Earliest stars in Universe may have been twins

Washington, July 10 (ANI): Astrophysicists, using extremely detailed computer simulations, have determined that the earliest stars in the universe formed not only as individuals, but sometimes also as twins.

The robust simulations of the early universe were created by astrophysicists Matthew Turk and Tom Abel of the Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology, and Brian O’Shea of Michigan State University.

“We used to think that these stars formed by themselves, but now we see from our computer simulations that sometimes they have siblings,” said Turk.

“These stars provide the seeds of next generation star formation, so by understanding them we can better understand how other stars and galaxies formed,” he added.

To make this discovery, the researchers created an extremely detailed computer simulation of early star formation.

Into this virtual universe, they sprinkled primordial gas and dark matter as it existed soon after the Big Bang, data they obtained from observations of the cosmic microwave background.

This mostly uniform radiation – a faint glow of radio waves spread across the entire sky – contains subtle variations that reflect the beginning of all structure in the universe.

The simulations focused on the first Population III stars: massive, hot stars thought to have formed a mere several hundred million years after the Big Bang.

As the researchers watched their simulated universe evolve, waves of gas and dark matter swirled through the hot, dense universe.

As the universe cooled, gravity began to draw the matter together into clumps. In areas rich with matter, stars began to form.

In one out of the researchers’ five simulations, a single cloud of dust and dark matter formed into “twin” stars: one with a mass equivalent to about 10 suns, and one with a mass equivalent to about 6.3 suns.

Both of them were still growing at the end of the calculation and will likely grow to many times that mass.

“We ran five of these calculations starting from the beginning of the universe, and to our surprise one of them was special,” said Abel.

“This opens a whole new realm of research possibilities. These stars could evolve into two black holes, which could have created gravitational waves we could detect with an instrument like the Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory,” he added.

“This will help us fine-tune our models for how structure in the universe formed and evolved. Understanding the very early stars helps us understand what we see today,” Turk said. (ANI)

The Universe is flat, but not entirely

London, May 19 (ANI): In a move that is reminiscent of scientists rejecting the view held by many people in the medieval times that the Earth is flat, a team of researchers has dismissed the notion that the Universe is completely flat.

According to a report in New Scientist, when it comes to the universe, “flatness” refers to the fate of light beams traveling large distances parallel to each other.

If the universe is “flat”, the beams will always remain parallel. Matter, energy and dark energy all produce curvature in space-time, however.

If the universe’s space-time is positively curved, like the surface of a sphere, parallel beams would come together. In a negatively curved, saddle-shaped universe, parallel beams would diverge.

Thanks in part to the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) satellite, which revealed the density of matter and dark energy in the early universe, most astronomers are confident that the universe is flat.

But, that view is now being questioned by Joseph Silk at the University of Oxford and colleagues, who say it’s possible that the WMAP observations have been misinterpreted.

In a research paper accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, they took data from WMAP and other cosmology experiments and analyzed it using Bayes’s theorem, which can be used to show how the certainty attached to a particular conclusion is affected by different starting assumptions.

Using modern astronomers’ assumptions, which presuppose a flat universe, they calculated the probability that the universe was in one of three states: flat, positively curved or negatively curved.

This produced a 98 per cent probability that the universe is indeed flat.

When they reran the calculation starting from a more open-minded position, however, the probability changed to 67 per cent, making a flat universe far less of a certainty than astronomers generally conclude.

“It’s a reasonable assumption that the universe isn’t entirely flat,” Silk said, adding that the calculation reveals how strongly astronomers’ prejudices can affect their conclusions.

“They’ve developed a statistically rigorous way of examining the question,” said David Spergel of Princeton University, the spokesman for WMAP.

According to Silk, astronomers need to achieve a 99.9999 per cent level of confidence on the flat universe, high enough that the case starts to look compelling no matter what the starting assumptions are.

