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Saturday, January 25, 2020

Second Black Texan teen told to cut dreadlocks

Kaden Bradford is now the second Black Texan teen being told to cut off his dreadlocks or else he won’t graduate.

ABC News reported the 16-year-old has been on suspension since last week according to his mother Cindy Bradford because he refuses to cut his hair. Kaden is Trinidadian and it is part of their culture to wear their hair in this manner. It is a celebration of identity and culture.

Cindy stated that her son has worn his hair in its natural state for years. She said it only became an issue last year and officials at his son warned him about pulling it back. If he did not do so, it would be in violation of their hair policy that dictates hair for males must be “gathered or worn in a style that would allow the hair to extend below”.

READ MORE Texas school forces Black teen to choose between wearing locs or attending graduation

He pinned his dreads back to comply and Cindy offered to have her son’s hair braided but that did not satisfy administrators who wanted his dreads cut off. Cindy said that the school’s principal, Rick Kana, told her that “the only way Kaden can come back to school is if he cuts his hair.”

“He had [dreads] last year,” she said. “He took a headband, and pushed them off his shoulders. [The school] said if he kept them up like that it was no problem.”

She is now considering suing, believing that her son is being targeted due to his race just as his cousin, DeAndre Arnold. The senior at Barbers Hill Independent School has been at the center of controversy for similar reasons.  He drew mainstream press after being told that he would not be able to walk during graduation unless he cut his dreads.

READ MORE Denver mom claims natural hair caused daughter to be kicked off her cheerleading squad

“My son is having the same issue (as Deandre),” Bradford said. “He’s a sophomore, he’s been growing his dreads out since sixth grade.”

Houston Texans wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins, who also wears dreadlocks, tweeted in support of Arnold.

On Friday, Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., expressed his support for the young teens, tweeting, “No one should be punished for expressing who they are.” Booker also introduced The CROWN Act in New Jersey that will ban discrimination based on hair.

School officials have denied that race has played a factor.

“The policy is not about cornrows or ethnicity,” Poole said. “There is no injustice being done.”

Cindy and her sister Sandy Arnold, DeAndre’s mother, are considering lawsuits because their children have done nothing wrong. Arnold said the school “never called me because Deandre was being disrespectful or because of his grades, but because of his hair.”

 

 

 

The post Second Black Texan teen told to cut dreadlocks appeared first on TheGrio.



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The Sneaky Simple Malware That Hits Millions of Macs

How the Shlayer Trojan topped the macOS malware charts—despite its “rather ordinary” methods.

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Angelica Ross is the new face of Louis Vuitton campaign

Angelica Ross, actress and transgender advocate, continues to make her mark in the entertainment industry as she now adds model to her growing list of accomplishments. 

In the new 2020 ad campaign for fashion brand Louis Vuitton, the Pose star is shown against a backdrop in a vintage horror movie-inspired poster, a nod to her appearance on FX’s American Horror Story: 1984.

The ad reads, “When the future knocks, open the door!”

According to NBC News, Anthony Ramos, head of talent at the LGBTQ media advocacy group GLAAD, believes that Ross’ inclusion in the campaign is a “major step forward” for visibility among the community but “specifically for trans women of color.”

READ MORE Trans actress Angelica Ross shares how Oprah helped her mother accept her

Ross is best known for her breakout role as Candy in the groundbreaking series FX’s Pose. She left the show in its second season after the character was killed off to spotlight the violence that transgender women of color face.

“I must applaud @angelicaross for her tour de force of a performance as Candy Abundance Ferocity. It has been a gift to watch her blossom as a true star and undeniable talent. Though she will always be our Candy, and our show suffers this incredible loss, I am elated that the world will get much more Angelica,” Ryan Murphy, showrunner of Pose, declared on social media at the time.

Murphy was true to his word as Ross made history, becoming the first trans actress to star as a series regular on two television shows when she joined the cast of American Horror Story: 1984. Her TV debut was in 2015, starring in Caitlyn Jenner‘s E! reality series I Am Cait and she then moved on to Her Story, ClawsDoubt and Transparent. 

READ MORE GLAAD taps ‘Pose’ star Angelica Ross to host presidential candidate forum on LGBTQ Issues 

Ross tweeted that she asked the company if she could wear her natural hair and was embraced to do so. Pose co-star Indya Moore tweeted her excitement that the fashion brand featured a “dark skin trans women talent” and said it’s “giving us what we literally have been looking for.”

The post Angelica Ross is the new face of Louis Vuitton campaign appeared first on TheGrio.



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Gabrielle Union responds after Terry Crews praises AGT diversity

Terry Crews cast doubt on Gabrielle Union‘s claims that she was fired from America’s Got Talent after speaking against the racism and sexism she endured. 

During an appearance on the TODAY, Crews insisted that he never witnessed nor was subjected to any racism or discriminatory behavior behind the scenes of AGT in contrast to Union’s statements. 

“That was never my experience. In fact, it was the most diverse place I have ever been in my 20 years of entertainment,” the actor told TODAY. “When you look at what the allegations were about, it was given by an unnamed source. It’s funny because I believe you should listen to women, you should always believe women, so I asked my wife what I should do. She was like, ‘first of all if it’s coming from an unnamed source – because Gabrielle Union has not made any statement to this day about any of these allegations publicly. If she hasn’t made a statement, why would you?'”

READ MORE Gabrielle Union warns against being the ‘happy negro’ bowing to the status quo

Love B. Scott and Variety exclusively reported last November of Union’s firing from the NBC show. Union alleged a hostile work environment where the texture of her hair was criticized and racial jokes were made about contestants. In 2017, Nick Cannon made similar complaints after he left the show and stated, “My soul won’t allow me to be in business with corporations that attempt to frown on freedom of speech, censor artists, and question cultural choices.”

According to Variety, who released the exclusive report of Union’s firing in November, celebrities and supporters rallied behind the actress. NBCUniversal launched “a third-party investigation to look into the accounts of racial insensitivity and a hostile climate for AGT’s women judges.” The results of that investigation are due later this month.

Union broke her silence in regards to Crews’ in a series of tweets. She praised the “multiple witnesses who bravely came forward to let everyone know” that her criticism was true and criticized “those who enthusiastically will throw you under the bus.” The actress had been one of the many to offer the former NFL player support when he alleged that WME agent Adam Venit sexually assaulted him in February 2016 at a party. Crews sued but the complaint was ultimately rejected by the D.A.’s office. 

READ MORE Gabrielle Union has ‘productive’ meeting with NBC execs over AGT toxic workplace complaints

Union continued to challenge Crews’ comments on the show’s overall climate with many people weighing in.

Crews has not yet responded to Union’s comments or clarified his.

The post Gabrielle Union responds after Terry Crews praises AGT diversity appeared first on TheGrio.



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The Best Running Gear (2020): Shoes, Clothes, Accessories

Whether you’re running in warm weather or in the rain, we have the gear for you, including shoes, socks, and more.

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Space Photos of the Week: An Ode to Infrared

The Spitzer Space Telescope wasn’t big, but its view of the universe was certainly mighty.

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Writing About Videogames Isn't All Fun and Glamor

David L. Craddock is one of the major voices in longform games journalism, but his reporting hasn't always been easy. 

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Google Calls Out Safari for Privacy Flaws

Facial recognition, iCloud encryption, and the rest of this week's top security news.

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The Doomsday Clock Moves Closer Than Ever to Midnight

Since the advent of the clock—even during the peak years of the Cold War—the minute hand has never advanced past the 11:58 mark.

