Today was the first commercial sale of cell-cultured meat in human history, at $23 per entrée, the biggest milestone since the first hamburger in 2013 for $300,000. https://ift.tt/3pilKr9

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One Nice Bug Per Day
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@disrupteneurs
Today was the first commercial sale of cell-cultured meat in human history, at $23 per entrée, the biggest milestone since the first hamburger in 2013 for $300,000. https://ift.tt/3pilKr9
➕ Disruption in Our Digital Era🖒🖒
Every frame is a masterpiece. if we play your business, will it be as beautiful? (image from Wes Anderson's The Royal Tenenbaums)
“Maturity is learning to walk away from people & situations that threaten your peace of mind, self-respect, values, morals or self worth.”
~Anonymous
“Blame is just a lazy person’s way of making sense of chaos.”
— Douglas Coupland, All Families are Psychotic (via quotespile)
10 rules for being an exceptional leader from ‘philosopher king’ Marcus Aurelius.
14 Strategies To Accelerate Your Personal Growth By 1,000%
“Don’t join an easy crowd; you won’t grow. Go where the expectations and the demands to perform are high.”
➕ Disruption in Our Digital Era🖒🖒
The company's bid to see more of its occasional users could threaten public transit.
The Brain Mechanism Behind Multitasking
Although “multitasking” is a popular buzzword, research shows that only 2% of the population actually multitasks efficiently. Most of us just shift back and forth between different tasks, a process that requires our brains to refocus time and time again — and reduces overall productivity by a whopping 40%.
New Tel Aviv University research identifies a brain mechanism that enables more efficient multitasking. The key to this is “reactivating the learned memory,” a process that allows a person to more efficiently learn or engage in two tasks in close conjunction.
“The mechanism may have far-reaching implications for the improvement of learning and memory functions in daily life,” said Dr. Nitzan Censor of TAU’s School of Psychological Sciences and Sagol School of Neuroscience. “It also has clinical implications. It may support rehabilitation efforts following brain traumas that impact the motor and memory functions of patients, for example.”
The research, conducted by TAU student Jasmine Herszage, was published in Current Biology.
Training the brain
“When we learn a new task, we have great difficulty performing it and learning something else at the same time. For example, performing a motor task A (such as performing a task with one hand) can reduce performance in a second task B (such as performing a task with the other hand) conducted in close conjunction to it. This is due to interference between the two tasks, which compete for the same brain resources,” said Dr. Censor. “Our research demonstrates that the brief reactivation of a single learned memory, in appropriate conditions, enables the long-term prevention of, or immunity to, future interference in the performance of another task performed in close conjunction.”
The researchers first taught student volunteers to perform a sequence of motor finger movements with one hand, by learning to tap onto a keypad a specific string of digits appearing on a computer screen as quickly and accurately as possible. After acquiring this learned motor memory, the memory was reactivated on a different day, during which the participants were required to briefly engage with the task — this time with an addition of brief exposure to the same motor task performed with their other hand. By utilizing the memory reactivation paradigm, the subjects were able to perform the two tasks without interference.
By uniquely pairing the brief reactivation of the original memory with the exposure to a new memory, long-term immunity to future interference was created, demonstrating a prevention of interference even a month after the exposures.
“The second task is a model of a competing memory, as the same sequence is performed using the novel, untrained hand,” said Dr. Censor. “Existing research from studies on rodents showed that a reactivation of the memory of fear opened up a window of several hours in which the brain was susceptible to modifications — in which to modify memory.
"In other words, when a learned memory is reactivated by a brief cue or reminder, a unique time-window opens up. This presents an opportunity to interact with the memory and update it — degrade, stabilize or strengthen its underlying brain neural representations,” Dr. Censor said. “We utilized this knowledge to discover a mechanism that enabled long-term stabilization, and prevention of task interference in humans.
The researchers are eager to understand more about this intriguing brain mechanism. "Is it the result of hardwired circuitry in the brain, which allows different learning episodes to be integrated? And how is this circuitry represented in the brain? By functional connections between distinct brain regions? It is also essential to determine test whether the identified mechanism is relevant for other types of tasks and memories, not only motor tasks,” Dr. Censor concluded.
Raised by a filmmaker/painter father and psychotherapist mother, Adam Savage (born July 15, 1967) worked as a child actor in TV commercials and music videos until he was a teenager. Since then, Adam has been an animator, toy designer, carpenter, graphic designer, projectionist, scenic painter, stage designer and welder. Little did he know that all of these jobs would one day aid him in his career as a MythBuster. https://www.instagram.com/p/BWluDfNFyu3/
“This land is your land, this land is my land From California to the New York island; From the Redwood forest to the Gulf Stream waters, This land was made for you and me.” — Woody Guthrie (born July 14, 1912) https://www.instagram.com/p/BWjGzykFw2o/
What's the point of consciousness? Experiments suggest it evolved to help us learn and adapt more rapidly than we could without it
To understand human consciousness, we need to know why it exists in the first place. New experimental evidence suggests it may have evolved to help us learn and adapt to changing circumstances far more rapidly and effectively. We used to think consciousness was a uniquely human trait, but neuroscientists now believe we share it with many other animals, including mammals, birds and octopuses. While plants and arguably some animals like jellyfish seem able to respond to the world around them without any conscious awareness, many other animals consciously experience and perceive their environment. In the 19th century, Thomas Henry Huxley and others argued that such consciousness is an “epiphenomenon” – a side effect of the workings of the brain that has no causal influence, the way a steam whistle has no effect on the way a steam engine works. More recently, neuroscientists have suggested that consciousness enables us to integrate information from different senses or keep such information active for long enough in the brain that we can experience the sight and sound of car passing by, for example, as one unified perception, even though sound and light travel at different speeds. Unconscious action But a growing number of experiments have shown that there are a surprising number of things you don’t need to be conscious for, says Eoin Travers at the School of Advanced Study, University of London. For example, once you have learned to ride a bicycle or touch-type, you can do these tasks without being conscious of them in the same way as you had to be when learning them. Studies have also shown that you don’t need to be aware of a stop sign to comply – subliminal perception of a stop signal can be enough to halt someone performing an action. To see what differences there might be between conscious and unconscious perception, Travers and colleagues have been testing how well we learn when there are wrong or misleading cues in our environment.
“The side project survival guide: making time to work on everything as a freelancer” @_ChelleShock