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  • Blast From the Past: Sweden’s Siljan Ring

    Blast From the Past: Sweden’s Siljan Ring

    Impact craters exist on every continent on Earth. While many have eroded away or been buried by geologic activity, some remain visible from the ground and from above. This week, we revisit stories featuring some of our most captivating satellite images of impact sites around the planet. The images and text on this page were originally published on July 21, 2021.

    Covered with lakes, forests, and mountains, Dalarna County has been called “Sweden in miniature.” But the same region that today draws people to its idyllic lakeside villages and midsummer celebrations was also the site of an ancient, catastrophic impact.

    Around 380 million years ago, in the Late Devonian period, an asteroid slammed into the land that is now south-central Sweden. The impact left quite a mark. Even after hundreds of millions of years of erosion, the scar is still recognizable. It is especially apparent when viewed from above.

    The Siljan impact structure, or “Siljan Ring,” is visible in this image, acquired on June 24, 2020, with the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8. Measuring more than 50 kilometers (30 miles) across, Siljan is the largest-known impact structure in Europe and among the top-20 largest on Earth.

    Surveys of the structure have shown that the ground is slightly raised up across parts of the crater’s center. It is surrounded by a ring-like graben, or depression, which today is partially filled with water. Lake Siljan, on the crater’s southwest side, is the largest lake; it connects to Lake Orsa via a small river.

    People have lived for millennia near the crater without knowing its cosmic origin. In the late 1960s, scientists used drill cores to uncover the complex and ancient geology deep below the ground.

    Research at Siljan is ongoing today. In a 2019 study, scientists described how they used drill cores to find that the deep, fractured rocks in the crater were suitable for ancient life. A subsequent paper in 2021 described the fossilized remains of fungi discovered at a depth of more than 500 meters.

    NASA Earth Observatory images by Lauren Dauphin, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey. Story by Kathryn Hansen.

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  • Paris Saint Germain and Real Madrid advance to a blockbuster semi-final at the FIFA Club World Cup

    Paris Saint Germain and Real Madrid advance to a blockbuster semi-final at the FIFA Club World Cup

    European champions Paris Saint‑Germain have edged past Bayern Munich 2‑0 to reach the semi-finals at the FIFA Club World Cup in the United States.

    The deadlock was broken in the 78th minute when Désiré Doué latched onto a brilliant ball from João Neves and curled a left-footed strike past Manuel Neuer.

    The drama intensified with two PSG red cards late in the game—Willian Pacho in the 82nd minute and Lucas Hernández in injury time.

    Deep into stoppage time, Ousmane Dembélé sealed the victory in the 90+6th minute, sweeping in a composed finish that ensured PSG’s progression despite their numerical disadvantage

    The match also saw a worrying moment as Bayern’s Jamal Musiala suffered a serious ankle injury late in the first half following a collision with Gianluigi Donnarumma.

    ATLANTA, GEORGIA – JULY 05: Jamal Musiala #42 of Bayern Munich has a shot saved by Gianluigi Donnarumma #1 of Paris Saint-Germain during the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 quarter-final match between Paris Saint-Germain and FC Bayern München at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on July 05, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Patrick Smith – FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)

    Paris Saint‑Germain: 2 (DÉSIRÉ DOUÉ 78’, OUSMANE DEMBÉLÉ 90+6’)

    Bayern Munich: 0

    15 times Europoean champions Real Madrid flexed their muscles with a dramatic 3-2 win over another German side, Borussia Dortmund.

    Early goals from Gonzalo Garcia and Fran Garcia put the Spaniards in control and despite edging the possession stats, Dortmund never really looked like getting into the game until second half injury time.

    Maximilian Beir’s deflective shot gave Dortmund late hope. But Kylian Mbappe effectively sealed the result two minutes later with a spectacular volley for 3-1. Dean Huijsen was then sent off for bringing down a Dortmund player in the box and Serhou Guirassy converted from the spot. Thibaut Cortouis then made an incredible last gasp save to deny Dortmund what would have been a remarkable equaliser.

    Real Madrid will face PSG in the second semi final on Wednesday (US time) with Chelsea and Fluminese to meet in the first semi on Tuesday.

