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Deeply Empathetic People Process Music Differently in Their Brains

People with who deeply feel the pain or happiness of others differ in the way their brains process music, according to one study.

The researchers found that those with higher empathy process familiar music with greater involvement of the reward system of the brain, as well as in areas responsible for processing social information.

“High-empathy and low-empathy people share a lot in common when listening to music, including roughly equivalent involvement in the regions of the brain related to auditory, emotion, and sensory-motor processing,” said lead author Zachary Wallmark, an assistant professor in the SMU Meadows School of the Arts.

But there is at least one significant difference.

Highly empathic people process familiar music with greater involvement of the brain’s social circuitry, such as the areas activated when feeling empathy for others. They also seem to experience a greater degree of pleasure in listening, as indicated by increased activation of the reward system.

“This may indicate that music is being perceived weakly as a kind of social entity, as an imagined or virtual human presence,” Wallmark said.

Researchers in 2014 reported that about 20 percent of the population is highly empathic. These are people who are especially sensitive and respond strongly to social and emotional stimuli.

This SMU-UCLA study is the first to find evidence supporting a neural account of the music-empathy connection. Also, it is among the first to use functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to explore how empathy affects the way we perceive music.

The  study indicates that among higher-empathy people, at least, music is not solely a form of artistic expression.

“If music was not related to how we process the social world, then we likely would have seen no significant difference in the brain activation between high-empathy and low-empathy people,” said Wallmark, who is director of the MuSci Lab at SMU, an interdisciplinary research collective that studies—among other things—how music affects the brain.

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“This tells us that over and above appreciating music as high art, music is about humans interacting with other humans and trying to understand and communicate with each other,” he said.

This may seem obvious.

“But in our culture we have a whole elaborate system of music education and music thinking that treats music as a sort of disembodied object of aesthetic contemplation,” Wallmark said.

“In contrast, the results of our study help explain how music connects us to others. This could have implications for how we understand the function of music in our world, and possibly in our evolutionary past.”

The researchers reported their findings in the peer-reviewed journal Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, in the article “Neurophysiological effects of trait empathy in music listening.”

“The study shows on one hand the power of empathy in modulating music perception, a phenomenon that reminds us of the original roots of the concept of empathy—’feeling into’ a piece of art,” said senior author Marco Iacoboni, a neuroscientist at the UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior.

“On the other hand,” Iacoboni said, “the study shows the power of music in triggering the same complex social processes at work in the brain that are at play during human social interactions.”

Comparison of brain scans showed distinctive differences based on empathy

Participants were 20 UCLA undergraduate students. They were each scanned in an MRI machine while listening to excerpts of music that were either familiar or unfamiliar to them, and that they either liked or disliked. The familiar music was selected by participants prior to the scan.

Afterward each person completed a standard questionnaire to assess individual differences in empathy—for example, frequently feeling sympathy for others in distress, or imagining oneself in another’s shoes.

READ: MIT Scientists Spin Some Music Out of Spider Webs – And it Sounds Otherworldly (Listen)

The researchers then did controlled comparisons to see which areas of the brain during music listening are correlated with empathy.

Analysis of the brain scans showed that high empathizers experienced more activity in the dorsal striatum, part of the brain’s reward system, when listening to familiar music, whether they liked the music or not.

The reward system is related to pleasure and other positive emotions. Malfunction of the area can lead to addictive behaviors.

Empathic people process music with involvement of social cognitive circuitry

In addition, the brain scans of higher empathy people in the study also recorded greater activation in medial and lateral areas of the prefrontal cortex that are responsible for processing the social world, and in the temporoparietal junction, which is critical to analyzing and understanding others’ behaviors and intentions.

RELATED: That Song Stuck in Your Head is Helping the Brain With Long-Term Memory

Typically, those areas of the brain are activated when people are interacting with, or thinking about, other people. Observing their correlation with empathy during music listening might indicate that music to these listeners functions as a proxy for a human encounter.

Beyond analysis of the brain scans, the researchers also looked at purely behavioral data— answers to a survey asking the listeners to rate the music afterward.

Those data also indicated that higher empathy people were more passionate in their musical likes and dislikes, such as showing a stronger preference for unfamiliar music.

Precise neurophysiological relationship between empathy and music is largely unexplored

A large body of research has focused on the cognitive neuroscience of empathy—how we understand and experience the thoughts and emotions of other people. Studies point to a number of areas of the prefrontal, insular, and cingulate cortices as being relevant to what brain scientists refer to as social cognition.

Activation of the social circuitry in the brain varies from individual to individual. People with more empathic personalities show increased activity in those areas when performing socially relevant tasks, including watching a needle penetrating skin, listening to non-verbal vocal sounds, observing emotional facial expressions, or seeing a loved one in pain.

