Artificial Intelligence Helps Predict Dangerous Solar Flares

Though scientists do not completely understand what triggers solar flares, Stanford solar physicists Monica Bobra and Sebastien Couvidat have automated the analysis of those gigantic explosions. The method could someday provide advance warning to protect power grids and communication satellites.Solar flares can release the energy equivalent of many atomic bombs, enough to cut out satellite communications and damage power grids on Earth, 93 million miles away. The flares arise from twisted magnetic fields that occur all over the sun's surface, and they increase in frequency every 11 years, a cycle that is now at its maximum.Using artificial intelligence techniques, Stanford solar physicists Monica Bobra and Sebastien Couvidat have automated the analysis of the largest ever set of solar observations to forecast solar flares using data from the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO), which takes more data than any other satellite in NASA history. Their study identifies which features are most useful for predicting solar flares.Specifically, their study required analyzing vector magnetic field data. Historically, instruments measured the line-of-sight component of the solar magnetic field, an approach that showed only the amplitude of the field. Later, instruments showed the strength and direction of the fields, called vector magnetic fields, but for only a small part of the sun, or part of the time. Now an instrument on a satellite-based system, the Helioseismic Magnetic Imager (HMI) aboard SDO, collects vector magnetic fields and other observations of the entire sun almost continuously.Adding machine learningThe Stanford Solar Observatories Group, headed by physics Professor Phil Scherrer, processes and stores the SDO data, which takes 1.5 terabytes of data a day. During a recent afternoon tea break, the group members chatted about what they might do with all that data and talked about trying something different.They recognized the difficulty of forming predictions from many data points when using pure theory and they had heard of the popularity of the online class on machine learning taught by Andrew Ng, a Stanford professor of computer science."Machine learning is a sophisticated way to analyze a ton of data and classify it into different groups," Bobra said.Machine learning software ascribes information to a set of established categories. The software looks for patterns and tries to see which information is relevant for predicting a particular category.For example, one could use machine-learning software to predict whether or not people are fast swimmers. First, the software looks at features of swimmers -- their heights, weights, dietary habits, sleeping habits, their dogs' names and their dates of birth.And then, through a guess and check strategy, the software would try to identify which information is useful in predicting whether or not a swimmer is particularly speedy. It could look at a swimmer's height and guess whether that particular height lies within the height range of speedy swimmers, yes or no. If it guessed correctly, it would "learn" that the height might be a good predictor of speed.The software might find that a swimmer's sleeping habits are good predictors of speed, whereas the name of the swimmer's dog is not.The predictions would not be very accurate after analysis of just the first few swimmers. The more information provided, the better machine learning gets at predicting.Similarly, the researchers wanted to know how successfully machine learning would predict the strength of solar flares from information about sunspots."We had never worked with the machine learning algorithm before, but after we took the course we thought it would be a good idea to apply it to solar flare forecasting," Couvidat said. He applied the algorithms and Bobra characterized the features of the two strongest classes of solar flares, M and X. Though others have used machine learning algorithms to predict solar flares, nobody has done it with such a large set of data and or with vector magnetic field observations.M-class flares can cause minor radiation storms that might endanger astronauts and cause brief radio blackouts at Earth's poles. X-class flares are the most powerful.Better flare predictionThe researchers catalogued flaring and non-flaring regions from a database of more than 2,000 active regions and then characterized those regions by 25 features such as energy, current and field gradient. They then fed the learning machine 70 percent of the data, to train it to identify relevant features. And then they used the machine to analyze the remaining 30 percent of the data to test its accuracy in predicting solar flares.

Machine learning confirmed that the topology of the magnetic field and the energy stored in the magnetic field are very relevant to predicting solar flares. Using just a few of the 25 features, machine learning discriminated between active regions that would flare and those that would not flare. Although others have used different methods to come up with similar results, machine learning provides a significant improvement because automated analysis is faster and could provide earlier warnings of solar flares.However, this study only used information from the solar surface. That would be like trying to predict Earth's weather from only surface measurements like temperature, without considering the wind and cloud cover. The next step in solar flare prediction would be to incorporate data from the sun's atmosphere, Bobra said.Doing so would allow Bobra to pursue her passion for solar physics. "It's exciting because we not only have a ton of data, but the images are just so beautiful," she said. "And it's truly universal. Creatures from a different galaxy could be learning these same principles."Monica Bobra and Sebastien Couvidat worked under the direction of physicist Phil Scherrer of the WW Hansen Experimental Physics Laboratory at Stanford.

