মঙ্গলবার, ১৬ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Memory effect now also found in lithium-ion batteries

Apr. 12, 2013 ? Due to their high energy density, lithium-ion batteries are used in many commercial electronic appliances. They are also believed to exhibit no memory effect. That's how experts call a deviation in the voltage of the battery that can limit the usability of the stored energy as well as the ability to determine the state of charge of the battery reliably. Scientists at the Paul Scherrer Institute PSI, and the Toyota Central R&D Labs, Inc. in Japan have now however discovered a memory effect in a lithium-ion battery. This finding is particularly relevant for the use of lithium-ion batteries in the electric vehicle market.

The work was published today in the scientific journal Nature Materials.

Many of our everyday devices that get their energy supply from a battery, whilst not always being as "smart" as they are described in the adverts, often come equipped with a kind of memory. For example, a battery powered shaver or electric toothbrush that is recharged before the battery runs out, can later take revenge on the prudent user. The battery appears to remember that you have only taken part of its storage capacity -- and eventually no longer supplies its full energy. Experts refer to this as a "memory effect," which comes about because the working voltage of the battery drops over time because of incomplete charging-discharging cycles. This means that despite the battery still being discharged, the voltage it supplies is sometimes too low to drive the device in question. The memory effect therefore has two negative consequences: firstly, the usable capacity of the battery is reduced, and secondly the correlation between the voltage and the charge status is shifted, so the latter cannot be determined reliably on the basis of voltage.

The memory effect has long been known to exist in Nickel-Cadmium- and Nickel-metal hydride batteries. Ever since lithium-ion batteries started to be successfully marketed in the 1990s, the existence of the memory effect in this type of battery had been ruled out. Incorrectly, as this new study indicates.

Consequences of the Memory Effect for Electric and Hybrid Vehicles

The memory effect and its associated abnormal working voltage deviation have now been confirmed for one of the most common materials used as the positive electrode in lithium-ion batteries, lithium-iron phosphate (LiFePO4). With lithium-iron phosphate, the voltage remains practically unchanged over a large range of the state of charge. This means that even a small anomaly in the operating voltage could be misinterpreted as a major change in the state of charge. Or, to put it another way: when the state of charge is determined from the voltage a large error can be caused by a small deviation in the voltage.

The existence of a memory effect is particularly relevant in the context of the anticipated steps towards using lithium-ion batteries in the electric mobility sector. In hybrid cars in particular, the effect can arise during the many cycles of charging/discharging that occur during their normal operation. In such vehicles, the battery is partially recharged during each braking operation by the engine running in a generator mode. It is in turn discharged, and usually only partially, to assist the engine during acceleration phases. The numerous successive cycles of partial charging and discharging lead to individual small memory effects adding up to a large memory effect, as this new study demonstrates. This leads to an error in the estimate of the current state of charge of the battery, in cases where the state of charge is calculated by software on the basis of the current value of the voltage.

A microscopic explanation

The researchers also examined the causes of the memory effect at a microscopic level. The electrode material -- in this case lithium-iron phosphate (LiFePO4) -- consists of a large number of small, micrometer-sized particles which are charged and discharged individually one after the other. Researchers refer to this model of charging and discharging as the "many particles model." Charging proceeds particle by particle, and involves the release of lithium ions. A fully charged particle is therefore lithium-free and comprises only iron phosphate (FePO4). Discharge in turn involves the re-incorporation of lithium atoms into the electrode particles, so that iron phosphate (FePO4) becomes lithium-iron phosphate (LiFePO4) once more. The changes in the amount of lithium associated with charging and discharging induce a change in the chemical potential of the individual particles, which in turn changes the voltage of the battery. However, charging and discharging are not linear processes. During charging, chemical potential initially increases, with the progressive release of lithium ions. But then, the particles reach a critical lithium-content value (and chemical potential). At this point, there is an abrupt transition: the particles give up their remaining lithium ions very rapidly, but are not allowed to change their chemical potential. This is the transition that explains why battery voltage remains practically unchanged over a wide region (voltage plateau).

The Barrier between "Rich" and "Poor"

The existence of this potential barrier is vital for the memory effect to become manifest. Once the first particles have overcome the potential barrier, and have become lithium-free, the electrode particle population gets split up into two groups. In other words: there is now a clear distinction between lithium-rich and lithium-poor particles (see graphic). If the battery is not fully charged, a certain number of lithium-rich particles that have not made it over the barrier will remain. These particles do not remain on the edge of the barrier for long, because this state is unstable, and they will "slide down the slope," that is, their chemical potential will decrease. Even when the battery is discharged again and all of the particles will come to rest in front of the barrier, this division into two groups will be maintained. And here is the crucial point: during the next charging process, the first group (lithium-poor particles) will overcome the barrier first, whilst the second group (lithium-rich) will "lag behind." In order for the "delayed" group to get over the barrier, their chemical potential must be increased, and this is what causes the overvoltage (the "bump" in the graphic) that characterises the memory effect. The memory effect is thus a consequence of the particle population being divided into two groups, with very different concentrations of lithium, which is followed by the particles "jumping" over the potential barrier one after the other. This overvoltage, through which the effect is noticeable, is equal to the additional work that needs to be done to carry the particles that lagged behind after a partial charge, over the potential barrier.

Wait Until the Memory Fades The time that elapses between charging and discharging a battery plays an important role in determining the state of the battery at the end of these processes. Charging and discharging are processes that alter the thermodynamic equilibrium of the battery, and this equilibrium can be achieved after some time. Scientists have found that idling a sufficiently long period of time can be used to erase the memory effect. However, in accordance with the many particles model, this only happens under certain conditions. The memory effect only vanished if one waited a sufficiently long time after a cycle of partial charging followed by full discharge. In such cases, the two particle groups were still separated after the full discharge, but were found on the same side of the potential barrier. Thus, the separation disappeared, because particles attained an equilibrium state, in which they all had the same lithium-content. The memory effect remained however providing you waited after the partial charging and before the incomplete discharge. Here, the particles were on opposite sides of the potential barrier, and this prevented a reverse of their division into "lithium-rich" and "lithium-poor."

According to Professor Petr Novak, Head of the Electrochemical Energy Storage Section at the PSI and co-author of the publication, the study disproves a long cherished misconception: "Ours is the first study that has specifically looked for a memory effect in lithium-ion batteries. It had simply been assumed that no such effect would arise." To acquire knowledge via research is often a fruitful mix of speculation and diligence: "Our finding results from a combination of critical investigation and careful observation. The effect is in fact tiny: the relative deviation in voltage is just a few parts per thousand. But the key was the idea of looking for it at all. Normal battery tests usually run deep, and not partial charging/discharging cycles. It thus took a flash of inspiration in order to ask what might happen during partial charging in the first place.

For the future use of lithium-ion batteries in vehicles however, this recent discovery is not the final word. It is indeed absolutely possible that the effect could be detected and taken into account through clever adaptation of the software in battery management systems, Novak pointed out. Should that prove successful, the memory effect would not stand in the way of a reliable use of lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles. So now, engineers face the challenge of finding the correct way of handling the peculiar memory of batteries.

Box According to the many particles model described here, charging and discharging the battery is considered to take place particle by particle. In this context, by particles, we mean a kind of "grains." This means that the material (LiFePO4) does not come "as one piece," but rather as a collection of grains, in each of which the crystal structure is nominally the same, but in which the granules have minute differences, either in size, shape or orientation. This is the typical structure of powders. In technical terms, these are called "crystallites." One can imagine these as roughly equally sized cubes lying side by side. Each cube would be slightly rotated relative to its neighbours, that is, the cubes are not strictly aligned, but the crystal structure (the cuboidal shape) is the same for all.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Paul Scherrer Institut (PSI).