    EAST RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY – JULY 05: Fran Garcia #20 of Real Madrid C. F. celebrates scoring his team’s second goal during the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 quarter-final match between Real Madrid CF and Borussia Dortmund at MetLife Stadium on July 05, 2025 in East Rutherford, New Jersey. (Photo by Carl Recine – FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)

    Real Madrid 3 (Gonzalo GARCIA 10′ Fran GARCIA 20′ K. Mbappé

    Borussia Dortmund 2 (Maximilian BEIR 90+2 Serhou GUIRASSY 90+8′)

     

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  • Israel to send team to Gaza talks despite Hamas demands, PM says

    Israel to send team to Gaza talks despite Hamas demands, PM says

    Sebastian Usher & David Gritten

    BBC News

    Reuters Israeli hostages' families and their supporters take part in a rally to demand a deal securing their release from captivity in Gaza, in Tel Aviv, Israel (5 July 2025)Reuters

    Israeli hostages’ families took part in a rally in Tel Aviv to demand a deal that would see them all released

    Israel has decided to send a delegation to Qatar on Sunday for proximity talks with Hamas on the latest proposal for a Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said he had accepted the invitation despite what he described as the “unacceptable” changes that Hamas wanted to make to a plan presented by mediators from Qatar, the US and Egypt.

    On Friday night, Hamas said it had delivered a “positive response” to the proposal for a 60-day ceasefire and that it was ready for negotiations.

    However, a Palestinian official said the group had sought amendments including a guarantee that hostilities would not resume if talks on a permanent truce failed.

    In Gaza itself, the Hamas-run Civil Defence agency said Israeli strikes and gunfire killed at least 35 Palestinians on Saturday.

    Seven people were killed, including a doctor and his three children, when tents in the al-Mawasi area were bombed, according to a hospital in the nearby city of Khan Younis.

    Meanwhile, two American employees of the controversial aid distribution organisation backed by Israel and the US – the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) – were wounded in what it said was a grenade attack at its site in the Khan Younis area.

    The Israeli and US governments both blamed Hamas, which has not commented.

    Late on Saturday, the Israeli Prime Minister’s Office said in a statement that “the changes that Hamas is seeking to make” to the ceasefire proposal were “unacceptable to Israel”.

    But it added: “In light of an assessment of the situation, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has directed that the invitation to proximity talks be accepted and that the contacts for the return of our hostages – on the basis of the Qatari proposal that Israel has agreed to – be continued. The negotiating team will leave tomorrow.”

    Earlier, an Israeli official had briefed local media that there was “something to work with” in the way that Hamas had responded.

    Mediators are likely to have their work cut out to bridge the remaining gaps at the indirect talks in Doha.

    Watching them closely will be President Trump, who has been talking up the chances of an agreement in recent days.

    On Friday, before he was briefed on Hamas’s response, he said it was “good” that the group was positive and that “there could be a Gaza deal next week”.

    Trump is due to meet Netanyahu on Monday, and it is clear that he would very much like to be able to announce a significant breakthrough then.

    The families of Israeli hostages and Palestinians in Gaza will also once again be holding their breath.

    Hostages’ relatives and thousands of their supporters attended a rally in Tel Aviv on Saturday night to call for a comprehensive deal that would bring home all of the hostages.

    Among those who spoke was Yechiel Yehoud. His daughter Arbel Yehoud was released from captivity during the last ceasefire, which Trump helped to broker before he took office and which collapsed when Israel resumed its offensive in March.

    “President Trump, thank you for bringing our Arbel back to us. We will be indebted to you for the rest of our lives. Please don’t stop, please make a ‘big beautiful hostages deal’,” he said.

    Reuters A Palestinian boy walks near a UNRWA school sheltering displaced people that was hit in an Israeli strike, in Gaza City (5 July 2025)Reuters

    An overnight Israeli strike hit a UN-run school sheltering displaced people in Gaza City

    On Tuesday, the US president said that Israel had accepted the “necessary conditions” for a 60-day ceasefire, during which the parties would work to end the war.

    The plan is believed to include the staggered release of 10 living Israeli hostages by Hamas and the bodies of 18 other hostages in exchange for Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails.

    Fifty hostages are still being held in Gaza, at least 20 of whom are believed to be alive.

    The proposal also reportedly says sufficient quantities of aid would enter Gaza immediately with the involvement of the UN and the International Committee of the Red Cross.

