The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Monthly Archives: May 2021
Biden’s Demolition Crew in the White House | News Talk WBAP-AM – WBAP News/Talk
Posted: May 11, 2021 at 11:06 pm
The following column is adapted from The Michael Savage Show podcast, available for download on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and wherever podcasts are heard.
Today, were talking about Bidens bombs. Now, what do I mean by Bidens bombs? Is he bombing anyone? Well, hes bombing America with his left-wing fanaticism.
What Donald Trump built in four years, Biden will destroy in four months. Ive never seen anything like this.
One mistake after the other. Immigration policies that were somewhat controlled, caravans that were coming from Central America, now flooding America and being sent all over the country with first-class travel by Catholic charities and other gangster groups.
Biden is now welcoming asylum seekers like theyre the promised citizens that America never had before. All of them Einsteins, waiting to be discovered.
Where are they coming from? And why are they being brought into America and sent into towns that dont want them? Why has he melted down our border?
For the votes, no other reason.
Bidens bomb number two: He canceled the Keystone pipeline, killing thousands of high paying union jobs. Thats even though the Keystone XL pipeline was known by the Obama administration to have almost no environmental impact.
Biden has stopped new drilling leases on federal lands, which will kill income for New Mexico, which voted for Biden. This attack on energy has eventually caused a rise in gasoline prices, which is going to get even worse, by the way, hurting lower income Americans the most.
More of Bidens bombs. Siding with teacher unions over the needs of families who were trying to earn a living as teachers. He refused to order teachers back to work, indifferent to the real science. What is science anymore?
After years of the liar, Fauci. Science said schools can open safely. Unions said No, we want our teachers to collect money for not working. Why is he doing that?
What about the Middle East bomb? Whereas Trump brought the Arabs and the Jews together, Biden has put the Abraham Accords on ice, freezing arms sales to the UAE which were included in that deal.
Biden is not speaking with Israels Benjamin Netanyahu. Why are they trying to stir up hatred and war in the Middle East? Because war is the middle name of the Democrat party.
Mark my words, ladies and gentlemen of the Savage Nation. I said this to you when Biden won, that within six months there would be a war somewhere in the world to unify the American people.
Bidens demolition crew is also stirring up a war with Russia. Both for the added billions in military contracts and to galvanize the people behind him.
Remember, war always brings people together.
This is the Democrat playbook.
Lets talk about the economy.
They jammed through an absurd, almost $2 trillion aid package with no votes from the Republican party, destroying Bidens campaign promise to work across the aisle, to be a unifier.
Biden pushed an almost $2 trillion new aid package but businesses cant find employees with everyone staying at home rather than going to work because the governments taking care of them.
And there still remains a trillion dollars that are unspent from prior packages!
Now lets talk about God. Biden omitted the word Godfrom his National Prayer Day declaration. The president boasted about Americas remarkable religious vitality and diversity.He had to throw the word diversity in there.
He quoted the late Congressman and civil rights leader, John Lewis, but he made no mention or reference to God or any other deity.
Donald Trumps National Day of Prayer proclamation last year mentioned God eight times. Even Obama mentioned God twice in his last National Day of Prayer declaration in 2016. Bush mentioned God four times in his 2008 proclamation, but Biden did not mention God once.
Why? Because he is godless.
His administration is atheistic, communistic. We all know that theres no one else to pray to except God, yet President Biden omitted the word God.
Think about that very carefully. Even if youre an atheist, what is he saying? That HE is God.
And now lets talk about what hes doing in promoting the left-wing racial radicals. According to a great article by Michael Goodwin of the New York post, this man is shameful beyond belief.
For just one example, the hate crimes against Asian-Americans is an epidemic but has Biden once mentioned the demographic committing these heinous crimes against Asians? Its African-American street thugs largely, not white nationalists.
Its not white people who are beating up Asians by and large. Biden should say Stop it. Were going to throw the book at you. If you do it one more time, youre going to get a go away for life.
Todays podcast goes into detail on Bidens bombs and his wrecking ballon America. Pay close attention because thats going to get a lot worse before it gets better.
A National Radio Hall of Fame recipient, Savage has hosted his radio show for more than 25 years and launched The Savage Nation Podcast in January of 2019 with one of the most successful podcast debuts. A prolific New York Times best-selling author, Dr. Savages latest book is Our Fight for America: The War Continues. To read more of his reports Click Here Now.
SAVAGE ENTERPRISES, LLC, 2021 All Rights Reserved.
Follow this link:
Biden's Demolition Crew in the White House | News Talk WBAP-AM - WBAP News/Talk
Posted in Atheist
Comments Off on Biden’s Demolition Crew in the White House | News Talk WBAP-AM – WBAP News/Talk
ON MENTAL ILLNESS: There is No Conflict Between Religion and Science. Category: Columns from The Berkeley Daily Planet – Berkeley Daily Planet
Posted: at 11:06 pm
When members of your church or other religious affiliation dispute the existence of mental illness and advise you not to take psychiatric medication prescribed by a doctor, they're advising you to make a huge mistake. The person advising that will not suffer the consequences themselves, you will. You can be a good Christian, Hindu, Muslim, or any of the above and can still listen to the reality-based warnings and advice from a psychiatrist. A psychiatrist is a medical doctor who specializes in certain brain disorders treatable with psychiatric drugs.
On the other hand, a psychiatrist should never be advising you not to have a religious practice, albeit in my experience I have never seen that happen. Religion and science do not conflict. They are two different things that address completely different areas of human lives.
Some of the greatest scientists and scholars have been highly religious. Gregor Johann Mendel was a meteorologist, mathematician, biologist, Augustinian friar, and abbot. After his death he gained recognition for discoveries that led to the modern science of genetics. He studied how characteristics in plants were transmitted. In high school, I got the impression that my biology teacher was big into church. I was told by a fellow student that he volunteered at the church doing cleanup.
You do not have to be atheist to understand and believe science. Our President is highly religious and at the same time touts "listen to the scientists," in his powerful speeches about beating coronavirus.
I am not religious, but it doesn't mean I lack belief in a higher power. Something takes care of me and got me through dozens of situations that by all rights I should not have survived. The higher power must have work in store for me or would not be taking care of me in this way. When people are in rough times, in which we don't know how we are to get through a situation, even the non-religious like me will be tempted to ask for help from something greater.
Those who pervert science into something it is not might reject the spiritual, and this leads to cruelty. I am not saying you need to believe in god to be a good person--you do not. My point is that atheistic people who disbelieve in human personhood and believe people are machines that arose by chance, might also reject the validity of human suffering. This could lead to cruel experimentation on people.
I've heard a psychiatrist say, "consciousness could be an illusion." How crackpot of an idea is that? To assert consciousness is an illusion is in total contradiction to the most basic truth known by a conscious entity: "I think therefore I exist." If consciousness were an illusion, we would be unaware that we are here. Who is reading these words? How is it that you are aware of them? Consciousness is not an illusion; it is a subjective absolute truth.
Atheism is not the same thing as agnosticism. No one can prove or disprove a theory that explains how the universe came to be. We can prove and disprove many things about the universe and about the people in it. And it has been shown that science is applicable to mental illness. If you are a good Christian, Muslim, Jew, Buddhist, Sikh, other, it doesn't make you more or less likely to become mentally ill, and none of these religions will cure it.
