (c) endometrium (d) myometrium

38. What is the correct sequence of sperm formation?

(a) spermatid, spermatocyte, spermatogonia, spermatozoa(b) spermatogonia, spermatocyte, spermatozoa, spermatid(c) spermatogonia, spermatozoa, spermatocyte, spermatid(d) spermatogonia, spermatocyte, spermatid, spermatozoa

39. Identify A, B & C in the diagram below.

(a) A acrosome, B tail, C mitochondria (b) A plasma membrane, B acrosome, C mitochondria (c) A mitochondria, B acrosome, C plasma membrane (d) A mitochondria, B plasma membrane, C tail

40. Match the following.

(a) (A) 2, (B) 4, (C) 1, (D) 3(b) (A) 4, (B) 3, (C) 1, (D) 2(c) (A) 4, (B) 1, (C) 2, (D) 3(d) (A) 2, (B) 1, (C) 3, (D) 4

41. Find the odd one out.

(a) spermatocyte(b) polar body(c) spermatid(d) spermatogonium

42. Oogenesis is initiated during the embryonic development stage when a couple of million oogonia are formed within each fetal ovary; no more oogonia are formed and added after birth.

(a) true(b) false(c) cant say(d) partially true or false

43. Primary oocyte surrounded by a layer of granulosa cells is called

(a) secondary follicle(b) ootid(c) primary follicle(d) tertiary follicle

44. At the time of birth, the oocyte is present in _______ stage of cell cycle.

(a) prophase-I(b) prophase-II(c) meiosis-II(d) mitosis

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[Latest] Human Reproduction MCQ | Assertion | CaseStudy 2022

It’s time to take reproduction in space seriously – Axios

Before humans can settle off-Earth, scientists need to figure out how or even whether people can reproduce in space.

Why it matters: Powerful figures in the space industry like Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos have dreams of a future where millions of people live in space, which would naturally require a self-sustaining population of humans somewhere other than Earth.

What's happening: Scientists have sent a number of experiments to the International Space Station in recent years to try to answer various questions about what it might take for mammals, and eventually humans, to reproduce in space.

Yes, but: More in-depth studies are needed in order to figure out just what it would take for humans and other species to have babies off-Earth, and some scientists say there hasn't been enough attention paid to funding and performing these types of studies.

The big question: What are the major factors that could limit how and whether humans can have healthy babies in space?

What's next: A number of studies being proposed in the coming years could help answer those outstanding questions around reproduction in space.

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It's time to take reproduction in space seriously - Axios

Liberation or Folly? Your Takes on Artificial Wombs – The Atlantic

Earlier this week I asked readers, What do you think about artificial wombs? Are they ethical? Desirable? Should they be a priority for scientists? If they become advanced enough to be viable, would you ever use one? How would a world in which they were available differ from ours?

Kaitlin, who favors artificial wombs, has been thinking about this subject for a long time, and sees it as a clash between equality and identity:

I was a 16-year-old girl when my mother thought I was monstrous for announcing that women would never be equal until everyone had access to artificial wombs and the ability to have children with their partners, regardless of gender. To my mother this was the stripping away of her identity and role in the societymotherhood. For me, it was imagining a world where no one has to be defined by their reproductive role unless they choose it, the necessary step for creating an egalitarian society with true gender fluidity. I had just finished reading American speculative fiction writer Lois McMaster Bujolds Vorkosigan Saga, where artificial wombs and their use (or not) play major plot points, and I was intoxicated with the possibility that I could be more than my reproductive organs.

Mark opposes artificial wombs in general but has mixed feelings:

I imagine the perfection of such a technique is only a matter of time, and the benefit to previously pre-viable children cannot be ignored. At the same time, the question immediately brought to mind this quote from Shulamith Firestone (Dialetic of Sex, 1970):

The end goal of feminist revolution must be, unlike that of the first feminist movement, not just the elimination of male privilege but of the sex distinction itself: genital differences between human beings would no longer matter culturally.

The reproduction of the species by one sex for the benefit of both would be replaced by (at least the option of) artificial reproduction: children would be born to both sexes equally, or independently of either, however one chooses to look at it The division of labour would be ended by the elimination of labour altogether (through cybernetics). The tyranny of the biological family would be broken.

Our modern society is simply unable to say no in principle to reaching for more power, and as C. S. Lewis noted in The Abolition of Man, all long-term exercises of power, especially in breeding, must mean the power of earlier generations over later ones. While a more equitable division of labor is a good thing, I think that completely and finally severing the link between the mother and child for the sake of utility is not. Its hard to imagine a world where commodification of human dignity would not be the endpoint.

Jesse is an enthusiastic proponent of the technology:

Think of all the times a pregnant woman is told: If you try to carry this child to term, you will both die. Now suppose that for somenot all or many, but even just someof these pregnancies, the mother is then told: You have the option of transferring the child to an artificial womb, which will surely save your life, and has a good chance of bringing the child to term. What a miracle! What a blessing! Who could possibly object?

We can certainly concede that it is not ideal. The mother may suffer detrimental psychological effects from the absence of physical intimacy with her child, and for that matter, perhaps the child will, too. Further, it is virtually certain that the technology will be suboptimal for a long time. We should expect children with low birth weight and developmental abnormalities. There will be diminished opportunity for the mother to transfer her viral antibodies to the childand who knows what other kinds of things the mothers womb may do for her child that we dont yet fully understand? But to argue that any of these things are worse than a dead baby seems a difficult task indeed.

Rosies family history predisposes her to celebrating artificial wombs:

My brother was born at 28 weeks. As a result, he has a range of disabilities including an intellectual disability that leaves him unable to live an independent life. My husband and I are starting to plan a family. If I had the safety of knowing that if I went into labor prematurely our child could continue to develop and grow in an artificial womb, Id be less reticent [about getting] pregnant. Im so afraid of creating another person who I will need to be responsible for well past young adulthood. I think artificial wombs are a fantastic idea!

Laura also focuses on medical obstacles to getting pregnant:

I have health issues that made it challenging to have my child in 2019 and make it very challenging to have another child. I have friends who have struggled immensely with infertility, multiple miscarriages and/or stillbirths, because unfortunately something in their genes makes it hard for their bodies to carry a fetus to full-term. If they had the opportunity to be able to have an artificial womb carry a child for them, it would be a godsend.

Mike is gay, married, and enthusiastic:

Having a child for a gay couple is frankly fraught with complexity, first and foremost, identifying a surrogate! More complexity comes from what now may become a 3 parent family! Being able to remove the surrogate frees gay men in so many ways. And gives them total control in what is a deeply personal decision in the lives of gay couples.

Conor Friedersdorf: Your presidential picks: Adam Silver, Tyler Cowen, Stacey Abrams

But Ilona worries that artificial wombs will prove a slippery slope:

Having had miscarriages, I know firsthand the disappointment and learned quickly what a miracle pregnancy is. Those nine months may be uncomfortable and reshape a body in less than perfect ways, but the time allows for a connection to be created that is cemented at birth. I suspect synthetic wombs would allow for mass produced children as every good development often leads to misuse. Do we really want a day when we can order a child to our specifications without the investment of time and preparation?

What a sad world this could become!

Ann believes that artificial wombs are one more example of what she sees as a broader human folly:

I question the utility of the human propensity to constantly try to one-up Mother Nature. It seems we do a lot of tweaking, to fix something that isnt broken or improve human lives at the expense of other life. We usually end up with more problems than we started with. Examples abound: the advent of chemical fertilizers, gas powered vehicles, ubiquitous paving, industrial scale farming, sugar laden foodthe list is endless and timeless.

The result seems to be that this entire planet is, in our care, on a trajectory towards complete artificiality. And since wisdom is imparted so very late in a single human life, and rarely accepted as a template for the congregate of human activity even when it is spelled out chapter and verse to each new generation, it appears we will keep marching towards our own dismal, depressive, disassociated relationship with our own nature. Not to mention a far less appealing habitat. I vote no on one more addition to Frankensteins museum.

Robert worries about overpopulation:

This is a solution looking for a problem. THE WORLD IS STILL OVERPOPULATED; it cant support the population it does have. Do we really need more carbon-burners born through artificial means? Its a triumph for aggressive individualism (or libertarianism if you prefer) over the good of everyone else. I want mine. If it helps kill you, gee, Im really sorry but at least I got mine. Just morally WRONG. Were all in this together. Its time to act like it.

