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Daily Archives: July 9, 2017
Bitcoin is Permanently Superior to Paper Money in Ways: German Business Magazine – CryptoCoinsNews
Posted: July 9, 2017 at 11:52 am
Thorsten Polleit; image taken from authors website
While many mainstream media personalities and analysts remain skeptical about bitcoin (and often rehash misinformation), others are beginning to give cryptocurrency an honest appraisal.
The latest comes from leading German business magazine Wirtschafts Woche, which recentlypublished an article praising bitcoin.The Revolution of Cryptocurrency, written by economist Thorsten Polleit, argues that the advent of cryptocurrency set off a monetary revolution that could eventually supplant fiat national currencies.
Public fiat money, he explains, possesses four inherent flaws:
Polleit states that cryptocurrencies avoid these and other flaws due to market competition. As long as no currency has a state-mandated economic monopoly, consumer demand should favor better coins.
However, it should be noted that not all cryptocurrencies resist the flaws Polleit finds in fiat money. Many cryptocurrencies are inflationary, although their rate of inflation is generally fixed rather than variable. Cryptocurrency distribution models can also exhibit inequality, and there is much debate about what constitutes a fair coin/token dissemination method. That said, by divorcing monetary policy from the national government, one will avoid the final two flaws of public money.
Polleit believes consumer demand for bitcoin will likely increase as fiat money loses purchasing power and national governments reduce or even eliminate cash transactions. He foresees the potential for blockchain-based currencies to makeFiat money worthless.
Despite this bullish tone, Polleit urges investors to approach cryptocurrency speculation with caution. As he states (translated into English):
Whoever obtains [cryptocurrency] should know that he does not invest, but speculates. Unlike in the case of shares or bonds, they do not have a recognized and tested valuation formula the same also applies to raw materials or art objects. You can not even estimate whether the price you pay is justified with regard to the intrinsic value of the [coins].
For this reason, he seems to favor colored coins tied to physical assets, such as gold.
Diverging from other pro-bitcoin analysts, Polleit encourages investors to avoid currency speculation. The sensible investor, he says, should instead continue to invest in great companies and take a long-term approach to the markets. The monetary revolution may cause economic upheaval, but he explains that solid companies will continue to bring positive returns no matter what currencyor cryptocurrencythey use to transact business.
Featured image from Shutterstock.
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Cradle on Steam
Posted: at 11:52 am
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Smart, subtle and sinister, Cradle is a wonderful work of science fiction that doesnt quite fit inside the space Flying Cafe have designed for it. Rock,Paper,Shotgun
The discovery of the mysterious phenomenon induced a string of events to have completely changed the society. Dozens of years later the question of the Panic Attack nature still remains open. We do not know how far the researchers thought has led them in search of the answer, but we believe it hardly ever visited this Mongolian steppe.
Year 2076, Mongolia. You wake up in a yurt amidst the boundless steppes. You neither remember your name, nor are aware of how long you had slept. Who are you? Who is this mechanical girl sitting on the table and what is the number she has on her chest? Nearby there towers the dome of a neglected entertainment park. How did it appear in these desert lands? What has happened here? Look around and try to sort things out. You are to begin on a peculiar and a touching story.
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Cradle on Steam
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China tests self-sustaining space station in Beijing – Reuters
Posted: at 11:52 am
BEIJING Sealed behind the steel doors of two bunkers in a Beijing suburb, university students are trying to find out how it feels to live in a space station on another planet, recycling everything from plant cuttings to urine.
They are part of a project aimed at creating a self-sustaining ecosystem that provides everything humans need to survive.
Four students from Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics entered the Lunar Palace-1 on Sunday with the aim of living self-sufficiently for 200 days.
They say they are happy to act as human guinea-pigs if it means getting closer to their dream of becoming astronauts.
"I'll get so much out of this," Liu Guanghui, a PhD student, who entered the bunker on Sunday, said. "It's truly a different life experience."
President Xi Jinping wants China to become a global power in space exploration, with plans to send the first probe to the dark side of the moon by 2018 and to put astronauts on the moon by 2036. The Lunar Palace 365 experiment may allow them to stay there for extended periods.
For Liu Hong, a professor at Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics and the project's principal architect, said everything needed for human survival had been carefully calculated.
"We've designed it so the oxygen (produced by plants at the station) is exactly enough to satisfy the humans, the animals, and the organisms that break down the waste materials," she said.
But satisfying physical needs is only one part of the experiment, Liu said. Charting the mental impact of confinement in a small space for such a long time is equally crucial.
