Sunday, July 24, 2016
More sleep may not be making you as productive as you think
- A man takes a nap on his couch alongside his dog.
It has long been thought that the amount of time spent in different stages of sleep was responsible for how well people were able to remember things.
But a new study done by researchers at the University of California and University of Padua shows that we may have been missing something.
The autonomic nervous system (ANS) appears to be a key player in the brain's ability to perform memory consolidation during sleep.
ANS is made of three parts. The sympathetic system is responsible for the body's "fight or flight" reaction, the parasympathetic system controls the body during rest with functions like heart rate and temperature, and the enteric system controls how your gut works.
Shuleydee Visits #Special Children & orphanage homes around Lagos to kick start her Promo for her new single #AYAMA @realshuleydee

popular artiste #SHULEYDEE has taken great strides in her noble campaign to redefine the industry by being different, her commitment to humanity and love for the less privilege is immeasurable, her new single #AYAMA is buzzing and highly anticipated ,on Saturday 24th July 2016 took time from her busy schedule to spend the weekend with children with special need , it was a great moment of sober reflection of hope (in her words from facebook post)
Be thankful for ur life today.. some of this people can't even do anything, some can't eat some can't sleep, some can't ask God for anything... Go out today and help who u can because it's the right thing to do...#Shuleydee#FR..
Saturday, July 23, 2016
Manchester United plane forced to make unscheduled landing on the way to Beijing for City clash
The aeroplane carrying Manchester United's staff and players from Shanghai to Beijing was forced to make an unscheduled landing due to bad weather.
Jose Mourinho and his men are travelling to Beijing for Monday's International Champions Cup match against rivals Manchester City.
But their preparations for the game aren't going to plan, as winger Memphis Depay revealed on Facebook.
He shared a video with his fans on the social media website, explaining how he and his teammates were forced to touch down earlier than planned.
"We are lost somewhere, we had to make a quick landing somewhere," Depay says in the video.
Birmingham Bullring: Shocking picture shows badly injured man moments after falling from top floor balcony
This picture shows horrifying scene moments after he reportedly fell from a top floor of Birmingham's Bullring shopping centre.
He can be seen receiving attention from staff at the shopping centre as he lays curled on the ground.
Shocked shoppers took to social media saying the man plummeted from the third floor of the building onto the walkway below.
Pictures show crowds of people looking down over railings at the floor where the man is believed to have fallen.
At least one floor of the building was shut following the incident and a police incident tent erected over the site the man fell. He was taken to hospital for treatment.
Initial reports indicated the entire shopping centre had been evacuated but that is yet to be confirmed.
Scientists have developed a tiny robot prototype to that could help fight disease in the future
- The robots are modeled after African trypanosomes, bacteria that can hide their flagellum.
Blood clots, cancer, and damaged brain cells - these are the last words anyone wants to hear at the doctor's office. They're also the stuff that scientists are hoping to be able to fight one daywith nanotechnology.
A newstudy released todayin the journal Nature Communications details just how scientists are hoping to transform modern medicine with very tiny robots.
Selman Sakar fromEPFLand Hen-Wei Huang fromETHZ have worked together to create prototypes of nanosized robots that could actually enter human bodies. While they haven't yet tested these little robots in people, they hope to do so soon. Perhaps, in the not too distant future, the nanosized robots might do things that are too microscopic for doctors to currently perform and are too sensitive for common drug therapies to handle.
FIRST PICTURE - Munich maniac was 'mentally ill loner obsessed with shooting sprees': Iranian-German killer, 18, had 300 rounds of ammunition in rucksack as he went on murderous rampage which ended with nine dead before he killed himself
Police have said today that the 18-year-old loner who gunned down nine people during a rampage through Munich last night was deranged and obsessed with guns, but had no links to ISIS. They said Ali David Sonboly (centre) had no known links to Islamic State. Police who searched his room (bottom right) found newspaper clippings on attacks including an article entitled 'Why do students kill?' His father works as a taxi driver and his mother works in German department store Karstadt. Police are investigating a fake Facebook advert which offered free food at the McDonald's (top left), where he killed the first of his nine victims with a 9mm Glock pistol. Terrified shoppers were seen running for their lives from the Munich Olympia Shopping Centre after hearing gunshots (bottom left). Witnesses said that the gunman screamed 'I'm German' and 'Allahu Akbar' before shooting at children. A total of 21 people were taken to hospital as a result of the incident - ten are fighting for their lives in critical condition and 16 are still receiving medical treatment.
Friday, July 22, 2016
Dresses that ruled Britain: The secrets behind the Queen's historic outfits revealed in a new exhibition at Buckingham Palace
Her bright suits and bold hats put the Duchess of Cambridge’s nude court shoes in the shade. The Queen may have turned 90, but there is little doubt she is still the ultimate style icon, as a new exhibition at Buckingham Palace from tomorrow reveals.
Her Majesty wears jewel-coloured outfits to ensure she can be seen by her subjects - and even uses them as a tool of diplomacy. Who knew that she dresses to echo the flag of the country she is visiting so as to flatter her hosts, and sometimes even has their national emblem sewn into them?
Fashioning A Reign: 90 Years Of Style From The Queen’s Wardrobe shows off almost 80 of her outfits and 62 of her iconic hats. Here, we take a look at a glorious selection...
THE ONE-SHOULDERED DRESS
Made from duchesse satin, lace, sequins, diamante and beads, this asymmetric crinoline-skirted gown of pale yellow and turquoise - made by Sir Norman Hartnell, her favourite couturier of the time - is a perfect example of the Queen’s Fifties fashions
Made from duchesse satin, lace, sequins, diamante and beads, this asymmetric crinoline-skirted gown of pale yellow and turquoise - made by Sir Norman Hartnell, her favourite couturier of the time - is a perfect example of the Queen’s Fifties fashions.
