Sunday, October 31, 2021

AMICOR 3.055 (24)

 #Dra. Valderês A. R. Achutti (*13/06/1931+15/06/2021)

No Canadá. no século passado, meditativa...
"Dou-te um milhão pelo que vai nesta cabecinha..."

#From: Human Development Report Office


HDialogue: How large are inequalities in global carbon emissions – and what to do about it?

Going beyond income and wealth, inequality manifests itself in many dimensions, one of which is in the stark differences in carbon emissions across different countries. Carbon inequality is accelerating the climate crisis and threatening our very existence. A new study Climate Change & the Global Inequality of Carbon Emissions released by UNDP and the World Inequality Lab (WIL) provides novel findings on carbon emissions of individuals, based on a newly assembled set of economic inequality and environmental data available on the World Inequality Database.

Check out the latest HDialogue post from WIL Co-Director Lucas Chancel to learn about the key findings and what we can do to close the gap and reduce the burden we place on the planet.

#De: Vera Elisabeth Veríssimo



#Da Academia Sul-Riograndense de Medicina
9 de novembro, terça-feira 18 horas. Podem me pedir o Link
Professora Vera Maciel Barroso do CHCSC

A palestrante da Sessão será a historiadora Véra Lúcia Maciel Barroso, pesquisadora, escritora e Coordenadora do Arquivo do Centro Histórico-Cultural Santa Casa de Porto Alegre.

A reunião nos oferecerá um momento de informações e relembranças. Sintam-se à vontade para convidar familiares e amigos, que serão bem-vindos no ambiente da Academia Sul-Rio-Grandense de Medicina.

Este e-mail tem o propósito de "Save the Date". Na véspera da Sessão, os senhores receberão um lembrete da reunião com o link de acesso.



#From: Poket
How Corruption Ruined Lebanon
How Corruption Ruined Lebanon
Rania Abouzeid, The New York Times
The deadly port blast, the triple-digit inflation, the energy shortages — Lebanon’s many crises have a shared root: misrule by a self-dealing elite.







#Do MUHM  -  Autoestima e Amor Próprio




#From: Psiché


Unlike some other organs, if your brain gets sick, you can’t get a transplant
– so it pays to look after the one you’ve got. This week’s 
Guide by a dementia
expert shows you how to begin optimising and protecting your precious grey
and white matter. In Ideas, an explanation of 
poetry’s unique emotional
power; the fascinating etymology of the word ‘
risk’; a new approach to
goodness that sees 
morals as molecules that can be combined; and, the
surprisingly difficult task of finding a scientific definition of 
emotions.
Perhaps the exploration of emotion is best left to art? Our latest 
Film 
has a go – an enchanting music video moulded in clay, which manages
to capture both the persistence of anxiety and the joy of movement and
landscape.

 – Christian Jarrett, Deputy Editor 

#Convites vários
SESSÃO CULTURAL, dia 09/11, às 18h
  Pelo aplicativo ZOOM: ID Sessão Cultural: 856 3939 7843
                                          MARCIA MACEDO
 SECRETÁRIA DA ACADEMIA SUL-RIO-GRANDENSE DE MEDICINA 
                                             Tel.: (51) 3217-0666 / (51) 995025863
                                           Site: www.academiademedicinars.com.br
Domingo, dia 07 de novembro, às 16h, na Feira do Livro:
 
 
















Segunda, dia 08 de novembro, às 17:30h, na Feira do Livro:
 
 




































Terça, dia 09 de novembro, às 16h, na ABC:
 
 










































Quinta, dia 11 de novembro, às 17:30h, na Feira do Livro:
 
#From: Quanta Magazine
My Bookmarks

PLANETARY SCIENCE | ALL TOPICS

 

Researchers Revise Recipe for Building a Rocky Planet

By JONATHAN O'CALLAGHAN

Over the past decade, researchers have completely rewritten the story of how gas giants such as Jupiter and Saturn form. They’re now debating whether the same process might hold for Earth and the other inner planets.

Read the article

POLYNOMIALS

 

Surprising Limits Discovered in Quest for Optimal Solutions

By MAX G. LEVY

Algorithms that zero in on solutions to optimization problems are the beating heart of machine reasoning. New results reveal surprising limits.

Read the article

Related: 
A Classical Math Problem Gets
Pulled Into the Modern World

by Kevin Hartnett (2018)

EVOLUTION

 

Sponge Genes Hint at the Origins of Neurons and Other Cells

By VIVIANE CALLIER

A new study of gene expression in sponges reveals the complex diversity of their cells and possibly ancient connections between the nervous, immune and digestive systems.

Read the blog

Related: 
World’s Simplest Animal
Reveals Hidden Diversity

by Charlie Wood (2018)

Q&A

 

Her Machine Learning Tools Pull Insights From Cell Images

By ESTHER LANDHUIS;
Video by EMILY BUDER

The computational biologist Anne Carpenter creates software that brings the power of machine learning to researchers seeking answers in mountains of cell images.

Read the interview | Watch the video

Related: 
Wanted: More Data, the Dirtier the Better
by Esther Landhuis (2017)

Around the Web

Close Encounter
A refrigerator-sized asteroid almost grazed Earth in a near-miss — and scientists never saw it coming, Mindy Weisberger reports for Live Science. Asteroid collisions are a regular occurrence in our geological era, but this wasn’t always the case. By studying impact craters on Earth and the moon, scientists have discovered a less violent time in our cosmic past, as Joshua Sokol reported for Quanta in 2019.

Start From Zero
New research may explain why we don’t inherit our parents’ biological age: Shortly after conception, embryonic cells turn back the clock to get younger again. Erin García de Jesús reports for Science News on this rejuvenation process discovered in mice. There are many remaining mysteries about how aging happens throughout life. In 2019 Veronique Greenwood reported for Quanta on a link between overactive neurons and shorter lifespans.
Visualizar o vídeo SANTA CASA NAS MEMÓRIAS DE ROGÉRIO GASTAL XAVIER do YouTube
Sábado, dia 06 de novembro, às 15h, no youtube: 
  Para acessar, só clicar no link: https://youtu.be/_pexga36gjc  




























































#From: AEON Magazine
Virtues and vicesIdea
‘Moral molecules’ – a new theory of what goodness is made of
by Oliver Scott Curry, Mark Alfano, Mark Brandt and Christine Pelican
History of ideasIdea
How 12th-century Genoese merchants invented the idea of riskby Karla Mallette

#From: Nature briefing

28 million


The years of life lost to COVID-19, based on an analysis of changes to life expectancy in
37 upper-middle to high-income countries for which reliable data were available.
(The Washington Post | 4 min read)
Reference: BMJ paper 

View of a tardigrade preserved in a chunk of Dominican amber.This tiny tardigrade has been preserved in amber for 16 million years. Researchers were studying the fragment for months before spotting the half-millimetre-long creature in a corner. The discovery is “truly a once-in-a-generation event”, says entomologist Phil Barden. It is only the third fossilized tardigrade to be found, and the first from the Cenozoic, the current geological era. The fossil specimen — a genus and species new to science — has been named Paradoryphoribius chronocaribbeus.