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Tsuyoshi Sasaki, Yoshio Ukyo, Petr Nov?k. Memory effect in a lithium-ion battery. Nature Materials, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/NMAT3623

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/electricity/~3/hUTkC0CpNG4/130414193213.htm

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Lion Air jet that crashed into sea must be cut up

En una foto proporcionada por la Polic?a de Indonesia, los restos de un avi?n de la l?nea a?rea Lion Air se encuentra en el agua tras salirse de la pista del aeropuerto de Bali, Indonesia el s?bado 13 de abril de 2013. (AP Foto/Indonesian Police)

En una foto proporcionada por la Polic?a de Indonesia, los restos de un avi?n de la l?nea a?rea Lion Air se encuentra en el agua tras salirse de la pista del aeropuerto de Bali, Indonesia el s?bado 13 de abril de 2013. (AP Foto/Indonesian Police)

(AP) ? Aviation authorities are struggling to remove a Lion Air passenger jet that crashed into the sea on Indonesia's resort island of Bali because it is too heavy to tow in the shallow water.

Transportation Ministry spokesman Bambang Ervan said Monday divers are also facing difficulties removing the cockpit voice recorder located in the plane's tail, which is submerged.

All 108 people on board survived Saturday's crash when the plane slammed into the water near Bali's Ngurah Rai airport and snapped in two.

Ervan said authorities have decided to cut the wreckage into several parts instead of towing because it weighs too much and could damage the area's coral reefs.

Bali is one of Asia's most popular destinations, drawing millions of vacationers with its world-class surf and beautiful beaches.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-04-15-Indonesia-Plane%20Crash/id-2aab7297d5d84fafb30db647ffb18c6f

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সোমবার, ১৫ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Second Child on the Way for Kevin Richardson

The Backstreet Boys bandmate posted a photo of his wife Kristin displaying her growing baby bump.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/t17Jiiovws0/

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Press Release: Massive Solar Flare May Disrupt Earth Radio, GPS

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Home / / Massive Solar Flare May Disru... 2013-04-14 14:17:00 (GMT) (Caymanmama.com - News Providers News)

/EINPresswire.com/ April 12, 2013 /EIN News/?A massive solar flare has fired particles toward earth that may disrupt radio communications and GPS signals over the next few days. This event can result in a geomagnetic storm as it collides with the magnetosphere. Harmful radiation also results, but will be blocked by the atmosphere. See the article here:

-Massive Solar Flare Article?http://energy.einnews.com/article/145899847

EIN News, a leading media monitoring company, provides in-depth news about space science and developments via a number of news sections, including:

-Solar Flares News Topics?http://solarflares.einnews.com/category/solar-flares-miscellaneous
-NASA News?http://nasa.einnews.com/

About EIN News (http://www.einnews.com/)

EIN News has developed one of the world?s leading real time news indexing services. Its systems continuously scan the web, indexing news from thousands of worldwide sources. The data is then filtered according to specific needs, and the processes are supervised by a team of professional news editors.

Thousands of industry, government and private institutions rely on EIN News for their media monitoring needs. Combining both intelligent search technologies and the human element, EIN News delivers the most efficient, yet personalized media monitoring, news aggregation and syndication services on the market.

EIN News is positioned as the leading news index on the planet.

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- EIN Inbox Robot (www.inboxrobot.com), a newsletter service that searches thousands of online sources and delivers results directly to the email inbox of a user or a group of users.

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Source: http://www.caymanmama.com/2013/04/14/Massive-Solar-Flare-May-Disrupt-Earth-Radio-GPS_2013041414644.html

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Flatirons Audiology Offers the Newest Treatment for Tinnitus

Dr. Julie Eschenbrenner, Audiologist with Flatirons Audiology in Lafayette, is the first in Colorado to be able to offer her patients with mild to moderate tinnitus relief using the new Neuromonics Sanctuary.?

(PRWEB) April 13, 2013

Dr. Julie Eschenbrenner, Audiologist with Flatirons Audiology in Lafayette, is the first in Colorado to be able to offer her patients with mild to moderate tinnitus relief using the new Neuromonics Sanctuary.?

Tinnitus is often described as a buzzing, hissing, ringing or roaring in the ears in the absence of other sounds coming from the environment. More than 50 million people in the United States suffer from some form of tinnitus according to the American Tinnitus Association. Tinnitus can occur from exposure to loud noises, a medical condition, or a reaction to a substance. Approximately 34 percent of the veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan are reporting symptoms of tinnitus.

The Neuromonics Sanctuary helps the brain filter out the perception of the irritating noise in the ears. The Sanctuary can be setup and fit in a single day. It is easy to learn how to use. It has multiple headphone options to give patients their choice of what is most comfortable.

Unlike the older Neuromonics Oasis, the gold standard device for use in patients with chronic tinnitus, the Neuromonics Sanctuary offers those patients with mild to moderate tinnitus situational relief of their symptoms.

People with mild to moderate symptoms of tinnitus who want more information about the newest treatment can contact Dr. Julie Eschenbrenner at Flatirons Audiology at 303-664-9111.

Julie Eschenbrenner
Flatirons Audiology
303-664-9111
Email Information

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/flatirons-audiology-offers-newest-treatment-tinnitus-114038680.html

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রবিবার, ১৪ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Bringing Down The Mexican Tech Mafia: How Hackers Stopped A $9.3 Million Fraud

Mexican-mafiaEditor?s note:?Maria Rocio Paniagua currently works at?Flit, a PR firm that helps?products, projects and events launch in Mexico. ?When the geeks go marching in, good stuff can happen, but if everyone joins in, real change can take place.? That?s what the hackers and team behind Codeando M?xico,?a civil innovation platform where government and organizations publish projects,?thought when they launched the #app115 challenge, an app competition that aimed to prove that great code can be very inexpensive if motivated by the right reasons.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Ve8Y3b_yhbU/

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Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/lil-wayne-trick-daddy-fight-erupts-at-strip-club/

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শনিবার, ১৩ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Now Endangered, Florida's Silver Springs Once Lured Tourists

A glass-bottomed boat glides along water in Silver Springs, Fla. The springs, once a major tourist destination, have declined both in volume and in water quality.

Greg Allen/NPR

A glass-bottomed boat glides along water in Silver Springs, Fla. The springs, once a major tourist destination, have declined both in volume and in water quality.

Greg Allen/NPR

Before Disney World, Silver Springs in Central Florida was for decades one of the state's most popular tourist destinations.

Even if you've never visited Silver Springs, you might have seen it ? if you're old enough. The 1960s television show Sea Hunt was filmed here, as were countless movies including Tarzan and Creature from the Black Lagoon.

The crystal clear water of Silver Springs made it invaluable to Hollywood. Guy Marwick, the founder of the Silver River Museum, says it drew over a million visitors a year.

"It was not an amusement park in the sense of Coney Island and the rides that one might associate with it," Marwick says. "It was kind of the natural Florida, and I think that's what people are hoping to see it go back to now."

Repairing The Springs

Later this year, Florida's park service will take over Silver Springs and begin working to restore it to a more natural state. That is a huge task, however, and over the past two decades, Silver Springs ? and most springs in Florida ? have fallen on hard times.

Drought, development and excessive groundwater pumping have cut the amount of water flowing here in half. From the walkway that overlooks the head spring, the water is still blue and crystal clear, with fish, turtles and alligators clearly visible.

