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Latest Science Shows How to Reduce Loneliness

Free time is sometimes idealized, but research shows free time can sometimes be unhealthy by increasing loneliness. A new Penn State study demonstrated that engaging in meaningful, challenging activities during free time can reduce people’s loneliness and increase their positive feelings.

An international team of researchers including John Dattilo—professor of recreation, park, and tourism management at Penn State—has been studying how to increase leisure and reduce loneliness during the pandemic among both international college students and older adults.

Across two different studies, the researchers found that people who had meaningful, challenging experiences were less lonely—even when higher levels of social contact and support were not available.

“There is a well-known saying: ‘Time flies when you are having fun,'” said Dattilo. “The unspoken corollary is that time drags when you are bored. Our research shows that both of these ideas are true. By engaging in meaningful activities during free time that demand focus, people can reduce loneliness and increase momentary happiness.”

Loneliness and the pandemic

Despite—or perhaps in part because of—technology that can connect people anywhere at any time, previous research has shown that loneliness has increased over recent decades.

Loneliness touches people of all ages, from children to young adults to older adults. The COVID-19 pandemic, which caused many people to alter their social behavior to prevent the spread of disease, exacerbated the problem of loneliness around the world.

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“Loneliness is very connected to our health,” Dattilo explained. “Psychological, emotional, and cognitive health are all challenged when people are lonely. Loneliness is associated with depression and other mental health challenges.”

“Troublingly,” continued Dattilo, “there is a loneliness epidemic. And while the COVID-19 pandemic has increased loneliness for many people, the silver lining is that the pandemic has also exposed the scope of the loneliness problem. Anything we can do as a society to reduce loneliness should improve health and happiness for people everywhere.”

In a new article that appears in Leisure Sciences, the researchers explored loneliness among international university students in Taiwan. The same research team also published an article about reducing loneliness among nursing home residents late in 2021.

Prior research has shown that loneliness among international university students is common around the world. International students are removed from their social networks and live in a different culture, often one that speaks a different language. Typically, international students can prevent loneliness by participating in social activities to receive ‘social support,’ the sense that they are cared for by the people with whom they socialize. During the pandemic, however, many group-based activities and social gatherings have been cancelled or prohibited.

Additionally, the researchers identified that the online social opportunities that became available in the pandemic may be less accessible to international students because of language and cultural differences.

Flow reduces loneliness

According to the researchers, reduced loneliness is associated with engaging in enjoyable activities that require both concentration and skill.

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“When people become engrossed in what they are doing, they enter a state that is called ‘flow,'” Dattilo explained. “Flow can be achieved by engaging in mental or physical activities that we value and that require us to concentrate fully to use our skills.”

For people to achieve a state of flow, an activity must require a good deal of their skill but not be so difficult that it seems impossible. Additionally, it must demand concentration to execute and be meaningful to the participant. Artistic endeavors like playing the piano or painting can induce flow. So can physical activities like skiing or chopping wood, along with mental tasks like writing or storytelling. What induces flow differs from person to person based on individual skills and values.

“When we enter a state of flow, we become absorbed and focused, and we experience momentary enjoyment,” Dattilo continued. “When we leave a state of flow, we are often surprised by how much time has passed.”

People with extensive free time—like college students who are locked down during a pandemic, or people who live in a nursing home—can achieve flow when they engage in activities they find to be meaningful. In this way, time passes quickly for them, their life has meaning, and their experience of loneliness is reduced, according to the researchers.

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Social support from friends and acquaintances is a primary way that people reduce loneliness. For many people, however, obtaining adequate social support can be challenging. Though the researchers found that students with high levels of social support were less lonely, they found that flow was even more important to reducing loneliness. Helping people achieve flow can reduce loneliness in situations where social support is insufficient. More importantly, it can reduce loneliness for people in any situation.

Encouraging flow for everyone

Some activities never induce flow, while other activities may or may not, depending on the individual. According to Dattilo, there is nothing wrong with watching television, but, typically, it does not help people enter a state of flow because they are unlikely to experience any challenges. Additionally, different people find different activities meaningful and enjoyable. Nursing home residents are unlikely to enjoy playing bingo if they did not enjoy similar games when they were younger, said Dattilo.

“Learning which activities might enable someone to enter a state of flow requires asking questions and listening,” said Dattilo. “People tend to thrive on healthy engagement and challenge. My collaborators and I hope that this research will help people live fuller, happier, healthier lives.”

Source: Penn State

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Livin’ Good Currency – Ep 6: Peter Samuelson’s Star Power is Funneling Hollywood Money into Hospitals

The Lesson: The stereotype of the Hollywood producer is one of self-involvement, packed schedules, and rudeness. By definition however, producers know how to make things happen, and in the case of Peter Samuelson, that’s involved 25 films, but also 5 separate charities that work in children’s hospitals and foster care organizations providing psycho-neuro-immunology, dream-making, and improving education outcomes.

Notable Excerpt: “He (Steven Spielberg) said, ‘well if we’re going to raise money, maybe I should give some money,’ and I said, ‘I think that’d be very good, you’re the chairman so I think that’d be excellent thank you for suggesting that.’ He said, ‘what do you think I should give?’ I said ‘I have no idea. Furthermore if I had an idea ,there’s no way that I’m telling Steven Spielberg what he should give to charity.’ He said ‘You can’t leave until you give me a number,’ so it was like a face off.”

The Guest: Holding an MA from Cambridge, Peter Samuelson is a public speaker, lecturer film producer of 25 movies including The Libertine, and Arlington Road, and make-things-happen-man behind five major charities, Starlight, Starbright World, First Star, AspireLabs, and Edar.

The Podcast: Livin’ Good Currency explores the relationship of time to our lives. It gives a simple, straight-forward formula that anyone can use to be present in the moment—and features a co-host who knows better than anyone the value of time (see below). How do you want to spend your life? This hour can inspire you, along with upcoming guests, to be sure you are ‘Livin’ Good Currency’ and never get caught running out of time.

The Hosts: Good News Network fans will know Tony (Anthony) Samadani as the co-owner of GNN and its Chief of Strategic Partnerships. Co-host Tobias Tubbs was handed a double life sentence without the possibility of parole for a crime he didn’t commit. Behind bars, he used his own version of the Livin’ Good Currency formula to inspire young men in prison to turn their hours into honors. An expert in conflict resolution, spirituality, and philosophy, Tobias is a master gardener who employs ex-felons to grow their Good Currency by planting crops and feeding neighborhoods.

Subscribe to the Pod:  On iTunes… On Spotify… On Amazon Music… Or Google Play.

