Category Archives: Deep Mind
COLUMN: Finding food for your mind and heart – Cape Cod Times
Lawrence Brown, Columnist| Cape Cod Times
Many Cape Codders are experiencing COVID-19 fatigue on steroids. Kids are still having to mask up. Grown-ups have to work, like it or not. But for our seniors, theres an affordable option for continuing education and excellent companionship.
Check out the Academy for Lifelong Learning (ALL) online and find a wide spectrum of courses, including perils of post-modernism, theology, great cities of the world, molecular biology, home improvement, American history, short-story writing and the poetry of Yeats, to name a few.
When I retired after 34 years at Cape Cod Academy, I was already old and it was time. But I suffered from The Bends rapid decompression and I missed my kids terribly. (I still do.) Thats when I was happily recruited by ALL. The program had classes at the community college. My senior students were bright, engaging, with a lifetime of experiences to share.I was hooked.
Then COVID-19 hit and our cohort had special reasons to take care. We retreated to Zoom. As the pandemic refuses to let up, were on it still.Compared to sitting around a big table together, Zoom has its share of disappointments. Our companions are credit-card-sized boxes on a screen.Much of the nuance of in-person conversation is stripped away. I know some folks have trouble adjusting to it.
But consider the alternative, which is nothing.When the pandemic first hit, our screens held the faces of men and women whod just lost marriage partners spanning most of a lifetime. What could be worse than grief wrapped in loneliness?Here, we had company.
The ALLprogram favors discussions over lectures. My last class was titled Becoming America.ALL offers six- and 12-week classes that meet once a week. I prefer the six-week rhythm.We looked at the historical and cultural currents that made us what we are.
To take one example: the stunning inventiveness of Americans.
In the 1800s, American farmers essentially had the same technologies available to them that farmers had in ancient civilizations: iron and wooden equipment with animal power.Typically, one farmer could feed six people so most people were farmers.
Then, with the same technologies, American farmers invented the horse-drawn combine and harvester, the steel-edged plow. Suddenly a farmer could cultivate up to 20 times as much land or feed 20 times as many people. Any civilization could have done it, but after all that time, Americans did it first.
Of course, there are less heroic chapters in our story, too. But for every cruelty, thereve been countless voices of protest insisting that to be great, America must be moral as well as mighty. History isnt just something we learn.History is something we have to wrestle with.So on our sixth and final session, two sections (almost 50 people) spent the whole time sharing the collected wisdom and perspective of the group.
Where might we be 25 years out?Optimists hoped the U.S. and China will have established some kind of dtente, short of war.Others worried that our internal divisions, fanned by social media and lying politicians, will have overwhelmed us.Some worried America could be driven into mediocrity by the very politicians who promised greatness.
Francoise, with a huge clan still in France, observed that while children and grandchildren were seeking livelihoods across the globe, none were coming here. Too dysfunctional. We do not always see ourselves as others see us.
We listed the elements that people thought made up our greatest strengths: Our system of higher education, our flare for innovation, the diversity that offers us multiple perspectives and a broad national palate … our democracy, freedom … and tied to the American Dream what Jo-Anne called the idea of America. Its still a powerful force around the world, she said.
But each class, independently, called out threats to the survival of each gift: a growing hostility to education and expertise … increasing hostility to cultural and racial diversity … the increasing concentration of wealth, and the death of social and political comity that despite differences of opinion has knitted us together into a single nation.
What we got was an unexpected warning from our elders that America was at risk of committing cultural and political suicide eyes wide shut and blinded by a mutually exclusive self-righteousness.Maybe well continue to blame each other all the way down.
But maybe not. There was still a deep pride in all weve accomplished together and an inability to believe we might really throw it all away.
Where else these days can we find opportunities for discussions like these?
Lawrence Brown of Centerville is a columnist for the Cape Cod Times.Email him at columnresponse@gmail.com.
Read more:
COLUMN: Finding food for your mind and heart - Cape Cod Times
Peacemakers Butterrflies may be revealed by some weird DC comics – Polygon
After murdering his way through Corto Maltese in James Gunns The Suicide Squad, Chris Smith, aka Peacemaker, is back on screens in his own expectedly brutal HBO Max show. Though hes not a complicated man, the series introduces a rather complex mystery with one question that looming large: Who are the mysterious Butterflies, and which DC villain is pulling their strings?
While the mysterious insect-themed threat might not be directly from the comics, there are actually some pretty obvious and deep cut potential inspirations
From those with butterfly in their name to those with mind-controlling powers and the most likely of all ... an alien queen with possession powers and a passion for insects; lets dig into just whos behind the Butterflies.
[Ed. note: This piece contains spoilers for the first three episodes of Peacemaker.]
In order to stay out of prison, Peacemaker has once again been enlisted for one of Amanda Wallers nefarious schemes. This time, rather than a giant starfish that takes over peoples minds, he has to take down a series of mind-controlled killers known as Butterflies.
Not much is known about them, but by the third episode there has been one key reveal: inside each of the Butterflys heads maybe acting as transmitters? are some actual real life scary butterflies. That makes the question of who is behind it all a little harder to answer, but it does open up some interesting avenues.
While your mind might have immediately gone to the 50s Quality Comics (now owned by DC) character Madame Butterfly when the Butterflies were first mentioned, shes definitely an outlier. First debuting in 1948s Modern Comics #78, she was a Japanese supervillain introduced as an antagonist for the Blackhawk Squadron. While Gunn loves a deep-cut pull, theres not much aside from the name to link her to the Butterflies. So lets move on.
Next up are the DC characters with mind control powers. Seeing as a major part of the Butterflies is that they are mind-controlled humans, these characters would be an obvious bet.
First up and most likely of the mind-controllers is Mister Mind, the founder of the Monster Society of Evil. An incredibly intelligent caterpillar, Mister Mind can control minds, technology, and more across the universe. Created by C.C. Beck and Otto Binder, Mister Mind first appeared in 1943s Captain Marvel Adventures #22. The nature of him being a caterpillar makes his connection to the Butterflies even more intriguing. But he was also a villain in the recent Shazam movie, so that makes him slightly less likely to appear here. Also, he wouldnt necessarily need technology or wireless devices to control the minds of his human minions.
