Shrinking Bat Genomes Spark a New Model of Evolution – WIRED

Take an onion. Slice it very thin. Thinner than paper thin: single-cell thin. Then dip a slice in a succession of chemical baths cooked up to stain DNA. The dyed strands should appear in radiant magentathe fingerprints of lifes instructions as vivid as rose petals on a marital bed. Now you can count how much DNA there is in each cell. Its simply a matter of volume and density. A computer can flash the answer in seconds: 17 picograms. Thats about 16 billion base pairsthe molecular links of a DNA chain.

Original story reprinted with permission from Quanta Magazine, an editorially independent publication of the Simons Foundation whose mission is to enhance public understanding of science by covering research developments and trends in mathematics and the physical and life sciences.

Maybe that number doesnt mean much to you. Or maybe youre scratching your head, recalling that your own hereditary blueprint weighs in at only 3 billion base pairs. Huh? joked Ilia Leitch, an evolutionary biologist at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, in England. Her reaction mimicked the befuddlement of countless anthropocentric minds who have puzzled over this discrepancy since scientists began comparing species genomes more than 70 years ago. Why would an onion have five times more DNA than we have? Are they five times more clever?

Of course, it wasnt just the onion that upended assumptions about a link between an organisms complexity and the heft of its genetic code. In the first broad survey of animal genome sizes, published in 1951, Arthur Mirsky and Hans Rispioneers in molecular biology and electron microscopy, respectivelyreported with disbelief that the snakelike salamander Amphiuma contains 70 times as much DNA as a chicken, a far more highly developed animal. The decades that followed brought more surprises: flying birds with smaller genomes than grasshoppers; primitive lungfish with bigger genomes than mammals; flowering plants with 50 times less DNA than humans, and flowering plants with 50 times more; single-celled protozoans with some of the largest known genomes of all.

Lucy Reading-Ikkanda/Quanta Magazine; Source: Animal Genome Size Database

Even setting aside the genetic miniatures of viruses, cellular genome sizes measured to date vary more than a millionfold. Think pebbles versus Mount Everest. Its just crazy, Leitch said. Why would that be?

By the 1980s, biologists had a partial answer: Most DNA does not consist of genesthose functional lines of code that translate into the molecules carrying out the business of a cell. Large genomes have vast amounts of noncoding DNA, Leitch said. Thats whats driving the difference.

But although this explanation solved the paradox of the clever onion, it wasnt particularly satisfying. It just opened up more cans of worms, said Ryan Gregory, a biologist at the University of Guelph who runs the online Animal Genome Size Database. Why, for instance, do some genomes contain very little noncoding DNAalso, controversially, often called junk DNAwhile others hoard it? Does all this clutteror lack of itserve a purpose?

This past February, a tantalizing clue arose from research led by Aurlie Kapusta while she was a postdoctoral fellow working with Cedric Feschotte, a geneticist then at the University of Utah, along with Alexander Suh, an evolutionary biologist at Uppsala University in Sweden. The study, one of the first of its kind, compared genome sequences across diverse lineages of mammals and birds. It showed that as species evolved, they gained and shed astonishing amounts of DNA, although the average size of their genomes stayed relatively constant. We see the genome is very dynamic, very elastic, said Feschotte, who is now at Cornell University.

To explain this tremendous DNA turnover, Feschotte proposes an accordion model of evolution, whereby genomes expand and contract, forever gathering up new base pairs and dumping old ones. These molecular gymnastics represent more than a curiosity. They hint at hidden forces shaping the genomeand the organisms that genomes beget.

The first signs that inheritance involves the transmission of more than just genes emerged around the time that Mirsky and Ris were marveling at the enormousness of the salamander genome. In the 1940s, a Swedish geneticist named Gunnar stergren became fascinated with odd hereditary structures found in some plants. stergren wrote that the structures, known as B chromosomes, appeared to have no useful function at all to the species carrying them. He concluded that these extraneous sequences were genetic parasiteshijackers of the host genomes reproductive machinery. Three decades later, the evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins solidified this idea in his popular 1976 book The Selfish Gene ; the theory was quickly adapted to explain genome size.

By then, scientists had learned that B chromosomes are only a tiny fraction of the molecular parasites making genomes fat. The most prolific freeloaders are mobile strings of DNA called transposons, identified in 1944 by Barbara McClintock, the groundbreaking cytogeneticist who was honored with a Nobel Prize for that discovery. Transposons are popularly known as jumping genes, although they are rarely in fact true genes. They can get passed down from one generation to the next or transmitted between species, like viruses, and they come in several flavors. Some encode enzymes that snip a transposon out of its place in a genome and paste it elsewhere. Others copy themselves by manufacturing RNA templates or stealing enzymes from other transposons. (You can get parasites within parasites, Gregory said.)

Lucy Reading-Ikkanda/Quanta Magazine

Its not hard to see how these copies could quickly multiply, eventually taking over large portions of a genome. (More than 100 can pop up in a single generation of flies; they make up 85 percent of the maize genome and almost half of our own.) Proponents of the selfish DNA theory saw this pileup as the driving force of genome evolution: Within the ecosystem of a cells nucleus, natural selection would favor fast-multiplying transposons. But only up to a point. Once a genome reached a certain size, its bulk would start to interfere with an organisms well-beingfor example, by slowing the division of cells and thus the rate of the organisms growth. Selection would kick in again, preventing further expansion. The limit would depend on the organisms biology.

New evidence soon complicated this picture. In the late 1990s, Dmitri Petrov, then a doctoral student at Harvard University, began tracking small mutations in insectsrandom genetic changes of up to a few hundred base pairs that resulted from DNA damage, copying mistakes and poor strand repair. He started with flies. Analyzing defunct transposons, he showed that old code was being scrapped more quickly than new lines were being written (because random mutations are more likely to delete existing base pairs than to insert new ones). He wondered if this deletion bias might explain the flys relatively compact genome. He repeated the experiment in crickets and grasshoppers, whose genomes are, respectively, 10 and 100 times as large as the flys. This time, the deletion rates, although still dominant, were indeed considerably slower. Were some genomes bulkier than others simply because they werent as quick to clear out debris?

Based on these and similar observations, Petrov laid out a new model of genome size. Transposons, he argued, would always accumulate, sometimes very quickly. (Maize, for example, has doubled its genome in only 3 million years.) But over eons, small excisions would slowly chip away at a genomes bulk. Eventually, the pace of expunction would match the pace of creation, and the genome would settle into equilibrium. Any number of forces in the chaotic nucleus might setor resetthis balance.

Not everyone was convinced. Gregory, for one, maintained that spontaneous change happened too slowly to account for the dramatic morphing of genome size in many lineages. But no one could deny that loss was a powerful transformative force. As Gregory wrote in The Evolution of the Genome , there are more complex interactions between [transposons] and their hosts than strict parasitism. The tricky part was finding them.

For Feschotte, the tip-off came from a bat. By the early 2000s, following advances in DNA sequencing, labs had begun decoding whole genomes and sharing the data online. At the time, Feschottes group was not particularly interested in the evolutionary dynamics of genome size, but they were extremely curious about what transposons could reveal about the history of life. So when the genome of the common little brown bat ( Myotis lucifugus ), the first genome sequence from a bat, appeared in 2006, Feschotte was thrilled. Bats have strikingly small genomes for a mammaltheyre more like those of birdsand it seemed likely they would hold surprises.

The tiny red viscacha rat has the largest known genome of any mammal.

MICHAEL A. MARES; STEVE BOURNE

Southern bent-wing bats have some of the smallest mammalian genomes, despite resembling the viscacha rat in size and complexity.

