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Knowledge Update

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.

Meet Viv, the new 'intelligent interface for everything'

​New York, May 10 (IANS) In an upgrade to the human-computer interaction platforms, voice controlled assistance touched a new high when Viv -- an artificial intelligence (AI) virtual system -- was presented at the "TechCrunch Disrupt" event here on Monday.

EMC in race to develop smart cities in India

​Las Vegas (US), May 9 (IANS) The world's largest IT storage company is in the race for developing smart cities in India, offering their services to the central and state governments, according to senior officials of the company.

"We have already completed a health project for a state government to make hospitals smart and to provide real time information to the government for taking appropriate decision," Rajesh Janey, President, EMC India and Saarc, told visiting Indian journalists to the EMC world annual conference here.

Tourism to Egypt almost halved

Cairo, May 10 (IANS/AKI) The number of tourists visiting Egypt fell by 47.2 percent between March 2015 and the same month this year, according to official statistics cited by state-run daily Al-Ahram.

A total of 440,700 tourists visited Egypt in March, compared with 834,600 in the same month last year, said the country's central statistics office, quoted by Al-Ahram. 

Egypt's authorities blame the slump in tourist bookings on fears caused by the downing of a Russian passenger jet over Sinai in October which killed all 224 people on board.

The Islamic State jihadist group claimed it brought down the flight which was travelling from the Red Sea resort of Sharm El-Sheikh to St Petersburg. 

Western Europeans formed the biggest group of visitors to Egypt (slightly over one-third) followed by tourists from the Middle East and eastern Europe. 

Egypt was most popular with Germans, Saudi Arabians and Ukrainians.​

Scientists produce jet fuel in 'one pot' recipe

New York, May 10 (IANS) Researchers including one of Indian origin from the US Department of Energy's Berkeley Lab have engineered a strain of bacteria that enables a "one-pot" method for producing advanced biofuels from a slurry of pre-treated plant material.

The Escherichia coli (E coli) is able to tolerate the liquid salt used to break apart plant biomass into sugary polymers. 

Developing ionic-liquid-tolerant bacteria eliminates the need to wash away the residual ionic liquid.

The achievement is a critical step in making biofuels a viable competitor to fossil fuels because it helps streamline the production process.

Being able to put everything together at one point, walk away, come back and then get your fuel, is a necessary step in moving forward with a biofuel economy," said principal investigator Aindrila Mukhopadhyay, vice president of the fuels' synthesis division at the Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI), Berkeley Lab. 

"The E coli we've developed gets us closer to that goal. It is like a chassis that we build other things onto, like the chassis of a car. It can be used to integrate multiple recent technologies to convert a renewable carbon source like switchgrass to an advanced jet fuel," he added.

The basic steps of biofuel production start with deconstructing, or taking apart, the cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin that are bound together in the complex plant structure. 

Enzymes are then added to release the sugars from that gooey mixture of cellulose and hemicellulose, a step called saccharification. 

Bacteria can then take that sugar and churn out the desired biofuel. 

The multiple steps are all done in separate pots.

Researchers pioneered the use of ionic liquids - salts that are liquid at room temperature - to tackle the deconstruction of plant material because of the efficiency with which the solvent works. 

E. coli remains the workhorse microbial host in synthetic biology and in the new study, using the ionic-liquid-tolerant E. coli strain, we can combine many earlier discoveries to create an advanced biofuel in a single pot," the authors noted.

"Ultimately, we hope to develop processes that are robust and simple where one can directly convert any renewable plant material to a final fuel in a single pot," Mukhopadhyay noted in a paper published in the journal Green Chemistry.​

How we choose what to order for lunch

Washington, May 10 (IANS) Researchers have discovered how a small brain structure plays a central role in the many decisions that we make each day such as what to order for lunch or whether to go with the hearty red wine or the lighter white.

Studying how monkeys choose between juice drinks, the researchers found that some of the neurons in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) assign value to the options, while other neurons are related to making final choices. 

All of these neurons can re-map to make different decisions when circumstances change.

"When we choose between an apple and a banana, some neurons assign a value to the apple, some neurons assign a value to the banana, and other neurons represent the choice outcome," said the study's senior investigator Camillo Padoa-Schioppa from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.

"Taken together, these different groups of cells seem to form a neural circuit that generates economic decisions," Padoa-Schioppa said.

In this study, reported in the journal Nature Neuroscience, the researchers examined how this neural circuit reorganises when decisions are made in different circumstances.