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Scraping the Web Is a Powerful Tool. Clearview AI Abused It

The facial recognition startup claims it collected billions of photos from sites like Facebook and Twitter. What does the practice mean for the open web?

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An AI Epidemiologist Sent the First Warnings of the Wuhan Virus

The BlueDot algorithm scours news reports and airline ticketing data to predict the spread of diseases like those linked to the flu outbreak in China.

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16 Best Weekend Deals: Samsung QLEDs, Apple AirPods Pro, and More

If you're in the market for the Gadget Lab's favorite headphones, a smart display, or a new robot vacuum, you're in luck.

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London Cops Will Use Facial Recognition to Hunt Suspects

The deployment, at an unspecified number of locations, will be one of the largest uses of the technology by government authorities in the West.

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Friday, January 24, 2020

Benefits Offered Through AARP Medicare

AARP Medicare plans over wide coverage.

A Brief Overview of Medicare and AARP Medicare Plans

Medicare is a federal insurance program with four parts—Part A, Part B, Part C and Part D. Part A and B are known as Original Medicare. AARP Medicare Supplement plans help pay for some of the costs not covered by Original Medicare. Part C, also known as Medicare Advantage, offers insurance coverage through private companies such as AARP. In order to sign up for AARP Medicare plans you must be enrolled in Original Medicare.

Part D provides prescription drug coverage. Prescription drug coverage is available to AARP members through the prescription drug plans (PDPs).AARP offers Medicare plans insured by UnitedHealthcare Company. UHC is a private insurance company that contracts through Medicare to provide coverage to beneficiaries. Below are the Medicare health insurance plan offerings through AARP.

Medicare Advantage Plans Offered Through AARP

AARP Medicare Advantage plans, insured through UnitedHealthcare, include Medicare Part A (hospital stays), Medicare Part B (doctor visits) and, in most cases, Medicare Part D (prescription drug coverage). 

Every plan has its own unique benefits. Additional plan benefits may include:

  • Preventive services—some plans offer a $0 copay when you visit your in-network primary care provider to receive preventive services. Below is a list of the preventive services offered through AARP Medicare Advantage: 
  • Alcohol misuse screening and counseling
  • Bone mass measurement (for those at high risk)
  • Breast cancer screening (2D and 3D mammograms)
  • Cardiovascular disease (behavioral therapy)
  • Cardiovascular screening
  • Cervical and vaginal cancer screening (Pap test and pelvic exam)
  • Colorectal cancer screening
  • Depression screening
  • Diabetes screening
  • Flu shots
  • Glaucoma tests (for those at high risk)
  • Hepatitis B immunization
  • Hepatitis C screening
  • HIV screening
  • Human papillomavirus (HPV) test
  • Lung cancer screening
  • Medical nutrition therapy services
  • Medicare Diabetes Prevention Program (MDPP)
  • Obesity screening and counseling
  • Pneumococcal shot
  • Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test
  • Sexually Transmitted Infection (STI) screening and counseling
  • Smoking cessation (counseling to stop smoking)
  • Disease management programs —these programs are designed to help members who have chronic conditions, such as diabetes or certain types of heart disease. 
  • Health management programs—these mail-based programs focus on self-care and are designed to provide members with guidelines on how to stay healthy and avoid disease. 
  • Alternative care services—some plans offer alternative therapies in preventing and treating disease, healing illness, and promoting health. Covered therapies include acupuncture and/or chiropractic care in some areas under some plans.
  • Dental — dental coverage is now available with most Medicare Advantage plans. All plans that include a dental benefit cover exams, annual X-rays, cleanings, and fluoride for a $0 copay with in-network dentists. Many plans may also include dental coverage for fillings, crowns, bridges, dentures, and certain types of root canals.
  • Vision—nearly all Medicare Advantage plans offer $0 copay annual eye exams. Many plans also offer an eyewear allowance on contacts or frames. Lenses may be covered in full, including designer-quality prescription glasses such as Warby Parker. 
  • OTC (over-the-counter)—this benefit will help you save 40% or more on OTC medications and products. 
  • Hearing—many Medicare Advantage plans offer $0 annual hearing exams and low copays on name brand and private-label hearing aids. Through UnitedHealthcare Company, AARP has a nationwide network of over 5,000 hearing provider locations and online ordering with home delivery.
  • Virtual medical visits—this benefit gives you the ability to live chat with a licensed virtual provider from the comfort of home or any location. You have unlimited access to these visits for a $0 copay. Many plans also offer virtual behavioral health visits for a low or no copay.

Medicare Prescription Drug Plans

Most AARP Medicare Advantage plans (Part C) include Part D coverage. Medicare Part D, also known as a Medicare prescription plan, helps cover the cost of your medication. 

All plans include brand and generic drugs, but vary in terms of which specific drugs it covers. The list of drugs a plan covers is known as its formulary. Within the formulary, there are tiers of drugs. The higher the tier, the more expensive the drug.  

Tier Type Tier 1 Tier 2 Tier 3 Tier 4 Tier 5
Drug Type Preferred Generic Drugs Non-PreferredGeneric Drugs Preferred Generic and Brand Drugs Non-Preferred Generic and Brand Drugs Specialty Drugs
Copay Cost $ $$ $$$ $$$$ $$$$$

Medicare Supplement Plans Through AARP

Medicare Supplement insurance plans, also known as Medigap, help pay for some of the healthcare costs not covered by Medicare Part A and Part B. These costs include coinsurance, copays, and deductibles. 

In addition to covering healthcare costs, some of AARP’s supplement plans include the following benefits:

  • Renew Active —through some Medicare Advantage plans, you will receive access to various gyms and fitness locations at no additional cost. And rewards for remaining physically active.
  • AARP Staying Sharp– this online program includes a brain health assessment, brain exercises, recipes and activities designed to nurture a healthy brain.
  • Hearing Care Program by HearUSA—through this program you receive a discount on hearing aids and access to screenings by certified HearUSA hearing care providers.
  • AARP Vision Discounts provided by EyeMed—with this benefit you save on eyewear purchases and routine exam exams
  • NurseLine Plan—with this benefit you receive 24/7 phone access to a registered nurse. The nurse can help answer medical questions and/or guide you to outside help if necessary. In addition to registered nurses, NurseLine also has a health information library with recorded messages on more than 1,700 health topics. This service is intended for non-emergency needs.
  • Wellness coaching—with this benefit you receive access to trained coaches to reach their health and fitness goals.
  • Foreign travel—some plans cover emergency care services during a portion of your trip(s) outside of the United States 

To be eligible to apply for a Medicare Supplement plan, you must be an AARP member or spouse of a member, enrolled in both Part A and Part B of Medicare, and not covered under any other Medicare Supplement plans. 

If you are not yet age 65, you are only eligible to apply if you do not have end-stage renal disease and then you may only apply for A, B, C, F or K, unless you are in your birthday Open Enrollment Period and replacing a Medicare Supplement plan. 

You must apply within six months after enrolling in Medicare Part B or receiving notification of your retroactive eligibility for Medicare Part B, unless you are entitled to Guaranteed Issue.

What Are The Costs Of AARP Medicare?

All AARP Medicare Advantage plans include the following payments:

  1. A monthly premium
  2. A deductible
  3. A copay
  4. Coinsurance

The amount of each payment varies based upon the plan you choose and your state or region. The payments associated with PDP plans depend upon the tier of the drugs as described above in the Medicare prescription drugs section.

When Can You Enroll AARP Medicare?