"They can become a bit depressed," Liu said. "If you spend a long time in this type of environment it can create some psychological problems."
Liu Hui, a student leader who participated an initial 60-day experiment at Lunar Palace-1 that finished on Sunday, said that she sometimes "felt a bit low" after a day's work.
The project's support team has found mapping out a specific set of daily tasks for the students is one way that helps them to remain happy.
But the 200-day group will also be tested to see how they react to living a for period of time without sunlight. The project's team declined to elaborate.
"We did this experiment with animals... so we want to see how much impact it will have on people," Liu, the professor, said.
(Reporting By Natalie Thomas. Editing by Jane Merriman)
MOUNT ETNA, Italy A robot wheels across a rocky, windswept landscape that looks like the surface of some distant planet from a science fiction film. But it is not in outer space, it's on the slopes of Europe's most active volcano.
BEIJING China's launch of a new heavy-lift rocket, the Long March-5 Y2, carrying what the government said was its heaviest ever satellite, failed on Sunday, official news agency Xinhua said.
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Stanford’s Final Exams Pose Question About the Ethics of Genetic Engineering – Futurism
Posted: at 11:51 am
In BriefThe age of gene editing and creation will be upon us in thenext few decades, with the first lifeform having already beenprinted. Stanford University questions the ethics of prospectivestudents by asking a question we should all be thinking about. Stanfords Moral Pickle
When bioengineering students sit down to take their final exams for Stanford University,they are faced with a moral dilemma, as well as a series of grueling technical questions that are designed to sort the intellectual wheat from the less competent chaff:
If you and your future partner are planning to have kids, would you start saving money for college tuition, or for printing the genome of your offspring?
The question is a follow up to At what point will the cost of printing DNA to create a human equal the cost of teaching a student in Stanford? Both questions refer to the very real possibility that it may soon be in the realm of affordability to print off whatever stretch of DNA you so desire, using genetic sequencing and a machine capable of synthesizing the four building blocks of DNA A, C, G, and T into whatever order you desire.
The answer to the time question, by the way, is 19 years, given that the cost of tuition at Stanford remains at $50,000 and the price of genetic printing continues the 200-fold decrease that has occurred over the last 14 years. Precursory work has already been performed; a team lead by Craig Venter created the simplest life form ever known last year.
Stanfords moral question, though, is a little trickier. The question is part of a larger conundrum concerning humans interfering with their own biology; since the technology is developing so quickly, the issue is no longer whether we can or cant,but whether we should or shouldnt. The debate has two prongs: gene editing and life printing.
With the explosion of CRISPR technology many studies are due to start this year the ability to edit our genetic makeup will arrive soon. But how much should we manipulate our own genes? Should the technology be a reparative one, reserved for making sick humans healthy again, or should it be used to augment our current physical restrictions, making us bigger, faster, stronger, and smarter?
The question of printing life is similar in some respects; rather than altering organisms to have the desired genetic characteristics, we could print and culture them instead billions have already been invested. However, there is theadditional issue of playing God by sidestepping the methods of our reproduction that have existed since the beginning of life. Even if the ethical issue of creation was answered adequately, there are the further questions ofwho has the right to design life, what the regulations would be, and the potential restrictions on the technology based on cost; if its too pricey, gene editing could be reserved only for the rich.
It is vital to discuss the ethics of gene editing in order to ensure that the technology is not abused in the future. Stanfords question is praiseworthy because it makes todays students, who will most likely be spearheading the technologys developments, think about the consequences of their work.
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GENEALOGY: A warning to Ancestry customers who consent to use DNA services – Terre Haute Tribune Star
Posted: at 11:50 am
A couple of years ago, Ancestry went into a partnership with a biotech company called Calico, owned by Google. The premise of this partnership was that Ancestry would make its customers DNA results available to this other company to use for their research purposes. Its a for-profit venture on both sides. Ancestry sells its customers DNA data to Calico and Calico makes money off the research it does. Customers pay Ancestry to conduct the DNA test, but Ancestry and its partners stand to make billions.
This May, an attorney named Joel Winston, specialist in consumer protection, former deputy attorney general for New Jersey, and formerly in the Department of Justice, posted a warning to Ancestry customers when they consent to use the DNA services. The following is a summary of his article which can be found in its entirety on https://thinkprogress.org/ancestry-com-takes-dna-ownership-rights-from-customers-and-their-relatives-dbafeed02b9en.
