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The Evolutionary Perspective
Monthly Archives: March 2022
Where Is the Evidence for Darwinism? – Discovery Institute
Posted: March 18, 2022 at 8:36 pm
Photo credit: Elizabeth Smith, via Unsplash.
Editors note:We are delighted to present a new series by Neil Thomas, Reader Emeritus at the University of Durham, Origin of Species: From Discussion Document to Nihilist Dogma.This is the second article in the series. Find the full series so far here. Professor Thomass recent book isTaking Leave of Darwin: A Longtime Agnostic Discovers the Case for Design(Discovery Institute Press).
As Charles Darwin seemed to anticipate, judging from his notably diffident manner of presentation of his material, some contemporaries were (and remained) troubled by some of his more facile conjectures. Those included his just-so stories purportedly accounting for sundry natural phenomena as well as his striking omissions and elisions in adumbrating intricate biological chains of development (whose intricacies after the invention of the electron microscope in the 1940s have of course been shown to be far more unfathomable than could have been anticipated by Darwin or any of his scientific peers).
As William Irvine once put it, Darwin was commonly faulted for not showing his working when attempting to describe complicated and problematical evolutionary steps:
Darwin has nothing to say about mental factors. He will not discuss the origin of mind, any more than that of life itself. Few theorists on the grand scale have skirted so judiciously such vast regions of the unknown, or been so shrewd in their reticences.1
Notoriously, one of the shrewdest of Darwins reticences concerned the lack of fossil evidence to demonstrate his postulation of evolving body types and (he claimed) new species over vast swathes of time a lacuna which he attempted to explain away via the exculpatory rhetorical strategy of blaming the poor fossil record for his inability to adduce confirmatory bone remains. Not without reason did Darwin refer to himself as a master wriggler. Nevertheless, his wriggling, however masterful, clearly did not have the desired effect with his greatest ally, Thomas Huxley.Somewhat surprisingly, in view of his indefatigable partisanship for Darwin, Huxley could assent only to the phenomenon of evolution (which of course was a pre-Darwinian idea going back to Darwins grandfather Erasmus and before him to the ancients), butnotto Darwins distinctive innovation of natural selection.
What had worried Huxley from the beginning was the dearth of fossil remains to chart the slow evolution and gradual speciation of the natural world that Darwin claimed. Only the following decades, stated Huxley (contemplating at least the theoretical possibility of more convincing fossil finds being disinterred in future time), would enable naturalists to say whether the modifying cause and the selective power which Mr. Darwin has satisfactorily shown to exist in Nature, are competent to produce all the effects he associates to them; or whether, on the other hand, he has been led to over-estimate the value of the principle of Natural Selection as greatly as Lamarck over-estimated hisvera causaof modification by exercise [= utilization of limbs,et al.].2
So Huxley would not, he repeated in a speech made as late as 1880, accept the theory of natural selection until he cautioned further palaeontological work had made the proof incontrovertible. This of course was a courteous get-out formula referring to the elephant in the room: the disquieting dearth of fossils. As Huxley defined matters, the doctrine of natural selection presupposed evolution but evolution most certainly did not entail an acceptance of natural selection.
Next, The Hamlet of Down House.
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Viral Video Shows Heartwarming Evolution of Cat and Dog’s Relationship – Newsweek
Posted: at 8:36 pm
Although the popular trope commonly depicts cats and dogs as animals that don't get along, a man's viral video of his own pets proved the opposite.
TikTok user @sobolmatthew shared the video, which has been viewed 9 million times, showing how his cat and dog's relationship evolved over the years. Viewers remarked on the special relationship between the two.
At the start of the video, his doga puppy at that pointnibbled at the cat's tail but quickly scurried away when the cat sat up. In another clip, the puppy playfully jumped toward the cat who initially leaned back and raised its paw before the video clip ended.
The pair warmed up to one another, as seen in the following video clips that showed the cat grooming the dog from the time it was a puppy to the point it grew older and larger.