It’s possible, however, that no measurements will ever be able to get to that level of accuracy. (ANI)

Feng Shui gaining popularity in Chandigarh

Chandigarh, May 7 (ANI): Feng Shui, literally meaning wind-water, is a s an ancient Chinese system of aesthetics believed to utilize the laws of both Heaven (astronomy) and Earth (geography) to help one improve life by receiving positive energy.

It also described as popular Chinese art of placement. Widely used for interior decoration, it is gaining popularity in the corporate sector here since business fraternity is facing the heat of global financial downturn.

Chandigarh-based Ginni Singh is one of them who wants end to the run of bad luck in her business. She has been consulting a Feng Shui Master so that the Chinese `science of direction’ can be used to overcome the crisis.

Feng Shui techniques are now popular in Punjab as many believe that they can help alleviate financial strain created by the global meltdown.

“There is little bit instability in our business. To stabilize it I need some help from Feng Shui, an expert can tell me and guide me. Also, my daughter has been facing lack on concentration in studies. I want to seek some help for her also,” said Ginni Singh, Feng Shui enthusiast.

Enthusiasts today can be noticed thronging to Feng Shui shops to buy Laughing Buddha, Feng Shui Candles, crystals, Feng Shui Mirrors and much more.

Available in the price range of one to 120 dollars, depending on the product and its size, Feng Shui sale has almost doubled in the last three years.

Feng Shui decoration is a combination of art, science and proper placement of furniture and accessories.

As decorating and Feng Shui principles work well together, the products are in great demand by Indian companies.

“I have certain bankers who have a list of sick units with them. And somehow they are my clients. They don’t want sick units to exist in this area. So what happens is that they suggest to those people to come and meet me and get consultation from me. And, when I give them the calculation, sick units turn into healthy units in a week or two. They see the results,” said M.S.Walia, Consultant, Feng Shui.

Feng Shui products are popularly believed to enhance weak sectors in any place such as residential, commercial, office or institutional areas.

It’s a long-established Chinese tradition that things are placed in a special manner in a house or any other place, so that human beings are able to live harmoniously with their environment.

It is believed that this practice brings peace, prosperity and happiness in one’s life. By Sunil Sharma (ANI)

Swine flu’s first genetic analysis reveals potency

London, May 2 (ANI): While swine flu virus H1N1 continues to spread around the world, the first genetic analysis of the efficacy of its transmission from person to person revealed that it spreads barely well enough to keep itself going.

The analysis also suggested that the virus might have started circulating as long ago as January.

However, because of the scarcity of cases to analyse, the calculation is still uncertain, as many believe that the circulation could have started more recently, or as far back as September.

Nicholas Grassly of Imperial College London and Andrew Rambaut of the University of Edinburgh, UK, have analysed the rate of spread.

Their analysis is based on the small mutations that have accumulated in almost two-dozen genetic sequences produced so far, from viruses collected from patients in Mexico and the US.

Unlike H5N1 bird flu, all the genetic sequences of this H1N1 are being posted on bulletin boards like GISAID, so that scientists can access them and compare preliminary analyses.

Scientists who protested that H5N1 sequences were not being made freely available set up the GISAID system in 2006.

“The limited sampling so far gives rise to considerable uncertainty in the estimate,” New Scientist quoted Rambaut as saying.

However, if the rate at which genes mutate is similar for this virus as for other H1N1 viruses, the number of mutations that have accumulated so far have indicated that it has been circulating since January – or even September 2008.

If the new virus spreads from one infected person to the next at about the same speed as ordinary flu, it could give an idea of how many cases there may have been in that time.

A mathematical model permits the calculation of an important variable called R0 – the number of additional people infected, on average, by each case.

If R0 is less than one, an infection dies out.

Also, Grassly cautioned that the estimate is very preliminary.

However, with newly available data, he gets an R0 of 1.16 – enough for the virus to keep going, but only just.

This comes as good news, as epidemiological theory suggests that the lower the R0, the easier it may be to snuff the virus out by further hindering its spread.