I once believed meditative attainment could cure my mental illness; it can't. I've gained meditative attainment in my past, and then when I believed it had cured my condition, I relapsed from not taking medication. Afterward I was aware that the attainment I'd created was erased. And it can take years to regain this--if it is even possible. The damage to function that occurs in a relapse of psychosis will make any type of mental development harder to regain. I am not speaking of Buddhism specifically but of mindfulness, which can be practiced generically in the absence of any religious beliefs.
Many doctors and many psychiatrists seem to reject the notion that human suffering exists. This is a sign of being disconnected. If science is to help the human species, it must be used to remediate aspects of the human condition. It must not be used solely for profits of innovators. Human beings employ massive amounts of time and energy devising methods of getting more. This is also apparently not in conflict with many religious practices.
Doctors in the U.S. and in NAZI Germany have experimented on human beings. This was perceived as conscionable because people believed they were forwarding science. This is an atrocity like any other. A religious person could do this to people as could a non-religious person. Religion is a separate issue from people's acts of kindness and unkindness. That's an opinion. Many religions teach compassion. Yet the lesson does not always take. Some religions teach members that anyone outside of their religion goes to hell. Some religious people are lacking enough in basic perception that they would not be suitable to practice science. Yet many atheistic people are unsuitable as well, because ruling out the possibility that something conscious could have created the universe shows lack of thought. No one knows how the universe came about. Science can describe the universe but that is all it can do. Religion is not sufficient to explain things either, since our religions create a concept of god from human imagination, not from known fact.
More here:
Posted in Atheist
Comments Off on ON MENTAL ILLNESS: There is No Conflict Between Religion and Science. Category: Columns from The Berkeley Daily Planet – Berkeley Daily Planet
Bob Marley: Reggae king’s only Scottish gig remembered on 40th anniversary of his death – The Scotsman
Posted: at 11:06 pm
Todaymarks the 40th anniversary of the death of the Reggae king, who succumbed to cancer in Miami on May 11, 1981, aged just 36.
He played a gig at the Glasgow Apollo less than a year earlier, in July 1980, as part of the Tuff Gong Uprising tour of Europe.
Sign up to our History and Heritage newsletter
Sign up to our History and Heritage newsletter
Those at the show recalled a night like no other as the Wailers took to the stage along with the joyous accompaniment of the I-Threes backing singers.
One man in the 3,000-strong audience recently told a fans forum: The atmosphere was electric, a vibe Ive never experienced before or since. Im an atheist, but it was like being in the presence of a god.
Journalist Frank Morgan, a reporter at the Evening Express in Aberdeen at the time, was among the crowd.
He told a newspaper last year: I'll never forget the palpable air of excitement before we got into the Apollo. There was a buzz even on Renfield Street as I arrived from Aberdeen with my then-girlfriend and an old mate from school.
The band came on and began a chug-along reggae beat. The I-Three backing singers came on and began to chant "Mar-ley woaaaahhh" over and over and soon the entire audience was singing along."
With the crowd wound up to fever pitch, Marley then appeared, skanking onto the stage from the left, the reporter recalled.
"The noise was deafening as the Apollo went crazy, Mr Morgan recalled.
The reporter said Marley cut a small figure on the stage with his body dwarfed by his huge mass of dreadlocks.
He added: But I doubt I've ever seen such a hard-working performance from an established star. The energy was so strong you felt you could have reached out and touched it.
The performance peaked with Marley playing Redemption Song on acoustic, with Glasgow written on his guitar.
The crowd were mesmerised and it is said Marley cried during the song.
Bob Marleys night in Glasgow was a one-off, but he did have an affinity with the city given his regard for Celtic Football Club.
In his autobiography, Celtic legend Dixie Deans recounted a chance meeting with Marley in Australia, where the musician spoke of his wish to go to Celtic Park and kick a few balls there.
The football and fitness fanatic kept videos of the teams matches at home in Jamaica and had great respect for the Lisbon Lions squads who won the European Cup in 1967 against all the odds.
While touring Europe in 1980, he taped Old Firm games and took the recordings home for his son Rohan to watch.
A message from the Editor:
Thank you for reading this article. We're more reliant on your support than ever as the shift in consumer habits brought about by Coronavirus impacts our advertisers.
Read more:
Posted in Atheist
Comments Off on Bob Marley: Reggae king’s only Scottish gig remembered on 40th anniversary of his death – The Scotsman
Biden said he’d cut down on unemployment benefits, but he really might reinstate a pre-pandemic job-seeking policy The Madison Leader Gazette – The…
Posted: at 11:06 pm
The New York Times
Its been a long, strange trip in the four decades since Rick Doblin, a pioneering psychedelics researcher, dropped his first hit of acid in college and decided to dedicate his life to the healing powers of mind-altering compounds. Even as anti-drug campaigns led to the criminalization of Ecstasy, LSD and magic mushrooms, and drove most researchers from the field, Doblin continued his quixotic crusade with financial help from his parents. Doblins quest to win mainstream acceptance of psychedelics will take a significant leap forward Monday when the journal Nature Medicine is expected to publish the results of his labs study on MDMA, the club drug popularly known as Ecstasy and Molly. The study, the first Phase 3 clinical trial conducted with psychedelic-assisted therapy, found that MDMA paired with counseling brought marked relief to patients with severe post-traumatic stress disorder. The results, coming weeks after a New England Journal of Medicine study that highlighted the benefits of treating depression with psilocybin, the psychoactive ingredient in magic mushrooms, have excited scientists, psychotherapists and entrepreneurs in the rapidly expanding field of psychedelic medicine. They say it is only a matter of time before the Food and Drug Administration grants approval for psychoactive compounds to be used therapeutically for MDMA as soon as 2023, followed by psilocybin a year or two later. Sign up for The Morning newsletter from the New York Times After decades of demonization and criminalization, psychedelic drugs are on the cusp of entering mainstream psychiatry, with profound implications for a field that in recent decades has seen few pharmacological advancements for the treatment of mental disorders and addiction. The need for new therapeutics has gained greater urgency amid a national epidemic of opioid abuse and suicides. Some days I wake up and cant believe how far weve come, said Doblin, 67, who now oversees the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, a multimillion-dollar research and advocacy empire that employs 130 neuroscientists, pharmacologists and regulatory specialists working to lay the groundwork for the coming psychedelics revolution. The nations top universities are racing to set up psychedelic research centers, and investors are pouring millions of dollars into a pack of startups. States and cities across the country are beginning to loosen restrictions on the drugs, the first steps in what some hope will lead to the federal decriminalization of psychedelics for therapeutic and even recreational use. Theres been a sea change in attitudes about what not long ago was considered fringe science, said Michael Pollan, whose bestselling book on psychedelics, How to Change Your Mind, has helped destigmatize the drugs in the three years since it was published. Given the mental health crisis in this country, theres great curiosity and hope about psychedelics and a recognition that we need new therapeutic tools. The question for many is how far and how fast the pendulum should swing, and even researchers who champion psychedelic-assisted therapy say the drive to commercialize the drugs combined with a growing movement to liberalize existing prohibitions could prove risky, especially for those with severe psychiatric disorders, and derail the fields slow, methodical return to mainstream acceptance. Doblins organization, MAPS, is largely focused on winning approval for drug-assisted therapies and promoting them around the globe, but it is also pushing for the legalization of psychedelics at the federal level, though with strict licensing requirements for adult recreational use. Numerous studies have shown that classic psychedelics like LSD and psilocybin are not addictive and cause no organ damage in even high doses. And contrary to popular lore, Ecstasy does not leave holes in users brains, studies say, nor will a bad acid trip lead to chromosome damage. But most scientists agree that more research is needed on other possible side effects like how the drugs might affect those with cardiac problems. And while the steady accumulation of encouraging data has