In addition to grooming, the two were also spotted cuddling with one another.
According to Better Pets and Gardens, a relationship between a cat and a dog can vary, but it is possible for the two to form a bond if properly socialized.
The first interaction when introducing the two is important.
"Allowing a kitten or puppy to meet a cat or a dog calmly and in a safe, controlled environment is more likely to result in a tension-free relationship over the long term," the organization stated.
It may take some time for the two to form a solid bond, but there are a few tactics pet owners can do to help with the process.
This may include keeping the pets separated while the new pet has time to get acclimated to its new environment, giving them a chance to get used to one another's scents and allowing them to see one another with a barrier between them.
The heartwarming bond between the two sparked commenters to share their delight.
"My heart is melting," a viewer wrote.
"Sending this to my dog and cat," another commented.
One wrote, "Awwww, nothing sweeter."
"I JUST CAN'T," a TikTok user declared.
Some viewers wrote that the relationship between their own pets is not as sweet as the one shown in the video.
"My cat still slaps him," one commenter claimed.
Another shared that they had their puppy for three weeks, but their cats have not quite come around to bonding with each other.
Newsweek reached out to @sobolmatthew for comment.
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Viral Video Shows Heartwarming Evolution of Cat and Dog's Relationship - Newsweek
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New Study Sheds Light on Early Human Hair Evolution – UMass News and Media Relations
Posted: at 8:36 pm
Among primates, including humans, hair is an important feature of diversity and evolution, serving functions tied to thermoregulation, protection, camouflage and signaling. However, the evolution of wild primate hair has remained relatively understudied until recently.
Now, University of Massachusetts evolutionary anthropologist Jason Kamilar and researchers from thePrimate Genomics Lab at the George Washington Universityhave examined what factors drive hair variation in a family of wild lemur populations known as Indriidae.
In a new study published in the American Journal of Biological Anthropology, the researchers specifically aimed to assess the impacts of climate, body size and color vision on hair evolution.
They found:
The reduced body hair that modern humans exhibit is unique among primates, says Kamilar, an associate professor of anthropology at UMass Amherst. Unfortunately, hair does not fossilize, so studying how human hair has evolved through time is very challenging, although we can study our primate relatives to give us insight into our deep-time ancestors.
Brenda Bradley, an associate professor of anthropology who directs GWs Primate Genomics Lab and is a co-author on the study, explains that our understanding of hair evolution and diversity in other primates helps us fill in the gaps of our own human evolutionary story.
Most people are intrigued by the diversity of hair on their own bodies, and the variety of hair types among people around the world, Bradley said. Understanding hair patterns in non-human primates, such as these lemurs, may provide a comparative context for understanding how variation arose in human hair.
We examined lemurs in Madagascar that live in a variety of habitats, but consistently exhibit an upright posture similar to human ancestors, and found that lemurs living in hot, dry environments had higher hair follicle density on the top of their head, Kamilar says. This may be related to greater UV exposure for this part of their body, which has been a hypothesis proposed to explain the presence of high human head hair density.
The researchers note future work should focus on samples across smaller geographic or phylogenetic (family-level, genus-level) scales and from diverse non-human and human populations.
The complete study, Hair phenotype diversity across Indriidae lemurs, is now available online from the American Journal of Biological Anthropology.
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New Study Sheds Light on Early Human Hair Evolution - UMass News and Media Relations
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The history and evolution of Ukrainian national identity podcast – The Conversation
Posted: at 8:36 pm
What does it mean to be a Ukrainian? In this episode of The Conversation Weekly podcast, we talk to three experts about the origins of Ukrainian nationalism, and how Ukrainian national identity is changing.
And we hear about a rare archive of Ukrainian dissident literature from the Soviet era, and why its now in danger.
History is central to understanding why the Russian invasion of Ukraine happened, and what might happen next. And in this episode, were exploring the history of Ukrainian national identity.
Dominique Arel, professor and holder of the chair of Ukrainian studies at the University of Ottawa in Canada, explains how Ukrainian national identity started to emerge in the 19th century, when the territory that later became Ukraine was split between the Russian empire to the east and the Austro-Hungarian empire to the west.