“Be like water making its way through cracks… Adjust to the object, and you shall find a way around or through it.” – Bruce Lee

Quote of the Day: “Be like water making its way through cracks… Adjust to the object, and you shall find a way around or through it.” – Bruce Lee

Photo by: Anvesh Uppunuthula

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Solar Panels That Make Electricity at Night are Finally Here – And They’re Cheap and Don’t Need Batteries

About 750 million people in the world do not have access to electricity at night. Solar cells provide power during the day, but saving energy for later use requires substantial battery storage.

Researchers from Stanford University constructed a photovoltaic cell that harvests energy from the environment during the day and night, avoiding the need for batteries altogether. The device makes use of the heat leaking from Earth back into space—energy that is on the same order of magnitude as incoming solar radiation.

“You want the thermoelectric to have very good contact with both the cold side, which is the solar cell, and the hot side, which is the ambient environment,” said author Sid Assawaworrarit. “If you don’t have that, you’re not going to get much power out of it.”

At night, solar cells radiate and lose heat to the sky, reaching temperatures a few degrees below the ambient air. The device under development uses a thermoelectric module to generate voltage and current from the temperature gradient between the cell and the air. This process depends on the thermal design of the system, which includes a hot side and a cold side.

The team demonstrated power generation in their device during the day, when it runs in reverse and contributes additional power to the conventional solar cell, and at night.

The setup is inexpensive and, in principle, could be incorporated within existing solar cells. It is also simple, so construction in remote locations with limited resources is feasible.

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“What we managed to do here is build the whole thing from off-the-shelf components, have a very good thermal contact, and the most expensive thing in the whole setup was the thermoelectric itself,” said author Zunaid Omair.

Sid Assawaworrarit

Using electricity at night for lighting requires a few watts of power. The current device generates 50 milliwatts per square meter, which means lighting would require about 20 square meters of photovoltaic area.

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“None of these components were specifically engineered for this purpose,” said Shanhui Fan, author of the paper published in Applied Physics Letters. “So, I think there’s room for improvement, in the sense that, if one really engineered each of these components for our purpose, I think the performance could be better.”

The team aims to optimize the thermal insulation and thermoelectric components of the device. They are exploring engineering improvements to the solar cell itself to enhance the radiative cooling performance without influencing its solar energy harvesting capability.

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Opium Production Ceases as Communities in Mexico’s Golden Triangle Turn to Forestry

A group of community workers from the Ejido Santa Ana rest after a day working in the forest. Image courtesy of UCDFI Topia, S.C. released
UCDFI Topia, S.C.

An area famous for cropping narcotics and cannabis has changed its moniker from the Golden Triangle of Opium to the Golden Triangle of Sustainable Forestry.

It’s a shift four decades in the making, as the residents of four communities in the hilly, forested northern part of the state of Durango decided they wanted to secure a more sustainable future for themselves.

Durango state is one of Mexico’s great timber producers, contributing 70 million cubic feet to the national industry. Since the 1970s, the four communities of the Tamazula municipality have used their hills, richly forested with various species of conifers, as a forestry resource—calling themselves The Foresters of Northern Tamazula.

A study by The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations highlights Durango as “one of the most important Mexican states with regards forest production and the conservation of natural resources,” and the more these resources can be developed, the greater the incentives become to move away from Tamazula’s narcotrafficker past. At the moment, the foresters of the mountains there make around U.S. minimum wage.

Reporting on this budding industry is Claire Storey at Mongabay, who spoke with a forestry engineer for UCDFI Topia, a community forest management organization, named Carlos Zapata Pérez.

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“When we initially began providing them with technical assistance, we saw the situation [the strong presence of crops destined for drug production] and made a real effort to convince them to move away from growing narcotics,” Zapata told Mongabay. “We told them their forest was an important resource because it could offer them many benefits, eco-systemic services, for example.”

Over 40 years, UCDFI Topia has helped the communities of Tamazula to create a community-powered, community-benefited forest management model. Their tree nurseries have produced more than a million conifers, and the economic ends of their labor sustains 10,500 families.

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Today, a thousand families still live off this forestry system. They maintain the highest certification in Mexico for sustainable forestry, and this has helped lift the municipality off the state’s poverty list.

While Tamazula remains remote, semi-isolated, and rugged, the residents speak proudly of what they’ve built, and the victories over the ‘Golden Triangle’ stigma which they’ve won.

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Man Wins 200 Million on the Lottery and Donates Almost All of It to Save the Earth

EuroMillions_tickets cc license wikimedia commons Magnus D

€200,000,000: That’s how much an anonymous Frenchman won in the Euromillions jackpot lottery last week, and almost the sum total of how much he gave towards the preservation of tropical rainforest in West Africa, and forests in his native country.

The lucky winner established the Anyama Endowment Fund, named after a town in Côte d’Ivoire where it’s understood he spent a lot of time, and to it his winnings will go for “the protection and revitalization of forests, the preservation and regeneration of biodiversity and the support of family caregivers.”

“I only played during large jackpots, for one purpose: to devote most of this sum to the creation of a foundation,” he wrote in an open letter on the Fund’s website.

“During my life, I have witnessed in Côte d’Ivoire the incessant passage of trucks loaded with trees cut in the forests of Burkina Faso,” he told Le Parisien.

“We have never seen an initiative of this size, but there again, we have rarely seen such high winnings,” said an operator of the French National Lottery. “Often, these things go hand-in-hand.”

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Indeed it was the second-largest jackpot in the lottery’s history. The winner is only known to be a retiree in the south of France, who wants to spread the message that humans can preserve the natural environment if we want to—and that giving makes people more happy than having.

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“Above all, it is the expression of a conviction that I want to share with as many people as possible: giving makes people happy, and constitutes a tremendous lever for transforming indignation into concrete and useful actions,” the man said, according to Euro News.

Featured image: Magnus D, CC license

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Dengue Detection Smartphone Tech Offers Hope For Low-Cost Testing on Par With Labs

University of Reading, CC license
University of Reading, CC license

Accurate home testing could be used for a wider range of illnesses, as new research shows the capability of smartphone-powered tests for Dengue Fever.

Biomedical technology researchers from the University of Reading used a new diagnostic kit called Cygnus to detect Dengue Fever with significantly improved rates over lateral flow testing kits.

Working with academics and clinicians in Thailand, the team trialed the tests alongside already established alternatives in and found the new tests showed 82% clinical sensitivity, beating lateral flow testing (74% sensitivity) and matching hospital-based lab diagnostics (83% sensitivity). At the same time, these devices make 10 measurements allowing us to identify which of the four different dengue virus types caused the infection.

Dr Sarah Needs, Postdoctoral Research Associate in Microfluidic Antimicrobial Resistance Testing from the University of Reading is lead author of the paper.

