Large-scale study of adaptation in yeast could help explain the evolution of cancer – Phys.Org

July 18, 2017 In his lab, Lang employs robotic technology to deposit yeast dilutions into culture plates, propagating 288 populations at a time. He then freezes these samples at -80 degrees, which allows him to create fossil records of his experiments. Credit: Lehigh University

Genes provide instructions to cells in the body telling them what to do and not do in order to function optimally. Small changes in genes, called mutations, can have major consequences. Similar to a glitch in a computer's coding, a glitch in gene coding can cause a cell's system to go haywire. Not all mutations are bad, however. The process of adaptive evolution selects for mutations that promote rapid and unchecked growth, both in yeast populations and in cancer.

As a cancer cell reproduces by cloning itself, a number of mutations are passed along to successive generations. Some of these are "hitchhikers"along for the ride, but basically harmlessand others are "driver" mutations, responsible for cancer's growth.

Such mutations may be cancer's greatest strength, but they could also be its Achilles' heel: targeting driver mutations with treatment could inhibit the cancer's growth.

Precision medicine in cancer treatment proposes to use genome sequencing to identify which gene mutation or mutations are responsible for driving the growth of a patient's cancer cells, but for this to be practical, it must be possible to identify the cancer-causing driver mutations.

Unfortunately, identifying exactly which mutations are drivers in the human genome is like trying to find a needle in the proverbial haystack.

One possible solution: look at mutations in a smaller haystack.

Gregory Lang, assistant professor of biological sciences at Lehigh University, and his team are exploring how genomes evolve over thousands of generations using laboratory populations of yeast, which has a genome that is one thousandth the size of the human genome. Yeast, the same one used in baking and in brewing beer, reproduces rapidly by division making it a good model system for studying adaptive evolution in an asexual population, like cancer.

"Yeast undergoes one generation every 90 minutesten generations within 24 hours," says Lang. "Unlike human cancer cells, we can maintain hundreds of identical yeast populations in the lab and then evolve them for thousands of generations."

Lang and his colleagues recently applied such a large-scale approach to quantify the effect on growth of 116 mutations from 11 lineages of experimentally-evolved yeast populations. They found that only 20% of the mutations that succeed are drivers; the rest are along for the ride. Their results have been published in an article in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) called: "Hitchhiking and epistasis give rise to cohort dynamics in adapting populations," co-authored by Sean W. Buskirk and Ryan Emily Peave.

"If you want to get a realistic picture of the evolutionarily significant spectrum of mutations that promote growth, a comprehensive study of individual mutations is neededsomething that would be very difficult to conduct using the human genome," says Lang. "In our experiments with yeast, we are able 'shuffle the deck' to isolate thousands of sporesall from the same ancestoreach with a random combination of evolved mutations to analyze. This large-scale approach allows us to measure, with great precision, the fitness effect of each mutation. We can then quantify how important certain mutations or combinations of mutations were to growth."

"Shuffling the deck" to understand gene mutations

Once Lang and his colleagues shuffled the yeast population's genetic deck, they used whole genome sequencing to infer which mutations or combinations of mutations were driving growth.

"The hitchhikers would not increase in frequency," says Lang. "The drivers would increase at a rate that's proportional to their fitness effect."

Instead of searching for common mutationsas is being done for some cancer genomesand then inferring that those mutations must be the drivers, Lang's approach measures the effects of all mutations, enabling the identification of subtler dynamics.

By directly measuring the fitness effects of all mutations in 1,000 generations of a single yeast strain, the researchers were able to unambiguously identify and quantify the fitness effects of driver mutations that could otherwise be missed by recurrence-based methods.

"Comparing our results to previous recurrence-based methods we had tried, we found that we had missed dynamics that had 'weak' or small effects, as well as rare mutations," says Lang.

The team identified one mutational group in which mutations combined to provide a fitness benefit greater than the sum of their individual effects. In other words, the interaction of two mutations that were passed down together positively impacted growth. Neither had an substantial effect on its own.

Though the yeast genome has been studied extensively, this genetic interaction had not been previously identified.

According to Lang, the discovery is an illustration of the power of experimental evolution to select for combinations of mutations that increase growth and of their approach for identifying such interactions.

Lang says it is unlikely that the exact mutations his team discovered in yeast occurs in cancer. However, he believes that understanding the dynamics of adaptation in yeast could provide insight into gene mutation dynamics in other systems, such as cancer.

"In yeast we have the tools to answer types of questions that we would love to be able to answer for cancer populations," says Lang

"Future work will include identifying additional genetic interactions in yeast," says Lang. "Experimental evolution is a good way to enhance our current understanding of the role in adaptation of individual mutations and the interactions between themknowledge that could one day lead to advances in human healthcare."

Explore further: New statistical analysis reveals thousands of rare mutations linked with cancer

More information: Hitchhiking and epistasis give rise to cohort dynamics in adapting populations, Sean W. Buskirk, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1702314114 , http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2017/07/17/1702314114.full

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Large-scale study of adaptation in yeast could help explain the evolution of cancer - Phys.Org

‘Scopes monkey trial’ town erects evolution figure’s statue – The Philadelphia Tribune

NASHVILLE, Tenn. The famed Scopes monkey trial pitted two of the nations foremost celebrity lawyers against one another, but only one of them was memorialized outside the Tennessee courthouse where the landmark case unfolded until now.

On Friday at the Rhea County Courthouse in Dayton the public will behold a 10-foot statue of the rumpled skeptic Clarence Darrow, who argued for evolution in the 1925 trial. It will stand at a respectful distance on the opposite side of the courthouse from an equally huge statue of William Jennings Bryan, the eloquent Christian defender of the biblical account of creation, which was installed in 2005.

The trial that unfolded there nine decades ago garnered national headlines in what historians say started as a publicity stunt for the small town. Formally known as Tennessee vs. John Thomas Scopes, the case generated front-page headlines nationwide and was immortalized in songs, books, plays and movies. Dayton hosts its annual Scopes Trial festival for 10 days, starting Friday, featuring a theatrical production.

Historians say the trial came about after local leaders convinced Scopes, a 24-year-old high school teacher, to answer the American Civil Liberties Unions call for someone who could help challenge Tennessees law that banned teaching evolution. He was found guilty but didnt spend time in jail.

Bryan, a three-time Democratic candidate for president, died just five days after the trial ended.

In Dayton, home of a Christian college thats named for Bryan, its not hard to envision the community accepting a statue venerating the august champion of the faith.

But Darrow is another matter.

Rifts over evolution and creationism continue almost a century later, and the Darrow statue was requested by atheist groups.

Pockets of opposition in the town suggest many Christians still see the science of evolution as clashing with their faith. Dayton resident and minister June Griffin has led much of the backlash against the Darrow statue, citing religious convictions.

This is a hideous monstrosity, Griffin said. And God is not pleased.

Two weeks ago about 20 supporters and 20 protesters clashed peacefully at the courthouse over the statue, said Rhea County Sheriffs Department Special Projects Coordinator Jeff Knight.

Nevertheless, the Darrow statue hasnt drawn teeming crowds in Dayton like the ones that forced some of the 1925 trial proceedings to be moved outdoors.

Regardless of how peoples beliefs differ, the statue helps represent history, said Rhea County historian Pat Guffey. Most people seem OK with it, she added.

I just think that something that is history should stay, or should be put up, no matter what, Guffey said. I dont think we should try to change history.

Philadelphia-based sculptor Zenos Frudakis crafted the new statue, funded largely by $150,000 from the Freedom from Religion Foundation. The group said the project would remedy the imbalance of Bryan standing alone.

Bryan was there as an attorney, a prosecutor, and Clarence Darrow as a defense attorney. And now, the history has been restored, Frudakis said.

Frudakis, an admirer of Darrow, said the sculpture offers an honest look at the lawyer.

He looks like he slept in his suit, which he often did. Sometimes his shirts were torn, Frudakis said of Darrow. He smoked too much. He drank too much. He was a womanizer. I got as much of that as I could in the sculpture. (AP)

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'Scopes monkey trial' town erects evolution figure's statue - The Philadelphia Tribune

‘Splatoon 2’ is a cautious but excellent evolution of the original – Engadget

That's mostly a good thing. The original Splatoon was something of an experiment, a Nintendo game that focused on online play as the primary selling point. The game succeeded by being something unique: a frantic, multiplayer shooter that dripped with personality and cultivated a ravenous community of loyal fans. Splatoon 2 basically picks up where the original left off, starting with the same core game mechanic that incentivized teamwork over individual victory: Turf War.