To use the AncestryDNA service, customers must consent to the Ancestry Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. These are binding legal contracts between the customer and Ancestry. The most egregious of these terms gives Ancestry a free license to exploit your DNA for the rest of time...There are three significant provisions...to consider on behalf of yourself and your genetic relatives: (1) the perpetual, royalty-free, world-wide license to use your DNA; (2) the warning that DNA information may be used against you or a genetic relative; (3) your waiver of legal rights, writes attorney Winston.
(1) Basically, Ancestry gets to use or distribute your DNA for any research or commercial purpose it decides and doesnt have to pay you, or your heirs... Ancestry takes this royalty-free license in perpetuity (for all time) and can distribute the results of your DNA tests anywhere in the world and with any technology that exists, or will ever be invented. With this single contractual provision, customers are granting Ancestry the broadest possible rights to own and exploit their genetic information. Although the customer can withdraw consent, full withdrawal isnt easy, may not be possible and requires more steps than just a click of a mouse.
(2) Ancestry warns customers that it is possible that information about you or a genetic relative could be revealed [and] that information could be used by insurers to deny you insurance coverage, by law enforcement agencies to identify you or your relatives, and...by employers to deny employment. (Ancestry has already turned DNA over to law enforcement in several cases).
(3) Even the genetic relatives of a customer, who have never taken the Ancestry DNA test or consented to it, are in effect signing over their rights and privacy to Ancestry when their relative takes the test: You or a genetic relative agree to hold the company harmless for any damages that AncestryDNA may cause unintentionally or purposefully. Customers give up the right to sue or participate in a class action.
Attorney Winston cautions the consumer to be aware of these issues and to fully read the privacy policy and terms of service beforehand. Since his article appeared, Ancestry has made some slight changes to the wording of their consents, but these issues still exist.
Another genetic company, 23andMe, has long been in the biomedical field and its customers also consent to other uses of their DNA. Recently, it patented a designer-baby technology, in which desired characteristics could be taken from several egg and sperm donors based on DNA profiles, and used to create a customized baby. See http://www.nature.com/gim/journal/v15/n12/full/gim2013164a.html. 23andMe customers may or may not think this idea is moral or ethical. But I doubt this is what they thought they were signing up for when they ordered the test. We dont know what the future of DNA research holds for humanity, but now Google has access to it.
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GENEALOGY: A warning to Ancestry customers who consent to use DNA services - Terre Haute Tribune Star
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Wild Wheat Genome Sequencing May Boost Future Food Production, Safety – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com
Posted: at 11:49 am
Photo Credit: Raz Avni
A global team of researchers has published the first-ever Wild Emmer wheat genome sequence inSciencemagazine (Wild emmer genome architecture and diversity elucidate wheat evolution and domestication).
Wild Emmer wheat is the original form of nearly all the domesticated wheat in the world, including durum (pasta) and bread wheat. Wild emmer is too low-yielding to be of use to farmers today, but it contains many attractive characteristics that are being used by plant breeders to improve wheat.
The study was led by Dr. Assaf Distelfeld of Tel Aviv Universitys School of Plant Sciences and Food Security and Institute for Cereal Crops Improvement, in collaboration with several dozen scientists from institutions around the world and an Israel-based company, NRGene, which developed the bioinformatics technology that accelerated the research.
This research is a synergistic partnership among public and private entities, said Dr. Daniel Chamovitz, Dean of TAUs George S. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences, who was also involved in the research. Ultimately, this research will have a significant impact on global food security.
Our ability to generate the Wild Emmer wheat genome sequence so rapidly is a huge step forward in genomic research, said Dr. Curtis Pozniak from the University of Saskatchewan, a project team member and Chair of the Canadian Ministry of Agriculture Strategic Research Program. Wheat accounts for almost 20% of the calories humans consume worldwide, so a strong focus on improving the yield and quality of wheat is essential for our future food supply.
From a biological and historical viewpoint, we have created a time tunnel we can use to examine wheat from before the origins of agriculture, said Dr. Distelfeld. Our comparison to modern wheat has enabled us to identify the precise genes that allowed domestication the transition from wheat grown in the wild to modern day varieties. While the seeds of wild wheat readily fall off the plant and scatter, a change in two genes meant that in domesticated wheat, the seeds remained attached to the stalk; it is this trait that enabled humans to harvest wheat.
This new resource allowed us to identify a number of other genes controlling main traits that were selected by early humans during wheat domestication and that served as foundation for developing modern wheat cultivars, said Dr. Eduard Akhunov of Kansas State University. These genes provide invaluable resource for empowering future breeding efforts. Wild Emmer is known as a source of novel variation that can help to improve the nutritional quality of grain as well as tolerance to diseases and water-limiting conditions.