And now the onus lies on how quickly the new H1N1 virus from swine adapts to people. (ANI)

Diabetes, obesity, hypertension up mortality in hepatitis C patients

Washington, Apr 23 (ANI): Type 2 diabetes, obesity and hypertension are associated with overall and liver related mortality in hepatitis C (HCV) infected patients, a new research has claimed.

The specific impact of metabolic syndrome on mortality in hepatitis C patients has been revealed by new research to be presented on Sunday April 26 at EASL 2009, the Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver in Copenhagen, Denmark.

In HCV-infected patients, the top three predictors of liver related mortality were having higher body mass index (BMI), presence of insulin resistance (IR) and elevated serum cholesterol. Overall mortality in HCV patients was most linked to metabolic syndrome, higher BMI and hypertension.

Metabolic syndrome is a combination of medical problems that increase risks of cardiovascular disease and diabetes.

Recent data have suggested that metabolic syndrome is associated with adverse outcomes in HCV patients. This study set out to assess which aspects of metabolic syndrome are of most risk to such HCV patients and to quantify their specific impact on mortality.

Professor Zobair Younossi MD, MPH from the Center for Liver Diseases at Inova Fairfax Hospital and the Executive Director of Betty and Guy Beatty’s Center for Integrated Research, Virginia, USA, who led the study, said: “Exploring the risk factors associated with adverse outcomes in HCV patients helps us to better understand the complex nature of this highly prevalent disease.

“This study shows a clear association between key components of metabolic syndrome and mortality in HCV patients and demonstrates the importance of lifestyle improvements and coaching in the management of HCV patients, to potentially minimise the onset and impact of metabolic syndrome and its associated mortality risks.”

Researchers in this study utilised the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III) and Linked Mortality Files. HCV was defined as positive HCV RNA by PCR assay. Subjects without other causes of chronic liver disease such as presumed NAFLD with elevated serum aminotransferases, excessive alcohol use, elevated transferrin saturation and positive hepatitis Bs antigen were designated controls without liver disease. HCV patients were compared to HCV-negative individuals and controls without liver disease using Rao-Scott chi-square statistics.

Adjusted hazard ratios for overall mortality and cause-specific mortality were calculated for HCV patients using persons without HCV. The Cox proportional hazard model was used for calculation of AHR for independent risk factors, and for the presence of HCV as a potential risk factor for overall mortality and cause-specific mortalities.

The cohort included 15,866 individuals with complete data. (ANI)

TABLE-China Eastern Air 2008 net turns to loss

April 16 (Reuters) – Year ended December 31, 2008

(in million yuan unless stated)

Shr (yuan) 3.14 loss vs 0.08 gain

Net 15,268.53 loss vs 378.57 profit

Revenues 41,072.56 vs 42,533.89

Company name China Eastern Airlines Corp. Ltd.

NOTE – China Eastern Airlines (0670.HK) (CEA.N) (600115.SS)
is a Shanghai-based airline operator.

The calculation of loss per share is based on the weighted
average of 4,866.95 million shares in issue during the period.

The figures are prepared in accordance with International
Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS).
(Reporting by Jimmy Tsim; Editing by Ken Wills)

TABLE-Foreign investors bought Japan stocks last week

TOKYO, April 16 (Reuters) – Foreign investors bought a net
114.5 billion yen ($1.2 billion) of Japanese stocks last week,
capital flows data released by Japan’s Ministry of Finance showed
on Thursday.

Details of net investments were as follows (in billion yen).
FOREIGN INVESTMENT IN JAPAN: (net)

stocks bonds bills
April 5-11 114.5 -169.3 -1058.7
Mar 29-Apr 4 44.7 88.5r 864.7
JAPANESE INVESTMENT ABROAD: (a minus sign indicates net selling
and inflow of funds into Japan)

stocks bonds bills
April 5-11 7.9 818.3 -1.4
Mar 29-Apr 4 74.7 -2113.6r -25.9

Note:

– “r” notes revised figure

– As of January 2005, the ministry changed its calculation
methods for weekly capital flows to match its Balance of Payments
figures and previous data are not directly comparable.