In order to enroll into AARP Medicare, you must:

  1. Be an AARP member
  2. Be enrolled into Original Medicare (Medicare Part A and Part B) and 

To apply to be an AARP member, visit AARP.org/membership. On their site you will also find the monthly payment information and a full list of the benefits provided to members. In addition to healthcare insurance, AARP also offers car, vehicle, and property insurance, as well as a plethora of other benefits offered to members.

The second step is to be enrolled into Original Medicare. You will be automatically enrolled in Medicare Part A once you qualify for federal retirement benefits. If you are not automatically enrolled, you will need to enroll during your Initial Enrollment Period. The initial enrollment period begins three months before your 65th birthday and ends three months after your birthday. If you miss this period, you can enroll during the general enrollment which runs from January 1 to March 1.

You can enroll into Medicare Part B during the same time periods. This can be the Initial Enrollment Period or the General Enrollment Period if you happen to miss the initial. In the event of a life change such as your employer or spouse health insurance ends, you will have access to a special enrollment period. 

When enrolling in medicare, you can consult an insurance agent or utilize free resources. In order to enroll, you can choose one of the three following options: 

  1. You can apply by visiting your local Social Security office or
  2. Calling Medicare at 1-800-772-1213 or 
  3. By filling out a simple application at the Social Security Administration website. Note if you have Medicare Part A and wish to add Medicare Part B, you will not be able to fill out an online form to do this. You will have to call the above number or visit your local Social Security office. 

Once you are enrolled into Original Medicare, review the plans offered by AARP to determine which one(s) are the best fit for your situation. These plans have a lot of information, so feel free to request a free quote for more information. Call toll-free at 888-OUR-AARP (888-687-2277) or email member@aarp.org. 



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Scientists Predict Wuhan's Virus Outbreak Will Get Much Worse

New estimates of how far the virus could spread suggest an explosion of cases will hit the Chinese city and more infected individuals will show up abroad.

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Nigeria: Discovering Lagos nightlife by danfo

Danfo is a way for party-goers to reach the city’s hot spots in an affordable way.

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An Esports Exodus to YouTube Reshapes the Livestream Wars

The *Call of Duty* League, the *Overwatch* League, and *Hearthstone* Esports all call YouTube home now. That's not great news for Twitch.

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Zeinab Mohammud Warsame: Sole survivor of Mogadishu mayor attack recalls ordeal

Zeinab is the only survivor of the al-Shabab attack on the office of the Mogadishu mayor in July 2019.

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NFL Hall-of-Famer Terrell Davis Tells Young Athletes: ‘Write Your Own Checks’

Terrell Davis

The financial tips just keep coming from older athletes. This time, NFL Hall-of-Famer Terrell Davis gives excellent money advice to young athletes: “Write your own checks,” according to CNBC.

Before retiring from an on-the-field injury, Davis, who played for the Denver Broncos from 1995 to 2001, made approximately $19 million in his eight seasons in the NFL, according to Sportrac. One of his biggest regrets was letting other people write checks for him during the height of his career. He is now encouraging young players to make sure they keep track of their own finances.

“Don’t have anybody writing your checks or paying your bills for you,” Davis tells CNBC Make It. ″[I] don’t care how busy you get. You can never get too busy to write your own checks or pay your own bills,” Davis says. “You’ve got to see what’s coming in and what’s going out.”

Davis also told CNBC last year that one of his biggest money mistakes was putting money into a project in Atlanta before it was green-lighted by the city. The deal didn’t meet the expectation, it ended up floundering, and he lost his entire investment in the project. It’s one of the reasons he urges young players to not take every deal that is placed in front of them. “I’d look at a deal and if it was a good deal, I’d jump on it, and that didn’t always work out. A couple of times, I’ve been in bad deals,” he said. “I would just say to take more time. There’s always going to be another that comes on the table.”

“Really do your due diligence on things and make sure that it is what it is,” Davis said. “There’s a saying … trust but verify.”

Davis helped create Defy, a CBD-infused performance drink geared toward athletes. The idea for Defy was born in 2017 when Davis first used hemp extract to recover after workouts and to ease his joint pain. It officially launched in May of last year. “You’ve got to have the drive. You’ve got have goals. You’ve got to be able to take some risk.”



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Chime Chai Maker Review: A Pricey, Speedy Way to Make Chai

For chai lovers, Chime's hands-free and speedy pod-based brewing process is convenience at its finest.

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Athletic Authorities Must Reckon With Racing Tech Again

As World Athletics debates whether to ban Nike's carbon-fiber running shoe, it should heed lessons from the case of “Bionic Olympian” Oscar Pistorius.

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Sure, 'The Goop Lab' Is Absurd—but It Also Offers Hope

Gwyneth Paltrow’s Netflix show offers controversial treatments for people who feel they’ve been failed by everything else.

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Danielle Johnson Will Launch the First Black Woman-owned Digital Radio Station in Boston

Danielle Johnson

People of color in the media industry face many challenges when trying to get their foot in the door. There is a certain way that you must look, carry yourself, and speak. In fact, everything from appearance to professional nature can be found in many media professionals contracts when working for major publications and outlets.

And, a number of those clauses coupled with barriers to entry keep many people seeking to enter the industry out.

That is why Boston-based radio personality Danielle Johnson founded Spark FM. After applying for countless positions with big-name broadcast companies and not being hired, Johnson decided to create an opportunity for herself and other media professionals by creating her own radio station.

Related: Sam Sylk: Radio Personality Has A Heart For His Community

“It’s really hard to get that urban voice in there that actually has a foot on the ground in the local community,” Johnson said. “There’s not a lot of resources that the urban community knows about that can help them with generational wealth, local politics, community events and engagement volunteer opportunities and all of our entertainment,” Johnson told the Daily Free Press, the independent student newspaper at Boston University.

She went on to say, “I saw the need for a platform that actually caters to the demographics that are oftentimes overlooked and under-represented from the bigger names in media platforms.”

Johnson is set to launch Spark FM, the first digital radio station owned by a black woman, this spring in Boston.

Related: Meet Radio Industry Vet and Community Leader Patricia Robinson

As Johnson prepares for the launch of the station, she is seeking financial support on Kickstarter to fund her dream. As outlined online, Spark FM hopes to amplify more urban voices on the radio.

  • Spark FM will be a platform for urban voices and talent in a way that specifically caters to that under-served and under-represented community
  • Spark FM will allow small and local black business owners to advertise their businesses in an affordable and accessible way
  • Spark FM will be “logistically local” but have a global impact as a legal, professional, small market alternative to mainstream media
  • Spark FM will be housed in a state-of-the-art facility that people can feel proud of and that represents the artistic creativity and skill of our diverse community and culture
  • Spark FM will invest in the community by way of community events, live remotes broadcasts, and community sponsorships
  • Spark FM will provide mentorship opportunities to younger radio talent (on-air-personalities, DJ’s, etc..) to give them professional training and experience if they desire to pursue big-market goals in the future
  • Spark FM will provide relatable news that directly correlates to the people, places, and things in the urban community
  • Spark FM will provide programming that matters on topics that are important to this community: educational, political, financial, and entertainment.

In addition to amplifying urban voices, Johnson plans to help marginalized people in Boston’s inner-cities learn about generational wealth and ownership.



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East Africa's battles devastating locust swarms

Desert locusts swarms which are devouring crops in East Africa are forcing farmers into desperate measures.

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Gadget Lab Podcast: Oral Hygiene Tech and Espresso Science

On this week’s episode: hacking oral hygiene with AI, and hacking espresso with science.

