Saturday, April 13, 2024

3.184 - AMICOR (26)

 3.184 - AMICOR (26)

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





No jantar de encerramento do XI Congresso Mundial de Cardiologia, em Manila 1990. Na foto de baixo estava conosco a saudosa Marianne Burle de Figueiredo, Secretária Executiva da Federação Mundial de Cardiologia, desde a época em que se chamava "International Society and Federation of Cardiology" Aquino, Corazon Hoje, minha filha Lucia Helena, fazendo arrumação em guardados, encontrou as duas vestes que usamos na cerimônia. Foi a única vez que, além dos dados oficiais, passaporte, etc... solicitaram aos convidados, com meses de antecedência, as medidas corporais, para a confecção das vestes bordadas a mão... Na sessão de abertura, a Presidente Corazón Aquino esteve presente e, ao entrar no Salão de Atos, quando passou por nós (Valderês e eu), sentados na primeira fila da platéia, nos apertou as mãos como reperesentates dos demais congressistas. Vestíamos a tal jaqueta branca feita de um tecido, a partir de folha de bananeira, típico de lá 

Corazon Aquino, in full Maria Corazon Aquino, née Maria Corazon Cojuangco(born January 25, 1933, Tarlac province, Philippines —died August 1, 2009, Makati ), Philippine political leader who served as the first female president (1986–92) of the Philippines, three years after her husband's assassination, restoring democratic rule in that country after the long dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos.

#Zero Hora Meu filho Luiz Eduardo é coautor Na segunda página do jornal do dia 09, Juliana Bublitz informa sobre a publicação de um livreto, da qual meu filho Luiz Eduardo é um dos co-autores

#Neuroscience News

University of California, Irvine biomedical engineering researchers have uncovered a previously unknown source of two key brain waves crucial for deep sleep: slow waves and sleep spindles.

Traditionally believed to originate from one brain circuit linking the thalamus and cortex, the team’s findings, published today in Scientific Reports, suggest that the axons in memory centers of the hippocampus play a role.

For decades, slow waves and sleep spindles have been identified as essential elements of deep sleep, measured through electroencephalography recordings on the scalp. However, the UC Irvine-led team revealed a novel source of these brain waves within the hippocampus and were able to measure them in single axons./.../

This shows a woman sleeping.
By uncovering the hippocampus’s role in generating slow waves and sleep spindles, this research expands our understanding of the brain’s activity during deep sleep and its impact on memory processing. Credit: Neuroscience News
#

EDITOR'S NOTE | ALL TOPICS

 

My Fantastic Voyage at Quanta

By THOMAS LIN

Dear Readers,

Last July, I read this memo to the staff and explained why I had made the difficult decision to move on from my role as Quanta’s editor-in-chief. This magazine has meant everything to me since I pitched the concept to the Simons Foundation in 2012. Building, growing, nurturing and leading the publication and staff — and being a part of what we’ve collectively accomplished — has been the most remarkable and rewarding experience of my career. And it’s been especially gratifying to see valued Quanta readers like you multiply twentyfold over the past decade, with many millions more engaging with our science and math content on social media and YouTube, and through our podcasts and in translated reprintings around the world...


Keep reading

VIRUSES

 

Viruses Finally Reveal Their Complex Social Life

By CARL ZIMMER

New research has uncovered a social world of viruses full of cheating, cooperation and other intrigues, suggesting that viruses make sense only as members of a community.

Read the article


Related: 
Viruses Can Scatter Their Genes Among Cells and Reassemble

By Viviane Callier (2019)

THE JOY OF WHY

 

Can Information Escape a Black Hole?

Podcast hosted by JANNA LEVIN

Black holes are inescapable traps for most of what falls into them — but there can be exceptions. The theoretical physicist Leonard Susskind speaks with co-host Janna Levin about the black hole information paradox and how it has propelled modern physics.


Listen to the podcast


Read the transcript

 

TURING AWARD

 

Avi Wigderson, Complexity Theory Pioneer, Wins Turing Award

By STEPHEN ORNES

The prolific researcher found deep connections between randomness and computation and spent a career influencing cryptographers, complexity researchers and more.

Read the blog
 

ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE

 

How Do Machines ‘Grok’ Data?

By ANIL ANANTHASWAMY

By apparently overtraining them, researchers have seen neural networks discover novel solutions to problems.

Read the article

Related: 
New Theory Suggests
Chatbots Can Understand Text

By Anil Ananthaswamy

GEOMETRY

 

Number of Distances Separating Points Has a New Bound

By LEILA SLOMAN

Mathematicians have struggled to prove Falconer’s conjecture, a simple but far-reaching hypothesis about the distances between points. They’re finally getting close.

Read the blog

#ASRMedicina
Peça de teatro pelo Acadêmico Gilberto Schwartsmann. Na Sala Olga Reverbel do Multipalco do São Pedro. Estacionamento no local (Riachuelo com Caldas Junior). 

#Quantum Day

Celebrating World Quantum Day with IOP Publishing

14th April 2024

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To celebrate World Quantum Day, we have put together a collection of some of the amazing work taking place in quantum science and technology. From ground-breaking research articles and focus issues to the multitude of books, we want to celebrate the research paving the way in quantum science.

#AAAS
AAAS
More Women in Science Means More Progress
At AAAS, we’re guided by our commitment to advance science, engineering, and innovation throughout the world for the benefit of all. Making the STEMM fields more inclusive of women is a crucial part of this work.

By joining AAAS, you will help us advocate for women in science and, if you join at the Silver Level or above, you’ll get an exclusive “Women in Science” T-shirt to show your support.
#Our World in Data
Link disponível no título sublinhado

#CHCSanta Casa de Misericórdia
'Construindo um mundo global: migrantes através do Atlântico (1746 – 1753)' é o tema da Quinta Cultural desta semana, com Antero Ferreira (Casa de Sarmento - UMinho / CITCEM).
11/04/2024 as 19h Pelo Facebook e Youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MLvkR9o526s
 #Nature Briefing

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