softened the skepticism of prominent scientists, some researchers warn against the headlong embrace of psychedelics without stringent oversight. Although bad trips are rare, a handful of anecdotal reports suggest that psychedelics can induce psychosis in those with underlying mental disorders. Dr. Michael P. Bogenschutz, a professor of psychiatry who runs the 4-month-old Center for Psychedelic Medicine at NYU Langone Health, said most of the clinical studies to date had been conducted with relatively small numbers of people who were carefully vetted to screen out those with schizophrenia and other serious mental problems. That makes it hard to know whether there will be potential adverse reactions if the drugs are taken by millions of people without any guidance or supervision. I know it sounds silly but, Kids, dont take these at home, Bogenschutz said. I would just encourage everyone to not get ahead of the data. The Rush to Invest Psychedelics are suddenly awash in money. Doblin can remember when research funding was nearly impossible to come by. But MAPS is flush now, having raised $44 million over the past two years. I spend a lot of my time saying no to investors, said Doblin, whose work has been funded by an unlikely collection of philanthropists, among them Rebekah Mercer, the Republican political donor, and David Bronner, a liberal heir to the liquid soap company Dr. Bronners. Johns Hopkins, Yale, the University of California, Berkeley, and Mount Sinai Hospital in New York are among the institutions that have recently established psychedelic research divisions or are planning to do so, with financing from private donors. And scientists are conducting studies on whether psychedelics can be effective in treating everything from depression, autism and opioid addiction to anorexia and the anxieties experienced by the terminally ill. More than a dozen startups have jumped into the fray, and the handful of companies that have gone public are collectively valued at more than $2 billion. Field Trip Health, a 2-year-old Canadian company that trades on the New York Stock Exchange, has raised $150 million to finance dozens of high-end ketamine cl inics in Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston and other cities across North America. Compass Pathways, a health care company that has raised $240 million and is listed on the Nasdaq, is conducting 22 clinical trials across 10 countries of psilocybin therapy for treatment-resistant depression. Investors have been encouraged by the changing politics, a shift inspired in part by the nations accelerating embrace of recreational marijuana and by public weariness over Americas endless war on drugs. Last year, Oregon became the first state to legalize the therapeutic use of psilocybin. Denver, Oakland, California, and Washington, D.C. have decriminalized the drug, and several states, including California, are mulling similar legislation. Though the drugs remain illegal under federal law, the Justice Department has so far taken a hands-off approach to enforcement, similar to how it has handled recreational marijuana. Even some Republicans, a group that has traditionally opposed the liberalization of drug laws, are starting to come around. Last month, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, citing the high rates of suicide among war veterans, called on his states legislators to support a Democratic-sponsored bill that would establish a psilocybin study for patients with PTSD. Weve had 50 years of government propaganda around these substances, and thanks to the research and a grassroots movement, that narrative is changing, said Kevin Matthews, a psilocybin advocate who led Denvers successful ballot measure. Decades in the Wilderness Long before Nancy Reagan warned the nation to just say no to drugs and President Richard Nixon supposedly pronounced Timothy Leary the most dangerous man in America, researchers like William A. Richards were using psychedelics to help alcoholics go dry and cancer patients cope with end-of-life anxiety. The drugs were legal, and Richards, then a psychologist at the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center, was among scores of scientists studying the therapeutic prowess of entheogens, the class of psychoactive substances that humans have used for millenniums. Even years later, Richards and other researchers say, many early volunteers called the psychedelic sessions the most important and meaningful experiences of their lives. But as the drugs left the lab in the 1960s and were embraced by the counterculture movement, the countrys political establishment reacted with alarm. By the time the Drug Enforcement Administration issued its emergency ban on MDMA in 1985, funding for psychedelic research had largely disappeared. We were learning so much, and then it all came to an end, said Richards, 80, now a researcher at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. These days, the Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research at Johns Hopkins, created two years ago with $17 million in private funding, is studying, among other things, psilocybin for smoking cessation and the treatment of depression associated with Alzheimers as well as more spiritual explorations involving religious clergy. We have to be careful not to overpromise, but these are fantastically interesting compounds with numerous possible uses, said Roland R. Griffiths, the centers founding director and a psychopharmacologist whose 2006 study, on which he is a co-author with Richards, administered psilocybin to healthy volunteers one of the first psychedelic studies to win FDA approval in a generation. Though researchers are still trying to understand the cognitive and therapeutic mechanics of psychedelics, they have concluded that psilocybin, DMT and other psychoactive chemicals can help people feel more tolerance, understanding and empathy. They also induce neuroplasticity, the brains ability to change and reorganize thought patterns, enabling people with psychological disorders to find new ways to process anxiety, depression or deeply embedded trauma. They can help people who have lost the plotline of their lives, Doblin said. The Trip Business The future of psychedelic medicine can already be glimpsed at a suite of plush, soothingly decorated journey rooms that occupy the top floor of an office building in Midtown Manhattan. The clinic, run by Field Trip Health, is a year-old venture where patients wear eyeshades and listen to electronic music and Tibetan chanting, as they are administered six ketamine injections over the course of several weeks. The 90-minute trips are interspersed with therapist-guided integration sessions to help participants process their experiences and work on achieving their mental health goals. A typical course of four sessions starts at $4,100, though some insurance companies reimburse patients for a portion of the cost. Ketamine is not a classic psychedelic; it is an anesthetic perhaps best known as both a club drug and a horse tranquilizer. But at higher doses, it can produce hallucinations, and it has shown promise treating major depression and severe PTSD, though the effects tend to be less enduring than therapies with psilocybin or MDMA. Ketamine, however, has a distinct advantage over those other drugs: It is the only one in the United States that is legally available to patients outside a clinical study. Emily Hackenburg, Field Trips clinical director, said the drug was only one component of a demanding therapeutic process. The drug is not a magic bullet, she said. Joe, a marketing executive in his mid-40s who has battled depression and anxiety for decades, said he decided to visit the companys Atlanta location after seeing one of its ads on Facebook. Antidepressants, he said, left him emotionally brittle, and his years of psychotherapy were of little use. (He asked that his full name be withheld, citing the stigmas surrounding both mental illness and mind-altering drugs.) In an interview one week after his final session, he described a newfound awareness of the factors that could drive him to despair: his alpha male obsession with success, the frustrations stoked by his 9-year-old daughters misbehavior and the poor eating and drinking habits that often leave him feeling unwell. In a follow-up conversation two weeks later, Joe said the therapys effects were beginning to fade. He said that he was eager to try psilocybin-assisted therapy. Im really looking forward to the day when that becomes legal, he said. So, too, is Field Trip. The company, which got its start opening cannabis clinics across Canada, is planning to test psilocybin therapy next month in Amsterdam, where magic mushroom truffles are legal. And its scientists are currently developing a new psychedelic that carries the therapeutic punch of psilocybin but works in about half the time about two to three hours. Creating a proprietary short-lived psychedelic would reduce the staffing costs of supervised sessions, but more important, it would give the company lucrative exclusivity over its new drug. Other biotech companies are also developing new psychedelic compounds. Ronan Levy, Field Trips executive chairman, said the company was hoping to grab a slice of the $240 billion that Americans spend each year on mental health services. We are riding the forefront of what I think is going to be a significant cultural and business wave, he said. To veteran scientists who lived through the nations earlier star-crossed love affair with psychedelics, such corporate boosterism is both thrilling and troubling. They are mindful about potential missteps that could undo the progress of recent years, and they question whether the coming commercialization could limit access to those with limited financial means. Dr. Charles S. Grob, a professor of psychiatry at UCLAs school of medicine who has spent decades researching hallucinogens, worries that commercialization and a rush toward recreational use could prompt a public backlash, especially if increased availability of the drugs leads to a wave of troubling psychotic reactions. What is needed, he said, are rigorous protocols and a system to train and credential psychedelic medicine professionals. We have to be very attentive to safety parameters, because if conditions are not properly maintained, there is a risk for some people to go off the rails psychologically, he said. And if the primary motivator is extracting profit, I feel the field is more vulnerable to mishaps. Doblin shares some of those concerns, even if his institute stands to profit handsomely. Although MAPS is a nonprofit, it has recently created a corporate entity and hired management consultants to help plot the future of legalized MDMA therapy. Winning FDA approval would give MAPS at least six years of exclusivity to market its MDMA-guided treatments for PTSD, with a potential windfall of $750 million. Most of that money, he said, would help train a generation of psychedelic practitioners, fund lobbying efforts to require insurance coverage for such treatments and promote new therapies around the world. Our goal is mass mental health, he said, explaining the organizations rejection of private investment. Its not to amass a whole bunch of money. Despite his optimism, Doblin is not blind to the possibility that societys fascination with psychedelics could sour. Weve made so much progress so fast but there are so many challenges ahead, he said. I realize, he said, we could screw things up at the last minute so Im not planning to celebrate any time soon. This article originally appeared in The New York Times. 2021 The New York Times Company
Read more from the original source:
Posted in Entheogens
Comments Off on Biden said he’d cut down on unemployment benefits, but he really might reinstate a pre-pandemic job-seeking policy The Madison Leader Gazette – The…
The psychedelic revolution is coming. Psychiatry may never be the same – bdnews24.com
Posted: at 11:06 pm
Doblins quest to win mainstream acceptance of psychedelics will take a significant leap forward Monday when the journal Nature Medicine is expected to publish the results of his labs study on MDMA, the club drug popularly known as Ecstasy and Molly. The study, the first Phase 3 clinical trial conducted with psychedelic-assisted therapy, found that MDMA paired with counselling brought marked relief to patients with severe post-traumatic stress disorder.
The results, coming weeks after a New England Journal of Medicine study that highlighted the benefits of treating depression with psilocybin, the psychoactive ingredient in magic mushrooms, have excited scientists, psychotherapists and entrepreneurs in the rapidly expanding field of psychedelic medicine. They say it is only a matter of time before the Food and Drug Administration grants approval for psychoactive compounds to be used therapeutically for MDMA as soon as 2023, followed by psilocybin a year or two later.
After decades of demonisation and criminalisation, psychedelic drugs are on the cusp of entering mainstream psychiatry, with profound implications for a field that in recent decades has seen few pharmacological advancements for the treatment of mental disorders and addiction. The need for new therapeutics has gained greater urgency amid a national epidemic of opioid abuse and suicides.
Some days I wake up and cant believe how far weve come, said Doblin, 67, who now oversees the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, a multimillion-dollar research and advocacy empire that employs 130 neuroscientists, pharmacologists and regulatory specialists working to lay the groundwork for the coming psychedelics revolution.
The nations top universities are racing to set up psychedelic research centres, and investors are pouring millions of dollars into a pack of startups. State and cities across the country are beginning to loosen restrictions on the drugs, the first steps in what some hope will lead to the federal decriminalisation of psychedelics for therapeutic and even recreational use.
Theres been a sea change in attitudes about what not long ago was considered fringe science, said Michael Pollan, whose bestselling book on psychedelics, How to Change Your Mind, has helped destigmatise the drugs in the three years since it was published. Given the mental health crisis in this country, theres great curiosity and hope about psychedelics and a recognition that we need new therapeutic tools.
The question for many is how far and how fast the pendulum should swing, and even researchers who champion psychedelic-assisted therapy say the drive to commercialise the drugs combined with a growing movement to liberalise existing prohibitions could prove risky, especially for those with severe psychiatric disorders, and derail the fields slow, methodical return to mainstream acceptance.
Doblins organisation, MAPS, is largely focused on winning approval for drug-assisted therapies and promoting them around the globe, but it is also pushing for the legalisation of psychedelics at the federal level, though with strict licensing requirements for adult recreational use.
Numerous studies have shown that classic psychedelics like LSD and psilocybin are not addictive and cause no organ damage in even high doses. And contrary to popular lore, Ecstasy does not leave holes in users brains, studies say, nor will a bad acid trip lead to chromosome damage.
But most scientists agree that more research is needed on other possible side effects like how the drugs might affect those with cardiac problems. And while the steady accumulation of encouraging data has softened the scepticism of prominent scientists, some researchers warn against the headlong embrace of psychedelics without stringent oversight. Although bad trips are rare, a handful of anecdotal reports suggest that psychedelics can induce psychosis in those with underlying mental disorders.
Dr Michael P Bogenschutz, a professor of psychiatry who runs the 4-month-old Center for Psychedelic Medicine at NYU Langone Health, said most of the clinical studies to date had been conducted with relatively small numbers of people who were carefully vetted to screen out those with schizophrenia and other serious mental problems.
That makes it hard to know whether there will be potential adverse reactions if the drugs are taken by millions of people without any guidance or supervision. I know it sounds silly but, Kids, dont take these at home, Bogenschutz said. I would just encourage everyone to not get ahead of the data.
The Rush to Invest
Psychedelics are suddenly awash in money.
Doblin can remember when research funding was nearly impossible to come by. But MAPS is flush now, having raised $44 million over the past two years.
I spend a lot of my time saying no to investors, said Doblin, whose work has been funded by an unlikely collection of philanthropists, among them Rebekah Mercer, the Republican political donor, and David Bronner, a liberal heir to the liquid soap company Dr Bronners.
Johns Hopkins, Yale, the University of California, Berkeley, and Mount Sinai Hospital in New York are among the institutions that have recently established psychedelic research divisions or are planning to do so, with financing from private donors.
And scientists are conducting studies on whether psychedelics can be effective in treating everything from depression, autism and opioid addiction to anorexia and the anxieties experienced by the terminally ill.
More than a dozen startups have jumped into the fray, and the handful of companies that have gone public are collectively valued at more than $2 billion. Field Trip Health, a 2-year-old Canadian company that trades on the New York Stock Exchange, has raised $150 million to finance dozens of high-end ketamine clinics in Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston and other cities across North America. Compass Pathways, a health care company that has raised $240 million and is listed on the Nasdaq, is conducting 22 clinical trials across 10 countries of psilocybin therapy for treatment-resistant depression.
Investors have been encouraged by the changing politics, a shift inspired in part by the nations accelerating embrace of recreational marijuana and by public weariness over Americas endless war on drugs. Last year, Oregon became the first state to legalise the therapeutic use of psilocybin. Denver, Oakland, California, and Washington, DC have decriminalised the drug, and several states, including California, are mulling similar legislation. Though the drugs remain illegal under federal law, the Justice Department has so far taken a hands-off approach to enforcement, similar to how it has handled recreational marijuana.
Even some Republicans, a group that has traditionally opposed the liberalisation of drug laws, are starting to come around. Last month, former Texas Gov Rick Perry, citing the high rates of suicide among war veterans, called on his states legislators to support a Democratic-sponsored bill that would establish a psilocybin study for patients with PTSD.