STEVE BOURNE

Parsing the creatures 2 billion base pairs, Feschotte and his colleagues did stumble on something strange. We found some very weird transposons, he said. Because these oddball parasite sequences didnt appear in other mammals, they were likely to have invaded after bats diverged from other lineages, perhaps picked up from an insect snack some 30 to 40 million years ago. Whats more, they were incredibly active. Probably 20 percent or more of the bats genome is derived from this fairly recent wave of transposons, Feschotte said. It raised a paradox because when we see an explosion of transposon activity, wed predict an increase in size. Instead, the bat genome had shrunk. So we were puzzled.

There was only one likely explanation: Bats must have jettisoned a lot of DNA. When Kapusta joined Feschottes lab in 2011, her first project was to find out how much. By comparing transposons in bats and nine other mammals, she could see which pieces many lineages shared. These, she determined, must have come from a common ancestor. Its really like looking at fossils, she said. Researchers had previously assembled a rough reconstruction of the ancient mammalian genome as it might have existed 100 million years ago. At 2.8 billion base pairs, it was nearly human-size.

Next, Kapusta calculated how much ancestral DNA each lineage had lost and how much new material it had gained. As she and Feschotte suspected, the bat lineages had churned through base pairs, dumping more than 1 billion while accruing only another few hundred million. Yet it was the other mammals that made their jaws drop.

Mammals are not especially diverse when it comes to genome size. In many animal groups, such as insects and amphibians, genomes vary more than a hundredfold. By contrast, the largest genome in mammals (in the red viscacha rat) is only five times as big as the smallest (in the bent-wing bat). Many researchers took this to mean that mammalian genomes just dont have much going on. As Susumu Ohno, the noted geneticist and expert in molecular evolution, put it in 1969: In this respect, evolution of mammals is not very interesting.

Aurlie Kapusta, a research associate in human genetics at the University of Utah and the USTAR Center for Genetic Discovery.

Mary-Anne Karren

But Kapustas data revealed that mammalian genomes are far from monotonous, having reaped and purged vast quantities of DNA. Take the mouse. Its genome is roughly the same size it was 100 million years ago. And yet very little of the original remains. This was a big surprise: In the end, only one-third of the mouse genome is the same, said Kapusta, who is now a research associate in human genetics at the University of Utah and at the USTAR Center for Genetic Discovery. Applying the same analysis to 24 bird species, whose genomes are even less varied than those of mammals, she showed that they too have a lively genetic history.

No one predicted this, said J. Spencer Johnston, a professor of entomology at Texas A&M University. Even those genomes that didnt change size over a huge period of timethey didnt just sit there. Somehow they decided what size they wanted to be, and despite mobile elements trying to bloat them, they didnt bloat. So then the next obvious question is: Why the heck not?

Feschottes best guess points at transposons themselves. They provide a very natural mechanism by which gain provides the template to facilitate loss, he said. Heres how: As transposons multiply, they create long strings of nearly identical code. Parts of the genome become like a book that repeats the same few words. If you rip out a page, you might glue it back in the wrong place because everything looks pretty much the same. You might even decide the book reads just fine as is and toss the page in the trash. This happens with DNA too. When its broken and rejoined, as routinely happens when DNA is damaged but also during the recombination of genes in sexual reproduction, large numbers of transposons make it easy for strands to misalign, and that slippage can result in deletions. The whole array can collapse at once, Feschotte said.

Cedric Feschotte, a professor of molecular biology and genetics at Cornell University, recently of the University of Utah.

University of Utah Health

This hypothesis hasnt been tested in animals, but there is evidence from other organisms. Its not so different from what were seeing in plants with small genomes, Leitch said. DNA in these species is often dominated by just one or two types of transposons that amplify and then get eliminated. The turnover is very dynamic: in 3 to 5 million years, half of any new repeats will be gone.

Thats not the case for larger genomes. What we see in big plant genomesand also in salamanders and lungfishis a much more heterogeneous set of repeats, none of which are present in [large numbers], Leitch said. She thinks these genomes must have replaced the ability to knock out transposons with a novel and effective way of silencing them. What they do is, they stick labels onto the DNA that signal to it to become very tightly condensedsort of squishedso it cant be read easily. That alteration stops the repeats from copying themselves, but it also breaks the mechanism for eliminating them. So over time, Leitch explained, any new repeats get stuck and then slowly diverge through normal mutation to produce a genome full of ancient degenerative repeats.

Meanwhile, other forces may be at play. Large genomes, for instance, can be costly. Theyre energetically expensive, like running a big house, Leitch said. They also take up more space, which requires a bigger nucleus, which requires a bigger cell, which can slow processes like metabolism and growth. Its possible that in some populations, under some conditions, natural selection may constrain genome size. For example, female bow-winged grasshoppers, for mysterious reasons, prefer the songs of males with small genomes. Maize plants growing at higher latitudes likewise self-select for smaller genomes, seemingly so they can generate seed before winter sets in.

Some experts speculate that a similar process is going on in birds and bats, which may need small genomes to maintain the high metabolisms needed for flight. But proof is lacking. Did small genomes really give birds an advantage in taking to the skies? Or had the genomes of birds flightless dinosaur ancestors already begun to contract for some other reason, and did the physiological demands of flight then shrink the genomes of modern birds even more? We cant say whats cause and effect, Suh said.

Carrie Arnold

Genetic Architects Untwist DNAs Turns With Crispr

Tim Vernimmen

Biologists Are Figuring Out How Cells Tell Left From Right

John Pavlus

The Hunt for the Algorithms That Drive Life on Earth

Its also possible that genome size is largely a result of chance. My feeling is theres one underlying mechanism that drives all this variability, said Mike Lynch, a biologist at Indiana University. And thats random genetic drift. Its a principle of population genetics that driftwhereby a genetic variant becomes more or less common just by sheer luckis stronger in small groups, where theres less variation. So when populations decline, such as when new species diverge, the odds increase that lineages will drift toward larger genomes, even if organisms become slightly less fit. As populations grow, selection is more likely to quash this trait, causing genomes to slim.

None of these models, however, fully explain the great diversity of genome forms. The way I think of it, youve got a bunch of different forces on different levels pushing in different directions, Gregory said. Untangling them will require new kinds of experiments, which may soon be within reach. Were just at the cusp of being able to write genomes, said Chris Organ, an evolutionary biologist at Montana State University. Well be able to actually manipulate genome size in the lab and study its effects. Those results may help to disentangle the features of genomes that are purely products of chance from those with functional significance.

Many experts would also like to see more analyses like Kapustas. (Lets do the same thing in insects! Johnston said.) As more genomes come online, researchers can begin to compare larger numbers of lineages. Four to five years from now, every mammal will be sequenced, Lynch said, and well be able to see whats happening on a finer scale. Do genomes undergo rapid expansion followed by prolonged contraction as populations spread, as Lynch suspects? Or do changes happen smoothly, untouched by population dynamics, as Petrovs and Feschottes models predict and recent work in flies supports?

Or perhaps genomes are unpredictable in the same way life is unpredictablewith exceptions to every rule. Biological systems are like Rube Goldberg machines, said Jeff Bennetzen, a plant geneticist at the University of Georgia. If something works, it will be done, but it can be done in the most absurd, complicated, multistep way. This creates novelty. It also creates the potential for that novelty to change in a million different ways.

Original story reprinted with permission from Quanta Magazine , an editorially independent publication of the Simons Foundation whose mission is to enhance public understanding of science by covering research developments and trends in mathematics and the physical and life sciences.

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Shrinking Bat Genomes Spark a New Model of Evolution - WIRED

Scientists use gene editing to correct mutations in humans – DeathRattleSports.com

Each year, millions of people around the world are affected by diseases caused by mutations that occur in the very early stages of development.

But many of those diseases could soon cease to exist, thanks to a gene editing technique that uses the controversial CRISPR-Cas9 system.

