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Man Tells Heartfelt Story About How His Father’s Wrinkled Hands Sparked Their Reconnection (MOTH Monday)

Today is MOTH Monday on Good News Network: In partnership with The Moth, a nonprofit dedicated to the art of storytelling, we bring you the most uplifting speakers from live stages across the world.

Harwood Taylor has always had a difficult relationship with his father – especially since his father struggled with bipolar disorder.

So when Taylor’s father was eventually diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, he was faced with the challenge of trying to reconnect with his dad and overcome the weight of their past.

Thankfully, Taylor describes how he was finally able to reconnect with his father through a very simple gesture in the car.

Listen to his inspiring story below…

The Moth gives people an opportunity to tell a true story in front of a live audience, and sometimes their stories are chosen to air on the radio show, now celebrating its tenth year, and broadcasting on 485+ public radio stations—and on The Moth podcast, which is downloaded over 52 million times a year.

The Moth’s third book, Occasional Magic: True Stories About Defying the Impossible is now available for purchase through your favorite booksellers.

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Dutch Company Unveils the World’s First Long-Range Solar Car – The 4-Passenger Lightyear One

The group from Eindhoven whose prototype car won the Bridgestone World Solar Challenge for three years, just introduced the world’s first long-range solar car—the four-passenger all-electric vehicle called Lightyear One.

The prototype, which has already sold 100 orders to be filled in 2021, was presented to a select audience of investors, customers, partners, and press last week at the break of dawn in the Netherlands.

“This moment represents a new era of driving,” said Lex Hoefsloot, CEO and co-founder of Lightyear. “Two years of dreaming, thinking and working hard have led to this milestone, which is a giant leap towards achieving our mission of making clean mobility available to everyone.”

Lightyear was founded in 2016 after receiving enough accolades, grants, and investment that they were able to develop their working prototype in just two years.

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The Lightyear One has been engineered using only the principles of physics to produce maximum efficiency for their plug-in car to get “the most out of every ray of sunshine.”

They were able to produce a 4-passenger luxury car that requires only half the energy consumption of other cars in its class—with a battery two-thirds the size of a Tesla S but providing longer range, up to 800 kilometers (497 miles) if driving in full sun.

The Lightyear One two door, four-passenger car

Hoefsloot continued, “The main goal of the car is to fill in where electric cars fall short. Research has shown that range and the lack of charging options are still the top concerns that people have when considering electric cars.”

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It can charge directly from the sun, but also can be plugged in. So effectively, you charge a lot faster from any power outlet. You can charge up to 400 km (248 miles) at night from an ordinary household electrical outlet.

  • The car is constructed from high-tech materials to have the lowest weight possible while maintaining stringent passenger safety.
  • The roof and hood are comprised of five square meters of integrated solar cells in safety glass so strong that a fully-grown adult can walk on them without causing dents.
  • Lightyear One is propelled by four independently driven wheels, so no energy is lost in transit from the engine to the wheel.
  • In addition to solar power, Lightyear One can be charged at a (fast)charging station or a regular outlet.
  • Crash testing has yet to be undertaken, but they’re looking forward to crashing one ”for science.”

Hoefsloot and his team of international engineers—some coming from Ferrari and Tesla—believe that with advancements in solar cars, making them cheaper in the future, they can make a big dent in world CO2 emissions.

Since new technology has a high unit cost at the beginning, they have to start in an exclusive market—the first production vehicles cost $127,000. But the next models Lightyear plans to develop will have a significantly lower purchase price.

ALSO: Tesla’s Record-Breaking Mega Battery–Installed on a Bet–Saves Australia $40 Million in Its First Year

Combined with the low operating costs of the vehicle—a low price per kilometer—the third, final step will be to provide truly sustainable cars that are more affordable to use than the cost of gas you would need to drive a combustion car.

“This will prove to be our most important tipping point in the near future, and it will pave the way for a car fleet that is one hundred percent sustainable.”

They have yet to ramp up production of the Lightyear One in their new facility in Helmond, but buyers can reserve one of the 500 electric vehicles for a reservation fee of €119,000 on their website (with expected delivery in 2021).