To understand Turf War -- and Splatoon 2's primary multiplayer modes -- you need to know a few things. First, there are no bullets in Splatoon. Instead, players use a mix of squirt guns, paintbrushes and buckets to spray, fling and slosh colored ink across the battlefield. Battles aren't won by how many enemies the player defeats but by how much of her team's color covers the ground at the end of a match.

Sure, you can take out other players in these matches, and you'll need to to win, but it's not the end goal. By rewarding players based on how much ground they cover, the game passively changes the focus from being the best fighter to contributing the most to the team victory. It also takes the pressure off casual players. No good in a firefight? You can still contribute by focusing on keeping the ground your team's color.

The paint mechanic is more than just a gimmick to promote teamwork -- it also changes how you can move. If the ink on the ground belongs to the player's team, she can turn into a squid and swim through it to replenish ammo and move faster. If it's the enemy team's color, she'll be slowed down and take damage. There are a few more rules, of course, but the long and short of it is that Splatoon 2 offers a multiplayer experience unlike anything in other games. Its unique twist on movement, weapons and ink-based victory helps keep game modes like tower defense, control point and capture-the-flag feeling fresh.

So what's new about Splatoon 2? Well, a few things. For one, the entire experience just looks better: Colors are more vibrant and bright; player characters, weapons and clothing are far more detailed; and best of all, the entire game runs at a noticeably higher frame rate. There are also new levels, weapon upgrades and special moves that change the way the game is played. The new Splat Dualie pistols, for instance, open up player movement by adding a dodge roll to the game, which drastically changes how close-range combat unfolds. Other weapons have been tweaked to give them more balance, adding a long-range attack for roller weapons, for instance, or allowing long-range weapons to hold a charge while players swim through ink.

Nintendo's decision to stick close to the original mostly works: Splatoon 2 strengthens the series' core gameplay, gives players more tools to use in battle and retains the spirit of fun that made the first entry a hit. Unfortunately, it also retains a handful of the first game's awkward flaws.

Multiplayer modes and maps are still limited to a two-at-a-time rotation that changes every few hours, for instance. Players still can't change weapon and gear loadouts without quitting multiplayer and jumping back in either. (Being able to switch weapons between matches would have been a huge quality-of-life improvement.) These aren't deal breakers, but it would have been nice to see some more of the game's rough edges ironed out in the sequel.

The sameness of Splatoon 2 falls flat in the single player campaign, however. The game's Hero Mode very much follows the vein of the original, serving as training for the main event: multiplayer. It's basically a set of linear levels that introduces the game's core concepts. Here's a level that teaches you how to swim through ink to make longer jumps. Here's one designed to teach you how charge weapons work.

As a basic gameplay tutorial, Splatoon 2's single-player mode is a good introduction for folks new to the series, but players who have sharpened their teeth on multiplayer (or just played the first game) might find it a bit tedious -- and that's a shame, because it's framed around a light and fun story that revisits characters from the first game.

The entire time I played Hero Mode, I felt like it could have been something great. It almost was too: Every now and then, the campaign will throw an incredible boss fight at you or a complex, joyously fun level that calls back to the best of games like Super Mario Galaxy. Instead, the single-player campaign is merely an OK experience with a few great moments.

Despite this, Splatoon 2 is still a fantastic experience for Nintendo Switch owners looking for a fun, addictive multiplayer game. It didn't learn every lesson it could have from its predecessor, but it delivers on the core gameplay mechanics that made the original an unexpected hit. Better still, it retains the original game's cultural identity by building a community around Splatoon's in-game hosts and by showcasing artwork made by players in a Miiverse-like drawing app.

Splatoon 2 is everything it needs to be and nothing more. If you're OK with that, you'll love it. Just don't buy it for the single-player campaign alone.

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'Splatoon 2' is a cautious but excellent evolution of the original - Engadget

A Simple Bacteria Reveals How Stress Drives Evolution – Astrobiology Magazine (registration)

The researchers examined the biological processes of E.coli, a common bacteria. Credit: NIAID

A common bacteria is furthering evidence that evolution is not entirely a blind process, subject to random changes in the genes, but that environmental stressors can also play a role.

A NASA-funded team is the first group to design a method demonstrating how transposons DNA sequences that move positions within a genome jump from place to place.

The researchers saw that the jumping rate of these transposons, aptly-named jumping genes, increases or decreases depending on factors in the environment, such as food supply.

This is a new window into how environment can affect evolution rates, said Nigel Goldenfeld, director of the NASA Astrobiology Institute for Universal Biology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. We can measure evolution rates for the first time, and we can see evolution acting at the molecular level.

Thomas Kuhlman, a physicist at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, said bacteria species can also play a role in jumping rates, as well as the environment.

The activity of these transposal elements is not uniformly random; its not just a pile of cells, he said.

Kuhlman and Goldenfeld recently published a paper on the research, Real-time transposable element activity in individual live cells, in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The research was led by Neil Kim, a physics graduate student at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and also included work from fellow students Gloria Lee, Nicholas Sherer and Michael Martini.

The NASA Astrobiology Institute funded the research.

True colors

Twinkling transposons in live cells. Credit: Nigel Goldenfeld and Thomas Kuhlman

Goldenfeld studies the role of the environment on evolution, while Kuhlman focuses on the biological processes of E. coli, a common bacteria that lives in the digestive tracts of humans and animals and the cause of infections by way of contaminated feces.

The two researchers came up with a novel approach to watching the movement of jumping genes by engineering an E. coli that expresses a fluorescent protein when the transposons jump out of a genome. Because the cell lights up when this occurs, the researchers were able to record the cells that jump more than others.

The cells light up only when a transposon jumps, Goldenfeld said. So we can see how often they jump, and when they jump, and where they jump from.

Goldenfelds team also constructed a computer simulation of the jumping activity that was able to rule out random activity as the primary reason for jumping. Once they compared the simulation with the laboratory trials, it was clear that the transposons were not jumping randomly. Goldenfeld said the findings shed more light on the mechanisms of evolution.

A fundamental assumption of evolution has been that mutations and other instabilities in the genomes randomly occur in an organism as a blind evolutionary force, and those that are beneficial to the cell lead to reproductive success. Another possibility, less accepted by biologists, is that the environment prompts the cell or organism to mutate in order for the cell to prosper better. These adaptive mutations, or stress-induced mutations, occur in response to stressors in the environment.

Our work shows that the environment does affect the rate at which transposons become active, and subsequently jump into the genome and modify it, Goldenfeld said. Thus the implication is that the environment does change the evolution rate. What our work does not answer at this point is whether the transposon activity suppresses genes that are bad in the particular environment of the cell. It just says that the rate of evolution goes up in response to environmental stress.

This conclusion, he added, was already known through other studies, for certain types of mutation, so is not in itself a complete reversal of the current dogma. We hope that future work will try to measure whether or not the genome instabilities that we can measure are adaptive.

Kuhlman said he has hopes of future research on more complex organisms.

The next step is operating in yeast, as a very simple eukaryotic cell. Then eventually much further down the road, well get [the process] working in mammalian or human cells.

The research is not only useful for understanding the origins of life, but also uncovering situations where cells undergo rapid mutations. One possible application could be routing out the pathways of cancer, which happens when cells abnormally grow and cause problems with the rest of the body.

Goldenfeld added that the findings also have clear implications to astrobiology.

One of the things that astrobiology is concerned with is the interaction between the environment and the rate of evolution, he said. Our work showed for the first time that there are environmental influences on the rate of transposon activity, because we could literally measure the effect. We did this quantitatively and compared it with theoretical predictions that assumed that transposon activity was random. We could show that the activity is not random at all.

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A Simple Bacteria Reveals How Stress Drives Evolution - Astrobiology Magazine (registration)

7 species with ‘superpowers’ thanks to evolution and invasion – Mother Nature Network

Imagine if nature or the circumstances of your environment forced you to adapt in a dramatic way. What if, for example, you had to learn to jump higher to reach your food or adjust your body temperature to survive in colder temperatures?

The animals here have accomplished similar feats just to stay alive. One rodent built up such a tolerance to the poison used to exterminate it that it now eats the poison as food. One African bee escaped from captivity to breed with other bees and create a more deadly version of itself. In doing so, these and other animals have developed superpower-like abilities that don't seem possible.

Periplaneta japonica, a cockroach from Japan, can withstand freezing temperatures and snow. (Photo: Lyle Buss/University of Florida)

New York City residents may recall the 2013 headlines about an Asian cockroach found in High Line Park on Manhattans West Side that can withstand frigid temperatures and snow. An exterminator found the bug and thought it looked different than your typical NYC roach, so he sent it to the University of Florida for analysis.