New genomic tools are already being implemented to identify novel genes for wheat production improvement under changing environment, explains Dr. Zvi Peleg of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel. While many modern wheat cultivars are susceptible to water stress, Wild Emmer has undergone a long evolutionary history under the drought-prone Mediterranean climate. Thus, utilization of the wild genes in wheat breeding program promote producing more yield for less water.
The wheat genome is much more complex than most of the other crops and has a genome three times the size of a human genome. said Dr. Gil Ronen, NRGenes CEO. Still, the computational technology we developed has allowed us to quickly assemble the very large and complex genome found in Wild Emmers 14 chromosomes, to a standard never achieved before in genomic studies.
For the first time, the sequences of the 14 chromosomes of wild emmer wheat are collapsed into a refined order, thanks to additional technology that utilizes DNA and protein links. It was originally tested in humans and recently demonstrated in barley, both of which have smaller genomes than Wild Emmer wheat. says Dr. Nils Stein, the Head of Genomics of Genetic Resources at Leibniz Institute of Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research in Germany. These innovative technologies have changed the game in assembling the large cereal genomes,
This sequencing approach used for Wild Emmer wheat is unprecedented and has paved the way to sequence durum wheat (the domesticated form of Wild Emmer). Now we can better understand how humanity transformed this wild plant into a modern, high-yielding durum wheat, said Dr. Luigi Cattivelli, coauthor of the work and coordinator of the International Durum Wheat Genome Sequencing Consortium.
We now have the tools to study crops directly and to make and apply our discoveries more efficiently than ever before, concluded Dr. Distelfeld.
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Immune-matching process improved, reports Human Longevity-led study – The San Diego Union-Tribune
Posted: at 11:48 am
A team led by researchers at La Jollas Human Longevity reports developing a faster and more accurate method for determining immune type. The method will speed up immune matching for organ transplant and other purposes such as treating infectious and autoimmune diseases, the scientists say.
The method characterizes a region of the genome called human leukocyte antigen, or HLA, that regulates the immune system. Located on Chromosome 6, this region contains a high number of short, repetitive DNA sequences.
Because these repeats are so similar, placing them in the correct order is difficult. So even when people have their genome sequenced, the precise HLA type may not be clear. People can have HLA typing done separately, but that adds time and expense, said J. Craig Venter, one of the studys authors.
The study was published July 3 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Go to j.mp/humanhla for the study. Venter was senior author. The first author was Chao Xie.
The Human Longevity-led team invented an algorithm called xHLA to read these sequences correctly. Results are available within about 3 minutes from a desktop computer, instead of several minutes or even hours, the study stated. Moreover, the method helps identity potential matches that purely DNA-based methods would miss.
Making HLA typing a routine part of sequencing will help doctors advance the practice of precision medicine, the study stated.
For example, autoimmune disorder patients often have chronic problems with no exact diagnosis for many years after repeated doctor visits, the study stated. Knowing patients HLA types could lead to early diagnosis and reduce the burden on both patients and the healthcare system.
Venter said Human Longevity now offers HLA typing as part of its genome sequencing service. And in the future, this technology will be omnipresent and in the hands of patients.
If a family member needs a kidney transplant, you can just look it up on your iPhone and compare the sequences, and everybody will know immediately if theres a match in the family, or other places, Venter said.
Popular sequencing technologies cut up DNA into short pieces for sequencing. These pieces are reassembled by computer like an electronic jigsaw puzzle. But the many repetitive components in HLA can fool the computer programs, like similarly shaped or colored jigsaw puzzle pieces can do to a human.
The xHLA algorithm works with sequencing technology from Illumina to improve accuracy. An important component of the algorithm is that it examines the sequence of amino acids the DNA codes for, the study said. This helps accuracy by accepting DNA variations that happen to code for the same amino acid.
Since immune compatibility is determined at the protein level, using these synonymous variations produces a more accurate result than typing by DNA alone.
The problem with DNA-level alignment is that it cannot distinguish synonymous from nonsynonymous mismatches, the study stated. For example, it will rank five synonymous mismatches as more dissimilar than a single nonsynonymous one.
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3 Stocks With Huge Business Advantages – Madison.com
Posted: at 11:48 am
Though investing might seem challenging at times, one of the smartest choices you can make is to focus on companies with clear-cut business advantages. Companies that offer visible advantages over their peers tend to have sustainable and growing businesses, which usually means a healthy long-term return for investors.
What companies possess these advantages? That's a question we recently asked three of our Foolish investors. The stocks they came up with that you should strongly consider looking into include rare-disease drugmaker Alexion Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: ALXN), airplane manufacturing juggernaut Boeing (NYSE: BA), and search engine kingpin Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG)(NASDAQ: GOOGL).
