Introduction & Purpose
Knowledge update and Industry update at Skyline University College (SUC) is an online platform for communicating knowledge with SUC stakeholders, industry, and the outside world about the current trends of business development, technology, and social changes. The platform helps in branding SUC as a leading institution of updated knowledge base and in encouraging faculties, students, and others to create and contribute under different streams of domain and application. The platform also acts as a catalyst for learning and sharing knowledge in various areas.
SUC Editing Team
International Business
Madrid, Nov 25 (IANS) World famous architect Norman Foster has been selected to renovate part of the famous Prado art gallery here, the museum has confirmed.
Foster will work with Spanish architect Carlos Rubio on the 30 million euro ($33 million) refurbishment of the 17th century Hall of Realms (Salon de Reinos in Spanish), Xinhua
SUC Editing Team
Information Systems
London, Nov 25 (IANS) Internet search mechanisms will need to change to support the Internet of Things (IoT) whereby billions of devices will become connected, say experts.
"Search engines have come a long way since their original purpose of locating documents, but they still lack the connection between social, physical and cyber data which will be
Super User
Lifestyle and Trends
New York, Nov 25 (IANS) Do you find it difficult to remember lessons despite reading them over and over again because of the stress that examinations put? If yes, this new study may provide you a solution.
Researchers have found that learning by taking practice tests, a strategy known as retrieval practice, can protect memory against the negative effects of stress.
"Our results suggest that it is not necessarily a matter of how much or how long someone studies, but how they study," said corresponding author on the study Amy Smith from Tufts University in Massachusetts, US.
In experiments involving 120 student participants, individuals who learned a series of words and images by retrieval practice showed no impairment in memory after experiencing acute stress.
Participants who used study practice, the conventional method of re-reading material to memorise it, remembered fewer items overall, particularly after stress, showed the study published in the journal Science.
"Typically, people under stress are less effective at retrieving information from memory," said senior study author Ayanna Thomas, Associate Professor at Tufts University.
"We now show for the first time that the right learning strategy, in this case retrieval practice or taking practice tests, results in such strong memory representations that even under high levels of stress, subjects are still able to access their memories," Thomas added.
The research team asked participants to learn a set of 30 words and 30 images. These were introduced through a computer programme, which displayed one item at a time for a few seconds each.
To simulate note taking, participants were given 10 seconds to type a sentence using the item immediately after seeing it.
One group of participants then studied using retrieval practice, and took timed practice tests in which they freely recalled as many items as they could remember.
The other group used study practice. For these participants, items were re-displayed on the computer screen, one at a time, for a few seconds each. Participants were given multiple timed periods to study.
The researchers found that participants who learned through study practice remembered fewer words overall, and those who were stressed remembered even less.
"Even though previous research has shown that retrieval practice is one of the best learning strategies available, we were still surprised at how effective it was for individuals under stress. It was as if stress had no effect on their memory," Smith said.
Super User
From Different Corners
New York, Nov 24 (IANS) Researchers have developed a first-of-its-kind soft, flexible microfluidic device that easily adheres to the skin and connects wirelessly with a smartphone to measure the wearer's sweat to show how his or her body is responding to exercise.
Sweat is a rich, chemical broth containing a number of important chemical compounds with physiological health information, the researchers said.
The low-cost device, which is a little larger than a quarter and nearly the same thickness, connects wirelessly with a smartphone to analyse key biomarkers to help a person to find whether he/she needs to drink more water or energy drink to boost the electrolyte levels, or if something is medically going wrong in his/her body.
"The intimate skin interface created by this wearable, skin-like microfluidic system enables new measurement capabilities not possible with the kinds of absorbent pads and sponges currently used in sweat collection," said John A. Rogers, Professor at the Northwestern University, US.
For the study, published in the journal Science Translational Medicine, the team tested the device on two groups of cyclists.
The device, which is designed for one-time use for a few hours, was placed directly on the skin of the forearm or back of the athletes.
It showed accurate accounts of the acidity of sweat and concentrations of glucose, chloride and lactate and could even detect the presence of a biomarker for cystic fibrosis.
To get the data, individuals had to use a smartphone to capture the photo of the device. An app then analyses that photo to display the relevant information.
"The sweat analysis platform we developed will allow people to monitor their health on the spot without the need for a blood sampling and with integrated electronics that do not require a battery but still enable wireless connection to a smartphone," said Yonggang Huang, Professor at the Northwestern University, US.
In the future, it may be more broadly used for disease diagnosis, the researchers added.
Super User
From Different Corners
Melbourne, Nov 25 (IANS) An Australian Nobel Prize-winning scientist is developing a drug to counter allergies and asthma, a statement said on Friday.
Still in its initial stage the the drug can be taken as tablets, capsules, liquids or powder, Xinhua news reported.
Barry Marshall, a microbiology professor from University of Western Australia, who won the Nobel Prize in Physiology in 2005 for stomach ulcer research, is working on the new drug.