Rutgers insect biologists Jessica Ware and Dominic Evangelista identified the species as Periplaneta japonica, marking the first time the Asian cockroach has been found in the United States. Scientists believe the critter hitched a ride from overseas along with some ornamental plants being used to decorate the park.

About 20 years ago colleagues of ours in Japan reared nymphs of this species and measured their tolerance to being able to survive in snow. As the species has invaded Korea and China, there has been some confirmation that it does very well in cold climates, so it is very conceivable that it could live outdoors during winter in New York. That is in addition to its being well suited to life indoors alongside the species that already are here," Ware and Evangelista said in a statement.

But don't worry: You won't find swarms of freeze-resistant roaches around the Big Apple. Because this species is very similar to cockroach species that already exist in the urban environment, they likely will compete with each other for space and for food," said Evangelista. And as they compete, their combined numbers inside buildings could actually fall because more time and energy spent competing means less time and energy to devote to reproduction," Ware added.

The Daily Mirror newspaper cover story on giant poison-proof rats in Liverpool, England. (Photo: Jonathan Deamer/flickr)

In 2014, residents of Liverpool, England, smelled a rat a giant one, in fact. So they called in pest control experts, who caught the rats and found some that were as big as cats. (It would sound like a Dr. Seuss rhyme if it weren't such a disturbing concept.)

But not only were these rodents huge, they were also immune to poison.

Rat-catchers there told The Telegraph that calls about rat infestations had risen 15 percent and that the rodents were unaffected by traditional poisons in fact, they gorged themselves on it. The use of anything stronger would require legislation, experts said.

Studies have shown that genetic mutations had produced a new type of "super rat" that accounts for up to 75 percent of the rat population in some areas of England.

Invasive garden ants (Lasius neglectus) nurse a sick friend back to health. (Photo: Chris Pull/Wikimedia Commons)

England can't catch a break when it comes to freaky animal adaptations. A so-called "super ant" from Asia was first found in Gloucestershire in 2009, and wildlife experts sounded an alarm a fire alarm, to be exact.

The problems with them are they seem to get attracted to electricity and they can take up residence in plug sockets and power sources, creating a fire hazard," Jo Hodgkins, a wildlife adviser at the National Trust told The Telegraph. Because the ants are drawn to outlets and cables, they can spark fires. They can easily establish themselves in somewhere like Britain and I would not be surprised if they colonised other areas. They are pretty tough little creatures.

The ants, which are an invasive species that's relatively new to Europe, tend to nest in enormous numbers, according to the Invasive Species Compendium. More than 35,000 were found in that Gloucestershire nest.

Mellifera scutellata, an African honey bee, also known as an Africanized bee. (Photo: Jeffrey W. Lotz, Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services/Wikimedia Commons)

These bees are like next generation honeybees. African honeybees reached the Americas when they were imported to Brazil in 1956 for cross-breeding with the local population, according to the Smithsonian. The goal was to produce more honey, but a few years later, swarms of bees and a few dozen queens escaped and formed hybrid populations with European honeybees. The bees spread north through South and Central America at a rate of 100 to 200 miles per year, and they're now as far north as the southern United States.

Also known as Africanized bees, so-called "killer bees" have earned their name. The Smithsonian explains:

Formosan termites cause about $1 billion in damage each year in the Southern United States. (Photo: Scott Bauer/Wikimedia Commons)

What makes these termites so special? Their voracious billion-dollar appetites.

Formosan termites hail from East Asia and now occupy about a dozen states in the southern U.S., costing about $1 billion a year in property damages, repairs and control measures, according to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA).

A colony, which contains about a million termites, won't just infest one building or one tree; they'll divide and conquer your entire property. So protecting one or the other from termites isn't an effective strategy.

In Florida and Louisiana, for example, pest control experts take a multi-pronged approach, including chemicals, bait traps and studying the insect to "exploit weaknesses in the pest's biology, growth, chemical communication, and behavior," the USDA says. The bait traps don't kill on contact, so the termite takes the poison back to the colony.

Along the river Tarn in France, catfish have evolved and, like their feline namesakes, developed a fondness for birds pigeons, to be specific. But how can a fish hunt a bird? Watch the video above and you'll see.

Just like killer whales launch themselves onto shorelines to snatch sea lions before wiggling back into the ocean, catfish take a similar approach. They lie in wait in shallow water until a clueless pigeon wanders just a little too close. Then they lurch out of the water, strand themselves onshore for a moment and thrash back into the river ideally with a catch.

Drug-resistant bacteria are emerging around the world, making bacterial infections a threat once again. (Photo: Sirirat/Shutterstock)

Antibiotics, one of the most important discoveries of the 20th century, have saved millions of lives against bacterial infections. But now, drug-resistant bacteria are emerging worldwide, according to the National Institute of Health (NIH), and bacterial infections are once again a threat.

Why are they on the rise? As the NIH explains: "The antibiotic resistance crisis has been attributed to the overuse and misuse of these medications, as well as a lack of new drug development by the pharmaceutical industry due to reduced economic incentives and challenging regulatory requirements."

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 2 million people are infected each year with antibiotic-resistant bacteria and about 23,000 people die from it, making this "superpower" the most dangerous one on the list.

Angela Nelson ( @bostonangela ) is an exhausted mom of two young daughters and two old cats, and a Pulitzer Prize-winning digital editor with more than 15 years of experience delivering news and information to audiences worldwide.

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7 species with 'superpowers' thanks to evolution and invasion - Mother Nature Network

Turkey Removes Darwin’s Theory of Evolution From High School Curriculum – Haaretz

Country's religious schools will also teach concept of jihad the real meaning of which is 'loving your nation,' says education minister

Turkey announced a new school curriculum on Tuesday that excluded Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, feeding opposition fears President Tayyip Erdogan is subverting the republic's secular foundations.

The chairman of a teachers' union described the changes as a huge step in the wrong direction for Turkey's schools and an attempt to avoid raising "generations who ask questions."

Education Minister Ismet Yilmaz said the main elements of evolution already underpinned the science curriculum, but there would be no mention of Darwin's landmark theory until university.

"Because it is above the students' level and not directly related, the theory of evolution is not part" of the school curriculum, Yilmaz told a news conference.

Opposition Republican People's Party lawmaker Mustafa Balbay said any suggestion the theory was beyond their understanding was an insult to high school students.

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"You go and give an 18-year-old student the right to elect and be elected, but don't give him the right to learn about the theory of evolution ... This is being close minded and ignorant."

The theory of evolution is rejected by both Christian and Muslim creationists, who believe God created the world as described in the Bible and the Koran, making the universe and all living things in six days.

Erdogan, accused by critics of crushing democratic freedoms with tens of thousands of arrests and a clampdown on media since a failed coup last July, has in the past spoken of raising a "pious generation."

The curriculum, effective from the start of the 2017-2018 school year, also obliges Turkey's growing number of "Imam Hatip" religious schools to teach the concept of jihad as patriotic in spirit.

"It is also our duty to fix what has been perceived as wrong. This is why the Islamic law class and basic fundamental religion lectures will include [lessons on] jihad," Yilmaz told reporters. "The real meaning of jihad is loving your nation."

Jihad is often translated as "holy war" in the context of fighters waging war against enemies of Islam; but Muslim scholars stress that it also refers to a personal, spiritual struggle against sin.

Ataturk

Mehhmet Balik, chairman of the Union of Education and Science Workers, condemned the new curriculum.

"The new policies that ban the teaching of evolution and requiring all schools to have a prayer room, these actions destroy the principle of secularism and the scientific principles of education," he said.

Under the AKP, which came to power in 2002, the number of "Imam Hatip" religious schools has grown exponentially. Erdogan, who has roots in political Islam, attended one such school.

He has spent his career fighting to bring religion back into public life in constitutionally secular Turkey and has cast himself as the liberator of millions of pious Turks whose rights and welfare were neglected by a secular elite.

Liberal Turks see Erdogan as attempting to roll back the work of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the Western-facing founder of modern Turkey who believed education should be free of religious teachings.

Some government critics have said the new curriculum which was presented for public feedback earlier this year increased the emphasis on Islamic values at the expense of Ataturk's role.

But Yilmaz said on Tuesday nothing about Ataturk or his accomplishments had been removed. Changes only emphasized core values such as justice, friendship, honesty, love and patriotism.

He said discussion of the militant Kurdistan Workers Party, the Islamic State and the network of the U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom Ankara blames for last year's attempted coup, would also be added.

Balik, the head of the union, said the changes were being made in an attempt to stamp out dissenting ideas.

"The bottom line is: generations who ask questions, that's what the government fears," he said.