And Jean says artificial wombs have implications for femaleness that fill her with dread:

If we remove pregnancy from the female body, it renders so many salient aspects of femaleness moot. I may sound like a biological essentialist, but when you look at the female body, almost everything about it (starting at puberty) is tailored around pregnancy, childbirth, and child rearing. Think of the hormones (and hormonal fluctuations) that influence the psychological ways females differ from men. Think about menstruationhow many females would choose to continue bleeding every month with the cramps and the mood swings now that they wont be using their uterus?

I feel conflicted, as a female, because the female body can be a hindrancethe proportionally high body fat, aforementioned mood swings and periods, the toll of pregnancy and childbirth under the best circumstancesyet outsourcing wombs might so significantly alter the character of females, which serves as a balance to males in many ways, and could theoretically sort of erase women as we know them. I also, in truly paranoid fashion, worry about some dystopian situation where women would be forced to have children since theres no longer a physical burdenonly the emotional one.

In contrast, Amelia believes the technology would be good for women and their equal standing:

Heres my take: artificial wombs are the last frontier of womens liberation. Decoupling the woman from being pregnant and having to give birth really would level the playing field. As long as the tech isnt being used to breed a ton of extra people or super soldiers or something, this would absolutely improve the lives of women everywhere. There would be no more attempting high-risk pregnancies and allowing the mother to die in childbirth.

It sickens me that women go through the process of pregnancy and birth, and then have to recover from their bodies being ripped and cut open while theyre raising an infant. Imagine being handed a ready-made baby without having to go through the pregnancy and birth. Parents would find themselves better equipped for the task at hand.

Bekke frets about maintaining the connection between mother and child:

Just no! Bonding with a child is important, and how much bonding, physically and emotionally, can a mother do with a totally artificial birth?

But Errol is skeptical of that argument:

Is there no such thing as a father who loves his child? And I guess that siblings dont have reason to care about each other since they were never inside the others stomach.

Jonathan argues that a world where pre-natal children can be safely and reliably transferred out of a natural womb would transform social attitudes toward abortion:

Abortion kills a human being in its most innocent and most vulnerable stateoften through grotesque violence While a small fraction of these abortions occur because the pre-natal child (by no will of its own) gravely endangers the health and life of its mother, the overwhelming majority of abortions occur because the burden of the child is for myriad reasons unwanted. This is the case for hundreds of thousands of abortions each year in the United States.

Today, it is common to justify this violence on the basis of bodily autonomy the claim that the mother has the right to deny the pre-natal child the use of her body at any time If, however, a prenatal child could be safely and reliably removed to an artificial womb, this violence would no longer be the necessary result of vindicating bodily autonomy. Rather, a woman would be able to transfer the pre-natal child without any of the attendant violence. Voluntarily choosing that violence would quickly become a horrifying notion, and society would rapidly embrace the artificial womb as the means of escaping pregnancy and childbirth.

Undoubtedly, this would be a tremendous step toward resolving the moral, legal, and political crisis of abortion. Might I add, however, that such future generations would also come to regard todays abortion regime as horrifically grotesque and flagrantly immoral? When abortion is no longer a necessary evil to vindicate bodily autonomy, future generations will see abortion in its naked form: evil. And history does not treat well the promoters of necessary evil.

Jesse has thoughts on reproductive rights, too:

If you squint a little, artificial wombs look like a solution that can satisfy everyone: A mother who does not want to complete her pregnancy could surrender the child to a designated agency, much as one would currently under safe haven laws, whereupon it would be received into an artificial womb, carried to term, and adopted. The mother gets her autonomy and is relieved of the burden, pro-life interests get a non-terminated fetus.

Everyone is happy, yes?

I suspect this would satisfy many moderate pro-life and pro-choice individuals, while creating new issues and some shifted goalposts on both sides. On the pro-choice side, you may have some arguing that even being required to surrender the fetus is an intolerable imposition on the mothers autonomy: they may prefer to terminate their pregnancy in a different way, they will have to live with the burden of knowing their child is alive in the world (the very characterization of this knowledge as a burden is a topic prime for interesting debate), or perhaps most intriguing of all, they may simply argue that the very decision to bring a life fully into the world is one which should lie solely with the mother (this brings to mind the fascinating question of how the availability of artificial wombs might affect paternal rights in deciding the course of a pregnancy).

On the pro-life side, you will surely have purists arguing that artificial wombs are aberrant and unnatural, and that health risks they impose on the gestating fetus are unconscionable. I also expect moralistic arguments to the effect that a mother who is pregnant through consensual intercourse does not deserve to be relieved of their pregnancythat they have a positive responsibility to the child to carry it fully to term. Most interesting to me is not so much the change in position that this would entail, as how it would bring to the forefront of these arguments the centrality of conservative moral values: choice, consequence, and more than a little biblical bear-your-sin stoicism.

And last but not least, Susanna explains why she favors research to push this technology forward:

Im 24 years old, and while I dont expect to have a baby soon, I think I would like to in the future. Im not in the least excited about being pregnant though. It seems both extremely uncomfortable and extremely inconvenient. A way to make a (biological) family without that long, painful, dangerous process sounds wonderfully liberating.

I wonder how artificial wombs might shift our broader social attitudes toward motherhood. If babies didnt come out of women, might they be less of a womens thing and might it seem less natural to assume women will take on more baby-related responsibilities? I dont think calling something unnatural is even close to giving a definitive reason to reject it. Human life in a natural state, without any of our technological advances, would be a lot less pleasant in many ways than it is right now. There may be many upsides to natural birth (lots of evidence suggests many benefits of breastfeeding, for example, and its hard to see how that could come along with artificial wombs) and this isnt to deny them. But the potential seems huge. I, for one, would strongly support medical (and ethical!) research into the possibility of artificial wombs for humans.

Thank you for all of your responses, and see you next week.

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Liberation or Folly? Your Takes on Artificial Wombs - The Atlantic

New IJGO Supplement: Quality of care for abortion-related complications | Figo – International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics

IJGO is delighted to announce the publication of a World Health Organization (WHO) and joint UN special Human Reproduction Programme (HRP)[1] supplement containing insights from the WHO and HRP Multi-Country Study on Abortion-related morbidity (MCS-A) across 11 African countries.

Seven papers utilise secondary data analysis to assess the quality of care for abortion-related complications in facilities in Sub-Saharan Africa. The wealth of data generated provide a unique opportunity to assess the provision and experience of care for abortion-related complications in Sub-Saharan Africa, especially in countries with restrictive abortion laws.

This supplement shows how far we still have to go in ensuring quality, respectful post-abortion care for all; it also proves how much we can learn when we commit to working together. Across 11 countries, knowledge has been gained and research capacity has been strengthened. A stronger research community is better able to listen, ask and answer questions, working together for a future where every woman and girl achieves the highest standard of sexual and reproductive health and rights.

zge Tunalp, Medical Officer at WHO and HRP.

Complications due to unsafe abortions are an important cause of morbidity and mortality in many Sub-Saharan African countries. Despite the burden these complications represent for health services, information on the provision and quality of care for abortion and abortion-related complications in many settings across Sub-Saharan Africa is lacking.

To try to fill this important evidence gap, WHO/HRP conducted a cross-sectional study in 210 health facilities in partnership with local research institutes between February 2017 and April 2018. The findings span both clinical provision of care and quality of care from the womens perspective, exploring how this is experienced differentially by those living in vulnerable situations such as adolescents and women accessing care in insecure environments.

A multipronged approach including self-care, clinical care, task sharing, human rights, and an enabling legal environment is needed to deliver high-quality abortion and post-abortion care, including access to family planning, but there is still considerable progress to make. Immediate action needs to be taken by healthcare providers and policy makers.

Read the MCS-A WHO supplement here

Three key areas are highlighted here:

The authors of the editorial of the supplement, Professors Seni Kouanda and Zahida Qureshi, conclude with these hopeful words:

While we still face many challenges and obstacles to ensuring access to high-quality abortion and post-abortion care for all women, we believe that efforts such as the MCS-A in Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean represent an important step forward. We hope that the work presented throughout this supplement will help inspire innovations and insights to help fulfil womens reproductive rights.