Alligators sun themselves along the waters of Silver Springs, Fla.

Greg Allen/NPR

Alligators sun themselves along the waters of Silver Springs, Fla.

Greg Allen/NPR

But director of the Florida Springs Institute Robert Knight says look closer and you'll see the problem: pollution from agriculture and residential development has helped coat the spring with algae.

"This spring [it] was white on the bottom," Knight says. "It was a sandy bottom and shells; it was just glistening ... Now, it's green on the bottom because it's covered with algae. It's just not glowing at you the way it used to."

When the park service takes over operations at Silver Springs, the rides and the reptile farm, with its two albino alligators, will be gone. But the signature attraction of the springs ? its famous glass-bottom boats ? will remain.

Glass-bottom boat captain Oscar Collins has seen big changes at Silver Springs over his 44 years spent working there. On a recent day, just a few dozen people are in the park, a big contrast with Silver Springs' heyday in the 1960s.

"We were doing four and five thousand people in the middle of the day, and on weekends, six and seven," Collins says. "We are losing people here."

The boats glide over the spring vents that deliver millions of gallons of water from Florida's aquifer into the Silver River. Like all springs in Florida, it's much less water than was produced just 10 years ago.

Fish are no longer abundant, but there are some like the long-nosed gar. Most of the aquatic plants are covered by algae. Nitrates in the spring water, much of it from fertilizer spread on farms and lawns, promotes the growth of algae and, Knight says, eventually kills the plants.

"It would be tragic to lose all this vegetation in Silver Springs," he says. "But our other springs, we've already lost all the plants."

State Intervention

A dozen years ago, alarm over the decline of Florida's springs drew the attention of political leaders in Tallahassee. Then-Gov. Jeb Bush launched an initiative to save the 1,000-plus springs throughout the state. That program was defunded last year by Florida's current governor, Rick Scott.

But for Silver Springs at least, the state takeover is good news. To improve the water quality of the springs, Florida regulators have set targets for reducing the amount of nitrates. Hitting those targets, though, will mean addressing the sources of pollution, putting thousands of septic tanks on public sewer systems, and aggressively reducing the amount of fertilizer used by homeowners and farmers.

Drew Bartlett of Florida's Department of Environmental Protection acknowledges it's a massive undertaking that could take decades.

"Well, it certainly is a challenge," Bartlett says, "and my response has essentially [been] that's not an excuse not to get started."

Springs advocates are especially concerned about a potential new source of pollution just a few miles from Silver Springs. Water management officials are considering plans for a huge cattle ranch that would withdraw millions of gallons a day from the aquifer that feeds the springs.

The 15,000 to 20,000 head of cattle would produce as much as a million pounds of manure a day.

"What we're getting is very intensive farms using a lot of water with very big wells and using a lot of fertilizer to maximize their profits," Knight says. "That's what's hurting our springs."

In some ways, Florida's endangered springs are a symptom of a larger problem. With development and wells sunk for everything from golf courses to bottled water plants, Florida's aquifer is being depleted.

In some areas, the aquifer ? which most Floridians rely on for drinking water ? has dropped by 60 feet. Some coastal communities are now getting saltwater in their wells, which costs millions to treat.

The most visible consequence of excessive pumping from the aquifer may be Florida's epidemic of sinkholes, including a massive one near Tampa recently that claimed a man's life.

http://www.npr.org/2013/04/13/177105692/before-disney-floridas-silver-springs-lured-tourists

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/04/13/177105692/before-disney-floridas-silver-springs-lured-tourists?ft=1&f=1007

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বুধবার, ১০ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Obama budget boosts embassy security spending, changes food aid

By Patricia Zengerle and Charles Abbott

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama included $4 billion to improve security at hundreds of overseas diplomatic posts in his budget proposal on Wednesday, in the wake of the deadly September 11, 2012, attacks on the U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya.

The money would secure overseas personnel and facilities, including enough money to increase embassy security construction to $2.2 billion, as recommended after an independent review of the Benghazi attacks.

Embassy security has been under particular scrutiny - amid harsh criticism of the Obama administration by Republican lawmakers - since the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three other Americans were killed in the eastern Libyan city.

The proposal reflects shifting U.S. priorities as Washington winds down its wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Programs in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan account for $6.8 billion of the budget proposal, $4.2 billion less than requested in 2012. The budget plan calls for $2.1 billion for Iraq, $3.4 billion for Afghanistan and $1.4 billion for Pakistan.

"We owe it to the American people to do our part to help solve the fiscal problems that threaten not only our future economic health, but also our standing in the global order," Secretary of State John Kerry wrote in a letter to Congress.

"As such, we have proposed necessary cuts, where it will not adversely affect our national security, and we propose modest increases, where they are necessary to achieve our highest priorities," he said.

Overall, Obama has asked for $47.8 billion for the Department of State and U.S. Agency for International Development, a six percent decrease from 2012 levels, because of the lower requests for Iraq and Afghanistan.

As expected, the budget proposes the most sweeping change in U.S. food aid in decades, with a plan intended to feed more people and deliver food more quickly. It would end a practice of buying food from American farmers and shipping it overseas.

Under the plan, Washington would donate $1.1 billion to a disaster relief account for food vouchers that would be used to buy food from suppliers located near areas of need.

Shipping can double food aid costs because, by law, supplies must be transported on U.S.-flagged vessels.

An additional $250 million would be provided to economic development projects and $75 million would be earmarked for emergency relief.

The food aid proposal could face a tough fight. Aid groups disagree over whether the switch to cash donation is advisable. And two dozen senators wrote the White House in March to try to derail the change.

However, proponents said the plan would let the United States feed millions more people each year, while assisting farmers in poor countries by buying their crops.

(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing By Marilyn W. Thompson and Paul Simao)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-budget-boosts-embassy-security-spending-changes-food-191041611--business.html

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Monkey Calls Could Offer Clues For Origin Of Human Speech

Melissa Block talks with researcher Thore Bergman about his findings that a rare type of Ethiopian monkey, the gelada, makes a human-like sound that could offer insights into the evolution of human speech.

Copyright ? 2013 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:

This is not the sound of the ALL THINGS CONSIDERED staff morning meeting.

(SOUNDBITE OF WOBBLE)

BLOCK: It's not Justin Timberlake doing his vocal warm-up. And it's not a celebration of hedge fund managers.

(SOUNDBITE OF WOBBLE)

BLOCK: It is the sound of the wild gelada monkey. And why are we bringing you the sound of the wild gelada monkey? Well, because a new study finds the vocalization of these monkeys could tell us something about the beginning of human speech.

Evolutionary biologist Thore Bergman has spent a lot of time listening to the geladas in the highlands of Ethiopia. He's a professor at the University of Michigan, and he headed up the study. Welcome to the program.

DR. THORE BERGMAN: Thanks. Good to be here.

BLOCK: And the sound that we just heard, the sound we're talking about is called a wobble. Why don't you describe what the monkeys are doing?

BERGMAN: So they're vocalizing. They're producing sort of a steady hum of sound, but they're also moving their mouth very quickly, sort of rapidly opening and closing their mouths. And that produces the kind of undulation you hear in the sound.

(SOUNDBITE OF WOBBLE)

BLOCK: There's a lot going there. What are you listening for as you listen to these monkeys?

BERGMAN: So when they're making this wobble call, the undulating one, we're listening for the interval between the pulses of loud sound and the quiet sounds that come in between.

BLOCK: Sort of the rhythm of what they're doing.