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The Future of Death-Tech Has No Rules—Yet

Mortuary startups, like one that plans to freeze and shatter corpses, have run afoul of some fusty regulations.

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Billionaire's Patrice Motsepe's 'Africa loves Trump' comment divides opinion

South African mining mogul Patrice Motsepe tells the US president that the continent supports him.

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The Bird 'Snarge' Menacing Air Travel

When winged wildlife slams into aircraft, disasters can happen. Inside the world of bird-strike countermeasures, where avian goo is the enemy.

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The Strange, Subtle Matter of ASMR Erotica

Although many fans and creators claim the appeal isn't sexual, much of the genre flirts with intimacy. Close your eyes—and open up.

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The Rise of Mouth Tech: Oral-B, AI Toothbrushes, Burst Oral Care

It’s easy to bristle at a $200 AI-powered toothbrush, but not for the reasons you might think.

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Cameroon's Stephane Mbia on the move in China

Former Cameroon captain Stephane Mbia joins Shanghai Shenhua from Chinese Super League rivals Wuhan Zall

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Locusts: UN calls for international help in East Africa

"Unprecedented" swarms of desert locusts, the worst in decades, are devouring crops in East Africa.

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Saido Berahino 'regrets every moment' of reaction to rejected Tottenham bids

Former West Brom striker Saido Berahino says he "regrets every moment" of his reaction to rejected Tottenham transfer bids.

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Liverpool to check on Sadio Mane injury following win over Wolves

Liverpool will assess Sadio Mane after the forward suffered a hamstring injury in their 2-1 win over Wolves.

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Felix Tshisekedi's year as DR Congo president

Felix Tshisekedi looks back at his first year in power in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

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Thursday, January 23, 2020

Study: Commercial air travel is safer than ever

It has never been safer to fly on commercial airlines, according to a new study by an MIT professor that tracks the continued decrease in passenger fatalities around the globe.

The study finds that between 2008 and 2017, airline passenger fatalities fell significantly compared to the previous decade, as measured per individual passenger boardings — essentially the aggregate number of passengers. Globally, that rate is now one death per 7.9 million passenger boardings, compared to one death per 2.7 million boardings during the period 1998-2007, and one death per 1.3 million boardings during 1988-1997.

Going back further, the commercial airline fatality risk was one death per 750,000 boardings during 1978-1987, and one death per 350,000 boardings during 1968-1977.

“The worldwide risk of being killed had been dropping by a factor of two every decade,” says Arnold Barnett, an MIT scholar who has published a new paper summarizing the study’s results. “Not only has that continued in the last decade, the [latest] improvement is closer to a factor of three. The pace of improvement has not slackened at all even as flying has gotten ever safer and further gains become harder to achieve. That is really quite impressive and is important for people to bear in mind.”

The paper, “Aviation Safety: A Whole New World?” was published online this month in Transportation Science. Barnett is the sole author.

The new research also reveals that there is discernible regional variation in airline safety around the world. The study finds that the nations housing the lowest-risk airlines are the U.S., the members of the European Union, China, Japan, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Israel. The aggregate fatality risk among those nations was one death per 33.1 million passenger boardings during 2008-2017.

For airlines in a second set of countries, which Barnett terms the “advancing” set with an intermediate risk level, the rate is one death per 7.4 million boardings during 2008-2017. This group — comprising countries that are generally rapidly industrializing and have recently achieved high overall life expectancy and GDP per capita — includes many countries in Asia as well as some countries in South America and the Middle East.

For a third and higher-risk set of developing countries, including some in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, the death risk during 2008-2017 was one per 1.2 million passenger boardings — an improvement from one death per 400,000 passenger boardings during 1998-2007.

“The two most conspicuous changes compared to previous decades were sharp improvements in China and in Eastern Europe,” says Barnett, who is the George Eastman Professor of Management at the MIT Sloan School of Management. In those places, he notes, had safety achievements in the last decade that were strong even within the lowest-risk group of countries.

Overall, Barnett suggests, the rate of fatalities has declined far faster than public fears about flying.

“Flying has gotten safer and safer,” Barnett says. “It’s a factor of 10 safer than it was 40 years ago, although I bet anxiety levels have not gone down that much. I think it’s good to have the facts.”

Barnett is a long-established expert in the field of aviation safety and risk, whose work has helped contextualize accident and safety statistics. Whatever the absolute numbers of air crashes and fatalities may be — and they fluctuate from year to year — Barnett has sought to measure those numbers against the growth of air travel.

To conduct the current study, Barnett used data from a number of sources, including the Flight Safety Foundation’s Aviation Safety Network Accident Database. He mostly used data from the World Bank, based on information from the International Civil Aviation Organization, to measure the number of passengers carried, which is now roughly 4 billion per year.

In the paper, Barnett discusses the pros and cons of some alternative metrics that could be used to evaluate commercial air safety, including deaths per flight and deaths per passenger miles traveled. He prefers to use deaths per boarding because, as he writes in the paper, “it literally reflects the fraction of passengers who perished during air journeys.”

The new paper also includes historical data showing that even in today’s higher-risk areas for commerical aviation, the fatality rate is better, on aggregate, than it was in the leading air-travel countries just a few decades in the past.

“The risk now in the higher-risk countries is basically the risk we used to have 40-50 years ago” in the safest air-travel countries, Barnett notes.

Barnett readily acknowledges that the paper is evaluating the overall numbers, and not providing a causal account of the air-safety trend; he says he welcomes further research attempting to explain the reasons for the continued gains in air safety.

In the paper, Barnett also notes that year-to-year air fatality numbers have notable variation. In 2017, for instance, just 12 people died in the process of air travel, compared to 473 in 2018.

“Even if the overall trendline is [steady], the numbers will bounce up and down,” Barnett says. For that reason, he thinks looking at trends a decade at a time is a better way of grasping the full trajectory of commercial airline safety.

On a personal level, Barnett says he understands the kinds of concerns people have about airline travel. He began studying the subject partly because of his own worries about flying, and quips that he was trying to “sublimate my fears in a way that might be publishable.”

Those kinds of instinctive fears may well be natural, but Barnett says he hopes that his work can at least build public knowledge about the facts and put them into perspective for people who are afraid of airplane accidents.

“The risk is so low that being afraid to fly is a little like being afraid to go into the supermarket because the ceiling might collapse,” Barnett says.



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Blue Cross Blue Shield Medicare Health Plans

What is the Right Blue Cross Blue Shield Medicare Plan for You?

Knowing which health insurance plan will work best for you isn’t always easy. So, let’s take a closer look at some Blue Cross Blue Shield Medicare coverage plans and how they can help you get the health care you need.

What is Medicare?

There’s a lot of talk about Medicare coverage and other issues about health plans. But these conversations often skip past explaining what Medicare is.

Medicare is a federal health insurance program. Medicare health plans offered are for:

  • U.S. citizens age 65 and over, or
  • Citizens under 65 with certain disabilities or medical conditions

Medicare has different plans referred to as Parts A, B, C, D and private carriers also issue supplemental plans. These plans cover different health care services and needs.

Medicare Plans Part A Part B Medicare Advantage (Part C) Part D Medicare supplement plans
Features Offers  inpatient care and home health care services Offers doctor services, outpatient care, and medical supplies Coverage may include wellness programs, hearing aids, and vision services Offers prescription drug coverage Help with out-of-pocket costs (such as deductibles, copays and coinsurance) not covered by Part A and Part B

 

Medicare Part A and Part B Plans

Medicare Part A and Part B are also known as Original Medicare.