(WATCH the car driving in the video below)

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Hearts Are Melting Over This Photo of Little Boy Hugging His Tearful Youngster Sister: ‘I’m just so happy’

This adorable photo of a little boy proudly embracing his tearful younger sister is melting hearts across social media.

The children’s mother, Aundrea Smith, described the sweet moment in an Instagram post last week.

The Connecticut parent says that her 5-year-old daughter Charlee had just finished her honorary Pre-K graduation ceremony when she was approached by her 8-year-old brother Derek.

In her Instagram post, Smith writes: “After the ceremony, my son walked up to her and gave her a hug. ‘I’m just so proud of you,’ he said.

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“Then of course my daughter started crying. As we wiped away our tears, my husband asked her, ‘Pumpkin, why are you crying?’ She responded, ‘I’m just so happy.’”

Since publishing the photo to Instagram, it has been shared thousands of times across social media and national news outlets.

Smith says that she posted the photo in hopes of inspiring other people to express their emotions as fearlessly and honestly as her kids – and based on the amount of positive feedback she has received on social media since publishing the picture, her wish has come true.

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Las Vegas is Now Allowing Drivers to Pay Off Parking Tickets By Donating School Supplies

The city of Las Vegas has launched an innovative new initiative that is putting their parking tickets to good use.

The city council unanimously approved a month-long program that will allow motorists to pay off their parking tickets and driving infractions by donating school supplies and educational materials.

As long as a driver has not been fined for a public safety-related incident, they are free to eliminate their debt by donating supplies such as pencils, pens, erasers, dry erase markers, paper towels, copy paper, rulers, scissors, and pencil sharpeners.

Since the program launched on June 19th, it is set to run until July 19th. All donations must be made within 30 days of the infractions and all of the supplies must be “new, unwrapped school supplies of equal or greater value to their fine to the Parking Services Offices.”

MORE: People Can Pay Their Parking Fines With Cans of Food for the Hungry

All of the supplies will be donated to the Teachers Exchange, a nonprofit that is associated with the Public Education Foundation.

This is not the first time that the city has replaced parking fees with charitable donations. In July of 2016, the city council adopted an ordinance authorizing the establishment of this occasional program allowing for charitable donations in lieu of payment for parking fines.

That being said, city council members hope that the initiative will inspire other municipalities to pass similar initiatives to benefit their community.

Be Sure And Pass On The Good News To Your Friends On Social MediaFile photo by Kemberly Groue / U.S. Air Force

After Bear Cub Was Rescued From Life in a Basement, Watch Him Experience Grass for the First Time

This adorable little bear cub had never felt grass beneath his paws before he was recently rescued from a dark basement enclosure in Kosovo.

Someone had been keeping the cub as a pet, which is against the law – but after he was transported to his new home, he finally got the chance to roam free and experience the joys of nature.

The rescue was carried out by animal welfare group Four Paws International and the Kosovo authorities before he was brought to the Bear Sanctuary Prishtina. This specialized sanctuary is already home to many bears who were saved from neglectful conditions.

“We thank Ministry of Environment and Agency for Environment Protection for the trust in our professionalism to continue with the right treatment for the cub,” said Afrim Mahmuti, who manages the Bear Sanctuary Prishtina.

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After a through medical examination to make sure that the cub was in good health, it was time to let him explore the sanctuary grounds. Being able to run through the grass at the sanctuary and feel the sun on his face, it’s easy to tell that the cub is loving his new home.

Four Paws International will care for the cub for at least the next six months until he matures into adolescence. At that time, it will be decided if the bear can be released into the wild – but until then, it seems he is perfectly happy bouncing around the sanctuary, eager to explore his new home.

(WATCH the video below)

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“Forgiveness is not the act of condoning irresponsible, hurtful behavior. It is the finishing of old business that allows us to experience the present, free of contamination from the past.” – Joan Borysenko

Forever is a long time to live with forgiveness.