During the experiments, the researchers used a dozen different juice drinks. In each tasting session, the monkeys chose between two different drinks. Subsequently, they chose between two other juice drinks.

"If we look at individual cells, neurons are very flexible," Padoa-Schioppa said.

"However, if we consider the whole network, the decision circuit is remarkably stable. This combination of circuit stability and neuronal flexibility makes it possible for the same brain region to generate decisions between any two goods," Padoa-Schioppa noted.​

Fasting may help fight fatty liver disease

London, May 10 (IANS) Scientists have found that upon deprivation of food a certain protein is produced that adjusts the metabolism in the liver, assisting in warding off fatty liver disease.

According to researchers, a reduced intake of calories, such as in the framework of an intermittent fasting diet, can help to whip the metabolism back into shape. 

The findings showed that during fasting, the stress molecule reduces the absorption of fatty acids in the liver and improves sugar metabolism.

In the study, published in the open access journal EMBO Molecular Medicine, the researchers found that during fasting GADD45 beta -- protein, whose name stands for 'Growth Arrest and DNA Damage-inducible' - controls the absorption of fatty acids in the liver.

Mice who lacked the corresponding gene were more likely to develop fatty liver disease.

However when the protein was restored, the fat content of the liver normalised and also sugar metabolism improved.

"The stress on the liver cells caused by fasting consequently appears to stimulate GADD45 beta production, which then adjusts the metabolism to the low food intake," said Stephan Herzig, professor and Director of the Institute for Diabetes and Cancer (IDC) at the Helmholtz Zentrum München in Germany.

Also, in humans, a low GADD45 beta level was accompanied by increased fat accumulation in the liver and an elevated blood sugar level.

"Once we understand how fasting influences our metabolism we can attempt to bring about this effect therapeutically," Herzig added.

The researchers now want to use the new findings for therapeutic intervention in the fat and sugar metabolism so that the positive effects of food deprivation might be translated for treatment.​

Beware! Smartphones can make you hyperactive

New York, May 10 (IANS) Are you getting bored easily when trying to focus, or having difficulty doing quiet tasks and activities? If yes, the pervasive use of a smartphone could be the reason behind these attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)-like symptoms, new research suggests.

Recent polls have shown that as many as 95 percent of smartphone users have used their phones during social gatherings; that seven in 10 people used their phones while working; and one in 10 admitted to checking their phones during sex. Smartphone owners spend nearly two hours per day using their phones, said lead researcher Kostadin Kushlev from University of Virginia in the US.

"We found the first experimental evidence that smartphone interruptions can cause greater inattention and hyperactivity - symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder - even in people drawn from a nonclinical population," Kushlev said.

During the study, 221 students at University of British Columbia in Canada drawn from the general student population were assigned for one week to maximise phone interruptions by keeping notification alerts on, and their phones within easy reach. 

During another week participants were assigned to minimise phone interruptions by keeping alerts off and their phones away. 

At the end of each week, participants completed questionnaires assessing inattention and hyperactivity. 

The results showed that the participants experienced significantly higher levels of inattention and hyperactivity when alerts were turned on.

The results suggest that even people who have not been diagnosed with ADHD may experience some of the disorder's symptoms, including distraction, difficulty focusing and getting bored easily when trying to focus, fidgeting, having trouble sitting still, difficulty doing quiet tasks and activities, and restlessness.

"Smartphones may contribute to these symptoms by serving as a quick and easy source of distraction," Kushlev said.

The silver lining is that the problem can be turned off.

The findings were presented at the Association for Computing Machinery's the human-computer interaction conference in San Jose, California.​

Advances in medical care linked to Type-1 diabetes boom

Sydney, May 9 (IANS) Although it may sound counterintuitive, researchers from the University of Adelaide say that the global increase in Type-1 diabetes is directly linked to advances in medical care that has significantly increased the life expectancy of people.

For the study, the researchers looked at the prevalence of Type-1 diabetes in 118 countries and changes in life expectancy from 1950 to 2010.

After applying a measure known as the Biological State Index to the data, they found that the rapid increase in Type-1 diabetes over the last few decades was directly linked with increases in human life expectancy, especially in Western countries.

"Up to the early 20th century, Type-1 diabetes was a horrible and dangerous disease, usually leading to people's death during their teens or early 20s," said lead study author Wenpeng You.

"This meant there was limited opportunity for people with the disease to have children and to pass their genetic material onto future generations. In evolutionary terms, this is what we call 'natural selection',” he explained.