Part A covers:

  • Inpatient care offered in hospitals or skilled nursing facilities
  • me health care services
  • Hospice care for the terminally ill

Part B covers:

  • Doctorservices
  • Outpatient care
  • Medical supplies
  • Durable medical equipment
  • Preventive services

Now, let’s take a deeper look at Blue Cross and Blue Shield Medicare’s Advantage plans and Supplement plans

Medicare Advantage Blue Cross Blue Shield Plans (Part C)

Medicare Advantage plans offer Medicare coverage through private health insurance companies approved by the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). 

These plans include health maintenance organizations (HMOs), preferred provider organizations (PPOs), regional PPOs and private fee-for-service plans. An organization in these categories usually has a Medicare contract and is a licensee of the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association.

Medicare Advantage plans provide all Part A and B services and some additional services, such as:

  • Wellness programs
  • Hearing aids
  • Vision services

Also, Medicare Advantage plans (such as PPO plans and HMO plans) usually provide prescription drug coverage.

Some of these plans have a maximum that you would have to pay for out-of-pocket costs each calendar year, a feature not offered through original Medicare.

Medicare Advantage plans have location-based service areas and most have networks of doctors and hospitals. So, be sure to ask your doctors if they are in your health insurance plan’s Medicare Advantage network.

How Can I Enroll in a Blue Cross Blue Shield Medicare Advantage Plan?

You must first enroll in Medicare Part A and Part B before joining a Medicare Advantage plan. 

Medicare currently offers people an Open Enrollment Period about once a year. This gives you the chance to review and, if you want, make changes to your Medicare coverage. Some of the changes you can make include:

  • Joining a Medicare Advantage plan
  • Leaving your Medicare Advantage plan and returning to Original Medicare (Part A and Part B)
  • Switching from one Medicare Advantage plan to another
  • Adding or changing your prescription drug coverage (Part D) plan if you are in Original Medicare

Medicare Advantage plans can be useful. But what if you find out you have gaps in your Medicare health coverage?

That’s where Medigap comes in.

Blue Cross Blue Shield Medicare Supplement Plans

If you have Medicare Part A and Part B coverage, Medicare Supplement (also called Medigap) plans can help fill the coverage gaps in Medicare Part A and Part B. Some Medigap plans even cover foreign travel emergency services.

Medigap plans are sold by private insurance companies. They can help you with out-of-pocket costs (such as deductibles, copays and coinsurance) not covered by Parts A and B.

How Can I Enroll in Medigap?

You must first enroll in Medicare Part A and Part B before joining a Medigap plan. 

Even though Medicare has an annual Open Enrollment Period for Medicare Advantage plans, this doesn’t apply for folks wanting Medigap coverage.

The Open Enrollment Period for a Medigap policy is the six-month period that starts the first day of the month that you turn 65 or older and enrolled in Medicare Part B.

After that, your ability to buy one of the Medigap plans depends on which state you live in. This is balanced by the fact that once you’re enrolled in a Medigap plan, it renews annually as long as you pay your premium and the plan is available.

Medicare Prescription Drug Coverage (Part D)

Medicare prescription drug plans (PDP plans) are offered by private health insurance companies and cover your prescription drug costs for covered medications. 

You can select a Medicare PDP plan in addition to:

  • Original Medicare (Part A and Part B)
  • Original Medicare (Part A and Part B) with a Medigap Plan

Part D coverage is included in most Medicare Advantage (Part C) plans.

Blue Cross Blue Shield Medicare Coverage – Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q: Can I have the Blue Cross Blue Shield Medicare Advantage plan and a Medicare supplement plan at the same time?

A: No. You must pick between the Medicare Advantage plan (Part C) or a Blue Cross Blue Shield Medicare Supplement plan. It is against federal law for someone to be enrolled in both plans at the same time.

Q: How is Medicare different from Medicaid?

A: Medicaid is a state-based health insurance program that covers a set of benefits and services. The program helps low-income individuals and families, people with disabilities and older folks.

Medicare is a federal health insurance program that covers certain benefits and services. This program is primarily for people 65 and older as well as for people under age 65 who have disabilities and/or certain medical conditions.

Medicaid eligibility differs from Medicare eligibility. Certain rules apply for individuals eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid.

The Bottom Line

Getting original Medicare is a good start for basic health care coverage. But you also have additional options with Blue Cross Blue Shield Medicare to help cover more of your health care needs.

Medicare Advantage plans focus on covering additional health care services, including prescription drug coverage. Medigap (or Medicare Supplement) plans focus on helping to keep your out-of-pocket costs for health care affordable.

Choosing the right Medicare plan for you is straightforward. Get your customized Medicare plan quote and learn more about Medicare Advantage and Medicare Supplemental plans.



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Has Felix Tshisekedi tackling DR Congo's six biggest problems?

Ordinary Congolese hoped Felix Tshisekedi would transform their lives when he became president.

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Africa's week in pictures: 17-23 January 2020

A selection of the week's best photos from across the continent and beyond.

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No, the Wuhan Virus Is Not a 'Snake Flu'

One paper advanced a controversial theory about the disease's origin. Other scientists aren't biting.

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How to Buy Used on eBay: A Beginner's Guide

Gracefully avoid sketchy situations and score a deal on the post-holiday gadget turnover.

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Don't Break Up Big Tech

It won't protect small businesses, it won't preserve our data privacy, and it won't help promote democracy. 

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Bad Math, Pepsi Points, and the Greatest Plane Non-Crash Ever

How calculation errors and misunderstandings led to a very silly lawsuit—and a very lucky landing. 

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Technique reveals whether models of patient risk are accurate

After a patient has a heart attack or stroke, doctors often use risk models to help guide their treatment. These models can calculate a patient’s risk of dying based on factors such as the patient’s age, symptoms, and other characteristics.

While these models are useful in most cases, they do not make accurate predictions for many patients, which can lead doctors to choose ineffective or unnecessarily risky treatments for some patients.

“Every risk model is evaluated on some dataset of patients, and even if it has high accuracy, it is never 100 percent accurate in practice,” says Collin Stultz, a professor of electrical engineering and computer science at MIT and a cardiologist at Massachusetts General Hospital. “There are going to be some patients for which the model will get the wrong answer, and that can be disastrous.”

Stultz and his colleagues from MIT, IBM Research, and the University of Massachusetts Medical School have now developed a method that allows them to determine whether a particular model’s results can be trusted for a given patient. This could help guide doctors to choose better treatments for those patients, the researchers say.

Stultz, who is also a professor of health sciences and technology, a member of MIT’s Institute for Medical Engineering and Sciences and Research Laboratory of Electronics, and an associate member of the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, is the senior author of the new study. MIT graduate student Paul Myers is the lead author of the paper, which appears today in Digital Medicine.

Modeling risk

Computer models that can predict a patient’s risk of harmful events, including death, are used widely in medicine. These models are often created by training machine-learning algorithms to analyze patient datasets that include a variety of information about the patients, including their health outcomes.

While these models have high overall accuracy, “very little thought has gone into identifying when a model is likely to fail,” Stultz says. “We are trying to create a shift in the way that people think about these machine-learning models. Thinking about when to apply a model is really important because the consequence of being wrong can be fatal.”

For instance, a patient at high risk who is misclassified would not receive sufficiently aggressive treatment, while a low-risk patient inaccurately determined to be at high risk could receive unnecessary, potentially harmful interventions.