Read more: A short history of Ukrainian nationalism and its tumultuous relationship with Russia
The birth of Ukrainian nationalism as a mass social movement really crystallised by the first world war, says Arel. It was far more developed in western Ukraine than in eastern Ukraine because in the Russian empire, Ukrainian nationalism was repressed and even the Ukrainian language was banned. Under the Soviet era, while Ukrainian nationalism was initially encouraged under Vladimir Lenin, it began to be seen as a nationalist resistance that needed to be wiped out, explains Arel.
When Ukraine became independent in 1991 after the fall of the Soviet Union, anyone living on the territory had a right to citizenship. At that time, a little less than a quarter of the population identified as ethnically Russian and three-quarters as ethnically Ukrainian alongside minorities, including Crimean Tatars. But researchers point to shifts in those identities since then.
Volodymyr Kulyk is head research fellow at the Institute of Political and Ethnic Studies at the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. He spoke to us from Kyiv. To be Ukrainian used to mean to be Ukrainian by descent to be a Ukrainian origin or in the Soviet official parlance to be of Ukrainian nationality, he says, explaining that nationality was primarily understood in ethnic, hereditary terms.
But now, Kulyk says its changing and more and more people are identifying as Ukrainian. That means that more and more people who used to be Russian or who used to be other ethnicities, start identifying as Ukrainians.
The Euromaidan protests of 2013-14 marked a turning point. Olga Onuch, a senior lecturer in politics at the University of Manchester in the UK, has been part of a number of studies surveying Ukrainians about their views and identity, and their politics. She says theyve found that civic identity or state attachment was extremely strong amongst Ukrainians, across linguistic and across regions, and that it was increasing over time. As the conflict escalated, so did support for the Ukrainian state, says Onuch.
Her research is also tracking shifts in political attitudes. This was incremental at first, in the years following 2014, but after the election of the current president, Volodymyr Zelensky, in 2019, Onuch says there was a huge jump in support for Ukraine joining the EU and NATO, which she calls the Zelensky effect.
Our second story brings a personal perspective to some of this history. During the Soviet era, when Ukrainian language was repressed, it was dangerous to publish Ukrainian political and cultural texts within Ukraine. One man, Wolodymyr Mirko Pylyshenko, in the diaspora Ukrainian community in the US began collecting this dissident literature. His daughter, Katja Kolcio, an associate professor of dance and environmental studies at Wesleyan University in the US, tells the story of the archive and why its now in danger. (From 36 minutes)
And Moina Spooner, news editor for The Conversation in Nairobi, Kenya, recommends some analysis marking the two-year anniversary of the COVID-19 pandemic. (From 48m)
This episode of The Conversation Weekly was produced by Mend Mariwany and Gemma Ware, with sound design by Eloise Stevens. Our theme music is by Neeta Sarl. You can find us on Twitter @TC_Audio, on Instagram at theconversationdotcom or via email. You can also sign up to The Conversations free daily email here.
Newsclips in this episode are from Al Jazeera English, WION News, BBC News, Hromadske News , and France24 .
You can listen to The Conversation Weekly via any of the apps listed above, download it directly via our RSS feed, or find out how else to listen here.
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Tracing the evolution of galaxy clusters : NewsCenter – University of Rochester
Posted: at 8:36 pm
March 14, 2022
In 2013, a team of American and Hungarian astronomers discovered the largest known structure in the observable universe: a supercluster of galaxies they named the Hercules-Corona Borealis Great Wall. The Great Wall is so wide that light would take 10 billion years to move across it.
To better understand how superclusters evolve, scientists need to understand the inner workings of the building blocks of superclustersgalaxy clusters, which are thousands of galaxies bound together by gravity. For example, how is energy injected into the plasma that comprises galaxy clusters? How is this energy spread around to heat the entire enormous system?