You cant talk about DC mind control characters without mentioning Doctor Psycho. While he might have been a less well known character since he popped up in 1943s Wonder Woman #5, his regular appearances in the Harley Quinn animated show have changed that. Peacemakers first Butterfly being a woman made Psycho a prime contender as hes been defined by his misogyny. In both the comics and the animated series, Psycho takes pleasure in using his powers to control and manipulate women. But then Goff the Butterfly established that the mind-controlled killers are not all women, making him less likely. So while his mind control powers make him a contender, hes low on the list.
So if its not any of these mentalists then who? Get ready to meet the Insect Queen.
After episode 3s big reveal, Insect Queen seems like shes the most likely one to take the crown of being Peacemakers big bad. While the first two iterations of the superhero mantle were held by none other than Lana Lang, there is a third version of the Insect Queen who makes a lot of sense for Gunns deep cut tastes.
Introduced in 2008s Superman #671, the insectoid alien had plans on world domination. That seems to fit with whoever is behind the Butterflies in Peacemaker. And episode 3 confirmed that there are some likely alien shenanigans going on. How else do you explain those strange purple tentacles? Add to that the fact that this Insect Queen had the powers to possess people, something that could explain the mind-controlled army in Peacemaker. So what was her plan and how could it play into the series?
As she came from a planet where only one queen could reign, Insect Queen decided to find a new planet to colonize and make her own all-hive. That could definitely be the case here, especially as whoever is in control of the Butterflies in Peacemaker appears to have been creating an army of what are essentially worker/killer drones. The gross-out comedy aspects of Peacemaker make this dreadful fate seem pretty likely. And the nature of her Butterflies becoming killers ready to take down any humans adds fuel to the colony theory: clear out the existing population before making her stake on the world and its resources.
But will any of these prove to be the mastermind behind the Butterflies? Knowing James Gunn therell likely be a lot of twists, turns, red herrings, and hair metal before the truth is revealed.
The first three episodes of Peacemaker are now streaming on HBO Max. New episodes drop every Thursday.
Read this article:
Peacemakers Butterrflies may be revealed by some weird DC comics - Polygon
Pioneering neurosurgeon explored the mind’s mysteries and left behind secrets – The Globe and Mail
Dr. William Cone met Wilder Penfield at a New York hospital in 1924 and struck a friendship that, a decade later, would lead them to create a neuroscience institute in Montreal.Osler Library of the History of Medicine, McGill University
Shortly after midnight on the morning of May 4, 1959, Dr. William Cone lay his head on a pillow he had placed on the floor of his office in the Montreal Neurological Institute. Things were quiet at the hospital. No one would guess what had happened until dawn.
The Neuro, housed in a Gothic-looking stone fortress on the lower slopes of Mount Royal, was arguably the worlds most prestigious centre for the study and treatment of the brain. Cone was its co-founder and top surgeon.
Twenty-five years earlier, when he opened the institute with his mentor and closest friend Wilder Penfield, the brain was the deepest kind of mystery. Now, a quarter-century later, they and their colleagues had finally begun to let light in on some of the dark chambers of the mind: how memories were stored; where pleasure came from; even some of them believed the location of the soul.
One puzzle this team of brilliant scientists had not begun to solve, however, was William Cone. He was their unquestioned leader, The Boss. But there was also something remote, unfathomable, and sad about the 61-year-old. Especially in later years, he seemed barely to sleep and preferred to work at night, performing elaborate nocturnal surgeries that he called symphonies.
Even as his moods darkened, Cones skill never wavered. Some fellow physicians thought he was the best surgeon they had ever seen.
Patients adored him. His round-the-clock care and warm baritone voice seemed to be full of compassion for their seizures and broken spines. That God, one of them later wrote. That wonderful man.
The truth was, he understood their suffering better than they knew.
On that lightless morning in May, with his desk in order and his patients safe in their beds, he put a dose of cyanide to his lips and swallowed.
I learned about William Cone just over a year ago, while I was preparing to move to Montreal. The MNI is still an important local institution and I wanted to know more about it. Wilder Penfield remains its icon with a street named after him and a Heritage Minute in his honour but as I read about the pair, it became clear that Dr. Cone was every bit as important to their world-changing institute, although he has been largely forgotten outside its walls.
Soon I was trying to learn everything I could about this overlooked medical hero, to better understand how an intense, kindly man, who came as close as anyone in his lifetime to sounding the depths of the human brain, had so been overcome by his own.
Today, many may remember Wilder Penfield from this 1991 Heritage Minute. It dramatized his treatment of a seizure patient in 1934, the debut year of the Montreal Neurological Institute that he co-founded with Dr. Cone.
William Vernon Cone witnessed the glory and the sorrow of practicing medicine at an early age. He was born in 1897 and raised in tiny Conesville, Iowa, where he grew up idolizing his grandfather, a country doctor who made house calls by horse and buggy, or sleigh in winter, to treat fevers or deliver babies. When William was a small child, however, his father contracted a fatal case of typhoid after drinking from the tin cup of a public water pump. There was nothing the Old Doc could do.
William Cone emerged from a turbulent upbringing as an apparently well-adjusted young man. He was thought to have a beautiful singing voice and was in demand as a performer at weddings, said his nephew, J. Richard Cone, before going off to the University of Iowa, where he wrestled and boxed while studying medicine.
His life took a decisive turn in 1924, when he arrived as a research fellow at New Yorks Presbyterian Hospital and met Wilder Penfield. The two men were a study in contrasts: Wilder Penfield tall and handsome, a former Rhodes Scholar and Princeton football standout, with a charming twinkle in his eye; William Cone stocky and short, with a toothy smile and a way of folding in on himself when being photographed every inch the sidekick.