To illustrate how the method works, the researchers chose to focus on a widely used risk model called the GRACE risk score, but the technique can be applied to nearly any type of risk model. GRACE, which stands for Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events, is a large dataset that was used to develop a risk model that evaluates a patient’s risk of death within six months after suffering an acute coronary syndrome (a condition caused by decreased blood flow to the heart). The resulting risk assessment is based on age, blood pressure, heart rate, and other readily available clinical features.

The researchers’ new technique generates an “unreliability score” that ranges from 0 to 1. For a given risk-model prediction, the higher the score, the more unreliable that prediction. The unreliability score is based on a comparison of the risk prediction generated by a particular model, such as the GRACE risk-score, with the prediction produced by a different model that was trained on the same dataset. If the models produce different results, then it is likely that the risk-model prediction for that patient is not reliable, Stultz says.

“What we show in this paper is, if you look at patients who have the highest unreliability scores — in the top 1 percent — the risk prediction for that patient yields the same information as flipping a coin,” Stultz says. “For those patients, the GRACE score cannot discriminate between those who die and those who don’t. It’s completely useless for those patients.”

The researchers’ findings also suggested that the patients for whom the models don’t work well tend to be older and to have a higher incidence of cardiac risk factors.

One significant advantage of the method is that the researchers derived a formula that tells how much two predictions would disagree, without having to build a completely new model based on the original dataset. 

“You don’t need access to the training dataset itself in order to compute this unreliability measurement, and that’s important because there are privacy issues that prevent these clinical datasets from being widely accessible to different people,” Stultz says.

Retraining the model

The researchers are now designing a user interface that doctors could use to evaluate whether a given patient’s GRACE score is reliable. In the longer term, they also hope to improve the reliability of risk models by making it easier to retrain models on data that include more patients who are similar to the patient being diagnosed.

“If the model is simple enough, then retraining a model can be fast. You could imagine a whole suite of software integrated into the electronic health record that would automatically tell you whether a particular risk score is appropriate for a given patient, and then try to do things on the fly, like retrain new models that might be more appropriate,” Stultz says.

The research was funded by the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab. Other authors of the paper include MIT graduate student Wangzhi Dai; Kenney Ng, Kristen Severson, and Uri Kartoun of the Center for Computational Health at IBM Research; and Wei Huang and Frederick Anderson of the Center for Outcomes Research at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.



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Lyon sign Zimbabwe striker Tino Kadewere

Lyon sign Zimbabwe striker Tino Kadewere from French rivals Le Have and loan him back to the Ligue 2 side for the rest of the season.

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Ivorian Soro passes Celtic medical ahead of transfer

Ismaila Soro passes medical in Israel ahead of his proposed transfer to Celtic from Bnei Yehuda as the midfielder awaits a work permit and international clearance.

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Isabel Dos Santos: Africa's richest woman accused of fraud

Africa's richest woman has been formally accused of embezzlement by her country's prosecutors.

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Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Using artificial intelligence to enrich digital maps

A model invented by researchers at MIT and Qatar Computing Research Institute (QCRI) that uses satellite imagery to tag road features in digital maps could help improve GPS navigation.  

Showing drivers more details about their routes can often help them navigate in unfamiliar locations. Lane counts, for instance, can enable a GPS system to warn drivers of diverging or merging lanes. Incorporating information about parking spots can help drivers plan ahead, while mapping bicycle lanes can help cyclists negotiate busy city streets. Providing updated information on road conditions can also improve planning for disaster relief.

But creating detailed maps is an expensive, time-consuming process done mostly by big companies, such as Google, which sends vehicles around with cameras strapped to their hoods to capture video and images of an area’s roads. Combining that with other data can create accurate, up-to-date maps. Because this process is expensive, however, some parts of the world are ignored.

A solution is to unleash machine-learning models on satellite images — which are easier to obtain and updated fairly regularly — to automatically tag road features. But roads can be occluded by, say, trees and buildings, making it a challenging task. In a paper being presented at the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence conference, the MIT and QCRI researchers describe “RoadTagger,” which uses a combination of neural network architectures to automatically predict the number of lanes and road types (residential or highway) behind obstructions.

In testing RoadTagger on occluded roads from digital maps of 20 U.S. cities, the model counted lane numbers with 77 percent accuracy and inferred road types with 93 percent accuracy. The researchers are also planning to enable RoadTagger to predict other features, such as parking spots and bike lanes.

“Most updated digital maps are from places that big companies care the most about. If you’re in places they don’t care about much, you’re at a disadvantage with respect to the quality of map,” says co-author Sam Madden, a professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) and a researcher in the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL). “Our goal is to automate the process of generating high-quality digital maps, so they can be available in any country.”

The paper’s co-authors are CSAIL graduate students Songtao He, Favyen Bastani, and Edward Park; EECS undergraduate student Satvat Jagwani; CSAIL professors Mohammad Alizadeh and Hari Balakrishnan; and QCRI researchers Sanjay Chawla, Sofiane Abbar, and Mohammad Amin Sadeghi.

Combining CNN and GNN

Quatar, where QCRI is based, is “not a priority for the large companies building digital maps,” Madden says. Yet, it’s constantly building new roads and improving old ones, especially in preparation for hosting the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

“While visiting Qatar, we’ve had experiences where our Uber driver can’t figure out how to get where he’s going, because the map is so off,” Madden says. “If navigation apps don’t have the right information, for things such as lane merging, this could be frustrating or worse.”

RoadTagger relies on a novel combination of a convolutional neural network (CNN) — commonly used for images-processing tasks — and a graph neural network (GNN). GNNs model relationships between connected nodes in a graph and have become popular for analyzing things like social networks and molecular dynamics. The model is “end-to-end,” meaning it’s fed only raw data and automatically produces output, without human intervention.

The CNN takes as input raw satellite images of target roads. The GNN breaks the road into roughly 20-meter segments, or “tiles.” Each tile is a separate graph node, connected by lines along the road. For each node, the CNN extracts road features and shares that information with its immediate neighbors. Road information propagates along the whole graph, with each node receiving some information about road attributes in every other node. If a certain tile is occluded in an image, RoadTagger uses information from all tiles along the road to predict what’s behind the occlusion.

This combined architecture represents a more human-like intuition, the researchers say. Say part of a four-lane road is occluded by trees, so certain tiles show only two lanes. Humans can easily surmise that a couple lanes are hidden behind the trees. Traditional machine-learning models — say, just a CNN — extract features only of individual tiles and most likely predict the occluded tile is a two-lane road.

“Humans can use information from adjacent tiles to guess the number of lanes in the occluded tiles, but networks can’t do that,” He says. “Our approach tries to mimic the natural behavior of humans, where we capture local information from the CNN and global information from the GNN to make better predictions.”

Learning weights   

To train and test RoadTagger, the researchers used a real-world map dataset, called OpenStreetMap, which lets users edit and curate digital maps around the globe. From that dataset, they collected confirmed road attributes from 688 square kilometers of maps of 20 U.S. cities — including Boston, Chicago, Washington, and Seattle. Then, they gathered the corresponding satellite images from a Google Maps dataset.

In training, RoadTagger learns weights — which assign varying degrees of importance to features and node connections — of the CNN and GNN. The CNN extracts features from pixel patterns of tiles and the GNN propagates the learned features along the graph. From randomly selected subgraphs of the road, the system learns to predict the road features at each tile. In doing so, it automatically learns which image features are useful and how to propagate those features along the graph. For instance, if a target tile has unclear lane markings, but its neighbor tile has four lanes with clear lane markings and shares the same road width, then the target tile is likely to also have four lanes. In this case, the model automatically learns that the road width is a useful image feature, so if two adjacent tiles share the same road width, they’re likely to have the same lane count.