    A senior Palestinian official familiar with the talks told the BBC on Friday that Hamas was demanding aid be distributed exclusively by the UN and its partners, and that the GHF’s operations end immediately.

    Another amendment demanded by Hamas was about Israeli troop withdrawals, according to the official.

    The US proposal is believed to include phased Israeli pull-outs from parts of Gaza. But the official said Hamas wanted troops to return to the positions they held before the last ceasefire collapsed in March, when Israel resumed its offensive.

    The official said Hamas also wanted a US guarantee that Israeli air and ground operations would not resume even if the ceasefire ended without a permanent truce.

    The proposal is believed to say mediators will guarantee that serious negotiations will take place from day one, and that they can extend the ceasefire if necessary.

    The Israeli prime minister has ruled out ending the war until all of the hostages are released and Hamas’s military and governing capabilities are destroyed.

    Far-right members of his cabinet have also expressed their opposition to the proposed deal.

    National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said on Saturday that the only way to secure the return of the hostages was the “full conquest of the Gaza Strip, a complete halt to so-called ‘humanitarian’ aid, and the encouragement of emigration” of the Palestinian population.

    The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to the 7 October 2023 attack, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

    At least 57,338 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.

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  • Eugene Diamond League 2025: Melissa Jefferson-Wooden beats Julien Alfred and Sha’Carri Richardson in women’s 100m

    Eugene Diamond League 2025: Melissa Jefferson-Wooden beats Julien Alfred and Sha’Carri Richardson in women’s 100m

    Melissa Jefferson-Wooden won a superb duel with Julien Alfred to take the women’s 100m at the 2025 Prefontaine Classic on Saturday (5 July).

    Jefferson-Wooden made the far better start of the two, but the Olympic champion moved menacingly alongside the home runner with the pair well clear of the rest. However, Jefferson-Wooden refused to yield and crossed the line first in 10.75, just outside her world lead of 10.73 set at Philadelphia Grand Slam Track meet.

    Alfred suffered her first defeat of the year as she took second in 10.77, with Ivorian veteran Marie-Josee Ta Lou-Smith clocking a season’s best 10.90 in third. Jamaican champion Tina Clayton (11.02) was fourth.

    Sha’Carri Richardson, who had just one previous run under her belt this season – in Tokyo in April – was never competitive as she finished ninth in a season’s best 11.19. In the build-up to the race, the 2023 world champion revealed she had suffered an injury in February.

    More to follow…

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  • DXVK 2.7 Improves Support for God of War, Watch Dogs 2, and Final Fantasy XIV

    DXVK 2.7 Improves Support for God of War, Watch Dogs 2, and Final Fantasy XIV

    DXVK 2.7, a Vulkan-based implementation of D3D9, D3D10, and D3D11 for Linux / Wine, is now available for download with new features and other improvements for various games.

    Coming about three weeks after DXVK 2.6.2, the DXVK 2.7 release adds support for the VK_EXT_descriptor_buffer Vulkan extension by default on newer AMD and NVIDIA GPUs to significantly reduce CPU overhead in games like Final Fantasy XIV, God of War, Metaphor: ReFantazio, Watch Dogs 2, and others.

    “This feature remains disabled on older GPUs due to severe performance regressions in some cases, specifically on NVIDIA Pascal or older, as well as AMD RDNA2 or older when using AMDVLK or the AMD Windows driver. RADV is unaffected by these issues,” said the devs.

    DXVK 2.7 also enables memory defragmentation by default on Intel Battlemage and Lunar Lake GPUs, removes the state cache legacy feature, adds support for planar video output views, and adds support to zero-initialize all variables and groupshared memory by default for D3D11 shaders.

    On top of that, this release implements support for the ID3DDestructionNotifier interface, no longer lists Vulkan devices that lack the required feature support to run DXVK as DXGI / D3D9 adapters, fixes an instance of invalid Vulkan usage in the Modulus game, and optimizes D3D9 StretchRect in certain multisample Source Engine resolve cases.

    Among other noteworthy changes, DXVK now requires the VK_KHR_maintenance5 Vulkan extension for Windows users on AMD Polaris and Vega GPUs, and will now enforce the driver-reported VRAM budget as much as possible on discrete GPUs to improve performance in many Unity Engine titles on VRAM-constrained systems.