For all their apparent differences, the two men bonded quickly and intensely. Dr. Cone joined the hospitals department of surgery that year, working essentially as Dr. Penfields apprentice, and began operating on the tumours, cases of water on the brain, and New York City car crash victims that came their way.
Neurosurgery in the 1920s was a brutal business that involved gruesome guesswork and often killed patients, as Dr. Penfield later admitted in his memoir. Despite these obstacles, or because of them, Dr. Cones approach to the work was tireless as though he were trying to outhustle death. At first, his boss was delighted. His young assistant seemed to double my potential, Dr. Penfield said.
Their friendship blossomed, too. While housesitting for his colleague, Dr. Cone wrote him a letter: I am enjoying every minute of it but miss you a great deal. Soon their wives were friends too, and Dr. Cone was Uncle Bill to Wilder Penfields children.
Wilder Penfield and Dr. Cone.OSLER LIBRARY OF THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE, MCGILL UNIVERSITY
The pair co-founded The Neuro in 1934. It would encompass every aspect of the study of the brain: a working hospital where the sick could be diagnosed, treated, and operated on; a school for the training of the worlds best neuroscientists; and a massive laboratory, where patients could be healed but also studied.
It was a place whose ambitions were captured in a quotation from Dr. Penfield himself, inscribed next to the ambulance driveway: The problem of neurology is to understand man himself. Nothing like it existed in the world.
The building, with its small windows and extreme proportions, looked more like Count Draculas castle than a modern place of healing. But the Neuro was also a state-of-the-art temple to modern science. Dr. Cone would accept nothing less: the younger doctor was forever writing to Dr. Penfield from Chicago or Berlin about new equipment he wanted to buy. The institute came to reflect these high-end tastes and lofty goals.
The Neuro was also a global institution, and Drs. Cone and Penfield sought out medical skill wherever they could find it, among the female neurosurgeons of the Soviet Union, refugees from the Spanish Civil War, or the French-Canadian doctors in their own backyard. They took you no matter if you were polka-dotted or landed from Mars, said Mark Preul, a neurosurgeon in Arizona who trained at The Neuro. They looked for one thing and that was talent.
For decades, Dr. Cones own university explicitly discriminated against Jews, enforcing a 10-per-cent cap on the share of Jewish students in the faculties of medicine and law. But he was absolutely free of prejudice, said Daniel Slatkin, a young Jewish man whom Dr. Cone successfully recommended for McGill medical school.
Because many U.S. schools refused to accept Black medical students, meanwhile, some came to study at The Neuro instead. Dr. Cone trained two of the first three African-American neurosurgeons and proudly called himself the grandfather of neurosurgery at Howard University, the historically Black college in Washington, D.C., according to William Feindel and Richard Leblanc in The Wounded Brain Healed: The Golden Age of the Montreal Neurological Institute, 1934-1984.
A London hospital lies in ruins after an air raid during the Second World War.The Associated Press
In the spring of 1940, Dr. Cone sailed across the Atlantic to serve as head wartime surgeon at the new Number 1 Canadian Neurological Hospital in England. The Battle of Britain had begun by summer and casualties were mounting. Dr. Penfield sent him a tersely protective note shortly after he left: Good luck to you and dodge anything you see coming. Their letters for the next two years were often signed, Love.
As the bombs of the Blitz began crashing down on London, patients came streaming in to Dr. Cones hospital in rural Basingstoke, often with little hope of recovery. For a time we just got the hard ones almost hopeless things, he wrote to Dr. Penfield. At one point he saw 550 neurological cases in the course of three months.
Virtually every medical person who came across Dr. Cone was amazed by the crew-cut Iowan with the shy gaze and inexhaustible hunger for work. One professor at the University of Manchester reported back to Dr. Penfield, I cant make out whether Bill Cone is the greatest surgeon I have ever met or whether I am just a damn fool.
Dr. Penfield should have radiated pride, but instead he was distinctly uneasy about his former pupils sudden renown, writes Jefferson Lewis, Wilder Penfields grandson, in his biography of the great doctor, Something Hidden. He was desperate to take over for Dr. Cone in England, but kept stumbling in his efforts, thanks to a failed military exam and a worrying chest X-ray. In early 1941, he drafted an abject note to Dr. Cone sorry am helpless before striking it out and writing a braver, more formal message. Dr. Cone consoled his friend, in turn, reversing the dynamic of master and apprentice that had governed their relationship for fifteen years. Please please take care of yourself, he wrote. There is still a lot we have to do together.
Dr. Cone, second from right, spent a year and a half in England during the Second World War.Osler Library of the History of Medicine, McGill University
When Dr. Cone finally returned to The Neuro after 18 months overseas, he seemed more determined than ever to throw himself into endless labour.
In England he had faced the awful toll of war with only the roughest surgical tools at his disposal. Hes seeing all of these terrible head and spinal cord injuries, and what can you do? said Richard Leblanc, a neurosurgeon at the institute who has written extensively about its history. The instruments that you have at the time are basically 19th-century instruments.
Horrified by the lot of his patients, he began a second life in the workshop and never really emerged. He devised an apparatus of elastic bands and fish hooks with the barbs filed down for pulling back scalp and muscle during operations, and developed surgical instruments powered by dry nitrogen based on experiments with discarded aircraft parts during the war, according to an homage written by a group of fellow neurosurgeons, including Drs. Preul and Feindel, in the early 1990s. The simultaneous delicacy and brutality of the field is evoked by some of his designs, like the Cone-Barton Ice-Tongs.
The easiest way to lose a patient in those days was through infection Cone knew this all too well so his endless tinkering was matched by an obsessive quest for hygiene. Requiring his residents to rinse their mouths with a foul-tasting antibiotic called chloramphenicol was only one step in a fanatical regime to stamp out killer microbes.
No aspect of Dr. Cones profession was beneath him; he embraced the kind of basic nursing that other doctors shunned. He took bedpans and gave enemas and developed new procedures for handling catheters. He preferred to reposition patients in their beds himself and even helped with tube feeding, during which he insisted on a nutritious (if not necessarily delicious) slurry of corn flakes, cheese, eggs, baby food meat, vegetables, cocoa and sugar.