In a world first, scientists have used the technique to correct a mutation for a heart condition in embryos, so that the defect would not be passed on to future generations.

The findings could pave the way for improved IVF outcomes, as well as eventual cures for some of the thousands of diseases caused by mutations in single genes.

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The work is a collaboration between the Salk Institute, Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) and Koreas Institute for Basic Science.

Professor Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte, an author of the study, said: Thanks to advances in stem cell technologies and gene editing, we are finally starting to address disease-causing mutations that impact potentially millions of people.

Gene editing is still in its infancy so even though this preliminary effort was found to be safe and effective, it is crucial that we continue to proceed with the utmost caution, paying the highest attention to ethical considerations.

In the study, the researchers were able to correct a mutation that causes an inherited heart disease, called hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM).

HCM is an inherited disease of your heart muscle, where the muscle wall of your heart becomes thickened.

A: An incredibly powerful gene-editing tool that is transforming the way DNA is manipulated and modified. First demonstrated in 2013, it is based on a system bacteria use to defend themselves against invading viruses.

A: In its most basic form, the gene editing tool kit consists of a small piece of RNA a genetic molecule closely related to DNA and an enzyme protein called Cas9.

The RNA component is programmed to latch onto a specific DNA sequence. Then Cas9 slices through the strands of DNA, like a pair of molecular scissors.

A: By cutting away precisely targeted elements of DNA, active genes can be switched off. Defective parts of a gene can also be removed, allowing the fault to be repaired.

A: Here, nature comes into play. Once a piece of DNA has been snipped out in a cell, natural repair systems kick in to try to repair the damage.

More advanced gene editing systems include additional template DNA the cell can use to mend the break, making it possible to re-write the genetic code.

This was what the scientists conducting the new research planned to do. In the event, the embryos went their own way.

Instead of adopting the researchers template, their cells exploited the fact that only one copy of the gene carried by sperm was defective.

They based their repairs on the other, functioning, copy of the gene inherited from the women who donated their eggs for the research.

A: A lot more research has to be done before the technique is shown to be safe and effective enough to be used in the clinic.

Also, altering nuclear DNA in a developing embryo is currently illegal.

A change in the law would be needed before such treatments can be considered, and this would involve addressing some profound ethical questions.

If in future gene editing of embryos is given the green light, it could potentially prevent thousands of diseases being passed onto future generations.

It is caused by a mutation in the MYBPC3 gene, and those affected have a 50 per cent chance of passing the disease on to their own children.

Using a skin biopsy from a man with HCM, the researchers generated stem cells to use in their study.

The researchers used a technique based on CRISPR-Cas9 a genetic tool that can cut and paste small sections of DNA, deleting or repairing flawed genes to correct the HCM mutation in the cells.

CRISPR-Cas9 works as a pair of genetic scissors designed to cut the DNA near the position of the mutation.

The cut is then spontaneously repaired by the cell with different mechanisms: one repairs the DNA without leaving any trace, while the other introduces some unwanted insertions or deletions of a few base pairs near the cutting site.

While previous studies have injected CRISPR-Cas9 after IVF, they faced problems due to mosaicism in which embryos have some repaired cells, and others that carry the mutation.

To overcome this issue, the researchers injected the CRISPR-Cas9 and the sperm into the egg at the same time.

Using this technique, they found that the mosaicism did not occur.

During testing, CRISPR-Cas9 cut the DNA at the correct position in all tested embryos.

Forty-two out of the 58 embryos tested did not carry the HCM mutation.

In other words, this technique increased the probability of inheriting the healthy gene from 50 per cent to 72.4 per cent.

The highly controversial technique is still at an early experimental stage.

There is no question of any attempt being made to create babies with the genetic modification, which would be illegal both in the US and the UK.

But a leading member of the team has hinted that first steps towards bringing the treatment to patients could take place in the UK under the direction of the fertility regulator the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA).

Dr Shoukhrat Mitalipov, from Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) in Portland, said in a telephone briefing with journalists: Maybe .. (the) HFEA might take a lead on this, but Im quite sure before these clinical trials can go on they have to go through, I believe, Parliament to change a law.

So there is still a long road ahead, particularly if you want to do it in a regulatory way.

US regulatory barriers to such research are so high they could be insurmountable.

In the US, taxpayer funds cannot pay for research that destroys human embryos.

And Congress has banned the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) from even considering the possibility of human clinical trials involving embryos with edited inherited genes.

More liberal Britain has already blazed a trail by becoming the first country officially to sanction mitochondrial replacement therapy (MRT), seen by some as opening the door to designer babies.

The researchers also found that human embryos have an alternative DNA repair system, where the Cas9-induced cuts in the DNA coming from the sperm are repaired using the healthy eggs DNA as a template.

This explained why the remaining 27.6 per cent embryos still had the HCM mutations.

Additionally, the researchers found that there were no off-target changes made during the testing.

Some people are voicing their opposition to the gene-editing technology.

Dr David King, director of Human Genetics Alert, said: If irresponsible scientists are not stopped, the world may soon be presented with a fait accompli of the first GM baby.

We call on governments and international organisations to wake up and pass an immediate global ban on creating cloned or GM babies, before it is too late.

There is absolutely no medical need to use this technology to avoid the birth of children with genetic diseases, since genetic selection techniques can prevent their birth, where that is appropriate.

So scientists racing to develop this technology must be driven by something else: irresponsible technological enthusiasm, the desire for fame, or the financial gain of being the first to market designer babies.

Dr Jun Wu, one of the papers first authors, said: Our technology successfully repairs the disease-causing gene mutation by taking advantage of a DNA repair response unique to early embryos.

During testing, none of the embryos were allowed to develop beyond five days after conception.

But had they produced offspring, those with the repair would no longer be at risk of developing HCM, or passing the defective gene onto their own children.

Dr Shoukhrat Mitalipov, who also worked on the study, said: Every generation on would carry this repair because weve removed the disease-causing gene variant from that familys lineage.

By using this technique, its possible to reduce the burden of this heritable disease on the family and eventually the human population.

While the results are extremely promising, the researchers warn that they are very preliminary, and that further studies will be needed to make sure there are no unwanted side effects.

Professor Belmonte said: Our results demonstrate the great potential of embryonic gene editing, but we must continue to realistically assess the risks as well as the benefits.

Dr Daniel Dorsa, senior vice president for research at OHSU added: The ethical considerations of moving this technology to clinical trials are complex and deserve significant public engagement before we can answer the broader question of whether its in humanitys interest to alter human genes for future generations.

But not everyone is happy about the study, and claim that it is the first step in the development of designer babies.

Dr David King, director of Human Genetics Alert, said: If irresponsible scientists are not stopped, the world may soon be presented with a fait accompli of the first GM baby.

We call on governments and international organisations to wake up and pass an immediate global ban on creating cloned or GM babies, before it is too late.

There is absolutely no medical need to use this technology to avoid the birth of children with genetic diseases, since genetic selection techniques can prevent their birth, where that is appropriate.

So scientists racing to develop this technology must be driven by something else: irresponsible technological enthusiasm, the desire for fame, or the financial gain of being the first to market designer babies.

James Clapper, US director of national intelligence was right to call the creation of GM babies a weapon of mass social destruction.

Charlie Gard would not have been saved by gene editing his embryo in the way described by Dr Shoukhrat Mitalipov and his fellow scientists.

The technique worked for the heart failure condition hypertrophic cadiomyopathy because the disorder is due to a fault in a single gene inherited from one parent.

Charlies illness, infantile onset encephalomyopathy mitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome (MDDS) is an autosomal recessive disorder, which only manifests itself if the gene fault is inherited from both parents.

The disease leads to a loss of mitochondrial DNA, housed in cellular power plants that supply energy to vital organs.

Because of the gene defect Charlie was unable to transfer energy to his muscles, kidneys and brain.