Weve had 50 years of government propaganda around these substances, and thanks to the research and a grassroots movement, that narrative is changing, said Kevin Matthews, a psilocybin advocate who led Denvers successful ballot measure.
Decades in the Wilderness
Long before Nancy Reagan warned the nation to just say no to drugs and President Richard Nixon supposedly pronounced Timothy Leary the most dangerous man in America, researchers like William A. Richards were using psychedelics to help alcoholics go dry and cancer patients cope with end-of-life anxiety.
The drugs were legal, and Richards, then a psychologist at the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center, was among scores of scientists studying the therapeutic prowess of entheogens, the class of psychoactive substances that humans have used for millenniums. Even years later, Richards and other researchers say, many early volunteers called the psychedelic sessions the most important and meaningful experiences of their lives.
But as the drugs left the lab in the 1960s and were embraced by the counterculture movement, the countrys political establishment reacted with alarm. By the time the Drug Enforcement Administration issued its emergency ban on MDMA in 1985, funding for psychedelic research had largely disappeared.
We were learning so much, and then it all came to an end, said Richards, 80, now a researcher at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
These days, the Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research at Johns Hopkins, created two years ago with $17 million in private funding, is studying, among other things, psilocybin for smoking cessation and the treatment of depression associated with Alzheimers as well as more spiritual explorations involving religious clergy.
We have to be careful not to overpromise, but these are fantastically interesting compounds with numerous possible uses, said Roland R Griffiths, the centres founding director and a psychopharmacologist whose 2006 study, on which he is a co-author with Richards, administered psilocybin to healthy volunteers the first psychedelics study to win FDA approval in a generation.
Though researchers are still trying to understand the cognitive and therapeutic mechanics of psychedelics, they have concluded that psilocybin, DMT and other psychoactive chemicals can help people feel more tolerance, understanding and empathy. They also induce neuroplasticity, the brains ability to change and reorganise thought patterns, enabling people with psychological disorders to find new ways to process anxiety, depression or deeply embedded trauma.
They can help people who have lost the plotline of their lives, Doblin said.
The Trip Business
The future of psychedelic medicine can already be glimpsed at a suite of plush, soothingly decorated journey rooms that occupy the top floor of an office building in Midtown Manhattan. The clinic, run by Field Trip Health, is a year-old venture where patients wear eyeshades and listen to electronic music and Tibetan chanting, as they are administered six ketamine injections over the course of several weeks.
The 90-minute trips are interspersed with therapist-guided integration sessions to help participants process their experiences and work on achieving their mental health goals. A typical course of four sessions starts at $4,100, though some insurance companies reimburse patients for a portion of the cost.
Ketamine is not a classic psychedelic; it is an anaesthetic perhaps best known as both a club drug and a horse tranquiliser. But at higher doses, it can produce hallucinations, and it has shown promise treating major depression and severe PTSD, though the effects tend to be less enduring than therapies with psilocybin or MDMA. Ketamine, however, has a distinct advantage over those other drugs: It is the only one in the United States that is legally available to patients outside a clinical study.
Emily Hackenburg, Field Trips clinical director, said the drug was only one component of a demanding therapeutic process. The drug is not a magic bullet, she said.
Joe, a marketing executive in his mid-40s who has battled depression and anxiety for decades, said he decided to visit the companys Atlanta location after seeing one of its ads on Facebook. Antidepressants, he said, left him emotionally brittle, and his years of psychotherapy were of little use. (He asked that his full name be withheld, citing the stigmas surrounding both mental illness and mind-altering drugs.)
In an interview one week after his final session, he described a newfound awareness of the factors that could drive him to despair: his alpha male obsession with success, the frustrations stoked by his 9-year-old daughters misbehaviour and the poor eating and drinking habits that often leave him feeling unwell.
In a follow-up conversation two weeks later, Joe said the therapys effects were beginning to fade. He said that he was eager to try psilocybin-assisted therapy. Im really looking forward to the day when that becomes legal, he said.
So, too, is Field Trip. The company, which got its start opening cannabis clinics across Canada, is planning to test psilocybin therapy next month in Amsterdam, where magic mushroom truffles are legal. And its scientists are currently developing a new psychedelic that carries the therapeutic punch of psilocybin but works in about half the time about two to three hours. Creating a proprietary short-lived psychedelic would reduce the staffing costs of supervised sessions, but more important, it would give the company lucrative exclusivity over its new drug. Other biotech companies are also developing new psychedelic compounds.
Ronan Levy, Field Trip's executive chairman, said the company was hoping to grab a slice of the $240 billion that Americans spend each year on mental health services. We are riding the forefront of what I think is going to be a significant cultural and business wave, he said.
To veteran scientists who lived through the nations earlier star-crossed love affair with psychedelics, such corporate boosterism is both thrilling and troubling. They are mindful about potential missteps that could undo the progress of recent years, and they question whether the coming commercialisation could limit access to those with limited financial means.
Dr Charles S Grob, a professor of psychiatry at UCLAs school of medicine who has spent decades researching hallucinogens, worries that commercialisation and a rush toward recreational use could prompt a public backlash, especially if increased availability of the drugs leads to a wave of troubling psychotic reactions.
What is needed, he said, are rigorous protocols and a system to train and credential psychedelic medicine professionals. We have to be very attentive to safety parameters, because if conditions are not properly maintained, there is a risk for some people to go off the rails psychologically, he said. And if the primary motivator is extracting profit, I feel the field is more vulnerable to mishaps.
Doblin shares some of those concerns, even if his institute stands to profit handsomely. Although MAPS is a nonprofit, it has recently created a corporate entity and hired management consultants to help plot the future of legalised MDMA therapy.
Winning FDA approval would give MAPS at least six years of exclusivity to market its MDMA-guided treatments for PTSD, with a potential windfall of $750 million. Most of that money, he said, would help train a generation of psychedelic practitioners, fund lobbying efforts to require insurance coverage for such treatments and promote new therapies around the world. Our goal is mass mental health, he said, explaining the organisations rejection of private investment. Its not to amass a whole bunch of money.
Despite his optimism, Doblin is not blind to the possibility that societys fascination with psychedelics could sour. Weve made so much progress so fast but there are so many challenges ahead, he said. I realise, he said, we could screw things up at the last minute so Im not planning to celebrate any time soon.
2021 The New York Times Company
Read more:
The psychedelic revolution is coming. Psychiatry may never be the same - bdnews24.com
Posted in Entheogens
Comments Off on The psychedelic revolution is coming. Psychiatry may never be the same – bdnews24.com
Kin Euphorics Launches Lightwave, A Wind-Down Beverage To Calm The Mind – Forbes
Posted: at 11:05 pm
Kin Euphorics has launched its second canned beverage, Lightwave
Alcohol alternative brand Kin Euphorics is pushing deeper into the ready-to-drink beverage segment.
The New York-based company, launched in 2018 by entrepreneur Jennifer Batchelor and Soylent co-founder Matthew Cauble, on Thursday unveiled its second nonalcoholic RTD, called Lightwave.
The lightly carbonated beverage which features a blend of nootropics, adaptogens and other botanicals is designed to help consumers mellow the mood without alcohol at the end of a stressful day.
Available in 8 oz. cans, Lightwave contains 45 calories, and features a proprietary blend of L-theanine, L-serine, tryptophan, magnesium and reishi mushroom extract.
A four-pack retails for $27 on Kins online store.