Patients were often surprised to find such a lofty figure getting down into the muck with them. When a woman named Rae Hershenkopf came to The Neuro in 1945 with a broken back, Dr. Cone tickled her feet with his keys to test the feeling in her extremities, then laughed his gorgeous laugh when she shrieked in surprise. Her surgery happened in the middle of a hot summer night, in a room with a tiny ceiling fan they barely felt, and she watched as he scrubbed down his chrome operating table all by himself with a big hard brush. Sweat poured down his face as he worked around her in a kind of careful dance. I felt horrible for him, she wrote. I was crying and not for myself.
His work habits, always intense, grew more and more compulsive. After eating dinner with his wife on weeknights, he would return to the Institute to make the rounds, often staying until morning. Cone would operate all day he had energy like a diesel engine and he expected everyone to keep up with him, said Joseph Hanaway, a neurologist who trained at the Neuro in the 1950s.
He and his wife Avis an effervescent, blonde-haired woman from Iowa had no children, and tended to treat The Neuro as their family. Cone saw certain young doctors as the sons he never had, but Avis was often left to entertain Willys Boys after her husband had returned to the hospital for the night. She struck some people around The Neuro as a lonely figure.
Dr. Penfield, right, at a Canadian Club luncheon in Toronto.John Boyd/The Globe and Mail
Although he was manically driven, Dr. Cone wasnt ambitious in a conventional sense. It was Dr. Penfield who continued to receive most of the credit for The Neuros success, which included leaps forward in the treatment of epilepsy, the study of memory, and mapping the brain. There had always been a sharp asymmetry in their relationship and it only grew over time, until there were effectively two schools within the institute: a Penfield school and a Cone school, each with its own disciples, priorities, and strengths. Dr. Penfield was a pious man with an almost mystical sense of purpose, desperate to find the seat of the soul and interested in illnesses, like epilepsy, that promised rich experimental and even spiritual insights. Dr. Cone had an earthier approach to his work: he wanted to make people better, above all, and took on far more of the day-to-day patient care. Dr. Penfield was the captain of the ship, said Mark Preul, while Dr. Cone was its engine room.
The final rupture in their friendship arrived in the fall of 1953, when Dr. Cone learned that Dr. Penfield had struck a nominating committee to replace him as director of The Neuro. This was not how the passing of the sceptre was supposed to go. Everyone at the institute had always assumed the Boss would succeed the Chief one day; Dr. Cone himself believed the top job would be his when Dr. Penfield retired.
More painful still, Dr. Penfield announced his retirement at a meeting in The Neuros amphitheatre without telling Dr. Cone first. As the head nurse Eileen Flanagan later wrote, Dr. Cone felt he had been betrayed. After appealing to the university administration to block his colleagues departure, Dr. Cone threatened to quit. Stunned by his partners reaction, Dr. Penfield finally relented and agreed to remain as director part-time. The institute simply couldnt run without its Boss; even in the lowest moment of his career, he had at least proven that.
Dr. Cone chats with head nurse Eileen Flanagan, left, and Ruth Reitman, left. His compassionate, round-the-clock care endeared him to patients throughout his career. But he also picked up a reputation for moodiness.Osler Library of the History of Medicine, McGill University
As the 1950s wore on, Dr. Cone suffered increasingly from what we would now probably call clinical depression.
He had a longstanding reputation for moodiness, but after his falling-out with Dr. Penfield, William Cones symptoms seemed to get worse. He would lock himself in his office for hours and come out to do his rounds at 2 a.m. His deep, pained sighs grew more frequent.
Colleagues at The Neuro didnt know how to respond. These brilliant explorers of the human brain were often adrift in the face of other minds, not least each others. The resident Mark Rayport later recalled how in Dr. Cones prolonged, frequent depressive spells, when he stalked the halls of the Institute with his head and prominent nose facing down, the apparent animal resemblance gave rise to a system for rating his moods on a scale of Moose 1 to 5.
In his upswings, his eyes still sparkled and his smile took on a mischievous cast. He loved nurses and they loved him back. When he was preparing a reluctant vacation to Sea Island, Ga., to recover his health during the war, Eileen Flanagan sent him flowers. He wrote back, giddily unpunctuated, that she was to be both scolded and thanked for sending me the lovely roses I did enjoy them.
Still, depression was a dark, uncharted ocean then, still not widely diagnosed as an illness and with no effective therapy. The first tricyclic antidepressant drugs were only just being developed. When he was at his lowest, there was no way to reach him. Those were terrible times to be depressed, said Richard Leblanc. Suicide was not unusual for lack of treatment.
Four days shy of his 62nd birthday, Dr. Cone entered The Neuro for the last time.
He had planned his death carefully, like everything he did. The cyanide he would ingest came from the institutes pathology department, said Dr. Preul. Dr. Cone also made sure to finish his portion of The Neuros annual report, which showed how hard and how well he had worked. In the previous year, Neuro staff had performed 971 operations, with only two infections.
Dr. Penfield was shattered by the loss of his friend. In the following months, he tried desperately to understand what had happened, filling a diary with thoughts about Dr. Cones death. The truth always eluded him.
Eileen Flanagan, who knew both men well, later wrote down her assessment of the tragedy on a stray piece of paper filed away in the institutes archives. Dr. Penfield, she said, never understood that it was his alienation from Dr. Cone which made him so unhappy.
The details of Dr. Cone's death would be shrouded in secrecy for decades afterward.OSLER LIBRARY OF THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE, MCGILL UNIVERSITY
From the morning Dr. Cones body was discovered, The Neuro treated his suicide essentially as a family secret. They purposely suppressed that idea, said Dr. Hanaway. They didnt want anyone to think there were any problems. This approach was not uncommon, but it added a layer of posthumous confusion to the misunderstanding that plagued William Cone during his life.
Even within the Institute, the secrecy surrounding his death led to rumours, some more credible than others. Many residents believed Dr. Cone had shot himself. Others spoke about his ghost creeping around the halls at night. The real circumstances of the suicide werent revealed until 1981, when Jefferson Lewis published his biography of Wilder Penfield.