[1] The UNDP-UNFPA-UNICEF-WHO-World Bank Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction (HRP)

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New IJGO Supplement: Quality of care for abortion-related complications | Figo - International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics

There’s No Science Argument on Whether Unborn Children Are Human – Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence

The recent March for Life in Washington featured signs like Save the baby humans (featuring a whale), Any country that accepts abortion is not teaching its people to love Mother Theresa and One heart stops; many hearts break.

Neurosurgeon Michael Egnor has a message for people who wonder whether the preborn child is a human being:

Ever ask #Why we should believe that a human embryo is a human life? There is no question about itfrom the moment of conception, a unique human being exists. Pro-abortion activists will try to say that the embryo is a different species, some unclassified thing, or part of the mother, but none of these are true. The science of sexual reproduction is as much settled science as is the fact that the Earth orbits the sun and that DNA carries genetic code. There is no debate that life begins at conception. The only debate is whether people respect life at all stages. (Students for Life, July 26, 2021)

Egnor has also written some personal reflections on abortion, including the fact that he himself might have been aborted:

The world is blessed with countless people who, with Gods grace, had moms and dads who chose life instead of death. Im one of them my mom had severe hypertension and doctors recommended I be aborted, but she and my dad refused. I owe my life to their love for me, even before I was born.

He also recounts that, while he always tells the truth to parents about their unborn babies neurological issues as he understands them, sometimes the children surprise him:

Just recently, I saw a 10 year old girl in the office for whom Ive cared since she was in the womb. When her spina bifida was diagnosed by prenatal testing, the doctor basically insisted that she be aborted. It was relatively late in the pregnancy, and the doctor gave them the name of George Tiller, a notorious late-term abortionist in Kansas who aborted babies at an age when even the most callous of other abortionists refuse to kill. Her family declined, and sought me out as a second opinion. I told them the truth about their daughters prognosis which was guarded but by no means hopeless.

As it turned out, I was wrong. She did indeed have spina bifida and I operated on her the day she was born. But she has done much better than any of us even dreamed. She walks, runs, and loves to dance. She is bright and charming, and is the love and light of her mom, dad, and her doting older brothers. I give talks to medical professionals about neurosurgical prenatal diagnoses and at the end of the talks I show a video clip of her dancing.

There is another aspect of abortion that explicitly involves neuroscience: Do unborn children feel pain? Alas, yes:

The argument commonly used by abortion advocates, and by physicians and scientists, who argue that fetuses do not experience pain, is that the central nervous system is too immature to process pain at that age. But I think that thats clearly a misunderstanding of the neurobiology.

Pain, as far as we know, is the only sensory modality that does not require cortical representation to be experienced. That is, it seems that we probably feel pain at deeper levels of the brain, probably at the level of the thalamus. And what the cortex does, is it actually suppresses our experience of pain and helps us interpret it. So decorticate animals seem to experience pain much, much more intensely. The thalamus in fetal life develops around the sixth or eighth week of fetal development. And the thalamic tracks that connect the thalamus to the periphery, that would allow the fetus to feel pain, are present at that stage.

A recent medical journal article confirmed that there is clear scientific evidence that pain is felt from 13 weeks gestation onward. Egnor responded:

The scientific community has for decades misrepresented the straightforward science of conception and fetal development for ideological reasons

I have cared for hundreds of premature infants and it is very clear that these very young children experience pain intensely. An innocuous needlestick in the heel to draw small amount of blood would ordinarily not be particularly painful for an adult. But a tiny infant will scream at such discomfort.

Many Americans do not realize that most Western countries have restrictions on abortion. The United States is one of the few where children be aborted up to the time of birth in many states and, if they survive, may legally be left to die after birth. Currently, the federal government is even working on an act that would remove all state-level protections for unborn children at any age.

You may also wish to read: Political websites Christmas gift to readers: promoting abortion FiveThirtyEight asked readers to share their abortion stories and got something it hadnt bargained on: Many were glad it didnt happen. I am a pediatric neurosurgeon, and every day I treat kids (and adults) who were prime candidates for abortion, but by the grace of God escaped the abortionist. (Michael Egnor)

and

Do babies really feel pain before they are self-aware? Michael Egnor discusses the fact that the thalamus, deep in the brain, creates pain. The cortex moderates it. Thus, juveniles may suffer more. Jonathan Wells recalls, from when he was a lab technologist, how very premature infants would scream when he took a drop of blood for tests.

More here:
There's No Science Argument on Whether Unborn Children Are Human - Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence

E.O. Wilson, groundbreaking figure in evolutionary biology, dead at 92 – WSWS

Edward O. Wilson, known as E.O. Wilson, who died last month at the age of 92, was a major figure in the field of evolutionary biology. He made significant contributions to the study of animal behavior, biodiversity, and environmental conservation. However, he is perhaps best known for the controversies stemming from his attempt to found a field of study he called sociobiology, which places great emphasis on the genetic determination of animal and human behavior.

During his career, Wilson wrote, cowrote, or edited over 30 books. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize twiceonce for On Human Nature (1979) and, as coauthor, for The Ants (1991).

Born in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1929, Wilson earned bachelors and masters degrees at the University of Alabama. He went on to receive his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1950, and joined the faculty there in 1956, where he remained for a remarkable 46 years.

His early research was focused on insects, ants in particularhow they communicated chemically using pheromones and how they diversified and spread geographically. Through studying the distribution of ant species across islands, he developed mathematical models to predict their spread and differentiationechoing and expanding on Darwins study of species diversity in the Galapagos Islands. He has been dubbed by some, Darwins natural heir.

Wilson tested his model in the Florida Keys by eradicating all insects from small, uninhabited islands and then documenting how immigrants re-established themselves and achieved stable ecosystems. He also conducted extensive field research in the Caribbean and South Pacific during the 1940s and 1950s. During his career, he is credited with having identified and described over 450 species of ants.

Based on this research, Wilson, in collaboration with biologist Robert MacArthur, wrote The Theory of Island Biogeography in 1967, which became a seminal work in the field of ecology. In turn, this approach has been applied to the understanding of biodiversity and the interactions between species, enabling predictions regarding how many species a variety of environments could hold, the impact of habitat destruction on species extinctions and the stability of ecosystems.

Wilsons attention then turned to the study of how natural selection molded animal social behavior, including that of humans. He found that classical evolutionary theory had difficulty explaining the behavior of social animals such as ants. Instead, he drew on the work of William Hamilton, who had proposed the concept of inclusive fitness.

According to classical evolutionary theory, reproductive success, the passing on of ones genes to offspring, defines the concept of fitness of an individual in its environment. The more offspring an individual produces who themselves survive to reproduce, the more that individuals genes increase in its species gene pool (the individual is more fit), compared to other individuals who are less successful in a given environment. This was the standard understanding of natural selection.

In effect, organisms are merely mechanisms for the reproduction of genes (i.e., DNA). Genes that promote the survival of those individuals which bear them tend to be perpetuated themselves and increase in frequency within a population or species. Those genes that are less successful in promoting the survival and reproduction of their bearers in a given environment diminish and eventually disappear. Thus, evolution occurs. Under this model, the effective entity subject to natural selection is the individual organism, which is either successful or not in passing on its genetic material.

Hamilton proposed that among social animals, genes may perpetuate themselves and spread by promoting individual behaviors that benefit not only the individual, but the group to which they belong. In this model, genes that promote the survival and reproductive success of close relatives, or the group as a whole, can spread if an individual with those genes promotes the reproduction (fitness) of others who carry the same genes. Thus, among relatives, an individuals fitness may be inclusive: it may refer not only to their own reproductive success, but to the success of others.

In a 1963 paper, Hamilton described his conception as inclusive fitness, under which the unit of natural selection is the gene, not the individual. According to this model, if an individuals actions, even to the point of that individuals own demise, and consequent failure to reproduce, promote the propagation of the groups genetic information (e.g., altruistic behavior, such as giving an alarm call that alerts other members of the group to the presence of a predator), that fulfills the evolutionary imperative of reproductive success of that set of genes, even if that particular individual does not reproduce.

Wilson sought to interpret the behavior of ants as gene bearers for such a group, and not merely as autonomous, individually reproducing individuals.

Most ants live in highly structured colonies, with a well-defined division of labor. Each colony is composed of a queen, whose primary function is reproduction. The female offspring, the workers, are normally sterile, performing all the tasks necessary for maintenance of the colony, including the collective raising of offspring. Males have only one function, fertilizing future queens. Species in which members of a group have genetically and/or developmentally determined differential reproductive capacities and other highly defined tasks are termed eusocial. This is mostly seen in ants, bees, wasps, termites, and a very limited number of mammals (naked mole-rats). From a reproductive perspective, colonies of ants and other eusocial animals may be viewed as the equivalent of a single, multi-cellular organism, rather than a collection of autonomously reproducing individuals.