Quote of the Day: “Forgiveness is not the act of condoning irresponsible, hurtful behavior. It is the finishing of old business that allows us to experience the present, free of contamination from the past.” – Joan Borysenko

Photo: by cygnoir, CC license

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Watch Ugandan Woman’s Joyous Reaction When She is Given Her First-Ever Pair of Shoes, Thanks to a Stranger

Sometimes the smallest objects in life can bring us the most joy – at least that was the case for this Ugandan woman who was gifted her first ever pair of shoes.

Laura Grier felt compelled to give this woman the shoes off of her own feet as she was being driven through Bwindi National Park earlier this month.

RELATED: African Children Hear a Fiddle for the First Time and Their Reaction is Priceless

Grier’s driver then stopped and helped put the shoes on the woman’s feet – and after they ended up being the perfect fit for her feet, she immediately burst into the most infectiously joyous happy dance.

“When I saw the woman on the side of the road barefoot, I urged my driver to stop,” Grier told Newsflare. “The woman was barefoot and had never owned shoes before, so we stopped the car to pull over and give them to her, and her reaction to wearing the shoes was priceless!”

(WATCH the video below)

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Families Choose Road Trips Over Airfare to Spend More Time Together – Here’s a Checklist and Some Car Games to Play

According to new research, the average American is choosing to hit the road with their family this summer, instead of flying – and it’s not just because of the money saved.

The poll of 2,000 Americans found that driving allows them to see things and experience more together, and offers the opportunity to spend quality family time with one another—and 45% are taking their pet along for the fun.

It’s this quality time that Americans seem to enjoy. In fact, 78% of those surveyed revealed they have very fond memories of family road trips in the past.

During the average car ride this year, folks will play three car games and hear three clamors of ‘Are we there yet?’

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The license plate game was chosen as the number one car game played by Americans — with 43% enjoying the pastime of searching for out-of-state vehicle plates as they travel to their vacation destination.

Another fun game is going around the car with everyone naming as many cities or countries that begin with ‘A’, until someone is stumped before moving on to ‘B’.

THE TOP 5 CAR GAMES ARE… SURVEY SAYS:
1. License plate game
2. I spy
3. 21 questions
4. Phone/tablet games
5. Bingo

“From Memorial Day to Labor Day, families take a break from school and work to come together and vacation with loved ones,” said Jaclyn Chastain, the Marketing Manager for Quaker State, which sponsored the OnePoll survey. “Spending time with family, especially in the car, provides some of the best time for bonding.”

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But that’s not all that goes down during a long car ride to a vacation destination.

For half the respondents, Rock and Pop topped the list of summer song genres to listen to in the car.

71% are big fans of eating in the car while traveling, and 66% don’t mind stopping for snacks and food.

67% like a nice bathroom break stop, even while driving an average of only three hours.

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To make sure the old Chevrolet makes it safely to their destinations, Americans prepare with pre-trip essentials—the top task being checking their car’s tires (68%).

Though family road trips are enjoyable for 77% of those polled, that doesn’t mean they don’t come with their share of stressful moments—heavy traffic being the number one irritant.

Another 62% admitted bad weather has caused stress while traveling by car and a further 39% got stressed out making sure the car was working properly whenever they travel long distances with the family. Keeping the kids entertained was reported as stressful by 38%.

5 PRE-ROAD TRIP ESSENTIALS? … SURVEY SAYS:
1. Checking the car’s tires 68%
2. Making sure enough gas is in the car 68%
3. Checking the oil in the car 62%
4. Getting an oil change 54%
5. Making sure enough snacks/food are packed 54%

5 MOST COMMON ROAD TRIP EXPERIENCES? … SURVEY SAYS:
1. Getting lost/taking a wrong turn 53%
2. Getting a flat tire 43%
3. Someone in the car getting car sick 35%
4. Losing cell reception at a crucial moment 31%
5. Having a child who won’t stop crying 30%

Make sure everyone has gone to the toilet, and is hydrated and fed before you leave—and remember that having a good attitude before you enter the car ensures a great start.

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Researchers Have Successfully Made First-Ever Robotic Arm That Can Be Controlled By Your Mind

Photo by College of Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University

Researchers have accomplished a groundbreaking new technological feat by developing the first-ever successful mind-controlled robotic arm exhibiting the ability to continuously track and follow a computer cursor controlled by one’s thoughts.