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Turkey Removes Darwin's Theory of Evolution From High School Curriculum - Haaretz

Kate Middleton’s hair evolution – how the Duchess went from messy mid-lengths to polished perfection – Mirror.co.uk

From catwalk curls to chic updos, Kate Middleton's hair is the envy of the nation. Weve seen her evolve from the pre-blow dry days into the sophisticated icon that she is now, and shes barely made a style slip along the way.

We look back at the subtle changes that prompted people across the globe to go for the chop, attempt an overgrown fringe, and give the middy a whirl.

Here are some of her most memorable hair moments over the years...

At just 23-years-old, Kates style is world away from what we see now. No bouncy blow-dry here for Hugh Van Cutsem and Rose Astors Wedding back in 2005, instead it looks like shes left her brunette locks relatively un-styled.

Another year, another wedding. This time, Kate appears to have used a curling tong to create a bit of movement through the ends of her hair. Its not the glossy bounce we see today, but shes on her way!

After the couple went on a holiday to Kenya, Wills popped the question. And about time, too - theyd been dating eight years! The future Duchess of Cambridge looked incredible for the official engagement announcement in 2010. With thick, glossy waves, she started to show us her new royal style.

Kate Middleton's wedding dress - a look back at her iconic Alexander McQueen bridal gown

We cant imagine how nervous Kate must have been on her big day. With an estimated two BILLION people worldwide tuning in to watch her marry her prince, there was no room for a hair flop. Luckily her favourite stylist James Pryce was on hand to create a beautiful half-up style - accentuated with a delicate veil.

Straying from her favoured loose waves, Kate opted for a side-part chignon back at an NBCUniversal event in 2012. We love how she paired it with statement earrings and a glowing tan. She looked sophisticated and happier than ever.

Back in 2012 Kate opened the Natural History Museums Treasures Gallery, and she showcased her new do at the same time. With tumbling waves and a side-swept fringe, she gave her complexion a youthful boost. We love the darker chocolatey shade as well.

The royal couple welcomed their new baby son into the world in 2013, and although he stole the hearts of our nation, it was Kate who impressed the millions. Shed only just given birth but she looked radiant. We think the subtle waves and honey highlights made it one of her best ever looks.

She tiptoed around the idea of a fringe in 2012 and a few years later she nearly made the jump. With shorter layers, Kate gives the appearance of having much thicker hair - and it prompted women across the country to go for the chop as well (we even gave it a go!).

Kate looked every inch the royal at Ascot this year. She cut an elegant figure in a creamy lace dress and matching fascinator, but it was her hair that won the in the style stakes. Her low bun was pinned to perfection, and the wrap around detail was beautiful.

This week, Kates been out and about in Poland, and shes showed off her latest hairstyle - which has already been dubbed the middy. Shorter than weve seen it before, it looks thick and healthy, and we're guessing that quite a few people will be bringing in her picture to show their hairdressers this summer.

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Kate Middleton's hair evolution - how the Duchess went from messy mid-lengths to polished perfection - Mirror.co.uk

Climatic Stability Resulted in the Evolution of More Bird Species – R & D Magazine

More species of birds have accumulated in genera inhabiting climatically stable areas. This is shown by a new study from Ume University.

"The explanation may be that a stable climate makes it more likely that diverging lineages persist without going extinct or merging until speciation is completed, and stability reduces the risk for extinction in response to climatic upheavals," says Roland Jansson, researcher from Ume University who led the study.

How life has evolved from simple origins into millions of species is a central question in biology that remains unsolved. Advances in genomics and bioinformatics mean we now know a lot about the relationships among species and their origins, but surprisingly little is known about which environmental conditions that allows species to multiply.

In a project focusing on how climate changes in the past affects the evolution of biodiversity, researchers tried to fill this knowledge gap. They studied bird genera endemic (unique to) to North and South America and asked which geographic and climatic factors could explain why more species have accumulated in species-rich genera compared to their more species-poor sister genera.

The results showed that genera occupying areas that had been more climatically stable during the last millions of years had diversified into more species than their closest sister genera inhabiting more climatically variable areas. The previously popular hypothesis that climate change during this time period would promote speciation was refuted, at least for birds.

The question of what this means for biodiversity in the future considering climate change is however not an easy one to answer. On one hand, areas of high climatic stability are predicted to warm less than the global average. On the other hand, species from climatically stable areas may be less tolerant to new climatic conditions.

"Climate change has been a feature of Earth's entire history, and has been both rapid and large in the past. But the climate change occurring now will make the climate warmer than in millions of years, and be beyond what many species have experienced," says Roland Jansson.

Another complicating factor making present climate change different from events in the past is that most ecosystems are now dominated by human use, making it harder for species to adjust their geographic ranges in response to the changing climate.

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Climatic Stability Resulted in the Evolution of More Bird Species - R & D Magazine

Afghan Girls’ Robotics Team Won Visas. Now for the Real Contest. – New York Times

Wai Yan Htun, an 18-year-old member of the Myanmar team who stopped by the Afghan table after the first three rounds to offer a taste of Myanmar peanuts and get the teams signatures on his shirt, said: We love them. Theyre like superheroes in this competition.

Colleen Elizabeth Johnson, 18, one of three teenagers representing the United States, said: Theyre celebrities here now. Theyre getting the welcome they deserve.

Before their first match Tuesday morning, the six Afghan teenagers were paired with the United States and four other all-female teams to compete in a demonstration match for Ivanka Trump, the presidents daughter and adviser. Ms. Trump then spoke briefly to the crowd, applauding the students work and dedication.

For many of you who have traveled great lengths to be here, we welcome you, she said, turning to smile at the six Afghan girls. Its a privilege and an honor to have you all with us.

She shook hands with the teenagers and posed for pictures before she left and the rounds continued.

Competition takes place in arenas built in the center area of Constitution Hall, where teams of three, equipped with kits that includes wheels, gears and two video game controllers, chase down blue and orange balls, which represent clean and contaminated water. In two-and-a-half-minute rounds, teams guide the robots to sweep the balls into openings based on their color.

Its way more fun, way more exciting than bouncing a ball, said Dean Kamen, one of the organizations founders and inventor of the Segway. Thats not a competition out there. Thats a celebration.

It was certainly a celebration for Roya Mahboob, a renowned Afghan technology entrepreneur who interpreted for the teenagers and came on behalf of her company, Digital Citizen Fund, a womens empowerment nonprofit that sponsored the Afghan team for the competition.

The six students were chosen from an initial pool of 150 applicants. They built their robot in two weeks, compared with the four months some of their competitors had, because their kits shipment was delayed.

Im just proud that we show the talent of the women, Ms. Mahboob said. We see that there is change.

The Afghan robot, named Better Idea of Afghan Girls, lurched across the terrain for the first round and skirted out of bounds, but 15-year-old Lida Azizi, a teal-colored fishtail braid dangling from underneath her white head scarf, flashed her teammates a thumbs-up as they cheered in Dari and applauded. As the competition progressed, they continued to make adjustments as they got used to driving their robot, an Afghan flag carefully attached. (The team has jumped to 69th place from 115th, out of about 160 teams.)

Alireza Mehraban, an Afghan software engineer who is the teams mentor, said this was an opportunity to change perceptions about the girls country. Were not terrorists, he said. Were simple people with ideas. We need a chance to make our world better. This is our chance.

Yet with more than 150 countries represented in the competition, the Afghan teenagers were not the only students who overcame bureaucratic and logistical challenges to showcase their ingenuity. Visa applications were initially denied for at least 60 of the participating teams, Mr. Kamen said.

On Monday, with the news media swarming the Afghan girls, a team from Africa five Moroccan students who also got their visas two days before the competition huddled in a downstairs corner to repair their robot, which had been disassembled for last-minute shipment. An American high school built a robot on behalf of the Iranian team when sanctions on technology exports stopped the shipment of their materials kit. And on Sunday, the Estonian team built a new robot in four hours before the opening ceremony, the original lost in transit somewhere between Paris and Amsterdam.

But it was the Afghan team and Team Hope, which consists of three Syrian refugee students, that ensnared the attention of the competitors, the judges and supporters.

The high school students exchanged buttons and signed shirts, hats and flags draped around their shoulders. The Australian team passed out pineapple-shaped candy and patriotic stuffed koalas to clip on lanyards, while the Chilean team offered bags with regional candy inside.

God made this planet for something like this, all the people coming together as friends, said Alineza Khalili Katoulaei, 18, the captain of the Iranian team, gesturing to the Iraqi and Israeli teams standing nearby. Politics cannot stop science competitions like this.