It should be noted that, in the overwhelming majority of cases, any single gene is not expressed individually but in combination with many other genes to produce the whole organism, greatly reducing the exposure of single genes to direct selective pressure.

Nevertheless, Wilson sought to apply a gene-centric model, which gained acceptance among biologists in the context of a burgeoning genetic revolution, to understand the behaviors of all animals. Sociobiology: The New Synthesis, published in 1975, presented Wilsons view that The organism is only DNAs way of making more DNA. Based on this understanding, he argued that social behavior, including that of humans, could be explained as a product of natural selection differentially acting on the variety of genetic material in a species.

The publication of Sociobiology initiated a great deal of controversy. So much so that its review in the New York Times was placed on the papers front page. While its proposals regarding social behavior in animals have had an impact on subsequent research, those regarding that of humans have also drawn criticism. Many viewed Wilsons arguments as a form of biological determinism, or reductionism: the attitude that simple processes may explain complex phenomena that in fact require more sophisticated explanation.

Wilson proposed that humans have a weak form of eusociality, such that the behavior of individuals and their roles in the social group is partly controlled by genetics. Some critics, including his Harvard colleagues, Stephen Jay Gould and Richard Lewontin, accused Wilson of biological determinism, Social Darwinism, and even alleged that his ideas logically supported eugenics and genocide.

In his preface to the 2000 edition of Sociobiology, Wilson pushes back against critics who accuse him of reductionism. Specifically referring to Gould and Lewontin, whom he describes as the last of the Marxist intellectuals, Wilson characterizes these critics as advocating a tabula rasa view of human behaviorthat there is no genetic influence at all, which he says suits their aim for socialism to be fitted to the human mind, apparently implying indoctrination.

He goes on to reject the position of other critics, associated with the New Left, who opposed sociobiology on the grounds that it could lead to the conclusion that behaviors such as racism, sexism, class oppression, colonialism, andperhaps worst of allcapitalism! could be genetically based. In one notorious incident, a protester doused Wilson with water, yelling Wilson, you are all wet!

A review of Wilsons discussion of human behavior in Sociobiology reveals that while he seems to take a more nuanced view than some critics suggest, fundamentally, despite protestations to the contrary, he fails to appreciate the qualitative difference between human behavior, based on abstract, symbolic thought, and a huge store of culture, and that of other animals.

He states, Human societies have effloresced to levels of extreme complexity because their members have the intelligence and flexibility to play roles of virtually any degree of specification, and to switch them as the occasion demands. And, furthermore, Roles in human societies are fundamentally different from the castes of social insects.

In his preface to the second edition of Sociobiology (2000), Wilson states, in the creation of human nature, genetic evolution and cultural evolution have together produced a closely interwoven product. And as well: The exact process of gene-culture coevolution is the central problem of the social sciences and much of the humanities, and it is one of the great remaining problems of the natural sciences.

Some of his discussion involves behaviors that are so basic as to be likely to have a substantial genetic component. For example, he proposes that there are epigenetic rules (i.e., in which non-genetic factors, such as environment or learned behavior, modify genetic expression) which provide general frameworks for such things as classification of color, aesthetic evaluation of shapes, acquisition of fears and phobias, communication via facial expression and body language, and so on across a wide spread of categories in behavior and thought. Most of these rules are evidently very ancient, dating back millions of years in mammalian ancestry. Others, like the ontogenetic steps of linguistic development in children, are uniquely human and probably only hundreds of thousands of years old.

However, Wilsons discussion of more complex aspects of human behavior fails to make clear the overwhelming predominance of culture over biology.

An important topic raised by Wilson is that of social class in human societies. A key question of human biology is whether there exists a genetic predisposition to enter certain classes and to play certain roles.

At first, he states, A strong initial bias toward such stratification is created when one human population conquers and subjugates another, a common enough event in human history. Genetic differences in mental traits, however slight, tend to be preserved by the raising of class barriers, racial and cultural discrimination, and physical ghettos.

But then, Yet despite the plausibility of the general argument, there is little evidence of any hereditary solidification of status. And further, Powerful forces can be identified that work against the genetic fixation of caste differences. First, cultural evolution is too fluid.

Scientific research has demonstrated time and time again that there is absolutely no basis for the proposition that there are any differences in intelligence or any other significant behavioral characteristic within or between various modern human populations. Nevertheless, Wilson, leaves the door open to the possibility that such differences may exist. Is this merely a prudent scientists caution or does it betray underlying reservations?

With regard to cultural evolution, again Wilson provides contradictory statements. Ethnographic detail [i.e., different cultures] is genetically underprescribed [i.e., has relatively weak genetic influence], resulting in great amounts of diversity among societies. Underprescription does not mean that culture has been freed from the genes. What has evolved is the capacity for culture, indeed the overwhelming tendency to develop one culture or another.

Few would dispute the first part of this last sentence. However, does this latter statement mean that the humans are somehow genetically driven to cultural diversity? How could that genetic influence be expressed? Again, Wilson is attempting to suggest some degree of genetic influence without providing any evidence to support his contention.

In an even more puzzling statement, Wilson is of the opinion that Human beings are absurdly easy to indoctrinatethey seek it. If we assume for argument that indoctrinability evolves, at what level does natural selection take place? One extreme possibility is that the group is the unit of selection. This suggests that he believes humans capacity for independent thought is somehow genetically limited and that some populations may be more susceptible to indoctrination than others.

There are numerous other examples of Wilsons attempt to have it both ways. One of the more troubling is his contention that warfare promoted a number of what he feels are important human traits: including team play, altruism, patriotism, bravery on the field of battle, and so forth, as the genetic product of warfare. He goes on to suggest that groups with genes for aggressiveness would conquer and replace those that did not, thus creating a positive feedback loop for the spread of aggressive genetics.

But warfare is a recent development in human evolution, a product of class society. To imply that it is somehow a key influencer of human genetics has no scientific basis. Elsewhere, he rejects the contentions of such popular authors as Konrad Lorenz ( On Aggression ) and Robert Ardrey ( African Genesis ) who claim that aggressive behavior was key to early human evolution.

Wilson rejected accusations that he was promoting a right-wing agenda, labeling them as academic vigilantism and criticized Gould and Lewontin in particular for what he labels as their Marxism, which he employs as a derogatory epithet without specific content.

There is no indication that he personally held reactionary views. It appears rather that he was led astray by an excessively mechanical view of human development, and as has happened all too frequently, tried to apply the laws of motion of one sphere of the natural world to another and more complicated sphere. Thus, in Sociobiology, he argued that ethics should be taken out of the hands of philosophers and, instead, biologicized. And, in his later work, On Human Nature (1978), he proposed that in the future, with a much deeper understanding of genetics, a democratically contrived eugenics could be implemented, indicating, at best, a political naivete with regard to its implications within class society. This clearly goes beyond medical interventions for physical ailments, implying behavioral modification through genetic manipulation.

In a more recent work, The Social Conquest of Earth (2012), Wilson appears to step back from rigid determinism. He characterizes humans as the first truly free species, and one which can, based on simple decency combined with the unrelenting application of reason, turn the earth into a permanent paradise. This, apparently, is to be accomplished by somehow freeing humans from the otherwise imperious domination of genetics. However, at the same time, he continued to contend that free will is an illusion.

Wilsons conception of human social organization is a gross oversimplification, betraying a lack of knowledge of anthropology and sociology. Firstly, all members of a human social group can, at least potentially, reproduce (barring illness, etc.), contrary to the condition in eusocial species. There are certainly constraints on reproductive success in class-based societies. However, these are the product of social factors, not on any inherent genetically controlled differentiation. The same is true of all productive tasks, which are based on learned behavior.

Fundamentally, Wilson was unable to bridge the contradiction between a genetically constructed brain that evolved under natural selection and its unique capacity for abstract, symbolic thought, whose content is not genetically programmed. In fact, humans have long since evolved beyond behavior that is primarily controlled by their DNA. The problems facing humanity are social and political, not biological.