Dr Needs said, “The paper shows exciting potential for the use of the microfluidic ‘lab on a strip’ tests that can used in conjunction with a smartphone and are more powerful than LFT testing in this case. As well as being cheap to produce, the lab on a strip technology allows users to test many different targets at once in one single sample, so it could be useful to detect multiple diseases not just one.

Lab on a strip

The new diagnostic test developed for the research uses ‘lab on a strip’ technology, which performs 10 or more tests a very small amount of liquid sample (such as blood, urine or saliva).

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The tests developed for the research were specifically developed to detect Dengue Fever, which affects an estimated 400m cases each year. While most cases are mild, dengue infections can lead to significant complications and can be fatal. Dengue can be most severe in children and is a serious health challenge facing half the global population.

Dr Alexander Edwards, Associate Professor in Biomedical Technology at the University of Reading co-created the lab on a strip technology.

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Dr Edwards said, “While some people might only recently learned of the trade-offs between home vs lab testing following Covid-19, in many parts of the world rapid lateral flow tests are used for a range of illnesses including dengue.’

“With the Cygnus concept, we are tackling the biggest hurdle for home testing. How do you make something portable that can be cheaply mass produced while still matching laboratory test performance? By designing the microfluidic lab on a strip using mass-production melt-extrusion it is possible to scale up production and produce hundreds of thousands of tests. By recording results with smartphones, which are becoming ubiquitous, we have designed something that could be revolutionary for healthcare.”

This paper has been published in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases.

Source: University of Reading

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“Worrying is only praying for stuff you don’t want.” – Mildred Richards

By Nathan Dumlao

Quote of the Day: “Worrying is only praying for stuff you don’t want.” – Mildred Richards

Photo by: Nathan Dumlao

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Homeless Dog That Comforted Troops is Being Transported to America to Live With One of the Soldiers

SWNS
SWNS

A homeless dog that brought comfort to U.S. soldiers overseas will now get a chance to live the cozy life in America with one of those soldiers.

The three-year-old mixed breed became like family to Sergeant K. and his Army unit in Kosovo last year, after they found him looking for food around their base.

His daily visits and wagging tail soon became the highlight of their day, delivering comfort to those far from home.

Sgt. Kelsey bonded with the pooch he named Duke and wanted to get him to a better life, out of danger.

The staff at the New York-based charity Paws of War promised to help, so Duke and the sergeant could be together once more.

But, before Duke could find his forever home in the US, disaster struck. He stopped showing up at the base.

Soldiers searched for him for several days, had no luck, and feared the worst. When they finally found him, they discovered he had been shot, was bleeding badly, and was severely dehydrated.

Paws of War sent out an emergency vet team to save Duke’s life.

The nonprofit’s overseas rescue partner, The Alamal Foundation, provided foster care for Duke while he healed. The pup spent six months recovering and eventually rebuilt his muscle strength to the point he was able to walk again.

LOOK: 2-Legged Pup Rescued From Afghanistan Makes Most Amazing Recovery: ‘He’s full of joy’

Paws of War / SWNS

Recently, Sgt. Kelsey got a message from Dereck Cartright, a veteran and logistics coordinator for Paws of War.

“We are thrilled to be able to tell you that after months of healing and rehabilitation, Duke has made a tremendous recovery. He is ready for the next part of his journey.”

The lucky canine is projected to be reunited with Sgt. Kelsey this month.

“The entire Army unit is so excited that Duke is coming home,” said Sgt. Kelsey. “This is the moment we’ve prayed for.”

Staff at The Alamal Foundation threw Duke a farewell party, attended by everyone who assisted in his rehabilitation.

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Paws of War launched a fundraising campaign to help cover the cost of Duke’s flight to the U.S, as well as his lifetime medical care.

“We are happy to help them with this mission and hope that many people in the community will want to support it as well. We can’t do it without their support.”

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Humans Can Fight Viruses By Breathing Deeply –Harvard Study Shows How it Works

Microstructure of human lung alveoli by Wyss Institute at Harvard University

The average person will take more than 600 million breaths over the course of their life. Every breath stretches the lungs’ tissues with each inhale and relaxes them with each exhale. The mere motions of breathing are known to influence vital functions of the lungs, including the maintenance of healthy tissue.

Now, new research from the Wyss Institute at Harvard University has revealed that this constant pattern of stretching and relaxing does even more—it generates immune responses against invading viruses, such as COVID-19.

Using a ‘Human Lung Chip’ that replicates the structures and functions of the lung air sac, or “alveolus,” the research team discovered that by applying mechanical forces that mimic breathing motions, they could suppress influenza virus replication, while activating innate protective immune responses.

“This research demonstrates the importance of breathing motions for human lung function, including immune responses to infection, and shows that our Human Alveolus Chip can be used to model these responses in the deep portions of the lung, where infections are often more severe and lead to hospitalization and death,” said co-first author Haiqing Bai, Ph.D., a Wyss Technology Development Fellow at the Institute. The results were published this week in Nature Communications.

Creating a flu-on-a-chip

As the early phases of the COVID-19 pandemic made painfully clear, the lung is a vulnerable organ where inflammation, in response to infection, can generate a “cytokine storm” that can have deadly consequences. However, the lungs are also very complex, and it is difficult to replicate their unique features in the lab. This complexity has hindered science’s understanding of how the lungs function at the cell and tissue levels, in both healthy and diseased states.

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The Wyss Institute’s Human Organ Chips were developed to address this problem, and have been shown to faithfully replicate the functions of many different human organs in the lab, including the lung. As part of projects funded by the NIH and DARPA since 2017, Wyss researchers have been working on replicating various diseases in Lung Airway and Alveolus Chips to study how lung tissues react to viruses that have pandemic potential, and test potential treatments.

During his Ph.D. training, Bai studied diseases that affect the tiny air sacs deep inside the lungs where oxygen is rapidly exchanged for carbon dioxide. That foundation prepared him to tackle the challenge of recreating a flu infection in an Alveolus Chip so that the team could study how these deep lung spaces mount immune responses against viral invaders.

Microstructure of human lung alveoli by Wyss Institute at Harvard University

Bai and his team first lined the two parallel microfluidic channels of an Organ Chip with different types of living human cells – alveolar lung cells in the upper channel and lung blood vessel cells in the lower channel – to recreate the interface between human air sacs and their blood-transporting capillaries. To mimic the conditions that alveoli experience in the human lung, the channel lined by alveolar cells was filled with air while the blood vessel channel was perfused with a flowing culture medium containing nutrients that are normally delivered via the blood. The channels were separated by a porous membrane that allowed molecules to flow between them.

Previous studies at the Wyss Institute have established that applying cyclical stretching to Alveolus Chips to imitate breathing motions produces biological responses that mimic those observed in vivo. This is accomplished by applying suction to hollow side chambers adjacent to the cell-lined fluidic channels to rhythmically stretch and relax the lung tissues by 5%, which is what human lungs typically experience with every breath.