Still, in death, Dr.Cone had a lasting impact on the study of the brain, made all the more poignant by his personal struggles. Many of his surgical innovations were still in use decades later and his bedside manner what the resident Harold Rosen called his tender loving care for the patient as a whole individual remained an inspiration for doctors across North America.
With money from the Bill Cone Memorial Fund endowed by gifts from grateful patients one of his successors, William Feindel, set about improving The Neuros brain imaging technology and developing new ways to use it. With PET scanners, researchers at the institute were eventually able to study the neural distribution of serotonin, a neurotransmitter that is key to regulating mood allowing them to better understand the brains of people who suffer in the way Dr. Cone suffered.
Today, even if he is mostly forgotten by the world at large, his memory is alive at The Neuro. A wall-sized mural in the institute shows its co-founders surrounded by famous neurologists of the past and captures the contrast between the friends. Dr. Penfield, wearing a pin-striped suit, looks upward in classical profile, gazing toward the future or the heavens. Dr. Cone is dressed in blue, his sad eyes looking down at a patient.
See the original post here:
Pioneering neurosurgeon explored the mind's mysteries and left behind secrets - The Globe and Mail
Bill Kirby: January brings the challenge of crossing the international dateline – The Augusta Chronicle
"I just hate sitting and writing I had to do that in school."
Saul Kripke
Welcome to one of each new year's most pervasive challenges, a task that should bethe easiest of January's list of transitions.
Take a deep breath, slow down and start writing the date as "2022."
This should be simple, but for many, it is not. Count me in that majority.
A few daysin, and I've missed the mark several times.
It's not that I have a particular fondness for "2021." I am simply a man of habits, most of them bad.
That and I have always had underperforming penmanship and never cared to improve when I no longer had a teacher grading it.
Today I also lack patience, particularly when writing checks, and want to get the task over as quickly as possible. My hand is rushing through the motions and just at the end of that dateline, my mind is probably heading somewhere else.
The result is hastily scrawled "2021."
The good news is that this year's mistake writing a 1 instead of a 2, is pretty easy to fix. Just add a horizontal base to the 1 by drawing a small line to the right. Then put a little cap on the top of the 1, sort of like a reversed "C".
Next year will be even easier converting a tardy 2 from 2022 into a 3 for 2023. You just add the reversed "C" to the top.
Trouble returns in two years. Turning a 3 into the 4 needed for 2024 is difficult. Likewise, converting a 4 to a 5 is a stretch. It's pretty easy the following year to make a 5 a 6 in 2026. Just close the base loop. But here comes trouble 12 months later when making a 6 into a 7.
We catch a break making 7 into 8 in 2028, just use a backslash stroke and seal the bottom.
But dressing up 8 to 9 is a mess, as is 9 to 0.
On the bright side, bank checks will probably be long gone by 2029 and 2030, as more and more financial and legal transactions become digital.
I see it coming. In fact, I had to complete several legal document signings in the fall involving out-of-town family matters.
One computer service even had me type the name I used in my signature, then it asked me to pick out my "handwriting style" from several choices.
I clicked through the selections and found one that was almost a dead ringer for my written signature.
After that, all I had to do was click the signature lines, and the written signature appeared. It was pretty easy and pretty amazing.
New technology, I've noticed, arrives like a new year, showing up whether you're ready to change or not.
Bill Kirby has reported, photographed and commented on life in Augusta and Georgiafor 45 years.
Read the original:
Bill Kirby: January brings the challenge of crossing the international dateline - The Augusta Chronicle
Bernard Tomic reveals Novak Djokovic comment that stuck into his mind – Tennis World USA
Former world No. 17 Bernard Tomic revealed Novak Djokovic approached him in the locker room following their clash at the 2019 Miami Masters. Djokovic, ranked at No. 1 in the world, saw off Tomic 7-6 (2) 6-2 in the Miami second round.
The comment Djokovic made to Tomic after the match stuck deep into the Australian's memory. "I still remember the one thing he said to me," Tomic told The Sydney Morning Herald. "He said to me, 'Bernard, if I had half your talent, where would I be?'"
Tomic, who was once considered as one of the most talented players on the Tour, was tipped by many to win multiple Grand Slams and become a world No.
1. "[My dad's] expectations of me as a player were always too high," Tomic told A Current Affair. "Being No.1, winning 10-20 grand slams there was a lot of pressure put on me from my father. "It's not easy.
People don't see this constant world of pressure, pressure, pressure. At times, I didn't want to play tennis. "It was not something I enjoyed 100 per cent doing. But I was beating everyone and with winning comes a lot of good feelings with emotions as a young kid.
And it grew on me." Also, Tomic said he will never raise his kids the way his dad raised him. "I'm still scared of my dad," Tomic admitted. "I wouldn't want to be raising my kid the way I was raised.
"He's whacked balls at me, racquets and stuff. I mean, the guy is a crazy man, for sure. But he made me who I am today. It was discipline at 100 per cent. "When you look at it now, in a way I wouldn't raise anyone like that.
But I didn't know any better. Parents can be a little bit you know? He's a good man and has a good heart and he put a lot of time and effort into making me who I am."
Follow this link:
Bernard Tomic reveals Novak Djokovic comment that stuck into his mind - Tennis World USA
Nobel Laureates to discuss the future of science at Vietnams VinFuture Award Week – Yahoo Finance
HANOI, VIETNAM --News Direct-- Vingroup
HANOI, VIETNAM - Media OutReach - 14 January 2022 - As part of the VinFuture Award Week (Jan 18 21, in Hanoi), the "Science for Life" Symposium will see some of humanitys greatest thinkers give detailed predictions about the future of mankind.
Slated for January 19, the symposium, covering three main areas: Energy, Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Health, is considered a must-go event for outstanding minds in global science and technology, who will be attending the VinFuture Awards Week from January 18-22.
