Author Archives: Attention to the Unseen
How malnutrition affects the microbiome
The Scientist reports: The gut microbiomes of young children don’t fully recover from the trauma of early-life malnourishment, even after they are treated with more-complete diets, according to a study published in Nature. A team led by Jeffrey Gordon of the Washington University in St. Louis sampled the gut microbiomes of healthy and malnourished children in Bangladesh and found that the microbiomes of children who were underfed and whose diets lacked essential nutrients looked less like those of adults and more like those of younger, healthy children.
“This is actually a real step forward in terms of having a technique to look at development of the microbiome in children,” said Josef Neu, a pediatrician at the University of Florida who studies gastrointestinal health of neonates and was not involved in the work.
The findings present a possible explanation for the commonly observed complications that malnourished children suffer even after they are treated with a standardized food regimen, including stunted growth, cognitive delays, and immune system problems. The researchers suggested that the immature gut microbiomes of malnourished children may be partially responsible for some of these long-term impairments. [Continue reading…]
Music: Rahat Fateh Ali Khan — ‘O Re Piya’
Music: Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan — ‘Don’t Go Back to Sleep’
This comes from the album Vision 2: Spirit of Rumi by Graeme Revell.
Music: Gaudi & Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan — ‘Bethe Bethe Kese Kese’
Music: Bombay Dub Orchestra — ‘Blue Mosaic’
Music: Manu Katché — ‘Song for Her’
Music: Dizzi Dulcimer — ‘Dizzi Jig’
Music: Lila Downs — ‘La Llorona’
Music: Hang Massive — ‘Once Again’
Music: Manu Katche — ‘Number One’
Music: Marimba + 6
Music: Arany Zoltán — ‘Non é gran cousa se sabe’ (from the Cantigas de Santa Maria)
Music: Hesperion XX & Jordi Savall — ‘Paavin Of Albarti’ (Alberti)
Physicists report finding reliable way to teleport data
The New York Times reports: Scientists in the Netherlands have moved a step closer to overriding one of Albert Einstein’s most famous objections to the implications of quantum mechanics, which he described as “spooky action at a distance.”
In a paper published on Thursday in the journal Science, physicists at the Kavli Institute of Nanoscience at the Delft University of Technology reported that they were able to reliably teleport information between two quantum bits separated by three meters, or about 10 feet.
Quantum teleportation is not the “Star Trek”-style movement of people or things; rather, it involves transferring so-called quantum information — in this case what is known as the spin state of an electron — from one place to another without moving the physical matter to which the information is attached.
Classical bits, the basic units of information in computing, can have only one of two values — either 0 or 1. But quantum bits, or qubits, can simultaneously describe many values. They hold out both the possibility of a new generation of faster computing systems and the ability to create completely secure communication networks.
Moreover, the scientists are now closer to definitively proving Einstein wrong in his early disbelief in the notion of entanglement, in which particles separated by light-years can still appear to remain connected, with the state of one particle instantaneously affecting the state of another. [Continue reading…]