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In the field of music psychology, a number of recent studies have suggested that empathy is related to intensity of emotional responses to music, listening style, and musical preferences—for example, empathic people are more likely to enjoy sad music.

“This study contributes to a growing body of evidence,” Wallmark said, “that music processing may piggyback upon cognitive mechanisms that originally evolved to facilitate social interaction.”

Source: Southern Methodist University

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Nintendo is Partnering With a Nonprofit to Bring Gaming Consoles to Hospitalized Kids

Starlight Gaming Stationnonprof

Starlight Nintendo Switch Gaming stations have been making their way to hospitals and health care facilities across the country.

Each station comes preloaded with more than 25 games from Super Mario Party to The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild.

The station is specially designed and manufactured by Nintendo for use in a hospital setting.

The device can be completely cleaned with disinfectant to meet a hospital’s strict safety infection protocols and includes a mounted playback monitor that can roll anywhere in a hospital, so children can enjoy some of their favorite Nintendo video games from the comfort of their own hospital beds or in a playroom with a group of other children.

Gaming delivers happiness to kids stuck in the hospital by providing entertainment and much-needed distraction from stressful situations. According to Starlight Children’s Foundation, it can even provide emotional support, resulting in reduced anxiety and improved mood.

CHECK OUT: Study During Lockdown Shows Video Gaming –Even For Hours– Can Help Your Mental Health

Doctors, nurses, clinicians, and child life specialists are able to use a single Starlight Gaming station in a variety of settings, from entertaining children during a relative’s visit to the emergency room, to distracting kids during an otherwise painful medical treatment, to giving kids something fun to do during long periods of isolation or with a group of other kids, or helping them to relax and feel comfortable when communicating with caregivers about their diagnosis.

In 28 years, the partnership of Starlight with Nintendo of America has delivered Gaming stations to over 800 hospitals and healthcare facilities all over the country—bringing smiles to an estimated 11.6 million seriously ill children.

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“Over the years, Starlight Gaming stations have provided millions of seriously ill children with the healing power of play, entertainment, socialization, and emotional support, and have helped to normalize an otherwise scary situation or setting for families,” Adam Garone, CEO of Starlight, said. “We’re so grateful to Nintendo and their employees for such a long and continuing partnership fueled by innovation, impact, and generous support.”

“It’s been our pleasure to work with Starlight and observe them bringing happiness to kids when they need it the most,” Don James, Nintendo of America’s Executive Vice President of Operations, added. “As with everything we do, we hope the new Starlight Nintendo Switch gaming stations will put smiles on the faces of children and their families.”

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Two-Legged Pooch Rescued From Afghanistan Makes the Most Amazing Recovery: ‘He’s full of joy’

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A two-legged pooch who was rescued from the streets of Afghanistan has made a remarkable recovery—and loves running on his two legs.

Maz the Labrador cross was struck by a car that crushed both of his back legs in 2013, and was left to roam the streets of the war-torn nation.

UK NHS doctor Helene Svinos said she saw a video of the ‘friendliest dog’ online on Valentine’s Day in 2015 and couldn’t stop thinking about him.

Despite his severe injuries, Maz was ‘full of joy’ and Helene decided she had to bring him back to her home in Manchester, England.

After contacting old friend Louise Hastie, a former soldier who rescues dogs from war zones, the dog was taken to Kabul and eventually flown to the UK in May that year.

Maz has joined a gang of other pups at Helene’s home, as she has six rescue dogs including paraplegic Pomeranian Bambi and blind Husky Inka, both from Romania.

Despite having both of his back legs amputated after they were fused together, Maz has remained upbeat and is always raring to go for runs.

Helene said the pooch has repeatedly refused to wear wheels or walking aids as he loves to ‘scuttle around as fast as lighting’.

Marvellous Maz has even beaten Helene’s three springer spaniels in a sprint, despite them competing in CaniCross races.

Helene said: “Maz is just a complete and utter star. You can’t feel sad or unhappy around him as he’s full of joy—except for when it’s raining.

“Maz has never let anything stop him from doing all the things he wants to do—including rolling in mud!

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“He just lives in the moment and he doesn’t focus on what happened in the past.”

Helene, who works on the frontline as an A&E doctor at Manchester Royal Infirmary, said coming home to her dogs has helped her throughout the Covid crisis.

She said: “I’m an A&E doctor working during lockdown, but coming home he just puts things into perspective.

“It’s been difficult at times during lockdown, feeling lonely, but then I come back to these happy dogs.”

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The intelligent pooch somehow found his way to a vet where he befriended one of the doctors and would always leap up to greet anyone despite his injuries, Helene said.

They tried to keep the friendly pooch healthy but with limited resources, they were unable to do much more and posted an appeal online.