    As expected, the new DXVK release also improves support for various game titles, including Astebreed, GTR – FIA GT Racing Game, LEGO City Undercover, Star Trek: Starfleet Command III, Test Drive Unlimited 2, and Wargame: European Escalation.

    Check out the release notes on the project’s GitHub page for more details about the changes included in DXVK 2.7, which you can download as a source tarball from the same location. If you have DXVK installed from the software repos of your distribution, you’ll have to wait for the new release to land there to enjoy these improvements.

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  • Down Over 50%, Should You Buy the Dip on SoundHound AI Stock?

    Down Over 50%, Should You Buy the Dip on SoundHound AI Stock?

    • Euphoria gave way to despair after Nvidia sold its stake in SoundHound.

    • Investors need to develop their own investment thesis for the stock instead of reacting to Nvidia.

    • A well-rounded thesis will include a realistic view of future competition.

    • 10 stocks we like better than SoundHound AI ›

    Shareholders of SoundHound AI (NASDAQ: SOUN) were riding high in 2024 after the stock posted an incredible 836% gain for the year. But 2025 is a different story. SoundHound stock is down 55% from the all-time high it reached late last year.

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    The rise and fall of SoundHound stock has a common denominator: Nvidia. In early 2024, Nvidia revealed that it had recently invested in some promising artificial intelligence (AI) stocks, including SoundHound AI. Shares skyrocketed because investors believed this validated the small company’s technology.

    Image source: Getty Images.

    In early 2025, the opposite happened when Nvidia revealed that it had sold its stake in the company.

    Buying or selling a stock based on another investor’s actions — in this case, Nvidia’s — can be a bad idea. It’s important for investors to have their own investment thesis, or a structured argument for why the stock will go up over the long term. With this in mind, I want to explore the investment thesis for SoundHound AI stock today.

    SoundHound AI offers voice-assistant technology to automotive companies, restaurants, and other industries. It’s considered a first-mover in the space, leaning on two decades of experience. But its revenue growth wasn’t catalyzed until the relatively recent AI revolution. Now, its revenue is skyrocketing with full-year revenue growth of 85% in 2024 and stunning 151% year-over-year growth in the first quarter of 2025.

    Bullish investors are salivating over those numbers, particularly because of the total addressable market. According to management, the company has a $140 billion market opportunity. For perspective, it commands far less than 1% of its theoretical market as of this writing.

    SOUN Revenue (TTM) Chart
    Data by YCharts.

    In other words, SoundHound is growing at a head-turning rate, and the runway ahead of it appears to be massive. This combination could lead to many years of growth — a huge factor for stocks that perform well in the long run — which is why investors are excited about the company.

    They’re also excited by the prospects of SoundHound’s profits. Management believes it will achieve profitability by the end of this year based on adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA). That’s a big step forward when thinking about long-term viability for any business.

    To be clear, SoundHound isn’t profitable yet — it has a massive trailing 12-month net loss of $188 million. But with $246 million in cash and no debt, the company is on solid financial footing as it moves toward breakeven.

    Put simply, SoundHound stock could be a winning investment because it’s a fast-growing business in a massive industry, and its financials are trending in the right direction.

    So SoundHound believes its market opportunity is over $140 billion. Management also believes the company has a competitive advantage in the space because it’s known as “white-label.” Whereas bigger companies might have similar voice-technology solutions on the market, these companies usually like to slap their branding on it. In contrast, SoundHound works behind the scenes, keeping its customers’ branding front and center.

    To play the devil’s advocate, I’m not sure this is actually a competitive advantage for SoundHound. Auto manufacturers, for example, have no problem putting other branding in their vehicles, including SiriusXM satellite radio and JBL speakers.

    SoundHound also boasts a big head start in the AI voice-assistant space. But massive progress in AI could be cutting into its lead. On the Q1 earnings call, management admitted that the boom in generative AI applications has increased competition in recent years.

    Moreover, competition will likely be coming from tech giants in the next few years. SoundHound’s technology plays into the nascent agentic AI trend — AI that can make more autonomous decisions on a user’s behalf. All of the big players are working to address this holistically, and a head-on collision with SoundHound seems likely.