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Artificial Intelligence Helps Predict Dangerous Solar Flares

Nobel Laureate Martin Chalfie to Address International Nanomedicine Conference

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Newswise LOS ANGELES (Jan. 14, 2015) Nobel laureate Martin Chalfie, PhD, will be the keynote speaker at Cedars-Sinais Nanomedicine for Imaging and Treatment Conference, where two dozen experts from around the world will discuss emerging trends in the study and treatment of diseases at the molecular and atomic levels.

The March 13-14 event will bring together academic researchers, clinicians, representatives from the National Institutes of Health and scientists from private biotech industries to present lectures and abstracts about advances in nanomedicine and the development of imaging and drugs in this specialized field.

This conference will give many top scientists and physicians an opportunity to share insights as the field of nanomedicine matures and we home in on new ways to diagnose, treat and cure diseases, said Keith Black, MD, chair and professor of Cedars-Sinais Department of Neurosurgery.

Chalfie, chair of the Department of Biological Sciences at Columbia University, received the 2008 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his part in the discovery and development of green fluorescent protein, found in a species of jellyfish. The protein glows when excited by light. Because it can be attached to many biological substances to make them readily visible, it has become a fundamental tool in a wide range of medical and scientific fields.

This years program will focus on three issues: Nanomedicine and imaging: How far are we from patient care? Latest preclinical and clinical advances in the treatment of cancer, neurodegenerative disorders and other pathological conditions. The role of the National Institutes of Health in nanodrug and nano-imaging development.

The conference also will address issues relevant to the biotech industry and the legal profession. Speakers and presenters will discuss research taking place at Cedars-Sinai; the California Institute of Technology; Harvard Medical School; Houston Methodist Hospital; the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Max Planck Institute of Biophysical Chemistry, Germany; the National Cancer Institute; the National Institutes of Health; Northeastern University; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey; Saarland University, Germany; Stanford University; UCLA; the University of Central Florida; the University of Chicago; the University of New Mexico; the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; the University of Southern California; and the University of Utah, Salt Lake City.

Nanomedicine is conducted at microscopic levels at a scale of about one to 100 nanometers. A nanometer is equal to one billionth of a meter. A sheet of paper is about 100,000 nanometers thick.

Julia Ljubimova, MD, PhD, the nanomedicine conferences leading organizer, has worked with colleagues at Cedars-Sinai and UCLA to develop an experimental nanodrug 20 to 30 nanometers in size to deliver antitumor therapies to brain and breast cancers. Ljubimova, professor of neurosurgery and biomedical sciences, is director of the Nanomedicine Research Center in the Department of Neurosurgery and director of the Nanomedicine Program at the Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute.

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Nobel Laureate Martin Chalfie to Address International Nanomedicine Conference

Experts explore the medical safety needs of civilian space travel

IMAGE:New Space facilitates and supports the efforts of researchers, engineers, analysts, investors, business leaders, and policymakers to capitalize on the opportunities of commercial space ventures. Spanning a broad array of... view more

Credit: Mary Ann Liebert Inc., publishers

New Rochelle, NY, January 14, 2015--The commercial aviation industry has medical care standards, as does NASA for traditional space missions, and the emerging commercial space transportation industry will need to define medical care practices as well. The unique risks posed by commercial spaceflight warrant the establishment of Medical Levels of Care to account for the different phases of suborbital and orbital missions, as described in an article published in New Space, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert Inc., publishers. The article is available free on the New Space website until February 14, 2015.

In the article "Considerations toward Defining Medical 'Levels of Care' for Commercial Spaceflight" ," Stefan Neis and David Klaus, University of Colorado, Boulder, review current medical care practices in the civilian aviation industry and traditional space exploration sector and offer suggestions for defining appropriate onboard levels of medical care for the commercial space transportation industry, related to different types and phases of flight. Suborbital tourist flights, for example, might require motion sickness and pain medications, oxygen masks, and possibly pressure suits onboard; whereas longer-term orbital flights would necessitate a higher level of care, including emergency medical equipment and training and perhaps spacesuits.

"Medical constraints are the most important discriminators in determining who in the general population can be a spaceflight participant. This original article adds critical new knowledge to an emerging discipline," says Editor-in-Chief of New Space Prof. Scott Hubbard, Stanford University.

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About the Journal

New Space facilitates and supports the efforts of researchers, engineers, analysts, investors, business leaders, and policymakers to capitalize on the opportunities of commercial space ventures. Spanning a broad array of topics including technological advancements, global policies, and innovative applications, the journal brings the new space community together to address the challenges and discover new breakthroughs and trends in this epoch of private and public/private space discovery. The Journal is published quarterly online with Open Access options and in print. Complete tables of content are available on the New Space website.

