Tag Archives: Communication

Against all odds, Helldivers 2 community notches a historic win in grueling Major Order many thought impossible – defending 10 planets amid communication breakdowns – Gamesradar

  1. Against all odds, Helldivers 2 community notches a historic win in grueling Major Order many thought impossible – defending 10 planets amid communication breakdowns Gamesradar
  2. Game master Joel cuts an unprecedented deal with Helldivers 2 players: Pull off the ‘Martale Gambit’ and he’ll liberate two planets for the price of one PC Gamer
  3. Helldivers 2 faces “grim projections” after we beat two billion bugs PCGamesN
  4. Chill out, Helldivers 2 hardcores trying to get casual players to stick to the battle plan, Arrowhead’s doing what it can to help out VG247
  5. Helldivers 2’s latest Major Order has finally exhausted players Destructoid

Read original article here

Arrowhead’s latest major order is exploiting the Helldiver 2 community’s greatest weakness: communication – PC Gamer

  1. Arrowhead’s latest major order is exploiting the Helldiver 2 community’s greatest weakness: communication PC Gamer
  2. Game master Joel cuts an unprecedented deal with Helldivers 2 players: Pull off the ‘Martale Gambit’ and he’ll liberate two planets for the price of one PC Gamer
  3. As Helldivers 2 players struggle with a brutal Major Order, dev says GM Joel secretly helps them out: “Short of handing you the win, there isn’t a lot more we can do” Gamesradar
  4. Helldivers 2 faces “grim projections” after we beat two billion bugs PCGamesN
  5. Helldivers 2 dev “looking into” progress tracking and display issues Eurogamer.net

Read original article here

Helldivers 2 Game Master Joel works to fix “inconsistent” liberation results, but lacking in-game communication tools is the bigger problem – Gamesradar

  1. Helldivers 2 Game Master Joel works to fix “inconsistent” liberation results, but lacking in-game communication tools is the bigger problem Gamesradar
  2. Helldivers 2 planet liberation isn’t working as intended yet, but Joel will flip the switch PCGamesN
  3. Game master Joel cuts an unprecedented deal with Helldivers 2 players: Pull off the ‘Martale Gambit’ and he’ll liberate two planets for the price of one PC Gamer
  4. Helldivers 2 players facing an impossible choice convince Game Master to bend the rules Destructoid
  5. Helldivers 2 Multi-Liberation System Isn’t Working As Intended Yet GameRant

Read original article here

A top Chinese carmaker is launching satellites into low-Earth orbit for real-time communication anywhere—giving Elon Musk’s SpaceX some company – Fortune

  1. A top Chinese carmaker is launching satellites into low-Earth orbit for real-time communication anywhere—giving Elon Musk’s SpaceX some company Fortune
  2. China’s Geely launches 11 low-orbit satellites for autonomous cars Reuters
  3. Launch Roundup: NASA’s PACE mission, Chinese art satellites, and more Starlink missions – NASASpaceFlight.com NASASpaceflight.com
  4. Geely unit Geespace launches 2nd batch of 11 satellites for services including autonomous driving CnEVPost
  5. China launches 11 new Geely-02 satellites for future travel ecosystem CGTN

Read original article here

US defense secretary says ongoing lack of communication with China could lead to incident that could ‘spiral out of control’ – CNN

  1. US defense secretary says ongoing lack of communication with China could lead to incident that could ‘spiral out of control’ CNN
  2. Defense Secretary Austin warns of Chinese provocation and calls for open communication NBC News
  3. US Defense Secretary Austin says China’s meeting snub unfortunate Reuters
  4. US defense chief calls China’s refusal to meet unfortunate during visit to Tokyo for talks The Associated Press
  5. China Watcher: Austin-Li derailed — Pill peddlers punished — Dutch chip cliffhanger POLITICO Europe
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Silence and delay vs. communication and drive — a look at the differences between police responses in Uvalde and Nashville – CNN

  1. Silence and delay vs. communication and drive — a look at the differences between police responses in Uvalde and Nashville CNN
  2. Nashville cops who shot Audrey Hale are Marine vet and ‘precision policeman’ New York Post
  3. Nashville shooting: Uvalde Foundation to honor officers who killed school shooter | LiveNOW from FOX LiveNOW from FOX
  4. Covenant School Shooting: Sister of officer who stopped shooter says ‘proud is probably an understatement’ WKRN News 2
  5. Central Kentucky law enforcement compares police response in Nashville to Uvalde LEX 18 News – Lexington, KY

Read original article here

Motorola Defy 2 is an affordable Android smartphone that features two-way satellite communication – XDA Developers

  1. Motorola Defy 2 is an affordable Android smartphone that features two-way satellite communication XDA Developers
  2. Motorola unveils Defy 2, a rugged phone with satellite connectivity: Check price, specs and other details msnNOW
  3. Mobile space race intensifies: New devices with satellite connectivity unveiled Interesting Engineering
  4. $99 Motorola Defy Satellite Link enables 2-way satellite communications on smartphones through 3GPP NTN technology CNX Software
  5. The new Motorola Defy 2 rugged phone is all about satellite messaging PhoneArena
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Technologically Assisted Communication May Impair Brain Development

Summary: Face-to-face interactions elicited nine significant cross-brain links between frontal and temporal areas of the brain, whereas remote communications elicited only one.

