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Peekaboo! Strange tiny galaxy provides a glimpse into the universe’s early history

Astronomers have discovered that a strange dwarf galaxy hidden for years in our cosmic neighborhood looks like it belongs in the early universe, despite having formed more recently. 

The tiny galaxy measuring just 1,200 light-years across earned the nickname ‘Peekaboo’ because it was hidden in the bright glare of a fast-moving foreground star and only emerged between 50 and 100 years ago.

The dwarf galaxy, bearing the official name HIPASS J1131–31, is located around 22 million light-years from Earth in the constellation of Hydra. Its strange appearance was confirmed using the Hubble Space Telescope after it showed up in observations from other space and ground-based telescopes.

Related: James Webb Space Telescope peers into lonely dwarf galaxy with sparkling results

The galaxy’s faux-ancient appearance comes from the fact that it has low abundances of elements that are heavier than hydrogen and helium, the universe’s lightest and earliest-formed elements. Astronomers describe these heavier elements as ‘metals’ and are usually found in much more distant locations; thus, early galaxies that are typically described as ‘extremely metal-poor.’

As such, HIPASS J1131–31 represents the closest example of a galaxy formed by processes that existed predominantly throughout the universe shortly after the Big Bang. 

“Uncovering the Peekaboo Galaxy is like discovering a direct window into the past, allowing us to study its extreme environment and stars at a level of detail that is inaccessible in the distant, early universe,” study co-author and Space Telescope Science Institute astronomer, Gagandeep Anand, said in a statement (opens in new tab).

Tiny galaxy HIPASS J1131–31 peeks out from behind the glare of star TYC 7215-199-1, a Milky Way star positioned between Hubble and the galaxy. (Image credit: NASA/ESA/Igor Karachentsev (SAO RAS)/Alyssa Pagan (STScI))

During the earliest era of the universe, almost everything in the cosmos was composed of hydrogen and helium (opens in new tab). These light elements were formed shortly after the Big Bang when the universe had expanded and cooled enough to allow electrons and protons to bond and form the first atoms and thus the first chemical elements.

These elements formed the first stars, which during their lifetimes forged heavier elements. When this first generation of extremely metal-poor stars reached the end of their lives and exploded, they spread these heavy elements throughout the universe to become the building blocks of the next generation of stars.

As this process repeated throughout cosmic history, each subsequent generation of stars became more and more enriched with heavy elements and created the metal-rich universe that we see throughout our cosmic neighborhood today. 

These heavier building blocks forged in earlier stars  —  particularly carbon, oxygen, iron, and calcium  —  would also become the foundational elements of life. 

An illustration of the Big Bang theory showing an outward explosion of galaxies. (Image credit: Getty Images)

Though early and distant galaxies were by default metal-poor, other examples of extremely metal-poor galaxies have previously been discovered closer to the Milky Way, our galaxy. 

Peekaboo stands out from these galaxies because it seems to lack an older stellar population of ancient and thus metal-poor stars. Additionally, at just around 20 light-years from Earth, Peekaboo is much closer than other young metal-poor galaxies which are twice as distant.

First discovered two decades ago by research co-author professor Bärbel Koribalski in data collected in the HI Parkes All Sky Survey, the dwarf galaxy HIPASS J1131–31 didn’t immediately present itself as anything special to astronomers. It took observations in far-ultraviolet light by NASA’s now-defunct space-based Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) mission to reveal Peekaboo’s nature as a strange compact blue dwarf galaxy.

“At first we did not realize how special this little galaxy is,” Koribalski said. “Now with combined data from the Hubble Space Telescope, the Southern African Large Telescope (SALT), and others, we know that the Peekaboo Galaxy is one of the most metal-poor galaxies ever detected.”

Hubble was able to resolve around 60 stars in the dwarf galaxy which all appear to be no older than a few billion years. Astronomers then used SALT to discover Peekaboo’s metal-poor nature, revealing it as one of the youngest and least-chemically-enriched galaxies ever detected in the local universe.

As the local universe has had over 13 billion years to evolve, the metal-poor nature of Peekaboo marks it as extremely unusual and astronomers still have much to learn about this dwarf galaxy.

To improve the snapshot of HIPASS J1131–31 collected by the Hubble observations, which were part of the Every Known Nearby Galaxy Survey, astronomers will now use the James Webb Space Telescope to observe the galaxy alongside Hubble. 

Hopefully, this will reveal more about its population of stars and how enriched with metals they are. 

“Due to Peekaboo’s proximity to us, we can conduct detailed observations, opening up possibilities of seeing an environment resembling the early universe in unprecedented detail,” Anand concluded. 

The team’s research has been accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 

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Georgia draws Ohio State in College Football Playoff: 5 early thoughts

ATHENS, Ga. — Georgia and Ohio State are two power programs that have been watching each other from a short distance the past few years, contesting each other in the recruiting rankings, seeing Justin Fields go from one program to the other, but for all this time not meeting on the same football field.

That changes in this year’s College Football Playoff semifinal, where they face off in the Peach Bowl on Dec. 31. It’s the game that for a while seemed destined for the championship but instead will be for a chance to get there. Plenty of analysis awaits the marquee matchup, but here are initial thoughts from Georgia’s angle.

Did Georgia get a raw deal?

Plenty of people, including those not given to conspiracy thinking, always will assume the members of the Playoff selection committee made sure not to create a Michigan-Ohio State rematch in the semifinals. The result being that top-seeded Georgia ended up with what’s perceived as the harder game (than Michigan-TCU) against fourth-seeded Ohio State.

Still, committee chairman Boo Corrigan came armed with data points when asked about it Sunday.

“When you look at TCU, 6-1 over teams over .500, 2-1 against ranked teams,” he said. “Ohio State had the good wins over Penn State and Notre Dame, played Michigan close for three quarters of the game, but at the end of the day, we came back to TCU, and there was nothing that occurred during that game against Kansas State (in the Big 12 championship game) that we didn’t believe moved them out of the No. 3 spot.”

Convincing? Not really. But there’s not exactly a huge chasm between TCU’s and Ohio State’s resumes. It’s just the name brand and perceived talent base that makes Ohio State seem like the much better team.


Stetson Bennett and the Georgia Bulldogs are 2-0 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium this year with a third game coming up in the Peach Bowl. (Dale Zanine / USA Today)

What’s more, Georgia and Michigan aren’t miles apart in their resumes. Both are unbeaten. Michigan has the most impressive win (at Ohio State) while Georgia has more wins over ranked teams (five versus two).