In retirement, Wilson devoted his energy to environmental conservation, producing many publications on the subject, including his 1992 book, The Diversity of Life, which became a best seller. He was an advocate of Half Earth which proposed that half of the earths surface, both land and water, be devoted to species conservation.

In sum, E.O. Wilson made historic contributions in the fields of ecology, biodiversity, animal behavior, and evolutionary biology. However, his attempt to explain at least a portion of human behavior as significantly controlled by genetics demonstrates a failure to understand that the development of culture as humanitys primary mode of adaptation has created a qualitatively new level of organization. Just as biology cannot be explained simply by physics and chemistry, human behavior cannot be reduced to biology.

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Control review: The troubling past, present and future of eugenics – New Scientist

By Layal Liverpool

A rising global population has led to a resurgence of eugenics-based ideas

Ben Edwards/Getty Images

Control: The dark history and troubling present of eugenics

Adam Rutherford

Weidenfeld & Nicolson

WHAT does the word eugenics bring to mind? For many, it is Nazi Germany and the atrocities that were committed in its name, not least the murder and involuntary sterilisation of people that they deemed unworthy of reproducing. But eugenics didnt begin or end with the Nazis. In fact, writes geneticist Adam Rutherford in his new book Control, the idea persisted and persists.

Eugenics didnt begin with Francis Galton either, even though he coined the term in the 1800s and was responsible for spreading the idea around the world. More than 30 countries, including Germany and the US, had formal eugenics policies in the 20th century, with awful consequences.

In fact, as Rutherford points out, notions of eugenics and population control date back much further in human society to the 4th century BC, when the Ancient Greek philosopher Plato outlined in books V and VI of Republic a detailed plan to control the reproduction of the people in a utopian city-state. Children born with defects would be hidden away, which may well have been a euphemism for killed, writes Rutherford. Platos plan was never enacted, he adds, but infanticide has been a constant feature in human societies throughout history and around the world.

Eugenics became a dirty word after the horrors of the 20th century, yet some of its ideas survived in science and medicine, says Rutherford. Eugenics formed the basis for the modern field of human genetics, with many eugenicists rebranding themselves as geneticists after the second world war, he argues.

Some of the language and phrases of the 20th-century eugenics movement remain in general use today, although their meanings have evolved. Todays casual insults such as imbecile, moron or idiot carried specific psychiatric significance a century ago, and could warrant enforced institutionalisation and, in hundreds of thousands of cases, involuntary sterilisation, writes Rutherford.

Unfortunately, the drive to restrict reproduction to those deemed by some to be the most suitable still exists. In 2020, there were reports that up to 20 women were involuntarily sterilised in Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention centres in the US. And in Canada, a class action lawsuit in response to the coerced sterilisation of hundreds of Indigenous women as recently as 2018 is ongoing. Meanwhile, sex-selective abortion practices continue to skew sex-ratios in India and China, the most populous countries in the world.

Embedded in all of these practices are dangerous notions of inferiority and superiority that are unscientific and laced with prejudice, says Rutherford. And, as the world reckons with climate change, discussions around the idea of population control are increasingly resurfacing.

There is still a question mark over whether eugenics would even work, even if it werent morally offensive

Control s strength is that it provides not only much-needed guidance for these conversations by reminding us of the horrors of the past, but also uses scientific evidence to dismantle the viability of these ideas.

Rutherford makes it clear that there is still a question mark over whether eugenics would even work, which neatly demonstrates how limited our understanding of human genetics actually is and how ill-equipped we are to direct our species evolution, even if it werent morally offensive.

The 2018 births in China of Lulu and Nana, the first gene-edited humans, provide one example. He Jiankui used CRISPR/Cas9 gene-editing technology on two fertilised human embryos in an attempt to introduce a naturally occurring genetic mutation associated with resistance to HIV infection. But, as Rutherford describes, the intended gene editing failed. In the embryo that became Lulu, 15 letters of DNA were deleted, while in the one that became Nana some DNA was added and other parts deleted.

Control ultimately exposes eugenics as a pseudoscience that cannot deliver on its promise and encourages us to instead focus on interventions that we know can improve peoples lives and the state of our planet, such as improved education, healthcare, equality of opportunities and protection of the environment.

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Control review: The troubling past, present and future of eugenics - New Scientist

Commentary: Abortion ban is an attack on the lives of Black people – Austin American-Statesman

Marcela Howell and Marsha Jones| Austin American-Statesman

Texas abortion clinics can sue over the state's controversial ban

The Supreme Court ruled that clinics challenging a Texas abortion ban can continue to fight in lower federal courts, but permitted the law to remain.

Associated Press, USA TODAY

As we approach the 49thanniversary of Roe v. Wade, the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case legalizing abortion, Black women in Texas are not celebrating this constitutional right but fighting to keep it. Texans seeking abortion care have to drive 14 times farther than they did previously, according to an analysis of the states new abortion ban by the reproductive health research group the Guttmacher Institute. For 70 percent of the Texans seeking care, Louisiana is the closest state to obtain a legal abortion. Twenty-three percent have to travel to Oklahoma, the analysis found which, like Louisiana, has multiple abortion restrictions of its own.

And thats the case for people fortunate enough to have the money, transportation, time off from work, childcare and other resources needed to make the journey. Forcing people to go out of state is just one way that this extreme abortion ban threatens the health and rights of Texans who need timely care.

It will come as news to no one that being Black in Texas has long been fraught with disadvantages and discrimination. For Black women and pregnant people who give birth, our bodies and families continue to face unjust surveillance. New mothers who are Black are more likely to be subject to drug screenings, frequently without our knowledge or consent. Black parents are more likely to be reported to or investigated by Child Protective Services, compared to white families.

Black women are disparately likely to experience sexual violence and abuse, making the Texas bans lack of exceptions for rape or incest particularly callous and cruel for Black women. Forced births are particularly deadly for Black pregnant people in a country where Black women are three times more likely than white women to die from complications related to childbirth. Its even more perilous in Texas, which leads the country in postpartum deaths.

In a new tack, the Texas law is written so no government office or official is responsible for enforcing it, instead the law offers a bounty on people who perform or aid and abet access to abortion. Last month, a state district court judge agreed with critics of the vigilante measure. Judge David Peeples ruled the enforcement by private individuals unconstitutional.

Nonetheless, the far-reaching law banning access to abortion care after six weeks gestation, was allowed to stand by the U.S. Supreme Court. American College of Obstetrician and Gynecologists Lead for Equity Transformation Dr. Jennifer Villavicencio spoke about this restriction in The New York Times.

Forcing [people] to find out about a pregnancy and make a decision about how to manage it in a short period of time is antithetical to ethical care, said Dr. Villavicencio.

The bottom line is that abortion bans do not stop abortions; they just make abortion less safe and this is especially true for Black women. A study that looked at potential outcomes of a nationwide abortion ban found it would lead to a 21 percent increase in the number of pregnancy-related deaths overall and a 33 percent increase among Black women.

With their bright smiles reflecting the blithe confidence that comes with knowing the new law will not affect their privileged existence, on Sept. 1, 2021 conservative members of the Texas legislature and Governor Greg Abbott who cant or chooses not to understand basic human reproduction signed into law a targeted attack on the health, rights and lives of Black people. The abortion ban is a call to action and we will not stand idly by.

Howell is founder, CEO and president of In Our Own Voice: National Black Women's Reproductive Justice Agenda.

Jones is co-founder and executive director of The Afiya Center, areproductive justice organization in North Texas founded and directed by Black women.

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Commentary: Abortion ban is an attack on the lives of Black people - Austin American-Statesman

Why we are living in an era of unnatural selection – BBC News

Human-induced trait change has been observed in animals on every continent other than Antarctica.

Today, worker bees in industrial beehives transported from farm to farm across the United States in convoys of trucks are one-third larger than their wild cousins, and more docile. In the past 100 years, North American songbirds have modified the shape of their wings to cope with habitats fragmented by deforestation. Under pressure from poaching, Zambian elephants are born without tusks. Since the introduction of cane toads to Australia in 1935, originally to deal with beetle infestations in sugar plantations, the mouths of black snakes have shrunk as succeeding generations learned to avoid toad-sized prey, while the toads themselves have become cannibals, victims of their own success as predators.