The "Future of Energy" session is a unique event in Vit Nam that brings together two Nobel laureates, Sir Konstantin S. Novoselov and Professor Grard Mourou, as well as the owner of the 2010 Millennium Technology Prize - Sir Richard Henry Friend.
Professor Novoselov, the world's youngest Nobel laureate in Physics, created graphene known as a super material, which is predicted to become a mainstream material in the future.
Professor Mourou, the 2018 Nobel laureate in Physics, is considered the "father" of ultra-short pulse laser amplification technology - a technique used in eye surgeries for millions of people each year.
Meanwhile, Professor Friend is recognised worldwide as his research has laid the foundation for the birth of OLED screens - a common part in electronic devices such as televisions and smartphones today.
At the symposium, questions about the most important alternative energy sources in the future like How to make energy cleaner, cheaper and easily accessible to the vast majority of people around the world? will be addressed. The topic interests both the scientific community and business circles.
At the "Future of Artificial Intelligence" session, the world's leading scientists such as Dr. Padmanabhan Anandan, Prof. Jennifer Tour Chayes, Dr. Xuedong David Huang, and Dr. Bui Hai Hung will provide an overview of the impact of AI on people's lives, how to create competitive advantages, close the gap between countries as well and ease potential risks or consider ethical aspects.
Story continues
The event will bring Vietnamese scholars and public a rare opportunity to meet and talk directly with famous names coming from technology giants such as Microsoft, Google or Adobe.
Dr. Padmanabhan Anandan is former founder and CEO of Microsoft Research India, vice president at Adobe Research, with expertise in computer vision, visual motion analytics, video surveillance and 3D scene modelling.
Jennifer Tour Chayes is the managing director of three Microsoft Research centers in Cambridge, New York and Montreal. Microsoft Corporation Chief Technology Officer Xuedong David Huang currently owns 170 patents, and plays an important role in robot research that can see, hear, understand and support human life best way. Meanwhile, Dr. Bui Hai Hung used to hold important positions at Google DeepMind and Adobe Research, AI Center, and SRI International.
Attracting the most attention is probably the "Future of Health" session, where health spellbinders will discuss the progress of medicine, responsibilities in the field of health and issues surrounding the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic and its variants.
Notably, the scientists laying the foundation for COVID-19 vaccines technology will reveal the journey of a nearly 30-year preparation to produce a "weapon" in the fight against the global pandemic. These include Prof. Pieter Rutter Cullis, pioneer in gene therapy using lipid nanoparticle (LNP) technology; Drew Weissman and Dr. Katalin Kariko, co-recipient of the Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences 2021 with mRNA technology that shortens the production time of vaccines from years to just months.
Attending the symposium, the South African-born professor married couples, Salim Abdool Karim and Quarraisha Abdool Karim, will also share information about the "miracle" Tenofovir. This is considered a breakthrough invention that helps reduce the amount of HIV in the blood and reduces the risk of AIDS-related illnesses and other dangerous infectious diseases.
Right after the "Science for Life" Symposium, the winners of the prestigious VinFuture Prize will be announced in the award ceremony held at 8:10pm on January 20 at the Hanoi Opera House.
The organizers have carefully prepared a COVID-19 test for all guests participating in VinFuture events, in order to ensure a high level of safety.
VinFuture Science Week has four main activities:
- January 18, 2022: Conversation with VinFuture Prize Council and Pre-Screening Committee, where famous scientists share stories of passion, achievements and sacrifices of scientists.
- January 19, 2022: The "Science for Life" Symposium has three discussion sessions, each session will last 90 minutes with the topics: Future of Energy, Future of Artificial Intelligence and Future of Global Health.
- January 20, 2022: Inaugural Award Ceremony of VinFuture Prize at Hanoi Opera House at 8:10pm (live broadcast on VTV1 and major domestic and international platforms).
- January 21, 2022: Scientific Dialogue with the VinFuture Prize Laureates.
Vingroup
View source version on newsdirect.com: https://newsdirect.com/news/nobel-laureates-to-discuss-the-future-of-science-at-vietnams-vinfuture-award-week-976079978
Follow this link:
Nobel Laureates to discuss the future of science at Vietnams VinFuture Award Week - Yahoo Finance
Valentino Khan Shares Heartwarming Story of Bob Saget’s Reaction to "Deep Down Low" – EDM.com
The tragic passing of Bob Saget over the weekend has inspired several high-profile electronic music artists to share their stories of meeting the late comedy icon.
Who would America's Dad have had such a curiosity and appreciation for in dance music? Saget made a particularly meaningful impact on renowned producer Valentino Khan, who shared a heartwarming tribute on Instagram. Khan explains he was playing a set at Encore Las Vegas when the Full House star approached the booth to introduce himself. The two exchanged pleasantries and although it was brief, Khan said that Saget struck him as particularly kind.
Later in the evening before leaving the club, Saget returned to the DJ booth to show Khan he'd been trying to identify his global hit, "Deep Down Low," on his phone and was surprised to find the track's creator was standing right in front of him.
Saget excitedly tells Khan, "I was trying to find out what song was playing and its you!"
Khan says the moment left him mind-blown. The fact that Saget would take the time to go out of his way to share such a genuine reaction for the mere sake of it certainly speaks volumes about his character.
Khan's takeaway from the experience is simple, but timeless. "If you can make a positive impact on someone even for a small moment in this life youre doing it right," he wrote.
Facebook: facebook.com/ValentinoKhanTwitter: twitter.com/ValentinoKhanInstagram: instagram.com/valentinokhanSpotify: https://spoti.fi/2ZgLEkr
Read the original here:
Valentino Khan Shares Heartwarming Story of Bob Saget's Reaction to "Deep Down Low" - EDM.com
Move your body for a healthy mind: Health experts weigh in on winter activity – WKOW
This winter stay active so you can boost your mental health
MADISON (WKOW) -- Health and wellness experts remind us theres a powerful correlation between mental and physical health.Darkerand colderdayscan causeyou tofeel more fatigued and tired all the timeand thiscausesstress and anxiety to increase.