Worn on a state visit to the Netherlands in 1958, it features a one-shouldered bodice, the line of which is continued by a gathered panel of satin across the skirt.
The dress is appliqued with tape lace forming stylised floral motifs and is richly embroidered with heavy beading.
This, says the Royal Collection, is another perfect example of the Queen’s unique championing of British couture.
Black therapist says police shot him with his hands raised
A black therapist who was trying to calm an autistic patient in the middle of the street says he was shot by police even though he had his hands in the air and repeatedly told them that no one was armed.
The moments before the shooting were recorded on cellphone video and show Charles Kinsey lying on the ground with his arms raised, talking to his patient and police throughout the standoff with officers, who appeared to have them surrounded.
"As long as I've got my hands up, they're not going to shoot me. This is what I'm thinking. They're not going to shoot me," he told WSVN-TV from his hospital bed, where he was recovering from a gunshot wound to his leg. "Wow, was I wrong."
The shooting comes amid weeks of violence involving police. Five officers were killed in Dallas two weeks ago and three law enforcement officers were gunned down Sunday in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Before those shootings, a black man, Alton Sterling, 37, was fatally shot during a scuffle with two white officers at a convenience store. In Minnesota, 32-year-old Philando Castile, who was also black, was shot to death during a traffic stop. Cellphone videos captured Sterling's killing and aftermath of Castile's shooting, prompting nationwide protests over the treatment of blacks by police.
Mark Cuban rips Donald Trump in brutal tweetstorm during RNC speech
Mark Cuban went on a brutal tweetstorm Thursday night slamming Donald Trump during the latter's official acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention.
In a series of tweets on Thursday evening, the billionaire owner of the NBA's Dallas Mavericks mocked the Republican nominee's presentation and rhetorical style, and reassured people that Americans were "nothing like" Trump.
"@realDonaldTrump should have worked harder to make his TelePrompTer reading skills great again," Cuban wrote in one tweet.
Cuban went as far as retweeting Sen. Bernie Sanders' criticism of Trump's rhetoric, which the Vermont senator characterized as bigoted.
'World's unluckiest man' survives meningitis, MRSA, heart attack and cancer then wife DUMPS him
A dad who suffered four years of serious health problems thought things could not get any worse – until his wife left him.
Martial arts expert Oliver Pugh battled meningitis , MRSA, a heart attack and cancer that sparked temporary paralysis.
The 26-year-old also lost half his thumb in an industrial accident.
He said: “I was definitely the world’s unluckiest man.”
Here are the crazy things that this guy did to become the first person to catch all of the Pokémon in the US
Brooklyn-based Nick Johnson, who happens to be a friend of mine, has publicly declared himself to be the first Pokémon Go player to catch all of the 142 Pokémon that we know are available in the US.
According to the original video games that Pokémon Go is based on, there are 151 total monsters. We know that there are 142 you can catch in the US, plus three more exclusive to certain international regions, but nobody can account for the whereabouts of the other six.
Johnson's journey to Pokémon mastery took a lot of doing and some long nights, he tells Business Insider, but it was worth it to fulfill his childhood dream of catching 'em all.
Hyde Park water fight brawl suspects pictured after mass violence on hottest day of the year
Three people including a police officer were stabbed in the violence that spilled into Marble Arch
Police probing a mass brawl which broke out following a water fight in Hyde Parkhave released images of four new suspects they wish to trace.
They include a man caught on CCTV who appears to be aiming a missile at police officers who found themselves attacked by a mob the London park on Tuesday night.
Images of the four have been added to a gallery of suspects sought in connection with the widespread disorder that saw a water fight descend into chaos.
Up to 4,000 people had gathered on the banks of the Serpentine on Tuesday afternoon as the capital enjoyed the hottest day of the year so far, but the festivities turned hostile as the evening wore on.
Here are the highlights from the final night of the Republican National Convention
The 2016 Republic National Convention is in the books.
After the most raucous evening of the convention Wednesday night, the final night of the four-day affair showcased Ivanka Trump, Silicon Valley billionaire Peter Thiel, and many others addressing the crowd before Donald Trump spoke to the nation for the first time as the GOP's official nominee.
Here’s some highlights from Trump’s big night.
How quitting smoking can be good for your LIVER: Those who have given up cigarettes 'drink less alcohol too'
If you're trying to quit smoking to boost your health, there might be an added benefit.
Smokers trying to kick the habit tend to give up drinking as well, a new study has found.
Ex-smokers not only drank less in the first week of stubbing out, they were less inclined to binge drink.
They were more likely to be classified as 'light drinkers' - drinking within government regulations - compared with those who were not attempting to stop smoking.
Experts said this goes against the belief that people who have quit start drinking more as a result.
Smokers who have recently quit tend to cut down on alcohol as well as cigarettes, a new study has found
Lead author Jamie Brown, from University College London, England, said: 'These results go against the commonly held view that people who stop smoking tend to drink more to compensate.
'It's possible that they are heeding advice to try to avoid alcohol because of its link to relapse.'
Previous research has shown that smoking and drinking are linked - people associate lighting up with having a pint.
As a result those trying to quit smoking are often advised to drink less at the same time.
The study involved household surveys, where a total of 6,287 out of 31,878 people reported smoking between March 2014 and September 2015.
Of these, 144 had begun an attempt to quit smoking in the week before the survey.
They had also completed a validated questionnaire called the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test.
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