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  • Bitcoin sets another record above $113,000

    Bitcoin sets another record above $113,000

    Bitcoin climbed to new all-time high on Thursday, building on its previous record reached just a day earlier, as investors jumped into risk assets and liquidated short positions.

    The price of the flagship cryptocurrency was last higher by about 2% at $113,459.16. Earlier, it rose as high as $113,863.18.

    On Thursday afternoon, bitcoin saw about $318 million in short liquidations across centralized exchanges in a 24 hour period, according to CoinGlass. When traders use leverage to short bitcoin and the cryptocurrency’s price rises, they buy bitcoin back from the market to close their positions, which pushes the price up and causes more positions to be liquidated.

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    Bitcoin this week

    Don’t miss these cryptocurrency insights from CNBC Pro:

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  • Nicholas Hoult Got Asked About Bleaching His Hair Blonde And His 9-Word Response Says It All

    Nicholas Hoult Got Asked About Bleaching His Hair Blonde And His 9-Word Response Says It All

    Nicholas Hoult, famously, is a brunette. However, the guy is not afraid to change his hair at all. He shaved his head for one of the best action movies of all time, Mad Max: Fury Road. Then, he did it again to play Lex Luthor in James Gunn’s Superman, which is set to premiere on the 2025 movie schedule on July 11. Now, he’s bleached his hair blonde for a new role, and his nine-word response about it says it all.

    In the midst of promoting the release of Superman, Nicholas Hoult has been talking a lot about his hair, or lack thereof. Part of that is because he shaved it off to play Lex Luthor. However, it’s also a topic of conversation because bleaching it blonde marked another dramatic change in his look. When ET asked him if there was anything he wouldn’t do for a role while referencing his blonde hair, the actor responded with the following nine words:

    There is nothing I won’t do for a role.


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  • Breakthrough Listen Releases Results for 27 Eclipsing Exoplanets

    Breakthrough Listen Releases Results for 27 Eclipsing Exoplanets

    We live in an exciting time of technological innovation and breakthroughs in astronomy, cosmology, and astrophysics. This is similarly true for the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI), which seeks to leverage advances in instrumentation and computing to find evidence of “technosignatures” in the Universe. While the scope has expanded considerably since Cornell Professor Frank Drake and colleagues conducted the first SETI experiment over sixty years ago (Project Ozma), the vast majority have consisted of listening to space for signs of possible radio transmissions.

    A prime example is Breakthrough Listen (BL), a project launched by Breakthrough Initiatives in 2016 and the largest SETI experiment ever mounted. BI combines radio observations from the Green Bank Observatory and the Parkes Observatory with visible light observations from the Automated Planet Finder. In a recent study, an international team of astronomers examined 27 exoplanets selected from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) archive and examined them for signs of artificial radio signals that went silent as they passed behind their stars.

    The study was led by Rebecca Barrett, a SETI researcher and recent Masters of Science (Astrophysics) graduate from the University of Southern Queensland (UniSQ). She was joined by researchers from the UniSQ Center for Astrophysics, the SETI Institute, the Berkeley SETI Research Center, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Astronomy and Space Science, the Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing(CAS) at the Swinburne University of Technology, the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), and the Square Kilometer Array Observatory (SKAO).

    The field of SETI has grown considerably in the past six decades, reflecting our expanding knowledge of the cosmos and astrophysical phenomena. Per the NASA Technosignature Report (released in 2018), the list of potential technosignatures includes gravitational waves (GWs), neutrinos, directed energy (optical communications or propulsion), and more. Nevertheless, surveys in the radio spectrum are still at the forefront of SETI investigations because the technology has a proven track record as a cost-effective means of communication. Moreover, radio waves are easily detected since they experience minimal scattering as they pass through planetary atmospheres and the interstellar medium (ISM).

    The field has also been bolstered by the spate of exoplanet discoveries that have taken place in the past twenty years. To date, more than 5,900 exoplanets have been confirmed in over 4,400 planetary systems, with thousands more awaiting confirmation. For their study, the team carefully selected a frequency band of radio data from a large set of observations made by BI from 2018 to 2022. The team ensured that these observations’ field of view (FoV) corresponded to a selection of 27 confirmed and candidate exoplanets detected by NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS).