Image source: Getty Images.
Sean Williams (Alexion Pharmaceuticals): We don't need to turn to monopolies and oligopolies to necessarily find companies that have clear-cut business advantages. Instead, rare-disease drugmaker Alexion Pharmaceuticals serves as a fine example.
Alexion Pharmaceuticals currently has three Food and Drug Administration-approved drugs in its portfolio: Soliris, Strensiq, and Kanuma. The company's focus is entirely on rare-disease drugs with ultra-orphan indications. In layman's terms, that means Alexion tries to develop drugs that treat very rare diseases. If its drugs get approved by the FDA to treat those diseases, it receives special patent protections from possible brand-name and generic competition. It's also able to pass along some very high price points to insurers and consumers to make up for its development costs. Soliris, which treats paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria and atypical uremic hemolytic syndrome, can run around $500,000 annually, making it one of themost expensive drugs in the world.
How does Alexion get away with pricing Soliris at around $500,000 a year? The answer is simple: It has little to no competition as of yet. Developing new drugs takes years and potentially hundreds of millions of dollars, and ultra-orphan indications aren't exactly on most drugmakers' radars. This means Alexion has carved out its own little niche that's given it a clear-cut business advantage.
Image source: Getty Images.
Soliris has been critical in supplying the company with healthy cash flow, enabling it to go shopping. In 2015, Alexion announced an $8.4 billion acquisition of Synageva BioPharma, giving it access to Kanuma, a lysosoamal acid-lipase deficiency drug that's designed to treat about 3,000 people in "major reimbursable markets."Thus far, Kanuma hasn't lived up to the hype, but with Soliris on track for $3.4 billion to $3.5 billion in annual sales this year, Alexion should have plenty of future cash flow to enable more rare-disease acquisitions.
In short, Alexion's focus on rare-disease therapies has given it a clear path to financial success, and that's something investors should take note of.
Rich Smith(Boeing): America's biggest plane maker, and the world's, has a huge business advantage. How big is Boeing's business advantage? 5,646.
That's how many plane orders Boeing has in backlog right now. While it may not be as big as the "over 6,800 aircraft" backlogat Airbus, it's still a lot of airplanes. At the rate Boeing has been producing and delivering planes to customers who have placed orders -- 745 planes per year-- it will take Boeing 7.5 years to work through that backlog. That means Boeing could give its sales force the better part of a decade "off," and still have plenty of business to do, plenty of work for its workers, and plenty of money pouring into its revenue stream -- should it be so inclined.
Image source: Getty Images.
Of course, Boeing is not so inclined. Boeing's big backlog is a huge business advantage for the company, obviating any obligation to offer customers big discounts to secure new business. But Boeing isn't resting on its laurels. Last month at the Paris Air Show, Boeing announced orders and commitments from its customers to buy 571 airplanes, worth $74.8 billion at list prices. In terms of backlog, it added more than nine months' worth of orders and commitments -- and revenues -- to its backlog in just one day.
What's more, Boeing earns a lot more profit from these revenues than does its archrival Airbus -- operating profit margins of 4.8% on its Commercial Airplanes. According to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence, that's more than a 50% premium over the 3.1% operating profit margin Airbus earns on its commercial airplanes. It's yet another huge business advantage for Boeing: A huge backlog, and a more profitable backlog as well.
Steve Symington (Alphabet): Alphabet may not be a household name just yet. But as the recently formed parent holding company for Google, as well as its various operating subsidiaries, its business advantages are apparent to even the most inexperienced investor.
For one, Google operates on a scale few other companies could dream of enjoying. Early last year, for example, Gmail surpassed one billion users, marking Google's seventh product to hit the 10-figure mark as it joined the ranks of Google Search, Android, Chrome, Maps, the Google Play Store, and YouTube.Incidentally, at VidCon 2017 last month, YouTube executives revealed that the video platform alone recently exceeded 1.5 billion logged-inmonthly active users (which doesn't include those who watch YouTube videos without logging on), each of whom spends an average of more than one hour per day watching YouTube on mobile devices.
Perhaps it should come as no surprise, then, that Alphabet is massively profitable and growing quickly. Revenue last quarter climbed 22.2% year over year (24% at constant currency) to $24.75 billion, helped by a 44% increase in aggregate paid clicks and 18.8% growth in Google's advertising revenue. On the bottom line, Alphabet's net income rose 29% to $5.43 billion.