However, with the widespread introduction of insulin from the 1920s onwards, and improvements in modern medicine, life expectancy for people with Type- diabetes has now increased to about 69 years.

"That is a remarkable achievement, but it also means that with reduced natural selection, the genetic material leading to the development of type-1 diabetes may be accumulating at a rapid rate within the world's population," You noted.

The findings were published in the journal BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care.

The researchers decided to investigate the link because although cases of Type-1 diabetes have been increasing globally, its prevalence is uneven in different parts of the world.

"Not every country has access to good health care, or freely available insulin. In a number of poor countries, such as in Africa, the life expectancy for people with Type-1 diabetes is much lower than in the Western world. This means more people are dying prematurely, with less opportunity to produce offspring who will carry those genes from generation to generation," You said.​

Intense wind from nearby black hole discovered

London, May 10 (IANS) An international team of astrophysicists has detected an intense wind from one of the closest known black holes to the Earth.

The team led by professor Phil Charles from the University of Southampton observed "V404 Cygni" which went into a bright and violent outburst in June 2015 after more than 25 years of quiescence.

They began taking optical measurements of the black hole's accretion disc using the Gran Telescopio CANARIAS (GTC) - the biggest optical-infrared telescope in the world in the Canary Islands.

The results show the presence of a wind of neutral material (unionised hydrogen and helium), which is formed in the outer layers of the accretion disc, regulating the accretion of material by the black hole.

This wind, detected for the first time in a system of this type, has a very high velocity (3,000 kms per second) so that it can escape from the gravitational field around the black hole.

“Its presence allows us to explain why the outburst, in spite of being bright and very violent, with continuous changes in luminosity and ejections of mass in the form of jets, was also very brief, lasting only two weeks,” explained professor Charles.

“V404 Cygni” is a black hole within a binary system located in the constellation of Cygnus. At only 8,000 light years away, it is one of the closest known black holes to the Earth and has a particularly large accretion disc (with a radius of about 10 million kms), making its outbursts especially bright at all wavelengths (X-rays, visible, infrared and radio waves).

The observations also revealed the presence of a nebula formed from material expelled by the wind.

This phenomenon, which has been observed for the first time in a black hole, also allows scientists to estimate the quantity of mass ejected into the interstellar medium.

“This outburst of 'V404 Cygni' will help us understand how black holes swallow material via their accretion discs,” noted Teo Muñoz Darias, researcher at the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC) in a paper published in the journal Nature.​

Malaria vaccine offers durable protection in human trials

New York, May 10 (IANS) An experimental malaria vaccine has been found to protect a small number of healthy people from infection for more than one year after immunisation, says a study.

The vaccine, known as the PfSPZ Vaccine, was developed and produced by US-based biotechnology firm Sanaria.

"It is now clear that administering the PfSPZ Vaccine intravenously confers long-term, sterile protection in a small number of participants, which has not been achieved with other current vaccine approaches," said principal investigator of the trial Robert Seder from National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the US National Institutes of Health.

NIAID researchers and collaborators at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore conducted the clinical evaluation of the vaccine, which involved immunisation and exposing willing healthy adults to the malaria-causing parasite Plasmodium falciparum (P. falciparum) in a controlled setting.

The parasites that cause malaria are transmitted to humans through the bite of an infected mosquito. 

The PfSPZ Vaccine is composed of live, but weakened P. falciparum sporozoites -- the early developmental form of the parasite.

Previous research showed the PfSPZ Vaccine to be highly protective three weeks after immunisation. In this trial, researchers assessed if protection could last for five months to a year.

For the phase one clinical trial, the researchers enrolled 101 healthy adults aged 18 to 45 years who had never had malaria. 

Of these volunteers, 59 received the vaccine and 32 participants served as controls and were not vaccinated. 

Vaccine recipients were divided into several groups to assess the roles of the route of administration, dose, and number of immunisations in conferring short- and long-term protection against malaria.

To evaluate how well the vaccine prevented malaria infection, all participants - including the control participants who were not vaccinated - were exposed at varying times to the bites of mosquitoes carrying the same P. falciparum strain from which the vaccine was derived. 

The researchers found that the vaccine provided malaria protection for more than one year in 55 percent of people without prior malaria infection. 

The findings were published in the journal Nature Medicine.

In those individuals, the vaccine appeared to confer sterile protection, meaning the individuals would be protected against disease and could not further transmit malaria. 

The vaccinations were also well-tolerated among participants, and there were no serious adverse events attributed to vaccination, said the study.​