    Specifically, the team looked for indications of potential radio signals that were interrupted as these planets passed behind their respective stars (occulted). As Barrett told Universe Today via email:

    Occultations could provide a unique opportunity to search for and localise technosignatures. Hypothetically, if a transmitting exoplanet were to pass behind its host star, the signal should be interrupted, resuming when it re-emerges. A signal could thus potentially be isolated from the surrounding noise and RFI by subtracting emission received from the system during eclipse from emission during transit. This concept will be explored in future works.

    Using occultations to detect and confirm targets for SETI technosignature searchers has gained popularity in the last decade. However, the focus has been on planet-planet occultation and signal spillover, whereas Barrett and her colleagues explored planet-star occultation. Their work was based on Barrett’s 2023 Master’s thesis, which established the first limits using targets of interest (TOIs) designated by TESS. Unfortunately, all 27 TOIs were attributed to radio frequency interference (RFI), ruling out the possibility of technological activity.

    Murriyang, CSIRO’s Parkes radio telescope at the Parkes Observatory.

    Nevertheless, this study is the first case where planet-star occultations were used for technosignature searches and will serve as a benchmark for similar SETI surveys in the near future. Said Barrett:

    I personally plan to commence a PhD in 2026, where I hope to continue developing tools that will aid in the search for intelligent life. I was very fortunate to work alongside some of the leading experts in the field during this project, and will undoubtedly do so again in the future! I would hope that this work could inspire further SETI investigations toward exoplanets during occultation and help spur the development of an efficient method for isolating unique emissions that could be applied as a background check in mainstream transiting exoplanet surveys.

    The preprint of their paper was published online by the University of Cambridge Press and is being reviewed by the Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia.

    Further Reading: arXiv

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  • Psychological stress drives ovarian tumor metastasis through NR3C1 and NUPR1

    Psychological stress drives ovarian tumor metastasis through NR3C1 and NUPR1

    This new article publication from Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B, discusses how a psychological stress-activated NR3C1/NUPR1 axis promotes ovarian tumor metastasis.

    Ovarian tumor (OT) is the most lethal form of gynecologic malignancy, with minimal improvements in patient outcomes over the past several decades. Metastasis is the leading cause of ovarian cancer-related deaths, yet the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood.

    Psychological stress is known to activate the glucocorticoid receptor (NR3C1), a factor associated with poor prognosis in OT patients. However, the precise mechanisms linking NR3C1 signaling and metastasis have yet to be fully elucidated.

    The authors of this article demonstrate that chronic restraint stress accelerates epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and metastasis in OT through an NR3C1-dependent mechanism involving nuclear protein 1 (NUPR1). Mechanistically, NR3C1 directly regulates the transcription of NUPR1, which in turn increases the expression of snail family transcriptional repressor 2 (SNAI2), a key driver of EMT. Clinically, elevated NR3C1 positively correlates with NUPR1 expression in OT patients, and both are positively associated with poorer prognosis.

    Overall, this study identified the NR3C1/NUPR1 axis as a critical regulatory pathway in psychological stress-induced OT metastasis, suggesting a potential therapeutic target for intervention in OT metastasis.

    Source:

    Journal reference:

    Liu, B., et al. (2025). Psychological stress-activated NR3C1/NUPR1 axis promotes ovarian tumor metastasis. Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B. doi.org/10.1016/j.apsb.2025.04.001.

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  • Vitamin A Deficiency: 5 warning symptoms of Vitamin A deficiency |

    Vitamin A Deficiency: 5 warning symptoms of Vitamin A deficiency |

    Amidst the fad diets, superfoods, and supplements world, some very fundamental yet critical nutrients tend to go unnoticed, and Vitamin A is one of these. While iron, vitamin D, and B12 deficiencies are a constant source of media coverage, Vitamin A deficiency tends to be silently neglected, even though it strikes millions of people, especially in third-world nations.Vitamin A is essential to have good eyesight, a healthy immune system, good skin, and good cell growth. However, most people, particularly pregnant women and children, are prone to its deficiency without even knowing. World Health Organization states that Vitamin A deficiency is the most common cause of preventable blindness in children and raises the risk of disease and death significantly.So why isn’t this talked about more? A part of the issue is the gradual onset of symptoms. They tend to show up as aches and pains or skin problems and not become severe until later. By the time individuals take action, the deficiency may have done permanent damage.Following are 5 important Vitamin A deficiency symptoms that can be dangerous if ignored:

    Night blindness

    Difficulty seeing in dark or low light conditions is one of the earliest and most precise signs of Vitamin A deficiency. Difficulty seeing in dark or low light conditions, or night blindness, occurs because Vitamin A plays an important role in the formation of rhodopsin, a pigment in the eye used to see in low light. If it is not treated, night blindness can lead to total loss of vision.