Relatedly, Alphabet takes advantage of Google to fund its decidedly unprofitable "Other Bets" segment, which is primarily comprised of high-potential business that are in their pre-revenue stages. That's not to say all of Alphabet's other bets aren't proving their worth; Other Bets revenue actually climbed 47.9% year over year last quarter to $244 million, thanks to sales from Nest connected home products, Verily life sciences products, and Fiber high-speed internet. Meanwhile, Alphabet continues to plow resources into separate bets like Calico (focusing on human longevity), Google Capital (its capital investments wing), its infamous Google X "moonshot" initiatives, and its Waymo self-driving car project.
Finally, I should note that the world is doing its best to stem Alphabet's advantages. Late last month, the European Commission announced that it will impose a record $2.74 billion fine on Google over allegedly favoring its own comparison-shopping service over those of competitors as displayed in -- perhaps ironically -- Google's Search results. Google has naturally voiced its disagreement with the decision and promised to appeal. But that it must fight these battles in the first place serves as an indication of the staggering business advantage it enjoys.
10 stocks we like better than Boeing
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David and Tom just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy right now...and Boeing wasn't one of them! That's right -- they think these 10 stocks are even better buys.
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Suzanne Frey, an executive at Alphabet, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Rich Smith owns shares of Alphabet (C shares). Sean Williams has no position in any stocks mentioned. Steve Symington has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Alphabet (A and C shares). The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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Big data analytics in healthcare: Fuelled by wearables and apps, medical research takes giant leap forward – Firstpost
Posted: at 11:47 am
Driven by specialised analytics systems and software, big data analytics has decreased the time required to double medical knowledge by half, thus compressing healthcare innovation cycle period, shows the much discussed Mary Meeker study titled Internet Trends 2017.
The presentation of the study isseen as an evidence of the proverbial big data-enabled revolution, that was predicted by experts like McKinsey and Company. "A big data revolution is under way in health care. Over the last decade pharmaceutical companies have been aggregating years of research and development data into medical data bases, while payors and providers have digitised their patient records, the McKinsey report had said four years ago.
Representational image. Reuters
The Mary Meeker study shows that in the 1980s it took seven years to double medical knowledge which has been decreased to only 3.5 years after 2010, on account of massive use of big data analytics in healthcare. Though most of the samples used in the study were US based, the global trends revealed in it are well visible in India too.
"Medicine and underlying biology is now becoming a data-driven science where large amounts of structured and unstructured data relating to biological systems and human health is being generated," says Dr Rohit Gupta of MedGenome, a genomics driven research and diagnostics company based in Bengaluru.
Dr Gupta told Firstpost that big data analytics has made it possible for MedGenome, which focuses on improving global health by decoding genetic information contained in an individual genome, to dive deeper into genetics research.
While any individual's genome information is useful for detecting the known mutations for diseases, underlying new patterns of complicated diseases and their progression requires genomics data from many individuals across populations sometimes several thousands to even few millions amounting to exabytes of information, he said.
All of which would have been a cumbersome process without the latest data analytics tools that big data analytics has brought forth.
The company that started work on building India-specific baseline data to develop more accurate gene-based diagnostic testing kits in the year 2015 now conducts 400 genetic tests across all key disease areas.
What is Big Data
According to Mitali Mukerji, senior principal scientist, Council of Scientific and Industrial Research when a large number of people and institutions digitally record health data either in health apps or in digitised clinics, these information become big data about health. The data acquired from these sources can be analysed to search for patterns or trends enabling a deeper insight into the health conditions for early actionable interventions.
Big data is growing bigger But big data analytics require big data. And proliferation of Information technology in the health sector has enhanced flow of big data exponentially from various sources like dedicated wearable health gadgets like fitness trackers and hospital data base. Big data collection in the health sector has also been made possible because of the proliferation of smartphones and health apps.
The Meeker study shows that the download of health apps have increased worldwide in 2016 to nearly 1,200 million from nearly 1,150 million in the last year and 36 percent of these apps belong to the fitness and 24 percent to the diseases and treatment ones.
Health apps help the users monitor their health. From watching calorie intake to fitness training the apps have every assistance required to maintain one's health. 7 minute workout, a health app with three million users helps one get that flat tummy, lose weight and strengthen the core with 12 different exercises. Fooducate, another app, helps keep track of what one eats. This app not only counts the calories one is consuming, but also shows the user a detailed breakdown of the nutrition present in a packaged food.