RELATED: Never Give Up! Terrier Lost For 290 Days After Vacation is Found Thanks to Social Media

Louise Hastie from War Paws, a charity she set up to help dogs in areas of civil conflict, helped bring Maz to Manchester where he is now ‘full of life’.

He had two four-hour surgeries to remove his back legs in May 2015 before he finally found his forever home with Helene.

Helene said: “He’s just the most wonderful dog and I’m so grateful to have him in my life.

CHECK OUT: Stranger Takes Home 2 Dogs After Helping Car Accident Victims Get Airlifted to Hospital Unable to Tend Pups

“There are so many incredible dogs in the world who need homes, and they will bring you as much joy as you give them.

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“I have a special love for disabled dogs, and I think people are worried that they may have problems but that’s just not true.

“They get overlooked often but they can live a full and happy life.”

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“Do not let the pain make you hate. Do not let the bitterness steal your sweetness. Take pride that even though the rest of the world may disagree, you still believe it is a beautiful place” – Iain Thomas

Quote of the Day: “Do not let the pain make you hate. Do not let the bitterness steal your sweetness. Take pride that even though the rest of the world may disagree, you still believe it is a beautiful place” – Iain Thomas, I Wrote This For You

Photo: by Martin Adams

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quotes page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

 

 

Explorer Who Found Many Iconic Shipwrecks Like the Titanic Credits Dyslexia For His Success

Ted Talks on YouTube / Titanic photo by NOAA
Ted Talks on YouTube / Titanic photo by NOAA

Not being able to see the world in the same way as others is often considered a drawback, but the view from a different lens can also be revelatory.

79-year-old Robert Ballard, a pioneer in underwater robotic technology, always knew he was “wired differently” than most folks, but it was only a few years ago that he learned he was dyslexic.

While he finally had an explanation for early learning issues that set him apart from his peers, the realization also went a long way toward explaining just how extraordinary his particular gift of vision was.

As National Geographic “explorer at large,” along with his ongoing robotic research at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Ballard’s milieu is literally the wide oceans of the Earth.

“I live in a world where everywhere I go is totally dark, so you have to visualize it in your mind… Dyslexics are extremely good at visualization of three-dimensional space,” Ballard told The i. “When I am at my command center… I’m able to take all of that information into my head and then form a mental image of a world of total darkness [where I’m] extremely comfortable… because I see it in my mind.”

Before discovering he was dyslexic, Ballard assumed that’s how everyone else saw the world as well, but it’s his singular ability to simultaneously assimilate vast quantities of information “eyes-on” that’s led to his greatest achievements.

Ballard is the man responsible for finding the wreck of the RMS Titanic. While it’s arguably the historic footnote he’ll be best remembered for (at least by search engines), ironically, when the discovery was made, Ballard was on a top-secret mission for the U.S. government. Searching for the storied lost liner was just his cover story.

Check Out: This Font is Designed Specifically For Dyslexia – and it Really Works

In addition to locating other notable shipwrecks—like the infamous Nazi battleship, the Bismarck, the aircraft carrier USS Yorktown, and the torpedo patrol boat last commanded by John F. Kennedy who saved his crew when it sunk during WWII—the technology spearheaded by Ballard has given us some of the most comprehensive scientific knowledge of the ocean floor to date.

Ballard’s robot denizens have plumbed the mysteries of plate tectonics and explored vast, previously uncharted undersea biomes home to creatures straight out of an Alien movie, including 13-foot worms with nightmarish gnashing teeth.

Alvin submersible from Woods Hole / NOAA

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Thinking outside the box of conventional maritime history, Ballard plotted a direct trading route across the Mediterranean Sea between ancient Rome and Carthage by following a trail of discarded empty wine bottles that were tossed overboard by sailors at mealtime.

None of these things, he believes, would have been possible had he not seen the world through a dyslexic’s eyes.

“I often wonder how my life would have been different had I known I was dyslexic… I think I arrived at a good spot, but I got there by a very strange route,” he told The i.

In his new autobiography, Into the Deep, Ballard chronicles his personal history and storied career, along with the very important role his dyslexia played in all that he’s accomplished.

“Everyone needs to understand that dyslexics aren’t stupid, they’re just a different kind of human being. They see the world in a very different way,” Ballard told the University of Rhode Island News. “This book is a coming-out party for my dyslexia. I’m standing on a soapbox now and saying, ‘I’m dyslexic,’ and I feel so lucky’.”

MORE: Childhood ADHD – 5 Things No One Else is Telling You

Nearing 80, Ballard is mentoring more these days, but he continues to be actively involved in new projects, including the design and implementation of a fleet of autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs), which he says can be programmed “like a pack of hounds” to hunt the estimated 3,999,040 remaining shipwrecks (that’s minus the 60 he’s already found) languishing beneath the waves.

In addition, Ballard is partnering with National Geographic to create a program offering educational opportunities so that dyslexics who come from disadvantaged backgrounds can better achieve their full potential.