This work opens a new, experimental path to address a long-standing astrophysical question: Why are the cores of galaxy clusters so hot, despite the copious amounts of radiation they emit?Petros Tzeferacos
An international team of scientists from the University of Rochester, Oxford University, and the University of Chicago was able to demonstrate in a laboratory setting for the first time how thermal conduction is suppressed in a plasmacausing galaxy clusters to be hotter than expectedby replicating conditions that are characteristic of the conditions that exist within galaxy clusters. The research, published in the journal Science Advances, provides insights into the complex physical processes at play within the building blocks of our universe.
This work opens a new, experimental path to address a long-standing astrophysical question: Why are the cores of galaxy clusters so hot, despite the copious amounts of radiation they emit? Accounting for this energy budget will help us understand how galaxy clusters evolve and how their large-scale structure is set up, says Petros Tzeferacos, an associate professor of physics and astronomy and a senior scientist at Rochesters Laboratory for Laser Energetics (LLE). Tzeferacos is also the director of the Flash Center for Computational Science, which recently moved to Rochester from Chicago, and contributed to the experiments.
Most of the matter that makes up galaxy clusters is in the form of a plasmaa hot soup of free-moving electrons and ionsthat is threaded by magnetic fields and is in a turbulent state, moving in a random fashion much like smoke from a chimney. Scientists have previously studied galaxy clusters and the heat conduction in a plasma using observations and inputting data into theoretical models. However, they faced a difficult conundrum: the galaxy clusters in their simulations all appeared to be much hotter than scientists would expect, according to physical laws.
Until now, scientists had never been able to experimentally replicate the turbulent plasma that exists within galaxy clusters. To do so, the researchers used high-powered lasers at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL).
In the experiments, laser beams were used to vaporize plastic foils and generate a turbulent and magnetized plasma, similar to the laser-driven experiments the team performed at the LLE to demonstrate the turbulent dynamo mechanismfor the first time.
The researchers found that the electrons in the plasma collide infrequently with each other and end up following the tangled magnetic field lines. This phenomenon suppresses heat conduction, giving rise to pockets of hot plasma that cannot escape, causing the cores of galaxy clusters to be much hotter than anticipated.
This work is an important stepping stone in understanding microscopic processes that occur in plasmas that are both magnetized and turbulent, says Gianluca Gregori, a professor of physics at the University of Oxford, who was the principal investigator in these experiments. The experimental findings are surprising, as they demonstrate that energy is transported in ways that are very different from what we would have expected from simple theories.
In order to design and interpret the laser experiments, the researchers used simulations developed at the Flash Center for Computational Science, using the multi-physics simulation code FLASH.
The FLASH simulations and our previous LLE experiments were key for untangling the physics at play in the turbulent, magnetized plasma, Tzeferacos says. The level of thermal transport suppression, however, was still beyond what we expected.
Further experiments will seek to better understand the microscopic mechanism that is ultimately responsible for the suppression of heat conduction that the researchers observed.
The research was funded by the US Department of Energy (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), the US DOE Office of Science Fusion Energy Sciences (FES), the National Science Foundation (NSF), the European Research Council (ERC), and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC). The Discovery Science program of the US DOE NNSA provided the collaboration with access to the NIF. Compute time for the FLASH numerical simulations was provided by the US DOE ALCC and ERCAP programs and the LLE High Performance Computing group.
Tags: Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Flash Center for Computational Science, Laboratory for Laser Energetics, Petros Tzeferacos
Category: Science & Technology
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Tracing the evolution of galaxy clusters : NewsCenter - University of Rochester
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People Who Don’t Believe In Evolution May Be More Prejudiced Against Minorities – IFLScience
Posted: at 8:36 pm
Low belief in evolution is associated with a higher level of prejudice, racist attitudes, discriminatory behaviors toward LGBTQ+ people and minorities, and general hostility toward people perceived to belong to an out-group, researchers found using surveys collected across 46 countries.
The findings, reported in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, were based on data from the United States, 19 Eastern European countries, 25 Muslim countries, and Israel.