    Dry eyes and corneal damage

    Eyes

    Image Credit : Canva

    Vitamin A maintains moist eyes and guards against the surface tissues. When individuals lack sufficient amounts of it, they can suffer from dry, inflamed eyes, and even severe xerophthalmia, a condition that can result in permanent blindness. The cornea could get cloudy or form ulcers, which can hurt and become irreversible if not acted on immediately.

    Frequent infections

    Vitamin A enhances the immune system by keeping mucous membranes intact in the respiratory, digestive, and urinary systems. Individuals with Vitamin A deficiency have an increased vulnerability to infections like pneumonia, measles, and diarrhea. Indeed, research has indicated that VAD elevates mortality from infectious diseases, particularly in children.

    Dry, scaly skin

    Dry Skin

    Image Credit : Canva

    Vitamin A is very important in the regeneration of skin. Lack of it can cause rough, dry, or scaly skin on the arms, legs, and face. This sign is confused with eczema or other skin diseases. With time, the skin becomes more susceptible to wounds and takes longer to heal.

    Delayed growth and development

    In children, Vitamin A deficiency can also affect physical and cognitive development. It has an impact on bone growth, immune response, and tissue repair, all of which are important at early childhood. Learning and growth can be stunted in children with chronic Vitamin A deficiency.Vitamin A deficiency is more prevalent and perilous, than most are aware. It lurks in the shadows, usually undiagnosed until serious illness strikes. The good news is that it’s preventable and curable by way of a nutritionally balanced diet packed with leafy greens, carrots, sweet potatoes, eggs, and dairy, or by supplementation as needed.Raising awareness of this quiet deficit may save sight, enhance immunity, and even save lives, particularly among the world’s most at-risk communities.


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  • Ed Helms never wanted his parents to watch ‘The Hangover’?

    Ed Helms never wanted his parents to watch ‘The Hangover’?



    ‘The Hangover’ features Ed Helms, Bradley Cooper, and Zach Galifianakis

    Ed Helms, who is widely known for playing Stu in The Hangover franchise, has shared a rare insight.

    The 2009 comedy thriller movie featuring him along with Bradley Cooper and Zach Galifianakis follows the story of four friends knitted in “The Wolfpack” and go on wild adventures together.

    The 51-year-old star, in a recent interview, revealed that he has always felt nervous of his parents seeing his popular movie series.

    Helms opened that he grew up in “repressed Southern home” and The Hangover is not the kind of movie he should have been in, keeping in mind the conservative environment of his family.

    While speaking at the SiriusXM’s Where Everybody Knows Your Name podcast, the Tag actor stated, “I grew up in a kind of a repressed Southern home. Politically, very progressive, but still a very socially conservative kind of environment.”

    “And so The Hangover is nuts. That’s not what they raised me to do, to be in a movie like The Hangover.”

    Ed admitted that he is still nervous about his parents watching the franchise.

    Even though, when his mum saw the movie for the first time, she gave a very positive reaction to it and for him, it was an unforgettable moment. 

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  • New insights into neural replay and memory formation from flying bats

    New insights into neural replay and memory formation from flying bats

    Every day, our brain takes countless fleeting experiences – from walks on the beach to presentations at work – and transforms them into long-term memories. How exactly this works remains a mystery, but neuroscientists believe that it involves a phenomenon called neural replay, in which neurons rapidly recreate the same activation sequences that occurred during the original experience. Surprisingly, neural replays can happen both before and after an experience, suggesting they help in both memory storage and also future planning.

    In a new study, neuroscientists at the University of California, Berkeley, recorded activity from hundreds of neurons simultaneously in freely flying bats. It is the first time that an ensemble of neurons – rather than just individual neurons – have been studied in concert in bats as they fly around and behave naturally. The data provided surprising new insights into neural replay and theta sequences, another phenomenon which is believed to be involved in memory and planning. 

    For the past 20 years, we’ve been recording single neurons in bats and asking the question, ‘When animals are doing interesting things, what do individual neurons do?’ But in the brain, there are emerging properties that you only see when you’re looking at ensembles of neurons. In this study, we looked at these two phenomena – replay and theta sequences – that are only visible when you track many neurons at the same time.”


    Michael Yartsev, study senior author, associate professor of neuroscience and bioengineering and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator at UC Berkeley

    Better understanding the role of replay and theta sequences in the brains of animals could shed light on how long-term memories are formed and stored in humans, potentially leading to new treatments for neurological disorders like Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimer’s. 

    The study, which was published online today (July 9) in the journal Nature, was supported by grants from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and the Office of Naval Research.

    ‘A whole different ball game’

    Studying neural replay and theta sequences is tricky because it requires listening in on tens or hundreds of neurons in the brain simultaneously. Over the past decade, Michael Yartsev’s lab has pioneered wireless neural recording technologies in Egyptian fruit bats, giving his team an unprecedented view inside the brains of these navigational experts as they forage in large environments. 

    Previously, the wireless recording devices were only able to detect signals from small numbers of neurons at a time. In the new study, co-first authors Angelo Forli, Wudi Fan and Kevin Qi successfully utilized high-density silicon electrode arrays that can record hundreds of neurons at once from flying bats. These electrodes can also record local field potentials, a measure of the overall electrical activity in a region of the brain.

    “It’s a whole different ball game to record such large ensembles of neurons wirelessly in a flying animal,” Yartsev said. “This was never possible before now.”

    To study neural replay and theta sequences, the researchers tracked the activity of “place cells,” a type of neuron that is found in the hippocampus of many species. Individual place cells fire when an animal is in a specific location in space, creating an internal spatial map of their environment. 

    “If you know that a place cell corresponds to a specific location in space, and the cell is active, then you can infer that the bat is in that location,” said Angelo Forli, who is a postdoctoral researcher at UC Berkeley. “If you can track multiple cells, you can know the path that the bat took.”

    But place cells aren’t only active when an animal is moving around. Experiments in rodents have shown that they exhibit hippocampal replay during rest, essentially refiring in the same sequence as they did during the movement but in a shorter, time compressed format.

    Place cells in rodents also exhibit patterns called theta sequences, which happen during movement, and are believed to represent the animal “looking ahead” just a few steps from its current location.

    “Previously, these phenomena were exclusively investigated in rodents, because that’s what the technology allowed. We wanted to find out if they also exist in bats, and if they do, are they any different from what we see in rodents?” said Forli. “We discovered a series of differences that challenge established models.”

    A fundamental unit of information processing

    In the experiment, the researchers recorded the activity of bats’ place cells as they flew freely around a large flight room and identified which sequences of place cells corresponded with specific trajectories. They were then able to identify replay events, or moments when these same neural sequences occurred when the bats were at rest.

    Most of what we know about replay has been gleaned from experiments on rodents in unnatural settings, such as a “sleep box,” to record replay events following behavioral runs. This introduces artificial boundaries between active and inactive states. In contrast, bats have many natural active periods and rest periods within the same experimental session, allowing for the capture of replay under less restrictive conditions. This led to the discovery that replays mostly occur minutes after the experience, and often at locations distant from where the experience took place. 

    Surprisingly, the researchers also found that the length of these replay events was the same for all flight trajectories, no matter how long the flight was. Essentially, if one neural sequence corresponded to a 10-meter flight, and another neural sequence corresponded to a 20-meter flight, the replays of both of those sequences were time-compressed to the same length.

    “We saw that replays for short versus long trajectories had the same duration,” Forli said. “It seems that information is cut down to the same chunk of time regardless of the length of the experience.”

    The researchers hypothesize that this constant replay duration may represent an elemental unit of information processing in the brain.

    “From a computational perspective, it’s incredibly advantageous to send fixed packets of information,” Yartsev said. “It’s very efficient because whatever is reading that information out knows it will arrive in these fixed sizes.”

    The team’s next question concerned theta sequences, a type of ensemble phenomenon that is believed to support replay and to rely on theta oscillations in the hippocampus. However, unlike rodents, bats and humans both lack continuous theta oscillations, which occur at a frequency of approximately 8 Hertz, or eight wingbeats per second. Interestingly, the researchers found sequential network activity during flight in bats, akin to theta sequences in rodents, but with one major difference: unlike rodents, the fast sequences in bats had no relationship to theta oscillations, but were, instead, synced to the bats’ 8 Hz wingbeats. 

    From the quivering of a mouse’s whiskers to the rhythms of human speech, there are countless other animal behaviors that occur at frequencies around 8 Hz. The researchers hypothesize that these theta sequences might provide a universal neural mechanism for how these behaviors are organized and directed in the animal brain. 