For Indian users, there's Healthifyme, which comes with a comprehensive database of more than 20,000 Indian foods. It also offers an on-demand fitness trainer, yoga instructor and dietician. With this app, one can set goals to lose weight and track their food and activity. There are also companies like GOQii, which provide Indian customers with subscription-based health and fitness services on their smartphones using fitness trackers that come free.
Dr Gupta of MedGenome explains that data accumulated in wearable devices can either be sent directly to the healthcare provider for any possible intervention or even predict possible hospitalisation in the next few days.
The Meeker study shows that global shipment of wearable gadgets grew from 26 million in 2014 to 102 million in 2016.
Another area that's shown growth is electronic health records. In the US, electronic health records in office-based physicians in United States have soared from 21 percent in 2004 to 87 percent in 2015. In fact, every hospital with 500 beds (in the US) generate 50 petabytes of health data.
Back home, the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, Government of India, runs Aadhar-based Online Registration System, a platform to help patients book appointments in major government hospitals. The portal has the potential to emerge into a source if big data offering insights on diseases, age groups, shortcomings in hospitals and areas to improve. The website claims to have already been used to make 8,77,054 appointments till date in 118 hospitals.
On account of permeation of digital technology in health care, data growth has recorded 48% growth year on year, the Meeker study says. The accumulated mass of data, according to it, has provided deeper insights in health conditions. The study shows drastic increase of citations from 5 million in 1977 to 27 million in 2017. Easy access to big data has ensured that scientists can now direct their investigations following patterns analysed from such information and less time is required to arrive at conclusion.
If a researcher has huge sets of data at his disposal, he/she can also find out patterns and simulate it through machine learning tools, which decreases the time required to arrive at a conclusion. Machine learning methods become more robust when they are fed with results analysed from big data, says Mukerji.
She further adds, These data simulation models, rely on primary information generated from a study to build predictive models that can help assess how human body would respond to a given perturbation, says Mukerji.
The Meeker also study shows that Archimedes data simulation models can conduct clinical trials from data related to 50,000 patients collected over a period of 30 years, in just a span of two months. In absence of this model it took seven years to conduct clinical trials on data related to 2,838 patients collected over a period of seven years.
As per this report in 2016 results of 25,400 number of clinical trial was publically available against 1,900 in 2009.
The study also shows that data simulation models used by laboratories have drastically decreased time required for clinical trials. Due to emergence of big data, rise in number of publically available clinical trials have also increased, it adds.
Big data in scientific research
The developments grown around big-data in healthcare has broken the silos in scientific research. For example, the field of genomics has taken a giant stride in evolving personalised and genetic medicine with the help of big data.
A good example of how big data analytics can help modern medicine is the Human Genome Project and the innumerous researches on genetics, which paved way for personalised medicine, would have been difficult without the democratisation of data, which is another boon of big data analytics. The study shows that in the year 2008 there were only 5 personalised medicines available and it has increased to 132 in the year 2016.
In India, a Bangalore-based integrated biotech company recently launched 'Avestagenome', a project to build a complete genetic, genealogical and medical database of the Parsi community. Avestha Gengraine Technologies (Avesthagen), which launched the project believes that the results from the Parsi genome project could result in disease prediction and accelerate the development of new therapies and diagnostics both within the community as well as outside.
MedGenome has also been working on the same direction. "We collaborate with leading hospitals and research institutions to collect samples with research consent, generate sequencing data in our labs and analyse it along with clinical data to discover new mutations and disease causing perturbations in genes or functional pathways. The resultant disease models and their predictions will become more accurate as and when more data becomes available.
Mukerji says that democratisation of data fuelled by proliferation of technology and big data has also democratised scientific research across geographical boundaries. Since data has been made easily accessible, any laboratory can now proceed with research, says Mukerji.
We only need to ensure that our efforts and resources are put in the right direction, she adds.
Challenges with big data
But Dr Gupta warns that big-data in itself does not guarantee reliability for collecting quality data is a difficult task.
Moreover, he said, In medicine and clinical genomics, domain knowledge often helps and is almost essential to not only understand but also finding ways to effectively use the knowledge derived from the data and bring meaningful insights from it.
Besides, big data gathering is heavily dependent on adaptation of digital health solutions, which further restricts the data to certain age groups. As per the Meeker report, 40 percent of millennial respondents covered in the study owned a wearable. On the other hand 26 percent and 10 percent of the Generation X and baby boomers, respectively, owned wearables.
Similarly, 48 percent millennials, 38 percent Generation X and 23 percent baby boomers go online to find a physician. The report also shows that 10 percent of the people using telemedicine and wearable proved themselves super adopters of the new healthcare technology in 2016 as compared to 2 percent in 2015. Collection of big data.
