Infidelity on the rise Down Under, confirms dating websites

Sydney, May 3 (ANI): Two new dating websites have confirmed that infidelity is on the rise in Australia, with more 293000 people signing up for their services.

More than 280,000 people, 36 percent of them women, have signed up to ashleymadison.com since it was launched three weeks ago, and about 13,000 people have visited gleeden.com in its first week.

They follow the basic structure of most dating sites, where members publish profiles outlining their interests, passions and sexual proclivities.

But instead of singles, the pay-to-join sites specifically cater for married people looking for secret dalliances or long-term affairs.

“It is not in anyone”s DNA to stay with the same person,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted ashleymadison.com founder Noel Biderman as saying.

“So this notion that [our site is] generating this kind of behaviour is wrong,” he said.

American TV host Dr Phil McGraw agrees. Last week, the clinical psychologist known as Dr Phil told female viewers how to tell if their man would cheat on them.

He said men with a ring finger longer than their index finger have higher testosterone levels and were more likely to cheat. He also said that men with a short gene, the vasopressin receptor gene, were predisposed to infidelity.

But University of Sydney professor of medicine and molecular genetics Ron Trent said proving that a “cheating gene” existed would be difficult.

“There may be some sort of connection but these are complex traits and a lot of these situations involve a combination of genes and environmental factors,” Dr Trent said.

“For one, we cannot prove infidelity runs in families,” he explained.

Running an adultery website has not made Biderman insecure about his marriage but it has made him more pragmatic.

“It has challenged the paradigm I grew up with, that you should just get married. But there is more diversity than that out there,” he said.

NSW Family First representative the Reverend Gordon Moyes said the popularity of such sites was disappointing, if not surprising.

“Infidelity solves nothing. It is not surprising that there are significant numbers of people who think they can get out of their rather boring malaise within their existing marriage by having an affair,” Moyes said.

“However, you only have to read the celebrity pages to realise that the other partner often responds badly,” he stated.

Biderman said the Australian site had higher levels of female participation than sites in the US and Britain.

“Women who use the service haven”t been paid attention to, these women who were once such objects of desire that someone married them,” he said.

University of Sydney behavioural scientist Dr Di Sansom said some people rediscovered the love they felt for their spouse after partaking in an affair.

“They find it is not as fulfilling as their marriage and so they end it,” he revealed.

Biderman said his website was allowing more than 5.8 million people internationally to test the waters.

“It is hard for people to shed that idea of monogamy. When they are tired of vanilla, they want to try different flavours,” he added. (ANI)

Men with long ring fingers drive faster, ignore traffic rules

London, Sep 10 (ANI): Does your man drives a little too fast and doesn’t care much about traffic rules? Well, then take a close look at his ring finger.

A new research has said that men with long ring fingers are more likely to drive too fast, overtake on dangerous roads and park illegally.
The study has indicated that bad driving may be programmed from birth because finger length is directly linked with exposure to the hormone testosterone in the womb.

Many previous studies have shown that a long wedding ring finger compared to the index finger in men can have a powerful effect on health and behaviour.

According to researchers, it is linked with increased male aggression and risk-taking.

However, it also means men are better at sports such as athletics and football, more successful in business and may even be more fertile than those with shorter ring fingers.

Scientists believe exposure to greater levels of testosterone in the womb affects the way the brain works later in life. It is believed that the hormone promotes more masculine behaviour.

But it also seems to activate growth of the wedding ring finger by stimulating testosterone receptors in bone.

In the current study, researchers at the University of Mainz, in Germany, recruited 77 male drivers at an average age of 38, who had their left hand scanned to measure the difference in length between the ring and index fingers.

Later, they had to provide details of all driving offences within the previous five years.

More than one third of the drivers reported having penalty points on their licences, ranging from one to 20, for offences ranging from speeding to drink driving.

The results showed that men with longer ring fingers were more likely to have offended.

“A longer ring finger than index finger was related to more traffic violations. Hormone exposure in the womb might increase traffic violations in later life,” the Telegraph quoted the researchers as saying in a report on their findings.

The study was published in the journal Accident Analysis and Prevention. (ANI)

Scientists develop robotic hand that ‘restores sense of touch’

London, Sept 10 (ANI): The first robotic hand to give amputees a sense of touch has been created by Swedish scientists.

