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
Information Systems
New York, Oct 5 (IANS) After the popular mobile messaging platform WhatsApp, parent company Facebook has reportedly rolled out end-to-end encryption for its Messenger users.
SUC Editing Team
International Business
London, Oct 4 (IANS) In a bid to develop one of the worlds largest industrial cloud platforms, Swiss engineering giant and Microsoft on Tuesday announced a strategic partnership to help industrial customers create new value with digital solutions.
Super User
Retail and Marketing
San Francisco, Oct 4 (IANS) With an aim to lead the world of smartphones with its artificial intelligence (AI)-based technology, Google on Tuesday launched much-awaited Pixel -- a new premium device completely designed by the tech giant -- at a special event here.
The launch also ended the Nexus branding under which the company has always released phones in partnership with other original equipment manufacturers like LG (for Google Nexus 5) and Huawei (for Google Nexus 6P).
Although HTC has manufactured the smartphones, the new devices bear Google branding.
With curved edges and a unibody made up of combination of aluminium and glass, the device comes in two sizes -- 5 and 5.5-inch with super AMOLED displays -- and is available in quite black, very silver and limited edition really blue colours.
Pixel is first smartphone with Google Assistant -- a built in AI programme that works as an intelligent personal assistant and knowledge navigator. So now just ask questions, tell it to do things.
With the highest ever DxOMark Mobile score of 89, Pixel's 12.3MP rear camera with f/2.0 click stunning photos in any light conditions -- #Nofilter needed.
Catch action shots as they happen with Smartburst, which takes a rapid-fire sequence of shots. Use Lens Blur to achieve shallow depth of field and bokeh effects, making your subject pop.
Google is offering free and unlimited online storage for photos and videos -- in original quality.
Google's video calling app Google Duo comes preloaded on the devices. The device also has Pixel Imprint -- the fingerprint scanner on the back of the smartphone for quick access to all apps, texts and e-mails.
Catering to the demand of a large battery that not only charges fast but also lasts all day long, Pixel devices come with 2,770 or 3,450 mAh battery packs that can give up to 7 hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
It comes with a Type-C charging port and has retained the 3.5mm headphone jack. The device has a Bluetooth 4.2.
With powerhouse specifications, both the devices have similar hardware under the hood. Pixel smartphones are fitted with Qualcomm's latest Snapdragon 821 Quad core (2x 2.15 Ghz and 2x1.6 Ghz) processors, 4GB LPDDR4 RAM and run on Android Nougat 7.0 operating system that was launched in August.
The devices are available for $649 and up for pre-order in the US, Britain, Canada, Germany and Australia. The device will be available in India from October 13.
Super User
From Different Corners
New York, Oct 4 (IANS) New York, Oct 4 (IANS) A gene associated with an increased risk of children developing a common ear infection has been identified by US researchers.
Middle-ear infection, or acute otitis media, is an ear infection that is usually caused by bacteria or viruses.
Common symptoms include ear pain and fever and in some cases, it may also cause drainage of fluid from the ear or hearing loss.
"This painful childhood ear infection is the most frequent reason children receive antibiotics," said Hakon Hakonarson from The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP).
For the study, the team performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) with DNA samples from 11,000 children.
They found that an association between acute otitis media and a site on chromosome 6 containing the gene FNDC1, and then replicated the finding in an independent pediatric cohort with data from 2,000 children.
The scientists showed that the mouse gene corresponding to FNDC1 was expressed in the animal's middle ear.
"Although the gene's function in humans has not been well studied, we do know that FNDC1 codes for a protein with a role in inflammation," Hakonarson added.
The finding, published online in the journal Nature Communications, may offer an early clue to helping doctors develop more effective treatments to prevent one of the most common childhood illnesses.
Middle-ear infection, or acute otitis media, is an ear infection that is usually caused by bacteria or viruses.
Common symptoms include ear pain and fever and in some cases, it may also cause drainage of fluid from the ear or hearing loss.
"This painful childhood ear infection is the most frequent reason children receive antibiotics," said Hakon Hakonarson from The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP).