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When the team infected these “breathing” Alveolus Chips with H3N2 influenza by introducing the virus into the air channel, they observed the development of several known hallmarks of influenza infection, including the breakdown of junctions between cells, a 25% increase in cell death, and the initiation of cellular repair programs. Infection also led to much higher levels of multiple inflammatory cytokines in the blood vessel channel including type III interferon, a natural defense against viral infection that is also activated in in vivo flu infection studies.

In addition, the blood vessel cells of infected chips expressed higher levels of adhesion molecules, which allowed immune cells including B cells, T cells, and monocytes in the perfusion medium to attach to the blood vessel walls to help combat the infection. These results confirmed that the Alveolus Chip was mounting an immune response against H3N2 that recapitulated what happens in the lung of human patients infected with flu virus.

Focus on your breath

The team then carried out the same experiment without mechanical breathing motions. To their surprise, chips exposed to breathing motions ​​had 50% less viral mRNA in their alveolar channels and a significant reduction in inflammatory cytokine levels compared to static chips. Genetic analysis revealed that the mechanical strain had activated molecular pathways related to immune defense and multiple antiviral genes, and these activations were reversed when the cyclical stretching was stopped.

“This was our most unexpected finding – that mechanical stresses alone can generate an innate immune response in the lung,” said co-first author Longlong Si, Ph.D., a former Wyss Technology Development Fellow who is now a Professor at the Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology in China.

Knowing that sometimes the lungs experience greater than 5% strain, such as in chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD) or when patients are put on mechanical ventilators, the scientists increased the strain to 10% to see what would happen. The higher strain caused an increase in innate immune response genes and processes, including several inflammatory cytokines.

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“Because the higher strain level resulted in greater cytokine production, it might explain why patients with lung conditions like COPD suffer from chronic inflammation, and why patients who are put on high-volume ventilators sometimes experience ventilator-induced lung injury,” Si explained.

The scientists then went a step further, comparing the RNA molecules present in cells within strained vs. static Alveolus Chips to see if they could pinpoint how the breathing motions were generating an immune response. They identified a calcium-binding protein, called S100A7, that was not detected in static chips but highly expressed in strained chips, suggesting that its production was induced by mechanical stretching. They also found that increased expression of S100A7 upregulated many other genes involved in the innate immune response, including multiple inflammatory cytokines.

Based on this promising result, the team then infected strained Alveolus Chips with the virus H3N2 and administered the drug azeliragon at its therapeutic dose two hours after infection.

This drug significantly blocked the production of inflammatory cytokines – an effect that was further enhanced when they added the antiviral drug molnupiravir (which was recently approved for patients with COVID-19) to the treatment regimen.

However, while azeliragon is a promising anti-inflammatory drug, the scientists warned that more studies are needed to determine a safe and effective treatment regimen in humans.

Meanwhile, robust breathing is something we can all do throughout any season to promote good heath.

Hubble Telescope Spots Most Distant Star Ever Seen on Record, From 12 Billion Light Years Away

Credit: NASA, ESA, Brian Welch of JHU, and Dan Coe of STScI
Credit: NASA, ESA, Brian Welch of JHU, and Dan Coe of STScI

NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has established an extraordinary new benchmark: detecting the light of a star that existed within the first billion years after the universe’s birth in the big bang – the farthest individual star ever seen to date.

The find is a huge leap further back in time from the previous single-star record holder; detected by Hubble in 2018. That star existed when the universe was about 4 billion years old, or 30 percent of its current age.

The newly detected star is so far away that its light has taken 12.9 billion years to reach Earth, so we are seeing it as it was when the universe was only 7 percent of its current age. The smallest objects previously seen at such a great distance are clusters of stars, embedded inside early galaxies.

“We almost didn’t believe it at first, it was so much farther than the previous most-distant, highest redshift star,” said astronomer Brian Welch of the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, lead author of the paper describing the discovery in the journal Nature. Scientists use the word “redshift” because as the universe expands, light from distant objects is stretched or “shifted” to longer, redder wavelengths as it travels toward us.

“Normally at these distances, entire galaxies look like small smudges, with the light from millions of stars blending together,” said Welch. “The galaxy hosting this star has been magnified and distorted by gravitational lensing into a long crescent that we named the Sunrise Arc.”

After studying the galaxy in detail, Welch determined that one feature is an extremely magnified star that he called Earendel, which means “morning star” in Old English. The discovery holds promise for opening up an uncharted era of very early star formation.

“Earendel existed so long ago that it may not have had all the same raw materials as the stars around us today,” Welch explained. “Studying Earendel will be a window into an era of the universe that we are unfamiliar with, but that led to everything we do know.”

“It’s like we’ve been reading a really interesting book, but we started with the second chapter, and now we will have a chance to see how it all got started,” Welch said.

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When Stars Align

The research team estimates that Earendel is at least 50 times the mass of our Sun and millions of times as bright, rivaling the most massive stars known.

Credit: NASA, ESA, Brian Welch (JHU), and Dan Coe (STScI)

But even such a brilliant, very high-mass star would be impossible to see at such a great distance without the aid of natural magnification by a huge galaxy cluster, WHL0137-08, sitting between us and Earendel. The mass of the galaxy cluster warps the fabric of space, creating a powerful natural magnifying glass that distorts and greatly amplifies the light from distant objects behind it.

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Thanks to the rare alignment with the magnifying galaxy cluster, the star Earendel appears directly on, or extremely close to, a ripple in the fabric of space. This ripple, which is defined in optics as a “caustic,” provides maximum magnification and brightening. The effect is analogous to the rippled surface of a swimming pool creating patterns of bright light on the bottom of the pool on a sunny day. The ripples on the surface act as lenses and focus sunlight to maximum brightness on the pool floor.

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This caustic causes the star Earendel to pop out from the general glow of its home galaxy. Its brightness is magnified a thousandfold or more. At this point, astronomers are not able to determine if Earendel is a binary star, though most massive stars have at least one smaller companion star.

Confirmation with Webb

Astronomers expect that Earendel will remain highly magnified for years to come. It will be observed by NASA’s new James Webb Space Telescope. Webb’s high sensitivity to infrared light is needed to learn more about Earendel, because its light is stretched (redshifted) to longer infrared wavelengths due to the universe’s expansion.

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“With Webb we expect to confirm Earendel is indeed a star, as well as measure its brightness and temperature,” said co-author Dan Coe at Baltimore’s Space Telescope Science Institute, who made the discovery using the data collected.

These details will narrow down its type and stage in the stellar lifecycle, with scientists expecting it to be a “rare, massive metal-poor star,” Coe said.