Lightwave is Kins fourth product, and the RTD counterpart to Dream Light, a spirit-like nightcap that contains a similar blend of adaptogens and nootropics as well as melatonin.
According to Batchelor, Kin consumers loved the flavor profile and mellowing effects of Dream Light, but they wanted a more accessible product that could be enjoyed earlier in the evening.
While Lightwave and Dream Light are both formulated to help consumers wind down, Kins other products High Rhode and Spritz are designed to provide more of an uplifting experience.
Spritz is tangy and herbaceous with a spiced hibiscus, slightly sweetened with white wine grapes and touch of ginger, Batchelor said of the flavor profile. Lightwave is creamy like a birch beer kissed with lavender-vanilla, saffron, and sea salts. And they, of course, have symbiotic yet opposite effects.
Like Lightwave, Kin Spritz features L-theanine, an increasingly popular amino acid that is said to promote relaxation and improve cognitive performance. However, Spritz contains caffeine and other mood-boosting ingredients that dont always make sense for evening consumption.
Launched in mid-2019, Kins first foray into canned beverages was initially intended as a more convenient way for consumers to skip alcohol during happy hour. Batchelor has since discovered that customers are substituting Spritz for coffee and energy drinks throughout the day.
They see the functional benefit, she said. They see the calm and focused energy, and they are drinking like three or four of these as they work.
Now, Batchelor hopes her consumers which she refers to as guests will use Lightwave in a similar way.
Lightwave is a critical addition to our lineup, Batchelor explained. Its the yin to the Kin Spritz yang.
When asked what role Kin plays in helping to educate consumers about the effects of adaptogens and nootropics which are becoming more common in both beverages and everyday supplements Batchelor pointed to the companys ongoing strategy of disrupting traditional alcohol occasions.
We were the first to bring nootropics and adaptogens into one bottle designed for the bar experience, she said. By introducing nootropics into unexpected settings and occasions that dont fit with the prescriptive norms of supplements, we connect with guests emotionally to create a stronger memory and ultimately a richer experience.
According to Batchelor, Kin consumers understand which products to use when they want to uplift or downshift, even if they arent totally aware of how individual ingredients affects them.
In its quest to push these nootropics and adaptogens further into the mainstream, Kin has raised upwards of $10 million, according to Batchelor.
Its also in the process of shifting from a nearly exclusive direct-to-consumer retail strategy, to one that includes more traditional brick-and-mortar stores like Whole Foods WFM .
Were expanding our offline footprint quite a bit, she said. Were about 95% online right now, and well be closer to 70% by the end of the year.
As it broadens its reach, Kin is betting that growing consumer curiosity for adaptogens and nootropics coupled with an increasing appetite for reducing alcohol consumption will lead to greater sales.
I want people to be able to choose a euphoric for any social dynamic, any season, any time of day, or any social occasion, she said.
Batchelor added that sales more than doubled last year, and she expects the business driven in part by the companys RTDs to triple in 2021.
Continue reading here:
Kin Euphorics Launches Lightwave, A Wind-Down Beverage To Calm The Mind - Forbes
Posted in Nootropics
Comments Off on Kin Euphorics Launches Lightwave, A Wind-Down Beverage To Calm The Mind – Forbes
Investing in AI for Good – Stanford Social Innovation Review
Posted: at 11:05 pm
IDinsight enumerators demarcate an area of a fieldtoestimate agricultural yield in Telangana, India. Data from surveys like this are a critical input into agricultural machine-learning models.
In the past 10 years, hundreds of projects have applied artificial intelligence (AI) to creating social good. The right tool applied to an appropriate problem has the potential to drastically improve millions of lives through better service delivery and better-informed policy design. But what kind of investments do AI solutions need to be successful, and which applications have the most potential for social impact?
AI excels at helping humans harness large-scale or complex data to predict, categorize, or optimize at a scale and speed beyond human ability. We believe that more targeted, sustained investments in AI for social impact (sometimes called AI for good)rather than multiple, short-term grants across a variety of areasare important for two reasons. First, AI often has large upfront costs and low ongoing or marginal costs. AI systems can be hard to design and operationalize, and they require an array of potentially costly resourcessuch as training data, staff time, and high-quality data infrastructureto get off the ground. Compared to the upfront investment, the cost of reaching each additional user is small. For philanthropies looking to drive positive social impact via AI, this often means that AI solutions must reach significant scale before they can offer a substantial social return on investment.
Another reason why targeted, sustained funding is important is because any single point of failurelack of training data, misunderstanding users' needs, biased results, technology poorly designed for unreliable Internetcan hobble a promising AI-for-good product. Teams using AI need to continually refine and maintain these systems to overcome obstacles, achieve scale, and maintain the ecosystems in which they live.
To narrow in on AI use cases that offer the most promise, our team at IDinsight synthesized existing research from the United Nations, McKinsey and Company, nonprofit practitioners, past Google.org work, and other groups in the social sector. From there, we identified about 120 use cases across 30 areas where developers are using AI to address social and environmental problems.
Using a detailed framework, our team then analyzed which of these areas will most likely lead to significant social impact. In addition to potential risks, this framework looks at:
As we looked through the use cases that scored highest against our framework, three criterialarge impact potential (depth and breadth), differential impact compared to non-AI tools, and a clear pathway to scalestood out as useful shorthand to explain why certain areas are uniquely primed for investment. We also considered whether each area had sufficient proof-of-concept evidence illustrating its feasibility, as well as manageable risks that investment and careful modeling can safely overcome. (The full framework outlines a process for more robust and precise analysis.)
Our analysis pinpointed three specific areas that appear optimal for near-term investment: medical diagnostic tools, communication support for marginalized communities and languages, and agricultural yield prediction. Its important to note that these are not the only areas that AI could drive significant social good. Other areas we analyzed that scored well against our framework included medical research/drug discovery, natural disaster response, supply chain forecasting, and combatting misinformation. While we dont detail these areas here, we encourage others to explore them. Heres a closer look at our top three areas:
In some low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), where the health-care provider to patient ratio is low, many patients fall through cracks. Under-diagnosis or misdiagnosis of dangerous conditions is common due to traditional tests that are expensive or unavailable due to laboratory requirements; time-intensive testing, which overburdened workers may not conduct; and the stigmatization of certain health conditions, which dissuades many patients from getting tested in public clinics.
Moreover, health-care workers often need more training than they receive to accurately diagnose and treat health conditions. Poor diagnostics seem to greatly constrain the improvement of health-care outcomes in low-resource settings. For example, when the Center for Global Development simulated theoretical improvements to maternal and child health outcomes in sub-Saharan Africa under optimized clinical conditions (no shortage of drugs or absent health-care workers), health care quality only marginally improved.
There is a strong case for investing in AI tools that diagnose or screen for common conditions at the point of care. Many of these tools are already at the proof-of-concept stage and work with smartphone cameras or microphones to capture sounds, images, or video that could aid diagnosis. And while smartphone penetration among frontline health workers in LMICs is low (with significant variance across countries), its expected to grow rapidly in the next few years.AI diagnostic tools have:
The most impactful diagnostic tools screen for underdiagnosed or misdiagnosed, treatable conditions that affect lots of people. AI tools for diagnosing many of these conditionssuch as respiratory conditions like tuberculosis or asthma, malnutrition (including infant anthropometrics), anemia, and cervical canceralready have promising proofs of concepts. However, developers still need to validate and adapt these technologies so that they are practically useful for health workers.