For the study, the team performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) with DNA samples from 11,000 children.
They found that an association between acute otitis media and a site on chromosome 6 containing the gene FNDC1, and then replicated the finding in an independent pediatric cohort with data from 2,000 children.
The scientists showed that the mouse gene corresponding to FNDC1 was expressed in the animal's middle ear.
"Although the gene's function in humans has not been well studied, we do know that FNDC1 codes for a protein with a role in inflammation," Hakonarson added.
The finding, published online in the journal Nature Communications, may offer an early clue to helping doctors develop more effective treatments to prevent one of the most common childhood illnesses.
Super User
From Different Corners
New York, Oct 4 (IANS) Gender bias at workplace can influence how supervisors view a manager's long-term potential, a new study shows.
The researchers examined a phenomenon called managerial derailment and found that supervisors can have subtle, even subconscious differences while expecting behaviour from male and female managers, which can have costly consequences for women in the workplace, most notably the loss of mentorship.
"If you're doing performance evaluations, there's a record in a Human Resource file you could refer to, and gender biases could be identified and dealt with," said Joyce Bono, Professor at the University of Florida, US.
"However, perceptions of derailment potential exist in a supervisor's head. They're informal assessments that supervisors make, yet they have important implications for the opportunities that supervisors provide," added Bono.
To examine gender bias in perceptions of derailment potential, the authors conducted four studies.
Two studies analysed data collected on nearly 50,000 managers enrolled in leadership development programmes and the other two were experimental studies where managers examined performance reviews of two fictitious employees whose only difference was their gender.
Bono and her colleagues found that when evaluating managers who exhibited equal levels of ineffective interpersonal behaviours, supervisors were more likely to predict derailment for women managers than for men.
Because of these negative assessments, female managers receive less mentoring.
"Sponsorship and mentoring are even more important for women than men because women are typically are less connected to those higher in the corporate hierarchy in part because there are more men than women at higher levels," Bono added in the study published in the journal Personnel Psychology.
Bono emphasises that the negative assessments female managers receive from male supervisors are not purposeful or nefarious.
"Don't think of the bias exhibited here as behaviour of bad people who don't want women to get ahead. Rather, we expect women to be nicer than men, because that's what our society has told us to expect. These beliefs influence our behaviors, often without our awareness," the author said.
Super User
Lifestyle and Trends
New York, Oct 5 (IANS) People who spend more than three hours a day on Facebook have more relaxed privacy attitudes and are more likely to share personal information than those who spend less time on the social networking site, new research has found.
Heavy social network users who read friends' updates and share information about themselves become used to the act of posting their information as they read daily about their friends and the world, spurring them to post more about themselves -- and to share more during off-line encounters, the study said.
"People sometimes don't realise the powerful socialising role of social media," said Mina Tsay-Vogel, Assistant Professor at Boston University in the US.
"Yes, we are maintaining relationships with others, and we might all get to know the most current news and what people are doing, and it's very satiating," Tsay-Vogel said.
"But we might not realise that it's also affecting how we're seeing information disclosure in the real world, and how it's also impacting us to then disclose our own personal information. Not only in the virtual world, but in the off-line world," she noted.
The study, published in the journal New Media and Society, analysed five years' worth of surveys from 2,789 students (18-to-25-year-old) in the US.
Researchers surveyed students in introductory communications courses between 2010 and 2015, asking them about their Facebook habits and their attitudes toward privacy and government regulation in order to discern patterns in their behaviour and attitudes about sharing information on Facebook.
This multiyear look at the same age group gave researchers more insights into users' attitudes than a one-time snapshot, Tsay-Vogel said.
The data showed that heavier users of Facebook, defined as being on a social network for more than the sample average of 3.17 hours a day, had more relaxed privacy attitudes and were more likely to share personal information, Tsay-Vogel said.
Super User
From Different Corners
New York, Oct 4 (IANS) Driven by burning of fossil fuels, which consumes oxygen and produces carbon dioxide, the rate of oxygen decline from the Earth's atmosphere has speeded up over the past 100 years, says a study.