About the Publisher

Mary Ann Liebert Inc., publishers is a privately held, fully integrated media company known for establishing authoritative peer-reviewed journals in many promising areas of science, technology, engineering, medical, and biomedical research, including Big Data, Soft Robotics, 3D Printing and Additive Manufacturing, and Astrobiology. Its biotechnology trade magazine, Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News (GEN), was the first in its field and is today the industry's most widely read publication worldwide. A complete list of the firm's more than 80 journals, newsmagazines, and books is available on the Mary Ann Liebert Inc., publishers website.

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Experts explore the medical safety needs of civilian space travel

rocknycliveandrecorded: Brainstorming synesthesia at Sonos Studios – Video


rocknycliveandrecorded: Brainstorming synesthesia at Sonos Studios
Performance set up by UCLA Professor in department of Design Media Arts, and Director of Art|Sci center, Victoria Vesna, Mark Cohen (UCLA neurology-behavioral science professor) and James ...

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Dr. Leonard Horowitz | Spirit Science, Weaponized Sound, & The Frequency Conspiracy – Video


Dr. Leonard Horowitz | Spirit Science, Weaponized Sound, The Frequency Conspiracy
After many moons, we finally got a guest to speak in depth about the 440 Hz conspiracy, the power of frequency and resonance, and how it #39;s been used against the massed in the multi-pronged...

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Dr. Leonard Horowitz | Spirit Science, Weaponized Sound, & The Frequency Conspiracy - Video

Hayden Kho to revive medical career

Hayden Kho is now raring to resume his medical practice following the renewal of his license last year.

The Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) reinstated him as a doctor after revoking his license for about five years following his involvement in controversy.

Also known as an actor, model and perfume merchant, the 34-year-old heartthrob now sees a need to focus on one profession at a time.

He believes the renewal of his medical license is Gods way of giving him guidance.

As he sets his life back in order, Hayden says, Im very happy. I cant spell it out for you.

He continues, If you work hard for something, and it was taken away from you, you feel bad about it because that something was very important to you. You lost the investment of your time, of your effort. Thats why when I got (my license) back, it became more important to me When God gave my license back, I know that this was going to be not just for me but also for other people.

Hayden, a medicine graduate from the University of Santo Tomas (UST), wants to take refresher courses in anti-aging medicine abroad. He wants to take the board exams as soon as possible, because he wants to open his own clinic.

For now, Hayden will be hosting TV5s Healing Galing sa TV with naturopathic medicine expert Dr. Edrinell Calvario.

Kailangan i-establish natin na doktor ako before anything else, he says about accepting the project. I already invested a decade studying medicine, might as well practice medicine.

It has been some time since Hayden had a regular show.

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Hayden Kho to revive medical career

NATO Exercises in Baltic States: Poland calls Russian military activity in Baltics ‘unprecedented’ – Video


NATO Exercises in Baltic States: Poland calls Russian military activity in Baltics #39;unprecedented #39;
Poland expects NATO to boost training exercises in the Baltics to counter the surge of Russian military provocations in the region. Polish Defence Minister T...

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NATO Exercises in Baltic States: Poland calls Russian military activity in Baltics 'unprecedented' - Video

Charlie Hebdo attacks bring France to NATO heel over ISIS mission Martin Summers Richard Peppiatt – Video


Charlie Hebdo attacks bring France to NATO heel over ISIS mission Martin Summers Richard Peppiatt
Charlie Hebdo massacre and terror attacks in Paris, France. Terror attacks in France and many contextual aspects such as the timing which suggest an ulterior...

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Charlie Hebdo attacks bring France to NATO heel over ISIS mission Martin Summers Richard Peppiatt - Video

NATO Slams Russian Role in Ukraine Conflict: Stoltenberg says Kremlin must end insurgent support – Video


NATO Slams Russian Role in Ukraine Conflict: Stoltenberg says Kremlin must end insurgent support
The head of NATO has urged Russia to drop its support for insurgents in eastern Ukraine. Check out our website: http://uatoday.tv Facebook: https://facebook.com/uatodaytv Twitter: https://twitter....

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NATO Slams Russian Role in Ukraine Conflict: Stoltenberg says Kremlin must end insurgent support - Video

NATO sends rapid-reaction forces to Russia's neighbors

An interim force of German, Norwegian and Dutch troops has been deployed in Eastern Europe to respond to any security threat from the east, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg told reporters in Berlin on Wednesday.