We found that disbelief in the theory that humans evolved from other animals was associated with prejudice, racist attitudes, and support for discriminatory behaviors towards human outgroups, particularly minorities (based on their racial, religious, or sexual identity). This correlation was generally small but was consistent across different countries and cultures, the research authors told IFLScience.
Importantly, although belief in human evolution was related to religiosity and political conservatism, the associations between belief in human evolution from animals and bigoted attitudes held also across various religious categories when controlling for measures of religiousness and political views, as well as other relevant variables (e.g. income, level of education, etc.). Findings were also found among non-dominant groups (religious and racial minorities).
Bigotry is unfortunately way too common in human culture, but the fact that we are animals might help to challenge that within ourselves and our societies. The work, led by graduate researcher Stylianos Syropoulos and Dr Uri Lifshin, suggests two hypotheses as to why that might be the case.
One is social identity theory, which places group identity at the center of how we define ourselves. So if we can accept our shared humanity and even our shared animality, we can expand our ingroup to embrace those who are different from us.
The other idea comes from terror management theory. Humans tend to deny our mortality, believing that we can survive death either literally or symbolically. Our cultures, religions, nations, the whole complex network of what makes our ingroups, shield us from these existential questions. So we like to hold onto those ingroups ideas. Challenges to that can open our eyes to our bigotries.
The theory of evolution has revolutionized more than our science. By connecting us to animals and the natural world at large, it has changed how humanity sees itself.
Classical social psychology suggests that finding our common humanity and seeing how our outgroups are also human, like us, is the way to reduce bigotry and dehumanization of outgroups. While this is true, this solution isnt perfect, because it still ignores the fact that we are in essence animals, the team explained to IFLScience.
So perhaps the key is to be able to acknowledge our shared animal origin that we are all animals, ingroup and outgroup alike, and thus be less depended on our cultural and national identities which might further attenuate intergroup differences, eventually reducing our proneness to prejudice and intergroup conflict.
While the theory of evolution has been used to challenge bigoted attitudes such as racism, misogyny, LGBTQphobia, it has also been used to perpetuate bigotry under the guise of science such as the eugenics movement. So just because someone knows that evolution is true, it doesnt mean they do not possess racist, misogynistic, homophobic, transphobic, or ableist attitudes.
The team is working to see if simply increasing peoples belief in human evolution and our undeniable link to the animal world can help challenge bigotry across the board.
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People Who Don't Believe In Evolution May Be More Prejudiced Against Minorities - IFLScience
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Co-evolution of machine learning and digital technologies to improve monitoring of Parkinson’s disease motor symptoms | npj Digital Medicine -…
Posted: at 8:36 pm
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CIYCE Evolution review: A wireless gaming headset with decent sound and four ways to connect – Techaeris
Posted: at 8:36 pm
The biggest problem with gaming headsets these days is that they often can only connect to some, but not all, of your devices. Oftentimes gamers will have a couple of different headsets to meet their console, PC, and mobile device needs.
Estimated reading time: 9 minutes
The CIYCE Evolution is the latest gaming headset to hit Kickstarter and we were sent an advance review unit. Not only does it offer up some pretty decent sound, but it also has a hidden microphone and offers four different ways to connect. Read on for our full review!
NOTE: Our review unit was a pre-production unit. As such, while nearly final, there may be minor variations between what we reviewed and the final retail product.
The CIYCE Evolution gaming headset we reviewed has the following features and specifications (configurable when ordering):Driver diameter50mmLatency30ms (dongle mode)Surround sound7.1 VirtualImpedance32THD< 0.5%Sensitivity105 3dB at 1KHzSignal-to-noise ratio96dBFrequency20Hz 20KHzBatteryUp to 30 hours on a single chargeCharging timeLess than 1.5 hoursCharging cable length50 cm (~20)3.5mm cable length1.5m (~ 5)ConnectivityUSB dongle (A/C), Bluetooth, 3.5mmCompatibilityPC, Mac, PS4/5, Xbox One/S/X, Nintendo Switch, iPhone, AndroidDimensions203 x 194 x 87mmWeight< 300g
For the most part, wireless gaming headphones follow a pretty similar design with a few minor variations. The CIYCE Evolution wireless gaming headset is black in colour. The main headband is nicely padded and wrapped in a protein leather material. The front and back edges are nicely stitched. At each end of the headband is a solid black plastic piece with the CIYCE logo stamped into the outside and an L or R on the inside. The headband attaches to the earcups by way of a thin metal inverted y piece.