When pressed against an object the 40 sensors in the Smarthand get activated. It also has four motors, which move the thumb and fingers.

They stimulate nerves in the arm to activate the appropriate part of the brain. This allows patients to feel objects they are holding, reports Sky News.

“It’s a feeling I have not had in a long time,” said Robin af Ekenstam, the first amputee to try the hand.

“When I grab something tightly I can feel it in the fingertips. It’s strange since I don’t have them any more! It’s amazing,” he added.

The motors are connected to nerves in the arm that once moved Robin’s real digits. Thanks to the “hand”, he’s able to pick up a plastic water bottle, without crushing it, and pour himself a drink.

Professor Goran Lundborg, a surgeon at Malmo University Hospital, said the artificial hand was a significant advance.

“If you find the right spot the correct areas of the brain cortex will be activated. If you put pressure on the index finger of the artificial hand then the index finger area of the brain will be activated,” he said.

The research is funded by the European Commission. (ANI)

Dogs understand gestures as well as 2-year-old kids

Washington, July 14 (ANI): Dogs understand human pointing gestures as well as two-year-old children, according to two studies.

Also, the studies found that due to domestication, dogs appear to be predisposed to read other human visual signals, including head turning and gazing, reports Discovery News.

People often use baby talk, scientifically known as “motherese,” with both children and their pet dogs, allowing canines and kids to receive similar social stimulation.

Since chimpanzees and other non-human primates often fail to understand human pointing gestures, the studies suggest dogs may understand humans better than even our closest living animal relatives do.n the first study, Gabriella Lakatos, a researcher in the Department of Ethology at Eotvos University, lead author of the first study, and her colleagues used a combination of finger-, elbow-, leg- and knee-pointing gestures to help dogs locate hidden food and, for children, a favourite toy.

The researchers found that two-year-olds and dogs understood everything except knee pointing and when the experimenter’s index finger pointed in a different direction than the protruding arm.

For example, they were confused when the individual raised an arm in a certain direction, but used her finger to point the other way.

In the second study, Marta Gacsi, also of Eotvos University, and her team analyzed 180 dogs of various ages to see how development and individual differences affect their understanding of human pointing.

They determined “the dogs showed no difference in the performance according to age, indicating that in dogs the comprehension of the human pointing may require only very limited and rapid early learning to fully develop.”

Lakatos, however, warned in thinking that dogs are just like furry two-year-old children.

“Any behavioral similarity or similar performance between dogs and children should be investigated separately in each case,” she said.

“Just to give an example for a reverse case: nobody has tried to herd a flock of sheep with two-year-old (human children),” she added.

The study has been published in the current issue of Animal Cognition. (ANI)

Malaysian kung fu master punctures coconut with index finger

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Kuala Lumpur, June 22 (ANI): A Malaysian Kung Fu expert has entered record books after puncturing four young unhusked coconuts with his index finger in 30.81 seconds.
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Ho Eng Hui, 55, got into the Malaysia Book of Records by piercing three young coconuts within one minute, but managed to add one more to strengthen his record-breaking feat./pp
This is not an illusion or black magic. I am able to do this after mastering the Chinese martial art technique of using the strength of my finger, from a martial arts master in Singapore, New Straits-Times Online quoted Hui as saying./pp
It is only done by a proper breathing technique and drinking a lot of warm water. Concentration and also focusing all my inner energy to my finger is necessary, he added. (ANI)/p

Sonia Gandhi casts vote

New Delhi, May 7 (ANI): Congress President Sonia Gandhi on Thursday cast her vote at the polling booth at Nirman Bhavan in New Delhi.

She was accompanied by Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit and her party’s candidate Ajay Maken.

Gandhi showed her index finger, which had the indelible ink, after casting her vote.

The Congress is expected to have an upper hand in the capital where seven seats are up for grabs. (ANI)

Christian Bale accidentally chopped off a finger and did not feel a thing!

London, May 4 (ANI): Actor Christian Bale has revealed that he once accidentally chopped off the top of one of his fingers and was far from feeling any pain.

The Batman star said he injured his left hand index finger during a dirt-biking accident and was surprised to realise it did not hurt.

“I had a dirt-biking accident and chopped it off at the end,” the Sun quoted him as saying.