Funders should also consider ecosystem investments that enable the creation of equitable AI toolsfor example, training datasets that are accurate, representative of the populations they would serve, and collected with informed consent. Privacy platforms, where health-care organizations can securely store and share training data, are another type of valuable ecosystem investment. (Nightingale Open Science is building a platform to do this for some health conditions like cancer and cardiac arrest). These investments can make a significant difference in how well AI tools serve the populations they seek to reach and shouldnt be overlooked.
As with any medical device, global health groups and regulatory agencies need to guarantee that AI tools meet common quality standards. They must ensure that algorithms are trained on representative data and are rigorously evaluated for fairness in the settings where they will be deployed. This is particularly important given that many health-care AI proofs of concept are built on non-representative data or data collected in laboratory settings, not in real-world contexts. If we are to realize game-changing advances and guard against potential risks, its important that philanthropies invest in correcting for these shortcomings.
Millions of people around the world are excluded from public services, education, the job market, and the Internet at large by virtue of their inability to speak majority languages. Just 10 of the 6,000 languages used in the world today make up about 87.3 percent of all online content. More than half of the content on the Internet is in English, and even some of the most commonly spoken languages in the world (including Arabic, Hindi, Bengali) dont make the top 10.
Language barriers can cause extreme, acute harm during legal proceedings, medical visits, and humanitarian emergencies. Hospitals, social service agencies, immigration lawyers, schools, and natural disaster response systems use translators to provide services, but in most cases, too few translators are available to meet translation needs globally. And while translation and automated speech recognition models have made tremendous headway for majority languagesone of Google.orgs AI Impact Challenge grantees, TalkingPoints, for example, helps non-English speaking parents in the United States communicate with their childrens teacherssupport for minority languages needs more investment.
Innovation in this space can take many different forms. One is datasets and tools that make machine translation available for more language pairs, such as the translation of Bhojpuri to English. Another form is improved translation for specific subdomains in existing machine-translatable languages, such as the improved translation of French or Arabic medical terms. Innovation can also happen with tools that extend beyond translation to enhance the usability of common, natural language processing tools in multiple languages, such as sentiment analysis tools. Each of these is primed for investment because they have:
One promising opportunity for investment is improving general translation services for languages that many people speak but that are underrepresented in existing translation models. Many languages with millions of native speakers dont have access to translation for their languages on common platforms. Wired Magazine noted several of the biggest in a 2018 article: Bhojpuri (51 million people), Fula (24 million), Sylheti (11 million), Quechua (9 million), and Kirundi (9 million). Even within existing languages, general translation quality varies substantially.
Another opportunity lies in domain-specific translation improvementsthat is, improvements to translation models for specific contexts. These models require accurate machine comprehension of jargon that may not be common in traditional, natural language data and could be most helpful in settings where translation heavily impacts individuals, such as helping migrants understand legal barriers when entering a new country or disenfranchised people navigate standardized government processes. It will be important to balance greater access for people with the potential risk of inaccurate translation.
Finally, most language models are based on convenience samples of data that happen to be available on the Internet, which can exacerbate biases. Its imperative that any large-scale investment in under-resourced language data is done in partnership with native speakers and that members of civil society help guide which texts to use for model training. The representativeness and accuracy of AI translation and communication models depend on it.
One difficult but essential factor contributing to sustainable food systems is accurate and timely estimates about agriculture yields. These estimates are extremely important to making informed policy decisions that provide farmers with the support they need and ensuring that millions of people have access to food.
In affluent countries, satellite-based, yield-prediction algorithmstrained on administrative and farm-reported data about land use, plot boundary demarcations, and planting timelinesprovide these estimates at periodic intervals throughout the growing season. This allows farmers to make better planning decisions. The algorithms help them get the right agricultural inputs (including hybrid seeds, fertilizer, and pesticides) to the right fields at the right time, and allows governments to more nimbly respond to shocks such as droughts and disease.
But in LMICs, where smallholder farms dominate agriculture, yield prediction isn't straightforward. Smallholders' plots are small, irregularly shaped, and frequently have more than one crop, making them difficult to identify or classify in remote-sensing imagery. Analog alternatives such as using crop-cut experiments are expensive, slow, and fraught with measurement challenges at scale. As such, farmers and government policy makers often make decisions without critical information on the state of agriculture.
Today, satellite imagery is increasingly available to the public, and has the high resolution and update frequency required to make predictions at the smallholder level. For example, the Sentinel-II satellite collects imagery for nearly the entire planet every five days at about 10 meter-per-pixel resolution. Beyond the satellite imagery, acquiring the training data to build AI models requires substantial, ground-level data collection upfronta labor- and time-intensive prospect involving farm visits and crop cuts in remote, rural areas.
High-quality research has nevertheless demonstrated the feasibility of using satellite imagery to estimate yields of smallholder farmers using publicly available imagery. These proofs-of-concept are generally limited to specific crops in specific regions, but with greater training data and model-building efforts, they could have:
Example investment opportunities include programs that recommend tailored agricultural inputs or inform macro-level government agriculture policy to increase or decrease food imports. As in other applications, the lack of training data is a major constraint to conducting yield prediction at scale in LMICs. With many different organizations and researchers working on related problems, theres a need for collection and labeling standards. Initiatives like the ML Hub by the Radiant Earth Foundation will be important in hosting and sharing the data that all model builders need to create the next generation of AI-based yield forecasting models.
In addition, as training data from crop cuts becomes more widely available, funding the creation of pre-trained algorithms that perform reasonably well off the shelf for common crops will be valuable. Similar to Googles BERT for natural language processing or VGG19 for image classification, pre-trained, open-source models can help data scientists focus on tweaking high-performing models to their use case, rather than starting from scratch. With proactive philanthropic investment, funders can insist on better, more representative training data and pre-trained models that are built with the needs of a diverse array of small-holder farmers in mind.
We offer this framework and analysis as a conversation starter, rather than a final verdict. AI holds tremendous promise to improve millions of lives around the world by proving the tools to directly combat health, communication, economic challenges. Investing in solutions that address large-scale social problems, tap into the unique comparative advantages of AI, and have clear pathways to scale is a good place to startthough they may require patient capital. Developing useful, scalable AI tools is hard and requires a sustained commitment to building datasets, systems, and user-centric applications that can help solve societal challenges. By staying the course and seeing promising technological innovations through to scale, investors can unlock inordinate social value.
More:
Investing in AI for Good - Stanford Social Innovation Review
Posted in Ai
Comments Off on Investing in AI for Good – Stanford Social Innovation Review
‘Nurses Are Essential’ to AI Integration in Healthcare – HealthTech Magazine
Posted: at 11:04 pm
For Dr. Erich Huang, Duke Healths chief data officer for quality, one issue often overlooked when discussing AI in healthcare is the importance of the user experience.
Its not just an abstract Westworld brain sitting out there, Huang says. It has to be well integrated with clinical workflow, and nurses are essential to that.
With the Sepsis Watch early warning program, Huang says, nurses were able to apply their professional experience to kick off the cascade of actions that would follow an AI-produced alert.
One of the big issues with electronic health records is fatigue from alerts, he says. If you have a human intermediary who can serve as a first line, thats an important component, because we can then triage things appropriately.
Huang adds that hed like to see more nurse-initiated thinking about automated processes that would make nurses jobs easier.
Id like to hear nursing staff identify inefficiencies they deal with, and think about the things AI and ML would be helpful in improving, allowing them to spend more time with their patients, he says. All clinical staff really need to be well integrated into the development or selection of these AI-based apps.
DISCOVER:Learn how to bridge the gap between nurses and IT teams.
