Yypk Three Charged In U.S. Terror Plot
A woman who helps students go to college with their posse, a psychiatrist who treats combat veterans and a museum director on Alaska s Kodiak Island are among the 24 winners of this year s MacArthur Foundation genius grants. The $500,000 fellowships were announced Tuesday by the Chicago-based John D. and Catherine T. Ma
stanley becher cArthur Foundation. Recipients can use the money however they wish. It s an incredible gift, said Deborah Bial, 42, founder and president of the Posse Foundation, which helps form social networks that college students can turn to for support. It will change my life and I hope it will change Posse s life. Bial was working with New York City public school students in a leadership program when one of the program s alumni tried to explain to her why he struggled after high school. He said, I never would have dropped out of college if I had my posse with me, she said.The conversation inspired Bial, then 23, to create the program that identifies promising teenagers from urban environments and gets them pre-collegiate training in small groups with other students - their posse - destined for the same school. Since then, the New York-based foundation has placed
stanley quencher nearly 2,000 students from six cities at 28 colleges. They graduate at a rate of more than 90 percent. I feel like the luckiest person in the world because I love what I do, Bial said. It was serendipity - I was in the right place at
stanley cup the right time with a kid who had a good idea. Meet All Of Tqul First Ever Lab-Grown Muscle That Can Heal Itself in Living Creatures
This amazing 3D piece of silicone dotted wi
stanley becher th electronics looks like something out of the future鈥攂ecause it is. In fact, this potential pacemaker replacement fits ove
stanley cup r the human heart and is capable of monitoring and, soon, responding to, its vital signs. Developed by researchers from the University of Alberta and the University of Illinois, the device is shaped to resemble the pericardium鈥攖he membrane surrounding the heart. It covered in 68 tiny sensors capable of tracking temp
stanley nz erature, mechanical strain and pH, and is designed with flexible, S-shaped circuitry to exert minimal forces on the heart as it expands and contracts. The research is reported in Nature Communications.
https://gizmodo/the-many-amazing-uses-of-stretchable-gold-816691320 The current design measures rich streams of data, and the next iteration will use embedded electrodes to regulate heartbeat based on that information, too. Further down the line, the researchers hope to develop controlled techniques to dissolve the implant away when it no longer needed, and are also looking at opportunities to use the device to monitor other organs. The researchers do admit that it ;ll be a while before the device finds its way to human trials, but in the meantime, it a wildly exciting example of the power of flexible electronics. [Nature Communications via Medical Xpress] BiologyHealthHeartMedicineScience