The earcups themselves are oval but moulded and designed to look like an alien head. As a result, the top is a bit flatter while the bottom chin, so to speak, is a bit more rounded and narrower. On both earcups, two eye LEDs are inset on either side of a slightly raised bump. At first, I wasnt sold on this visible line but it does add to the look and makes it easier to locate the center of the earcup for the touch controls. The touch control area is quite small and is centered near the bottom of the eyes more on that in the next section. The left earcup is where youll find the main microphone, 3.5mm audio jack, MFB, power/ANC LED indicator, volume buttons, and Bluetooth indicator LED. The right earcup houses the USB-C charging port, charging LED, and the call answer/hang up/game mode switch.
Attached to the headset are a pair of soft, padded, and super comfortable protein leather earmuffs. The leather wrapping offers better comfort and more soundproofing from the outside world. In addition, CICYE includes a pair of fabric earmuffs in case you prefer those. If you are wearing the headset for longer periods of time and notice your ears getting a bit warm and/or sweaty, you can swap to the more breathable fabric earmuffs easily.
One thing youll notice is that there is no boom microphone on the CIYCE Evolution. That is because the company opted for a hidden microphone on the bottom of the left earcup, which actually makes the design more versatile, especially if you plan on wearing and using it for calls while out in public. There is also another call mic hidden in one of the eyes on the same earcup. There are also four ANC mics, two on each earcup with one being centred towards the top of the outer shell and the other two on the inside of the earcup, located behind the earmuff.
Overall, the CIYCE Evolution wireless gaming headset is a nicely designed, sleek-looking, and lightweight headset.
As mentioned earlier, there are four different ways to connect the CIYCE Evolution wireless gaming headset to your devices. The easiest is with the dual-mode dongle. Small in size, there are two caps on it. Removing one cap will expose the smaller USB-C dongle. Placing this cap back in place and removing the other cap will expose the USB-A side, and also make the dongle slightly longer. NOTE, you do need to have the USB-C portion plugged into the USB-A portion if you are connecting the dongle to your computer via a USB-A port for it to work. You can also connect via Bluetooth or with the included 3.5mm audio cable.
The headset is turned on by holding the MFB button, which is indicated by the triangular play button. Once on, you can use this button to play/pause your current music track or quick press three times to switch between dongle and Bluetooth mode. The volume buttons allow you to control the volume on the headset, as well as skip between tracks. Tapping the left outer shell will toggle the LED light colours while tapping the right outer shell will toggle between two different ANC modes. Finally, holding the button on the right earcup down for two seconds or so will toggle between music and gaming mode.
The only issue I have with how easy the headset is to use is the small touch spots on the outer shells of the headset. These are used to toggle the ANC modes and LED lighting colours on the headset. They are a bit finicky and tricky, but once you found that sweet spot its not too bad.
I did try the headset on multiple devices including a desktop PC, laptop, Xbox Series X, Nintendo Switch, and my Pixel 5 Android smartphone. In each case, I had no issues with connecting or using the headset.
CIYCE has equipped the Evolution wireless gaming headset with pretty powerful 50mm drivers. The headset also features 7.1 virtual surround sound. With bigger drivers and virtual surround sound, one would expect decent sound and these headphones deliver. Not only do they get quite loud, but the sound levels are pretty balanced, with a bit of a skew to the bass end of things. Whether I was using them for gaming in games Call of Duty: Warzone, Forza Horizon 5, and Heroes of the Storm, or listening to music, the audio cues and sound were really good. Better, in fact, than I expected from such an affordably priced pair of headphones. Even better, the latency is low enough that it didnt affect my gameplay in more time-sensitive games like Warzone.