BERGMAN: Yup.

BLOCK: And what does that tell you as you listen to it? What do you conclude from that?

BERGMAN: So, well, it turns out that the rhythm has a same spacing pattern as speech does.

BLOCK: What are the gelada monkeys doing that other nonhuman primates don't do, because I thought they all communicate vocally in some way?

BERGMAN: Yeah. They definitely do. And vocalizations are very important for most primates. But the kind of puzzle has been - if you're thinking about where language came from - is that most primate vocalizations are quite simple and flat, sort of, monosyllabic grunts. And so if you look at what humans do when we communicate, it's nothing like what primates do. So we make these long strings of really complicated sounds with ups and downs and loud parts and high parts.

So people started to actually look elsewhere for possible precursors to speech. And one thing they've been looking at recently is this facial movement that monkeys do called lip-smacking. So this is a gesture that they perform in kind of friendly interactions between individuals. And the reason this behavior has become interesting is that the rhythm and the movement of the mouth is quite similar to human speech.

BLOCK: Hmm. Was this research that you've been doing, did it start because you were out among the monkeys watching them and thinking, they really look - if I look at them and listen to them, they sound like they're talking.

BERGMAN: Well, yeah, that's something we noticed right away when we first started studying the geladas, we'd - I had worked for years with baboons and other monkeys. So, you know, one of the first days we're out with the geladas, we got this sensation that there are people talking around us. So you'd be kind of looking over your shoulder to see who was talking to you, but there would just be a monkey behind you. So...

(LAUGHTER)

BLOCK: And no way of knowing of what they were trying to tell you, I suppose?

BERGMAN: No. We couldn't answer them back. But we sort of were struck by the strange sensation that we hadn't had working with other monkeys.

BLOCK: Well, Thore Bergman, thanks so much for talking to us.

BERGMAN: Thank you very much.

BLOCK: Thore Bergman is assistant professor at the University of Michigan. We were talking about the speech patterns of wild gelada monkeys.

Copyright ? 2013 NPR. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to NPR. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/04/09/176713152/monkey-calls-could-offer-clues-for-origin-of-human-speech?ft=1&f=1007

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সোমবার, ৮ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Doctor Who, Season 7, Part 2

In Slate?s Doctor Who TV Club, Mac Rogers discusses the Doctor?s travels via IM every week with the show?s bloggers and fans. This week he?s chatting about "The Rings of Akhaten" with Phil Plait, who writes the Bad Astronomy blog at Slate.

Mac Rogers: I swear, I had no idea when I asked the writer of Bad Astronomy to chat about this particular episode that there'd be quite so much, er, bad astronomy. Or at least wacky astronomy! I'll get to a little more of that in a second, but my overall take is that "The Rings of Akhaten" is more successful in its ideas and its visuals than in its plotting. I loved the exploration of storytelling, I loved the menagerie of aliens and space-scapes, but I thought the plot was a bit muddled.

Phil Plait: I think the overarching plot was straightforward: Sleeping alien god needs appeasement so it doesn't eat everyone. I don't think it was really sleeping so much as kinda hanging out and munching on the offerings from the citizens. The details I can always retcon?the singing was just a ritual to go with the offering, and was incidental. As the Doctor said, it was just time for him to (fully) wake up. As for the science of all this, well, I've learned not to probe too deeply into that for this show.?

Mac: As a science-fiction fan who's also famous for regularly calling out shoddy science, which do you prefer: harder science fiction that has at least some basis in genuine research or emerging technology, or softer, more magical sci-fi like Doctor Who where there's essentially no interaction with real science so you don?t have to think about it?

Phil: I?prefer?hard sci-fi (rocket ships, aliens, advanced tech), but honestly, I'll take story over science. As long as it's consistent, or at least not shoutingly inconsistent, I'm okay with it. Look, I laughed a long, long time in "Blink" when the Doctor said time was "a big ball of wibbly-wobbly timey-wimey stuff" because that was perfect! Doctor Who is full of ridiculous science, but that's OK if the plot demands it.

Mac: The Doctor famously said, "We're all stories in the end" in Season 5, and the Moffat era has been deeply obsessed with storytelling. "Akhaten" investigates the ways in which both individuals and cultures can be rendered as stories. We follow the Doctor as he verifies Clara's story?that she is indeed a real person, not one of an army of identical Clara-bots?and in the process eavesdrops on Clara's father telling the tale of "the most important leaf in human history." Then we travel through time and space to the seven planets of Akhaten system to meet young Merry Gillel, the "Queen of Years," who has memorized her entire culture's history?its story?which she can now render in song at the all-important Festival of Offerings. Finally, at a key climactic point in the story, the Doctor talks Merry out of sacrificing herself to the "Grandfather" parasite by impressing upon her the remarkable story of all cosmic events required to bring about her existence. He ends his plea by saying "You are Merry Gillel. There will never be another," and we sense that he's also talking about the mystery of Clara, who ought to be that unique.

Phil: The idea of people as stories has been done a few times in Doctor Who, and I like it. Of course, the meta-joke is that the Doctor himself is a story we're watching! Given Mofffat's history, I expect twisted and torrid plot developments, which is what makes his Doctor Who reign so much fun. I'll add I loved loved loved the Doctor's speech about supernovae. I've said the same thing many times myself. Never to a Queen of Years though.

Mac: Given that "Akhaten" is (present-day) Clara's second episode, I was struck by how closely it resembled Amy Pond's second episode, "The Beast Below": After a dazzling space-walk, the Doctor takes his new companion to a distant, off-world location. There they discover a society trapped in a corrupt, long-running arrangement requiring the sacrifice of innocents. And, as in "Beast," the new companion must step up to save the day when the Doctor can't quite do it. Does Moffat see this as an essential part of the hero journey of the Doctor Who companion?

Phil: That's a good question, and I'm not sure. Look at last week's "Bells" episode: Evil group uses tech to control large groups of people for some nefarious purpose; that was done many times, like David Tennant's first Christmas show, or "The Power of Three." If you squint your eyes enough you can probably summarize any two TV shows the same way! But it may well be that the Companions need to go through something like this to achieve hero status. Donna's first adventure in "Fires of Pompei" had a similar arc, with her begging the Doctor to help out another family, much as Clara does. This time, though, the Doctor doesn't need convincing.?Clara's first episode, though, was when she was a Dalek, and still managed to come out a hero!

Mac:?Where I thought the story got a bit muddled was at the climax. I thought the transfer of the threat from the Mummy (a properly frightening Doctor Who monster) to Grandfather proper (a jack-o'-lantern-faced celestial body) was a mistake. I'm still confused (and here comes the bad astronomy!): Was Grandfather the Akhaten system's sun?

Phil: I was under the impression (from the special effects early on) that Grandfather was a planet, and the ring system orbited him.

Mac: After the Doctor's fiercely defiant monologue to Grandfather (and basically no one in television does defiant monologues as well as Matt Smith), Grandfather seemed to dim in power ? but then Clara suddenly looked concerned and jumped on the space-scooter to go and rescue the Doctor with her father's "most important leaf." I normally love the special effects rendered by the Mill (which sadly had to close down many of its operations this past week) but celestial Grandfather made for a confusing villain for me. It wasn't clear when he was waxing vs. waning.