“When I was growing up, my Kansas grandmother was full of sayings, and I remember one in particular…  ‘Great is the person who plants a tree knowing they will never sit in its shade.’ That’s where I am now. I’m planting trees.”

(WATCH Robert Ballard’s popular Ted Talk below.)

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Thailand Announces Ban on Coral-Damaging Sunscreens in Marine National Parks

Thailand has announced that, across its marine national parks, it’s banning sunscreens that contain chemicals known to damage coral.

The Thai Department of Conservation said four ingredients commonly found in sunscreens are shown to destroy chemical larvae. They obstruct coral reproduction and contribute to bleaching of reef systems.

Those banned chemicals are: oxybenzone, octinoxate, 4-methylbenzylidene camphor or butylparaben.

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Hawaii and the Pacific islands of Palau, Bonaire, and Aruba, which are all known for their delicate reef systems, have also announced similar bans.

To learn more about reef safe sunscreen—which typically include UV-blocking minerals like oxide and titanium dioxide as their active ingredients—check out this handy guide.

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Duetting Songbirds ‘Mute’ the Musical Mind of Their Partner to Stay in Sync, Researchers Find

NJIT
NJIT

Art Garfunkel once described his legendary musical chemistry with Paul Simon, “We meet somewhere in the air through the vocal cords… .” But a new study of duetting songbirds from Ecuador has offered another tune explaining the mysterious connection between successful performing duos.

It’s a link of their minds, and it happens, in fact, as each singer mutes the brain of the other as they coordinate their duets.

In a study, a team of researchers studying brain activity of singing male and female plain-tailed wrens has discovered that the species synchronizes their frenetically paced duets, surprisingly, by inhibiting the song-making regions of their partner’s brain as they exchange phrases.

Researchers say that the auditory feedback exchanged between wrens during their opera-like duets momentarily inhibits motor circuits used for singing in the listening partner, which helps link the pair’s brains and coordinate turn-taking for a seemingly telepathic performance. The study also offers fresh insight into how humans and other cooperative animals use sensory cues to act in concert with one another.

“You could say that timing is everything,” said Eric Fortune, co-author of the study and neurobiologist at New Jersey Institute of Technology’s Department of Biological Sciences.

“What these wrens have shown us is that for any good collaboration, partners need to become ‘one’ through sensory linkages. The take-home message is that when we are cooperating well… we become a single entity with our partners.”

“Think of these birds like jazz singers,” added Melissa Coleman, the paper’s corresponding author and associate professor of biology at Scripps College. “Duetting wrens have a rough song structure planned before they sing, but as the song evolves, they must rapidly coordinate by receiving constant input from their counterpart.

“What we expected to find was a highly active set of specialized neurons that coordinate this turn-taking, but instead what we found is that hearing each other actually causes inhibition of those neurons—that’s the key regulating the incredible timing between the two.”

MORE: Falcons Have Natural ‘Eye Makeup’ to Improve Hunting Ability, Scientists Discover

For the study, the team had to travel to the heart of the plain-tail wren music scene, within remote bamboo forests on the slopes of Ecuador’s active Antisana Volcano.

Camped at the Yanayacu Biological Station’s lab, the team made neurophysiological recordings of four pairs of native wrens as they sang solo and duet songs, analyzing sensorimotor activity in a premotor area of the birds’ brains where specialized neurons for learning and making music are active.

The recordings showed that during duet turn-taking—which often take the form of tightly knit call-and-answer phrases, or syllables, that together sound as if a single bird is singing—the birds’ neurons fired rapidly when they produced their own syllables.

Yet, as one wren begins to hear their partner’s syllables sung in the duet, the neurons quiet down significantly.

“You can think of inhibition as acting like a trampoline,” explained Fortune. “When the birds hear their partner, the neurons are inhibited, but just like rebounding off a trampoline, the release from that inhibition causes them to swiftly respond when it’s their time to sing.”

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Next, the team played recordings of wrens duetting while they were in a sleep-like state, anesthetized with a drug that affects a major inhibitory neurotransmitter in the wrens’ brains that is also found in humans, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). The drug transformed the activity in the brain, from inhibition to bursts of activity when the wrens heard their own music.

“These mechanisms are shared or similar to what happens in our brains because we are doing the same kind of things,” said Fortune, whose study has been published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. “There are similar brain circuits in humans that are involved in learning and coordinating vocalizations.”

Fortune and Coleman say the results offer a fresh look into how the brains of humans and other cooperating animals use sensory cues to act in concert with each other, from flowing musical and dance performances, or even the disjointed feeling of inhibition commonly experienced today during video conferencing.

(WATCH the video illustrating this research below.)