    For example, Alphabet is a leading AI company, and its Android Auto product is getting some attention from auto manufacturers such as Ford and General Motors.

    The takeaway isn’t that SoundHound stock is doomed. On the contrary, the business is doing quite well.

    The takeaway is that investors should remember the path to SoundHound’s $140 billion market opportunity won’t be free from competition. If anything, competition will only intensify.

    For investors who believe SoundHound has what it takes to challenge the biggest tech players in the world, the stock may be a cautious buy in light of the 55% plunge from its peak.

    But personally, I’d wait on the sidelines to see how competition develops over the next year. I’m not worried about missing the train, so to speak. If the market opportunity is truly as big as SoundHound believes it is, this story still has a long time to play out, allowing patient investors to evaluate the company’s competitive position.

    Before you buy stock in SoundHound AI, consider this:

    The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and SoundHound AI wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

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    Down Over 50%, Should You Buy the Dip on SoundHound AI Stock? was originally published by The Motley Fool

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  • Woman’s rare stroke leads to psychotic delusions of infidelity

    Woman’s rare stroke leads to psychotic delusions of infidelity

    Stay informed on the latest psychology and neuroscience research—follow PsyPost on LinkedIn for daily updates and insights.


    A recently published case report in the journal Neurocase describes an unusual and distressing psychiatric condition that developed in a 50-year-old woman shortly after a stroke. With no history of mental illness, she suddenly became consumed by the belief that her husband was unfaithful—an unshakable conviction that ultimately escalated into violence. Doctors diagnosed her with Othello syndrome, a rare form of psychosis involving delusional jealousy. The case sheds light on how specific types of brain damage can dramatically alter perception, emotion, and behavior.

    Othello syndrome is a rare psychiatric disorder characterized by the fixed, false belief that a partner is being unfaithful. This belief persists despite clear evidence to the contrary. Named after the jealous protagonist in Shakespeare’s Othello, the condition is a form of delusional jealousy, a subset of psychotic disorders.

    While jealousy is a common human emotion, it becomes pathological when it is based on no real evidence, dominates the person’s thoughts, and results in harmful behavior. Othello syndrome has been observed in people with psychiatric disorders, substance use problems, and some neurological conditions. In rare cases, it can emerge after a stroke, particularly when the stroke affects brain regions involved in judgment, emotional regulation, and attention.

    The woman described in the case report had lived a stable life with her husband for over 30 years. She had no history of psychiatric illness, substance abuse, or previous strokes. The only known health issue was hypertension, which had not been adequately controlled. One day, while preparing a meal, she experienced a sudden, intense headache followed by confusion and memory problems. These symptoms led her to seek emergency medical care.

    Magnetic resonance imaging revealed that she had experienced a rare type of stroke known as a bilateral paramedian thalamic infarct. This type of stroke is caused by a blockage in a unique artery known as the artery of Percheron. Instead of supplying only one side of the brain, this artery provides blood to both sides of a deep brain structure called the thalamus. In her case, the damage was more pronounced on the right side. The thalamus plays a key role in regulating attention, emotion, and the integration of sensory and cognitive information. When this area is damaged, it can have far-reaching effects on a person’s behavior and personality.

    During her hospital stay, the woman was sometimes agitated, experienced visual hallucinations, and had trouble moving her eyes vertically—symptoms consistent with damage to the thalamus. After about two weeks, she was discharged from the hospital. Only a few days later, she began accusing her younger sister of having an affair with her husband. The accusations came out of nowhere, as her sister had only come to visit after the hospital stay. The woman told friends and family that her husband’s supposed infidelity was the cause of her illness. Over time, her suspicions shifted. She no longer accused her sister, but now believed her friend’s daughter was involved with her husband.

    Her behavior became increasingly erratic. She would try to check her husband’s phone without his knowledge. She stayed up late watching him, sometimes waking him in the middle of the night to accuse him of cheating. These outbursts escalated into two separate violent incidents in which she attacked him with a bladed weapon. Although she later denied these attacks, her jealousy remained intense and unrelenting.