After an award ceremony Tuesday night, the Afghan team is scheduled to attend a reception while some of the teams are slated to spend a couple of days exploring Washington. When they return to Herat, the third-largest city in Afghanistan, the Afghan teenagers plan to celebrate with their families and continue to work with their communities.

I want to be the young leader of robotic technology in my country and show the talent of Afghans, be an example for Afghan women, Rodaba Noori, 16, said.

She said she would remember the sisterhood she had formed with her teammates, the safety in the United States and the kindness of the people they had met.

We want to take the best examples of humanity back, she said.

Originally posted here:

Afghan Girls' Robotics Team Won Visas. Now for the Real Contest. - New York Times

The future of robotics means robots and humans will work side by side, experts say – Metro US

Right now, roboticist Daniela Rus main aspiration is to have a world where anyone can have a robot, where anyone can use a robot, the MIT professor told TechCrunch Sessions: Robotics on Monday.

Rus, who is also the director of the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at MIT, said that though the world of robotics has certainly made recent advancements, her dream isnt possible quite yet.

But just remember that only two decades ago, computation was a task reserved for an expert few, because computers were large, expensive and hard to use, she said. All that changed now everyone uses computers and I believe in the future, tasks will be equally changed by artificial intelligence.

What followed throughout the one-day robotics event organized by tech media company TechCrunch was the musings of many immersed in the robotics world as to where we are exactly in the timeline of robot advancement, and how that advancement will affect humans.

Basically, were just at the beginning of developing robots, and were still pretty far from many developments and from the sci-fi situation of robots taking over the world.

In a talk about robots, AI and humanity, experts discussed the difficult goal of creating a robot consciousness, which would allow artificial intelligence to make ethical decisions and follow social cues.

If you look at theology, humans are born without common sense, said Dr. David Barrett, a professor of mechanical engineering at Olin College. Its an acquired skill a little bit is better than none, a little bit more is better than that, until you get to a level of confidence to perform a job and interact with people. Computers and AI are far from that baseline point.

Even though the tech behind robots still has a long way to go, people are already thinking about how robots and humans will coexist. If you fear robots taking over the world, or just all your job options, dont worry.

I think there is sometimes a misconception that automation is all about a direct line march from all people to all robots, said Clara Vu, VP of engineering at Veo Robotics. Really, in many ways, humans and robots have very complementary strengths: Robots can be fast and strong, but humans have flexibility and judgment.

When people are looking for robotic solutions to problems, Vu said, theyre looking for ways robot and humans can work together.

There are already more than 80,000 robots working in Amazons warehouses and fulfillment centers, said Tye Brady, chief technologist for Amazon Robots, at TechCrunch Sessions: Robotics on Monday.

Though the robotics world is still developing, Brady doesnt expect or want robots to replace humans completely at Amazon.

Humans are really great at creative problem-solving, abstraction and generalizations. Robots are really good at crunching numbers, pulling data, lifting heavy objects and moving with precision, he said. We have to think about how we can build systems that bring the strengths of each of these components together.

To Brady, that collaboration will look like a symphony of humans and robots fulfilling orders in a way the world hasnt seen.

That collaboration will extend into other businesses as well, like helping first responders or law enforcement officials react to a crisis.

Heather Ames of Neurala, a Boston-based deep learning software company, unveiled at the TechCrunch event a partnership between Neurala and Motorola Solutions in which artificial intelligence can help find a missing child.

The description of a missing child can be sent to body cameras on the uniforms of officers, she said, so that thousands of eyes are scanning the crowd looking for a lost child. The same system could also be applied to finding suspicious packages.

Drones can help first responders assess a catastrophic event, said Buddy Michini of Airware.

They can take a drone for getting an overview of whats happening and put [help] at, say, the most crashed building, he said, adding that Airware sent drones to assist with a recent earthquake in Italy.

And robots can even be integrated right onto the human body, to augment human skills. David Perry from Harvard Labs demoed an exosuit at the event that straps robotics right onto someones legs.

This has two main applications, he said: to enhance the natural ability of healthy people and to restore ability that those with a physical impairment may have lost. For the first use, Harvard Labs has been working with the military to put these robotic pants onto soldiers, so they dont get as tired while walking and carrying packs that often weigh more than 100 pounds.

The machine doesnt control the user, Perry explained, but follows his moves, whether walking up a hill or stepping over rough terrain, combining the strengths of both robots and humans together in one use.

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The future of robotics means robots and humans will work side by side, experts say - Metro US

How 3D-printing, robotics and mixed reality created this HoloLens art piece – TNW

Credit: Shawn Hunt and Microsoft Vancouver

Transformation Mask is an experiential sculpture piece that brings art and technology together as it morphs from bird mask to human-merged-with-machine. Its the result of a collaboration between Canadian artist Shawn Hunt and Microsoft Vancouvers in-house maker space, The Garage, and leverages electronics and mechanical engineering in a physical transformation, before beginning an immersive holographic experience with the HoloLens.

But while the project is certainly interesting enough from a technical perspective the way it blends 3D-printed and robotics elements with HoloLens mixed reality holograms via Bluetooth is sure to get anybody with a penchant for geeky tinkering very excited what makes it truly ground-breaking is the way it uses those technologies to explore aesthetics, identity, and artistic expression in new ways.

Shawn Hunt is a successful Vancouver-based artist who like many people in British Columbia is of mixed descent, combining Scottish, French and indigenous Heiltsuk heritage. Rather than seeing that conflict of identities as a problem, however, Hunt has always leveraged it as a part of his art:

I have never felt like I really belonged to any one particular movement, culture, category, or clique. As an artist this has given me an incredible amount of freedom. I dont feel that my work is conceptual, traditional, artefact or craft. It is neither ancient nor modern. Instead, I feel as though my work has elements of all of these categories. This is a freedom that allows me to distort, subvert, hijack and remix these categories in order to offer new points of view. I want to challenge the viewers preconceptions. I like the idea of art being like a catalyst, or a flash point. I think art is most powerful when it poses questions, not when it gives the viewer the answers. My goal is to make the viewer think.

So it made perfect sense for him to take this subversion and remixing to the next step by incorporating cutting-edge technologies in his work. That led him to accept Microsofts invitation to essentially come and play with all the shiny toys in their impressive Vancouver HQ. Hunt and his team of artists then collaborated with a host of designers and engineers to explore how Robotics, 3D-Printing and Mixed Reality could help tell traditional stories in a new and powerful way.

The raven in Heiltsuk mythology is seen as the ultimate trickster and that fluid identity seemed like a perfect idea to explore using those tools. The interactive installation they came up with features a bird mask in a traditional indigenous design which gradually morphs into a cyborg through a mixture of physical robotics mechanisms and virtual Mixed Reality elements. As the experience unfolds, the mask appropriates the traditional aspects of metamorphosis with the transformation from bird mask to human, yet in this adaptation the human mask has been altered, upgraded, and merged with the machine. Incorporating aspects of technology, sound and space, each part of the work reflects Hunts interest in how we understand and identify with the term indigenous.

This work presents a new trajectory for engagement and exploration of First Nations practice; one that points towards technology and innovation as aspects that expand traditional practices and opens new avenues for interpretation, says Hunt.

The process started with the production of a paper prototype of the mask, and the team also employed a variety of traditional methods, from initial hand drawn sketches to a full size foam core mock up. These were then replicated into a digital prototype mounted on an aluminium skeleton for hinge measurements. True to traditional form, there are no straight lines on the raven (a concept diametrically opposed to polygonal hard surface 3D modelling) and complex compound curves were lofted to generate the primary beak and head surfaces while procedurally generated hex patterns filled the voids for the ravens eyes and nostrils.

At every step, the structures were digitally recreated and animated to avoid complications in the hardware build phase. Overall, the mask required nearly 300 hours of 3D-printing time. The model was digitally sliced into over 20 sections to meet printer specifications, with components assembled on open beam aluminium rails with interlocking elements between the printed pieces. The finished mask was made up of over 20 individually 3D-Printed components and measured over a meter.

The masks behaviour was achieved through an array of electronics, sensors, processors and mechanical elements. An ultrasonic range finder detects the presence of an attendee and automatically triggers the experience. Three linear actuators attached to an aluminium skeleton drive the primary phases of motion. Several microcontrollers work in unison to control individual addressable LEDs and behaviour states for the ravens eyes projected through Windows phones. The mask transforms with the help of three linear servos driven by two microcontrollers, and communicates with itself and the outside world through electromagnetic and optical signals.