Being able to non-invasively control robotic devices using only thoughts will have broad applications, in particular benefiting the lives of paralyzed patients and those with movement disorders.

The team of researchers from Carnegie Mellon University in collaboration with the University of Minnesota made their breakthrough using a noninvasive brain-computer interface (BCI).

BCIs have been shown to achieve good performance for controlling robotic devices using only the signals sensed from brain implants. When robotic devices can be controlled with high precision, they can be used to complete a variety of daily tasks. Until now, however, BCIs that have been successful in controlling robotic arms have used only invasive brain implants. These implants require a substantial amount of medical and surgical expertise to correctly install and operate, not to mention cost and potential risks to subjects, and as such, their use has been limited to just a few clinical cases.

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A grand challenge in BCI research is to develop less invasive or even totally noninvasive technology that would allow paralyzed patients to control their environment or robotic limbs using their own “thoughts.” Such noninvasive BCI technology, if successful, would bring such much needed technology to numerous patients and even potentially to the general population.

However, BCIs that use noninvasive external sensing, rather than brain implants, receive “dirtier” lower-resolution signals, leading to less precise control. Thus, when using only the brain to control a robotic arm, a noninvasive BCI hadn’t been able to stand up to using implanted devices. Despite this, BCI researchers forged ahead, their eye on the prize of a less- or non-invasive technology that could help patients everywhere on a daily basis—until they achieved a breakthrough.

Bin He, Trustee Professor and Department Head of Biomedical Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University, is achieving the ultimate goal, one key discovery at a time.

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“There have been major advances in mind controlled robotic devices using brain implants. It’s excellent science,” says He. “But noninvasive is the ultimate goal. Advances in neural decoding and the practical utility of noninvasive robotic arm control will have major implications on the eventual development of noninvasive neurorobotics.”

Using novel sensing and machine-learning techniques, he and his lab have been able to access signals deep within the brain, achieving a high resolution of control over a robotic arm. With noninvasive neuroimaging and a novel continuous pursuit paradigm, He is overcoming the noisy EEG signals leading to significantly improve EEG-based neural decoding, and facilitating real-time continuous 2D robotic device control. (See the video below…)

Using a noninvasive BCI to control a robotic arm that’s tracking a cursor on a computer screen, for the first time ever, He has shown in human subjects that a robotic arm can now follow the cursor continuously. Whereas robotic arms controlled by humans non-invasively had previously followed a moving cursor in jerky, discrete motions – as though the robotic arm was trying to “catch up” to the brain’s commands – now, the arm follows the cursor in a smooth, continuous path.

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In a paper published in Science Robotics, the team established a new framework that addresses and improves upon the “brain” and “computer” components of BCI by increasing user engagement and training, as well as spatial resolution of noninvasive neural data through EEG source imaging.

The paper shows that the team’s unique approach to solving this problem not only enhanced BCI learning by nearly 60% for traditional center-out tasks, it also enhanced continuous tracking of a computer cursor by over 500%.

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The technology also has applications that could help a variety of people, by offering safe, noninvasive “mind control” of devices that can allow people to interact with and control their environments. The technology has, to date, been tested in 68 able-bodied human subjects (up to 10 sessions for each subject), including virtual device control and controlling of a robotic arm for continuous pursuit. The technology is directly applicable to patients, and the team plans to conduct clinical trials in the near future.

“Despite technical challenges using noninvasive signals, we are fully committed to bringing this safe and economic technology to people who can benefit from it,” says He. “This work represents an important step in noninvasive brain-computer interfaces, a technology which someday may become a pervasive assistive technology aiding everyone, like smartphones.”

Reprinted from Carnegie Mellon University – College of Engineering

(WATCH the video below)

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Watch Exquisite New Short Film of a Child Living in One of the Highest, Most Magical Places On Earth

It took a determined filmmaker an entire year to film this mini-documentary about a 9-year-old girl and her life on the grasslands of Tibet – and the results are breathtaking.

Martin Buzora is the cinematic mastermind behind the 5-minute film “The Story of Pema”. The short film, which he says is the first Western film of its kind to come out of Tibet, portrays the simple life and beliefs of a Tibetan girl named Pema.