Every technology brings its own challenges, with big data analytics secure storage and collection of data without violating the privacy of research subjects, is an added challenge. Something, even the Meeker study does not answer.
Digital world is really scary, says Mukerji.
Though we try to secure our data with passwords in our devices, but someone somewhere has always access to it, she says.
The health apps which are downloaded in mobile phones often become the source of big-data not only for the company that has produced it but also to the other agencies which are hunting for data in the internet. "We often click various options while browsing internet and thus knowingly or unknowingly give a third party access to some data stored in the device or in the health app, she adds.
Dimiter V Dimitrov a health expert makes similar assertions in his report, 'Medical Internet of Things and Big Data in Healthcare'. He reports that even wearables often have a server which they interact to in a different language providing it with required information.
Although many devices now have sensors to collect data, they often talk with the server in their own language, he said in his report.
Even though the industry is still at a nascent stage, and privacy remains a concern, Mukerji says that agencies possessing health data can certainly share them with laboratories without disclosing patient identity.
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Big data analytics in healthcare: Fuelled by wearables and apps, medical research takes giant leap forward - Firstpost
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FOXP3 Gene Mutations May Explain Immune System Excitability in MS and Other Diseases – Multiple Sclerosis News Today
Posted: at 11:47 am
A gene mutation may explain theuncontrolled, inflammatory immune response seenin autoimmune and chronic inflammatory diseaseslikemultiple sclerosis, scientistsat the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre (RI-MUHC) report. Its a discovery that, they said, appears tobe a big step in the right direction.
According to the study, published in the journalScience Immunology, alterations in theFOXP3 geneaffect specificimmune cells called regulatory T-cells, or Tregs. Those mutations hamper Tregs in performing a crucial regulatory role, leading to a loss of control over the immune systems response to a perceived threat.
We discovered that this mutation in the FOXP3 gene affects the Treg cells ability to dampen the immune response, which results in the immune system overreacting and causing inflammation, Ciriaco Piccirillo, the studys lead author andan immunologist in the Infectious Diseases and Immunity, Global Health Program, at the RI-MUHC, said in a news release.
Tregs are known to be the immune system playersresponsible for keeping other immune cells under control, preventing them from attacking the hosts own tissues, while maintaining a properimmune response against harmful agents. The normal activity of Treg cells is essential for preventing excessive immune reactions.
TheFOXP3 gene is also well-known, and documented, to be essentialfor proper Treg cell function. However, the mechanisms by whichFOXP3 gene is involved in Treg cell activities are still poorly understood.
In the study, Suppression by human FOXP3+ regulatory T cells requires FOXP3-TIP60 interactions, the research team in collaboration with researchers at University of Pennsylvania, University of Washington School of Medicine, and Teikyo University School of Medicine in Japan evaluated the impact of aFOXP3 gene mutation in autoimmunity response.
Taking advantage of cutting-edge technology, the team studiedsamples from two patients carrying a common FOXP3 gene mutation, which caused a genetic immune disorder called IPEX. Interestingly, the researchers found that this genetic variant did not reduce the number of Treg cells or the levels of FOXP3 protein. Instead, the mutation altered the way Tregs could suppress other immune cells to prevent overactivation.
What was unique about this case of IPEX was that the patients Treg cells were fully functional apart from one crucial element: its ability to shut down the inflammatory response, saidPiccirillo.
Understanding this specific mutation has allowed us to shed light on how many milder forms of chronic inflammatory diseases or autoimmune diseases could be linked to alterations in FOXP3 functions, addedKhalid Bin Dhuban, the studys first author and a postdoctoral fellow in Piccirillos laboratory.
The team developed a compound capable of restoring Treg cells ability to control the immune system in the presence of this specific FOXP3 gene mutation. Tested in animal models of colitis and arthritis, twochronic inflammatory diseases, the compound reduced inflammation and restored normal Treg function.
Researchers now plan to developsimilar drugs that may be of use inother diseaseswhere Treg cells are known to be defective, including multiple sclerosis,type 1 diabetes, and lupus.
Currently, we have to shut down the whole immune system with aggressive suppressive therapies in various autoimmune and inflammatory diseases, said Piccirillo. Our goal is to increase the activity of these Treg cells in certain settings, such as autoimmune diseases, but we want to turn it down in other settings, such as cancer.
This discovery gives us key insights on how Treg cells are born and how they can be regulated, Piccirillo added. With this discovery, we are taking a big step in the right direction.
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FOXP3 Gene Mutations May Explain Immune System Excitability in MS and Other Diseases - Multiple Sclerosis News Today
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