Researchers from Princeton University compiled 30 years of data to construct the first ice core-based record of atmospheric oxygen concentrations spanning the past 800,000 years, according to the paper published in the journal Science.
The record showed that atmospheric oxygen has declined 0.7 per cent relative to current atmospheric-oxygen concentrations, a reasonable pace by geological standards, the researchers said.
During the past 100 years, however, atmospheric oxygen has declined by a comparatively speedy 0.10 per cent because of the burning of fossil fuels, which consumes oxygen and produces carbon dioxide.
"This record represents an important benchmark for the study of the history of atmospheric oxygen," said Assistant Professor of Geosciences John Higgins.
"Understanding the history of oxygen in Earth's atmosphere is intimately connected to understanding the evolution of complex life," Higgins noted.
Curiously, the decline in atmospheric oxygen over the past 800,000 years was not accompanied by any significant increase in the average amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, though carbon dioxide concentrations do vary over individual ice age cycles.
To explain this apparent paradox, the researchers called upon a theory for how the global carbon cycle, atmospheric carbon dioxide and the Earth's temperature are linked on geologic timescales.
"The planet has various processes that can keep carbon dioxide levels in check," said first author Daniel Stolper.
The researchers discussed a process known as "silicate weathering" in particular, wherein carbon dioxide reacts with exposed rock to produce, eventually, calcium carbonate minerals, which trap carbon dioxide in a solid form.
As temperatures rise due to higher carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, silicate-weathering rates are hypothesised to increase and remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere faster.
The study suggests that the extra carbon dioxide emitted due to declining oxygen concentrations in the atmosphere stimulated silicate weathering, which stabilised carbon dioxide but allowed oxygen to continue to decline.
"The Earth can take care of extra carbon dioxide when it has hundreds of thousands or millions of years to get its act together. In contrast, humankind is releasing carbon dioxide today so quickly that silicate weathering can't possibly respond fast enough," Higgins noted.
"The Earth has these long processes that humankind has short-circuited," Higgins said.
The researchers built their history of atmospheric oxygen using measured ratios of oxygen-to-nitrogen found in air trapped in Antarctic ice. This method was established by co-author Michael Bender.
Super User
From Different Corners
New York, Oct 4 (IANS) Electrifying brain circuits could treat neurological and psychiatric symptoms not because it causes neurons to fire but it creates an environment that makes it more or less likely for neurons to fire, researchers, including one of Indian-origin, have found.
Rather than taking medication, a growing number of people who suffer from chronic pain, epilepsy and drug cravings are zapping their skulls -- using transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) -- in the hope that a weak electric current will jolt them back to health.
"Although this therapy is taking off at the grassroots level and in academia (with an exponential increase in publications), evidence that tDCS does what is being promised is not conclusive," said the study's senior author Danny J.J. Wang, Professor of neurology at Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute, University of Southern California in the US.
In this study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, the researchers developed an MRI method whereby the magnetic fields induced by tDCS currents can be visualised in living humans
"Scientists don't yet understand the mechanisms at work, which prevents the FDA from regulating the therapy. Our study is the first step to experimentally map the tDCS currents in the brain and to provide solid data so researchers can develop science-based treatment," Wang noted.
People in antiquity used electric fish to zap away headaches, but tDCS, as it is now known, was introduced in 2000, said study lead author Mayank Jog, a graduate student conducting research at the David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California, Los Angeles.
"Since then, this noninvasive, easy-to-use, low-cost technology has been shown to improve cognition as well as treat clinical symptoms," Jog said.
The study is a technological breakthrough, study co-author Maron Bikson, Professor at The City College of New York, noted.
"You cannot characterise what you cannot see, so this is a pivotal step in the development of tDCS technology," Bikson said.
The researchers validated their MRI algorithm with a phantom, where the current path and induced magnetic field was known.
Then they tested the method using simple biological tissue -- a human calf. Finally, they repeated the process on the scalp of 12 healthy volunteers.
After 20 to 30 minutes in a scanner, the new algorithm produced an image of the magnetic field tDCS created.