Given a road not seen in training from OpenStreetMap, the model breaks the road into tiles and uses its learned weights to make predictions. Tasked with predicting a number of lanes in an occluded tile, the model notes that neighboring tiles have matching pixel patterns and, therefore, a high likelihood to share information. So, if those tiles have four lanes, the occluded tile must also have four.

In another result, RoadTagger accurately predicted lane numbers in a dataset of synthesized, highly challenging road disruptions. As one example, an overpass with two lanes covered a few tiles of a target road with four lanes. The model detected mismatched pixel patterns of the overpass, so it ignored the two lanes over the covered tiles, accurately predicting four lanes were underneath.

The researchers hope to use RoadTagger to help humans rapidly validate and approve continuous modifications to infrastructure in datasets such as OpenStreetMap, where many maps don’t contain lane counts or other details. A specific area of interest is Thailand, Bastani says, where roads are constantly changing, but there are few if any updates in the dataset.

“Roads that were once labeled as dirt roads have been paved over so are better to drive on, and some intersections have been completely built over. There are changes every year, but digital maps are out of date,” he says. “We want to constantly update such road attributes based on the most recent imagery.”



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Printing objects that can incorporate living organisms

A method for printing 3D objects that can control living organisms in predictable ways has been developed by an interdisciplinary team of researchers at MIT and elsewhere. The technique may lead to 3D printing of biomedical tools, such as customized braces, that incorporate living cells to produce therapeutic compunds such as painkillers or topical treatments, the researchers say.

The new development was led by MIT Media Lab Associate Professor Neri Oxman and graduate students Rachel Soo Hoo Smith, Christoph Bader, and Sunanda Sharma, along with six others at MIT and at Harvard University’s Wyss Institute and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. The system is described in a paper recently published in the journal Advanced Functional Materials.

“We call them hybrid living materials, or HLMs,” Smith says. For their initial proof-of-concept experiments, the team precisely incorporated various chemicals into the 3D printing process. These chemicals act as signals to activate certain responses in biologically engineered microbes, which are spray-coated onto the printed object. Once added, the microbes display specific colors or fluorescence in response to the chemical signals.

In their study, the team describes the appearance of these colored patterns in a variety of printed objects, which they say demonstrates the successful incorporation of the living cells into the surface of the 3D-printed material, and the cells’ activation in response to the selectively placed chemicals.

The objective is to make a robust design tool for producing objects and devices incorporating living biological elements, made in a way that is as predictable and scalable as other industrial manufacturing processes.

The team uses a multistep process to produce their hybrid living materials. First, they use a commercially available multimaterial inkjet-based 3D printer, and customized recipes for the combinations of resins and chemical signals used for printing. For example, they found that one type of resin, normally used just to produce a temporary support for overhanging parts of a printed structure and then dissolved away after printing, could produce useful results by being mixed in with the structural resin material. The parts of the structure that incorporate this support material become absorbent and are able to retain the chemical signals that control the behavior of the living organisms.

Finally, the living layer is added: a surface coating of hydrogel — a gelatinous material composed mostly of water but providing a stable and durable lattice structure — is infused with biologically engineered bacteria and spray-coated onto the object.

“We can define very specific shapes and distributions of the hybrid living materials and the biosynthesized products, whether they be colors or therapeutic agents, within the printed shapes,” Smith says. Some of these initial test shapes were made as silver-dollar-sized disks, and others in the form of colorful face masks, with the colors provided by the living bacteria within their structure. The colors take several hours to develop as the bacteria grow, and then remain stable once they are in place.

“There are exciting practical applications with this approach, since designers are now able to control and pattern the growth of living systems through a computational algorithm,” Oxman says. “Combining computational design, additive manufacturing, and synthetic biology, the HLM platform points toward the far-reaching impact these technologies may have across seemingly disparate fields, ‘enlivening’ design and the object space.”

The printing platform the team used allows the material properties of the printed object to be varied precisely and continuously between different parts of the structure, with some sections stiffer and others more flexible, and some more absorbent and others liquid-repellent. Such variations could be useful in the design of biomedical devices that can provide strength and support while also being soft and pliable to provide comfort in places where they are in contact with the body.

The team included specialists in biology, bioengineering, and computer science to come up with a system that yields predictable patterning of the biological behavior across the printed object, despite the effects of factors such as diffusion of chemicals through the material. Through computer modeling of these effects, the researchers produced software that they say offers levels of precision comparable to the computer-assisted design (CAD) systems used for traditional 3D printing systems.

The multiresin 3D printing platform can use anywhere from three to seven different resins with different properties, mixed in any proportions. In combination with synthetic biological engineering, this makes it possible to design objects with biological surfaces that can be programmed to respond in specific ways to particular stimuli such as light or temperature or chemical signals, in ways that are reproducible yet completely customizable, and that can be produced on demand, the researchers say.

“In the future, the pigments included in the masks can be replaced with useful chemical substances for human augmentation such as vitamins, antibodies or antimicrobial drugs,” Oxman says. “Imagine, for example, a wearable interface designed to guide ad-hoc antibiotic formation customized to fit the genetic makeup of its user. Or, consider smart packaging that can detect contamination, or environmentally responsive architectural skins that can respond and adapt — in real-time — to environmental cues.”

In their tests, the team used genetically modified E. coli bacteria, because these grow rapidly and are widely used and studied, but in principle other organisms could be used as well, the researchers say.

The team included Dominik Kolb, Tzu-Chieh Tang, Christopher Voigt, and Felix Moser at MIT; Ahmed Hosny at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute of Harvard Medical School; and James Weaver at the Wyss Medical Institute of Harvard. It was supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Gettylab, the DARPA Engineered Living Materials agreement, and a National Security Science and Engineering Faculty Fellowship.



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Audio explainer: Exploring the fields of bioprinting and biohybrid materials

The following audio excerpt and transcript features an explanation of bioprinting and biohybrid materials by MIT graduate student Rachel Smith of the Mediated Matter Group at the Media Lab. It corresponds with this MIT News article on those subjects.

[INTRO MUSIC] [INTRO]

HOST: 3-D printing is everywhere. From bike parts to fashion, to novelty key chains, to tools and light fixtures. We often see it employed to accelerate production processes and prototyping, but what about the biological potential of printing? You may have heard terms such as bioprinting, bioinks or biomaterials, but what exactly are they? We’ve asked Rachel Smith, a graduate student of the Mediated Matter Group at the MIT Media Lab to explain what bioprinting is and what biohybrid materials are, and to give us some idea of where these fields of study are going.

RACHEL SMITH: Bioprinting and biohybrid materials: though these terms overlap, it is a bit like comparing apples to oranges. Bioprinting is a type of material fabrication process, whereas biohybrid materials are one type of material resulting from fabrication processes like this. Both bioprinting and biohybrid materials involve the use of living cells.

First, lets think about living cells as fabrication materials: something that you could integrate, like other components, into human-made engineering processes and products.

Many cells can naturally replicate, differentiate, and self-organize, and over time, we have also engineered ways to guide their movement, their growth, and the products that they excrete and consume. Thus, you can think of living cells as sensing and computing machines that are extremely sensitive to their surroundings, but we can control and ‘code’ their responses. As a material, they have uniquely responsive and programmable properties.