The new "high-readiness spearhead force" is in place for 2015, Stoltenberg said after calling on Russia to respect the sanctity of postwar borders in Europe and the core values on which the continent's democracies are based.

It was Russia's annexation of Ukraine's Crimea peninsula 10 months ago that prompted the Western defense alliance to create the rapid-response force that will rotate troops into frontline states along Russia's borders.

Stoltenberg did not disclose the number of troops already deployed. The ultimate size of the force will be "several thousand troops" able to respond within a few days to any attack or security threat to a member state, NATO spokeswoman Oana Lungescu said.

Ukraine is not a member of the 28-nation defense alliance and it pledged in 2010 to remain nonaligned. The Ukrainian parliament retracted that position late last year in a signal that it intends eventually to apply for NATO membership.

Russian President Vladimir Putin is staunchly opposed to what he sees as NATO encroachment into Moscow's traditional sphere of influence. He is also clearly displeased with Ukraine's moves toward eventual membership in the European Union. It was after a Kremlin-allied Ukrainian president, Viktor Yanukovich, was ousted by a pro-European rebellion that Russian troops seized Crimea and Russian arms and mercenaries began flowing into eastern Ukraine.

Putin denies Russia is involved in the fighting in Ukraine that has killed more than 4,700 people in nine months, and he has justified the "reunion" of Crimea with the Russian federation as correcting a historical wrong. Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev deeded the territory that is home to the Russian Black Sea fleet to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1954.

Stoltenberg alluded to "the challenges we are facing to the east" during a news conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

"We see that international law is violated, and that the sovereignty and the territorial integrity of Ukraine is not respected. And we call on Russia to respect the Minsk agreements," Stoltenberg said.

He was referring to the Sept. 5 cease-fire signed in Minsk, the capital of Belarus, by Russia and Ukraine that set out a plan for halting artillery fire, withdrawing heavy weaponry, freezing the front lines and exchanging prisoners. The agreement has been repeatedly violated and few of its provisions fulfilled beyond a recent exchange of about 370 captives.

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NATO sends rapid-reaction forces to Russia's neighbors

NATO chief urges Germany to lead way on defence spending

NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg urged Germany on a visit to Berlin Wednesday to mirror its leadership role in Europe as the bloc's biggest economy in its defence spending.

Describing Germany as a "staunch and important" NATO ally, Stoltenberg stressed the need for members of the US-led alliance to bump up investment amid challenges such as the Islamic State jihadist group or the Ukraine crisis.

"Germany is providing leadership in so many areas in Europe, but we are also looking for German leadership when it comes to investing in defence," the alliance chief told a joint press conference with Chancellor Angela Merkel.

"We need to invest in our defence to be able to protect all our allies and to maintain the security and stability of Europe," the former Norwegian premier, who took over the NATO helm in October, added.

At a NATO summit in September in Wales dominated by the fallout from the Ukraine crisis, the 28 alliance leaders committed to increase defence spending to two percent of annual economic output within 10 years.

Meanwhile Stoltenberg welcomed German involvement in Afghanistan and developing a high-speed NATO reaction force.

Germany's Die Welt daily, which published an interview with Stoltenberg Tuesday, said that Berlin's defence expenditure was under the NATO target, at 1.3 percent of gross domestic product.

The NATO chief, in the interview, welcomed a nominal increase in German spending for 2015 but underscored that the US government had recently made one billion dollars available for safeguarding Europe.

Germany has faced criticism in the past over its perceived reluctance in foreign and security matters, and long faced calls for it to pull its weight in NATO and elsewhere on a par with its economic might.

Several political leaders last year called for Germany to take more responsibility in international crises.

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NATO chief urges Germany to lead way on defence spending

Stoltenberg: "NATO doesn't want confrontation with Russia"

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and NATO chief, Jens Stoltenberg, called on Russia to respect the borders of Ukraine on Wednesday at a press conference in Berlin:

"We call on Russia to respect the Minsk agreements, to use all its influence on the separatists to make them respect the ceasefire and to withdraw the support for the separatists," Stoltenberg said.

"NATO does not seek confrontation with Russia. NATO aspires for a more constructive and cooperative relationship with Russia. But to be able to establish that, Russia must want it, too," he added.

Stoltenberg also praised the German involvement in NATO, stressing that Germany will play "the leading role" in establishing NATO's fast-response troops, which is the most important NATO response to the Ukraine crisis.

At the same time, however, the head of NATO pressed Germany to increase defense spending, saying the country needed to show more leadership given its strength and influence:

"Germany is such a key country in Europe, Germany has the strongest economy in Europe and Germany is providing leadership in so many areas in Europe," Stoltenberg said, "But we're also looking for German leadership when it comes to investing in defense because we need to invest in our defense to be able to protect all our allies and to maintain the security and stability of Europe," he emphasized.