Although it affects mitochondrial DNA, the rare condition is triggered by a fault in the cell nucleus passed down by both a childs mother and father.

The American researchers admitted that fixing such a recessive genetic error caused by two mutated copies of a gene would be far more challenging.

This is because the repair they carried out depended on having one good copy of the gene.

The scientists used a molecular scissors technique called Crispr-Cas9 to snip away precisely targeted elements of defective DNA carried by fertilising sperm.

Once the dysfunctional DNA was removed, Mother Nature took over as the embryos own repair systems fixed the damage using the good gene copy inherited from the egg donor mothers as a template.

Without the mothers functioning genes, it is unlikely the fix would have succeeded.

Although the scientists introduced their own healthy gene template, at the end of the day this played no part in the repair.

Charlie died on July 28, aged 11 months, after being at the centre of a painful legal battle between his parents and Londons Great Ormond Street Hospital.

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Scientists use gene editing to correct mutations in humans - DeathRattleSports.com

Govs. Hickenlooper, Kasich urge bipartisan effort to move forward on health care – CBS News

Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper and Ohio Governor John Kasich say the next step toward changing the Affordable Care Act -- after lawmakers failed to follow through on health care reform-- should now include a bipartisan effort.

"Let's get a bipartisan group of people together, and include some governors, who are the guys who have to- the people who have to implement these plans, and look at how do we stabilize private markets, how do we, you know, deal with these high-cost pools, and what's the best way," Democratic Gov. Hickenlooper said on CBS News' "Face the Nation" on Sunday.

"There are some basic remedial steps that can improve our health care system without having to throw everything out the window," he added.

Hickenlooper noted that Americans will be "surprised" at the number of senators willing to "roll up our sleeves, and work on a bipartisan basis, and see how far we can go."

Kasich, who has been collaborating with Hickenlooper in recent weeks, echoed Hickenlooper's comments, saying that once lawmakers realize the system is "melting down," he's hopeful Congress can put aside their philosophical differences and provide a bipartisan solution.

"I think there is a hunger in the Congress at least in the Senate to try to do what they went to do, which is to solve problems. And you can't solve immense, difficult problems without both sides," Kasich said on Sunday.

When asked what compromises both parties would likely be making in such a bipartisan effort, Kasich said Democrats may have to be willing to allow more choices in the insurance marketplace to help drive costs down, while Republicans will have to admit that "there's going to be a group of people out there who are going to need help."

When asked for specific ways in which a revised policy could include a bipartisan solution on the issue of individual mandates, Hickenlooper said, "The key here is to recognize that when you let healthy people not be part of the pool, you're going to concentrate people with serious health issues, so much more expensive insurance risks, into the market. And that's of course going to raise the cost for everyone."

He added, "whether it's a mandate or a reinsurance type pool, that's where we can sit down."

Kasich said that while differences may persist in Washington, putting aside which party "wins" in the end could help ensure a successful outcome.

"If you don't worry about which party gets the credit or which politician gets the credit, it can work," he said. "Now, I can't guarantee you that Hickenlooper and I are going to agree on this, but I'm hopeful."

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Govs. Hickenlooper, Kasich urge bipartisan effort to move forward on health care - CBS News

Quora: Why Is Health Care So Difficult to Solve? – Newsweek

Quora Questions are part of a partnership between NewsweekandQuora, through which we'll be posting relevant and interesting answers from Quora contributors throughout the week. Read more about the partnershiphere.

Answer from Michael Lee, Public Policy Analyst:

Health care policy involves a lot of political challenges. Leaving aside the policy questions for the momentlets just talk politicsthe challenges include:

Daily Emails and Alerts - Get the best of Newsweek delivered to your inbox

With a stunning late-night vote, Republican Senators John McCain, Lisa Murkowski, and Susan Collins crossed party lines voting against the GOP's "skinny repeal" version of Obamacare reform. Zach Gibson/Getty

So when talking about the Republican health care proposal this year, even leaving aside the policy issues, we have a new government entitlement in the form of ACAs insurance subsidies that now has a constituency (both via the insurance industry and the covered individuals) that doesnt want things to change! But reversing field (even if Republicans were interested in building on ACA) isnt too workable either, because it would require new tax revenue to cover more people.

Remember, Democrats in 2010 passed ACA even though it had a lot of problems and didnt really reflect their policy priorities. And they did it because it moved the ball in their direction and they were convinced that theyd be rewarded by the voters for providing a new benefit. That hasnt happened quite yet, but voters still agitated against the Republican proposal because it would have reduced health insurance coverage compared to current law.

It remains to be seen where we go from here.

Why is the health care bill considered such a hard problem? originally appeared on Quora - the place to gain and share knowledge, empowering people to learn from others and better understand the world. You can follow Quora on Twitter, Facebook, and Google+. More questions:

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Quora: Why Is Health Care So Difficult to Solve? - Newsweek

Mental health services increase ROI for CHG Healthcare – Employee Benefit News

When Nicole Thurman first noticed the health issues that CHG Healthcare was treating its own employees at its Salt Lake City clinic anxiety, substance abuse and post-traumatic stress disorder, among others it became apparent that the medical staffing firm needed to hire a mental health counselor.

We have a young population, so we have an opportunity to help with mental health issues before they turn into substance abuse issues or physical health issues, says the senior director of talent management. I look at this as preventative care.

The staffing firm, which temporarily places physicians in hospitals and clinics, is still in its first year offering mental health counselors to its employees but this benefit has earned $1.73 on every dollar it spends on its Salt Lake City on-site clinic. The ROI was based on claims where high costs claims that cost more than $25,000 were not factored, according to CHG Healthcare.

The mental health counselors are solely available for about 1,300 CHG healthcare employees in the Salt Lake City location. CHG Healthcare plans to roll out the service to 600 employees in the Fort Lauderdale office this January, and is still thinking about its approach for bringing mental health services to locations with fewer than 100 employees. The company started out in Salt Lake City to find doctors and medical professionals for the rural west but it now has four subsidiary companies that all operate under CHG Healthcare. So far, only the Utah-based CHG Healthcare offers this service to its employees.

CHG Healthcare added three counselors to its on-site clinics in November 2016 and said about a third of the 75 visits each month are related to mental health.

We have a really high stress, high intensity workplace because most of our people are recruiters. They need to make their numbers, Thurman says. [The counselors] see a lot of people with anxiety, home and work-life balance problems, depression, marital issues, substance abuse, financial wellness. If we didnt have our clinic here, [our employees] would go elsewhere.

See also: This app tells you when youre depressed. Who else does it tell?

The clinic offers services such as primary care, health coaching, orthopedic injury treatment, pediatric services and womens health, among a myriad of other services, so its impossible for the company to know if an employee is seeking mental health services or treatment for a bad back, Thurman says.

Thurman declined to reveal the cost of the mental health services out of concern that it would deter other employers from offering similar services. However, she says the service is easily scalable.

Originally, the mental health services started out as a referral system, where CHG healthcare leaders could direct their employees. From there, CHG Healthcare has expanded its advertising to fliers, benefit brochures, online communications and physician assistant-led lunch-and-learn sessions, Thurman says.

There is an undercurrent that happens here, she says. Its all word of mouth. Someone will have a good experience and tell someone else. Its exciting to me because that stigma is broken down.

Thurman admits that the company has a good culture built upon trust, which makes a service like mental health counseling more widely used by employees.

Its convenient, its no cost and its high quality, Thurman says of the benefit that is not charged to the employees. Thats why it works.

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Mental health services increase ROI for CHG Healthcare - Employee Benefit News

In healthcare, big data alone isn’t enough – MedCity News

For what its worth, most hospitals and health systems have realized the value in investing in big data. Theyre eagerly raking in a plethora of data, focusing solely on the collection aspect.