    A psychiatric evaluation revealed signs of cognitive decline, such as impaired memory, reduced attention span, and a narrowed focus on her jealous suspicions. On two common cognitive screening tools—the Mini-Mental State Exam and the Montreal Cognitive Assessment—she scored well below the threshold for normal function. The clinicians ruled out other possible causes, such as dementia, drug intoxication, or metabolic disorders. The timing of her symptoms and brain imaging supported the conclusion that her psychiatric symptoms were linked to the stroke. Doctors diagnosed her with Othello syndrome stemming from her thalamic infarct.

    She was initially treated with quetiapine, an antipsychotic medication, which appeared to improve her symptoms for a few months. But she relapsed, and her jealous beliefs returned with the same intensity. Her care team then switched her to another antipsychotic, olanzapine, which led to much greater improvement. Over the course of the following year, she continued to take the medication at a reduced dose, with no reappearance of symptoms. She eventually recognized that her past beliefs were false, and she no longer viewed her husband with suspicion.

    Although this case is striking, it is not without precedent. Psychotic symptoms can emerge after a stroke, although they are far less common than anxiety or depression. Among people who develop post-stroke psychosis, delusional jealousy is one of the more frequently observed subtypes. The brain regions most commonly associated with these delusions include areas of the right hemisphere, particularly the frontal and parietal lobes, as well as the thalamus.

    The thalamus acts as a central relay station in the brain. It connects with both cognitive regions, such as the prefrontal cortex, and emotional areas, such as the limbic system. Damage to the thalamus, particularly on the right side, can disrupt networks responsible for attention, self-monitoring, and emotional processing. This kind of disruption can impair judgment and heighten suspicious thoughts. In this case, the patient’s stroke likely disrupted the normal communication between brain regions responsible for interpreting social cues and regulating emotional responses, paving the way for delusional jealousy.

    The researchers emphasized that the patient’s test results showed no signs of underlying dementia or small vessel disease. This helped rule out alternative explanations for her cognitive problems. Instead, the stroke itself appeared to be the primary cause of her psychiatric symptoms. The selective damage to her thalamus seemed to explain not only her delusional thinking but also her memory and attention problems.

    This case also illustrates how Othello syndrome can pose a danger not only to mental well-being but to physical safety. The woman’s false beliefs led to violent behavior against a loved one. Because of the risks associated with this syndrome, recognizing the signs early and initiating treatment is essential.

    At the same time, the authors of the study acknowledged the limitations of a single case. Case reports cannot establish how common a condition is or how often it is caused by a particular type of brain injury. Nor can they predict how other individuals might respond to the same treatment. Each brain injury is unique, and many factors influence how symptoms develop and change over time.

    However, case studies remain a valuable part of medical science. They allow researchers and clinicians to document rare conditions, identify patterns, and generate hypotheses that can later be tested in larger studies. In particular, unusual cases like this one can help draw attention to the diverse ways that brain injury can manifest—not just as physical or cognitive disability, but also as profound changes in personality and behavior.

    The study, “Jealousy’s stroke: Othello syndrome following a percheron artery infarct,” and Ghita Hjiej, Maha Abdellaoui, Hajar Khattab, Kamal Haddouali, Salma Bellakhdar, Bouchera El Moutawakil, Mohammed Abdoh Rafai, and Hicham El Otmani.

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  • Tomatoes in The Galapagos Islands Appear to Be Evolving in Reverse : ScienceAlert

    Tomatoes in The Galapagos Islands Appear to Be Evolving in Reverse : ScienceAlert

    The idea of evolution backtracking isn’t a completely new idea, but catching it in action isn’t an everyday experience.

    A newly documented example of wild growing tomatoes on the black rocks of the Galapagos Islands gives researchers a prime example of a species adapting by rolling back genetic changes put in place over several million years.

    Researchers from the University of California, Riverside (UC Riverside) and the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel say it’s evidence that species can wind back changes that have happened through evolution.

    Related: Ferns Can Evolve Backwards, Challenging a Common Assumption on Life

    “It’s not something we usually expect,” says molecular biochemist Adam Jozwiak, from UC Riverside. “But here it is, happening in real time, on a volcanic island.”

    The researchers studied the chemical structures of tomatoes and related. (Jozwiak et al., Nature Communications, 2025)

    Through an analysis of 56 tomato samples taken from the Galapagos, covering both the Solanum cheesmaniae and Solanum galapagense species, the team looked at the production of alkaloids in the plants: toxic chemicals intended to put off predators.