So it almost seems like a split-the-difference situation: Michigan gets (perhaps) the easier matchup, but Georgia gets to play on essentially a home field. Speaking of which …

Hometown factor will be real but not decisive

This will be Georgia’s third time in four months playing at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, but it’s almost certain Georgia won’t have the dominant crowd split it had for its first two times. Oregon had much farther to come, and LSU fans saw their enthusiasm dampened by being out of the Playoff hunt.

Ohio State, however, will receive a guaranteed allotment — it was 12,500 for Michigan State last year in the Peach Bowl — and its fans are likely to hit the secondary market hard, considering the stakes of the game.

Still, Georgia should have the majority of the crowd, it’s just a matter of how much. And it will know the stadium and be comfortable there.

“You’re playing the defending national champions in their backyard. It’s going to take everything we have to win this game,” Ohio State coach Ryan Day said, making clear later he wasn’t complaining. “When you get to this point of the season, this is what you’ve got to do. You’re going to be in these electric atmospheres. If you’d asked me at the beginning of the season you’d be playing Georgia in the Peach Bowl for the national semifinals, of course, you’d cut off your right arm for this opportunity.”

Well, probably not literally.

Kirby Smart, for his part, pointed out that in Georgia’s two previous semifinal trips, it traveled to Los Angeles and Miami. This just happened to be the year in the rotation that Atlanta was a semifinal. Smart also went a bit Norman Dale on the zoom call.

“The field is the exact same length as any other field we play them on,” Smart said.

Balance

By reputation, this is a sexy matchup of Ohio State’s offense versus Georgia’s defense. Peach Bowl chairman Gary Stokan pointed out Sunday that Ohio State had the nation’s second-ranked scoring offense and Georgia had the second-ranked scoring defense.

But it would be a little simplistic to look at it that way. For one thing, Georgia’s defense is coming off a game in which it gave up more than 500 passing yards to LSU. That was an anomaly — Georgia entered the game ranked first in the SEC in pass defense — but it gave Smart a talking point for the next few weeks.

“We can’t play defense the way we did last night, or we aren’t going to be any kind of champions,” Smart said.

Georgia’s offense, of course, put up 50 points in the same game, and that was only the second-most points it has scored this season. The Bulldogs rank second in the SEC in yards per play, behind only Tennessee, and against the five ranked teams they have faced, they have scored 49 points (Oregon), 48 (South Carolina), 27 (Tennessee in a game where rain hit in the second half), 45 (Mississippi State) and 50 (LSU).

Ohio State, meanwhile, certainly looked vulnerable on defense against Michigan. But the Buckeyes still rank 18th nationally in defensive yards per play and are 13th in scoring defense. They aren’t perfect — ninth in the Big Ten in pass defense — but this isn’t exactly Southern California’s defense, either.

Mindset

Smart told his team Sunday that last year’s Georgia team “had a different frame of mind than maybe our team right now.” The point was obvious: Last year’s team was propelled emotionally by the SEC championship loss, while this year’s team needed to make sure being 13-0 didn’t lead to any complacency.

Smart also pointed out Ohio State is feeling something different. Critics may say the Buckeyes backed into the Playoff, but they’re coming off a loss and were humbled. That’s similar to what Alabama had entering the 2017 Playoff, and look how that turned out.

“With Ohio State, there’s a breath of fresh air of opportunity,” Smart said. “The excitement that provides and the energy, it’s like it’s a kick of momentum that we have to understand that, and we have to be able to match that and understand that there’s a piece of that that you’ve got to know.”

This will be hard for Georgia

These two programs have met only once, and that was 29 years ago, but Smart has seen the Buckeyes within the past decade: the 2014 CFP semifinal when he was at Alabama.

“Long day. A long day,” Smart said. “That was Ezekiel Elliott, right?”

Yup, an Ohio-based reporter replied.

“He shredded what was a pretty talented Alabama defense,” Smart said.

Day didn’t join Ohio State’s program until the 2017 season. But he has kept the program’s same basic, explosive approach. He also has recruited at a high level: Ohio State has the nation’s third-most talented team, per the 247Sports Talent Composite, behind only Alabama and Georgia.

Last year there was a sense entering the Playoff that Georgia was headed for a rematch with Alabama if it didn’t trip up against Michigan. This year, the perception in some quarters may be that the tougher opponent is first, which may be a product of looking too much at preseason perceptions. Either way, it looks like Georgia will have to go through both of the Big Ten powers. If this year’s Georgia team repeats as the national champion, it will have earned it.

(Top photo of Kirby Smart: Steve Limentani / ISI Photos / Getty Images)



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Spinal tap test offers new hope to patients with early dementia

Alzheimer’s treatment ‘turned up to 11’ with new spinal tap test to spot early signs dementia offering rapid drug therapy

  • Almost one million Britons have dementia with Alzheimer’s being most common
  • A spinal tap pilot study is correctly identifying 90 per cent of dementia cases 
  • Earlier treatment can delay the devastating impact of dementia on patients  

A spinal tap test to spot early-stage Alzheimer’s disease could soon be brought in by the NHS so a radical new treatment can be started in time.

Almost one million Britons have dementia – with Alzheimer’s being the most common form – which damages the brain, causing memory loss, confusion and behaviour changes.

A spinal tap, currently undergoing a pilot study, uses a long needle to remove fluid from the spinal cord and has been proved to correctly identify 90 per cent of dementia cases and experts believe it is quicker than the NHS’s traditional screening tools of memory tests and brain scans.

Although the procedure, also known as a lumbar puncture, is potentially painful, experts say the results could be worth it as it will allow doctors to offer anti-dementia drugs at the earliest stages of the disease, when they are most effective.

A spinal tap, currently undergoing a pilot study, uses a long needle to remove fluid from the spinal cord and has been proved to correctly identify 90 per cent of dementia cases and experts believe it is quicker than the NHS’s traditional screening tools of memory tests and brain scans

Early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s is also essential for a groundbreaking new drug, lecanemab, which has been found to slow the progression of the disease by almost a third and may be available on the NHS next year.

Alzheimer’s is believed to be triggered by a build up of amyloid, a toxic protein in the brain. Lecanemab, which is administered by injection every two weeks, is proven to bind to and destroy amyloid, slowing the disease’s progression. But currently just one in 20 Alzheimer’s patients are said to be able to benefit from the drug because many are diagnosed too late for it to be effective.

While most Alzheimer’s diagnoses in the UK are picked up using memory tests, many countries already use the spinal tap. This looks for build ups of amyloid in the spinal fluid as well as another protein, tau, which is suspected to be linked to Alzheimer’s. But many patients are opposed to undergoing the test due to side effects which can include headaches, swelling and prolonged back pain.