But thats insufficient, Gray Matter Analytics president and CEO Sheila Talton proposed during an event last week at Chicago-based startup incubator MATTER.

The real story is: How do you have data thats accessible that can actually become information? Because data is not information, she said.

Most healthcare organizations have gotten the data gathering process down pat, and theyve become experts at utilizing data to report what happened. However, the industry needs to keep moving forward so that data can be used to get descriptive insights, predictive insights and prescriptive recommendations.

Systems are clearly impeded from making good use of the data they have. Part of the problem is the fact that much of the data is siloed.

For other organizations, its simply a budget issue. The majority of health systems can hardly obtain the financial resources to maintain their existing tools, let alone implement new processes and programs.

When a hospital does hop on the bandwagon and begin to manage data, its often pulled into believing in a one-size-fits-all model. Every tool and solution that a certain hospital utilizes will work for me, the hospital thinks.

Yet thats not the case, Talton stressed. Each hospital has a different patient population and budget, meaning it requires its own unique solution.

The need for better data integration is especially applicable in this day and age as the healthcare sector pushes for value-based care.

Value-based care is here to stay, Talton said. That continuum is continuing.

Since the industry is moving toward shared risk models, figuring out how to use data is more important than ever. Health system leaders need to ask, How do we manipulate and manage our data? How can we use it to make the lives of our clinicians easier?

On top of asking these questions, everyone from payers to providers needs to be finding ways to share data with each other. Only by doing so can the healthcare field glean meaningful insights and information.

In closing, Talton shared her belief of what a health systems number one focus should be: Becoming a data-centric entity. But it also boils down to planning for the long term. Instead of focusing solely on installing one-off solutions and collecting data, systems must consider their ultimate goals.

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Sen. Ron Johnson: Put healthcare reform on back burner and focus on other legislative issues – Washington Examiner

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., said it is probably time for legislators to focus on areas of work like taxes and the economy while continuing to negotiate on a healthcare bill in the background.

Johnson was asked by CNN's Jake Tapper about a tweet from President Trump aimed specifically at Congress' upper chamber, stating, "Unless the Republican Senators are total quitters, Repeal & Replace is not dead! Demand another vote before voting on any other bill!"

"I really do think we probably ought to turn our attention to the debt ceiling and funding the government and tax cuts until we can really get all the parties together," Johnson said. "From my standpoint that really is getting the governors, House members, senators [and] the White House on the same page in terms of healthcare."

Tapper noted that Trump has also been critical of the Senate for leaving town with numerous campaign pledges by Republicans and the president himself still unfulfilled or languishing, such as funding and construction of a border wall, tax cuts, and plan to repeal and replace of Obamacare.

"My preference would have been to stay in session, to grapple with those issues I was talking about," Johnson said. "At the same time, getting back to the state, talking to constituents -- on Friday I traveled with Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue and had some really informative discussions with farmers and agriculture interests in the state. We are not on vacation. We really are working. I continue discussions on healthcare as well as taxes with my colleagues even though we're not in Washington, D.C.

Johnson went on to note that Obamacare markets are still unstable, and that the issues around healthcare "aren't going away."

With regards to the ongoing Russia investigations, a bipartisan Senate bill was introduced that would protect special counsel Robert Mueller from being fired by President Trump.

"I don't see that Bob Mueller is going to be fired," Johnson said. "But at the same time I was pretty vocal, saying I would have preferred the congressional committees, the House and Senate Intel Committees finish their work, issue their report before we begin thinking about special counsel. Let's face it, the history of special counsel, special prosecutors, sometimes they go off the rails, they start going on witch hunts. And we have enormous challenges facing this nation. We don't really need that kind of distraction."

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Bitcoin Just Reached a New All-Time High – Futurism – Futurism

In Brief Post fork, Bitcoin is surging up once more, reaching $3,000 for the first time since June, and surpassing $3,200 for the first time. This was accompanied by a peak in trade volume, and bitcoins market cap rests at around $54.13 billion at press time.

According to the CoinDesk Bitcoin Price Index (BPI), the price of bitcoin has shot up again, surpassing $3,200 for the first time. Market data indicates this latest surge started after 1:00 UTC on August 5, when the price of bitcoin surged past $2,900. By about 3:12 UTC, the price breached the $3,000 mark.

Although many predicted bitcoin would not fare well after the fork, these numbers seem to indicate otherwise. In fact, as Redditors have been discussing, Bitcoin is now worth more than $1 for each day it has existed. Senior Goldman Sachs technician Sheba Jafaris prediction about bitcoin starting a wave V during which its value could reach almost $3,700 is looking on point.Disclosure: Several members of the Futurism team, including the editors of this piece, are personal investors in cryptocurrency markets. Their personal investment perspectives have no impact on editorial content.

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Bitcoin Just Reached a New All-Time High - Futurism - Futurism

China to Start Using Blockchain to Collect Taxes and Send Invoices – Futurism

In Brief China has just announced that it will use blockchain technology for social taxation and issuing electronic invoices. This is just the latest example of the broad array of applications possible for the technology. Blockchain In China

The Chinese government listed blockchainin its Thirteenth Five-Year National Informatization Plan from 2015, and since that time the nation has been working diligently toward incorporate the technology into daily life. The techs inclusion in the plan signals the importance China has attached to it, and this was just confirmed by the governments announcement that it will utilize blockchain technology for social taxation and electronic invoice issuance matters.

This is a major development, and given that the Chinese economy is the worlds largest, with a 2016 GDP of over RMB 70 trillion (approximately U.S. $10.4 trillion), this should be an interesting test case for the implementation of blockchain technology. China has already launched a test of its own cryptocurrency based on the technology, so these initiatives should be able to build on each other.

Furthermore, we should also see implementation at the city level in China, as several local and provincial governments have recently promulgated pro-blockchain policies. In fact, asmart cities initiative has already enticed a Chinese automaker to integrate the tech into its business model. Additionally, blockchain-based industrial parks have gone up in Chengdu, Hangzhou, and other major cities, and agencies at different levels of government have created blockchain R&D teams.

This latest development in China is a good example of how blockchain technology can be used in a broad array of applications. Blockchain tech has been proposed for use in elections do to its potential for both transparency and security. Its these features that make it appealing for taxation as well.

Governments arent the only ones exploring the techs applications. Walmarthas started experimenting with a blockchain database that would protect consumers from contaminated food products as well as guard against product waste. Toyota is using blockchain to get its self-driving cars on the road faster, and the company plans to give customers access to their own data the same way.

Moving forward, we will see more and more innovative uses of blockchain technology as its potential is more fully realized. Transparency and security are both absolute essentials in a digital age, and China appears to be recognizing that need andputting this powerful techto use throughpolicy.

Disclosure: Several members of the Futurism team, including the editors of this piece, are personal investors in cryptocurrency markets. Their personal investment perspectives have no impact on editorial content.

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China to Start Using Blockchain to Collect Taxes and Send Invoices - Futurism

Report: The World Invested $264 Billion in New Renewables in 2016 – Futurism

In BriefREN21's latest Renewables Global Status Report claims thatmore solar energy technology installed worldwide in 2016 than anyother form of renewable energy. Overall, renewable energy isgrowing much faster than fossil fuels, with the former receivingdouble the investment dollars for the fifth consecutive year. Here Comes the Sun

The future of energy looks sunny. According to the latest Renewables Global Status Reportfrom REN21, more renewable power capacity was added in 2016 than all new fossil fuel capacity combined. In fact, for the fifth consecutive year, investment in new renewables was roughly double fossil fuel investments, with $264.8 billion invested in renewables worldwide in 2016.

Across the globe, renewable electricity costs are dropping, and of all the forms of renewable energy, REN21s report asserts that solar energy-capturing technology was the most popular in 2016.