Source: University of Montreal

Videoconferencing services are proliferating—there’s Zoom, Teams, Messenger, FaceTime, Skype, WhatsApp—and since the COVID-19 pandemic they have been seeing heavier use than ever before.

While the transition to technology-enhanced communication has permeated all facets of social life over the past three years, there is scant scientific literature on its impact on the social brain.

Could technologically mediated interactions have neurobiological consequences that interfere with the development of social and cognitive abilities?

An international research team that included Guillaume Dumas, a professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Addiction at Université de Montréal and principal investigator at the Precision Psychiatry and Social Physiology Laboratory at the CHU Sainte-Justine Research Centre, wanted to find out.

Dumas is also an associate academic member of Mila, the Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute, and holds the IVADO Chair in Artificial Intelligence and Mental Health. His research interests include social neuroscience, systems biology and artificial intelligence.

In this study, the research team compared brain electrical activity during face-to-face interaction and technologically assisted remote communication in 62 mother-child pairs in which the children were aged 10 to 14.

Using a technique called hyperscanning, which can simultaneously record brain activity in multiple subjects, the research team found that interaction via a videoconferencing platform attenuated mother-child brain synchrony.

Literally on the same wavelength

Several years ago, Dumas demonstrated that human brains have a tendency to spontaneously synchronize when engaged in social interaction, i.e., their electrical rhythms oscillate at the same frequency.

“Inter-brain synchrony is associated with the development of social cognition,” Dumas explained. “The resonance between brains enables children to learn to distinguish between self and others, to learn social relationships.”

The study found that face-to-face interactions elicited nine significant cross-brain links between frontal and temporal areas of the brain, whereas remote interactions generated only one.

“If brain-to-brain synchrony is disrupted, we can expect consequences for the child’s cognitive development, particularly the mechanisms that support social interaction,” said Dumas. “And these are life-long effects.”

Fundamentally social beings

In view of the findings, Dumas believes more research is needed on the potential impact of social technology on brain maturation, especially in young people. In particular, he questions the appropriateness of online education for teens.

See also

The study found that face-to-face interactions elicited nine significant cross-brain links between frontal and temporal areas of the brain, whereas remote interactions generated only one. Image is in the public domain

“I wonder about the digitization of education and the pandemic’s impact on the development of social cognition in young people, at a time when human relationships have been fragmented,” he said.

“It’s an important question but difficult to answer, given that the full effects won’t be known for 10, 15 or 20 years.”

According to Dumas, the study’s findings can also be extrapolated to adults and may explain the widespread “Zoom fatigue” following the rise in videoconferencing during the COVID lockdowns: “Since online interactions produce less brain-to-brain synchrony, it is understandable that people would feel they have to expend more effort and energy to interact,” he suggested. “The interactions seem more laborious and less natural.”

Dumas believes the study confirms that social relationships are critically important to humans and that inter-brain mechanisms are linked to the development of the social brain.

“These results are consistent with the findings of a study we conducted on the power of a mother’s scent and another that found that an affectionate touch from a romantic partner has the power to reduce pain,” he said.

It seems humans are interconnected by a technology more potent than Zoom or Teams: our brains.

About this neurodevelopment and communication research news

Author: Press Office
Source: University of Montreal
Contact: Press Office – University of Montreal
Image: The image is in the public domain

Read original article here

A Novel, Powerful Tool to Unveil the Communication Between Gut Microbes and the Brain

Summary: Researchers develop a novel tool that allows for the study of the communication of microbes in the gastrointestinal tract and the brain.

Source: Baylor College of Medicine

In the past decade, researchers have begun to appreciate the importance of a two-way communication that occurs between microbes in the gastrointestinal tract and the brain, known as the gut–brain axis.

These “conversations” can modify how these organs work and involve a complex network of microbe- and brain-derived chemical signals that are challenging for scientists to decouple in order to gain an understanding.

“Currently, it is difficult to determine which microbial species drive specific brain alterations in a living organism,” said first author, Dr. Thomas D. Horvath, instructor of pathology and immunology at Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’s Hospital.