‘This test is cheap, effective and used around the world, so it is peculiar it’s not used on the NHS,’ says Professor Dag Aarsland, head of old age psychiatry at King’s College London. ‘Catching the disease early is always crucial, but it will be particularly so with this new drug.

While most Alzheimer’s diagnoses in the UK are picked up using memory tests, many countries already use the spinal tap

‘The earlier you find Alzheimer’s, the more brain there will be to save.’

Researchers at King’s College London are now running a pilot study which will analyse how feasible rolling out the lumbar puncture test – created by the medical firm Roche –would be on the NHS.

‘We want to know if patients are happy to undergo it and doctors are comfortable using it,’ says Prof Aarsland. ‘If lecanemab is approved then this will absolutely be adopted more across the NHS.’

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4000-year-old hair from the Middle Nile highlights unusual ancient DNA degradation pattern and a potential source of early eastern Africa pastoralists

Archaeological context of Kadruka 1 SK68

Archaeological fieldwork in the Kadruka district of northern Sudan has revealed widespread past occupation of the alluvial plain and paleochannel systems to the east of the current Nile River channel9. In accordance with broader archaeological sequences for this region of the Middle Nile Valley10,11,12, cultural deposits were primarily linked to the Neolithic (spanning the 7th millennium BP), as well as the more recent Kerma period (3450–4450 BP). Excavation programs in the Kadruka district focused on several cemeteries from these cultural periods, including Kadruka 1 and Kadruka 21. Reflecting local environmental fluctuations between dry and wet conditions associated with more intensive Nile floods during the Middle Holocene, Neolithic skeletal remains at these cemeteries are typically highly degraded13,14. In contrast, progressive local aridification and floodplain contraction15, has facilitated enhanced preservation of organics, including hair and leather items, in the more recent Kerma period burials at Kadruka 116.

A recent study exploring the diet of individuals from Kadruka 21 and Kadruka 1 detected milk proteins attributable to domesticated cow (Bovinae) or sheep (Ovis) in the dental calculus of individual SK129 from Kadruka 21 and to goat (Carpa) in the dental calculus of individual SK68 from Kadruka 117. Furthermore, isotopic analyses of hair from individual SK68 (named “Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP” in this study) broadly indicate a diet primarily composed of C3-based resources (C3 plants or animals consuming C3 plants, δ13C -17.0‰, δ15N 12.0‰).

The early proliferation of herding economies in northeastern Africa, particularly apparent in the Kerma civilisation of Upper Nubia11,12, has been proposed as a potential link to the dispersal of pastoral populations into eastern Africa5,6,7, though there is as yet no published genetic evidence to support this migration model. Direct palaeoproteomic evidence for milk consumption17, together with the remains of cattle, sheep and goat found in grave assemblages18, identify individuals from Kadruka 1 and Kadruka 21 as belonging to early populations practicing pastoralism, making the sites ideal for archaeogenetic research seeking to examine early pastoralist dispersals in northeastern Africa.

Ancient DNA authentification and sequencing strategy

We screened five specimens deriving from four individuals from the Kadruka district of northern Sudan (Fig. 1a) for aDNA preservation, drawing on tooth (KDR001.A), hair (KDR001.B), petrous bone (KDR002, KDR004) and cranial (KDR003) samples. All specimens were excavated from archaeological contexts dating to the Neolithic and Kerma periods. The only sample that yielded detectable authentic aDNA was a lock of dark hair (127 mg) (Fig. 1b) from a Kerma period individual. We used a total of 27.5 cm of hair for aDNA extraction and 78.5 mg for radiocarbon dating. The hair sample from Kadruka 1 SK68 is directly dated to 3928–4139 calBP (Fig. 1c), contemporaneous to the Pastoral Neolithic period in eastern Africa.

Figure 1

Sample details of the 4,000-year-old hair from Sudan. (a) Geographic location of Kadruka and modern African populations used for subsequent analyses. (b) Picture of the Kadruka hair sample. (c) C14 calibrated age (cal BC) of the Kadruka hair, plotted using IntCal13 calibration curve19.

To maximize the possibility of aDNA retrieval from shotgun sequencing, we applied double-stranded and single-stranded library protocols to the four extracts deriving from the Kadruka skeletal remains, but only applied the single-stranded library protocol to the hair sample, since this protocol typically results in higher yields than the double-stranded library approach for highly fragmented DNA. None of the aDNA libraries extracted from the skeletal elements showed authentic aDNA damage patterns, i.e., substitutions from cytosine to thymine (C- > T) (Table S1). The hair sample (KDR001.B0101), however, provided an observed 17.5% C- > T substitution rate at the first 5-prime base in sequencing reads (Table S1). Accordingly, we selected this library from the hair sample for deeper sequencing.

We found that the average read length was relatively short (33 base pair/bp, Table S1). This poses a challenge, since short DNA fragments can result in spurious alignments to the human reference genome, even if they do not originate from humans, but from, for example, microbes present in the burial environment. On the other hand, while long DNA fragments have high mapping certainty, they are more likely to originate from modern human DNA contamination (which typically consists of long DNA fragments). We therefore explored various read length cut-offs to yield as much authentic human aDNA as possible, while maintaining a low proportion of reads from presumed modern human contamination. For this purpose, we used two tools to assess both the rate of spurious alignments and the rate of modern human contaminants. First, we used SpAl20 which uses simulations to estimate fractions of spurious and authentic alignments given certain read length cut-offs. For a cut-off length of 25 bp, SpAI estimated a spurious alignment fraction of 10% (Table S2). As the read length cut-off increases, the estimation for spurious alignments drops respectively (Table S2). Second, we used AuthentiCT21 to estimate the overall contamination level in the aligned fragments using base substitution patterns. We explored length cut-offs at 10, 25, 30 (custom setting) and 34 bp in the raw data processing steps, and summarised EAGER statistics and respective contamination estimates in Table S2.

We find that at a length cut-off of 30 bp, 47.3 ± 2.4% of retrieved aDNA is likely of modern-human contaminant origin (Table 1). In comparison, a length cut-off of 25 bp yielded 4,680,356 mapped reads with 0.1 ± 0.3% contamination (Table 1). Together with the results from SpAL, we consider 25 bp a safe cut-off length for this library. Thus, we continued our downstream analyses with a 25 bp read length filter, ending up with 231,040 sequencing reads after mapping, from which we derived 3,336 pseudo-haploid allele calls on 1240 k SNP positions (Table 1).