    “There’s something about this frequency which is ubiquitous across species, particularly mammalian species,” Yartsev said. “Our findings may provide the beginning of a mechanistic understanding of the neural basis of these behaviors, not only in rats and bats, but maybe also in other species like humans.”

    Additional support for this research was provided by the New York Stem Cell Foundation, the Vallee Foundation and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

    Source:

    University of California – Berkeley

    Journal reference:

    Forli, A., et al. (2025). Replay and representation dynamics in the hippocampus of freely flying bats. Nature. doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09341-z.

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  • Five Tied at the Top at The Amundi Evian Championship – LPGA

    Five Tied at the Top at The Amundi Evian Championship – LPGA

    1. Five Tied at the Top at The Amundi Evian Championship  LPGA
    2. Five share lead after opening-round 65s at Evian Championship  Field Level Media
    3. ‘Happy vibes’: Aussie aces Lee, Ruffels fire at major  Seymour Telegraph
    4. “Happy vibes”: Aussie golf aces fire at women’s major  Golf Australia Magazine
    5. Former tennis phenom Gabi Ruffels attends Wimbledon, then co-leads Amundi Evian in France  Yahoo

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  • Ana-Maria Crnogorčević on ‘unbelievable’ EURO 2025: ‘Never stop dreaming’

    Ana-Maria Crnogorčević on ‘unbelievable’ EURO 2025: ‘Never stop dreaming’

    Ana-Maria Crnogorčević on being a role model

    Growing up, seeing women’s football on TV was a rarity for Crnogorčević. As a result, role models were few and far between.

    More recently, though, things have changed astronomically.

    During her time as a player for FC Barcelona, the 34-year-old was part of two record-breaking games; the first in front of a crowd of 91,553 in March 2023, before bettering that the following month as 91,648 piled into the Camp Nou.

    “After [those games], I went to a men’s Barcelona game, and you could just see young kids, young girls, young boys, walking around with a jersey [with the] name of a women’s player,” she said in an interview, according to Star News.

    “I couldn’t imagine that even five years ago, that wasn’t the case.

    “I think this is something very special; it’s so amazing, and for young people around the world, it’s huge that they can look up to a women’s player.”

    Not only can they now look to women’s football for inspiration, but they can look to Crnogorčević in particular.

    On a stage like the European Championships, held on her home soil, there is no time like the present to be exactly the kind of role model she wanted as a young girl.

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  • Larry David and the Obamas team up for American history sketch comedy show | US television

    Larry David and the Obamas team up for American history sketch comedy show | US television

    Barack Obama and Larry David are making comedy history for HBO.

    The programmer announced Thursday that the 44th US president and the Curb Your Enthusiasm comic would team up for a sketch comedy series focused on American history, in honor of the country’s 250th birthday.

    The official log-line reads: “President and Mrs. Obama wanted to honor America’s 250th anniversary and celebrate the unique history of our nation on this special occasion … But then Larry David called.”

    The as-yet untitled half-hour series comes from Higher Ground, the production company founded by Obama and his wife Michelle after he left office in 2017. David and his Curb partner Jeff Schaffer will write the sketches, which will reportedly feature former Curb cast members and other “noteworthy” guest stars.

    Former president Obama said in a press release: “I’ve sat across the table from some of the world’s most difficult leaders and wrestled with some of our most intractable problems. Nothing has prepared me for working with Larry David.”

    “Once Curb ended, I celebrated with a three-day foam party,” David added. “After a violent allergic reaction to the suds, I yearned to return to my simple life as a beekeeper, harvesting organic honey from the wildflowers in my meadow. Alas, one day my bees mysteriously vanished. And so, it is with a heavy heart that I return to television, hoping to ease the loss of my beloved hive.”

    The 78-year-old David co-created the network sitcom Seinfeld, which ran from 1989 until 1998. He also wrote and starred on HBO’s Curb Your Enthusiasm, a comedy of manners that aired off and on between 2000 with its final celebratory episode airing in 2024. “We’re thrilled that Larry is coming back to HBO, this time with Higher Ground, to give us a glimpse at our shared history as we celebrate our Semiquincentennial,” said Amy Gravitt, head of comedy programming at the newly rebranded HBO Max.

    The series will be the first project with HBO for Higher Ground, which has predominantly worked with Netflix since its launch in 2019. Past projects include the documentaries Crip Camp and American Symphony, Michelle Obama’s autobiographical film Becoming, and the Oscar-nominated feature Rustin. The company won an Oscar in 2020 for the documentary American Factory.

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