– Bonds include beneficiary certificates.

– Figures are based on contracts and are rounded.
(Reporting by Rika Otsuka)

TABLE-Angang Steel 2008 net down 60 pct

April 15 (Reuters) – Year ended December 31, 2008

(in million yuan unless stated)

Shr (yuan) 0.414 vs 1.121

Final Div (yuan) 0.21 vs 0.55

Net 2,993 vs 7,534

Turnover 78,985 vs 65,294

Company name Angang Steel Co. Ltd.

Books close May 14 – June 12

NOTE – Angang Steel (0347.HK) (000898.SZ) is principally
engaged in the manufacture and distribution of steel and related
products.

The calculation of share earnings is based on the weighted
average of 7,235 million shares in issue during the period vs
6,721 million shares the same period a year ago.

The total dividend for year is 0.21 yuan vs 0.55 yuan.

The figures are prepared in accordance with International
Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS).
(Reporting by Jimmy Tsim; Editing by Ken Wills)

TABLE-China Southern 2008 net turns to loss

April 15 (Reuters) – Year ended December 31, 2008

(in million yuan unless stated)

Shr (yuan) 0.74 loss vs 0.28 gain

Net 4,823 loss vs 1,839 profit

Total operating revenue 55,288 vs 54,401

Company name China Southern Airlines Co. Ltd.

NOTE – China Southern Airlines (1055.HK) (600029.SS) (ZNH.N)
is the country’s largest carrier by fleet size.

The calculation of share earnings is based on the weighted
average of 6,561 million shares in issue during the two years.

The figures are prepared in accordance with International
Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS).

(Reporting by Jimmy Tsim; Editing by Ken Wills)

Many autistic people do have savant-like skills

London, Apr 15 (ANI): A new study has shown that one-third of adults with autism have savant-like skills – such as astounding memory, perfect pitch or the ability to multiply very high numbers together.

The study of about 100 autistic patients revealed that a larger number of people have skills that stand out, both in comparison with their other abilities and with the skills of the general population.

“People often focus on the things people with autism can’t do. One of the things our study illustrates is that these are people who do have special skills but they are not being used,” New Scientist magazine quoted Patricia Howlin of the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College in London, an study leader, as saying.

The notion of the savant has long been fascinating cognitive scientists and the general public, but a connection between autism and savantism was not established until now.

Thus, the researchers looked at two different measures of exceptional ability in a group of people with autism – all now adults – who the team have been studying periodically since they were first diagnosed between 1950 and 1985.

They found that 39 met criteria for either what they call a “savant skill” or an “exceptional cognitive skill”.

To identify savant skills, the researchers quizzed the parents of the autistic adults asking them to identify and describe, using specific examples, any outstanding skills and talents that were present “at a level that would be unusual even for normal people”.

Out of almost 100 parents who replied, about half (45) claimed that their child had a special skill.

However, only 24 met the study’s tough criteria for what constitutes a savant skill – both exceptional in terms of population norms and above the individual’s overall level of ability.

Some of the savant-like skills considered were: being able to name the elevation of both the sun and the moon at any time of day, on any specified date; being able to name the day of the week for any date in the distant past or future (a fairly common savant ability known as calendrical calculation); perfect pitch; and the ability to say, from a single chord, which piece of music it came from.

To identify exceptional cognitive ability, the researchers also examined the volunteers’ scores on standard intelligence tests consisting of a range of subtests aimed at different aspects of IQ, such as arithmetic, spatial and motor skills and memory span.

And it was found that 23 had an ability on at least one of these subtests that was well above the general population’s average score on that subtest.

According to the first criteria, eight out of 23 had also been identified as a mathematical or calendrical savant.

The researchers concluded that overall 28.5 percent – or almost one third – of their volunteers had either a savant skill or an exceptional cognitive ability.

They said that the study opened a window into the mind of a child with autism.