No progress yet

Chancellor Merkel said that the four-party meeting about the Ukraine crisis, which was originally scheduled for this Thursday and then postponed, might still happen.

"We are not ready yet, but we will be working on it with all our might", she said. However, Merkel could not say when the meeting can be expected to take place, adding that it depends on all the parties. The meeting, which was supposed to happen in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, has been postponed on account of significant differences in opinion.

The foreign ministers of Germany, France, Russia and Ukraine did not make any progress during a meeting in Berlin on Monday.

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Stoltenberg: "NATO doesn't want confrontation with Russia"

NATO rapid-response force now active

BERLIN NATOs interim agile expeditionary force is now active but planning continues for a permanent spearhead unit, the alliances chief said Wednesday.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg told reporters in Berlin the interim force is made up of troops from Germany, Norway, the Netherlands and some others. NATO said it had several thousand troops and could be deployed in a matter of days if needed.

An interim solution is in place and we are focused on a more permanent high-readiness force, Stoltenberg told reporters.

The NATO chief said its too early to say when the full permanent force will be in place or how it will be paid for, although it will have to be funded through a combination of NATOs budget and individual nations contributions.

The spearhead force, to be sent at short notice to aid at-risk members, was approved by NATO leaders in September amid concerns over Russias actions in Ukraine.

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NATO rapid-response force now active

NSA official: Support of backdoored Dual_EC_DRBG was regrettable

It was a mistake for the National Security Agency to support a critical cryptographic function after researchers presented evidence that it contained a fatal flaw that could be exploited by US intelligence agents, the agency's research director said.

The comments by NSA Director of Research Michael Wertheimer were included in an article headlined The Mathematics Community and the NSA published this week in a publication called Notices. The article responds to blistering criticism from some mathematicians, civil liberties advocates, and security professionals following documents provided by former NSA subcontractor Edward Snowden showing that the agency deliberately tried to subvert widely used crypto standards. One of those standards, according to The New York Times, was a random number generator known as Dual EC_DRBG, which was later revealed to be the default method for generating crucial random numbers in the BSAFE crypto toolkit developed by EMC-owned security firm RSA.

"With hindsight, NSA should have ceased supporting the dual _EC_DRBG algorithm immediately after security researchers discovered the potential for a trapdoor," Wertheimer wrote. "In truth, I can think of no better way to describe our failure to drop support for the Dual_EC_DRBG algorithm as anything other than regrettable."

He went on to defend the NSA and deny accusations that it tried to subvert crypto standards. Dual EC_DRBG was one of four random number generators included in the larger standard known as SP 800-90A,he pointed out, and the NSA-generated points were necessary for accreditation and had to be implemented only for actual use in certain Defense Department applications.

Wertheimer wrote:

The costs to the Defense Department to deploy a new algorithm were not an adequate reason to sustain our support for a questionable algorithm. Indeed, we support NISTs April 2014 decision to remove the algorithm. Furthermore, we realize that our advocacy for the DUAL_EC_DRBG casts suspicion on the broader body of work NSA has done to promote secure standards. Indeed, some colleagues have extrapolated this single action to allege that NSA has a broader agenda to "undermine Internet encryption." A fair reading of our track record speaks otherwise. Nevertheless, we understand that NSA must be much more transparent in its standards work and act according to that transparency. That effort can begin with the AMS [American Mathematical Society] now.

In the future, Wertheimer promised, NSA officials will be more transparent in the way they support fledgling technologies being considered as widely used standards. All NSA comments will be in writing and published for review. Additionally, the NSA will publish algorithms before they're considered so that the public has more time to scrutinize them.

"With these measures in place, even those not disposed to trust NSA's motives can determine for themselves the appropriateness of our submissions, and we will continue to advocate for better security in open-source software, such as Security Enhancements for Linux and Security Enhancements for Android (selinuxproject.org)," he wrote.

Update: Critics are already characterizing Wertheimer's letter as a non-apology apology that only deepens the divide. In the blog A Few Thoughts on Cryptographic Engineering, for instance Matt Green, a Johns Hopkins university professor specializing in cryptography, wrote:

The trouble is that on closer examination, the letter doesn't express regret for the inclusion of Dual EC DRBG in national standards. The transgression Dr. Wertheimer identifies is simply the fact that NSA continued to support the algorithm after major questions were raised. That's bizarre.

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NSA official: Support of backdoored Dual_EC_DRBG was regrettable

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