“Here we present a valuable tool that enables investigations into connections between gut microbes and the brain. Our laboratory protocol allows for the identification and comprehensive evaluation of metabolites – compounds microbes produce – at the cellular and whole-animal levels.”

The gastrointestinal tract harbors a rich, diverse community of beneficial microorganisms collectively known as the gut microbiota. In addition to their roles in maintaining the intestinal environment, gut microbes are increasingly being recognized for their influence on other distant organs, including the brain.

“Gut microbes can communicate with the brain through several routes, for example by producing metabolites, such as short-chain fatty acids and peptidoglycans, neurotransmitters, such as gamma-aminobutyric acid and histamine, and compounds that modulate the immune system as well as others,” said co-first author Dr. Melinda A. Engevik, assistant professor of regenerative and cellular medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina.

The role microbes play in the health of the central nervous system is highlighted by the links between the gut microbiome and anxiety, obesity, autism, schizophrenia, Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimer’s disease.

“Animal models have been paramount in linking microbes to these fundamental neural processes,” said co-author Dr. Jennifer K. Spinler, assistant professor of pathology and immunology at Baylor and the Texas Children’s Hospital Microbiome Center.

 “The protocol in the current study enables researchers to take steps toward unraveling the specific involvement of the gut-brain axis in these conditions, as well as its role in health.”

A road map to understand the complex traffic system in the gut-brain axis

One strategy the researchers used to gain insight into how a single type of microbe can influence the gut and the brain consisted of growing the microbes in the lab first, collecting the metabolites they produced and analyzing them using mass spectrometry and metabolomics.

Mass spectrometry is a laboratory technique that can be used to identify unknown compounds by determining their molecular weight and to quantify known compounds. Metabolomics is a technique for the large-scale study of metabolites.

This protocol gives researchers a road map to understand the complex traffic system between the gut and the brain and its effects in health and disease. Credit: Baylor College of Medicine

“The effect of metabolites was then studied in mini-guts, a laboratory model of human intestinal cells that retains properties of the small intestine and is physiologically active,” Engevik said. “In addition, the microbe’s metabolites can be studied in live animals.”

“We can expand our study to a community of microbes,” Spinler said.

“In this way we investigate how microbial communities work together, synergize and influence the host. This protocol gives researchers a road map to understand the complex traffic system between the gut and the brain and its effects.”

“We were able to create this protocol thanks to large interdisciplinary collaborations involving clinicians, behavioral scientists, microbiologists, molecular biology scientists and metabolomics experts,” Horvath said.

“We hope that our approach will help to create designer communities of beneficial microbes that may contribute to the maintenance of a healthy body. Our protocol also offers a way to identify potential solutions when miscommunication between the gut and the brain leads to disease.”

Read all the details of this work in Nature Protocols.

Other contributors to this work included Sigmund J. Haidacher, Berkley Luck, Wenly Ruan, Faith Ihekweazu, Meghna Bajaj, Kathleen M. Hoch, Numan Oezguen, James Versalovic and Anthony M. Haag. The authors are affiliated with one or more of the following institutions: Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Children’s Hospital and Alcorn State University.

Funding: This study was supported by an NIH K01 K12319501 grant and Global Probiotic Council 2019-19319, grants from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (Grant P30-DK-56338 to Texas Medical Center Digestive Disease Center, Gastrointestinal Experimental Model Systems), NIH U01CA170930 grant and unrestricted research support from BioGaia AB (Stockholm, Sweden).

See also

About this gut-brain axis research news

Author: Homa Shalchi
Source: Baylor College of Medicine
Contact: Homa Shalchi – Baylor College of Medicine
Image: The image is credited to Baylor College of Medicine

Original Research: Closed access.
“Interrogation of the mammalian gut–brain axis using LC–MS/MS-based targeted metabolomics with in vitro bacterial and organoid cultures and in vivo gnotobiotic mouse models” by Thomas D. Horvath et al. Nature Protocols


Abstract

Interrogation of the mammalian gut–brain axis using LC–MS/MS-based targeted metabolomics with in vitro bacterial and organoid cultures and in vivo gnotobiotic mouse models

Interest in the communication between the gastrointestinal tract and central nervous system, known as the gut–brain axis, has prompted the development of quantitative analytical platforms to analyze microbe- and host-derived signals.

This protocol enables investigations into connections between microbial colonization and intestinal and brain neurotransmitters and contains strategies for the comprehensive evaluation of metabolites in in vitro (organoids) and in vivo mouse model systems.

Here we present an optimized workflow that includes procedures for preparing these gut–brain axis model systems: (stage 1) growth of microbes in defined media; (stage 2) microinjection of intestinal organoids; and (stage 3) generation of animal models including germ-free (no microbes), specific-pathogen-free (complete gut microbiota) and specific-pathogen-free re-conventionalized (germ-free mice associated with a complete gut microbiota from a specific-pathogen-free mouse), and Bifidobacterium dentium and Bacteroides ovatus mono-associated mice (germ-free mice colonized with a single gut microbe).