However, aquick workout at the gym,or even a brisk walk around your neighborhoodcould help decrease these symptoms and improve your mood.
Studies have shown that a lack of physical activity will actually make your mental health and your stress and anxiety levels worse, says Devin Peterson,ahealth and wellness coach atQuickHITFitness Labs.So even though this time of year can be very difficult to feel motivated to get exercise in, it's very important to get that physical activity in there, because if you don't,it will amplify those negative feelings.
Petersonrecommendstrying toreframe your thoughtswhen it comes to exercise.Instead of telling yourself this is something youhaveto do on top of your busy schedule, think ofphysical activityas something you know will give you a boost of energy.
Also, your workout doesn't have to be an hour and a halfevery daytosee results. Think about spending a maximum an hour a week of exercisingin 20-minute chunks. Thatshouldfeel more doable.
You can stay activebystretching and making sure you hityourentire body.Hold the position for 10-20 seconds and focusontaking long,deep breaths.Thisis agood way to feelmore calm and relaxed.
Healthexperts also recommend finding someone to exercise with. This helps you to be accountable. Also, studies show the social interaction helps reduce symptoms ofdepressionand anxiety.
Separatingyourself from those stressful factors or your busy schedule and then just doing something that you enjoy for a little bit of time each dayhelps, says Peterson.That's a big thing that will help improve the mental healthandthen might make it easier for you to feel more motivated todo some physical activity.
Visit link:
Move your body for a healthy mind: Health experts weigh in on winter activity - WKOW
Alibaba ponders its crystal ball to spy coming advances in AI and silicon photonics – The Register
Alibaba has published a report detailing a number of technology trends the China-based megacorp believes will make an impact across the economy and society at large over the next several years. This includes the use of AI in scientific research, adoption of silicon photonics, the integration of terrestrial, and satellite data networks among others.
The Top Ten Technology Trends report was produced by Alibaba's DAMO Academy, set up by the firm in 2017 as a blue-sky scientific and technological research outfit. DAMO hit the headlines recently with hints of a novel chip architecture that merges processing and memory.
Among the trends listed in the DAMO report, AI features more than once. In science, DAMO believes that AI-based approaches will make new scientific paradigms possible, thanks to the ability of machine learning to process massive amounts of multi-dimensional and multi-modal data, and solve complex scientific problems. The report states that AI will not only accelerate the speed of scientific research, but also help discover new laws of science, and is set to be used as a production tool in some basic sciences.
As evidence, the report cites that fact that Google's DeepMind has already used AI to prove and propose new mathematical theorems and assisted mathematicians in areas involving complex mathematics.
One unusual area where DAMO sees AI having an impact is in the integration of energy from renewable sources into existing power networks. Energy generated from renewable sources will vary depending on weather conditions, the report states, which are unpredictable and may change rapidly, thereby posing challenges for integration of renewable energies such as maintaining a stable output.
DAMO states that AI will be essential to solving these challenges, in particular being able to provide more accurate predictions of renewable energy capacity based on weather forecasts. Intelligent scheduling using deep learning techniques should be able to optimise scheduling policies across energy sources such as wind, solar, and hydroelectric.
The use of big data and deep learning technologies will be able to monitor grid equipment and predict failures, according to the report, so perhaps in the near future you will blame the AI when the power cuts out just as you are trying to binge-watch Line of Duty.
DAMO also believes that we will see a shift in the evolution of AI models, away from large-scale pre-trained models such as BERT and GPT-3 that require huge amounts of processing power to operate and therefore consume a lot of energy, to smaller-scale models that will handle learning and inferencing in downstream applications.
According to this view, the cognitive inferencing in foundational models will be delivered to small-scale models, which are then applied to downstream applications. This will result in separately evolved branches from the main model that have developed their own perception, decision-making and execution results from operating in their separate scenarios, which are then fed back into the foundational models.
In this way, the foundational models continually evolve through feedback and learning to build an organic intelligent cooperative system, the report claims.
There are challenges to this vision, of course, and the DAMO report states that any such system needs to address the collaboration between large and small-scale models, and the interpretability and causal inference issues of foundational models, as the small-scale models will be reliant on these.
Silicon photonics has been just around the corner for many years now, promising not just the ability for computer chips to communicate using optical connections, but perhaps even using photons instead of electrons inside chips. DAMO now expects we will see the widespread use of silicon photonic chips for high-speed data transmission across data centres within the next three years, and silicon photonic chips gradually replacing electronic chips in some computing fields over the next five to ten years.
The continuing rise of cloud computing and AI will be the driving factors for technological breakthroughs that will deliver the rapid advancement and commercialisation of silicon photonic chips, the report states.
Silicon photonic chips could be widely used in optical communications within and between data centres and optical computing. However, the current challenges of silicon photonic chips are in the supply chain and manufacturing processes, according to DAMO. The design, mass production, and packaging of silicon photonic chips have not yet been standardised and scaled, leading to low production capacity, low yield, and high costs.
Privacy is another area where DAMO believes we will see advances in the next few years. It states that techniques already exist that allow computation and analysis while preserving privacy, but widespread application of the technology has been limited due to performance bottlenecks and standardisation issues.
The report predicts that advanced algorithms for homomorphic encryption, which enables calculations on data without decrypting it, will hit a critical point so that less computing power will be required to support encryption. It also foresees the emergence of data trust entities that will provide technologies and operational models as trusted third parties to accelerate data sharing among organisations.
Another prediction from DAMO is that satellite-based communications and terrestrial networks will become more integrated over the next five years, providing ubiquitous connectivity. The report labels this as satellite-terrestrial integrated computing (STC), and states that it will connect high-Earth orbit (HEO) and low-Earth orbit (LEO) satellites and terrestrial mobile communications networks to deliver "seamless and multidimensional coverage."
There are major challenges to implementing all this, of course, including that traditional satellite communications are expensive and use static processing mechanisms that cannot deliver the requirements for STC, while hardware for satellite applications is not commonplace and hardware for terrestrial applications cannot be used in space.