Sea-snakes in Papua New Guinea have developed darker bodies and shed their skins more often in response to toxins in the zinc-polluted waters they inhabit. One species of mosquito has evolved to live only in the tunnels of the London Underground, and lost the capacity to breed with its surface-dwelling cousins. Similar declines in genetic diversity have been observed in mosquitoes in the New York and Chicago subway systems. Blackcaps have shifted their migration routes from the Iberian Peninsula to the UK as climate change extends their range.

"There has never been another species that has so quickly changed the course of evolution," says Sarah Otto, an evolutionary biologist at the University of British Columbia. "Darwin would be shocked!"

We can't always know what causes a particular change, says Otto, whether it's plasticity in action or the beginning of cladogenesis, where distinct sub-populations form. But there are enough examples where genetic change is involved to know that something deeper is going on.

"Swans that avoid cities have a genetic difference from the ones that are human-tolerant," she says. And she points to the difference between UK-migrating blackcaps and birds that still migrate to Iberia as being "very clearly genetic". "The young carry this difference," she says. Changes like this are the first steps to the emergence of a new species. "The London Underground mosquitoes are an example where we might be forming a new niche and creating new opportunities for speciation," Otto adds.

I asked her if we are narrowing the opportunities for species to evolve by interacting with their environments 36% of the planet's land surface is given over to agriculture, while urban environments around the world increasingly resemble one another. One study found that the mass of plastic is now greater than all living biomass. Biodiversity is haemorrhaging due to human activity, according to many analyses. "We are homogenising the planet in some ways," she agrees. "On the other hand, we're making these really extreme environmental shifts. Urban environments are entirely different from our agricultural environments."

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Why we are living in an era of unnatural selection - BBC News

The robot performs the first laparoscopic surgery without human assistance – Vaughan Today

The robot named STAR for autonomous smart tissue robot, Designed by a team of researchers from Johns Hopkins University in the United States. At the moment, the ratings are very optimistic. STAR performed the procedure in four animals and achieved significantly better results than humans who had the same procedure. Axel Krieger, co-lead author of the study published in the journal robotics scienceAnd He is a professor at the Johns Hopkins Whiting School of Engineering.

BY H. SAEIDI JD OPFERMANN ET AL. Science Robotics, 2022

Laparoscopic Enhanced Soft Tissue Surgery. (a) Components of the STAR system, including medical robotic arms, operating surgical instruments, 2-channel light endoscopic imaging system and 3D NIR. (b) The control architecture of the improved STAR autonomy strategy.

>>> To read also: Video: Here are the first humanoid robots that can fly

One of the main challenges of creating a STAR robot was making it as autonomous and accurate as possible. What makes STAR special is that it is the first automated system to plan, adapt and execute a surgical plan in soft tissue, with minimal human intervention. Hamid Saeedi, co-lead author of the study and a visiting scholar in mechanical engineering at the Johns Hopkins Whiting School of Engineering in communication.

From a model built in 2016, researchers have created a new version of the robot by equipping it with the latest technology in surgery. With a guiding system, advanced suture tools, and the latest technology in surgical imaging, STAR has gained ultra-resolution vision for repairing and suturing pig intestines.

>>> To read also: Robots: The Surgeons of Tomorrow?

consequences ? The robot has excelled in performing an intestinal anastomosis, one of the most complex procedures in gastrointestinal surgery. In fact, connecting both ends of the intestine requires extreme precision! The slightest mistake can lead to leakage and therefore very serious consequences for the patient.

The best medical equipment is not enough to ensure the smooth running of this surgery. Robotic programming also had to innovate to manage another challenge: unpredictability. This factor obliges surgeons, and thus the STAR robot, to adapt to any unexpected event. Thus, the researchers equipped the STAR with a control system that allows it to adapt in real time to any obstacle.

>>> Read also: Here are the first robots capable of self-reproduction

The STAR-guided system consists of a 3D endoscope based on structural light and type algorithm machine learning Researchers believe that all these innovations will make robots smarter, but above all safer.

The study authors believe that roboticizing surgical procedures could lead to the democratization of patient care. Surgeons skills vary, and the expectations and outcomes of surgeries vary between each patient. Therefore, the robotic anastomosis A way to ensure that surgical tasks that require high precision and reproducibility can be performed with greater precision and accuracy in every patient, regardless of the skill of the surgeon According to researcher Axel Krieger. And you, would you be ready for surgery by a robot?

>>> Read also: Artificial intelligence, the technology of the future for cancer treatment

Source: DOI: 10.1126 / scirobotics.abj2908

Originally Posted on 01/27/2022

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The robot performs the first laparoscopic surgery without human assistance - Vaughan Today

Two choices in space exploration | TheHill – The Hill

When humanity contemplates sending assets to other planets, what should be our goal? There are two fundamental choices:

1) Use artificial intelligence (AI) astronauts to plant seeds of scientific innovation in other locations, so that intelligence is duplicated and not at risk of extinction.

2)Make numerous copies of what nature already produced on Earth.

The choice is between taking pride in what nature manufactured over 4.5 billion years on Earth through unsupervised evolution and natural selection, or aspiring to a more intelligent form of supervised evolution elsewhere.

The first choice AI is apt to an industrial duplication line, for which the proof of concept for the assembly line was already demonstrated on Earth and we can duplicate it in an Earth-like environment. We are emotionally attracted to the second choice, because we are attached to ourselves and our natural path for maintaining the longevity of our genetic-making through biological reproduction.

Prioritizing the natural processes of the second choice is misguided for two reasons. First, we tend to think we are special and so reproducing more of us is appealing. Second, we forget the extensively long series of trial and error that ended up in our naturally selected species. The second choice reflects a unique selection bias, namely we like who we are and imagine that if we duplicate natural selection in an Earth-like environment somewhere else something as special as us will result. Of course, natural selection holds no such guarantee. This underscores the appeal of the first choice of AI, which promotes new systems that are more advanced and adaptable to very different environments. If evolution is supervised by AI systems with 3D printers, it could be more efficient at identifying optimal solutions to new challenges that were never encountered before.

The second approach was the sort adopted by barbarian cultures throughout human history. Its brute-force simplicity in making copies of existing systems could lead to dominance by numbers, but its main weakness is that it is vulnerable to new circumstances that previous systems cannot survive. For example, the dinosaurs were not smart enough to use telescopes capable of alerting them to the dangers of giant space rocks. Also, the ideas offered by Ancient Greek philosophy survived longer than the Roman Empire despite the latters military might in conquering new territories.

AI scientists could use machine learning to navigate through virgin territories and adapt more effectively to their challenging terrain than terrestrial life forms. In this vein, AI systems could be viewed as our technological kids and a phase in our own Darwinian evolution, as they represent a form of adaption to new worlds beyond Earth. There is no reason for us to be attached to primitive representations of life on Earth, just as there is no reason to resurrect the dinosaurs.

Periods of snowball Earth removed some forms of life from our terrestrial habitat, but the physical challenges on other planets could be so extreme that envisioning terrestrial life there is a non-starter. Adopting survival tactics by AI systems in these alien environments might be essential for tailoring sustainable torches that carry our flame of consciousness there.

Is there a smarter kid on our cosmic block who already figured out the best strategy? If so, it would be interesting to find out whether the first choice or the second are more popular among extraterrestrial civilizations.

The first choice has a higher likelihood of survival in the face of natural disasters, such as loss of planetary atmospheres, climate change, meteorite impacts, evolution of the host star, nearby supernova explosions or flares from supermassive black holes. However, the second choice natures choice could be sufficiently infectious, like the omicron variant of COVID-19, so as to seed many locations at once and compensate for its reduced impact.

By studying other planets for signs of life we could identify which choice is most favorable and even might learn what was most popular by civilizations elsewhere. Based on human history, we might find evidence for a lot of barbarian cultures that had perished and a much smaller population of intelligent cultures that maintained longevity. Although more difficult to find, those precious needles in the haystack that survived over billions of years, could teach us an important lesson about the favorable path. To put my cards on the table even before we find them: I am all in favor of option A for AI than B for barbarian.

Avi Loebis head of HarvardsGalileo Project,a systematic scientific search for evidence of extraterrestrial technological artifacts. Loeb is the founding director of Harvard'sBlack Hole Initiative, the director of the Institute for Theory and Computation at the Harvard-SmithsonianCenter for Astrophysics, and he chairs the advisory board for the Breakthrough Starshot project.He is the author ofExtraterrestrial: The First Sign of Intelligent Life Beyond Earth.