“Peace is all around me,” proclaims the young girl whose happy nomadic family lives off the land.

Buzora told Good News Network that he was inspired to make the documentary after spending years of his life dreaming about the magical nature of the region. Since it was released last month, the director hopes his creation has given people an understanding of the cultural significance of the Tibet and its people.

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“I wanted to pay respects to a culture I love very much,” Buzora wrote in an email. “It has been my fever dream since I was a boy reading ‘The Adventures of Tintin’ to visit this enchanted and mysterious land—and getting the opportunity to make a film in Tibet has been the greatest opportunity of my career.

“With the continual modernization of China, the nomadic cultures of the Tibetan grasslands are rapidly disappearing,” he added. “This documentary portrait about Pema is not only a love song to an ancient nomadic way of life, but also an anthropological record of a culture whose survival into the future is unclear.”

If you want to check out Buzora’s other cinematic works and world travels, you can check out his website or Instagram page.

(WATCH the gorgeous mini-doc below)

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“Let go of those grand fantasies that make us strive to be perfect, instead of compassionate.” – Mark Nepo

Quote of the Day: “Let go of those grand fantasies that make us strive to be perfect instead of compassionate.” – Mark Nepo

Photo: by zervas, CC license

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Researchers ‘Shocked’ by Discovery That ALS-Diseased Neurons Show Incredible Resilience if Given Glucose

The researchers observed brain lobes of ALS-affected fruit flies under a microscope. Pictured is a nerve cord, populated with green-stained motor neurons, expressing human glucose transporters. Areas of neurotransmitter release are shown in red, while muscles are shown in blue. (Courtesy of the Zarnescu Lab)

Increased glucose, transformed into energy, could give people with ALS improved mobility and a longer life, according to a new study.

Physicians have long known that people with ALS experience changes in their metabolism that often lead to rapid weight loss in a relentless cycle called hypermetabolism, according to the University of Arizona-led research team.

People with ALS use more energy while resting, compared to those without the disease, while simultaneously they often struggle to effectively make use of glucose, the precise ingredient a body needs to make more energy. Experts have not known exactly what happens in a patient’s cells to cause this dysfunction or how to alleviate it.

“This project was a way to parse out those details,” said the study’s lead author Ernesto Manzo, who described the results, published online in eLife, as “truly shocking.”

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The study revealed that when ALS-affected neurons are given more glucose, they turn that power source into energy. With that energy, they’re able to survive longer and function better. Increasing glucose delivery to the cells, then, may be one way to meet the abnormally high energy demands of ALS patients.

“These neurons were finding some relief by breaking down glucose and getting more cellular energy,” Manzo said.

ALS is almost always a progressive disease, eventually taking away patients’ ability to walk, speak and even breathe. The average life expectancy of an ALS patient from the time of diagnosis is two to five years.

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Previous studies on metabolism in ALS patients have focused primarily on what happens at the whole-body level, not the cellular level, explained Daniela Zarnescu, UA professor of molecular and cellular biology and senior author on the study.

The researchers observed brain lobes of ALS-affected fruit flies under a microscope. Pictured is a nerve cord, populated with green-stained motor neurons, expressing human glucose transporters. Areas of neurotransmitter release are shown in red, while muscles are shown in blue. (Courtesy of the Zarnescu Lab)

“The fact that we uncovered a compensatory mechanism surprised me,” Zarnescu said. “These desperate, degenerating neurons showed incredible resilience. It is an example of how amazing cells are at dealing with stress.”

The novelty of the findings partially lies in the fact that metabolism in ALS patients has remained poorly understood, Zarnescu said.

“It’s difficult to study, in part because of limited accessibility to the nervous system,” she said.

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Because scientists can’t scrape away neurons from the brain without causing irreparable damage to a patient, the researchers used fruit flies as a model.

“Fruit flies can teach us a lot about human diseases,” Manzo said.

In the lab, he and Zarnescu used high-powered microscopes to observe the motor neurons of fruit flies in their larval state, paying close attention to what happened as they provided more glucose.