Table 1 Eager statistics of deeper shotgun sequenced data from the hair sample KDR001.B0101.SG1.2 with different length filter cut-off.

Characteristics of the aDNA fragments from hair

Employing our final read length filter at 25 bp and additionally filtering for alignment mapping quality (Methods), we further explored alignment statistics. We find two unusual characteristics in the aDNA library generated from the Kadruka hair sample. The first is that the sample is enriched in unusually short DNA molecules, giving a median read length of 25 bp, compared to 44 bp for typical bone-derived shotgun aDNA in a previous African aDNA study using the same laboratory pipeline4. The second is that unusually high damage rates were observed in the interior of the DNA molecules from hair, while unusually low damage rates were seen in the exterior of the molecules. For instance, at the interior 10th bp from the 5’ end, damage rates were 10% compared to 1% from typical bone-derived aDNA. While at the exterior, the 1st bp from the 5’ end showed damage rates of 15%, compared to on average of 27%22 from typical bone-derived aDNA. These patterns are consistent with high degradation of DNA fragments in hair through intense sun exposure, already during the lifetime of the individual, which may result in hair containing largely denatured single-stranded DNA fragments, as opposed to the more typically intact double-stranded fragments preserved in bone samples.

We find the ratio of mitochondrial to nuclear DNA in the hair-derived DNA library to be relatively high (with a ratio at 224 at length cut-off 25 bp, Table S1), compared to typical rates with other tissues; for example the ratio is at 110 on average for petrous bones in a previous study using the same laboratory pipeline4. We investigated whether there is a notable difference in terms of aDNA preservation in nuclear DNA and mitochondria from the hair material. Specifically, we examined if the two idiosyncratic features of hair aDNA we describe above apply to both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA from hair. In Fig. 2 and Fig S2, we compared the read length distribution and average base substitution rates of reads mapped to the complete genome (i.e., nuclear and mitochondrial), the nuclear genome, and the mitochondrial genome. We find that both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA have high base substitution rates in the interior of sequence reads (Fig S2a, c), but reads mapped to mitochondria are relatively longer than reads mapped to autosomes (Fig S2b, d).

Figure 2

Characteristics of aDNA fragments from the hair sample. (a) Length distribution of shotgun sequencing reads mapped to the whole genome using read length filter cut-off at 25 bp in the step of adaptor removal. (b) High C-to-T substitution rates in the interior of aDNA fragments.

Given the tenfold reduction of mapped reads after applying a mapping quality filter (Table 1), we examined if the two features of hair aDNA observed here resulted from the mapping quality filter. We find that our mapping quality filter did not have a notable effect on the two features of ultra-short DNA fragment enrichment and high interior aDNA damage pattern (Fig S3).

Given the success of SNP capture techniques for poorly preserved human DNA23, we also performed SNP capture for our hair-derived aDNA library. However, SNP capture did not provide an improvement over shotgun sequencing. Instead, we found the base substitution rates in the exterior and interior of reads are substantially lower in capture data, in comparison to the rate distribution in shotgun data (Fig. S1, Table S1), corroborating the fact of high contamination rate in the capture data (42 ± 3% as estimated by AuthentiCT), likely due to capture preferentially targeting molecules without damage (due to more effective hybridization) than with damage. In addition, longer molecules are preferentially captured over short molecules.

Genetic affinity to early eastern African pastoralists

We performed Principal Components Analysis (PCA) and Outgroup-f3 (Figs. 2, 3) to investigate the genetic ancestry of the individual (Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP) from whom our hair sample derived, utilizing 3336 mapped reads overlapping with SNP positions from the Shotgun data, after read length filter at 25 bp of Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP (Table S2). To maximise the resolution given the extremely low coverage and low number of called alleles, we used high-coverage modern African genomic data from the SGDP24 and the HGDP25, which includes all SNPs in 1240 k panel, instead of the commonly used Human Origin array data26, for calculating Principal Components (PCs). We projected ancient Africans and ancient Near Easterners on the background of modern African groups25. Although the number of available populations in SGDP and HGDP is limited, we observe clear separations of African populations from different regions, with eastern/northern, southern and western African populations falling into the right, left and top corner of PC1/PC2 space, respectively.

Figure 3

Genetic ancestry of Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) of African populations. We project Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP into an African PCA (Table S3) with PCs calculated from modern Africans in SGDP24. We use block jackknife strategy (taking-one-chromosome-out)26 for error bar calculation of Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP ‘s location on the PCA.

The PCA shows Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP located close to previously published early pastoralists in eastern Africa4,5, such as Kenya_EarlyPastoral_N (3800–4000 calBP) and Kenya_Pastoral_Neolithic (1500–3000 calBP). Kenya_EarlyPastoral_N is a group of two pastoralist individuals dated to the early stage of the eastern African Pastoral Neolithic, both of whom are genetically derived from admixture between two early northeastern African-related ancestries from Sudan and Northern Africa/Levant5. To estimate the level of noise resulting from the sparsity of our SNP data, we computed a standard error for the projected PCs of Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP using a block jackknife approach. Specifically, we computed pseudo-values by deleting each chromosome of the genotype data in turn and then used the resulting estimates from the remaining data as input for the weighted jackknife calculation27. We find the standard errors of Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP to be relatively small compared to overall genetic variation within Africa, which gives us confidence that the location calculated from the full data (Fig. 2a) is robust.

Despite the sparsity of the data, the PCA analyses conducted here clearly suggest a very close genetic relationship between Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP and ancient eastern African pastoralist populations. To corroborate this finding, we also computed allele sharing rates with ancient populations from the Levant and Africa and present-day African populations at genomic sites where Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP differs from the chimpanzee reference genome via outgroup-f3 (Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP, population X; Chimpanzee). Figure 4a shows that Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP shares the highest genetic affinity with ancient Levantine groups, ancient northern and Eastern Africans and modern Africans from northern Sahara and the Horn of Africa. We computed pairwise comparisons employing f4 (Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP, Kenya_EarlyPastoral_N; population X, Chimp) to validate the close PC location between Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP and Kenya_EarlyNeolithic_N. Consistent with PCA location, f4-statistic result confirms the genetic cladality between Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP and Kenya_EarlyPastoral_N given that none of the tested populations breaks cladality significantly, suggesting that these two individuals are indistinguishable in terms of allele frequencies (Fig. 4b). Additionally, we show that in f4 (Kenya_EarlyPastoral_N, population X; Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP, Chimp) results (Fig. 4c) that all tested ancient and modern African populations are either significantly positive (suggesting that they are less close to Kenya_EarlyPastoral_N compared to Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP) or overlapping with zero, indicating equal genetic distance to both.