Source: New Jersey Institute of Technology

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See the Moment a Shark Appears to Pose for a Selfie With a Diver, and Crack the Same Huge Smile

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This is the moment a shark appears to pose for a selfie with a diver—and crack the same giant smile.

36-year-old William Drumm recently clicked the perfectly timed shot 20 miles off the coast of Isla Mujeres in Mexico.

Whale sharks often swim with their mouths open and William thought it would make a good shot to imitate them.

After a few tries, he managed to get the perfect image. The Coloradan explained said that whale sharks are “so amazing.” The largest sharks on the planet, they “are often swimming with their mouths open as they filter tiny plankton from the water.”

On Instagram he explained that there were “millions of fish eggs in the water, which is likely what attracts all of these sharks every year.

“A whale shark can consume 30,000 calories or more per day, feeding on some of the smallest prey imaginable!”

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“They swim pretty fast, so it took me a few tries, but I think I got a few images that worked.

“I felt so excited and honored to share the water with so many of these beautiful behemoths.

CHECK OUT: Humpback Whales Herd Salmon With Their Fins in Never-Before-Filmed Feeding Behavior

”Never have I seen so many whale sharks—at least 100 in a single day.”

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“Walk with the dreamers, the believers, the courageous, the cheerful, the planners, the doers, the successful people with their heads in the clouds and their feet on the ground.” – Wilferd Peterson

Quote of the Day: “Walk with the dreamers, the believers, the courageous, the cheerful, the planners, the doers, the successful people with their heads in the clouds and their feet on the ground.” – Wilferd Arlan Peterson

Photo: by Joshua Earle

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Remarkable 10-Year-old Inspires the World to Donate Half a Million Books For Kids: ‘A Catalyst’ For Kindness

Orion Jean/Family photo
Orion Jean/Family photo

One boy is on a big mission to share the joys of reading with hundreds of thousands of other kids.

Orion Jean is only 10 years old, but after winning a student kindness contest in 2020, he’s caught the generosity bug: The number of books he’s currently hoping to pool in donations for other kids in Texas? Half a million.

“Kindness is a virtue we can all possess. If we are willing to,” he said, according to CBC. “So why not start today. Because right now, it’s what we need more than ever.”

CHECK OUT: Teen Raised $38,000 By Cutting Off His 19-inch Afro – And Gave the Money to Help Kids With Cancer

Given that he’s already collected 120,000 books so far, we think he might just manage his ambitious goal.

(Watch the video below – *INTERNATIONAL VIEWERS CAN VIEW it at CBS.)

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94-Year-old Grandmother Wears Dream Wedding Dress, 70 Years After Being Denied Entry to Bridal Shop

YouTube/GMA
YouTube/GMA

A dream deferred doesn’t necessarily mean a dream denied, even if it takes seven decades to come true.

In 1952, Martha and Lehman Tucker became man and wife. Although the marriage was a true romance, the wedding was missing one element the bride would have dearly loved to have—a traditional white lace wedding gown.

But in those days, Martha was unable to make the purchase in the racially segregated bridal shops of Birmingham, Alabama.

For years, Martha kept those memories to herself, but recently the 94-year-old revealed her long-held hopes to her granddaughter, Angela Strozier.

Knowing the sacrifices the Black women of Martha’s generation faced day-to-day—being denied many of life’s customs, courtesies, and basic rights that others simply took for granted—Strozier decided it was time to make her grandmother’s wedding dress wish come true.

Angela Strozier

This past July, after a fortifying brunch and a preparatory makeup session, the bridal party made their way to David’s Bridal in Hoover, Alabama, where the wedding gown Martha had always dreamed of—complete with full-length lace sleeves, matching veil, and even a cheeky, charming thigh-high lace garter—awaited her.

Angela Strozier

“When I first put on that dress, I was just so very excited,” Martha told CNN. “It was like I was getting married all over again. When I saw myself in the mirror, I was shocked. I said to myself, ‘Who is that?’ I can’t even explain the feeling I got seeing myself in the wedding dress.”

CHECK OUT: See Couple Adorably Recreate Their Wedding Album 50 Years Later, at the Same Church in the Same Dress

“Happy doesn’t really paint the picture of how this made me feel,” Strozier added. “My grandma has always been a giver, so to be able to finally give her an experience so dear to her was priceless. Happy is an understatement.”

Sadly, Lehman Tucker passed away in 1975. On the day she married him, Martha promised herself that one day, she’d wear the dress worthy of those vows.

MORE: Muddy Bride Sacrifices Dress to Deliver Calf During Wedding Reception

Although it took her 70 years, it’s a promise she kept—and if there is an afterlife, we’re sure her beloved groom was smiling down on his beautiful bride when she finally did.

(MEET Martha in the GMA video below.)