Modified LED strips line the inside of the mask triggering the hardware and software cues throughout the various stages of the experience. The HoloLens impressive computing power orchestrates all these elements, synchronizing the software and hardware over a Bluetooth connection.The holographic experience, where the animated volumetric drawings appear in concert with particle simulations and spatial sounds, was sequenced and rendered in real time using Unity3D. To design it, Shawn started by familiarizing himself with a range of technologies. Drawings that started as volumetric digital sculptures in Tilt Brush were later refined using 2D digital inking to perfect the traditional lines and forms Hunt intended to express. The 3D drawings were further enhanced with purpose-built skeletal systems to create organic animation. Sound was also a key part of the experience, with custom sound design being implemented first, inspiring the timing and intensities for visuals rather than adding it at the end. The result is a powerfully synchronized audio-visual-mechanical experience.

Art comes in many forms, can easily transcend cultures and utilize technology to become something new. Life is all about these infinite possibilities and combinations, says Andy Klein, HoloLens Mixed Reality Designer.

And thats precisely what makes the Transformation Mask such an interesting use case for HoloLens and Mixed Reality Technology: Rather than separating artistic and technical functions, these were very closely blended throughout the conceptual, design and execution phases of the project. Just as the traditional indigenous masks blurred the line between human and animal, reality and myth, technology brings together human and machine, the physical and the virtual. It is clear that if we are to create compelling, engaging and inspiring content that also resonates culturally with audiences, thats an approach that content makers would do well to learn from and adopt.

Read next: Welp, even ships are hackable now

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How 3D-printing, robotics and mixed reality created this HoloLens art piece - TNW

Robotics experts dismiss Musk’s call for AI regulation – Axios

March 2010: Affordable Care Act is signed into law

Sen. Mitch McConnell, the day after Obama signs the bill, says, "Repeal and replace will be the slogan for the fall." Days later, McConnell also criticizes the process in his weekly address: "Democrats decided to go the partisan route and blatantly ignore the will of the people."

Presidential candidate Mitt Romney says he'll give power and flexibility back to the states: "If elected President, I will repeal Obamacare and replace it not with another massive federal bill that purports to solve all our problems from Washington, but with common-sense, patient-centered reforms suited to the challenges we face."

After Obama is re-elected, House Speaker John Boehner says the GOP will not keep pursuing attempts to repeal Obamacare and calls it "the law of the land." He backs down after an uproar from conservatives and rank-and-file Republicans.

Obama vetoes a 2015 GOP bill to repeal parts of the ACA. That plan would have done away with key parts of the law, including the individual mandate, subsidies for people who buy private health insurance, and the expansion of Medicaid.

After the veto, newly elected Speaker Paul Ryan says, "The idea that Obamacare is the law of the land for good is a myth So, next year, if we're sending this bill to a Republican president, it will get signed into law."

Sen. Ted Cruz says, if elected, he will "repeal every word of Obamacare." Presidential candidate Donald Trump says his administration will "repeal and replace" the Affordable Care Act at nearly every stump speech.

After the House repeal and replacement stalls in the Senate, following a Congressional Budget Office estimate that 22 million fewer people would have health coverage, Trump pushes a repeal now, replace later strategy one that has no chance. HHS secretary Tom Price maintains that the GOP plan's deep Medicaid cuts "would not have individuals lose coverage."

And Vice President Mike Pence makes big promises for the Senate's Obamacare replacement plan, including beefed-up tax credit and a no-exceptions coverage model for people with pre-existing conditions. When drafting the Senate's bill, McConnell engages in the same closed-door strategy that he criticized Democrats for in 2010.

The fate of the Senate's bill hinged on three Republicans, and yesterday two more confirmed "no" votes put the bill over the edge. But McConnell is calling the senators' bluff by scheduling a new repeal-only vote on the same bill that passed in 2015 but three "no" votes killed that too.

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Robotics experts dismiss Musk's call for AI regulation - Axios

Mum somehow manages to convince her daughter her nipple’s fallen off in hilarious text exchange – Metro

(Picture: Lauren Farquharson/Getty)

Okay, everyone loves a good prank but sometimes people can go just a step too far.

Like this mother, who somehow managed to convince her daughter that her nipple had fallen off after tripping over her cat.

Unbelievable, we know but apparently not to Lauren Farquharson, who fell so hard for her mothers brilliant prank that she attempted to persuade her to put the nipple in ice and head over to A&E to have it reattached. Well, it is practical.

Of course, with a prank like that, you cant hold a straight face for too long but that didnt stop Lauren from uploading the entire exchange to her Facebook page after her mother came clean.

And yes, the exchange is as hilarious as you can imagine.

After being pranked, Lauren saw the funny side, and posted the entire exchange to her Facebook page, where she captioned it: Nightmare when your mums nipple apparently falls off.

Since being posted on 13 July, the post has received more than 13,000 shares and over 3,000 reactions from amused users.

Lauren, who lives in Scotland, told Metro.co.uk that she 100% fell for her mothers prank.

She said: She does prank me a lot but not usually about stuff like this, usually its silly stuff but this one baffled me.

It actually got me really worried because she just randomly text me (we usually speak everyday but I hadnt heard off her all day), so it being a joke didnt even cross my mind.

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I was just confused when she said she was joking! I didnt know if she was actually just telling me she was joking because she knows Im a worrier.

Of course, we can confirm it was all a joke and an epic one at that which apparently Lauren mum already knows, as she said: My mum isnt on Facebook so she thinks shes hilarious, most definitely didnt expect it to go this far!

MORE: Guy pulls off brilliant Snapchat prank to bribe his friends over to the pub

MORE: Tinder match has been in a beautiful text-only relationship for three years

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Mum somehow manages to convince her daughter her nipple's fallen off in hilarious text exchange - Metro

Assisted living tries virtual reality to help seniors with dementia – Orlando Sentinel

Black-and-white striped angelfish glide past Mary Spencer as she scuba dives for the first time in her 84 years.

Above, the sun glows white at the top of the Thai sea. Below, a school of bright orange fish darts by.

Oh, its a beautiful blue ocean, the Orlando native said. There goes a diver. Hes floating by."

The retired Walt Disney World workers next adventure could take her to the Grand Canyon or on a safari without ever leaving her home in an east Orange County assisted-living facility. Shes among the residents testing whether virtual reality can help people with dementia.

We are trying to be on the cutting edge of what we provide to our residents, said Kimberly Edwards, executive director at Encore at Avalon Park assisted living and memory care.

Susan Jacobson/Orlando Sentinel

Mary Spencer, 84, watches a video that immerses her in deep-sea diving. She's participating in a virtual-reality trial of dementia patients at Encore at Avalon Park assisted living facility on July 14, 2017.

Mary Spencer, 84, watches a video that immerses her in deep-sea diving. She's participating in a virtual-reality trial of dementia patients at Encore at Avalon Park assisted living facility on July 14, 2017. (Susan Jacobson/Orlando Sentinel)

Encore at Avalon Park is the third senior residence in the country to test the virtual-reality system created by MyndVR, a Dallas start-up whose partners are Samsung and the University of Texas at Dallas.

All 89 residents will have a chance to try the 360-degree experience, but only 16 will participate in the four-week field trial eight with dementia and eight without.

Theyll spend no more than half an hour at a time looking at three- to five-minute scenes meant to evoke nostalgia, serenity and wonder. Choices include a 1950s jazz club with a live singer and patrons sipping martinis, a sunset on a farm and a painter creating a flower-filled canvas.

MyndVR hopes the scenes will soothe the patients with dementia and reduce agitation and depression.

Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel

Chris Brickler, left, CEO and co-founder of MyndVR, helps resident John Auchter, 89, with a headset to view a virtual reality video at Encore at Avalon Park assisted living facility on July 12, 2017.

Chris Brickler, left, CEO and co-founder of MyndVR, helps resident John Auchter, 89, with a headset to view a virtual reality video at Encore at Avalon Park assisted living facility on July 12, 2017. (Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel)

During a past trial in Plano, Texas, a few residents without memory loss were allowed to try a skydiving segment that was a hit with an 85-year-old woman, Brickler said.

Our plan is to essentially be the Netflix of VR for seniors, MyndVR CEO and co-founder Chris Brickler, 45, said on a visit to kick off the trial last week at Encore at Avalon Park.

Thats why the equipment is designed to be light enough for comfort and easy to navigate.

It consists of a headphones and a headset powered by a specially programmed cellphone. The user sits in an office swivel chair under the supervision of a staff member trained by MyndVR. Slowly twirling the chair and moving the head create the panoramic effect.

The hurdles are far less than we thought, and the unintended benefits are starting to be more than we anticipated, said Brickler, who plans to lease the equipment to senior-care residences across the Sunbelt, where many older people live.

Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel

Jane Auchter, 85, a resident at Encore at Avalon Park assisted living facility, takes a virtual-reality trip to the Grand Canyon on July 12, 2017.

Jane Auchter, 85, a resident at Encore at Avalon Park assisted living facility, takes a virtual-reality trip to the Grand Canyon on July 12, 2017. (Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel)

No scientific studies prove the value of the technology among patients with dementia or other seniors.

But with society aging fast the U.S. Census Bureau predicts the 65-and-older population will grow from 49.1 million in 2016 to 83.7 million in 2050 and 98.2 million in 2060 several other companies in the U.S. and abroad also are experimenting with or marketing VR to senior-care and senior-living communities, hospitals and consumers.

Dr. Rosemary Laird, a Winter Park geriatrician whose specialties include memory disorders, said the technology sounds promising if only to bring the world to people who no longer can venture out.

One caveat, she said, would be to avoid scenarios that might frighten or overwhelm seniors who cant distinguish reality from the virtual world.

Virtual reality is part of a leap in care from three or four decades ago, when nursing homes tied unruly patients to chairs or their beds to keep them from hurting themselves or others, said Daniel Paulson, a professor of psychology at the University of Central Florida.

Later, drugs took the place of restraints, said Paulson, who is not familiar with the VR project but is involved with a music-therapy pilot program that pairs middle schoolers with residents at Encore at Avalon Park.

No one wants to go into a nursing home and learn that grandma has been drugged into submission, he said.

At minimum, Encore at Avalon Park administrators hope to inject a novel diversion into the lives of their residents.

If it doesnt decrease their anxiety or depression, at the very least it gives them an enjoyable experience for half an hour and increases their quality of life, Edwards said.

sjacobson@orlandosentinel.com or 407-540-5981

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Assisted living tries virtual reality to help seniors with dementia - Orlando Sentinel

Skydance Interactive’s Award-Winning Virtual Reality Game ‘Archangel’ Is Available Now On Playstation VR – PR Newswire (press release)

Set in a post-apocalyptic America during the year 2089, players choose to play the role of Gabby or Gabriel Walker, codename "Guardian," who has been selected by the United States Free Forces to lead the resistance against the tyrannical corporation HUMNX, a private conglomerate that governs what is left of our ravaged nation. Players must use strategy and skill to fire upon enemies with a wide array of high-powered weapons while protecting their allies from onslaught.

"How better tointroduce players to Skydance Interactive's vision for the future of virtual reality gamingthantogive themhands-on controlofa giant mechin a waythat no other medium can deliver," said Peter Akemann, President of Skydance Interactive. "Now is the time to join the resistance, protect your friends and countrymen, and become the beacon of hope that America needs the Archangel!"

Archangel garnered "Best VR Game" Awards at E3 2017 from Geek Citadel, MMOGames, and MEUPS4. On August 2, 2017 it will be available on other leading virtual reality platforms, including HTC Vive and Oculus. A location-based version of the game will also be made available in IMAX VR Centres in August.

View the newest trailer for Archangel here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XoaFEXviJpE

To learn more about Archangel visit http://www.archangelgame.com and follow @archangelgame on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

About Skydance InteractiveSkydance Interactive creates and publishes original and IP-based virtual reality, PC, and console games. The division of Skydance Media was launched in 2016 through the acquisition of The Workshop Entertainment, whose prior credits include franchise and genre-defining work on "Gears of War 4," "XCOM 2" for PS4/Xbox One, "Borderlands 2: Mr. Torgue's Campaign of Carnage," and "Sorcery" for Playstation Move. Skydance Interactive's first VR game the award-winning Archangel launches in July of 2017. The studio is located in Marina del Rey, CA.

ContactsShannon Olivas Corporate Communications (424) 2913485 solivas@skydance.com

View original content:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/skydance-interactives-award-winning-virtual-reality-game-archangel-is-available-now-on-playstation-vr-300489734.html

SOURCE Skydance Interactive

http://www.archangelgame.com

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Skydance Interactive's Award-Winning Virtual Reality Game 'Archangel' Is Available Now On Playstation VR - PR Newswire (press release)

How Lucasfilm Is Using Virtual Reality to Bring ‘Star Wars’ to Life – Fortune

The visual effects whizzes behind Star Wars are using virtual reality and augmented reality to make the film jump off the screen.

John Knoll, chief creative officer and senior visual effects supervisor of Industrial Light & Magic (ILM), described how his team created virtual sets for last year's blockbuster movie Rogue One 's that let director Gareth Edwards virtually map out certain shots and sets. He was also able to moving inside some of Rogue One's digital scenes to determine the best camera angles.

Knoll described the ILM's work while onstage Monday at Fortunes Brainstorm Tech conference in Aspen, Colo. In addition to putting the next wave of visual technology to work on the big screen, Disney and Lucasfilm, the division that produces Star Wars , are also hard at work developing virtual reality and augmented reality products that can let the film's fans feel like they're inside the world of the movies, even if they're at home (or, maybe, at a Disney theme park ).

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Vicki Dobbs Beck, the executive in charge at ILMxLAB, Lucasfilm's new laboratory for immersive entertainment, said, "Our ultimate goal is to deliver really compelling, immersive stories." Last year, ILMxLAB introduced the Star Wars virtual reality experience Trials on Tatooine, which lets fans wield their own lightsaber, and announced a VR project featuring Darth Vader .

When it comes to Star Wars and Disney's theme parks, though, Disney CEO Bob Iger has made it clear that he sees a bright future for augmented reality, which uses a headset to superimpose computer-generated images onto a real-world view. Over the weekend, at Disney's D23 fan event in Anaheim, Calif., the company announced plans to partner with Lucasfilm and Lenovo on a smartphone-based augmented reality headset that would layer Star Wars experiences such as lightsaber battles and games onto the real world.

Meanwhile, Disney also announced plans to open an immersive, Star Wars -themed hotel and resort, where guests would be able to live out unique storylines. Asked about the resort and its potential applications for immersive storytelling, Beck said: "Once you step through those doors, you're in Star Wars . I would assume that mixed reality would play a role in that."

Originally posted here:

How Lucasfilm Is Using Virtual Reality to Bring 'Star Wars' to Life - Fortune

Is 2018 the Year Virtual Reality Goes Mainstream? — The Motley Fool – Motley Fool

Facebook's (NASDAQ:FB) Oculus is reportedly planning to release a stand-alone virtual reality device next year to retail for just $200. The goal is to push VR into the mainstream.

Virtual reality has been a niche product for the better part of 30 years, but Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg made a big bet that VR is going to be the next big computing platform when his company bought Oculus for $2 billion in 2014.

Oculus released its first consumer product, the Rift, last year. While the device is relatively affordable, it requires users to hook it up to an expensive PC to run software. Meanwhile, low-cost devices that license Oculus technology, like Samsung's (NASDAQOTH:SSNLF) Gear VR, require a high-end smartphone. The new device will find a happy middle ground in terms of both capabilities and price. That may be just what the market needsfor mass consumer adoption.

Facebook Spaces. Images source: Facebook

Earlier this year, Mark Zuckerberg stated, "It's going to take five or 10 more years of development before we get to where we all want to go." Considering, the new Oculus device will have limited capabilities -- for example, no positional tracking -- it's just another step for the company in its push toward making VR the next big computing platform.

Other consumer electronic companies are following suit. Samsung is reportedly planning its own stand-alone headset as well, which will rely on Oculus technology. Other players like HTC and Lenovo are working on similar devices using Google's Daydream platform.

But Zuckerberg would compare these upcoming devices to early smartphones like those from Blackberry or Palm circa 2003. In other words, it's still very early and it could be another five years or more before we see a device that sparks mass interest in the platform. Zuckerberg points out it took 10 years for the smartphone market to sell 1 billion devices.

"I don't know [if] there was something that folks could have done to make that happen fast, but I think that was pretty good. And if we can be on a similar trajectory of anywhere near 10 years for VR and AR, then I would feel very good about that," Zuckerberg said during Facebook's fourth quarter earnings call earlier this year. "We're going to invest a lot in this and it's not going to return or be really profitable for us for quite a while," he added.

One big hurdle for virtual reality to overcome is a lack of content. That could be anything from immersive video content to video games. The problem is it's hard for top video game studios to create games for the platform before a mass audience exists.

To that end, Facebook has committed $250 million to new VR content. Most of that money will go toward software -- like the Facebook Spaces app the company unveiled during its F8 developers conference this spring -- and video games.

The new stand-alone device could help build a sizable enough audience that Facebook would no longer have to seed the content ecosystem. VR projects would be viable of their own accord, and game studios and software developers could start investing their time and money in projects for both high-end and low-end devices.