The medication, named Immbalance, aims to suppress an overactive immune system.
"This actually arose from work we were doing on helicobacter, the stomach bug, for which Robin Warren and I won the Nobel Prize a few years ago," Marshall said on Friday.
"We've discovered the way it survives in your body is by suppressing the immune system so you can't get rid of it.
"I can't guarantee that it's going to cure allergy sufferers... we think this kind of thing will bring people who are hyper reactive... down into the normal range."
Marshall, who spent the last seven years developing the drug, said that it can be formulated as tablets, capsules, liquids or powder.
"Children could spread the powder on their cereal or put it in a drink and over the course of a few months could suppress their allergic response," he said in a UWA media release.
"We think it's going to be 100 percent safe. It won't remove your immune system; it will just take the edge off."
SUC Editing Team
International Business
Kathmandu, Nov 24 (IANS) The Patanjali Group, owned by Indian yoga guru Ramdev, opened its new factory in Nepal on Thursday, aiming to produce various fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) in a bid to expand its business across the border.
SUC Editing Team
International Business
Riyadh, Nov 24 (IANS) World's top crude oil producer Saudi Aramco, the state-owned oil company of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, said it made a major advancement in its POWERS technology that will simulate oil migration problems in the Kingdom in a fraction of the time it once took and help discover new oil and gas fields.
Super User
From Different Corners
Washington, Nov 23 (IANS) Using a 8.2-meter telescope on the summit of Mauna Kea in Hawaii, an international team of researchers has found what could be the faintest dwarf satellite galaxy of our Milky Way.
Called Virgo I, the new dwarf satellite galaxy lies in the direction of the constellation Virgo at a distance of 280,000 light years from our Sun, Xinhua news agency reported.
It has an absolute luminosity of -0.8 in the optical waveband and such a remote galaxy with faint brightness has not been identified in previous sky surveys.
Its discovery suggested the presence of a large number of yet-undetected dwarf satellites in the halo of the Milky Way, according to the study published this week in The Astrophysical Journal.
"This discovery implies hundreds of faint dwarf satellites waiting to be discovered in the halo of the Milky Way," study leader Masashi Chiba, a professor from the Tohoku University in Japan, said in a statement.
"How many satellites are indeed there and what properties they have, will give us an important clue of understanding how the Milky Way formed and how dark matter contributed to it."
So far, some 50 satellite galaxies to the Milky Way have been identified.
Super User
From Different Corners
London, Nov 24 (IANS) With the onset of Christmas season, millions of parents will lie to their children about the existence of Santa Claus or Christmas Father. A new study has suggested that this lie may damage their bond.
The study, published in Lancet Psychiatry, showed that the children's trust in their parents may be undermined by the Santa lie.
"The morality of making children believe in such myths has to be questioned. All children will eventually find out they've been consistently lied to for years, and this might make them wonder what other lies they've been told," asked Christopher Boyle, Professor at the University of Exeter in Britain.
But, according to the authors, the Christmas father fantasy may not be purely for the children.
Parents may not be motivated by purely creating magic for their children, but by a desire to return to the joy of childhood themselves.
For adults, it's a chance to go back to a time when they believed in magic.
"Many people may yearn for a time when imagination was accepted and encouraged, which may not be the case in adult life," Boyle said.
"The persistence of fandom in stories like Harry Potter, Star Wars and Doctor Who well into adulthood demonstrates this desire to briefly re-enter childhood," added Kathy McKay from the University of New England, Australia.
However, the study contended that lying to children may sometimes be right.
"An adult comforting a child and telling them that their recently deceased pet will go to a special place (animal heaven) is arguably nicer than telling graphic truths about its imminent re-entry into the carbon cycle," Boyle observed.
Super User
Lifestyle and Trends
New York, Nov 23 (IANS) Meditation can help alleviate severe depression in people who do not fully respond to drugs, reports a new study.
Researchers found significant improvement in symptoms of depression and anxiety in medicated patients with major depressive disorder who participated in the yogic breathing technique.
The Sudarshan Kriya yoga helped those suffering from depression and on medication when compared to those who took medicines but did not do any breathing exercise.
"The study found a promising, lower-cost therapy that could potentially serve as an effective, non-drug approach for patients battling depression," said Anup Sharma, doctoral student at the University of Pennsylvania, in the US.
The meditation technique, which is practiced in both groups and at home, includes a series of sequential, rhythm-specific breathing exercises that bring people into a deep, restful and meditative state.
It involves slow and calm breaths alternated with fast and stimulating breaths.
Patients, who practised Sudarshan Kriya yoga, also showed a significantly greater improvement in mood, interest in activities, energy levels.
It also brought down suicidal thoughts and feelings of guilt among other symptoms of depression.
"Sudarshan Kriya yoga gives people an active method to experience a deep meditative state that's easy to learn and incorporate in diverse settings," Sharma added.
Past studies suggest that yoga and other controlled breathing techniques can potentially adjust the nervous system to reduce stress hormones.
The study was published in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry.