Soon, operate your cellphone without touching it

Washington, Mar 23 (ANI): You could soon operate your cellphone just at the point of a finger, without even having to touch the display—thanks to touchless control made of printable polymer sensors.

The sensors, just like human skin, react to the tiniest fluctuations in temperature and differences in pressure and recognize the finger as it approaches.

And the feat has been achieved, owing to the efforts of the research scientists involved in the EU project 3Plast, which stands for ‘Printable pyroelectrical and piezoelectrical large area sensor technology’.

The companies and institutes involved from industry and research have set themselves the goal of mass producing pressure and temperature sensors which can be cheaply printed onto plastic film and flexibly affixed to a wide range of everyday objects, such as electronic equipment.

“The sensor consists of pyroelectrical and piezoelectrical polymers which can now be processed in high volumes by screen printing, for example. The sensor is combined with an organic transistor, which strengthens the sensor signal. It”s strongest where the finger is. The special thing about our sensor is that the transistor can also be printed,” explained Gerhard Domann, who is in charge of the project.

The production of polymer sensors still poses a number of challenges.

To produce printable transistors, the insulation materials have to be very thin.

However, the experts at the ISC have succeeded in producing an insulator, which is only 100 nanometers thick.

The first sensors have already been printed onto film.

The research scientists are currently working on optimised transistors, which can amplify rapid changes in temperature and pressure.

“By providing everyday objects with information about their environment – for example whether a person is approaching – by means of pressure and temperature sensors, we can create and market new devices that can be controlled just by pointing a finger,” said Domann. (ANI)

Sparrows’ love tunes change with the landscape

Washington, May 21 (ANI): A new study from Duke University has found that changes in habitat have a significant impact on the way birds sing.

Lead researcher and biologist Elizabeth Derryberry found that male white-crowned sparrows have lowered their pitch and slowed down their singing so that their love songs would carry better through heavier foliage.

“This is the first time that anyone has shown that bird songs can shift with rapid changes in habitat,” she said.

During the study, Derryberry compared the recordings of individual birds in 15 different areas with some nearly forgotten recordings made at the same spots in the 1970s by a California Academy of Sciences researcher.

She found that the musical pitch and speed of the trill portion of the sparrows’ short songs had dropped considerably.

Further analysis showed that one population whose song hadn’t slowed down lived in an area where the foliage hadn’t changed either.

Derryberry believes that slower song suffers less reverberation in denser foliage and will be heard more accurately.

That means it is more likely to be copied by young males who are choosing which song they will learn.

Over generations, that should cause the song to slow down and drop in pitch as the foliage changes.

However it is still unclear whether the clearer song wins better territories or mates, although she does know that these changes in song do affect both male and female behaviour.

She had earlier discovered that female white-crowned sparrows preferred the slower new songs to the chirpy old ones.

“Given how much the world’s habitats are changing, this is sort of an unexpected but useful factor to monitor,” Derryberry said. (ANI)

Pandemic warning system depends on ‘human factors’

Washington, May 13 (ANI): Scientists have proposed a new approach to warn of an impending pandemic by detecting subtle signals in human behaviour.

“The goal is a public information and awareness system for pandemic with the same level of credibility, timeliness and visibility as storm-warning icons presented on television screens,” said Barrett Caldwell, a Purdue University associate professor of industrial engineering.

The system works by monitoring ‘event phases’ of human behaviour leading up to a pandemic, such as an increase in people purchasing flu-related medications or “foraging” on the Internet for certain types of information related to the flu.

“If you can recognize the triggers, the signals suggesting an event is likely to occur, you can start responding to it, gathering resources, preparing and mobilizing people. Our basic research idea could be used for any pandemic, or even other types of disasters,” said Sandra K. Garrett, an assistant professor of industrial engineering at Clemson University.

The study shows how pre-pandemic events are separated into four categories of “human factors,” or social behaviour: a period during which it is first possible to detect signals of an emerging pandemic; a time when it is possible to begin early efforts to prevent or mitigate spread; a time when it is critical to implement such measures; and a period when it is time to complete mitigation steps.

The method is an elaboration of “signal-detection theory,” conceived decades ago.

“Normally, when psychologists study signal detection, they are looking at very rapid changes, like whether a tone changes, whether a light changes colour or turns on and off,” Caldwell said.

The new approach proposes to make signal detection sensitive to more gradual events that are slower to develop.

“This is important because a pandemic is not a single point in time but a scenario that may take place in several waves over a period of months,” he said.

“One of the challenges is that the way influenza spreads, you don’t know that someone’s sick until several days later, and by then they have had the opportunity to infect other people. At that point you have to project backward to see where people have first been sick and where certain flu-related events have happened. You are reactive, rather than proactive,” he added.

The researchers envision a system that uses icons similar to those used to alert the public about an impending blizzard, hurricane or tornado.

The findings will be presented June 2 at the Industrial Engineering Research Conference in Miami. (ANI)

Infant weight gain can predict later obesity

Washington, Mar 30 (ANI): Rapid changes in weight during infancy increase children’s risk of later obesity, says a new study.

According to a new study led by researchers in the Department of Ambulatory Care and Prevention at Harvard Medical School and Harvard ilgrim Health Care, as well as Children’s Hospital Boston, rapid weight gain during the first six months of life may place a child at risk for obesity by age 3.

“There is increasing evidence that rapid changes in weight during infancy increase children’s risk of later obesity,” says lead author Elsie Taveras, assistant professor in the HMS Department of Ambulatory Care and Prevention and co-director of the One Step Ahead clinic, a pediatric overweight prevention program at Children’s Hospital Boston.

“The mounting evidence suggests that infancy may be a critical period during which to prevent childhood obesity and its related consequences,” the expert added.

The study has been published in the April edition of the journal Pediatrics.

To reach the conclusion, researchers examined how weight and body length, or weight-for-length, in infancy can influence later obesity.

The team mined self-reported data from Project Viva, an ongoing study led by Matthew Gillman, senior author on the paper, of more than 2,000 pregnant women and their children. They isolated a subgroup of 559 mother/child pairs and studied patterns of weight gain in infancy and their subsequent three-year effect.

In addition to looking at static weight and length measures, the team also looked at weight gain as a dynamic process, measuring not only how much but how quickly an infant gained weight.

The connection between rapid infant weight gain and later obesity was striking, even after adjusting for factors such as premature babies or those underweight at birth. (ANI)

Scientists disapprove American comet impact theory

London, Jan 28 (ANI): New data has led scientists to disapprove a theory that a large comet exploded over North America 12,900 years ago, causing a shock wave that traveled at hundreds of kilometers per hour and triggering continent-wide wildfires.

Dr Sandy Harrison from the University of Bristol and colleagues tested the theory by examining charcoal and pollen records to assess how fire regimes in North America changed between 15 and 10,000 years ago, a time of large and rapid climate changes.

Their results provide no evidence for continental-scale fires, but support the fact that the increase in large-scale wildfires in all regions of the world during the past decade is related to an increase in global warming.

According to Dr Harrison, fire is the most ubiquitous form of landscape disturbance and has important effects on climate through the global carbon cycle and changing atmospheric chemistry.

This has triggered an interest in knowing how fire has changed in the past, and particularly how fire regimes respond to periods of major warming.

“The end of the Younger Dryas, about 11,700 years ago, was an interval when the temperature of Greenland warmed by over 5 degrees Celsius in less than a few decades,” said Dr Harrison.

“We used 35 records of charcoal accumulation in lake sediments from sites across North America to see whether fire regimes across the continent showed any response to such rapid warming,” he added.

The team found clear changes in biomass burning and fire frequency whenever climate changed abruptly, and most particularly when temperatures increased at the end of the Younger Dryas cold phase.

Understanding whether rapid changes in climate have caused wild fires in the past will help understand whether current changes in global temperatures will cause more frequent fires at the present time.

Such fires have a major impact on the economy and health of the population, as well as feeding into the increase in global warming. (ANI)

‘Tan jabs’ could change appearance of moles

London, Jan 28 (ANI): ‘Tan jabs’, the unlicensed medicine used to produce a suntan, has been linked to rapid changes in the appearance of skin moles, a new study has claimed.

According to skin experts, Melanotan dubbed as ‘tan jabs’ are of two types Melanotan I and Melanotan II and they work by increasing the levels of melanin (the body’s natural pigment that protects us from the sun) resulting in a tan.

Citing the example of two patients attending their dermatology clinic with rapidly changing moles, the researchers revealed that both were sunbed users and injected Melanotan I and II, bought from the Internet, reports the British Medical Journal.

The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MRHA) had recently raised concerns about the health risks of these counterfeit drugs, say the authors.

These cases highlight a further area of concern – changes in the appearance of existing moles.

They authors warn that unregulated use of Melanotan may lead to an increase in the number of patients seeking medical advice about changing moles and may even confuse the diagnosis.

They suggest healthcare professionals look out for unexpected tanning as a clue to such use.(ANI)