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  • New Telescope Captures First Light In Chile

    New Telescope Captures First Light In Chile

    October welcomed a major milestone in a global telescope collaboration involving astronomers from our Department of Physics.

    The 4MOST telescope – which stands for 4-meter Multi-Object Spectroscopic Telescope – captured its first…

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  • Neurocognitive Functioning in CNS Cancer Declines Significantly – European Medical Journal Neurocognitive Functioning in CNS Cancer Declines Significantly

    Neurocognitive Functioning in CNS Cancer Declines Significantly – European Medical Journal Neurocognitive Functioning in CNS Cancer Declines Significantly

    NEUROCOGNITIVE functioning declines across central nervous system cancers, shaped by tumor location and interacting treatment effects.

    Neurocognitive Functioning in CNS Cancer

    This narrative review synthesizes evidence that neurocognitive…

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  • Astronauts can get motion sick while splashing back down to Earth – virtual reality headsets could help them stay sharp

    Astronauts can get motion sick while splashing back down to Earth – virtual reality headsets could help them stay sharp

    When learning about the effects of spaceflight on human health, you typically will hear about the dangers of radiation, bone density loss and changes in eyesight. While these long-term risks are important, a less frequently discussed concern…

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  • China’s cutting-edge camera captures neurons ‘kissing’ in real time

    China’s cutting-edge camera captures neurons ‘kissing’ in real time

    Chinese scientists have for the first time captured the fleeting moment when neurons “kiss” each other, a millisecond-scale event that lies at the heart of how the brain transmits signals.

    The finding, achieved with a revolutionary…

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  • Earlier menopause and reduced cardiac function may negatively affect brain health

    Earlier menopause and reduced cardiac function may negatively affect brain health

    Women face a higher risk of developing both cardiovascular disease and Alzheimer’s disease than men. Cardiovascular disease is linked to an increased likelihood of Alzheimer’s disease, especially among women. A new study…

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  • Tapo Introduces All-in-One 2K Floodlight Camera With Pan/Tilt and Solar Power

    Tapo Introduces All-in-One 2K Floodlight Camera With Pan/Tilt and Solar Power

    IRVINE, Calif.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–TP-Link Systems Inc., a global leader in networking and smart home solutions, is expanding its award-winning Tapo smart home portfolio with the launch of its first all-in-one solar-powered 2K pan/tilt…

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  • Jeremy Allen White on Transforming Into Bruce Springsteen for ‘Deliver Me From Nowhere’

    Jeremy Allen White on Transforming Into Bruce Springsteen for ‘Deliver Me From Nowhere’

    The result was 1982’s Nebraska, an acoustic gem released with no tour, press, or lead single. Bruce didn’t even want his face on the cover. Still, it reached number three on the Billboard chart, and is remembered by many as one of…

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  • Bank of England chief warns of ‘worrying echoes’ of 2008 financial crisis | Bank of England

    Bank of England chief warns of ‘worrying echoes’ of 2008 financial crisis | Bank of England

    The governor of the Bank of England, Andrew Bailey, has warned recent events in US private credit markets have worrying echoes of the sub-prime mortgage crisis that kicked off the global financial crash of 2008.

    Appearing before a House of Lords committee, the governor said it was important to have the “drains up” and analyse the collapse of two leveraged US firms, First Brands and Tricolor, in case they are not isolated events but “the canary in the coalmine”.

    “Are they telling us something more fundamental about the private finance, private asset, private credit, private equity sector, or are they telling us that in any of these worlds there will be idiosyncratic cases that go wrong?” he asked.

    The Bank of England governor, Andrew Bailey. Photograph: Alastair Grant/Reuters

    “I think that is still a very open question; it’s an open question in the US.”

    He added: “I don’t want to sound too foreboding, but the added reason this question is important is if you go back to before the financial crisis when we were having this debate about sub-prime mortgages in the US, people were telling us, ‘No it’s too small to be systemic, it’s idiosyncratic’… That was the wrong call.”

    Bailey said the complex nature of some of the financial engineering in use in the private credit markets gave cause for concern.

    “We certainly are beginning to see, for instance what used to be called slicing and dicing and tranching of loan structures going on, and if you were involved before the financial crisis and during it, alarm bells start going off at that point,” he told peers.

    “That stuff was a feature of the financial crisis, so that’s another reason why we’ve got to use these cases as another reason to have more drains up, frankly.”

    Deputy Bank governor Sarah Breeden, appearing alongside Bailey, said the Bank would be carrying out a war game exercise in these markets, to test the linkages between private credit and other sectors.

    She underlined some of the concerns about the private credit sector. “It’s about high leverage, it’s about opacity, it’s about complexity and it’s about weak underwriting standards.

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    “Those are things that we were talking about in the abstract as a source of vulnerability in this bit of the financial system, and those appear to have been at play in the context of these two defaults.”

    The collapse of car parts firm First Brands and auto lender Tricolor prompted concern on Wall Street, with the JP Morgan chief executive, Jamie Dimon, comparing them to “cockroaches”, and saying that more could emerge.

    The International Monetary Fund’s global financial stability review last week highlighted concerns about the close connections between private credit markets and mainstream banks – and the IMF’s managing director, Kristalina Georgieva, said it was the issue that kept her awake at night.

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  • The impact of carbapenem-resistant infections in intensive care units: focus on non-fermenting gram-negative bacilli and survival analysis | Antimicrobial Resistance & Infection Control

    The impact of carbapenem-resistant infections in intensive care units: focus on non-fermenting gram-negative bacilli and survival analysis | Antimicrobial Resistance & Infection Control

    Study setting

    We conducted an observational cohort study derived from an ongoing, prospective, multicenter surveillance network REA-REZO of ICU-acquired infections and associated risk factors. This cohort included individual patient data from 206…

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  • Comparison of postpartum depression, anxiety, sleep quality and neonatal outcomes in mothers with pregestational and gestational diabetes | BMC Pediatrics

    Comparison of postpartum depression, anxiety, sleep quality and neonatal outcomes in mothers with pregestational and gestational diabetes | BMC Pediatrics

    The average age of PGDM mothers participating in the study was 31.72 ± 5.17, with 77% having a high school education or higher, 57.5% unemployed, 22.5% smoking, 25% having a chronic illness, and experiencing the most common complications…

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