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Researchers Identify a ‘Fearsome Dragon’ With 23-ft Wingspan That Soared Over Australian Outback

Artistic reconstruction of Thapunngaka shawi/University of Queensland Media
Artistic reconstruction of Thapunngaka shawi/University of Queensland Media

Australia’s largest flying reptile has been uncovered, a pterosaur that had a wingspan stretching 23 feet and soared like a dragon above the ancient inland sea that once covered the Queensland outback.

University of Queensland PhD candidate Tim Richards led a research team that analyzed a fossil of the creature’s jaw.

“It’s the closest thing we have to a real-life dragon,” Richards said.

“The new pterosaur, which we named Thapunngaka shawi, would have been a fearsome beast, with a spear-like mouth and a wingspan around seven meters.

“It was essentially just a skull with a long neck, bolted on a pair of long wings.

“This thing would have been quite savage. It would have cast a great shadow over some quivering little dinosaurs who wouldn’t have heard them coming until it was too late.”

Richards said the skull alone would have been just over one meter long, containing around 40 teeth.

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Tim Richards/ University of Queensland Media

“Even though pterosaurs could fly, they were nothing like birds, or even bats,” he said. “Pterosaurs were the very first back-boned animals to take a stab at powered flight.”

A reptile species in the anhanguerians group, these pterosaurs were perfectly adapted to powered flight because of their thin-walled, hollow bones—making their fossilized remains very rare and often poorly-preserved.

“It’s quite amazing (that) fossils of these animals exist at all,” Richards said.

RELATED: Dinosaur Unearthed in Argentina Could Be the Largest Animal That Ever Walked the Earth

Dr. Steve Salisbury, co-author of the paper published in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, noted what was particularly striking about this new species of anhanguerian: the massive size of the bony crest on its lower jaw, which it presumably had on its upper jaw as well.

The fossil was found in a quarry by a local man, Len Shaw, who has been ‘scratching around’ in the area for decades.

The name of the new species honors the First Nations peoples of the area, incorporating words from the now-extinct language of the Wanamara Nation. “The genus name, Thapunngaka, incorporates thapun [ta-boon] and ngaka [nga-ga], the Wanamara words for ‘spear’ and ‘mouth’, respectively,” Dr Salisbury said.

“The species name, shawi, honours the fossil’s discoverer Len Shaw, so the name means ‘Shaw’s spear mouth’.”

Source: University of Queensland

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Ditch That Hard-to-Grow Lawn And Start Cultivating Moss, Instead

Across the country, soft, cushiony moss could be the cure to the struggling homeowner’s case of a balding lawn. Growing faster, more easily, and with less effort than normal grass, it has been the landscaper’s choice in Japan for centuries.

If one is struggling with patchy, dry, or weed-ridden grass lawns, it could be the moment to throw in the towel with a plant that in reality is quite fragile, almost always non-native, and offers little to the environment or the animals that live in the area.

Moss gardens and moss lawns are becoming more and more popular in the United States. In so many ways, moss is superior to any species of grass—except perhaps for the purpose of serving as a volleyball court or soccer pitch.

Moss grows fast, and is difficult to kill after it takes hold, and while psychologists note that green is a color that induces positive emotions, there’s no shade of green more vibrant or powerful than moist emerald moss. There are species that are perfect for sun, growing in between stepping stones, others which can climb over rocks or other objects, and carpet-like, or even edible moss.

Starting a moss garden or lawn

If you have an area of bare or patchy lawn or earth, clear it of as much grass, leaves, and debris as you can until you have a firm soil bed.

Next, lightly rake the top level of dirt and press the pieces of moss down firmly onto it. If the moss pieces seem dry, soak them in water for a few minutes before laying them down.

After watering thoroughly, it should be 4-6 weeks for the moss to completely take hold, after which regular watering during dry summers is all one needs do—which leads to the next major benefit of a moss lawn or garden: the lack of maintenance needed.

Keeping your moss healthy

One blogger alludes to the sheer volume of searches online for how to kill moss, a testament, she says, to its resilience even in the face of determined anthropogenic attack.

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However moss grows well in sun and shade, and doesn’t need water any more often than normal grass does—and often needs much less. Furthermore, moss grows about four inches high at most, meaning the lawnmower can look for employment elsewhere, and it never needs fertilizer.

The only thing one must look for are signs of weeds poking up between the moss patches; they must be removed by hand as moss is not immune to herbicide. And leaves must be cleared if they fall on the moss in autumn, as they can cause the moss underneath to rot.

Moss lawns can be expensive compared to grass seed, but expect to save way more in associated costs down the line.

In any case, rights permitting, one can simply go to whichever nearby forest in which they know moss grows, and pull up strips or patches, and repeat the steps needed to fasten the moss to its new habitat.

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Traditional moss gardens and lawns are paired to stone gardens, water gardens, and flower or herb gardens to create serene beauty, and tranquil stillness, as the tradition for Zen gardening has done for centuries.

