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bdhz Minutemen Go Back To Work
« le: Décembre 10, 2024, 06:14:37 am »
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 WASHINGTON Famous kidnapping survivors Jaycee Dugard and Elizabeth Smart have words of wisdom for the three women found this week in Cleveland years after their disappearance.Dugard was abducted from a California bus stop in 1991 at age 11 and held captive for 18 years in a backyard, where she gave birth to two children conceived by rape. She made an oblique reference Tuesday to the Cleveland case as she accepted a stanley becher n award in Washington from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. What an amazing time to be t stanley cup alking about hope, with everything that s happening,  she said in her brief remarks. She urged the hundreds of people at the annual awards gala not to give up on missing children.  Just urge yourself to care,  she said.Elizabeth Smart  overjoyed  about rescue of Cleveland women Police facing questions in 3 women s Ohio rescueTimeline: Key Events in the Cleveland missing women caseIn a statement released earlier through her publicist, Dugard said the women need a chance to heal and reconnect with the world. She said that the human spirit is resilient, and that the case reaffirms that people should never give up hope.Dugard s mother, Terry Prob stanley cup yn, said in Washington that she understood what the relatives of the Cleveland victims were going through. I feel the same relief and the same joy that I felt when Jaycee was returned to me safely after 18 hellish years,  she said.  I never doubted for one minute that I would someday be reunited with my daughter.        Hnuh Old Weapons, New Problems
 To learn how the whole brain works, it doesn ;t do to just record from one neuron鈥攜ou want to know what every single neuron is doing every millisecond. Now scientists have invented a technique that can actually capture the 3D activity of an entire brain milliseconds at the time鈥攑ossibly the most complete picture of brain activity we ;ve ever had. This new technique has been tried in the brains of larval zebrafish and the nema stanley thermoskannen tode C. elegans, both animals with transparent heads that are common in neuroscience labs. Scientists already use specially engineered proteins that fluorescence when calcium rushes into a neuron as i stanley thermos t fires. These momentarily flashes are how we record the neuronal activity. But recording these flashes on a millisecond scale, over an entire brain, and in three dimensions presents a whole different challenge. To solve this, the team used a technology called light-field imaging for the first time in recording brain activity. In light-field imaging, the angles of incoming rays of light are measured to generate 3D images. The team built a novel light-field microscope that could create their 3D neural activity movies, as MIT   news office explains: With this kind of microscope, the light emitted by the sample being imaged is sent through an array of lenses that refracts the light in different directions. Each point of the sample generates abou stanley website t 400 different points of light, which can then be recombined using a computer algorithm to recreate th