This report is big news for the planet. Burning oil, coal, and other carbon-based fuels generates carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gases that contribute to climate change. A trend toward clean energy sources like solar, wind, and hydropower can only help the environment, but thats not the only reason for the switch.

As Australian National University professor Andrew Blakers wrote in The Conversation, It is probable that construction of new coal power stations will declinebecause PV (solar photovoltaics)and wind are now cost-competitive almost everywhere.

The financial benefits of renewables may not be enough to spur their adoption in the U.S., however. The current administrationsAmerica First Energy Planwithdraws the nation from the Paris Agreement, rescinds the Clean Power Plan, and supports new investment in coal three acts that could stymie the switch to clean energy. Additionally, President Trumps position on trade has the solar industry, which manufactures mostly in China,nervous.

Despite being the star of the Global Status Report, solar faces its own environmental drawbacks, also. As IEEE outlines, huge amounts of energy are required to manufacture solar panels, and in China, that energy is often generated through the burning of fossil fuels.

The process requires lots of water, produces toxic chemicals, and can expose workers to unsafe working conditions. The price cuts that come from manufacturing solar panels abroad have been a huge boon to the industry, but it has further polishing to do before it can be considered truly green.

The overall tone of theRenewables Global Status Report is positive, and we can beencouraged to know that worldwideCO2 emissions from fossil fuels and industry remained stablein 2016 for the third year in a row. Of course, atmospheric CO2 levels continue to increaseto record highs,and they will continue to do so until our emissions reach zero.

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Report: The World Invested $264 Billion in New Renewables in 2016 - Futurism

Strong outing from Torres-Perez helps Freedom avoid sweep on rainy night at UC Health Stadium – User-generated content (press release) (registration)

On a rainy night in Northern Kentucky, the Florence Freedom, presented by Titan Mechanical Solutions, used a tremendous start from Braulio Torres-Perezto avoid a sweep with a 4-1 win over the Southern Illinois Miners on Sunday at UC Health Stadium.

For the third night in a row, Southern Illinois (30-42) plated a first-inning run, as Craig Massoni drove in Craig Massey with a single off Torres-Perez (3-1). But the left-hander would dance out of trouble through the next seven innings, stranding a total of five runners the rest of the way. Torres-Perez would finish with five strikeouts and allowed just seven scattered hits over eight innings.

Florence (45-28) would knot the score in the bottom of the third, thanks to a Taylor Oldham infield single that scored Austin Wobrock.

The 1-1 tie lasted until the bottom of the sixth inning, when Garrett Vail hit a line-drive, two-run shot to left field off Miners reliever Kyle Tinius (2-3) putting Florence in front, 3-1. Jordan Browers third double of the night would plate another run in the seventh pushing the Freedom ahead by the eventual final score, 4-1. The double also extended Browers hitting streak to ten games, matching his longest of the season.

Pete Perez took over in the ninth inning and, with one out, hit pinch-hitter London Lindley with a pitch before retiring the next two batters to record the save and help the Freedom avoid the series sweep.

After a day off Monday, the Freedom will travel to Evansville, Indiana to open a key three-game series against the Evansville Otters on Tuesday with first pitch scheduled for 6:35 p.m. at Bosse Field. Steve Hagen (5-4) will start for the Freedom against a yet-to-be-determined starter for Evansville.

The Florence Freedom are members of the independent Frontier League and play all home games at UC Health Stadium located at 7950 Freedom Way in Florence, KY.The Freedom can be found online at FlorenceFreedom.com, or by phone at 859-594-4487.

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Police chiefs need the freedom to weed out bad cops – Washington Post

Police officers go into peoples homes ... and they have the authority to take peoples freedom. And youre going to return somebody into that role, somebody who has that responsibility and authority, and whos been involved in extreme misconduct? I dont think anybody is comfortable with that. D.C. Police Chief Peter Newsham is exactly right in that observation about why police departments need to weed out officers who betray the publics trust. There should be plenty of discomfort about the revelations of a Post investigation chronicling how police chiefs are often thwarted when it comes to policing their own ranks.

Examination of some of the nations largest police departments found that hundreds of officers who had been fired for misconduct ranging from cheating on overtime to unjustified shootings and including convictions for criminal offenses were reinstated following appeals required by union contracts. Of 1,881 officers terminated since 2006, more than 450 officers were returned to duty, typically by outside arbitrators who did not dispute the underlying offense but found missteps in the administrative process or concluded that termination was too extreme a punishment.

Among the disturbing cases detailed by The Posts Kimbriell Kelly, Wesley Lowery and Steven Rich: a D.C. police officer convicted of sexually abusing a young woman in his patrol car ordered returned to the force; a Philadelphia officer reinstated despite a video of him striking a woman in the face; a San Antonio police officer regaining his job even though he had been caught on a dashboard camera challenging a handcuffed suspect to fight him for the chance to be released.

No question, there is a need for clear processes to guard against mistakes; some of the responsibility for having to reinstate undesirable officers falls on police agencies that make careless errors during disciplinary proceedings. But The Posts findings suggest a tilt in the system that makes it difficult to hold officers accountable for bad acts. That the executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police actually had the nerve to complain about the higher standards that police are held to (You very seldom see any phone-cam indictments of trash collectors or utility workers) exemplifies one obstacle to the drive for accountability.

It is, as the Post investigation pointed out, rare for departments to fire officers. Most officers, as Montgomery County Police Chief J. Thomas Manger recently wrote to this page, are courageous and professional. ... They risk their lives every day to keep the public safe. That they are forced to work alongside police who have been deemed unfit for duty does them and the public they protect grave disservice.

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Virgin Media Ireland targets students with Freedom TV – Irish Times

Virgin Media Irelands Elvis preaches the merits of flexible contracts in a Las Vegas wedding chapel in an image from its new advertising campaign. Photograph: David Sexton

Virgin Media Ireland will woo students and other contract-averse customers with a new slimline television service called Freedom TV that requires only 30 days notice to cancel.

The move by the Liberty Global-owned company is the latest sign that pay-TV companies in Ireland are being forced to rethink their approach to recruiting younger customers.

Freedom TV, which costs 20 a month, includes a basic pack of 20 channels and mobile app Virgin TV Anywhere.

From Tuesday it will be marketed with a creatively risky television advertisement set in a Las Vegas wedding chapel.

This is our way of understanding this part of the market. Apps and streaming are at the heart of it, said Virgin Media Irelands vice-president of commercial Paul Farrell.

Streaming volumes on Virgin TV Anywhere have been rising at a rate of 8 per cent a month this year, Mr Farrell said, but some 95 per cent of app usage relates to people streaming on devices within the home, rather than out and about.

This suggests that a younger generation of viewers does not necessarily need a traditional television screen to watch content. Nor are they only watching linear television: the spot held by Netflix, which is integrated into Virgins electronic programme guide, is one of our top five channels, Mr Farrell said.

Virgins regular broadband and television services are subject to an initial 12-month contract.

Its move follows the April arrival on the Irish market of Skys Now TV, a no strings over-the-top streaming service that charges fees for monthly passes to entertainment, movies and sport.

Sky, which is 39 per cent owned by Rupert Murdochs News Corp and the subject of a bid for full ownership, said its research had found that a contract can be a barrier for people.

Younger people who dont own a television set are one of the key targets for Now TV.

In the US market, cord-cutting has been a marked feature for several years, with consumers dropping cable services and often replacing them with a combination of streaming devices such as the Roku player and cheaper subscription services such as Netflix, Hulu and Amazon Prime.

Freedom TV also follows the launch last year of Virgins Freedom Broadband, another 30-day notice product.

This was really aimed at students, Mr Farrell said, with users tending to cut their service at the end of term when they went home to their parents households or travelled abroad for the summer.