America has a long history of adopting aspects of Japanese culture, and it’s about time we did the same with moss gardens.

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“We should not judge people by their peak of excellence; but by the distance they have traveled from the point where they started.” – Henry Ward Beecher

Quote of the Day: “We should not judge people by their peak of excellence; but by the distance they have traveled from the point where they started.” – Henry Ward Beecher

Photo: by Clay Banks

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quotes page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

 

Two-Headed Turtle Discovered Hatched on South Carolina Beach Gives Conservationists a Big Surprise

South Carolina State Parks/Facebook

Wildlife volunteers inspecting nests at a South Carolina beach stumbled upon an unexpected surprise: a two-headed baby sea turtle.

South Carolina State Parks/Facebook

According to South Carolina State Parks, this two-headed loggerhead hatchling is the result of a genetic mutation.

South Carolina State Parks/Facebook

The find wasn’t as rare as you might expect: News reports of other two-headed turtle hatchlings appeared in both 2017 and 2019, with photos being taken in Atlantic breeding grounds on Hilton Island in South Carolina:

And in Florida, by a university intern.

Leah Rittenberg/UCF Marine Turtle Research Group

Like a very cute version of the Greek legend of Hydra—where for every head chopped off, the serpentine creature would regrow two more—the hatchling from Ediston Beach has now been released into the ocean.

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It will now swim off in new directions, to the next stage in its fascinating, two-headed life.

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Thirsty Butterfly Fleeing Wildfire Drinks Water Straight From Aid Worker’s Hand –WATCH

Several charities have set up field hospitals in the areas affected by wildfires where they have rescued turtles and other small animals.

After flying away from a nearby wildfire in the south of Turkey, watch this butterfly drink water from the palm of one aid worker.

(WATCH the Now This video of the moment below.)

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Falcons Have Natural ‘Eye Makeup’ to Improve Hunting Ability, Scientists Discover

falcon cc license Greg Hume (Greg5030); brady cc license jeffrey beale wikimedia commons
(L) Greg Hume (Greg5030)/CC license; (R) Jeffrey Beale/CC license

Dark ‘eyeliner’ feathers of peregrine falcons act as sun shields to improve the birds’ hunting ability, a new scientific study suggests.

Scientists have long speculated that falcons’ eye markings improve their ability to target fast-moving prey, like pigeons and doves, in bright sunlight.

Now research suggests these markings have evolved according to the climate; the sunnier the bird’s habitat, the larger and darker are the tell-tale dark ‘sun-shade’ feathers.

The distinctive dark stripes directly beneath the peregrine falcon’s eyes, called the malar stripe or ‘moustache’, likely reduce sunlight glare and confer a competitive advantage during high-speed chases. It’s an evolutionary trait mimicked by some top athletes who smear dark makeup below their eyes to help them spot fast-moving balls in competitive sports.

Until now, there had been no scientific study linking solar radiation levels to the dark ‘eyeliner’ plumage, which is common to many other falcon species.

The scientists used photos of peregrine falcons from around the world posted on the web by bird watchers and scored the size of the malar stripe for each bird.

They then explored how these malar stripes varied in relation to aspects of the local climate, such as temperature, rainfall, and strength of sunlight.

The study, published in the journal Biology Letters, was conducted by researchers from the University of Cape Town (UCT) and the University of Witwatersrand in South Africa.

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It involved comparing malar stripe characteristics, including width and prominence, of individual peregrine falcons, by using over two thousand peregrine photographs stored in online citizen science libraries.

Researchers examined samples from 94 different regions or countries. Results showed that peregrine falcon malar stripes were larger and darker in regions of the world where sunlight is stronger.

“The solar glare hypothesis has become ingrained in popular literature, but has never been tested empirically before,” said Michelle Vrettos, an MSc student from UCT who carried out the research.

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Vrettos added: “Our results suggest that the function of the malar stripe in peregrines is best explained by this solar glare hypothesis.”

Associate Professor Arjun Amar from the UCT FitzPatrick Institute, who supervised the research, said: “The peregrine falcon represents the ideal species to explore this long-standing hypothesis, because it has one of the most widespread distributions of all bird species, being present on every continent except Antarctica—it is therefore exposed to some of the brightest and some of the dullest areas around the globe.”

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Amar added: “We are grateful to all the photographers around the world that have deposited their photos onto websites. Without their efforts this research would not have been possible.”

Source: University of Cape Town

Massive Balloon the Size of a Soccer Stadium to Launch Telescope to Edge of Space to Study How Stars Form

SWNS
SWNS

The world’s biggest balloon, the size of a soccer stadium, is to be sent to the edge of space.

The instrument—named Superpressure Balloon-borne Imaging Telescope, or SuperBIT—will fly above 99.5% of Earth’s atmosphere next April and will carry a wide field telescope to rival Hubble, but at a fraction of the cost. That’s according to the British scientists behind the ambitious project.