Being a gaming headset, however, it would be nice to have at least some presets to switch between different types of games like FPS, RPG, racing, or sports. It is nice that there is no software required for the headset, and given the fact it already has a button to toggle between music and game mode, it is conceivable this could be expanded to toggle between a few different game (or even music) equalizer settings.
When used with the dongle or in Bluetooth mode, I didnt have any issues with reception on the headset. It did start to cut out once I headed upstairs from my basement, but to be honest, youre going to be fairly close to your gaming setup while gaming. In Bluetooth mode, I was able to hit the usually 30 feet or so with walls in between the headset and my phone before it started to cut out. In an open area, I was able to get even further before it started to.
While the audio is clear, crisp, and nicely balanced, the microphone on our pre-production review unit was somewhat lacking. While it was still clear and crisp, people I was playing with mentioned that I was a bit quiet, as if the microphone was set to two-thirds volume. I found that I had to speak louder, which made me more audible to my teammates but wasnt optimal for people sitting in the same room as me trying to do other things.
I did mention this to CIYCE and they said that it was odd as that was an early issue with the headsets and that the newer review units, as well as the final consumer models, had been updated with a different Bluetooth chip and dongle setup. As it turns out, I wasnt the only one that experienced this issue and another reviewer posted a video comparing the two versions of the review units he looked at. You can check the clip below to hear the comparisons yourself. If it doesnt start at the proper mark, check out around 3:25 in, or click this link to view it on YouTube.
On that note, the score for this section reflects the microphone as I tested it, but the company assured me that the final versions customers will be receiving have the better microphone quality.
Theres almost nothing worse than having your wireless headset die in the middle of a match. CIYCE claims up to 30 hours of battery life on a single charge on the Evolution wireless gaming headset. During our testing, we were able to consistently get near this, allowing for multiple game sessions without having to recharge in between each one. Once they do run out, it takes about an hour-and-a-half to fully recharge them.
CIYCE is expected to retail the Evolution for US$120. Currently, you can back them starting at US$78, which is a pretty solid deal for such a comfortable and decent-sounding headset. You get a lot of the price, including the second set of earmuffs, and four different ways to connect to your devices.
This is an all-or-nothing Kickstarter with a rather modest US$5000 goal. It did just launch today and is anticipated to run for the next 30 days. The headsets are set to ship in May, so you wont have too long to wait if this crowdfunding campaign is successful.
As with any crowdfunding campaign, there is a risk of supporting them. Weve recently heard about several that weve written about that have failed or are having issues. Our reporting on Kickstarter, Indiegogo, or other crowdfunding campaigns does not mean we support or are affiliated with them. Support at your own risk.
Whats included with the CIYCE Evolution wireless gaming headset.
The outer and inner earcup on the CIYCE Evolution wireless gaming headset.
The buttons on the CIYCE Evolution wireless gaming headset.
The padded, protein leather wrapped headband on the CIYCE Evolution wireless gaming headset.
The CIYCE Evolution wireless gaming headset has pretty minimal branding.
The CIYCE Evolution wireless gaming headset a comes with both protein leather and fabric earmuffs.
The dual-USB dongle included with the CIYCE Evolution wireless gaming headset.
If youre looking for a versatile headset that will be suitable for your PC, console, and mobile gaming needs, the CIYCE Evolution wireless gaming headset is a pretty good bet if you dont mind backing a Kickstarter. Not only does it offer multiple connection options, it is lightweight, has great battery life, and is pretty affordable especially at the early bird pricing.
Last Updated on March 18, 2022.
CIYCE EvolutionUS$78+
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Mitogenomics provides new insights into the phylogenetic relationships and evolutionary history of deep-sea sea stars (Asteroidea) | Scientific…
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The evolution of the manual wheelchair – Saipan Tribune
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