They found that when they increased the amount of glucose, the motor neurons lived longer and moved more efficiently. When the researchers took glucose away from the neurons, the fruit fly larva moved more slowly.

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Their findings were consistent with a pilot clinical trial, which found a high carbohydrate diet was one possible intervention for ALS patients with gross metabolic dysfunction.

“Our data essentially provide an explanation for why that approach might work,” Zarnescu said. “My goal is to convince clinicians to perform a larger clinical trial to test this idea.”

Reprinted from the University of Arizona

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Check Out These Breathtaking Photos of Poppy Field’s First Bloom in Years

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These breathtaking new photographs show a sprawling English countryside bursting with color after hundreds of thousands of poppies bloomed for the first time in years.

The landscape is a lush sea of dazzling red flowers against a backdrop of mist gathering over the rolling Worcestershire hills.

The stunning snaps were taken by photographer Verity Milligan on farmland near Bewdley just before dawn of the day after the summer solstice.

LOOK: Husband Plants Field of Flowers for Blind Wife to Smell, So Spectacular it Gets Visitors

36-year-old Milligan said the poppy field has returned to its former glory after it had been dug up in 2013. The blossoms will only be in bloom for a couple of weeks.

“I got up super early, around 2:25AM, and there was a one-hour drive from Birmingham,” said Milligan.

“There was mist on the valley which was great – we photographers are always chasing mist.

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“I looked round to find the best vantage point and then waited for the sunrise at around 4:40AM.

“They have been like this for a good week, but they will probably only be around for another week. They are looking their best about now.

 

SWNS

“We have had a lot of rain, so they may well hang around a bit longer than usual.

“There used to be poppies every year. Its a truly magical sight and I was delighted with the result,” she added.

 

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Coffee Could Be Used to Fight Obesity, Says ‘Pioneering’ New Study

Scientists have published an intriguing new study on how coffee may be relied upon to do much more than just wake us up in the morning.

Researchers from the University of Nottingham have discovered that drinking a cup of coffee can stimulate “brown fat”, the body’s own fat-fighting defenses, which could be the key to tackling obesity and diabetes.

The study, published earlier this week in the journal Scientific Reports, is one of the first to be carried out in humans to find components which could have a direct effect on “brown fat” functions, an important part of the human body which plays a key role in how quickly we can burn calories as energy.

Brown adipose tissue (BAT), also known as brown fat, is one of two types of fat found in humans and other mammals. Initially only attributed to babies and hibernating mammals, it was discovered in recent years that adults can have brown fat too. Its main function is to generate body heat by burning calories (as opposed to white fat, which is a result of storing excess calories).

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People with a lower body mass index (BMI) therefore have a higher amount of brown fat.

“Brown fat works in a different way to other fat in your body and produces heat by burning sugar and fat, often in response to cold,” said Professor Michael Symonds, from the School of Medicine at the University of Nottingham who co-directed the study.

“Increasing its activity improves blood sugar control as well as improving blood lipid levels and the extra calories burnt help with weight loss. However, until now, no one has found an acceptable way to stimulate its activity in humans.

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“This is the first study in humans to show that something like a cup of coffee can have a direct effect on our brown fat functions. The potential implications of our results are pretty big, as obesity is a major health concern for society and we also have a growing diabetes epidemic and brown fat could potentially be part of the solution in tackling them.”

The team started with a series of stem cell studies to see if caffeine would stimulate brown fat. Once they had found the right dose, they then moved on to humans to see if the results were similar.

The team used a thermal imaging technique, which they’d previously pioneered, to trace the body’s brown fat reserves. The non-invasive technique helps the team to locate brown fat and assess its capacity to produce heat.

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“From our previous work, we knew that brown fat is mainly located in the neck region, so we were able to image someone straight after they had a drink to see if the brown fat got hotter,” said Professor Symonds.

“The results were positive and we now need to ascertain that caffeine as one of the ingredients in the coffee is acting as the stimulus or if there’s another component helping with the activation of brown fat. We are currently looking at caffeine supplements to test whether the effect is similar.

“Once we have confirmed which component is responsible for this, it could potentially be used as part of a weight management regime or as part of glucose regulation program to help prevent diabetes.”