Figure 4

Genetic affinity with ancient African pastoralists. (a) Outgroup f3(Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP, population X; Chimp). (b) f4(Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP, Kenya_EarlyPastoral_N; population X, Chimp). (c) f4(Kenya_EarlyPastoral_N, population X; Sudan_Kadruka1_4000BP, Chimp). Population X includes published ancient African and Near Eastern populations and modern African populations from SGDP and HGDP data sets (Table S3). We plot two standard error bars for f3 and f4 statistics shown here and highlight statistically significant tests (Z-score > 3) in red color.

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Experimental HIV Vaccine Shows Promise in Early Human Trial

Above, a red AIDS awareness ribbon.
Image: Shutterstock (Shutterstock)

An experimental HIV vaccine appears to have passed its first test in humans. In a newly released study, the vaccine candidate produced the sort of immune response that scientists had been hoping for in 97% of recipients. Importantly, the vaccine also seemed to be safe and well-tolerated.

The vaccine candidate is known as eOD-GT8 60mer and was developed by researchers from the Scripps Research Institute. The Phase I trial testing eOD-GT8 60mer, first announced in 2018, was sponsored by the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI). It’s part of a large collaboration between scientists at Scripps, the National Institutes of Health, the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, and other groups in the U.S. and Sweden. It involved 48 healthy participants, 36 of whom were given two doses of the vaccine eight weeks apart (these participants were divided into a low- and high-dose group).

HIV infection can be now effectively managed through lifelong antiviral therapy. But the virus has the ability to craftily change its structure once inside the body, making it hard for the immune system to recognize it for long. This means that sustained immunity to the virus, at least in most cases, has remained out of reach. But we’ve known for decades that some people can produce broadly neutralizing antibodies to the virus that can keep up with it. And scientists have been chasing after the elusive HIV vaccine capable of creating these antibodies ever since.

A new method for obtaining these antibodies, known as the germline-targeting strategy, is represented by eOD-GT8 60mer. In simple terms, the first dose of vaccine tries to prime a rare and select group of B cells into a state where they could produce these antibodies. Subsequent boosters are then supposed to reactivate these cells, eventually leading to durable and broadly neutralizing antibodies against HIV. And in the findings of this new trial, published Friday in Science, the first part of this strategy appears to be working.

The researchers found that 35 out of 36 volunteers appeared to generate the precursors to these broadly neutralizing antibodies and that this immune response only grew in strength following the second dose.

“The hope is that if you can induce this kind of immunity in people, you can protect them from some of these viruses that we’ve had a very hard time designing vaccines for that are effective,” Timothy Schacker, the program director in HIV medicine at the University of Minnesota Medical School, who was not involved in the research, told CNN. “So this is an important step forward.”

Phase I trials are primarily designed to test the safety of an experimental treatment. And the vaccine also did have a favorable safety profile, the researchers wrote, with no severe vaccine-related adverse reactions reported. The findings are timely as well, given that yesterday was World AIDS Day.

This study is only a proof of concept, though, the authors note. It will take more research in humans to confirm the early findings seen here, and to show that broadly neutralizing antibodies can be reliably coaxed through boosters. Any truly effective vaccine would also likely have to create a broad T cell response to HIV since T cells are often a crucial aspect of our immunity to germs. But if this research does continue to pan out, then scientists may one day be able to create vaccines that not only provide lasting protection against HIV, but other evasive diseases like hepatitis C, flu, and covid-19.

Another Phase I trial of eOD-GT8 60mer is already ongoing, and other similar vaccine candidates are being tested out in early human trials as well.

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HIV vaccine candidate induces immune response in early clinical trial



CNN
 — 

An experimental HIV vaccine has been found to induce broadly neutralizing antibodies among a small group of volunteers in a Phase 1 study. The findings suggest that a two-dose regimen of the vaccine, given eight weeks apart, can elicit immune responses against the human immunodeficiency virus.

The clinical trial results, published Thursday on World AIDS Day in the journal Science, establish “clinical proof of concept” in support of developing boosting regimens to induce immune responses against HIV infection, for which there is no cure and which can cause acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, known as AIDS.

The vaccine, called eOD-GT8 60mer, had a “favorable safety profile” and induced broadly neutralizing antibodies in 97%, or all but one, of the 36 recipients, according to the researchers from Scripps Research, the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, the National Institutes of Health and other institutions in the United States and Sweden.

Antibodies are proteins made by the immune system to help fight infections, and broadly neutralizing antibodies are known to neutralize many genetic variants of HIV, but they have been difficult to elicit by vaccination.

“Learning how to induce broadly neutralizing antibodies against pathogens with high antigenic diversity, such as HIV, influenza, hepatitis C virus, or the family of betacoronaviruses, represents a grand challenge for rational vaccine design,” the researchers wrote. “Germline-targeting vaccine design offers one potential strategy to meet this challenge.”

The eOD-GT8 60mer vaccine candidate is germline-targeting, meaning it was designed to induce the production of broadly neutralizing antibodies by targeting and stimulating the right antibody-producing cells.

The International AIDS Vaccine Initiative announced the start of this Phase 1 clinical trial in 2018, to evaluate the safety of eOD-GT8 60mer and the immune responses it is able to induce.

The trial included a total of 48 healthy adults, ages 18 to 50, who were enrolled at two sites: George Washington University in Washington and Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle.

Among the participants, 18 received a 20-microgram dose of the vaccine and, eight weeks later, a same-size dose of the vaccine with an adjuvant; 18 received a 100-microgram dose of the vaccine and, eight weeks later, a same-size dose of the vaccine with an adjuvant; and 12 received two doses of a saline placebo, eight weeks apart. The adjuvant is called AS01B, developed by the pharmaceutical company GSK. The vaccines and placebo were given into the arm muscle.

The researchers collected and analyzed immune cells from the blood and lymph nodes of participants during the study. They specifically examined how B cells, a type of white blood cell that makes antibodies in the immune system, responded to the vaccine.

The researchers found no serious adverse events reported among the study participants, and no participants acquired HIV infection during the study. About 97% – or all but one – of the 48 study participants reported local or systemic adverse events that were generally mild or moderate, such as pain at the injection site, malaise and headache. In most cases, these events were resolved within a day or two.

After the first immunization, all vaccine recipients but no placebo recipients were found to produce antibodies elicited by the eOD-GT8 60mer vaccine. Those vaccine-induced responses increased after the second vaccination, the researchers wrote.

Another Phase 1 study on this vaccine candidate is underway, said Dr. Julie McElrath, senior vice president and director of the vaccine and infectious disease division at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, who was an author of the study.