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Two choices in space exploration | TheHill - The Hill

How to ‘Prove’ a Chemical is Dangerous: The Glyphosate Case Study – American Council on Science and Health

If you want to show that any chemical is dangerous, here's a three-step process that will consistently yield the desired result:

I searched for the weed killer glyphosate and reproductive health in preparation for this article. Within seconds, I had 59 peer-reviewed papers at my fingertips that I could have used to argue that glyphosate is a reproductive toxicant. If you see an activist group tout some study as clear evidence that a chemical is harmful, they've almost certainly followed this process.

The anti-biotech group GM Watch, for instance, claimed recently that glyphosate damages blood-testis barrier and causes poor quality sperm, based on this just-published paper (referred to as "Liu et al." below). The researchers fed rats chow containing glyphosate at doses that correspond to levels the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) deems safe for humans, yet some of the animals experienced a decrease in sperm qualitysuggesting that chronic glyphosate exposure induces reproductive toxicity. You can see why GM Watch was interested in the paper:

"The high dose tested, 50 [milligrams per kilogram of body weight per day] is relevant to regulation of glyphosate because it is only 1/20th of the no-observed adverse effect level (NOAEL) of the 1000 mg/kg bw/d Based on this finding, the obvious conclusion is (though the researchers do not state as much) that the EPAs ADI [acceptable daily intake] is incorrect it should be lowered."

Here's the problem: regulatory agencies usually don't draw conclusions based on a single studyand a deeply flawed one at that, as we'll see below. They look at all the available data, then make a determination about the risk a chemical poses to human health. When we look beyond this one paper, we can see why the EPA set the existing limits for glyphosate exposure.

Stuffing animals with weed killer

Sometimes I feel bad for lab animals. That's because scientists stuff them full of chemicals to see what happens, in an effort to determine if they pose a risk to humans. Experiments of this sort have been done many times over the years with glyphosate and two results show up repeatedly:

Glyphosate was not a reproductive toxicant in the majority of rodent multigenerational reproductive studies up to the highest doses tested with HED [human equivalent] doses greater than 170 times higher than the short- term RfD and more than 800 times higher than the subchronic RfD. One multigenerational reproductive study reported decreased spermatid counts and delayed male puberty at an HED dose about 750 times higher than the subchronic RfD, but effects were not replicated in other studies

[A]nother study found increased testes weights but no effects on sperm motility, sperm counts, or estrous cycles at comparable doses. Increased testes and ovary weights were reported in a chronic mouse study at HEDs over 6,000 times higher than the chronic RfD [my emphases]

What about the new study?

The fact that GM Watch wants to elevate a single study over this massive body of peer-reviewed evidence, as well as the conclusions of 16 regulatory and scientific agencies, should set off alarm bells in your head. But what can we say about the new study itself? A lot. Here are just two critical issues with Liu et al. First, the authors claimed that An accumulating body of evidence suggests that glyphosate is an endocrine disruptor. [1] This is false, and we can see why by looking at a 2020 review the authors themselves cited. Here's that paper's conclusion:

"Based on an analysis of the comprehensive toxicology database for glyphosate and the literature, this review has concluded that glyphosate does not have endocrine-disrupting properties through estrogen, androgen, thyroid and steroidogenic modes of action." [my emphasis]

In other words, glyphosate does not interact with the pathways necessary to damage the endocrine system. The EPA also reached this conclusion after reviewing all the available data in 2015. What does this mean for the study GM Watch is so excited about? Glyphosate doesn't bind the estrogen receptor, indicating that the initial step in the paper's model that leads to an adverse effect is flawed, Bayer environmental toxicologist Steven Levine, lead author of the 2020 review, told ACSH by email.

Second, the researchers tried to show that glyphosate-induced oxidative stress led to decreased sperm quality, but they made a serious mistake along the way. Measuring an increase in reactive oxygen with the kit they used is not a reliable indicator of oxidative stress, Levine added. The US National Toxicology Program agrees. Using multiple reliable assays to measure oxidative stress, the NTP has shown that glyphosate does not induce oxidative stress in human cell lines.

Humans aren't lab rats

Replicating the results of animal models and cell-culture studies is important, but the results of human epidemiological research are no help to GM Watch either. For example, biomonitoring studies of farmers (who have the highest glyphosate exposure of any of us) indicate that the weed killer doesn't cause reproductive damage. According to a 2012 review:

"These data demonstrated extremely low human exposures as a result of normal [pesticide] application practices. Furthermore, the estimated exposure concentrations in humans are >500-fold less than the oral reference dose for glyphosate of 2 mg/kg/d[ay] set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. In conclusion, the available literature shows no solid evidence linking glyphosate exposure to adverse developmental or reproductive effects at environmentally realistic exposure concentrations."

If farmers are exposed to glyphosate in quantities far below the EPA reference dose, what are the chances trace amounts of the weed killer in your food will damage your reproductive system? Slim to none is my guess. But you don't have to believe me. Let's return to the EU's Assessment Group on Glyphosate (AGG). They reached the same conclusion:

" On basis of the available information the AGG does not consider the criteria for classification with respect to reproductive toxicity ... to be fulfilled. The AGG proposes that classification of glyphosate as toxic for reproduction is not justified."

I'm not implying that you should believe someone just because they have advanced degrees, or that challenges to scientific consensus are always wrong. People with lots of letters after their names are often mistakeneven if many of them agree. But that doesn't negate the simple fact that we have to account for all the evidence we have before drawing conclusions. Bloggers at GM Watch still haven't grasped this important point. Fortunately, we don't have to make the same mistake.

[1] My colleague Dr. Josh Bloom adds that "'endocrine disruptor' is a catch-all phrase used by anti-chemical types to scare everyone."

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How to 'Prove' a Chemical is Dangerous: The Glyphosate Case Study - American Council on Science and Health

The cost of sexual liberation – UnHerd

Women have very little idea of how much men hate them, wrote Germaine Greer in The Female Eunuch (1970). Last week, a tall, moustachiod 25-year-old serial shagger in New York City became Exhibit A for this claim and also for mens defence against it.

West Elm Caleb reportedly slept with a lot of women via dating apps, and wasnt very honest with any of them about what he was doing. Then some of his dates compared notes via TikTok and the result caused so much arguing it was even reported in India.

Why all the noise about some two-bit Lothario in a city a long way away? Well, in one sense, this is as old as humans: the ongoing resonance of mythic figures such as Helen of Troy show weve been quarrelling about men, women and sex for a very long time.

But the contours of the argument are also uniquely modern. It concerns a dream of hedonistic freedom that blossomed in the mid-20th century, and that Greer herself helped to articulate. And it also captures the way that dream has soured in the hyper-mediated 21st-century world.

In The Female Eunuch, Greer argued that men have, since time immemorial, stuffed women into a domestic role, in which were treated variously as drudge and sexual object. In Greers inimitably pithy terms: a receptacle into which he has emptied his sperm, a kind of human spittoon.

In turn, she thought, women have internalised a stunted image of our own desires. While our bodies are different, supposedly immutable differences in our inner lives are really imposed by stereotype. And this stereotype serves to castrate women, replacing a fully engaged and emancipated female energy with a weak and artificial femininity.

Greer argued that women should abandon this self-imposed prison. Instead, we should pursue revolution meaning the freedom to be a person, with the dignity, integrity, nobility, passion, pride that constitute personhood.

Five decades later, how is Greers vision working out? Well, the Anglosphere rejection of suburban domesticity and motherhood is now advanced. The average age of marriage has been rising steadily since the Seventies, while the total number of marriages has declined steadily. Over the same period, birth rates in the US and UK have fallen steadily and are currently at their lowest ever level.

Childbearing was never intended by biology as a compensation for neglecting all other forms of fulfilment and achievement, Greer argued. And now that women have more choices, claims feminist Jill Filipovic, were voting with our feet (or, perhaps, wombs).

So Greers vision of swapping compulsory domesticity for greater female choice, self-realisation and empowerment has been realised, at least for some. But how far did she really swim against the tide in setting this out?

When The Female Eunuch rocketed Greer to international fame, the Anglosphere had already seen a decade of counterculture, centred on the rejection of tradition and the pursuit of freedom and desire. And one crucial text for this was Jack Kerouacs On The Road (1957) a book that, like The Female Eunuch, celebrated the freewheeling pursuit of passion over the humdrum everyday.