Reprinted from the University of Nottingham

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This Circus Uses Elaborate Hologram Light Show in Response to Mistreatment of Performing Animals

This German circus has replaced their animal performances with a stunning animal-themed hologram light show – and they hope that it will inspire other circuses to do the same.

According to German news outlets, the Circus Roncalli has been entertaining audiences since 1976, yet they started phasing out the use of performing animals in the 1990s.

Recently, the circus decided to employ a production team to create an elaborate new hologram show that uses the images of animals.

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It takes 11 different projectors to display the 360º light show, and audiences have been enthralled. The show depicts dazzling herds of horses, a performing elephant, and even a massive golden goldfish in the middle of the stage.

Animal rights activists are hailing the circus as a role model for eliminating the exploitation of live performing animals, while still giving audiences a look at their magnificence.

With various states and countries implementing legislative bans on the use of animals as performers, Circus Roncalli provides a stellar example that others can— follow.

(WATCH the holograms in action in the video below) – Photo by Optoma EMEA

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“Until he extends his circle of compassion to include all living things, man will not himself find peace.” – Albert Schweitzer

Quote of the Day: “Until he extends his circle of compassion to include all living things, man will not himself find peace.” – Albert Schweitzer

Photo: by brian donovan, CC license

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?

 

Town Became Unified by Anointing a Homeless Poet as Their ‘Adopted Grandfather’

Photo by Mike Miller

This story was submitted as a nomination to the Reader’s Digest “Top 50 Nicest Places in America” contest: a crowd-sourced effort to uncover nooks where people are still kind and respectful in an era of cultural and political divides. Be sure and vote for which story you think should be nominated as the Nicest Place by visiting the Reader’s Digest website.

Photo by Mike Miller

After an ugly incident split this town, the citizens found common ground when they anointed a homeless poet their “adopted grandfather.”

Ask people what they like about Kingman and they’ll bring up the man known as Santa James. Santa James, AKA James Zyla, is a former real-estate salesman turned wandering poet who has become the town’s “adopted grandfather,” according to the local police chief. He’s also homeless.

When residents discovered his thoughtful nature and musical gifts, they teamed up to make sure he always has a place to stay, gigs to play, and a helping hand when he needs it. In return, he shares hugs, songs, and his one-of-a-kind free spirit.

WATCH: After 12 Years of Waving to Students From Her Window, Watch Her Reaction to 400 Kids Saying Goodbye

“There exists in Kingman a spirit of generosity,” Santa James told the Los Angeles Times last year. “It’s not just the young or the old. It permeates the generations.”

The town of about 25,000 people sits on the legendary Route 66, about 100 miles south of Las Vegas. Once home to a major military base and mining economy, later bypassed by the interstate and half-forgotten, Kingman got a black eye a few years ago when comic Sacha Baron Cohen’s television cameras captured a rowdy crowd of locals shouting down a proposed mosque. Kingman residents decried the intolerance—the city has had a mosque for thirty years, along with a well-established immigrant population—and locals stepped up their efforts to showcase the city’s best qualities.

“The community was very upset,” says our nominator, Coleen Haines, who has been at the heart of that effort as a city PR specialist. “Kingman is a welcoming place.”

LOOK: When Son Posts Photo of Sad Dad in His Empty New Donut Shop, the Tweet Attracts Hundreds of Customers

Santa James has become the symbol of the town’s best spirit, Haines says. His story shows that Kingman is the kind of place that finds room for anybody who helps make it better, even if it’s just with a smile and a song.

“The mayor gave him a key to the city,” she says. “It showed how we really go out of the way to help people.”

Reprinted with permission from Reader’s Digest. To learn more about GNN’s part in searching for the Top 10 Nicest Places, click here.

(WATCH the poet in action as he plays the piano in the video below)

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50 Years After Ohio River Caught Fire and Sparked a Movement, It Has Become Poster Child for Transformation

It has been 50 years since this iconic Ohio river caught fire – but now, it has become a poster child for environmental transformation.