Phil:?He was glowing, wasn't he? So maybe he was the sun ? in which case the Doctor and Clara just killed all those people they just saved. It would get mighty cold there without a central star! After the Doctor's speech Grandfather started to collapse, but then was able to shrug off the Doctor's history, reinflating. That's when Clara jumped in and collapsed him all the way down. I liked this as a bit of storytelling, though it pulled me out of the show a bit?the Doctor is only 1,200 years old, and Grandfather millions?so why should the Doctor's story do much more than cause a bit of indigestion? But the idea that what?has?happened is finite, compared to the infinities of what might-have-been?that was lovely.

Mac: I?loved?that Clara decides to rescue the Doctor after flashing back to her mother promising little-kid-Clara: "I will always find you." I loved that the memory of being cared for inspires Clare to care for others.

Phil: Well, that's the heroic move, right? Self-sacrifice, doing what needs to be done because it's the right thing to do. One of my favorite things about the Doctor is that he tends to bring that out in people. They had it all along, and some don't need prodding?maybe his choice of companions is not all that random?but it's always right there in his companions when needed. Thinking about Clara also reminds me that at the very end, when Clara opens the TARDIS door, she says her home "looks different." Then the Doctor goes into a longish speech about it being exactly the same. That was curious. Is it?actually?different (oooh, foreshadowing) or is she?seeing?it differently due to her now-larger universe?

Mac: That's a great point. They didn't go to the past, they went to another planet, so it wouldn't have been a case of rewriting history. Does Clara have an inadvertent effect on the world around her, not unlike Amy in the early going? ?

Phil: Well, we?know?she's weird; there are at least two of her, and maybe more. The Doctor said she "wasn't possible", so something is amiss. I trust Moffat will resolve this in as fun a way as possible.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=f67ba83d27c002b5418b202f6708265e

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শুক্রবার, ৫ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Has NBC learned transition lessons?

NEW YORK (AP) ? NBC's recent personnel transition in morning television was a disaster. Executives hope their luck is better late at night, and they have a year to try and make it a smooth handoff from Jay Leno to Jimmy Fallon at the "Tonight" show.

The network announced Wednesday what has been rumored for the past several weeks: Leno will leave the job he's had most of the time since 1992, to be replaced by "Late Night" host Fallon. The late-night franchise is also returning to its roots, leaving California for a New York studio.

The thinking is clear: Leno is 62, his hair graying. The eager Fallon is 38, looks younger, hangs with his ultra-hip house band the Roots and slow jams the news with President Obama.

All Leno does is consistently rank No. 1 in his field, a status not many people at NBC can claim these days.

The "Today" show was tops a year ago, too, or at least running neck-and-neck with ABC's "Good Morning America." Then the toppling of co-host Ann Curry spread a black cloud. Ratings tumbled, executives lost their jobs, Matt Lauer's popularity plummeted and "GMA" is now the most popular morning show.

Could history repeat itself at the same network?

"I'm sure the people at (corporate owner) Comcast and NBC are keeping their fingers crossed that it's not another public relations black eye," said Brad Adgate, analyst for Horizon Media.

NBC's hand was forced, to its perspective, by ABC when that network put Jimmy Kimmel in the time slot shared by Leno and CBS' David Letterman earlier this year. Young people are already seeking out other entertainment choices in late-night, and NBC didn't want ABC to establish itself as the network with the young, hip host right after the local news.

"We are purposefully making this change when Jay is No. 1, just as Jay replaced Johnny Carson when he was No. 1," said Steve Burke, chief executive officer of NBC Universal, in a statement. "Jimmy Fallon is a unique talent and this is his time."

Burke was not made available for an interview to discuss NBC's reasoning and whether the network applied any lessons from the Curry mess to its late-night switch.

The most pressing question is whether Leno's fans warm to Fallon, or if they use this as an opportunity to try something else. Leno's fans did not accept Conan O'Brien in 2009 when he took over "Tonight" for less than a year. Fallon's humor is broader than O'Brien's, and would seem a better fit.

Leno also presumably won't be around for a direct comparison this time. When O'Brien worked at "Tonight," Leno was in the midst of his failed prime-time experiment on NBC.

There's no telling whether fans of Leno will resent the network's treatment of the comic the way morning viewers took out their distaste for what happened to Curry on "Today." NBC is dislodging him from late-night for the second time; what did he do to deserve the door?

Viewers might also question the network's regard for them. Why is NBC taking my favorite comic away?

Letterman, while he's been no big fan of his rival Leno through the years, was already pushing this narrative on his own show Wednesday, taped shortly after NBC's announcement.

"How many times can a guy get pushed out of the job?" Letterman asked. "What's the matter with NBC? What's the matter with these guys? You know, honestly, what are they thinking?"

He congratulated Leno on his 'Tonight' tenure, "if in fact you're not coming back."

Both the New York Daily News and Post ran a front page picture of Leno driving a motorcycle with Fallon in the side car, his fist raised. The News added bundles of cash on Fallon's lap, with the headline: "Hit the road, Jay: Leno driven out of 'Tonight' by Fallon."

"It's difficult to give up a program that wins its time period by 33 percent, and Jay has always been a great friend to the affiliates," said John Dawson, general manager for five NBC affiliates in Kansas. "For that alone it will be hard to give him up. But I believe in Jimmy's ability to retain Jay's viewers and to bring his own unique audience to that time period."

NBC is timing the change for maximum impact. It will happen around the Winter Olympics in Russia, which is expected to give the network a large prime-time audience that will be peppered with promos.

Barring a major change in NBC's sagging prime-time fortunes, Fallon will quickly be on his own when the Olympic flame is extinguished.

The Curry debacle was punctuated by her tearful last day as host in June, a deeply uncomfortable television moment. She has largely been silent since, as NBC has tried many different ways to convince "Today" viewers that they shouldn't blame Lauer for an unpopular decision.

NBC says privately that Fallon has tried judiciously to make sure Leno was on board with the move, and that Leno has a higher regard for Fallon personally than he did for O'Brien. A few years down the line, Leno may be more ready to end his "Tonight" tenure than he was before.

NBC has taken pride through the years in orderly transitions ? like when Brian Williams took over for Tom Brokaw, and Meredith Vieira replaced Katie Couric. It will put the machinery to work to make this one seamless, too. Or at least appear that way.

There was a rocky start. When Leno needled NBC executives about their miserable prime- time ratings this winter, it hit a nerve with NBC Entertainment President Robert Greenblatt. He sent a note telling the comic to cool it. That approach backfired when the note became public and Leno hammered his network even harder.

The first public sign of the coming transition came Monday night, when Leno and Fallon filmed a genial spoof together making fun of all the late-night rumors. It aired between their two shows.

"It's clear they are trying to stave off negative reaction," said Christine Becker, an associate professor at Notre Dame University and author of the News For TV Majors blog. "I don't know whether it's going to be successful or not."

That's because of a sense that there's still something missing, she said.

"Jay is saying really nice things, but what really is the deal?" Becker said. "Did Jay tell them that he wants to go? Will he go someplace else? ... NBC is struggling to play the PR game and make it work but there are so many gaps and holes that it makes it strange."

___

Associated Press Television Writer Lynn Elber in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nbc-learned-transition-lessons-062312951.html

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Amid a rising tide of rapes and sexual assaults in India, three engineering stud...

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China culls birds as bird flu deaths mount


SHANGHAI/HONG KONG | Fri Apr 5, 2013 2:24pm IST

SHANGHAI/HONG KONG (Reuters) - Chinese authorities slaughtered over 20,000 birds on Friday at a poultry market in the financial hub Shanghai as the death toll from a new strain of bird flu mounted to six, spreading concern overseas and sparking a sell-off on Hong Kong's share market.

