Top Ten Reasons We Don't Talk About Climate Change | HuffPost - 0 views
-
People are overwhelmed by the enormity of the problem,
-
1. Despair:
Dhar Mann, YouTube's Moral Philosopher - The New York Times - 0 views
-
His “focus on universal truths,” he believes, is what has allowed him “to build such a massive audience.”
-
t’s 25 to 34. “Facebook and YouTube don’t give data for audience under 13 so I can’t say for sure 7 to 10 is the fastest growing audience, it just feels like it based on my interactions with people,” he wrote in an email.
-
Most of his videos incorporate timely narratives about police-calling Karens and Covid-19 hoarders, but in style and tone they are more reminiscent of 1980s after-school specials and the educational short films of the ’50s than other content that’s popular today.
- ...3 more annotations...
Movies about Afghanistan couldn't have predicted this ending - The Washington Post - 0 views
- 0 views
Metabolism peaks at age one and tanks after 60, study finds - BBC News - 0 views
-
Ripped musclesThe metabolism is every drop of chemistry needed to keep the body going. And the bigger the body - whether that is ripped muscles or too much belly fat - the more energy it will take to run.
-
The study, published in the journal Science, found four phases of metabolic life:birth to age one, when the metabolism shifts from being the same as the mother's to a lifetime high 50% above that of adults a gentle slowdown until the age of 20, with no spike during all the changes of pubertyno change at all between the ages of 20 and 60a permanent decline, with yearly falls that, by 90, leave metabolism 26% lower than in mid-life
-
Other surprises came from what the study did not find. There was no metabolic surge during either puberty or pregnancy and no slowdown around the menopause.
- ...2 more annotations...
I Was Powerless Over Diet Coke - The New York Times - 0 views
-
What makes it so hard to quit?
-
two culprits: aspartame and caffeine. Or, to be more precise: addiction to sweetness and to caffeine. Individually, they’re bad; together, they’re an addict’s nightmare.
-
A 12-ounce can of regular Coke has 34 milligrams of caffeine, whereas Diet Coke has 11 milligrams more, according to Coca-Cola. (An 8-ounce cup of coffee has about 95 mg.) Artificial sweeteners activate the brain’s reward system, but only about half as much as regular sugar, said Dr. Peeke. Faux sugar doesn’t pack the same wallop as the real stuff, so it keeps you wanting more and more.
- ...4 more annotations...
Turn "Anti-Vaxx" into "Defund the Police" - by Jonathan V. Last - The Triad - 0 views
-
You will hear, variously, that the “survival rate” for COVID is 99.0 percent, or 99.5 percent, or 99.8 percent.
-
These numbers are all statistical constructs based on the age distribution of a given population. The older your society, the lower your survival rate. But just for fun, let’s pretend it’s 99.8 percent.
-
If 99.8 percent of people who experience a rare event survive, then that number is comforting. If 99.8 percent of people survived being bitten by a shark, for instance, you’d think this was encouraging.
- ...2 more annotations...
Opinion | What's Ripping American Families Apart? - The New York Times - 0 views
-
At least 27 percent of Americans are estranged from a member of their own family, and research suggests about 40 percent of Americans have experienced estrangement at some point.
-
The most common form of estrangement is between adult children and one or both parents — a cut usually initiated by the child. A study published in 2010 found that parents in the U.S. are about twice as likely to be in a contentious relationship with their adult children as parents in Israel, Germany, England and Spain.
-
the children in these cases often cite harsh parenting, parental favoritism, divorce and poor and increasingly hostile communication often culminating in a volcanic event
- ...14 more annotations...
How to Get Things Done When You Don't Want to Do Anything - The New York Times - 0 views
-
As you look for your motivation, it helps to think of it falling into two categories, said Stefano Di Domenico, a motivation researcher
-
First, there’s controlled motivation, when you feel you’re being ruled by outside forces like end-of-year bonuses and deadlines — or inner carrots and sticks, like guilt or people-pleasing.
-
Often when people say they’ve lost motivation, “what they really mean,” Dr. Di Domenico said, “is ‘I’m doing this because I have to, not because I want to.’”
- ...15 more annotations...
The Better Letter: Randomness Rules - by Bob Seawright - The Better Letter - 0 views
Imagine a World Without Apps - The New York Times - 0 views
-
Allow me to ask a wild question: What if we played games, shopped, watched Netflix and read news on our smartphones — without using apps?
-
the downsides of our app system — principally the control that Apple and Google, the dominant app store owners in much of the world, exert over our digital lives — are onerous enough to contemplate another path.
-
in recent months, Microsoft’s Xbox video gaming console, the popular game Fortnite and other game companies have moved ahead with technology that makes it possible to play video games on smartphone web browsers.
- ...7 more annotations...
Pfizer and Moderna Vaccines Likely to Produce Lasting Immunity, Study Finds - The New Y... - 0 views
-
in people who survived Covid-19, immune cells that recognize the virus lie quiescent in the bone marrow for at least eight months after infection. A study by another team indicated that so-called memory B cells continue to mature and strengthen for at least a year after infection.
-
Based on those findings, researchers suggested that immunity might last for years, possibly a lifetime, in people who were infected with the coronavirus and later vaccinated.
-
But it was unclear whether vaccination alone might have a similarly long-lasting effect.
- ...13 more annotations...
« First
‹ Previous
681 - 700 of 6446
Next ›
Last »
Showing 20▼ items per page