SuperBIT will study dark matter, the invisible ‘glue’ that makes up 80 percent of all the stuff in the universe, which astronomers map by the way it bends rays of light, in a technique known as gravitational lensing.

Professor Richard Massey of Durham University, said: “Cavemen could smash rocks together to see what they’re made of. We are going to use SuperBIT to look for the ‘crunch’ of dark matter. It is the same experiment. You just need a space telescope to see it.”

A collaboration between NASA, the Canadian Space Agency, Durham, Toronto, and Princeton universities, SuperBIT cost £1.5 million ($2 million) to build compared to the £3.6 billion ($5 billion) for NASA’s Hubble.

And the international team are confident SuperBIT’s high-resolution images will be just as impressive.

Light from a distant galaxy can travel for billions of years before reaching our telescopes. In the final fraction of a second, it has to pass through Earth’s swirling, turbulent atmosphere—and our view of the universe becomes blurred. Observatories on the ground are built at high altitude sites to overcome some of this. But only placing a telescope in space fully escapes the effect. SuperBIT changes that.

It has a mirror half a meter in diameter and is carried to an altitude of almost 25 miles (40km) by the huge helium balloon. The mission will also be much less expensive than a typical machine-based alternative, and doesn’t take as long to plan.

SWNS

A final test flight in 2019 demonstrated the telescope’s extraordinary pointing stability. And NASA recently developed ‘superpressure’ balloons that can contain helium for months.

In April 2022, SuperBIT will take off from Wanaka on New Zealand’s South Island—carried seasonally stable winds.

It will circumnavigate the Earth several times, imaging the sky all night, then using solar panels to recharge its batteries during the day.

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Mohamed Shaaban, a PhD student at the University of Toronto, said: “New balloon technology makes visiting space cheap, easy, and environmentally friendly.

“As well as building a space telescope, our team has successfully tested all sorts of electronic and mechanical systems that could be used in future satellites.”

Its relatively cheap cost could even make it possible in the future to have a fleet of space telescopes offering time to astronomers around the world.

SWNS

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One thing the instrument will test is whether dark matter slows down during collisions. No particle colliders on Earth can accelerate dark matter. But this is a key signature predicted by theories that might explain recent observations of strange-behaving sub-atomic particles called muons.

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“If you run with wolves, you will learn how to howl. But, if you associate with eagles, you will learn how to soar to great heights.” – Colin Powell

Credit: Jongsun Lee

Quote of the Day: “If you run with wolves, you will learn how to howl. But, if you associate with eagles, you will learn how to soar to great heights.” – Colin Powell

Photo: by Jongsun Lee

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quotes page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

 

Over Half of Americans Have Had Some of the Best Moments of Their Lives in a Car

Olga Kay, CC license, via Flickr

Americans have a nostalgic appreciation for their car since the pandemic, according to a new poll—and it’s no wonder. 40% of them have experienced epiphanies or “eureka” moments while sitting in those cars.

Olga Kay, CC license, via Flickr

A survey of 2,000 American drivers and car owners explored the relationships that people have with their vehicles.

It found that there’s no shortage of life-altering moments happening behind 2-or-4 doors, from making a commitment to positive change to coming up with a business idea or figuring out an invention.

The survey, conducted by OnePoll, was commissioned by Metromile, a digital insurer: “While many Americans reduced their driving during the pandemic, our study shows that cars remain an essential part of our lives.”

The study also showed that cars had become extensions of one’s home—operating as everything from a de facto office to a video call studio for work.

48% said their car is a perfect space to talk to themselves, a perfect place to cry (42%), to shop online (37%), or to take a photo of themselves (21%).

The study also revealed the type of conversations respondents have had in their cars. The average driver said they’ve had at least six awkward talks in their car. More specifically, 46% said they’ve experienced some of the worst moments of their lives in their car.

But, many people view their vehicles as a refuge, with 40% of respondents saying that their vehicle is the only space they have to themselves.

RELATED: More Americans Now Consider Themselves to be ‘Thriving’ Than at Any Point in 13 Years: Gallop

58% said they’ve had some of the best moments of their lives sitting inside their ride—and two of every five people surveyed said they are ready to hit the open road again.

MOST INTERESTING EPIPHANIES THAT PEOPLE HAD IN CARS

Figured out a great chess move
Came up with an invention
Figured out how to make amends to my best friend after an ugly argument
Realized how to tell something important to someone
Encountered a spirit
Realized that I need to love more and show it
Figured out how to make a bookcase that lights up with motion
Caught someone in a lie
Realized I could invest the money I spend on fast food
Found the best way to get rid of a pimple
Realized that frogs are amphibians and not reptiles
Found a road behind Mount Diablo in Concord, California

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