Running through the city of Cleveland, the Cuyahoga River had already caught fire several times prior to the infamous blaze on June 22nd, 1969. The flames were a byproduct of the sheer amount of oil, chemicals, sewage, and pollution from the city’s heavily industrialized infrastructure.

“It smelled like a septic tank,” one Cleveland native told Nat Geo. “It literally bubbled and produced methane in July and August. It wasn’t bad—it was terrible. You can’t describe it using printable language.”

LOOK: Determined to Save His Country’s Water Supply, 26-Year-old Has Revived 10 Lakes From a Polluted Mess

Though it was not the first fire on the river, it was to be the last. Cleveland lawmakers became tired of companies and manufacturers treating the river like their own personal dumping grounds and they went before Congress to demand a change.

After city legislators rallied for federal intervention, the fire on the Cuyahoga River sparked the passage of the Clean Water Act and helped to inspire the creation of the EPA.

Over the course of the last 50 years, the act has helped to protect and preserve hundreds of waterways across the US – including the Cuyahoga River.

Photo courtesy of the Cleveland Press Collection

The river now boasts over 70 species of fish, all of which are edible. In addition to the shoreline now supporting dozens of birds and local wildlife, the waters are now open for swimming, paddle-boarding, and other recreational activities.

“People can see fish leaping out of the water here in the industrial shipping channel,” Jane Goodman, executive director of Cuyahoga River Restoration, told Nat Geo. “We had become the poster river for everything that could go wrong with a river. Now we’re a poster river for everything that can go right. It’s the Lazarus river—it came back from death.”

(WATCH the news coverage below or our international viewers can watch the footage on the CBS News website)

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Watch Chick-Fil-A Worker Jump Out of Drive Thru Window to Free Choking Boy From Tangled Seatbelt

A Chick-Fil-A employee is being hailed as a hero after he rushed to help a choking child who had somehow managed to get tangled in his seatbelt.

Logan Simmons had been working a shift at the restaurant in Hall County, Georgia when a distressed mother started calling for help from the drive thru lane.

While the woman was in the driver’s seat of her car, her 6-year-old son had gotten the seatbelt wrapped around his neck – and his face was quickly losing color.

When Logan heard the calls for help from the drive thru window, he leapt out of the window and rushed over to the woman’s car. He then climbed into the vehicle and used his pocketknife to cut the boy free from the seatbelt.

LOOK: Barefoot Teacher Pictured Running Ahead of Tornado to Warn Families in Carpool Lane to Take Cover

Needless to say, the frantic mother was overwhelmed with gratitude for the teen’s intervention.

Simmons’s mother also expressed pride in her heroic son when she told WSB-TV: “I’m amazed he didn’t panic. As his mother, I would have panicked. I’d be running around going, ‘Oh my gosh! What do we do?’”

Logan, on the other hand, says that he is just happy that he was in the right place at the right time.

(WATCH the news coverage below)

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For the First Time in 17 Years, No Whales Will Be Harpooned in Icelandic Waters

For the first time in 17 years, there will be no whaling in Icelandic waters this summer.

Due to a shrinking international market for whale meat and the expansion of a no-fishing coastal zone, both of the nation’s major whaling companies have decided to abandon their summer hunting season altogether, meaning that no whales of any kind will be hunted in Iceland.

IP-Utgerd – a company specializing in harpooning minke whales – said that the expansion of the no-fishing zone would force their ships to travel farther out to sea, making the venture far more costly than usual. The company now says that they will be focusing on collecting sea cucumbers for the summer, according to Icelandic news platform RUV.

RELATED: Watch the Badass Footage of Africa’s First All-Female Anti-Poaching Team in Action

Hvalur, the other Icelandic whaling company, specializes in harpooning fin whales – an endangered species that is hailed for being the second largest whale in the world.

Though the company typically exports 100% of their catch to Japan, a shrinking demand for whale meat has prompted them to abandon their summer harpooning.

Whalers have been hunting in Icelandic waters since the country lifted their restrictions on whaling in 2003. Though the companies may reconsider their whaling ventures next summer, environmentalists and marine biologists are rejoicing over this year’s harpooning respite.

Be Sure And Share This Whale Of A Tale With Your Friends On Social Media – File photo by Mike Pennington, CC