They also recommended using such isolated, exceptional abilities as a way to motivate people with autism to learn other skills – such as social or communication ones – that might not come as easily. (ANI)

Genes ‘time virginity loss’

London, Apr 1 (ANI): There’s a genetic link to the age at which a person loses his or her virginity, says a new study.

And the correlation can be explained by inherited behavioural traits such as impulsivity could help determine when people first have sex.

“It’s not like there’s a gene for having a sex at a certain date,” New Scientist quoted says Nancy Segal, a psychologist at California State University in Fullerton who led the new study.

The unique study of twins separated at birth has been published in the journal Personality and Individual Differences.

In the study, researchers found that genes explain a third of the differences in participants’ age at first intercourse – which was, on average, a little over 19 years old. By comparison, roughly 80 percent of variations in height across a population can be explained by genes alone.

However, determining the extent to which sexual precociousness is inherited is trickier than making a similar calculation for height. A common family environment – whether it promotes or hinders early sex – could cause scientists to overestimate the effect of genes.

By studying 48 pairs of twins raised apart, as well as 23 individual twins, Segal’s team sidesteps this confounding factor.
This gives us a pure estimate about how much genes affect behaviour,” she says.

On the other hand, conservative social mores might delay a teen’s first sexual experience, causing scientists to low-ball the effect of genes.

Indeed, the research team noticed a less pronounced genetic effect among twins born before 1948, compared with those who came of age in the 1960s or later.

Other factors may also make the effects of genes harder to discern. For example, scientists found that female volunteers who felt unhappy in their home life were more likely to have sex at a younger age. (ANI)

Laser imaging investigates how fat or thin dinos were

Washington, Feb 21 (ANI): Scientists at the University of Manchester, UK, are using laser imaging to investigate how fat or thin Tyrannosaurus Rex and his fellow dinosaurs were.

Karl Bates and his colleagues in the palaeontology and biomechanics research group have reconstructed the bodies of five dinosaurs, two T. rex (Stan at the Manchester Museum and the Museum of the Rockies cast MOR555), an Acrocanthosaurus atokensis, a Strutiomimum sedens and an Edmontosaurus annectens.

The team found that the smaller Museum of the Rockies T. rex could have weighed anywhere between 5.5 and 7 tonnes, while the larger specimen might have weighed as much as 8 tonnes.

Acrocanthosaurus atokensis was a large predatory dinosaur that looked like T. rex, but with large spines on its back and roamed the earth much earlier in the mid Cretaceous period, around 110 million years ago.

The team suggests that Acrocanthosaurus probably weighed in at a similar mass to MOR555 and other medium sized adult T. rex at about 6 tonnes.

The Strutiomimum sedens, whose name means “ostrich mimic”, lived alongside T. rex in the late Cretaceous period and probably weighed somewhere between 0.4 – 0.6 tonnes

The reconstruction of Edmontosaurus annectens, a plant-eating hadrosaur was based on a juvenile specimen, but still weighed in at between 0.8 – 0.95 tonnes.

The team used laser scanning (LiDAR) and computer modelling methods to create a range of 3D models of the specimens, attempting to reconstruct their body sizes and shape as in life.

This has allowed calculation of body segment masses, centres of mass and moments of inertia for each animal – all the information that is needed to analyze body movements.

Having created their ‘best-guess’ reconstruction of each animal, they then varied the volumes of body segments and respiratory organs to find the maximum plausible range of mass for the animals.

According to the team, the lower weight estimates are most likely to be correct as there is no good reason for the dinosaurs to weigh more than they need to as this would affect their speed, energy use and demands on the respiratory system.

“Our technique allows people to see and decide for themselves how fat or thin the dinosaurs might have been in life. You can see the skeleton with a belly,” Karl said.
Anyone from a five-year-old to a Professor can see it and say, ‘I think this reconstruction is too fat or too thin’,” he added. (ANI)

UK Defence Ministry wastes over 300 million of taxpayers’ money through errors

London, Jan.27 (ANI): Over 300 million pounds of the British taxpayers’ money has been lost by the Ministry of Defence due to poor book-keeping and payroll and contract errors, reports The Telegraph.
The money includes more than £8 million given “in error” to hundreds of soldiers after an accounting mistake in a scheme to award long-serving troops.