Super User
From Different Corners
New York, Oct 4 (IANS) Researchers have developed a new technology that could allow non-invasive testing of glucose levels, via a contact lens that samples glucose levels in tears.
Current method to monitor glucose levels involve a medication process along with a painful fingerpick blood test.
Glucose is a good target for optical sensing, and can be used as an alternative approach, the study said.
"It should be noted that glucose is present not only in the blood but also in tears, and thus accurate monitoring of the glucose level in human tears by employing a contact-lens-type sensor can be an alternative approach for non-invasive glucose monitoring," said Wei-Chuan Shih, Associate Professor at University of Houston in Texas, US.
The researchers developed a tiny device built with multiple layers of gold nanowires and gold film that was produced, using solvent assisted nanotransfer printing.
This component strengthens a technique called surface-enhanced Raman scattering -- named after Indian physicist C.V. Raman, who discovered the effect first in 1928 -- which gauges how light interacts with a material to determine its molecular composition, the researchers stated.
Further, the device enhances the sensing properties of the technique by creating "hot spots" or narrow gaps within the nanostructure which intensified the Raman signal.
Traditional nanofabrication techniques rely on a hard substrate -- usually glass or a silicon wafer -- but researchers wanted a flexible nanostructure which would be more suited to wearable electronics, Shih said.
The layered nanoarray was produced on a hard substrate but lifted off and printed onto a soft contact, Shih said in the paper published in the journal Advanced Materials.
Although non-invasive glucose sensing is just one potential application of the technology, it provided a good way to prove the technology, he said.
Moreover, the device is also an effective mechanism for using surface-enhanced Raman scattering spectroscopy.
Super User
From Different Corners
New York, Oct 4 (IANS) Love to drink that sweetened soda, or other sugar-laden fruit juices, sports drinks, energy drinks? Beware, as you can be at an increased risk of developing various cancers, a study has found.
"Recently growing evidence suggests a link between sugar-sweetened beverage consumption and the risk of pancreatic and endometrial cancer, as well as the risk of colon cancer recurrence and death among cancer survivors," said Melinda Sothern, Professor at Louisiana State University Health Sciences in New Orleans, US.
Additionally, such individuals may also be at risk of developing health issues like obesity, diabetes and cardio-metabolic diseases.
As more people are surviving cancer, the consumption of added sugar will be an increasingly important risk factor.
The American Heart Association recommends a consumption goal of no more than 450 kilocalories (kcal) of sugar-sweetened beverages or fewer than three 12-ounce cans of soda per week, the researchers said.
"Although consuming added sugar is not recommended, people are not usually aware of how much sugar they get from sugar-sweetened beverages," said lead author Tung-Sung Tseng, Associate Professor of Public Health at LSU Health New Orleans.
The results of the study indicate that sugar-sweetened beverage consumption behaviour varies across cancers and may be related to age.
Intervention programs to reduce consumption of added sugar be focused on lower socio-economic status, young males, as well as cervical cancer survivors, the researchers suggested.
They also recommend that custom intervention to decrease added sugar consumption be conducted for both non-cancer individuals and cancer survivors in communities and the medical care system.
For the study, the team examined data from 22,182 adults from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2003-2012 data.
The survey measured the consumption of sodas, fruit-flavoured drinks, sweetened fruit juices, sports drinks, energy drinks, sweetened teas and coffees and other sugar-sweetened drinks.
It also ascertained cancer, smoking and obesity status, as well as demographic characteristics including age, gender, race, educational level and poverty/income ratio.
For the overall study population, 15.7 per cent had high sugar intake from sugar-sweetened drinks. People with no cancer history had a higher sugar intake than cancer survivors, although this could be due to other factors including older age and gender.
The sugar intake from sugar-sweetened beverages among women with cervical cancer history was much higher (60g/day) compared to other cancer survivors who consumed only around 30-40 g/day.
The research team also found that individuals who had high sugar intake (80g/day sugar) from sugar-sweetened beverages were younger, male, black, obese, current smokers, low-income, or had education levels at or below high school.
The study is published in the journal of Translational Cancer Research.