What is unique about this HIV vaccine candidate is that it was engineered to directly target the production of broadly neutralizing antibodies, said Dr. Timothy Schacker, vice dean for research and program director in HIV medicine at the University of Minnesota Medical School, who was not involved in the research.

“In HIV, when we’ve designed and tested vaccines in the past, they didn’t for whatever reason induce these broadly neutralizing antibodies,” he said. “Call them super antibodies, if you want. The broadly neutralizing antibodies work more efficiently. They’re better at controlling things.”

By showing that broadly neutralizing antibodies can be induced by a vaccine, this new study could help inform the development of other types of immunizations, not just HIV vaccines, Schacker said.

“The hope is that if you can induce this kind of immunity in people, you can protect them from some of these viruses that we’ve had a very hard time designing vaccines for that are effective,” he said. “So this is an important step forward.”

Although this is “exciting science,” much more work needs to be done before this vaccine may be considered for use in the public, said Dr. Carlos del Rio, co-director of the Center for AIDS Research at Emory University and executive associate dean for Emory School of Medicine at Grady Health System, who was not involved in the new study.

“We know that broadly neutralizing antibodies are a potentially effective strategy to prevent HIV,” del Rio said. “We’re far from using this as a vaccine, but this is very exciting science. … Investing in this kind of research is critically important in not only developing a vaccine for HIV, but if this strategy works, it can be used for other vaccines.”

An HIV vaccine will probably need to elicit these broadly neutralizing antibodies, or bnAbs, “which are able to recognize globally diverse HIV strains and can prevent HIV infection. However, triggering bnAbs by vaccination has proven impossible so far. A key challenge is that bnAbs rarely develop, even during infection,” Penny Moore, of the University of the Witwatersrand and the National Institute for Communicable Diseases in South Africa, wrote in an editorial published alongside the new study.

A “key question” that still needs to be answered is how long the elicited antibodies from the first immunization can last.

Also, if the booster shot is too different from the previous vaccine, “antibodies that have been triggered by the first vaccination may not recognize the booster and will not mature further,” Moore wrote. “However, the incorporation of many different shots into an HIV vaccine regimen is unappealing. Getting the balance right between the need for antibody maturation toward bnAbs and feasibility in the real world will be essential.”

Last year, more than 38 million people were living with HIV or AIDS around the globe. More than 20 HIV vaccine clinical trials are ongoing around the world, according to the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative.

Many people in the United States have turned to daily HIV-prevention pills or frequent injections, known as PrEP, to reduce their risk of infection.

“It’s a daily pill or it’s a painful shot. It’s a shot that is uncomfortable at best that you have to get several times a year,” Schacker said of PrEP.

But having an HIV vaccine available would make protection against the virus more accessible, he said. “If you can give a vaccine, you’re going to reach more people and provide, if you have an effective vaccine, more and better coverage to reduce the probability of transmission if you’re exposed.”

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Rose Bowl agrees to amended deal allowing for early CFP expansion

The last remaining obstacle to expanding the College Football Playoff to 12 teams in the 2024 and 2025 seasons has been cleared.

A source told ESPN on Wednesday night that the Rose Bowl has agreed to terms that will pave the way for the College Football Playoff to expand in the final two seasons of the current contract — 2024 and 2025.

Any more steps toward an announcement are a formality, as the formal announcement of the playoff expansion beginning in 2024 is expected to be imminent.

In early September, the College Football Playoff board of managers voted to expand the College Football Playoff to 12 teams starting in 2026.

With nearly $450 million at stake in the final two years of the current contract, the path toward expanding in those two seasons has been fraught with complications.

But after months of haggling, getting the Rose Bowl on board loomed as the final step. The Rose Bowl needed to amend its contract as the other five so-called “contract bowls” needed to do in order to accommodate the new system. Ultimately, the Rose Bowl’s cooperation loomed as the final barrier.

A source told ESPN’s Heather Dinich earlier this week that the Rose Bowl was essentially given an ultimatum this week to agree to terms or risk being shut out of the next television contract, which begins in 2026.

The Rose Bowl’s requests for special treatment included an exclusive window for the game — a television window considered one of the most valuable in the sports — in years when the Rose Bowl wasn’t hosting a College Football Playoff game on New Year’s.

Essentially, sources told ESPN that CFP officials told the Rose Bowl this week that they’d make good faith efforts to work with them. But that would not include the exclusive window for the Rose Bowl that isn’t a part of the CFP. Any of the Rose Bowl’s requests that involved the next contract — be it financial or otherwise — were impossible to even address, as there’s no way to know what the television contracts for the next iteration of the CFP will look like.

Ultimately, if the Rose Bowl wanted to take part in the next version of the CFP, it needed to accept a role that didn’t include significant special favors. The upcoming announcement puts an end to the awkward and complex process to expand the College Football Playoff, which has epitomized the fractured and non-linear structure of college sports. To reach the September expansion decision to 12 teams, it took a significant momentum swings that included introducing a 12-team proposal in June of 2021. That eventually got shot down amid conference in-fighting, leading to second-guessing on why a potential model was announced before it was approved by all the constituents.

The following year, the college presidents who make up the CFP Board of Managers essentially decided to work backwards, first approving the 12-team model in September that would start in 2026. They then targeted 2024 and 2025, which was always going to be complicated because it required presidents from all 10 conferences and Notre Dame to agree unanimously.

Then the group of commissioners dove in for months of meetings, calls and all the details involving schedule, bowl games, game sits, the academic calendar and television contract complications. Three full months later, the Board of Managers pushed through all the issues — revenue distribution was a big one — until finally solving the Rose Bowl conundrum on Wednesday night. The 12-team playoff will start in the 2024 season, meaning just two more four-team playoffs — this year and next — before the sport’s postseason changes indelibly.

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Toward Early Detection of the Pathological Social Withdrawal Syndrome Known as ‘Hikikomori’

Summary: Hikikomori is a complex condition where a person withdraws from society and remains isolated at home for more than six months. The condition is becoming more prevalent in Western societies. Researchers have developed a new method designed to help detect hikikomori at an earlier stage and provide treatment.

Source: Kyushu University

Kyushu University researchers have developed a new ‘Hikikomori Questionnaire’ in an effort to detect the condition at an earlier stage.

Preliminary results show that isolation is a possible factor that can distinguish between non-hikikomori and pre-hikikomori individuals, providing possible validation of the new questionnaire as a tool for early detection and treatment.

Hikikomori is a complex pathological condition where an individual withdraws from society and remains at home almost every day for more than six months. Although it may be viewed as a condition unique to Japan, hikikomori has been reported globally from across Asia, to Europe and North America.