State news agency Xinhua said the Huhuai market for live birds in Shanghai had been shut down and birds were being culled after authorities detected the H7N9 virus from samples of pigeons in the market.

All the 14 reported infections from the H7N9 bird flu strain have been in eastern China and at least four of the dead are in Shanghai, a city of 23 million people and the showpiece of China's vibrant economy.

The latest death was of a 64-year-old man in Zhejiang province, Xinhua said on Friday, adding that none of the 55 people who had close contact with him had shown symptoms of infection.

In Hong Kong, shares tumbled to a four-month low on Friday on worries that the new strain of bird flu infections could become a widespread outbreak and hurt the local economy.

"The bird flu issue is at the top of people's minds now," said Alfred Chan, chief dealer at Cheer Pearl Investment in Hong Kong.

Chinese airlines were among the biggest percentage losers on the day, including China Southern Airlines (1055.HK), China Eastern Airlines (0670.HK) and Air China (0753.HK). Cathay Pacific (0293.HK) also fell.

In Shanghai, the rising death toll has prompted some residents to stay away from markets with live chickens and ducks.

"I'm only getting my groceries at the large supermarkets now because I don't think it is safe to visit the wet markets anymore," said 38-year-old homemaker Shao Linxia, adding that she has also stopped buying poultry since news of the bird flu surfaced.

"We all remember SARS and how quickly it could spread, so we are obviously worried."

The 2002-2003 epidemic of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) started in China and killed about one-tenth of the 8,000 it infected.

Still, there were few signs of a panic in Shanghai with shops remaining open and not many people wearing face masks in public.

The strain does not appear to be transmitted from human to human, but Hong Kong airport authorities said they were taking precautions. Vietnam banned imports of Chinese poultry.

In Japan, airports have put up posters at entry points warning all passengers from China to seek medical attention if they have flu-like symptoms.

In the United States, the White House said it was monitoring the situation and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said it had started work on a vaccine if it was needed. It would take five to six months to begin commercial production.

SHADOW OF SARS

With the fear that a SARS-like epidemic could re-emerge, China said it was pulling out the stops to combat the virus.

"(China) will strengthen its leadership in combating the virus ... and coordinate and deploy the entire nation's health system to combat the virus," the Health Ministry said in a statement on its website (www.moh.gov.cn).

In 2003, authorities initially tried to cover up an epidemic of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), which emerged in China and killed about 10 percent of the 8,000 people it infected worldwide.

China "will continue to openly and transparently maintain communication and information channels with the World Health Organisation and relevant countries and regions, and strengthen monitoring and preventative measures", the ministry said.

Shanghai has suspended poultry sales at two other marktes and ordered through disinfection of the premises. In Huhuai, authorities were conducting proper disposal of the culled birds, their excrement and contaminated food as well as disinfection of the market, Xinhua said.

The virus has been shared with World Health Organization (WHO) collaborating centres in Atlanta, Beijing, London, Melbourne and Tokyo, and these groups are analysing samples to identify the best candidate to be used for the manufacture of vaccine - if it becomes necessary.

Any decision to mass-produce vaccines against H7N9 flu will not be taken lightly, since it will mean sacrificing production of seasonal shots.

That could mean shortages of vaccine against the normal seasonal flu which, while not serious for most people, still costs thousands of lives.

Sanofi Pasteur (SASY.PA), the world's largest flu vaccine manufacturer, said it was in continuous contact with the WHO through the International Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations (IFPMA), but it was too soon to know the significance of the Chinese cases.

Other leading flu vaccine makers include GlaxoSmithKline (GSK.L) and Novartis NOVN.VX.

Preliminary test results suggest the new flu strain responds to treatment with Roche's (ROG.VX) drug Tamiflu and GSK's Relenza, according to the WHO.

Other strains of bird flu, such as H5N1, have been circulating for many years and can be transmitted from bird to bird, and bird to human, but not generally from human to human.

So far, this lack of human-to-human transmission also appears to be a feature of the H7N9 strain.

"The gene sequences confirm that this is an avian virus, and that it is a low pathogenic form (meaning it is likely to cause mild disease in birds)," said Wendy Barclay, a flu virologist at Britain's Imperial College London.

"But what the sequences also reveal is that there are some mammalian adapting mutations in some of the genes."

(Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in BEIJING, Grace Li in HONG KONG,; Olivier Fabre in TOKYO, Hanoi newsroom; Kate Kelland in LONDON and Julie Steenhuysen in CHICAGO; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Source: http://in.reuters.com/article/2013/04/05/health-h7n9-bird-flu-vaccine-idINDEE93400T20130405?feedType=RSS&feedName=topNews

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An ancient biosonar sheds new light on the evolution of echolocation in toothed whales

Apr. 4, 2013 ? Some 30 million years ago, Ganges river dolphins diverged from other toothed whales, making them one of the oldest species of aquatic mammals that use echolocation, or biosonar, to navigate and find food. This also makes them ideal subjects for scientists working to understand the evolution of echolocation among toothed whales.

New research, led by Frants Havmand Jensen, a Danish Council for Independent Research / Natural Sciences postdoctoral fellow at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, shows that freshwater dolphins produce echolocation signals at very low sound intensities compared to marine dolphins, and that Ganges river dolphins echolocate at surprisingly low sound frequencies. The study, "Clicking in shallow rivers," was published in the journal PLOS ONE.

"Ganges River dolphins are one of the most ancient evolutionary branches of toothed whales," says Jensen. "We believe our findings help explain the differences in echolocation between freshwater and marine dolphins. Our findings imply that the sound intensity and frequency of Ganges river dolphin may have been closer to the 'starting point' from which marine dolphins gradually evolved their high-frequent, powerful biosonar."

The scientists believe these differences evolved due to differences in freshwater and marine environments and the location and distribution of prey in those environments.

A complex, underwater environment

To sustain themselves, river dolphins must find their food, often small fish or crustaceans, in highly turbid water where visibility seldom exceeds a few inches. Like their marine relatives, they manage this using echolocation: They continuously emit sound pulses into the environment and listen for the faint echoes reflected off obstacles while paying special attention to the small details in the echoes that might signify a possible meal.

The environment that freshwater dolphins operate in poses very different challenges to a biosonar than the vast expanses of the sea where most dolphins later evolved. "Dolphins that range through the open ocean often feed on patchily distributed prey, such as schools of fish," Jensen says. "They have had a large advantage from evolving an intense biosonar that would help them detect prey over long distances, but we have little idea of how the complex river habitats of freshwater dolphins shape their biosonar signals."

Shy study animals with a surprisingly deep voice

To answer that question, the researchers recorded the echolocation signals of two species of toothed whales inhabiting the same mangrove forest in the southern part of Bangladesh: The Ganges river dolphin, an exclusively riverine species that is actually not part of the dolphin family but rather the Platanistidae family, and the Irrawaddy, a freshwater toothed whale from the dolphin family that lives in both coastal and riverine habitats.

Surprisingly, the echolocation signals turned out to be much less intense than those employed by marine dolphins of similar size and it seemed that the freshwater dolphins were looking for prey at much shorter distances. From this, the researchers surmise that both the dolphin species and the river dolphin were echolocating at short range due to the complex and circuitous river system that they were foraging in.

While both Irawaddy and Ganges river dolphin produced lower intensity biosonar, the Ganges river dolphin had an unexpectedly low frequency biosonar, nearly half as high as expected if this species had been a marine dolphin.