There's a ton of interest in virtual reality right now from a development side, but consumer demand hasn't quite taken off. We may still be a few years away from that, and Facebook will likely continue to lose money on its VR investments, but a stand-alone device with a broader reach than current devices have may be a key step to getting to where Facebook wants to go.

Adam Levy has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Facebook. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Link:

Is 2018 the Year Virtual Reality Goes Mainstream? -- The Motley Fool - Motley Fool

‘INSANE’ and ‘SCARY’ virtual reality gaming comes to Airhop Bristol, just a half hour from Bath – Bath Chronicle

People who've tried it come describe it as a thoroughly awesome, mind blowing experience.

A new concept in computer gaming called Virtual Reality (VR) gaming puts you at the centre of the action, whether it be shooting an enemy or chasing a speeding car and, be warned, it's scary and incredibly realistic.

It's coming to Airhop Bristol, the biggest trampoline park in the world, about a half hour's drive from Bath and it looks set to be a thrilling experience.

Kids will love it, especially if they love computer games, but the fun isn't limited to the youngsters - adults are loving it as well.

The Virtual Reality Concept is coming to the park in Patchway for nine days only as a special trial from Saturday, July 22 until Monday, July 31.

It's not cheap at 25 for 30 minutes for two people, but it is innovative and the team behind it promise a once in a lifetime experience.

Entry to the massive trampoline park is 12 for an hour, and you can literally bounce off walls, fly in the air, play basketball or dodge ball.

Jumpers and bouncers have to sign a waiver in case of injury.

For the virtual reality gaming, special technology and equipment allows you to immerse yourself in the computer game and become part of the action.

Users in other parts of the country have described the experience as 'insane' or 'awesome' as it is incredibly realistic.

For more information visit http://www.airhop-bristol.com and to book tickets to the virtual reality gaming go to http://lcnvirtuallabs.com/whats-on/bristol-july17

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'INSANE' and 'SCARY' virtual reality gaming comes to Airhop Bristol, just a half hour from Bath - Bath Chronicle

A Son’s Race to Give His Dying Father Artificial Immortality – WIRED

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A Son's Race to Give His Dying Father Artificial Immortality - WIRED

‘Nothing Compares 2 U’ Takes a Long, Strange Road to Immortality: 365 Prince Songs in a Year – Diffuser.fm

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To celebrate the incredibly prolific, influential and diverse body of work left behind byPrince, we will be exploring a different song of his each day for an entire year with the series365 Prince Songs in a Year.

By the mid-80s, Prince, between his albums, movies and side projects, had usurped James Browns title as the hardest-working man in show business. With irons in so many fires, some of his work naturally fell through the cracks. However, with the help of Sinead OConnor, one of those forgotten tunes, Nothing Compares 2 U, eventually became one of his most beloved songs.

Since OConnors hit 1990 recording, Nothing Compares 2 U has taken on a life of its own and is now as closely associated with Prince as anything he released under his own name. Since his April 2016 death, it has been performed in onstage tributes by some of the biggest names in rock, pop and country. Read below to discover the journey the song has taken.

In 1985, an unsuspectingfuture hit was quietly released into the world. The Family, one of Princes many side projects, put out their first and only album. On it was the Prince-scribed Nothing Compares 2 U, which is the only writing credit he claimed on the album, although, according to PrinceVault, he penned seven of its eight songs and played nearly all the instruments.

He drew his inspiration for the song from Sandy Scipioni, who had been his personal assistant in 1980, until she left suddenly following her fathers death. Despite the general tenor of the song, the two were not romantically involved.

Prince originally recorded Nothing Compares 2 Uon July 18, 1984, at the Flying Cloud Drive Warehouse, the same day Lets Go Crazy was released as a single. St. Paul Peterson and Susannah Melvoin later overdubbed vocals, while Clare Fischer added orchestral overdubs.

The song, like the album, received little attention, and Prince quickly became occupied by the making of his next film, Under theCherry Moon.He couldnt have imagined the drama that would later ensue, all with Nothing Compares 2 U at its root.

Nothing Compares 2 U was resurrected when Irish singer-songwriter OConnor took a liking to it, and recorded her own arrangement six years later. She put it on her second album,I Do Not Want What I Havent Got,and it quickly shot up the charts, becoming a worldwide hit. In the U.S., it reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 on April 21, 1990 26 years to the day beforePrince died and claimed the No. 3 spot for the year.

She also shot a video for the song, which was in heavy rotation at MTV. It featured OConnor against a stark background, singing about her various states of grief. The closeup of me singing Nothing Compares 2 U was supposed to be only one part of the video, she said. But the song reminded me of my mother, who had died three years previously. I made an emotional connection, which I was not expecting it didnt hit me when I was recording the song. It only kicked in when I was being filmed. So I was sitting there, thinking about me mother, and trying hard not to bawl my eyes out.

Following OConnors surprising success with the track, Prince immediately began adding it to his live sets, where it remained in regular rotation. In 1993, he captured and released a duet performance of it with Rosie Gaines on The Hits 1that reached No. 62 on BillboardsHot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.Then in 2002, he released another live version on his first live albumOne Nite Alone Live!He had played it live as recently as the week prior to his 2016 death.

The worldwide success of Nothing Compares 2 U seemed to throw OConnor for a loop. I loved his music, but I had absolutely no idea or expectation that that single would be such a big hit, not at all, She said in an interview,Digital Spyreported.

As quickly as the song rose to popularity, shebecame uncomfortable with the attention. Though her recording earned her a Grammy in 1991, she boycotted the ceremony and refused the award, saying it was protest against the extreme commercialism the Grammys represented.

Furthermore, it turns out that OConnor and Prince didnt get on well at all. According to her, they detest each other, partially because of his distaste for her swearing in public. He summoned me to his house after Nothing Compares 2 U. I made it without him. Id never met him. He summoned me to his house and its foolish to do this to an Irish woman he said he didnt like me saying bad words in interviews. So I told him to f off, OConnor told a Norwegian radio station. He got quite violent. I had to escape out of his house at five in the morning. He packed a bigger punch than mine.

You dont have to read very deeply into the lyrics of Princes 1994 track Days of Wild to see that he disputes OConnors account of their encounter. In it, he sang, A woman every day should be thanked / Not disrespected, not raped or spanked / And if a woman ever said I did /Shes a motherfing liar and Im a set-up kid.

The saga didnt end there. In 2015, OConnor announced that she would never perform Nothing Compares 2 U againbecause she no longer emotionally identified with the song, according to Billboard.The singer claimed the first principle of Bel Canto, the style in which she was trained, stipulates that you only sing that which you connect with emotionally.

OConnors public behavior became increasingly erratic over the years, as she openly struggled with mental illness. When Prince died in 2016, she accused comedian and talk-show host Arsenio Hall of providing him with drugs, and claimed she had tipped police off to this fact. Hall filed a $5 million defamation suit against OConnor, which he dropped after she apologized and retracted her accusation, according to the L.A. Times.

On May 4, 2016, at 5:07PM CT (Minneapolis, Princes hometown, is in Central Time), radio stations across the U.S. broadcast Nothing Compares 2 U from The Hits 1.The idea began at Minneapolis public radio station the Current and they encouraged others to follow suit. They chose the date because it wasexactly seven hours and 13 days since Prince had died, referencing the songs opening line. OConnor had changed it to 15 days.

The day Prince died, Chris Cornell of Soundgarden uploaded a version of him singing Nothing Compares 2 U to Facebook. Princes music is the soundtrack to the soulful and beautiful universe he created, Cornell wrote, and we have all been privileged to be part of that amazing world. Cornell had been performing Nothing Compares 2 U since 2015, according to Setlist.fm, including a filmed performance during an Artist Confidential session at Sirius XMs studio. In a sadly ironic twist, after Cornells death in 2017, Princes former band the Revolution began playing his version of the song over the P.A. after their concerts.

The day after Princes untimely death, the Dixie Chicks performed a stunningly stark version of Nothing Compares 2 U during their concert in Horsens, Denmark. It has remained a regular staple of their set lists ever since, including a show at the Minnesota State Fair in St. Paul four months after Princes death.

As part of a tribute at the 2017 Billboard Music Awards, his longtime frenemyMadonna, sang Nothing Compares 2 U. But when her performance earned bad reviews, she wrote on Instagram, Anyone who wants to do a tribute to Prince is welcome to. Whatever your age Gender or skin Color. If you loved him and he inspired you then show it!!!! I love Prince 4 ever.

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'Nothing Compares 2 U' Takes a Long, Strange Road to Immortality: 365 Prince Songs in a Year - Diffuser.fm