At the moment, the 20-channel pack is the only one available under the Freedom TV model, but Virgin hasnt ruled out extending its flexibility to its bigger channel packs.

Subscribers may have to wait some time before they regain access to Eir Sport through the Virgin platform, however. The service has not been available to Virgin customers since last summer when the two companies fell out over the wholesale price Eir sought to charge Virgin.

Glen Killane, the managing director of Eir Sport and Eir TV, recently told The Irish Times he would love to re-engage in conversation with Virgin but that it has to be fair deal.

But Virgin said it was unwilling to ask its customers to subsidise an Eir business model in which Eir gives Eir Sport free to its broadband users.

Were more than happy to meet Glen at any stage, but the reality is were never going to subsidise Eirs business, Mr Farrell said.

Virgin Media Ireland, previously known as UPC Ireland, saw its television customer base drop below 300,000 in the first quarter of 2017, continuing a pattern of decline in recent years.

Liberty Global publishes its second-quarter earnings after the close of US markets on Monday.

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Every woman’s quest for rights, freedom – The Hindu

Naval the Jewel is a universal story about women seeking their freedom, their rights, actor Reem Kadem has said.

The actor along with the cast and crew of the film was taking part at a meet-the-press here on Saturday.

Ms. Kadem, who is a Hollywood actor with roots in Iraq, said what happened to Naval happened to women around the world.

Actor Adil Hussain was all praise for director Renjilal Damodaran, saying the latter knew exactly what he wanted from the actors.

It was an important story to be told in todays India, he said.

Mr. Damodaran said the film, set in Iran, was about a 23-year-old woman Naval, an Iranian with a Malayali mother. Naval, played by Reem, is the product of a Malabari wedding her elderly father from Iran had married her mother Asma Beevi (played by Swetha Menon) when she was only 13.

In Iran, she gives birth to a girl. The father dies four years later.

In the film, Naval is shown being denied justice. Naval goes to jail in connection with a murder, and the court sentences her to be hanged to death. Naval, however, does not protest against the verdict.

Anu Sithara plays a young Swetha Menon. The screenplay is by V.K. Ajithkumar and Mr. Damodaran. The producer is Cyriac Mathew Alancheril. Lyrics are by Rafeek Ahmed and 15-year-old Kavyamayee, and music by M. Jayachandran.

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Every woman's quest for rights, freedom - The Hindu

Blue green algae closes swim beaches on Keuka Lake – MPNnow.com

The beaches will remain closed until the state Department of Health clears the area for swimming.

As of Friday, swim beaches on Keuka Lake Indian Pines, Red Jacket, and the Keuka Lake State Park swimming areas are closed due to the presence of blue green algae.

While conditions can change based on wind and weather, the beaches will remain closed until the state Department of Health clears the area for swimming.

Earlier this summer, the Sandy Bottom swim beach on Honeoye Lake in Ontario County was also closed due to blue green algae.

According to public health officials: Blue-green algae occur naturally in bodies of water in low numbers. During prolonged hot weather algae can become abundant, discoloring water and forming scums-particularly in warm, shallow areas. Some blue-green algae produce toxins. These pose health risks to people and animals if exposed in large enough quantities. Symptoms of toxin exposure may include allergic reactions or eye, skin, nose, and throat irritation. Ingesting large amounts of water containing blue-green algae toxins has resulted in liver and nervous system damage in laboratory animals, pets, livestock and people.

People, pets and livestock should avoid contact with water that has scums on the surface or is discolored-blue-green, yellow, brown or red. If contact does occur, wash with soap and water or rinse thoroughly with clean water. Swimming, bathing or showering with water not visibly affected by a blue-green algae bloom is not expected to cause health effects. If symptoms of toxin exposure develop, stop using the water and seek medical attention.

Individuals should not drink untreated surface water. Home boiling, disinfecting (chlorine or UV), and filtering do not remove algal toxins. When using surface water to wash dishes, rinse with bottled water. In addition to toxins, untreated surface water may contain bacteria, parasites or viruses known to cause illness.

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Heatwave makes Istanbul beaches wildly popular – Daily Sabah

A heatwave coupled with aggravated humidity pushed many in the concrete jungle of Istanbul to find a calm shelter yesterday. As temperatures rose to 35 degrees Celsius (95 degrees Fahrenheit), anyone with a car and free time flocked to the city's beaches near the Marmara and Black Sea.

ile beach on the Istanbul shore of the Black Sea was so popular among locals that getting to the previously serene beach proved disastrous for many stuck in traffic amid the suffocating heat, only struggle to find an empty spot on the overcrowded beach upon arrival.

Meteorologists warn against unusually high temperatures and suffocating humidity, with 35-degree temperatures to become a norm throughout the week, saying citizens should avoid direct exposure to the sun that could lead to sunstroke. The new weather pattern comes only two weeks after a string of unprecedented rainstorms that drenched the city.

The General Directorate of Meteorology said the temperatures, already above the seasonal norms, will soar in the first 10 days of August, with a felt temperature as high as 40 degrees Celsius in the afternoon hours coupled wit

h a considerable decrease in wind speed.

Experts warn that the heatwave may impact both those with chronic illnesses and healthy individuals. They say that lack of green spaces in cities has led to a decrease in oxygen levels and therefore, to chronic fatigue, a risk in the heatwaves. Long exposures to sun and inaction, especially during long hours spent in traffic jams, pose a threat to healthy persons.

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Heatwave makes Istanbul beaches wildly popular - Daily Sabah

Family astronomy day coming to MSU center in Midland – Midland Daily News

The sun and moon will be the topics of a program at 10 a.m. Monday, Aug. 14, at the MSU St. Andrews Center, 1910 W. St. Andrews Road (the next driveway west of the Grace A. Dow Memorial Library).

The program will begin with a short presentation describing different telescopes, along with information on the sun and the moon, including some discussion of eclipses. An observation session will follow as participants view the sun through a telescope, using special filters designed for solar viewing. People never should look at the sun through a telescope without a solar filter.

Participants should be able to see sunspots if they are in view asa well as the effects of earth's atmosphere as it warms up during the day.

The moon will also be in the sky that morning. People can compare daytime vs. nighttime viewing. That day, the moon will be in last quarter phase. Many craters will be visible, as well as some of the lunar "seas" and the "Ocean of Storms."

The program is recommended for elementary-age children and above, and their families, but all are welcome. There is no cost.

This program is made possible in part by support from the Dow Chemical Co. Foundation.

In case of clouds or bad weather, the event will move to 10 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 16.

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Family astronomy day coming to MSU center in Midland - Midland Daily News

Artificial Intelligence will lead to the human soul, not destroy it | Fox … – Fox News

Elon Musk famously equated Artifical Intelligence with summoning the demon and sounds the alarm that AI is advancing faster than anyone realizes, posing an existential threat to humanity. Stephen Hawking has warned that AI could take off and leave the human race, limited by evolutions slow pace, in the dust. Bill Gates counts himself in the camp concerned about super intelligence. And, although Mark Zuckerburg is dismissive about AIs potential threat, Facebook recently shut down an AI engine after reportedly discovering that it had created a new language humans cant understand.

Concerns about AI are entirely logical if all that exists is physical matter. If so, itd be inevitable that AI -- designed by our intelligence but built on a better platform than biochemistry -- would exceed human capabilities that arise by chance.

In fact, in a purely physical world, fully-realized AI should be recognized as the appropriate outcome of natural selection; we humans should benefit from it while we can. After all, sooner or later, humanity will cease to exist, whether from the sun running out or something more mundane including AI-driven extinction. Until then, wouldnt it be better to maximize human flourishing with the help of AI rather than forgoing its benefits in hopes of extending humanitys end date?