"It is very surprising to see these animals produce such low-frequent biosonar sounds. We are talking about a small toothed whale the size of a porpoise producing sounds that would be more typical for a killer whale or a large pilot whale," says Professor Peter Teglberg Madsen from Aarhus University in Denmark, an expert on toothed whale biosonar and co-author of the study.

A new perspective on the evolution of biosonar

The study suggests that echolocation in toothed whales initially evolved as a short, broadband and low-frequent click. As dolphins and other toothed whales evolved in the open ocean, the need to detect schools of fish or other prey items quickly favored a long-distance biosonar system. As animals gradually evolved to produce and to hear higher sound frequencies, the biosonar beam became more focused and the toothed whales were able to detect prey further away.

However, the Ganges river dolphin separated from other toothed whales early throughout this evolutionary process, adapting to a life in shallow, winding river systems where a high-frequency, long-distance sonar system may have been less important than other factors such as high maneuverability or the flexible neck that helps these animals capture prey at close range or hiding within mangrove roots or similar obstructions.

Improved tools for counting animals

Freshwater dolphins are among the most endangered animal species. Only around a thousand Ganges river dolphins are thought to remain, and they inhabit some of the most polluted and overfished river systems on Earth. The results of this study will help provide local collaborators with a new tool in their struggle to conserve these highly threatened freshwater cetaceans. Using acoustic monitoring devices to identify the local species may help researchers estimate how many animals remain, and to identify what areas are most important to them.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Frants H. Jensen, Alice Rocco, Rubaiyat M. Mansur, Brian D. Smith, Vincent M. Janik, Peter T. Madsen. Clicking in Shallow Rivers: Short-Range Echolocation of Irrawaddy and Ganges River Dolphins in a Shallow, Acoustically Complex Habitat. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (4): e59284 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0059284

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/CEzBgIwt_lA/130404152625.htm

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ৪ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

WazobiaBlog: Blogging definition and Tips to be a Successful Blogger

?This was a guest post by

Blogging is definitely the modern day expression of resourceful and commercial writing.
It also has its very own objective in the entire world of the Internet.

Thus, for people today who wants to take advantage of their hobby, as far as crafting is concerned, blogs are definitely the most effective way to accomplish them.


If writing is an art, then, blogging is another way of utilizing words and phrases to come up with a form of art. This is certainly due to the fact persons who?re into blogging are classified as the ones who?re creative on their own sense, properly picking out words and phrases that might most effectively express their inner thoughts, sentiments, desires, wishes, and almost everything.

Generally, blogs were initial presented as weblogs that relate to a ?server?s log file.? It was built when web logging click the virtual market. Since its beginning in the mid-1990s, web logging slowly but surely saturated the virtual community making the World wide web a worthwhile resource of more significant information and facts.

On the other hand, with web logging, you will still need to have a website and and professionally chosen domain names, however with blogging, you don't require anything at all just an account with blog providers. In many cases, these types of? blogs are absolutely free.

Usually, blogs are made for individual use. Such as a journal, people can publish their everyday ventures, feelings, and no matter what ideas they would like to express on the internet.

On the other hand, with the advancement of the online businesses, blogs had steadily obtained the spotlight in offering businesses the opportunity to enhance their work productivity online.

Business blogs are, generally, developed to publicize the products or services of a particular website or internet business to be able to maximize online sales.

Additionally, business blogs will also be another way of endorsing the firm to ensure that the other audience are fully aware of that particular company exists online. With blogs, internet marketers have the ability to establish an identity in the virtual market by means of articles that might be extremely helpful in the reader?s daily life.

From there, you can make money out of blogs by simply syndicating it to your business? web site.

Read more from here:

Regards

Eniola Adewale

Wazobiablog.com
Chief Blogger

?

Source: http://www.wazobiablog.com/2013/04/blogging-definition-and-tips-to-be.html

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David Ellison's skydance productions launches TV division

By Lucas Shaw

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) - David Ellison, a major film financier and provider of Paramount's biggest movies, is getting into the television business. Skydance Productions, Ellison's company that co-finances and co-produces big-budget films like the recent hit "G.I. Joe: Retaliation," will launch a TV division May 1 and has hired former Fox executive Marcy Ross to run it.

The announcement comes less than a week after TheWrap reported that Paramount CEO Brad Grey wants to bring TV production back to the studio and has been meeting with candidates to help run a new division. There is no mention of Paramount in this announcement, but because Elllison already bankrolls many of Paramount's biggest movies, he would seem a logical partner in the studio's TV efforts.

Ross most recently served as executive vice president of current programming at Fox, overseeing shows like "Glee," House" and "Family Guy." She has also worked at Studios USA, the Jim Henson Company and Sandollar Television, developing such series as "The Jim Gaffigan Show," "The Muppet Show" and "Buffy The Vampire Slayer."

"During her tenure at Fox, Marcy has developed and produced some of the best shows on television that have entertained audiences around the world," Ellison said in a statement. "We are thrilled to welcome her into the Skydance family to help pioneer our entrance into this wonderful medium of storytelling."

Ellison is the son of Oracle CEO Larry Ellison - one of the richest men in the world - and the brother of Megan Ellison, who has spent her money in the world of independent film production, supporting auteurs like David O. Russell and Paul Thomas Anderson.

David Ellison has engineered his company around the expensive, lavish films studios yearn for. He is co-financing and co-producing most of Paramount's biggest films this year, from "G.I. Joe" to "Star Trek: Into Darkness" to the Brad Pitt zombie film "World War Z."

He has now set his sights on an even more lucrative medium, television. It remains unclear how many shows he'll make or whether he'll sign a deal with a network.

His publicist would not elaborate.

Two things we do know? He's ambitious, and he'll have plenty of money to spend.

"When I met David and the Skydance team, I knew I had found the creative partner I was looking for," Ross said in a statement. "I am so impressed with the success that David, Dana Goldberg and Paul Schwake are achieving in the feature film side and I trust that once we open our doors wide to the television community, we will find the same success building a fun, nurturing place to create programming."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/david-ellisons-skydance-productions-launches-tv-division-203835234.html

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As Facebook matures, is it losing its edge?

This photo taken Monday March 25,2013 of Daniel Singer,13 works at his computer at his home in Los Angeles. Singer, thinks the average teenager wants to see new stuff. Twitter, comes to mind, along with Instagram and Pheed, a photo-text-video-audio sharing app launched last fall. For Singer, Facebook is part of a daily routine. ?Kind of like brushing your teeth,? he says. (AP Photo/Nick Ut)

This photo taken Monday March 25,2013 of Daniel Singer,13 works at his computer at his home in Los Angeles. Singer, thinks the average teenager wants to see new stuff. Twitter, comes to mind, along with Instagram and Pheed, a photo-text-video-audio sharing app launched last fall. For Singer, Facebook is part of a daily routine. ?Kind of like brushing your teeth,? he says. (AP Photo/Nick Ut)

(AP) ? To see what Facebook has become, look no further than the Hutzler 571 Banana Slicer.

Sometime last year, people began sharing tongue-in-cheek online reviews of the banana-shaped piece of yellow plastic with their Facebook friends. Then those friends shared with their friends. Soon, after Amazon paid to promote it, posts featuring the $3.49 utensil were appearing in even more Facebook feeds.

At some point, though, the joke got old. But there it was, again and again ? the banana slicer had become a Facebook version of that old knock-knock joke your weird uncle has been telling for years.

The Hutzler 571 phenomenon is a regular occurrence on the world's biggest online social network, which begs the question: Has Facebook become less fun?