Bioprinting is the process of printing with living cells. You can include living cells in the ink of a 2D printer, or in the build material for a 3D printer to create tissue-like structures. Currently, 3D-bioprinting can be used to print tissues and organs with the appropriate biological and mechanical properties as the real thing to help with a wide variety of medicinal research. In some cases, researchers print with porous materials that encourage cells to migrate inside and begin to ossify into bone. Another exciting example is 3D printing cardiac cells, which can begin to contract in sync to regenerate mechanical functions of the heart.

Biohybrid materials combine both living and non-living materials to acquire useful properties of both. Currently, the most prominent application for doing this is reconstructing tissues and organs from a combination of synthetic scaffolds and living cells. But, more recently, this idea has expanded to include constructs not found in nature and intended for uses beyond medicine, such as wearables and construction materials.

Already in the works, we have researchers developing biohybrid walls where concrete is blended with mineralizing bacteria for self-healing properties. We have biohybrid fibers spun with microbes, but knit or woven like traditional cloth. The living components in these fibers can produce pigments as dyes, filter heavy metals, or excrete drugs. I like to imagine them being used in fashion, wound dressings, or even environmental remediation. It’s an exciting field to be a part of.

[OUTRO MUSIC] [OUTRO]



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Eboni K. Williams talks State of the Culture and building her dream career

Eboni K. Williams has a reputation for bringing substance, style, and intelligence to whatever endeavor she tackles.  Whether it’s hosting on television or REVOLT’s “State of The Culture”, writing inspirational books, or giving back to her community, Williams puts her passion and truth into her work.

TheGrio spoke with the dynamic attorney and media personality about what it takes to find your authentic voice and stay motivated in an ever-complicated world.

“I don’t care if you’re an accountant, if you’re a teacher, if you’re a social worker, whatever your profession. This is not just for media types. Don’t let people tell you what to do with your talent or your gifts,” says Williams.

“You show them. Take that affirmative step. Take that proactive position to make sure that you are articulating for yourself where your gifts are and how wide the scope is. Because many of us are limitless in our talents and abilities, and we [can’t] allow other people to dictate and minimize what that looks like.

When it comes to standing on your convictions and speaking with courage, Williams offers this advice.

“I’m a woman of faith,” says Williams. “My steps are ordered. So, I appreciate the fact that it’s not going to be for everybody. I know that and I’m good with it. What I would invite people to do, just stay open to the process, stay open to your own process.”

Watch the full interview with Eboni K. Williams above, for more motivational gems and wisdom.

The post Eboni K. Williams talks State of the Culture and building her dream career appeared first on TheGrio.



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Eboni K. Williams talks State of the Culture and speaking your truth

Eboni K. Williams has a reputation for bringing substance, style, and intelligence to whatever endeavor she tackles.  Whether it’s hosting on television or REVOLT’s “State of The Culture”, writing inspirational books, or giving back to her community, Williams puts her passion and truth into her work.

TheGrio spoke with the dynamic attorney and media personality about what it takes to find your authentic voice and stay motivated in an ever-complicated world.

“I don’t care if you’re an accountant, if you’re a teacher, if you’re a social worker, whatever your profession. This is not just for media types. Don’t let people tell you what to do with your talent or your gifts,” says Williams.

“You show them. Take that affirmative step. Take that proactive position to make sure that you are articulating for yourself where your gifts are and how wide the scope is. Because many of us are limitless in our talents and abilities, and we [can’t] allow other people to dictate and minimize what that looks like.

When it comes to standing on your convictions and speaking with courage, Williams offers this advice.

“I’m a woman of faith,” says Williams. “My steps are ordered. So, I appreciate the fact that it’s not going to be for everybody. I know that and I’m good with it. What I would invite people to do, just stay open to the process, stay open to your own process.”

Watch the full interview with Eboni K. Williams above, for more motivational gems and wisdom.

The post Eboni K. Williams talks State of the Culture and speaking your truth appeared first on TheGrio.



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WATCH: Eboni K. Willams talks her inspiring journey, women’s empowerment and message for Black America

Eboni K. Williams has a reputation for bringing substance, style, and intelligence to whatever endeavor she tackles.  Whether it’s hosting on television, writing inspirational books, or giving back to her community, Williams puts her passion and truth into her work.

TheGrio spoke with the dynamic attorney and media personality about what it takes to find your authentic voice and stay motivated in an ever-complicated world.

“I don’t care if you’re an accountant, if you’re a teacher, if you’re a social worker, whatever your profession. This is not just for media types. Don’t let people tell you what to do with your talent or your gifts,” says Williams.

“You show them. Take that affirmative step. Take that proactive position to make sure that you are articulating for yourself where your gifts are and how wide the scope is. Because many of us are limitless in our talents and abilities, and we [can’t] allow other people to dictate and minimize what that looks like.

Watch the full interview with Eboni K. Williams above, for more motivational gems and wisdom.

The post WATCH: Eboni K. Willams talks her inspiring journey, women’s empowerment and message for Black America appeared first on TheGrio.



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Would the Coronavirus Quarantine of Wuhan Even Work?

It’s almost impossible to shut down a megacity. And even if you do, people (and their germs) would find a way out.

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Yo Gotti Speaks out Against the Inhumane Treatment in Mississippi Prisons

Activists, celebrities, and everyday folks have been speaking out on social media about the five inmates recently killed in prisons across the state of Mississippi. 

Rapper Yo Gotti is among the voices speaking out against the injustice. Yo Gotti is teaming up with Jay-Z to file a lawsuit against the Mississippi Department of Corrections Committee and has even written to the former Governor of Mississippi, Phil Bryant regarding the gravity of the situation. 

JAY-Z, ROC NATION FILE FEDERAL LAWSUIT AGAINST MISSISSIPPI PRISON OFFICIALS, ALLEGE VILE PRISON CONDITIONS

In an exclusive sit-down with theGrio, Yo Gotti discusses his position on the recent incidents in Mississippi and his plans to make an impact.

“These facilities are supposed to be for rehabilitation. Those people are supposed to come home, better, not die while they’re in jail. So, you know, I just think we have to do what we can do from the outside that can help the people, ” Yo Gotti tells theGrio.

The Tennessee native shares that one of the reasons he was inspired to speak out is the fact that Mississippi is close to home for him. “If you cross over one street in Memphis, you technically in Mississippi,” he tells TheGrio. Yo Gotti also details his initial reaction when he saw the graphic images and heard the tragic stories of the inmates in the prisons. The “Rake it Up” rapper states that jail is more complex than just a consequence of punishment, because there are people wrongfully in jail, awaiting trial, and people who can’t afford to make bond. 

“All of them are in the same facility, so how you distinguish who’s who? And even if you’re a criminal, you still don’t deserve to live like that,” he tells theGrio

Yo Gotti emphasizes that regardless if you are an artist or someone who clocks into a 9 to 5 everyday,  if something is important to you, touches you, or bothers you, then you should speak up and take action. 

“If I feel like it’s something to speak about or it’s an issue to me. I speak about it,” Yo Gotti tells theGrio

Yo Gotti’s message to inmates is that “we just hope that they can be as strong as they could be. And that we will try to help them from the outside as much as we can, you know, to just hold on.”

Check out the full interview above.

 

The post Yo Gotti Speaks out Against the Inhumane Treatment in Mississippi Prisons appeared first on TheGrio.



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Rohingya crisis: The Gambia who took Aung San Sui Kyi to the world court

Gambian Abubacarr Tambadou has forced the Nobel laureate to defend Myanmar against genocide charges.

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