“You have something as extreme as that – you’ve lost the end of your finger – but it didn’t hurt.

“I just kept looking at it going, ‘Why is that not hurting?’ The body’s amazing,” he added.

The 35-year-old continued: “It looks horrible. Everyone else almost faints looking at it.”

Meanwhile, the Brit, who is presently working on his upcoming sci-fi film Terminator Salvation, confessed he got his “English teeth” fixed.

But he added: “I kept a mould of my old ones because I did like them and I knew I’d miss them.” (ANI)

Dogs and babies follow similar human gestures

London, April 7 (IANS) Dogs and babies, sharing similar social environments, seem to follow human gestures in similar ways, finds a Hungarian study.

Gabriella Lakatos from Eotvos University in Budapest, Hungary, who conducted the study, showed that three-year-olds rely on the direction of the index finger to locate a hidden object.

But two-year-old babies and dogs respond instead to the protruding body part, even if the index finger is pointing in the opposite direction.

Lakatos and her team carried out two studies in which they compared the performance of adult dogs and two and three-year-old children – the period during which children and dogs respond in similar ways.

A total of 15 dogs and 13 two-year-old and 11 three-year-old children took part in the two studies. In the first study, researchers used a combination of finger and elbow pointing gestures to help dogs locate hidden food and children a favourite toy.

They found that dogs choose a direction for the reward on the basis of a body part that protrudes from the experimenter’s silhouette, even when the index finger is pointing in a different direction.

Like dogs, two-year-olds did not understand the significance of the pointing index finger when it did not protrude from the silhouette. (In these cases, the elbow protruded in the opposite direction.) However, three-year-olds responded successfully to all gestures.

In the second study, the researchers used unfamiliar pointing gestures with a combination of finger, leg and knee pointing, said an Eotvos release.

All children and the dogs understood the leg-pointing gestures but only three-year-olds successfully responded to pointing with the knee.

These findings were just published online in Springer’s journal Animal Cognition.

Rihanna gets ‘gun’ tattooed on her ribs

London, Mar 27 (ANI): Singer Rihanna, who was allegedly attacked by Chris Brown, has got a thought-provoking tattoo on her rib-a ‘gun’ tattoo.

The ‘Umbrella’ hitmaker especially called New York-based tattoo artist BangBang to L.A. to get the gun tattooed on her.

BangBang revealed that though Rihanna wanted to get the gun tattooed on her arm, she finally got it done on her ribs in a bid to save her contract with cosmetic giant Cover Girl.

BangBang also posted his recent photographs at Rihanna’s L.A. home on his MySpace page.

“I really wanted to put it here (on her arms)? She loved ‘em. But, Cover Girl wouldn’t have liked it much? and they pay the bills! Ended up doing it on her ribs,” the Daily Express quoted BangBang as stating on his blog.

BangBang has worked with Rihanna on many of her tattoos, including her famous stars design on her back, lettering on her shoulder and hip, and the ‘Shh…’ stamp on her right index finger.

Meanwhile, Brown has been charged with two felony counts, and released on a bail of 50,000 dollars until a hearing on April 6. (ANI)

Obama ‘thoughtful and loving but has chip on shoulder’, says palmist

London, Jan 16 (ANI): U.S. president-elect Barack Obama is thoughtful and loving but may have a chip on his shoulder, according to a palmist.
According to Lori Reid, a palmist, Obama’s hand comes in the category called The Water Hand, which is a common feature of thinkers, artists and writers.

She said that the phalanx of his little finger is large, which apparently suggests he may has the tendency to gain weight, as he gets older.

According to Reid, Obama’s index finger is deeply inset in his palm, whixh apparently suggests he has felt disadvantaged and has a ‘chip on his shoulder’.

“The middle section of his fingers are very long which shows he is a good manager – he has excellent psychology and listens to what people say, although he prefers to come to his own conclusions,” the Telegraph quoted Reid, as saying.

“The little finger is particularly long in comparison to the other fingers and this reveals his exceptional talents as an orator,” she added.

Reid said that his long thumb also suggests he is a good public speaker.

“It is stretchy and bendable, which reflects his flexible nature but when push comes to shove, this is a man who knows his own mind,” she said.

Reid said that Obama’s Mount of Venus, the part of the palm underneath the thumb, is particularly padded, which mean he is a very loving man. (ANI)