That's something many users ? especially those in their teens and early 20s ? are asking themselves as they wade through endless posts, photos "liked" by people they barely know and spur-of-the moment friend requests. Has it all become too much of a chore? Are the important life events of your closest loved ones drowning in a sea of banana slicer jokes?

"When I first got Facebook I literally thought it was the coolest thing to have. If you had a Facebook you kind of fit in better, because other people had one," says Rachel Fernandez, 18, who first signed on to the site four or five years ago.

And now? "Facebook got kind of boring," she says.

Chatter about Facebook's demise never seems to die down, whether it's talk of "Facebook fatigue," or grousing about how the social network lost its cool once grandma joined. The Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life Project recently found that some 61 percent of Facebook users had taken a hiatus from the site for reasons that range from "too much gossip and drama" to "boredom." Some respondents said there simply isn't enough time in their day for Facebook.

If Facebook Inc.'s users leave, or even check in less frequently, its revenue growth would suffer. The company, which depends on targeted advertising for most of the money it makes, booked revenue of $5.1 billion in 2012, up from $3.7 billion a year earlier.

But so far, for every person who has left permanently, several new people have joined up. Facebook has more than 1 billion users around the world. Of these, 618 million sign in every day.

Indeed, Fernandez hasn't abandoned Facebook. Though the Traverse City, Mich., high school senior doesn't look at her News Feed, the constant cascade of posts, photos and viral videos from her nearly 1,800 friends, she still uses Facebook's messaging feature to reach out to people she knows, such as a German foreign exchange student she met two years ago.

Fernandez uses Facebook in the same way that people use email or the telephone. But she prefers using Facebook to communicate because everyone she knows is there. That's a sign that Facebook's biggest asset may also be its biggest challenge.

"We have never seen a social space that actually works for everybody," says danah boyd, who studies youth culture, the Internet and social media as a senior researcher at Microsoft Research. "People don't want to hang out with everybody they have ever met."

Might Facebook go the way of email? Those who came of age in the "You've got mail" era can reminisce fondly about arriving home from school and checking their AOL accounts to see if anyone sent them an electronic message. Boyd, who is 35 (and legally spells her name with no capitalization), recalls being a teenager and "thinking email is the best thing ever."

Few people share that sentiment these days. Ian Bogost, professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology, recently listed email alongside "Blood, frogs, lice, flies, pestilence, boils, hail, locusts, darkness, death of the firstborn" in a Facebook post.

"I was just going through my daily email routine, reflecting on the fact that it feels like batting down a wall of locusts," Bogost says.

Although email has gone from after-school treat to a dull routine in the space of 20 years, no one is ready to ring its death knell just yet. And similarly, Facebook's lost luster doesn't necessarily foreshadow its obsolescence.

"I don't see teenagers leaving in droves," boyd says. "I just don't see it being their site of passion."

In early March, Facebook unveiled a big redesign to address some of its users' most pressing gripes. The retooling, which is already available to some people, is intended to get rid of the clutter that's been a complaint among Facebook users for some time.

Facebook surveys its users regularly about their thoughts on the site. Jane Leibrock, whose title at Facebook is user experience researcher, says it was about a year ago that she noticed people were complaining about "clutter" in their feeds. Leibrock asked them what they meant. It turns out that the different types of content flowing through people's News Feeds ? links, ads, photos, status updates, things people "liked" or commented on ? were "making it difficult to focus on any one thing," she says. "It might have even been discouraging them from finding new content."

The new design seeks to address the issue. There is a distinct feed for "all friends," another for different groups of friends, one just for photos, and one for pages that users follow. As a result, says Chris Struhar, the lead engineer on the new design, the new feeds give people a way to see everything that's going on.

"The amount of stories you have available to see has continued to increase," Struhar says. "What we try to do now is give you more control over what stories you see in your feed."

With that kind of control, the company hopes people will spend more time on the site and share more information about themselves so companies can target them better with advertisements.

Paul Friedman, a 59-year-old dentist in New York City, says he's using Facebook less now than when he first signed on four years ago, but he's not sure if the site has "become less interesting or that I am just less interested in it," he says.

"I think that it might have seemed more interesting in the past because it was a new 'forum,'" Friedman says. "Now that it is not new, it takes more unique content to make it interesting."

That said, Friedman still uses Facebook to see if friends are organizing events, such as music gigs or yoga classes, or to check out interesting YouTube videos. He says seeing the same jokes reappear doesn't really bother him.

"Ninety-nine percent of it is a waste of time anyway," he says. "If it wasn't for the one percent, I'd close my account."

When it comes to people of a certain age, Friedman may be in the minority. Tammy Gordon, vice president of the AARP's social media team, says the 50-plus set is just now settling into Facebook. The organization's own Facebook page grew from 80,000 fans to a million last year. This age group is growing the fastest because older people tend to be latecomers to Facebook. According to a recent Pew survey, 32 percent of people 65 or older use social networking sites, compared with 83 percent of those 18 to 29.

"They are not necessarily at that point where some of the younger generation is, where they have News Feed overload," Gordon says.

Robert Worden, who is 62 and has nearly 1,100 friends on Facebook, isn't overwhelmed. He says he got on Facebook two or three years ago primarily to establish a relationship with his estranged son, whom he didn't see for a quarter century before he found him on Facebook.

Through his son, he also found out he had a granddaughter, who has been adopted and used Facebook to find her biological family when she turned 18. They are now all connected.

Worden, who lives in Paducah, Ky., says he probably wouldn't have found his son were it not for Facebook, never mind his granddaughter. He also reconnected with people from his Memphis, Tenn., neighborhood using Facebook ? people he had not seen in half a century. The neighborhood, he says, "literally fell apart" in the 1960s, "and we had never been able to get back together."

"So someone said 'why don't you start a Facebook page?" he says. The group recently had its first reunion. Fifty people showed up.

Worden says Facebook is his "major communication tool to the world."

"Other people use news and I don't find the nightly news or daily news to be adequate," he says. "On Facebook I can actually hear from people who are living in the places where things are happening, and I can get instant information."

Daniel Singer is 13 and, according to his public Facebook profile, he enjoys "designing beautiful user interfaces and sitting down at my desk and creating great iOS apps." Last year, the eighth-grader created YouTell, a site that lets people ask for anonymous feedback from friends. You can use Facebook to log in, or email. As someone who designs applications, Singer calls Facebook's graphical design "brilliant." Still, he thinks the average teenager wants to see new stuff. Twitter comes to mind, along with Instagram and Pheed, a photo-text-video-audio sharing app launched last fall.

For Singer, Facebook is part of a daily routine. "Kind of like brushing your teeth," he says.

In the seven years since Mark Zuckerberg started Facebook in his Harvard dormitory, Facebook has moved from a closed social networking service available to college students to a place where one seventh of the world's population logs in at least once a month. No other social networking fad has accomplished such a feat.

Facebook predecessors MySpace and Friendster shone brightly but fizzled once finicky teenagers moved on to the next big thing. To boyd, though, Facebook is not only a destination site, but "a technical architecture that underlies many different things."

"It's not about new features to lure people back in," boyd says. A bigger question now, she says: What does it mean when your company is providing a vital service, rather than "a fun, glittery object"?

Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales, whose for-profit content creation site Wikia recently surveyed its young users about their technology habits, agrees. Teenagers, he says, "do see value in Facebook."

"I think we are seeing a shift from (it being) a place to talk to each other as just part of the world ?the infrastructure of the world," he says. "I don't know if that's to the detriment of Facebook in the long run."

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Follow Barbara Ortutay on Twitter at https://twitter.com/BarbaraOrtutay

Associated Press

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