Earendel’s composition will be of great interest for astronomers, because it formed before the universe was filled with the heavy elements produced by successive generations of massive stars. If follow-up studies find that Earendel is only made up of primordial hydrogen and helium, it would be the first evidence for the legendary Population III stars, which are hypothesized to be the very first stars born after the big bang. While the probability is small, Welch admits it is enticing all the same.

“With Webb, we may see stars even farther than Earendel, which would be incredibly exciting,” Welch said. “We’ll go as far back as we can. I would love to see Webb break Earendel’s distance record.”

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Vast Majority of Dog Owners Believe They Can Read Their Pooch’s Mind

Celebrated on April 11th, National Pet Day celebrates the joy that pets bring to our lives—and, for many, it’s a psychic connection.

In fact, nearly three-quarters of pup parents claim they can read their furry companions’ minds.

The new poll results coincide with the annual calendar day founded in 2006 by animal welfare advocate Colleen Paige, who also wanted to encourage adoptions.

Of the 2,000 dog owners surveyed, 74% are confident they understand what their pet wants at any given time. And, 71% feel their dog understands them, too.

Half of respondents recalled that it took about six months to get to that point, after bonding activities like playing fetch with a ball or taking them on walks.

Communication skills began while teaching some of the easiest commands for dogs: “sit,” “lie down” or “stay.” Other commands involved disciplining their furry friend, and took longer: “down,” “dinnertime” and “no.”

Most dog owners know their pets so well that even 70% consider their canines their mini-me because they have similar personalities.

RELATED: ‘Puppy Dog Eyes’ Are an Evolutionary Trait Developed So Dogs Can Better Capture Our Hearts

Conducted by OnePoll on behalf of Ollie, the survey also asked respondents to describe their dog’s funny or quirky characteristics and traits.

SWNS

When it comes to personalities, owners would likely describe them as “The Guardian” (protective, imposing, attached), “The Family Dog” (easy to get along with, great with children, gentle) or “The Class Clown” (goofy, entertaining, clumsy).

84% of parents with Guardian dogs or Dedicated Workers (reliable, obedient, high-energy) believe they have some telepathic skills to know what their dog wants.

Similarly, 72% of all pup parents think they know what their dog will do before they do it. And, 62% of those who have “The Class Clown” insist they know what goofy antics their dog will do next, with two-thirds of those owners saying they are also as comical as their “Class Clown” canines.

WATCH: Six Puppies Are All Determined to Fit Into One Small Bucket – And They Succeed

66% of those who have “The WatchDog” (vigilant, alert, barks a lot) or “The Independent Thinker” (intelligent, inquisitive, likes to do things on their own) attest to knowing what thoughts run through their furry friend’s head.

Half of those who have “Social Butterfly” pups (high-energy, loves attention, outgoing) see their own personality as matching their pup’s friendliness.

Being in-sync with their dogs comes in handy, too. Knowing what comes next with their furry friends proves helpful for the 78% of pet parents who said their dog knows exactly when they’re doing something they’re not supposed to.

TOP TRAITS PEOPLE USE TO DESCRIBE THEIR DOG:

Loving – 35%
Playful – 33%
Intelligent – 32%
Loyal – 32%
Protective – 31%
Gentle – 30%
Affectionate – 30%
Obedient – 29%
Brave – 29%
High-energy – 29%

LOOK: Watch the Serendipitous Moment a Dog Runs Into Her Puppy Brother in a Park—Even Though He Lives 500 Miles Away

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“Find a place inside where there’s joy, and the joy will burn out the pain.” – Joseph Campbell

Quote of the Day: “Find a place inside where there’s joy, and the joy will burn out the pain.” – Joseph Campbell

Photo by: Elisabeth Arnold

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?

 

Your Inspired Weekly Horoscope From Rob Brezsny: A ‘Free Will Astrology’

Our partner Rob Brezsny provides his weekly wisdom to enlighten our thinking and motivate our mood. Rob’s Free Will Astrology, is a syndicated weekly column appearing in over a hundred publications. He is also the author of Pronoia Is the Antidote for Paranoia: How All of Creation Is Conspiring To Shower You with Blessings. (A free preview of the book is available here.)

Here is your weekly horoscope…

FREE WILL ASTROLOGY – Week of April 9, 2022
Copyright by Rob Brezsny, FreeWillAstrology.com

ARIES (March 21-April 19):
To provide the right horoscope, I must introduce you to three new words. The first is “orphic,” defined as “having an importance or meaning not apparent to the senses nor comprehensible to the intellect; beyond ordinary understanding.” Here’s the second word: “ludic,” which means “playful; full of fun and high spirits.” The third word is “kalon,” which refers to “profound, thorough beauty.” Now I will coordinate those terms to create a prophecy in accordance with your astrological aspects. Ready? I predict you will generate useful inspirations and energizing transformations for yourself by adopting a ludic attitude as you seek kalon in orphic experiments and adventures.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
I love your steadfastness, intense effort, and stubborn insistence on doing what’s right. Your ability to stick to the plan even when chaos creeps in is admirable. But during the coming weeks, I suggest you add a nuance to your approach. Heed the advice of martial artist Bruce Lee: “Be like water making its way through cracks. Do not be assertive, but adjust to the object, and you shall find a way around or through it. If nothing within you stays rigid, outward things will disclose themselves.”

GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Gemini-born basketball coach Pat Summitt won Olympic medals, college championships, and presidential awards. She had a simple strategy: “Here’s how I’m going to beat you. I’m going to outwork you. That’s it. That’s all there is to it.” I recommend that you apply her approach to everything you do for the rest of 2022. According to my analysis, you’re on course for a series of satisfying victories. All you have to do is nurture your stamina as you work with unwavering focus and resilient intelligence.