The central character, Dean Moriarty, is a drifter, a slacker and a hedonist. He floats from place to place, leaving a trail of unpaid debts, disappointed friends, damaged cars and chaos in his wake. Hes also a prolific and faithless shagger, taking up with (and sometimes impregnating) lover after lover before abandoning them in one case with a newborn baby.

In Kerouacs telling, Moriarty is depicted both as a walking disaster zone but also an ecstatic, spiritual figure. Far from being abusive, his womanising seems animated by an intense desire to drink deeply from the cup of life, love and desire:

He darted the car and looked in every direction for girls. Look at her! [] And dig her! yelled Dean, pointing at another woman. Oh, I love, love, love women! I think women are wonderful! I love women!

Kerouac celebrated Moriartys unthinking and often-callous spontaneity as a kind of saintliness. Greers innovation was to lay claim, on womens behalf, to a countercultural movement whose main characters had hitherto been mostly male.

For her vision of revolution also involved women becoming more Dean Moriarty-like. Women, she claimed, are not by nature monogamous. Rather, we should be deliberately promiscuous, reject domesticity as an attitude of impotence and hatred masquerading as tranquillity and love and (again, frequently, like Dean Moriarty) run away.

But footloose emancipation on the Greer and Kerouac model has not been cost-free. Greer the libertarian argued that what gets called rape is mostly just bad sex, and shouldnt be severely punished. But the angry and aggrieved women of the #MeToo era seem far from her breezy confidence that bad sex should simply be shrugged off, especially where it feels coercive.

And were witnessing a steady re-evaluation of past attitudes to sexual liberation, too.It turned out, in practice, that no sooner was sex liberated from reproduction than it was re-ordered to commerce in enterprises such as thePlayboypornographic empire.Despite Greers disapproval of this development,Playboy was for decades a byword for egalitarian, libertine (and commercialised) sexual empowerment. Nowa recent documentary has compiled allegations of abuse and even bestiality, by dozens of the Playmates Hugh Hefner brought to live in his mansion. It turns out that the brave new world of free agency and personal responsibility can mesh uncomfortably with real-world imbalances, whether of power, money or beauty.

Meanwhile, the female sexual emancipation Greer pursued has delivered a bonanza for every live-in-the-moment modern-day Dean Moriarty with the looks to enjoy it. In the world of online dating, sex is even more abundant than it was for Dean Moriarty: one twentysomething friend tells me that photogenic male friends find female attention so abundant that some are quite sick of the attention.

But not everyone lucks out: among those neither married or possessing the charms to game online dating, sexual access may be difficult to come by. And among these involuntarily celibate or incel men, this uneven erotic liberation has spurred a boiling rage, much of which is directed against women. Over on the other side, too, its the other teams fault: every woman exploited in a #MeToo situation, or running afoul of some other sexual asymmetry, points the finger at patriarchy (ie men) for her distress.

But the common factor in both cases is a culture in hock to the libertarianism of Kerouac and Greer. For while this worldview was lionised as freedom, in practice what it delivered was a kind of marketisation of the heart, that imagines we can love according to principles of rational choice and utility maximisation. Rooted in mid-century liberation, this paradigm powers much of the hostility between the sexes today.

When a man claims that we shouldnt empathise with Hefners Bunnies as they were adult women who should have known what they were getting into, thats not misogyny. Its just what it looks like when you apply the market logic of freedom and personal responsibility to sex.

The same market logic suffuses the manosphere fixation on sexual market value and concludes that West Elm Caleb did nothing wrong. For in market terms, were all independent, rational adults; why shouldnt a man treat women as human spittoons, should they make themselves available in this capacity?

On the other side of the ledger, we find the same mindsetin the women who share first date evaluation spreadsheets with their friends; in the supposedly feminist claim that sex work is work; or in the bleak assertion that all men cheat, so you might as well hold out for a rich cheater. Or the claim that mens loneliness is mens fault, for male loneliness is caused only by a surplus of high value women and a surplus of low value men.

Instead of questioning sexual market liberalism, all were offered to make sense of this mess is a schizophrenic feminism wholly in thrall to the same fixation on autonomy but only for women. This worldview celebrates Greer-esque radical autonomy and sexual permissiveness, while dismissing observable normative differences between the sexes as stereotypes and blaming any negative side-effects of this approach on patriarchal revanchism.

Beneath this officially sanctioned surface, meanwhile, lurks an increasingly embittered male resentment, that reacts with gleeful schadenfreude whenever a woman acknowledges that there can be tradeoffs between female empowerment and motherhood.

Yet neither side is willing to see the field of courtship as anything more than a low-trust, radically individualist, structurally impermanent market a grim perspective both reinforced and accelerated by the dating apps that now dominate courtship. And under that cloud of suspicion and impermanence, its easy to see how the prospect of an 18-year commitment to a dependent child (and hopefully also to his or her other parent) might well seem wildly implausible, or just unattainable.

Where autonomy conquers solidarity, children are psychologically (and, increasingly, literally) inconceivable. But its precisely when we get to children that the persistent asymmetry between the sexes becomes most difficult to deny, as poignantly illustrated by the lives of both Greer and Kerouac themselves.

Kerouac is an object-lesson in the wider shock-waves caused when men refuse to move on from sexual hedonism. He married three times, and only grudgingly paid child support for Jan, the daughter he fathered in his eight-month marriage to Joan Haverty after a paternity test. He met his daughter only twice; her life was marked by poverty, trauma, sexual abuse, drug-taking and finally death at 44. Greer, meanwhile, never had children. Her biographer recounts how she struggled and failed to do so, before eventually taking solace in her animals.

Team Kerouac and Team Greer are both really the same camp, then. But depending on your sex, the costs of liberation are inescapably different and if we just point fingers at the other sides selfishness, we miss the deeper truth that beneath the pervasive tone of cynicism are real humans of both sexes. And no matter how loudly disappointment curdles to bitterness, nearly all in truth still long for intimacy, companionship and (in most cases) kids.

Such a craving for solidarity is now nigh-on impossible to square with contemporary norms or social infrastructure. Hard as it may be to admit, this is not the exclusive fault of one sex or the other. And yet compassion for the opposite sexs predicament is ever more difficult to muster.

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The cost of sexual liberation - UnHerd

Twelve Rutgers Professors Named Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science – Rutgers Today

MaxHggblom Distinguished Professor and ChairDepartment of Biochemistry and MicrobiologySchool of Environmental and Biological SciencesRutgers-New BrunswickHonored for distinguished contributions to understanding both the fundamental and application components of microbialbiotransformationsof pollutants, especially chlorinated aromaticcompoundsand metalloids.

MaxHggblomis a renowned research scientist and educator with a large body of microbial ecology and environmental biotechnology research that has expanded our understanding of how the biodegradation of environmental pollutants, such as dioxins and PCBs,impact our planet.

His research interests revolve around thebioexploration, cultivation and characterization of novel microbes.His research on bacteria has provided a foundation for applications that address the pollution problems facing impacted industrialized and urbanized environments.

Hggblomslab is also actively studying microorganisms that degrade pharmaceutical and personal care products in aquatic environments.

Over the past decadesthediverse chemicalsin pharmaceutical and personal care productshave emerged as a major group of environmental contaminants in numerous watersheds around the world; therefore, it is important to understand how microbes can degrade them.There is much to explore and learn,Hggblomadded.

Hggblomswork also touches climate change, particularly the roles and responses of microbes in rapidly changing environments, such as the Arctic.In his lab at Rutgers, students have the unique opportunity to exploreareas of research such asthe biodegradation and detoxification of anthropogenic pollutant chemicals, including certainpesticides;respiration of rare metalloids; or life in the frozen tundra soils.

For several years,my lab has worked on studying the microbial ecology of Arctic tundra soils to understand how the changing conditions impact microbial activity and turnover of soil organic matter, and consequently enhanced greenhouse gas flux,Hggblomsaid. This is an important area of research as the threat of microbial contribution to positive feedback of greenhouse gas flux is substantial.

His lab recently received funding from the National Science Foundation to studyhowdiverse microbial communitiesare established insoils.Hggblomwill work with an international research team of scientists from the U.S., China, South Africa and Finland to study soils from the three differentregionsacross Arctic, Tibetan Plateau and Antarctic habitats to expand our understanding of how soil ecosystems respond in critical polar regions.

Emily EversonLayden

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Twelve Rutgers Professors Named Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science - Rutgers Today