“Hikikomori was first defined in 1998. As we studied the condition, we found that it is a very complex pathology caused by an overlap of physical, societal, and psychological conditions,” explains Takahiro A. Kato of Kyushu University’s Faculty of Medical Sciences and first author of the study.

“Its growing international recognition has put hikikomori into the purview of many researchers and medical professionals, especially on the heels of the years long COVID-19 pandemic. Just this year, Hikikomori was recognized in the revised edition of the DSM-5.”

Kato and his team have been working on measures to evaluate, identify, and treat hikikomori patients, to the point of opening the world’s first outpatient clinic for hikikomori individuals in 2013. In 2018, the team developed the ‘Hikikomori Questionnaire,’ or HQ-25, that was design to assess whether individuals under social withdrawal after six months are symptomatic of hikikomori.

“This questionnaire allowed us to identify symptomatic individuals with hikikomori. As our work progressed, we found that we needed an assessment tool that could evaluate symptomatic individuals at an earlier stage to help detect and potentially prevent hikikomori,” continues Kato.

The new Hikikomori Questionnaire, or HQ-25M—made in collaboration with Nihon University and Oregon Health and Science University—is composed of 25 questions that evaluate the three subfactors of socialization, isolation, and emotional support on a scale to 0–4, 4 being ‘strongly agree.’

For example, questions such as ‘I feel uncomfortable around other people’ gauge socialization, while ‘there are few people I can discuss important issues with’ covers emotional support.

The pilot test of the new questionnaire, reported in Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, was conducted with 762 Japanese individuals. The questionnaire first asked about the individual’s social withdrawal status in the prior month in order to categorize participants into hikikomori, non-hikikomori, and pre-hikikomori groups. The team also added a questionnaire that evaluates the individual’s psychological distress during the same month.

Hikikomori is a complex pathological condition where an individual withdraws from society and remains at home almost every day for more than six months. Image is in the public domain

“We analyzed the data to see any comparable differences between the different category groups,” explains Kato. “Multiple models showed us that hikikomori groups scored significantly higher on all metrics compared to non- and pre-hikikomori.”

Interestingly, between the pre- and non-hikikomori respondents, of all the three subfactors that were measured, the isolation subfactor was the only one that showed a significant difference in scores.

While still preliminary, the team is pleased with their initial findings and plans to use them to improve their questionnaire and data collecting.

“These initial findings are promising and show that our questionnaire may be a good tool for early detection of hikikomori,” concludes Kato.

“Nonetheless, we have to work on expanding and diversifying our sample size and fine tune our questions. Moreover, since the hikikomori pathology is being reported around the world, we must work with researchers and patients outside of Japan.”

See also

About this psychology research news

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

Original Research: Open access.
“One month version of Hikikomori Questionnaire‐25 ( HQ‐25M ): Development and initial validation” by Takahiro A. Kato et al. Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences


Abstract

One month version of Hikikomori Questionnaire‐25 ( HQ‐25M ): Development and initial validation

Hikikomori is a pathological condition of social withdrawal in which a person remains at home almost every day for more than 6 months.

Although first observed in Japan, hikikomori is described around the world, causing serious impacts on healthcare, welfare, and the economy.

The COVID-19 pandemic has further led to social isolation at home to avoid the risk of infection, and perhaps increased the number of people with hikikomori-like conditions. The 25-item Hikikomori Questionnaire (HQ-25) was designed to assess social withdrawal after at least 6 months of symptoms.

However, assessment tools that can quickly evaluate social withdrawal at an earlier stage are needed to help detect and potentially prevent hikikomori. Therefore, we herein developed a modified version of the HQ-25 to assess the prior 1 month and preliminarily examined its validity.

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Morning people are smarter? Early risers have higher verbal intelligence, debunking previous studies

OTTAWA — Highly intelligent people are often portrayed as night owls. The dedicated novelist writing all night until daybreak, for example. While prior studies actually support this notion, finding that night owls typically display more robust verbal intelligence, new research from the University of Ottawa suggests otherwise.

Turns out the early bird really does get the (verbal) worm.

“Once you account for key factors including bedtime and age, we found the opposite to be true, that morning types tend to have superior verbal ability,” says Stuart Fogel, Director of the University of Ottawa Sleep Research Laboratory, in a university release. “This outcome was surprising to us and signals this is much more complicated that anyone thought before.”

This latest research out of Canada provides some much needed insight into how the impact of a person’s daily rhythm and activity levels during both wake and sleep relates to intelligence.

The research team identified participants’ chronotypes (evening or morning tendencies) by monitoring their biological rhythms and daily preferences. An individual’s chronotype is related to when in the day they prefer to pursue or accomplish demanding or important tasks, from intellectual pursuits to exercise.

Typically, younger people tend to be “evening types,” while older individuals and those more regularly entrenched in their daily/nightly activities are more often “morning types.” Ironically, the morning is usually a critical time for young people, especially those still attending school.

“A lot of school start times are not determined by our chronotypes but by parents and work-schedules, so school-aged kids pay the price of that because they are evening types forced to work on a morning type schedule,” Fogel explains. “For example, math and science classes are normally scheduled early in the day because whatever morning tendencies they have will serve them well. But the AM is not when they are at their best due to their evening type tendencies. Ultimately, they are disadvantaged because the type of schedule imposed on them is basically fighting against their biological clock every day.”

This study used volunteers representing a wide variety of age groups. All subjects were rigorously screened to rule out sleep disorders and any other possible confounding factors. Subjects wore a monitoring device to measure their activity levels.

Fogel explains that establishing the strength of a person’s rhythm, which drives intelligence, is key to understanding this study. Study authors point to a person’s age and actual bedtime as important factors. “Our brain really craves regularity and for us to be optimal in our own rhythms is to stick to that schedule and not be constantly trying to catch up,” he concludes.

The study is published in Current Research in Behavioral Sciences.



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100+ best early Cyber Monday deals 2022: Live updates

Image: ZDNET

Black Friday has come and gone, but Cyber Monday is up next, so you can still snag the year’s best deals on tech. We’re seeing tons of early Cyber Monday discounts online for TVs, laptops, tablets, phones, and even Apple products like the AirPods and iPads. A number of big internet retailers — including Amazon, Walmart, and Best Buy — have all marked down the hottest devices and toys. 

Also: The best Black Friday deals 2022 still available under $30

ZDNET editors are tracking the best Cyber Monday 2022 sales, right here. If you like to save money, bookmark this page and be sure to come back for up-to-the-minute discounts. At the top, you’ll see the last two hours of the newest Cyber Monday deals we could find. Farther down the page, rather than focus on the latest deals, we’ve sorted the best Cyber Monday deals into categories. 