We describe targeted liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry-based metabolomics methods for analyzing microbially derived short-chain fatty acids and neurotransmitters from these samples.

Unlike other protocols that commonly examine only stool samples, this protocol includes bacterial cultures, organoid cultures and in vivo samples, in addition to monitoring the metabolite content of stool samples. The incorporation of three experimental models (microbes, organoids and animals) enhances the impact of this protocol.

The protocol requires 3 weeks of murine colonization with microbes and ~1–2 weeks for liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry-based instrumental and quantitative analysis, and sample post-processing and normalization.

Read original article here

Best of CES 2023: Canine communication and a calming pillow

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Tech companies are showing off their latest products this week at CES, formerly known as the Consumer Electronics Show.

The show officially opened Thursday, with crowds of investors, media and tech workers streaming into cavernous Las Vegas venues to see the latest tech from big companies and startups alike.

Here are some highlights:

‘TALKING’ PETS

Have you ever wondered what your dog would say if it could speak to you?

FluentPet promises the next best thing — buttons the company says you can train your pet to push if it’s hungry, needs to go outside or wants to play.

The buttons come in a hexagon-shaped plastic mat called a hextile. Hextiles can be connected to each other to form a bigger collection of buttons.

“We find that actually when dogs kind of know that they’re being understood because they have the precision and specificity of the buttons, then they complain less because they’re no longer wondering whether they actually communicated what they wanted to,” said Leo Trottier, FluentPet CEO.

At CES, the company announced FluentPet Connect, a new app that notifies owners when their dog presses a button and collects data on how the buttons are used.

Fluent Pet’s starter kit comes with hextiles, a speaker and six buttons for $159.95. The app does not require a subscription.

A HIGH-TECH STROLLER

Canadian startup Gluxkind’s smart stroller is designed to make life easier for parents on the go.

The AI-powered stroller has a sensor that can tell when you’ve picked up a fussy baby, at which point it will roll in front of you while you walk without you having to touch it.

When the baby is in the stroller, you need to keep your hands on it, but the battery will help propel it, making it easier to push uphill. It stops automatically if it gets too far away from whoever is pushing it. It can also rock a baby back and forth.

The battery lasts for about eight hours and takes two to four hours to charge.

“I looked into the stroller market and were really surprised that we didn’t find anything that has some kind of level of automation or motorization present,” said Anne Hunger, who co-founded the company with husband Kevin Huang after their daughter was born in 2020.

The company is currently taking pre-orders for the stroller and hopes to deliver them beginning in July. Prices start at $3,300.

A CALMING PILLOW

Need a break? Japan’s Yukai Engineering says its robotic fufuly pillow can help users relax by mimicking the rhythm of breathing.

The soft, fluffy pillow gently expands and contracts, vibrating as you hold it against your stomach. The idea is that you’ll breathe more slowly and deeply as your breath starts to synch with the movement of the pillow.

It was developed based on research done at the University of Tokyo.

Yukai CEO Shunsuke Aoki said the pillow can help remote workers who struggle to switch off from their jobs.

The version on display at CES is a prototype. The company is looking for partners and hopes to start producing it this year.

ROBOT DOG

Meet Dog-E, the excitable robodog.

Unveiled by toy maker WowWee, Dog-E has more than a million possible combinations of lights, sounds and personality traits.

Dog-E begins as a blank canvas and develops its personality as you set it up.

The app-connected toy has audio sensors to hear sounds, touch sensors on its sides and body, and a tail that you can program to display lighted icons and messages when it wags.

Jessica Kalichman from WowWee says it’s a good option for those who can’t commit to owning a real pup, or perhaps for those with allergies.

“I do think for anyone that’s either not ready to have a dog yet, this is a great test to take care of it, learn to feed it, nurture it, and really have that trial run for a family,” she said.

WowWee expects to have Dog-E in stores in September. It will sell for $79. The app to control the toy’s movements does not require a subscription.

A FOLDABLE TREADMILL

If you want a treadmill but don’t have much space, WalkingPad offers a solution — a lightweight treadmill that can be folded in two when not in use and stored against a wall or under a bed.

WalkingPad reaches speeds of 7.5 mph (12 kph). It also includes a detachable phone or tablet holder and tracks your exercises in a free app. Its creators envision it helping remote workers stay fit at home.

An early version of WalkingPad went viral on TikTok as influencers added it to videos about their daily work-at-home routines.

Walking Pad creator King Smith Fitness opened its first headquarters in Dallas in December.

___

For more on CES, visit: https://apnews.com/hub/technology

Read original article here