The cash paid to the infantry has been “written off” at a time when the defence budget is under severe pressure with a shortfall approaching two billion pounds.

Opposition MPs have condemned the losses as a “scandalous waste of money”.

Under the heading Losses and Special Payment” in the thick volume of MoD accounts for the financial year ending in 2008 a series of book-keeping bungles, contract wrangles and payroll errors have emerged.

At a time when money is needed to fund front-line equipment and poor accommodation, the MoD wasted 26 million pounds after it decided to “scale back” a contract for a biological warfare detection system.

The Government’s decision to commit to the Oslo Declaration on banning cluster bombs meant that 112 million pounds was lost on equipment and contracts.

Another accounting error was spotted when a pension calculation mistake meant that 1.4 million pounds was paid in error to military pensioners in War Pension benefits.

Almost nine million pounds was written off when the MoD decided to cancel a sophisticated aviation computer system which had been beset with technical problems.

Another 500,000 pounds was paid in repairs to four Rolls-Royce Sea King engines which were damaged when shipped to the engineers the wrong way up.

A MoD spokesperson said: “Like all government departments, Parliament requires the MOD to declare losses and special payments in the Annual Report and Accounts. (ANI)

Nations that sow food crops for biofuels may reap less than previously thought

Washington, Jan 15 (ANI): In a new study, it has been found that global yields of most biofuels crops have been overestimated by 100 to 150 percent or more, which indicates nations that sow food crops for biofuels may reap less than previously thought.

The study, led by Matt Johnston and Tracey Holloway of the University of Wisconsin-Madison Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies and Jon Foley of University of Minnesota, suggests that many countries need to reset their expectations of agricultural biofuels to a more realistic level.

The study drew on actual agricultural data from nearly 240 countries to calculate the potential yields of 20 different biofuels worldwide.

The analysis indicates that the biofuels production potential in both developing and developed countries has often been exaggerated.

That’s because current yield estimates, most of which are based on data from the United States and Europe, don’t account for local differences in climate, soils, technology and other factors that influence agricultural outputs.

By offering an analysis of detailed, regional yield data that do encompass this variability, the scientists hope to empower wiser choices by countries about whether to invest in ethanol or biodiesel, which crops to plant, and how best to use existing farmlands.

According to the researchers, although agricultural biofuels have been sharply criticized for their impacts on the environment and food supply, the reality is that they’re here to stay.

That makes the availability of sound information critical.

“What we’ve tried to do is move beyond the back-of-the-envelope calculation. The time for that is over. We need to look at better data sources and make more informed decisions,” said Johnston.

Johnston turned to a global agricultural database, developed at SAGE, which provides actual yields of 175 crops, circa the year 2000, at a resolution of roughly five miles by five miles across the entire globe.

After tapping it for yields of 10 biodiesel crops, such as soybean, rapeseed and oil palm, and 10 ethanol feedstocks, including corn, rice and wheat, Johnston calculated and mapped the amount of biofuel that could be produced per hectare in every possible country by crop combination – some 3,000 in all.

To evaluate his numbers against published yield table values, he then computed a global average yield for each of the 20 fuels, as well as the average yields of each in both developed and developing nations as a whole.

What he found were large gaps between the yield table numbers and his own, especially for developing countries. (ANI)

Games like Wii Fit may promote physical activities among people of all ages

Washington, January 7 (ANI): A Kansas State University researcher says that games like Nintendo”s Wii Fit — which incorporate yoga, strength training, balance and aerobics — may be utilised as a promising tool to promote physical activities for people of all ages.

The suggestion given by David Dzewaltowski, professor and head of the department of kinesiology at K-State and director of the university”s Community Health Institute, contrasts the belief that emerging technologies can create environments that require very little physical effort, and thus promote sedentary activities among people.