Finally, the DAMO report predicts the rise of what it calls cloud-network-device convergence. This appears to be based on the premise that cloud platforms offer a huge amount of compute power, while modern data networks can provide access to that compute power from almost anywhere, so that endpoint devices only need provide a user interface.
Yes, it's the thin client concept emerging again, this time using the cloud as the host. Clouds allow applications to break free of the limited processing power of devices and deliver more demanding tasks, according to the report, while new network technologies such as 5G and satellite internet need to be continuously improved to ensure wide coverage and sufficient bandwidth.
Just by sheer coincidence, Alibaba Cloud already has such devices, with the handheld "Wuying" launched in 2020 and a more substantial desktop device shown off last year.
Naturally, the DAMO report expects to see a "surge of application scenarios on top of the converged cloud-network-device system" over the next two years that will drive the emergence of new types of devices and promise more high quality and immersive experiences for users.
Read the original here:
Alibaba ponders its crystal ball to spy coming advances in AI and silicon photonics - The Register
How A.I. is set to evolve in 2022 – CNBC
An Ubtech Walker X Robot plays Chinese chess during 2021 World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) at Shanghai World Expo Center on July 8, 2021 in Shanghai, China.
VCG | VCG via Getty Images
Machines are getting smarter and smarter every year, but artificial intelligence is yet to live up to the hype that's been generated by some of the world's largest technology companies.
AI can excel at specific narrow tasks such as playing chess but it struggles to do more than one thing well. A seven-year-old has far broader intelligence than any of today's AI systems, for example.
"AI algorithms are good at approaching individual tasks, or tasks that include a small degree of variability," Edward Grefenstette, a research scientist at Meta AI, formerly Facebook AI Research, told CNBC.
"However, the real world encompasses significant potential for change, a dynamic which we are bad at capturing within our training algorithms, yielding brittle intelligence," he added.
AI researchers have started to show that there are ways to efficiently adapt AI training methods to changing environments or tasks, resulting in more robust agents, Grefenstette said. He believes there will be more industrial and scientific applications of such methods this year that will produce "noticeable leaps."
While AI still has a long way to go before anything like human-level intelligence is achieved, it hasn't stopped the likes of Google, Facebook (Meta) and Amazon investing billions of dollars into hiring talented AI researchers who can potentially improve everything from search engines and voice assistants to aspects of the so-called "metaverse."
Anthropologist Beth Singler, who studies AI and robots at the University of Cambridge, told CNBC that claims about the effectiveness and reality of AI in spaces that are now being labeled as the metaverse will become more commonplace in 2022 as more money is invested in the area and the public start to recognize the "metaverse" as a term and a concept.
Singler also warned that there could be "too little discussion" in 2022 of the effect of the metaverse on people's "identities, communities, and rights."
Gary Marcus, a scientist who sold an AI start-up to Uber and is currently executive chairman of another firm called Robust AI, told CNBC that the most important AI breakthrough in 2022 will likely be one that the world doesn't immediately see.
"The cycle from lab discovery to practicality can take years," he said, adding that the field of deep learning still has a long way to go. Deep learning is an area of AI that attempts to mimic the activity in layers of neurons in the brain to learn how to recognize complex patterns in data.
Marcus believes the most important challenge for AI right now is to "find a good way of combining all the world's immense knowledge of science and technology" with deep learning. At the moment "deep learning can't leverage all that knowledge and instead is stuck again and again trying to learn everything from scratch," he said.
"I predict there will be progress on this problem this year that will ultimately be transformational, towards what I called hybrid systems, but that it'll be another few years before we see major dividends," Marcus added. "The thing that we probably will see this year or next is the first medicine in which AI played a substantial role in the discovery process."
One of the biggest AI breakthroughs in the last couple of years has come from London-headquartered research lab DeepMind, which is owned by Alphabet.
The company has successfully created AI software that can accurately predict the structure that proteins will fold into in a matter of days, solving a 50-year-old "grand challenge" that could pave the way for better understanding of diseases and drug discovery.
Neil Lawrence, a professor of machine learning at the University of Cambridge, told CNBC that he expects to see DeepMind target more big science questions in 2022.
Language models AI systems that can generate convincing text, converse with humans, respond to questions, and more are also set to improve in 2022.
The best-known language model is OpenAI's GPT-3 but DeepMind said in December that its new "RETRO" language model can beat others 25 times its size.
Catherine Breslin, a machine learning scientist who used to work on Amazon Alexa, thinks Big Tech will race toward larger and larger language models next year.
Breslin, who now runs AI consultancy firm Kingfisher Labs, told CNBC that there will also be a move toward models that combine vision, speech and language capability, rather than treat them as separate tasks.
Nathan Benaich, a venture capitalist with Air Street Capital and the co-author of the annual State of AI report, told CNBC that a new breed of companies will likely use language models to predict the most effective RNA (ribonucleic acid) sequences.
"Last year we witnessed the impact of RNA technologies as novel covid vaccines, many of them built on this technology, brought an end to nation-wide lockdowns," he said. "This year, I believe we will see a new crop of AI-first RNA therapeutic companies. Using language models to predict the most effective RNA sequences to target a disease of interest, these new companies could dramatically speed up the time it takes to discover new drugs and vaccines."
While a number of advancements could be around the corner, there are major concerns around the ethics of AI, which can be highly discriminative and biased when trained on certain datasets. AI systems are also being used to power autonomous weapons and to generate fake porn.
Verena Rieser, a professor of conversational AI at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, told CNBC that there will be a stronger focus on ethical questions around AI in 2022.
"I don't know whether AI will be able to do much 'new' stuff by the end of 2022 but hopefully it will do it better," she said, adding that this means it would be fairer, less biased and more inclusive.
Samim Winiger, an independent AI researcher who used to work for a Big Tech firm, added that he believes there will be revelations around the use of machine learning models in financial markets, spying, and health care.
"It will raise major questions about privacy, legality, ethics and economics," he told CNBC.
See original here:
How A.I. is set to evolve in 2022 - CNBC