CANCER (June 21-July 22):
In Britain, 70 percent of the land is owned by one percent of the population. Globally, one percent of the population owns 43 percent of the wealth. I hope there’s a much better distribution of resources within your own life. I hope that the poorer, less robust parts of your psyche aren’t being starved at the expense of the privileged and highly functioning aspects. I hope that the allies and animals you tend to take for granted are receiving as much of your love and care as the people you’re trying to impress or win over. If any adjustments are necessary, now is a favorable time to make them.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
TV show creator Joey Soloway says, “The only way things will change is when we’re all wilder, louder, riskier, sillier, and unexpectedly overflowing with surprise.” Soloway’s Emmy Award-winning work on Transparent, one of the world’s first transgender-positive shows, suggests that their formula has been effective for them. I’m recommending this same approach to you in the coming weeks, Leo. It will help you summon the extra courage and imagination you will need to catalyze the necessary corrections and adjustments.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
“Find a place inside where there’s joy, and the joy will burn out the pain,” wrote mythologist Joseph Campbell. I don’t think his cure is foolproof. The lingering effects of some old traumas aren’t so simple and easy to dissolve. But I suspect Campbell’s strategy will work well for you in the coming weeks. You’re in a phase of your astrological cycle when extra healing powers are available. Some are obvious, and some are still partially hidden. It will be your sacred duty to track down every possible method that could help you banish at least some of your suffering and restore at least some of your joie de vivre.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
You know who Jimi Hendrix was, right? He was a brilliant and influential rock guitarist. As for Miles Davis, he was a Hall of Fame-level trumpeter and composer. You may be less familiar with Tony Williams. A prominent rock critic once called him “the best drummer in the world.” In 1968, those three superstars gathered in the hope of recording an album. But they wanted to include a fourth musician, Paul McCartney, to play bass for them. They sent a telegram to the ex-Beatle, but it never reached him. And so the supergroup never happened. I mention this in the hope that it will render you extra alert for invitations and opportunities that arrive in the coming weeks—perhaps out of nowhere. Don’t miss out! Expect the unexpected. Read between the lines. Investigate the cracks.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Poet Anne Carson claims that “a page with a poem on it is less attractive than a page with a poem on it and some tea stains.” I agree. If there are tea stains, it probably means that the poem has been studied and enjoyed. Someone has lingered over it, allowing it to thoroughly permeate their consciousness. I propose we make the tea-stained poem your power metaphor for the coming weeks, Scorpio. In other words, shun the pristine, the spotless, the untouched. Commune with messy, even chaotic things that have been loved and used.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Sagittarian author Martha Beck articulated the precise message you need to hear right now. She wrote, “Here is the crux of the matter, the distilled essence, the only thing you need to remember: When considering whether to say yes or no, you must choose the response that feels like freedom. Period.” I hope you adopt her law in the coming weeks, Sagittarius. You should avoid responses and influences that don’t feel liberating. I realize that’s an extreme position to take, but I think it’s the right one for now. Where does your greatest freedom lie? How can you claim it? What shifts might you need to initiate?

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
I’m glad you have been exploring your past and reconfiguring your remembrances of the old days and old ways. I’m happy you’ve been transforming the story of your life. I love how you’ve given yourself a healing gift by reimagining your history. It’s fine with me if you keep doing this fun stuff for a while longer. But please also make sure you don’t get so immersed in bygone events that you’re weighed down by them. The whole point of the good work you’ve been doing is to open up your future possibilities. For inspiration, read this advice from author Milan Kundera: “We must never allow the future to collapse under the burden of memory.”

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Aquarian historian Mary Frances Berry offered counsel that I think all Aquarians should keep at the heart of their philosophy during the coming weeks. She wrote, “The time when you need to do something is when no one else is willing to do it, when people are saying it can’t be done.” I hope you trust yourself enough to make that your battle cry. I hope you will keep summoning all the courage you will regularly need to implement its mandate.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Our climate emergency would be significantly less dramatic if we cut back our consumption. That’s the kind of action I invite you to take in the coming months, Pisces. My analysis of astrological omens suggests that you now have even more power than usual to serve the collective good of humanity in whatever specific ways you can.

WANT MORE? Listen to Rob’s EXPANDED AUDIO HOROSCOPES, 4-5 minute meditations on the current state of your destiny — or subscribe to his unique daily text message service at: RealAstrology.com

(Zodiac images by Numerologysign.com, CC license)

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Researchers Find New Strategy for Preventing Clogged Arteries

Revving up a process that slows down as we age may protect against a major cause of heart attacks and strokes.

Scientists have successfully minimized artery-narrowing plaque in mice, and published their findings this week in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine did so by boosting chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA), a cellular housekeeping process discovered in 1993 and named in 2000.

“We’ve shown in this research that we need CMA to protect against atherosclerosis, which becomes severe and progresses when CMA declines—something that also happens when people get older,” said Dr. Ana Maria Cuervo, M.D., the professor of molecular biology and medicine who discovered it.

“But equally important, we’ve proven that increasing CMA activity can be an effective strategy for curbing atherosclerosis and halting its progression.”

CMA keeps cells functioning normally by selectively degrading the many proteins that cells contain. Dr. Cuervo has deciphered many of the molecular players involved in CMA and shown that, through its timely degradation of key proteins, it regulates numerous intracellular processes—including glucose and lipid metabolism, circadian rhythms and DNA repair.

She also found that disrupted CMA allows damaged proteins to accumulate to toxic levels, contributing to aging and—when the toxic buildup occurs in nerve cells—to neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, and Huntington’s disease.

RELATED STUDY: Cannabis Could Hold the Key to Preventing Neurodegenerative Diseases Like Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s

Fighting Back Against Plaque

Cardiovascular disease is the world’s leading cause of death, and is usually associated with atherosclerosis: the buildup of plaque (a sticky material consisting of fat, cholesterol, calcium, and other substances) within the walls of arteries. Accumulating plaque hardens and narrows arteries, preventing them from delivering oxygenated blood to heart muscle (leading to heart attacks), the brain (strokes), and to the rest of the body.

To investigate CMA’s role in atherosclerosis, Dr. Cuervo, who is also co-director of the Institute for Aging Research at Einstein, studied atherosclerosis in mice by feeding them a fatty Western diet for 12 weeks and monitoring CMA activity in plaque-affected aortas of the animals. CMA activity initially increased in response to the dietary challenge; after 12 weeks, however, plaque buildup was significant, and virtually no CMA activity could be detected in the two types of cells—macrophages and arterial smooth muscle cells—that are known to malfunction in atherosclerosis, and lead to the buildup of plaque within arteries.

“CMA seemed to be very important in protecting macrophages and smooth muscle cells—helping them function normally despite the pro-atherosclerotic diet—at least for a while, until their CMA activity basically came to a halt,” said Dr. Cuervo in an Einstein media release.

She and her colleagues noted that feeding the high-fat diet to mice totally lacking in CMA activity produced even stronger evidence of CMA’s importance: plaques nearly 40% larger than those in control animals that were also on the high-fat diet.

RELATED: 4 Common Medicines Have Reversed Alzheimer’s in Mice

Of Mice – and Also Men

The researchers found evidence that weak CMA activity correlates with atherosclerosis in people too. Some patients who have had strokes undergo a surgical procedure, known as carotid endarterectomy, that removes plaque-affected segments of their carotid arteries to reduce the risk of a second stroke. Dr. Cuervo and her team analyzed CMA activity in carotid artery segments from 62 first-stroke patients who were followed for three years after their surgery.

