• Breakthrough in treating paralysis
    https://diasp.eu/p/7974424

    Breakthrough in treating paralysis

    https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/10/181031141523.htm

    Three patients with chronic paraplegia were able to walk over ground thanks to precise electrical stimulation of their spinal cords via a wireless implant. In new research, Swiss scientists show that, after a few months of training, the patients were able to control previously paralyzed leg muscles even in the absence of electrical stimulation.

    • Article original:

      Mammal diversity will take millions of years to recover from the current biodiversity crisis.
      Matt Davis, Søren Faurby, Jens-Christian Svenning.
      Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, le 15 octobre 2018
      https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1804906115

      Le dernier paragraphe de l’article:

      The results reported here show that it is unlikely that mam-
      mals can evolve fast enough to restore their lost PD on any kind
      of time scale relevant to humans. Just the PD that mammals are
      expected to lose in the next few decades would realistically take
      millions of years to recover (SI Appendix, Fig. S8). Even after this
      PD recovery, FD (SI Appendix, Fig. S9) would likely remain
      highly altered for millions of years more. The lost evolutionary
      history from previous and ongoing extinctions is already affecting
      ecosystems (42), a trend that will likely only get worse. If any-
      thing, our grim predictions of long recovery times are conser-
      vative. Unlike our best-case scenario model, there is little reason
      to expect that humans will be able to bring extinction rates down
      to background levels within the next century with a rising human
      population and increasing anthropogenic climate change. The
      only real option to speed PD recovery is to save unique evolu-
      tionary history before it is already lost. In addition to increasing
      overall conservation efforts, we should use available PD methods
      to prioritize action for evolutionarily distinct species and dedi-
      cate more research to exploring PD’s relationship with FD and
      ecosystem services (4, 7). If we could momentarily stop extinc-
      tions for mammals, we would save as much evolutionary history
      in the next 100 y as what our ancestors lost in the last 100,000 y
      (SI Appendix, Table S1). Extinction is part of evolution, but the
      unnatural rapidity of current species losses forces us to address
      whether we are cutting off twigs or whole branches from the tree
      of life.

      On l’ajoute à la troisième compilation :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/680147

      #effondrement #collapsologie #catastrophe #fin_du_monde #it_has_begun #Anthropocène #capitalocène

  • Linguistic red flags from Facebook posts can predict future depression diagnoses — ScienceDaily
    https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/10/181015150643.htm

    Research finds that the language people use in their Facebook posts can predict a future diagnosis of depression as accurately as the tools clinicians use in medical settings to screen for the disease.

    In any given year, depression affects more than 6 percent of the adult population in the United States — some 16 million people — but fewer than half receive the treatment they need. What if an algorithm could scan social media and point to linguistic red flags of the disease before a formal medical diagnosis had been made?

    Ah oui, ce serait fantastique pour les Big Pharma : la dépression est une maladie complexe, dont les symptômes graves sont souvent confondus avec la déprime qui est un état sychologique que nous connaissons tous. Notre Facebook, couplé avec notre assistant vocal Amazon nous gorgerait de Valium, et tout irait pour le mieux dans le Meilleur des mondes.

    Considering conditions such as depression, anxiety, and PTSD , for example, you find more signals in the way people express themselves digitally."

    For six years, the WWBP, based in Penn’s Positive Psychology Center and Stony Brook’s Human Language Analysis Lab, has been studying how the words people use reflect inner feelings and contentedness. In 2014, Johannes Eichstaedt, WWBP founding research scientist, started to wonder whether it was possible for social media to predict mental health outcomes, particularly for depression.

    “Social media data contain markers akin to the genome,” Eichstaedt explains. “With surprisingly similar methods to those used in genomics, we can comb social media data to find these markers. Depression appears to be something quite detectable in this way; it really changes people’s use of social media in a way that something like skin disease or diabetes doesn’t.”

    Il y a au moins une bonne nouvelle sur la déontologie scientifique :

    Rather than do what previous studies had done — recruit participants who self-reported depression — the researchers identified data from people consenting to share Facebook statuses and electronic medical-record information, and then analyzed the statuses using machine-learning techniques to distinguish those with a formal depression diagnosis.

    Les marqueurs considérés sont aussi des marqueurs sociaux et économiques, qu’il faudrait traiter autrement qu’avec des médicaments.

    They learned that these markers comprised emotional, cognitive, and interpersonal processes such as hostility and loneliness, sadness and rumination, and that they could predict future depression as early as three months before first documentation of the illness in a medical record.

    La conclusion est fantastique : il faut rendre le balayage obligatoire !!!

    Eichstaedt sees long-term potential in using these data as a form of unobtrusive screening. “The hope is that one day, these screening systems can be integrated into systems of care,” he says. “This tool raises yellow flags; eventually the hope is that you could directly funnel people it identifies into scalable treatment modalities.”

    Despite some limitations to the study, including its strictly urban sample, and limitations in the field itself — not every depression diagnosis in a medical record meets the gold standard that structured clinical interviews provide, for example — the findings offer a potential new way to uncover and get help for those suffering from depression.

    #Dépression #Facebook #Foutaises #Hubris_scientifique #Big_pharma #Psychologie

  • Electrons go with the flow
    https://diasp.eu/p/7847619

    Electrons go with the flow

    https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/10/181009135910.htm

    You turn on a switch and the light switches on because electricity ’flows’. The usual perception is that this is like opening a faucet and the water starts to flow. But this analogy is misleading. The flow of water is determined by the theory of hydrodynamics, where the behavior of the fluid requires no knowledge of the movements of individual molecules.

  • First example of a bioelectronic medicine
    https://diasp.eu/p/7841906

    First example of a bioelectronic medicine

    https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/10/181008183344.htm

    Researchers have developed the first example of a bioelectronic medicine: an implantable, biodegradable wireless device that speeds nerve regeneration and improves healing of a damaged nerve. Their device delivered pulses of electricity to damaged nerves in rats after a surgical repair process, accelerating the regrowth of nerves and enhancing the recovery of muscle strength and control. The device is the size of a dime and the thickness of a sheet of paper.

  • String theory: Is dark energy even allowed?
    https://diasp.eu/p/7842062

    String theory: Is dark energy even allowed?

    https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/10/181009102431.htm

    In string theory, a paradigm shift could be imminent. In June, a team of string theorists published a conjecture which sounded revolutionary: String theory is said to be fundamentally incompatible with our current understanding of ’dark energy’. A new study has now found out that this conjecture seems to be incompatible with the existence of the Higgs particle.