Nurses must ensure that advanced technologies such as AI dont cause harm or compromise the nature of human interactions and relationships that are central to their job, says Liz Stokes, director of the American Nurses Associations Center for Ethics and Human Rights.
Nurses must also be sensitive to unintended consequences related to the development and use of AI technologies, Stokes says. As with any other advanced technology in practice, nurses should ensure that the AI being used is not biased, and they must express their concerns if there is potential or actual bias that is occurring.
Though AI can produce efficiencies in processes, such as prediction and diagnosis, Stokes says it has the potential to lower efficiency and increase stress and burnout if the cognitive demand on clinical teams is higher.
Adequate training and education for nurses is imperative, Stokes adds, and IT leaders need to involve nurses during the development and consideration of AI-related technologies. Those leaders should also collaborate with nurse informaticists, ethicists, engineers and other stakeholders when AI implementation is considered.
Visit link:
'Nurses Are Essential' to AI Integration in Healthcare - HealthTech Magazine
Posted in Ai
Comments Off on ‘Nurses Are Essential’ to AI Integration in Healthcare – HealthTech Magazine
IBM Think 2021 kicks off with AI innovations and some interesting quantum news – The Next Web
Posted: at 11:04 pm
IBM today kicked off its annual THINK conference with a hefty dose of AI news and some tantalizing tidbits about the companys current quantum computing endeavors.
Weve got the skinny, but theres a lot to get through so strap in and get comfy.
AutoSQL and Cloud Pak for Data: IBMs touting a breakthrough in cloud-based database management. Basically, where businesses serve up answers to customer queries using cloud-managed AI databases, this will significantly speed things up.
According to IBM, the new system gives answers to distributed queries as much as 8x faster than previously and at nearly half the cost of other compared data warehouses.
Per an IBM press release:
With the launch of AutoSQL, IBM Cloud Pak for Data now includes the highest-performing cloud data warehouse on the market (based on our benchmarking study) that can run seamlessly across any hybrid multi-cloud environment including private clouds, on-premises and any public cloud.
Quick take: Its tempting to call this a bit hyperbolic, but IBMs brought receipts in the form of internal benchmarking. Anything that speeds up customer-facing AI is a boon for businesses and the people who use their products. Get more info here.
Watson Orchestrate: The no code AI paradigm is picking up steam and this is a great example of how that can be useful. Orchestrate is an AI system designed to augment workflows for individuals.
According to IBM, its meant to be interactive and easy to use:
Requiring no IT skills to use, Watson Orchestrate enables professionals to initiate work in a very human way, using collaboration tools such as Slack and email in natural language. It also connects to popular business applications like Salesforce, SAP and Workday.
Quick take: I hate virtual assistants because theyre virtually useless. But this is integrated, not an externaltalking bot, so it looks like something that could legitimately accelerate workflows for people who tend to have a lot going on. Theres more info available here on IBMs website.
Maximo Mobile: IBM recently launched this new mobile asset management platform for workers tied to infrastructure-scale jobs such as electric company employees or maintenance crews who work on bridges and roads.
Quick take: Ever wonder why it takes so long for the power to come back on after something goes wrong? According to that video, when it comes to the people who maintain large assets, fix our powerlines, and operate refineries, as much as 15-20% of a technicians time can be spent on paperwork.
Thats ridiculous!
Maximo Mobile is IBMs solution to the data and asset management issues these large-scale operations face in the field.
Mono2Micro: A common problem for businesses is figuring out how to get legacy applications into new-fangled AI systems.
Per IBM:
Mono2Micro uses AI developed by IBM Research to analyze large enterprise applications and provide recommendations on how to best adapt them for the move to cloud.
Quick take: This is simple, but brilliant. Basically, when it comes to integrating legacy AI applications into hybrid-cloud environments, the only option used to be manually changing the code. Now, with Mono2Micro, that process can be automated. This could make it more cost-effective to port your old apps than it is to build something new from the ground up. Check out more info here.
IBM also announced several new initiatives and more information on its $1 billion investment in its partner ecosystem, but most of these announcements were news wed heard before.
[Read:3 new technologies ecommerce brands can use to connect better with customers]
Where things got real interesting is when IBM announced a new quantum computing breakthrough.
Qiskit software boosts: IBM today announced a 120X increase in quantum circuit processing speed thanks to IBMs hyrbid-cloud solution.
Instead of storing data on the physical quantum computer and thus necessitating more complex architecture and power requirements IBMs keeping things hybrid by enabling high-speed cloud-based data transfer via its Qiskit runtime.
Per IBM:
By introducing Qiskit Runtime, IBM is enabling quantum systems to run complex calculations such as chemical modeling and financial risk analysis in hours, instead of several weeks. To show the power of the software, IBM recently demonstrated how the lithium hydride molecule (LiH) could be modeled on a quantum device in nine hours, when previously it took 45 days.
Quick take: If were ever going to have a useful quantum computer, we need to scale the experimental builds were currently working with. IBMs new Quiskit Runtime service offloads a portion of the process to the cloud so the quantum part of the computer can do what it does unfettered.
Itll be a while before we see exactly what this means, but its reason for optimism in a field that already looks pretty bright. You can learn more here.
Greetings Humanoids! Did you know we have a newsletter all about AI? You can subscribe to itright here.
See the original post here:
IBM Think 2021 kicks off with AI innovations and some interesting quantum news - The Next Web
Posted in Ai
Comments Off on IBM Think 2021 kicks off with AI innovations and some interesting quantum news – The Next Web
Military AI: World needs to step back from militarisation of AI and big economies need to lead the way on this – The Financial Express
Posted: at 11:04 pm
One of the biggest examples of this the Cold War pursuit of nuclear weapons and how this has led to even nations like North Korea acquiring nuclear capability.
In an article in Nature, Denise Garcia, a professor at the Northeaster University in Massachusetts, the US, calls for the worlds attention to focus on an emerging AI cold war. In March, she writes, the USs National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence (NSCAI) made a case for integration of AI-enabled technologies into every facet of war-fighting to remain competitive with China and Russia.
Contrast this with the EUs guidelines that came in January, which say military AI should not replace human decisions and oversight. The NSCAI advocates against a ban on such AI-powered militarisation, calling instead for standards of use.
It has argued that a ban wont work since countries cant be trusted to complyagainst such a backdrop, which country would like having a rival-nations capabilities be a sword hanging over its head? What the NSCAI needs to ask itself is, if a ban wont work, what is the guarantee that standards of use will.
There is no predicting if AI systems will function as intended after deployment; sure, the leaps in technology will allow us to train these better, but there are far too many imponderables. Indeed, the only thing this will lead to proliferation, and the world will be forced to confront even greater instability that it faces now.
One of the biggest examples of this the Cold War pursuit of nuclear weapons and how this has led to even nations like North Korea acquiring nuclear capability.
A more humane use of AI needs to be imagined, and the big economies of the world each have a crucial role to play in this. If the pandemic has demonstrated anything, it is that the need is for greater global cooperation.
Get live Stock Prices from BSE, NSE, US Market and latest NAV, portfolio of Mutual Funds, Check out latest IPO News, Best Performing IPOs, calculate your tax by Income Tax Calculator, know markets Top Gainers, Top Losers & Best Equity Funds. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.
Financial Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest Biz news and updates.
Go here to see the original:
Posted in Ai
Comments Off on Military AI: World needs to step back from militarisation of AI and big economies need to lead the way on this – The Financial Express