“Those patients with higher levels of CMA following their first strokes never got a second one, while second strokes occurred in nearly all the patients with low CMA activity,” said Dr. Cuervo. “This suggests that your CMA activity level post-endarterectomy could help in predicting your risk for a second stroke and in guiding treatment, especially for people with low CMA.”

MORE: Another Reason to Drink More Water: Study Finds Hydration Can Lower Risk of Heart Failure

The study, published on PNAS, is the first to show that turning up CMA could be an effective way to prevent atherosclerosis from becoming severe or progressing. The CMA-boosted mice had greatly improved blood lipid profiles, with markedly reduced levels of cholesterol compared with the control mice. Plaque lesions that formed in the genetically altered mice were significantly smaller and milder in severity compared with plaques in control mice. Fortunately, people won’t need genetic alteration to benefit from this finding.

“My colleagues and I have developed drug compounds that have shown promise for safely and effectively increasing CMA activity in most mouse tissues and in human-derived cells,” said Dr. Cuervo, whose college has filed intellectual property on the technology.

(Featured file photo by Ed Uthman, CC license)

Young Artist Draws ‘Picture Perfect’ Pencil Portraits, Says Anyone Can Do it With Practice –And Shows You How

Pencil drawing by Emma Towers-Evans (cropped) / SWNS
Pencil drawing by Emma Towers-Evans (cropped) / SWNS

Her stunning hyper-realistic pencil drawings can take up to 100 hours to complete—but the artist insists anyone can master the skill if they put in the practice.

Emma Towers-Evans first picked up a pencil when she was just two years old and said her love for drawing began after watching the film ‘Free Willy’ which inspired her to draw killer whales.

Now she creates incredible portraits of people and animals which are so realistic they look like photos.

The 29-year-old often completes the drawings on a large A1 or A0 paper and estimates each piece of artwork can have upwards of a half million individual pencil strokes.

Since the pandemic lockdown, she has been sharing videos showing her techniques on TikTok, which have racked up 265,000 followers and 4.5 million likes.

In some of popular videos she can been seen drawing portraits of well-known celebrities like Rhianna and Taylor Swift.

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Emma Towers-Evans / SWNS

The self-taught artist insists ‘anyone’ can master the craft if they put in the hours, after she saw her own skills improve after years of practice.

“I don’t believe people are ‘naturally talented’ when it comes to drawing,” says the artist from Stourbridge, West Midlands, in England.

“It’s taken me years of practice, patience, and dedication to get to where I am today.

“I think anyone can get to that level—you just need to have that same determination and self-belief.”

Emma loved drawing as a hobby during her childhood and teens, but never thought it would be a future career. But then, while attending the University of Surrey for music and sound recording, she began doing commissions, often drawing portraits of people’s pets.

LOOK: Nursing Home Residents Recreate Famous Portraits From History – And They’re Amazing

As her success continued, Emma decided to focus on drawing full-time and set-up her own website. Now the pencil artist sells her own original work and her subjects are often portraits of people.

25 percent of proceeds from sales of her big cat series of prints go toward to conservation charities like the Born Free Foundation and Lion Aid.

Emma Towers-Evans / SWNS

One of these portraits was based on Christian the Lion, a famous pet lion who was bought from Harrods in the 1970s—and Emma had permission from the photographer to sketch his photo.

CHECK OUT: Stunning Cafes Will Make You Feel Like You’re Stepping Into a Comic Book

“It’s really exciting to see something come alive on the paper,” she continued.

Her videos on TikTok at @eteportraits capture each stage of her drawings (see video below). In one video, she shows the progression of a self-portrait that took 97 hours to complete.

“The first one I posted was a time lapse video of a portrait and I can’t believe how popular it’s become. The comments and support I get is amazing.”

LOOK: Michigan High School Lets Seniors Dress in Costume for School ID Photos – And They Are Fantastic

Self-portrait by Emma Towers-Evans / SWNS

But, the self-taught artist is also encouraging others to pick up a pencil and give it a go.

“I think having that ability can be attainable for anyone. It’s just a case of knowing how to do it, which comes with lots of practice.”

“I think anyone can become an artist if they’ve got the time and patients.”

WATCH the video from SWNS – and follow Emma on Instagram

UNLEASH Someone’s Inner Artist By Sharing This on Social Media…

Aggressive Breast Cancer Could Be Tamed By Ingredient Found in Cardamom Spice, Say Scientists

Cardamom pods by Stephantom, CC license
Cardamom pods by Stephantom, CC license

The spice cardamon could hold the key to tackling aggressive types of breast cancer, according to new research.

A natural compound called cardamonin found in the spice kills cancer cells and prevents them from flying under the immune system’s radar, say scientists at the Florida A&M University.

Around 10 to 15 percent of breast cancers are known as “triple-negative” which are more aggressive and deadly.

They are also difficult to treat with hormone-based therapies used for other types of breast cancer.

But now, the scientists in Tallahassee have made a promising discovery which could pave the way for new treatments.

“There is a critical need to investigate medicinal plants as a new way to combat this cancer,” says study author Dr. Patricia Mendonca, who took on the challenge to develop a targeted therapy for triple-negative breast cancer that is both safe and effective.

Her team studied how cardamonin affected the expression of a gene dubbed PD-L1 found in tumor cells. The gene plays a critical role in helping breast cancer cells escape the body’s immune system.

They tested the spice compound on cancer cells derived from women with African-American ancestry and women of European origins. Cardamonin was found to kill cancer cells from both groups—but only limit the expression of PD-L1 in European women. Genetic variations between races could explain why the cancer cells responded differently to the spice.

RELATED: Common Weed Stops the Growth of Breast Cancer Cells, Scientists in London Report

No wonder the spice is so valuable

By Aviatorjk, CC license

Cardamom (sometimes called cardamon), is a spice made from the seeds of several plants in the genera Elettaria and Amomum. Both are native to the Indian subcontinent, Indonesia, and throughout tropical and subtropical Asia. Today, the valuable spice is also cultivated in Guatemala, Malaysia, and Tanzania—and is the third most expensive spice, after saffron and vanilla.

A common ingredient in Indian cooking and baking in the Nordic countries, cardamom has a strong, unique taste, with an intensely aromatic fragrance. Black cardamom has a distinctly more smoky aroma, with a coolness some consider similar to mint.

The first references to medicinal cardamom are found in the Ayurvedic literatures of India. The ancient Greek physicians Dioscorides and Hippocrates also wrote about its therapeutic properties, identifying it as a digestive aid.

CHECK OUT: 9 Unique Ways to Use Rosemary – Backed by Mom and Science

The seeds, oils and extracts have been used in traditional medicine for centuries. One 2009 study showed cardamom significantly decreased blood pressure.