As possible as all this might seem, in actuality, what we know about the human mind strongly suggests that full AI will not happen. Physical matter alone is not capable of producing whole, subjective experiences, such as watching a sunset while listening to sea gulls, and the mechanisms proposed to address the known shortfalls of matter vs. mind, such as emergent properties, are inadequate and falsifiable. Therefore, it is highly probable that we have immaterial minds.

Deep down, we all know were more than biological robots. Thats why almost everyone rebels against materialisms implications. We dont act as though we believe everything is ultimately meaningless.

Granted, forms of AI are already achieving impressive results. These use brute force, huge and fast memory, rules-based automation, and layers of pattern matching to perform their extraordinary feats. But this processing is not aware, perceiving, feeling, cognition. The processing doesnt go beyond its intended activities even if the outcomes are unpredictable. Technology based on this level of AI will often be quite remarkable and definitely must be managed well to avoid dangerous repercussions. However, in and of itself, this AI cannot lead to a true replication of the human mind.

Full AI that is, artificial intelligence capable of matching and perhaps exceeding the human mind -- cannot be achieved unless we discover, via material means, the basis for the existence of immaterial minds, and then learn how to confer that on machines. In philosophy the underlying issue is known as the qualia problem. Our awareness of external objects and colors; our self-consciousness; our conceptual understanding of time; our experiences of transcendence whether simple awe in front of beauty or mathematical truth; or our mystical states, all clearly point to something that is qualitatively different from the material world. Anyone with a decent understanding of physics, computer science and the human mind ought to be able to know this, especially those most concerned about AIs possibilities.

That those who fear AI dont see its limitations indicates that even the best minds fall victim to their biases. We should be cautious about believing that exceptional achievements in some areas translate to exceptional understanding in others. For too many including some in the media -- the mantra, question everything, applies only within certain boundaries. They never question methodological naturalism -- the belief that there is nothing that exists outside the material world -- which blinds them to other possibilities. Even with what seems like more open-minded thinking, some people seem to suffer from a lack of imagination or will. For example, Peter Thiel believes that the human mind and computers are deeply different yet doesnt acknowledge that implies that the mind comprises more than physical matter. Thomas Nagle believes that consciousness could not have arisen via materialistic evolution yet explicitly limits the implications of that because he doesnt want God to exist.

Realizing that we have immaterial minds, i.e. genuine souls, is far more important than just speculating on AIs future. Without immaterial minds, there is no sustainable basis for believing in human exceptionalism. When human life is viewed only through a materialistic lens, it gets valued based on utility. No wonder the young nones young Americans who dont identify with a religion think their lives are meaningless and some begin to despair. It is time to understand that evolution is not a strictly material process but one in which the immaterial mind plays a major role in human, and probably all sentient creatures, adaption and selection.

Deep down, we all know were more than biological robots. Thats why almost everyone rebels against materialisms implications. We dont act as though we believe everything is ultimately meaningless.

Were spiritual creatures, here by intent, living in a world where the supernatural is the norm; each and every moment of our lives is our souls in action. Immaterial ideas shape the material world and give it true meaning, not the other way around.

In the end, the greatest threat that humans face is a failure to recognize what we really are.

If were lucky, what people learn in the pursuit of full AI will lead us to the re-discovery of the human soul, where it comes from, and the important understanding that goes along with that.

Bruce Buff is a management consultant and the author of the acclaimed scientific-spiritual thriller The Soul of the Matter (Simon & Schuster).

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Why Japan will profit the most from artificial intelligence – South China Morning Post

A resident of the Silver Wing Social Care elderly care home in Tokyos Chuo Ward chats happily to a staff member in the facilitys communal area, while in a nearby room another senior is being helped by a rehabilitation specialist to walk again after a fall last month. These workers never take a day off, never complain and dont need to be paid, for they are robots.

Silver Wing Social Care provides a glimpse into the future of Japan and indeed other industrialised nations as they follow its path to ageing societies and labour shortages. The companys flagship care facility began using robots to help care for residents four years ago after being selected by the city government as a test project.

Japan is entering uncharted territory for a modern economy. A consistently low birth rate has shrunk the working-age population by around 10 million since its mid-1990s peak, with another 20 million set to disappear from workplaces in the coming decades. The situation is becoming critical, with nearly 1.5 vacancies for every jobseeker and chronic shortages in sectors such as nursing care, manufacturing, construction and parcel delivery.

At a time when the government is pressuring companies to cut infamously long working hours, raise wages and ensure holidays are taken, and in a country still unwilling to countenance mass immigration, robotics and artificial intelligence (AI) look to be the only solutions.

We tried out various kinds of robots to see which would work best for us. Weve gradually increased their use and now have 20 different models operating, including robots for nursing care, rehabilitation, communication and recreation, explains Silver Wings Yukari Sekiguchi, who oversees the programme.

The companys staff used to regularly injure their backs lifting residents, leading to them being off work or quitting the profession altogether, a major problem given the tight labour market. Workers can now use robots they stand inside to help them do such heavy lifting.

A lot of people thought that elderly people would be scared or uncomfortable with robots, but they are actually very interested and interact naturally with them. They really enjoy talking to them and their motivation goes up when they use the rehabilitation robots, helping them to walk again more quickly, says Sekiguchi.

Japan may be the best-placed country to cope with the advance of automation its likely to cause less unemployment than elsewhere, given the shortage of workers and lifetime employment practises. Unemployment has fallen to 2.8 per cent and a record-high 97.6 per cent of new university graduates found jobs by the start of the business year in April.

The situation should be a boon for workers, but gains are being distributed unequally. Despite the tight labour market and many companies logging record profits, wage inflation remains stubbornly sluggish.

There is a shortage of manual workers, but an excess of white-collar workers, especially middle-aged men, says Naohiro Yashiro, a labour economist and dean of the Global Business Department Showa Womens University in Tokyo.

The government has set an inflation target, but its not happening yet. My explanation of this mystery is there is a kind of structural reform going on. The seniority based wage system, whereby employees wages in Japan rise rapidly with their age is not sustainable anymore, with the ageing of the population, says Yashiro, an adviser on labour economics to three prime ministers.

Companies are thus trying to halt automatic salary raises for workers in their 40s and 50s, and increase pay for younger ones, with one largely offsetting the other, according to Yashiro.

It is these mid-level workers who would normally be most at threat from the oncoming wave of robotics, AI and other new technologies. But in Japan, they should be saved from unemployment, if not wage stagnation, according to Dr Martin Schulz, senior economist at the Fujitsu Research Institute.

Much of the debate about automation squeezing workers out of the labour market is not an issue in Japan. Wages at the lower end wont be squeezed much because automation is costly, so the cheapest workers wont be replaced. At the top end, people with skills are usually helped by digitalisation because they benefit from new systems, says Schulz.

The squeeze would be at the mid-level. But they are comparatively protected in Japan by labour regulations. So they are not hit as hard as they are in, for example, the UK or US, where we are seeing political disruptions as a result of this, says Schulz, referring to the Brexit vote and election of Donald Trump.

But neither the governments employment reforms nor automation are the solution to Japans labour problems, according to Toyonori Sugita, owner of Daimaru Seisakusho, a metalworking factory just outside Tokyo.

If we put up wages and reduced hours as the government is suggesting, wed go bankrupt. But the shortage of workers in technical industries is terrible now, says Sugita, who is looking at bringing back skilled workers in their 70s.

Automation isnt the answer either. The type of work that can be automated is going overseas to other Asian countries; work that requires high levels of technical skills is what remains in Japan and can be profitable, says Sugita.

We need more workers from overseas, from the Philippines and places like that. If the government is going to do something, it should promote that, adds Sugita.

But with advocating mass immigration still seen as political suicide in Japan, the march of the robots looks set to continue.

Continued here:

Why Japan will profit the most from artificial intelligence - South China Morning Post