Latest early Cyber Monday deals

Please refer to the table of contents to quickly navigate and don’t forget to refresh the page to see the most recent updates.

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Best early Cyber Monday TV deals

Whether you’re buying your first TV or upgrading your home theater, these awesome Black Friday and Cyber Monday deals make it more affordable than ever. Brands like Samsung, Sony, LG, and TCL have great discounts on already budget-friendly models as well as high-end TVs for shoppers looking for premium features like OLED panels and virtual surround sound.

Also: The best Black Friday 2022 TV deals

LG

The deals below are ordered from oldest (top) to latest (bottom):

Best early Cyber Monday laptop deals

It’s November, which, among other things, means Black Friday and Cyber Monday deals and discounts on laptops of all kinds from retailers and laptop manufacturers. Black Friday started weeks ago, so the sales engine has long been up and running. There are some excellent deals to be had throughout the month. ZDNET is rounding up its top picks for the best laptop deals.

Also: The best Black Friday 2022 laptop deals

Best Buy

The deals below are ordered from oldest (top) to latest (bottom):

Best early Cyber Monday tablet deals

Black Friday and Cyber Monday are the biggest shopping times of the year, and it is when tablets go on sale for $100 or even $500 off. We’ve rounded up the best early Cyber Monday tablet deals from brands like Apple and Samsung.

Also: The best Black Friday 2022 tablet deals

Image: ZDNET

The deals below are ordered from oldest (top) to latest (bottom):

Best early Cyber Monday gaming deals

Get a jump on your Christmas list with these awesome deals on gaming laptops, PCs, consoles, and accessories. Retailers like Amazon, Best Buy, and Target all have huge discounts on everything you need to create the ultimate gaming space in your home.

Also: The best Black Friday 2022 gaming deals

Image: Best Buy

The deals below are ordered from oldest (top) to latest (bottom):

Best early Cyber Monday home deals

We found the deepest discounts you can get now on top-rated smart thermostats, video doorbells, security cameras, robot vacuums, and smart kitchen tech like Instant Pots. You will want to kit out your home/ office with these hot products all on sale.

Also: The best Amazon Black Friday deals 2022

Amazon

The deals below are ordered from oldest (top) to latest (bottom):

Best early Cyber Monday streaming deals

Streaming gives you the best options for entertainment, customizable to your preferences and budget. The Cyber Monday deals below encompass streaming subscriptions to services like YouTube Premium and Apple TV, smart TVs with streaming capabilities, and streaming devices that will transform the TV you have into one compatible with your favorite services. 

Also: The best Black Friday 2022 streaming deals

Sherin Shibu

The deals below are ordered from oldest (top) to latest (bottom):

Best early Cyber Monday headphone deals

If your holidays could be happier with a pair of headphones to either blast or block out cheesy Christmas songs, look no further. While headphones and earbuds are essential accessories, their pricing can be more than practical. With Cyber Monday finally here, we compiled a list of the best headphone deals so you can beat the holiday rush while wearing buds. 

Also: The best Black Friday 2022 headphone deals

Sony

The deals below are ordered from oldest (top) to latest (bottom):

Best early Cyber Monday smartphone deals

If you held off on upgrading your smartphone until the holiday shopping season, your patience is finally being rewarded. These are the best Black Friday deals that will save you hundreds on prime-time handsets. We’ve scoured the digital catalogs of the most popular retailers to gather the best mobile deals below. Read on and start saving. 

Also: The best Black Friday 2022 smartphone deals

Samsung

The deals below are ordered from oldest (top) to latest (bottom):

Best early Cyber Monday smartwatch deals

Sometimes relying on your phone to see what time it is, how many steps you took, and what the weather will look like tomorrow can get a little annoying. But with smartwatches, you can get access to all those features and so much more. Check out these deals on smartwatches from the comfort of your own home this holiday season.

Also: The best Black Friday 2022 smartwatch deals

Apple

The deals below are ordered from oldest (top) to latest (bottom):

Best early Cyber Monday speaker deals

Don’t wait until after the turkey to start shopping. Your shopping carts may be full of fixings for stuffing and cranberry sauce, but Black Friday and Cyber Monday are here — so make space for some of our favorite deals on speakers, soundbars, and subwoofers. 

Also: The best Costco Black Friday deals 2022

Target

The deals below are ordered from oldest (top) to latest (bottom):

More early Cyber Monday tech deals

OK, here’s all the other random — but still cool — tech we found on sale.

Also: The best Target Black Friday deals 2022

June Wan

The deals below are ordered from oldest (top) to latest (bottom):

ZDNET editors have experience tracking prices and hunting down deals 365 days a year. Take a peek at our Deals hub — we know how to find bargains. Our process starts by identifying the hottest and most popular products of the year, whether it’s the AirPods or the latest iPad, and then we conduct a painstaking process that involves checking major retailers and others you may have never heard about (but are still trusted stores). 

Once we’ve taken note of where each item is available and for how much, we use price-tracking tools to look at each product’s price history. From there, we can map out whether it’s frequently on sale or has hit an all-time low. Anything that isn’t at least 20% off doesn’t make the cut*, and of course, we don’t even consider things that have had their prices hiked up in recent weeks only to be lowered for Black Friday. We’re not noobs. 

We’ve shopped online just as much as you, but we’re experts at finding tech deals actually worth buying, which saves you time shopping so you can get back to enjoying the holidays with friends and family. 


Except for Apple products and other devices that seldom go on sale.

Black Friday takes place every year on the day after Thanksgiving. This year, Black Friday 2022 fell on Friday, Nov. 25. But, honestly, Black Friday is no longer just a 24-hour event. It’s morphed into weeks of bird deals, doorbusters, and even early sales that start in October. 

Black Friday and Cyber Monday are synonymous with big sales that kick off the holiday shopping season. While Black Friday deals started in October this year and can include brick-and-mortar stores and online retailers, Cyber Monday sales are primarily online and can extend Black Friday an entire week — ultimately turning into Cyber Week. Cyber Monday is always the Monday after Thanksgiving, so this year it falls on Nov. 28.

ZDNET scoured early Cyber Monday sales to find the best deals this year:

Our experts also split out the best deals by retailer, brand, and category, which you can see below.

Cyber Monday deals by retailer

Cyber Monday deals by brand

Cyber Monday deals by category

Here are some of the cheapest deals we’ve found so far:

Cyber Monday deals live blog

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