Studies in mice have shown that cardamom powder can increase the activity of certain enzymes that help fight cancer. A 2012 study showed the potential of cardamom as a preventive agent against stage-2 skin cancer in mice. Research in 2015 showed that a certain compound in the spice stopped oral cancer cells from multiplying in test tubes.

Next, the Florida researchers are planning on testing their cancer-combatting compound in clinical studies. They are also hoping to uncover what mechanisms are driving cardamonin’s anti-cancer properties.

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The findings will be presented at the American Society for Investigative Pathology annual meeting.

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“We must never allow the future to collapse under the burden of memory.” – Milan Kundera

Dariusz Sankowski

Quote of the Day: “We must never allow the future to collapse under the burden of memory.” – Milan Kundera 

Photo by: Dariusz Sankowski

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?

 

 

‘Stingless Bees’ Bring Life Back to the Amazon With Medicinal Honey and New Income

By Researcher Cesar Delgado

While the rest of modern civilization gets honey mostly from European honeybees, indigenous tribes in Peru’s slice of the Amazon get theirs from stingless bees, which seems way smarter.

But it’s more than just smart, it’s absolutely essential for people like the Kukama-Kukamiria, who now use it as food, a source of income, and medicine for everything from skin cuts to bronchitis.

Now, scientists working with these tribes are beginning to scratch the surface of the full extent the benefits this traditional bee husbandry, or ‘meliponiculture’ can have for people like the Kukama-Kukamiria, and the world at large.

Scientists such as Cesar Delgado Vasquez at the Institute for Investigations of the Peruvian Amazon, are working with indigenous groups as both teachers and learners; teaching them how to keep and raise stingless bees to produce their own honey without damaging wild nests, and learning about the immense value of this liquid medicine.

Delgado conducted a field study with three separate communities and four separate species of stingless bee to evaluate the physicochemical and microbiological characteristics of the honey they produced. They found that the humidity and sugar content didn’t change much between honeys, but the analysis of the high-quality chemical contents identified was able to lead to an increase in the unit price from $3.00 to $27.00.

LOOK: French Beekeeper Invents a Trap to Take on Asian Hornets Decimating Bee Populations in Europe

A spoonful of honey IS the medicine going down

With 600 species of stingless bees in the New World, the amount of possible data is immense. Each of these species have different relationships with hundreds of native plant species, and in the same way honey bought in a store from bees feeding on the pollen of oregano plants will taste different from honey made from clover plants, these pollinator-plant exchanges can change the medicinal and nutritional qualities of the honey produced.

By Researcher Cesar Delgado

Tribes use meliponine (stingless) bee honey to treat colds, cuts and abrasions, skin conditions, upper-respiratory tract infections, diabetes, gastrointestinal problems, pneumonia, burns, arthritis, and even cancer—and all these effects can be generated or amplified depending on the bees’ diet. For example, the honey from bees that feed on the pollen of the araza plant is being evaluated for anti-cancer properties.

Delgado has helped teach indigenous communities the most effective ways to husband meliponine bees. Using rectangular boxes with easy access to the honey, half of the states in the Peruvian Amazon now have communities keeping bees.

“For conservation, it is necessary to prevent people from cutting down the trees to obtain honey, as well as to increase production yields. It is also necessary to provide information on honey quality parameters and improve the incomes of small producers or family farming, making it a profitable activity,” Delgado wrote in his study.

Delgado was the chief author of another paper that found when indigenous communities practiced horticulture or agriculture—and kept bees next to their fields—providing they were cropping native species such as camu fruits, their yields would increase a whopping 44%.

RELATED: Company’s Innovative Smart Beehive Gets $80 Million in Funding to Save Bees From Any Hazard

Meliponiculture is already widely adopted in Brazil, and in making its way to Peru, it gives the forests, the bees, and the tribes a better chance for surviving through the decades.

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‘Drumroll, Please’… The Top 10 Happiest Countries in the World from 2022 Global Happiness Report

In our troubled times of war and pandemic, the World Happiness Report 2022 comes just in time for Spring.

And, a bright light from the pandemic was the increased rate in social support and benevolence.

This year marks the 10th anniversary of the World Happiness Report, which uses global survey data to report on how people evaluate their own lives in more than 150 countries around the world.

“A decade ago, governments around the world expressed the desire to put happiness at the heart of the global development agenda, and they adopted a UN General Assembly resolution for that purpose,” stated UN Economist Jeffrey Sachs. “The World Happiness Report grew out of that worldwide determination to find the path to greater global well-being.”

“World leaders should take heed. Politics should be directed, as the great sages long ago insisted, to the well-being of the people, not the power of the rulers.”

Ten years of proprietary data covering more than 150 countries provides a unique stock-taking opportunity. The three biggest gains were in Serbia, Bulgaria, and Romania.

This year, as in most years, Europe dominates, with Finland retaining its number one ranking for the fifth year in a row.

The Top 10 Happiest Countries are…

1: Finland
2: Denmark
3: Iceland
4: Switzerland
5: Netherlands
6: Luxembourg
7: Sweden
8: Norway
9: Israel
10: New Zealand

11-16 rankings include: Austria, Australia, Ireland, Germany and finally Canada—which dropped 10 places from a high of 5th in 2010. The United States took 16th place, showing improvement compared to last year, moving up from 19th place on the list.

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The WHR survey data also found that despite the effects of the pandemic, “helping strangers, volunteering, and donations” in 2021 strongly spiked in every part of the world, reaching levels almost 25% above their pre-pandemic prevalence.

Indeed, GNN has reported that in the U.S., the greater the threat of COVID to a community, the more Americans financially contributed to help their neighbors and towns— and values such as compassion, familial support, and generosity with time and money, were flourishing during the pandemic.

Chutes and ladders

The Report is formed using survey data from Gallup, and asks people to imagine their life as a ladder, with the 10th rung as a most fulfilled life, and 0 being “Dystopia,” a fictional world where everything is awful.

Participants—usually 2,000-3,000 per country—are then asked to use a measure from zero to 10 to rate their opinion on the national GDP, life expectancy, generosity, social support, freedom, and corruption. Those answers are not averaged and added to the ladder score, but rather kept only as a means to potentially show why some countries rank lower than others.

LOOK: The Top 50 Things to Come Out of Britain (Fish and Chips was Voted #1)

In short, if France ranks much higher than Italy (they do), despite enjoying the same economic, medical, technological, and cultural stature, one can look into the sub-categories to glean why someone’s position on the ladder is lower. Between these two, looking at the sub-categories shows that Italians perceive their country as less-free than French residents.

Rather than celebrating the success of industrialized, technologically-sophisticated countries, the WHI is meant to be, as Sachs explained, a way to try and show countries how to improve their citizens’ happiness, understanding that happy citizens equals a more prosperous society.

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