“I think there is a great potential to develop ways to promote physical activity through technology. Kids innately like to move, so I believe that there is a big future in games that use emerging technologies and require movement because the games will be enjoyed by children and also be more healthy than existing games,” said Dzewaltowski.

In a commentary published in the journal Exercise and Sport Sciences Reviews, Dzewaltowski highlights the fact that Wii Fit has interactive games that require the player to physically move, which is better than nothing.

He says that the game uses a balance board and allows gamers to simulate challenges, such as snowboarding down a mountain.

“Anything that gets people to move more than they have in the past is positive, but if people are trying to replace physical activity that demands more movement with the Wii, then that will be negative,” Dzewaltowski said.

He admitted that it was difficult in a small indoor space to replicate the intensity of some real-life physical activities, but pointed out that dance video games were effective at demanding physical movements that require caloric expenditure.

“The caloric expenditure demanded by an activity depends on the energy necessary to move the body”s weight to complete the task and how long you perform the task,” Dzewaltowski said.

The researcher further said that one would spend different amounts of calorie while performing different activities—playing a game of soccer demands much more energy expenditure than bowling or playing the outfield in baseball.

Dzewaltowski is of the opinion that Wii Fit may serve as an effective tool to create or maintain a healthy lifestyle for some people because it follows the basic principles for adhering to an exercise program—such as having physical activity goals, tracking those goals and evaluating the progress.

He also calls Wii Fit a good screening tool for adults because it measures players” body mass index (BMI), a weight evaluation based on height and weight.

Given that a player could categorize himself as being overweight or obese, Dzewaltowski said that he should seek more information from a health professional who could better evaluate the level of body fat.

However, the calculation would not be suitable for kids, said the researchers.

“For children, the BMI calculation has to be expressed based on age and gender growth charts, and it doesn”t do that. Due to children”s age and gender differences in growth, the adult BMI calculators don”t work. My use of the Wii BMI calculator showed that it was inappropriate for children and would categorize children incorrectly,” Dzewaltowski said.

Although the game also gives players fitness age measurements, Dzewaltowski does not consider it to be credible.

He said that it was more important to focus on behaviours like physical activity and fruit and vegetable consumption than on the game”s BMI and fitness age measurements.

Dzewaltowski thinks that gamers can solely rely on Wii Fit for exercise if they are meeting the guidelines for physical activity set by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

He said that future technologies should continue to promote physical activity if they made exercise enjoyable, especially for adults.

“I also believe that adults enjoy movement if they are at a fitness level where they can perform the activity comfortably. The problem is most adults have very poor fitness levels. So, I believe there is a future in developing games that include movement and demand caloric expenditure at the level of the participant,” Dzewaltowski said. (ANI)

Cabinet approves FDI limit increase from 26% to 49%

Cabinet approves FDI limit increase from 26% to 49%After a long debate that spanned for years, the government has finally given its approval for the introduction of the Insurance (Amendment) Bill, 2008. At the same time, however, the government has also conceded that the bill may not be passed by the present Lok Sabha owing to lack of time.

The Finance Minister, P. Chidambaram, told news reporters on Friday that the decision of the approval of the bill was taken on the basis of the recommendation of a Group of Ministers (GoM) constituted to study the issue.

The bill proposes to increase the upper cap of foreign direct investment (FDI) from the current 26 per cent to 49 per cent. Chidambaram said that the bill “is being tabled. This is one short bill that raises equity from Rs 5 crore to Rs 100 crore.”

The insurance industry has welcomed the move by the Union Cabinet. Increasing FDI would facilitate the insurance sector to further expand, launch innovative distribution channels, upgrade technology, enhance the current product portfolio and bring in global best practices.

Expressing his opinion, T. R. Ramachandran, Designate – MD & CEO, Aviva India, said in a statement: “We are delighted that the increase in FDI to 49 per cent has been approved by the Cabinet and we look forward to the Bill being approved soon. Calculation shows that raising the FDI limit may increase the total FDI in the life insurance industry by almost 2.5 times from the current levels of approximately Rs 2,500 crore.”