    In the case of the S. cheesmaniae tomatoes, different alkaloids were found in different parts of the islands. On the eastern islands, the plants come with alkaloids in a form comparable to those in the cultivated fruit from the rest of the world; but to the west, an older, more ancestral form of the chemicals were found.

    This older version of the alkaloid matches the one found in eggplant relatives of the tomato stretching back millions of years.

    Through further lab tests and modeling, the researchers identified a particular enzyme as being responsible for this alkaloid production and confirmed its ancient roots. A change in just a few amino acids was enough to flip the switch on the alkaloid production, the researchers determined.

    De-evolved tomatoes
    De-evolved tomato species from the Galapagos. (Adam Jozwiak/UC Riverside)

    There are other isolated examples of evolutionary backflips known scientifically as genetic atavisms, where a mutation causes a species to revert to expressing an ancestral trait. These include experiments on chickens that have been genetically tweaked to revive their ancient programming for growing teeth.

    The difference in this case is a critical change has propagated through entire populations. In some plants, multiple genes have reverted, suggesting strong selection pressures are involved.

    What makes it an even more interesting shift is that the western parts of the Galapagos islands are younger – less than half a million years old – and more barren. It seems environmental pressures may have driven these steps back into evolutionary history.

    Besides being a fascinating example of how evolution turns around on itself, the research also opens up possibilities for advanced genetic engineering that works with even greater control, altering plant chemistry for multiple benefits.

    “If you change just a few amino acids, you can get a completely different molecule,” says Jozwiak. “That knowledge could help us engineer new medicines, design better pest resistance, or even make less toxic produce.”

    “But first, we have to understand how nature does it. This study is one step toward that.”

    The research has been published in Nature Communications.

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  • Is Regis Healthcare Limited (ASX:REG) Trading At A 28% Discount?

    Is Regis Healthcare Limited (ASX:REG) Trading At A 28% Discount?

    • Regis Healthcare’s estimated fair value is AU$10.45 based on 2 Stage Free Cash Flow to Equity

    • Regis Healthcare is estimated to be 28% undervalued based on current share price of AU$7.52

    • Our fair value estimate is 29% higher than Regis Healthcare’s analyst price target of AU$8.08

    In this article we are going to estimate the intrinsic value of Regis Healthcare Limited (ASX:REG) by taking the expected future cash flows and discounting them to their present value. Our analysis will employ the Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) model. There’s really not all that much to it, even though it might appear quite complex.

    We would caution that there are many ways of valuing a company and, like the DCF, each technique has advantages and disadvantages in certain scenarios. Anyone interested in learning a bit more about intrinsic value should have a read of the Simply Wall St analysis model.

    We’ve found 21 US stocks that are forecast to pay a dividend yield of over 6% next year. See the full list for free.

    We use what is known as a 2-stage model, which simply means we have two different periods of growth rates for the company’s cash flows. Generally the first stage is higher growth, and the second stage is a lower growth phase. To begin with, we have to get estimates of the next ten years of cash flows. Where possible we use analyst estimates, but when these aren’t available we extrapolate the previous free cash flow (FCF) from the last estimate or reported value. We assume companies with shrinking free cash flow will slow their rate of shrinkage, and that companies with growing free cash flow will see their growth rate slow, over this period. We do this to reflect that growth tends to slow more in the early years than it does in later years.

    Generally we assume that a dollar today is more valuable than a dollar in the future, so we need to discount the sum of these future cash flows to arrive at a present value estimate:

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    2031

    2032

    2033

    2034

    2035

    Levered FCF (A$, Millions)

    AU$188.6m

    AU$205.3m

    AU$133.5m

    AU$139.8m

    AU$146.4m

    AU$136.5m

    AU$131.3m

    AU$128.9m

    AU$128.4m

    AU$129.2m

    Growth Rate Estimate Source

    Analyst x3

    Analyst x3

    Analyst x1

    Analyst x1

    Analyst x1

    Est @ -6.75%

    Est @ -3.84%

    Est @ -1.80%

    Est @ -0.38%

    Est @ 0.62%

    Present Value (A$, Millions) Discounted @ 6.4%

    AU$177

    AU$181

    AU$111

    AU$109

    AU$107

    AU$94.0

    AU$85.0

    AU$78.4

    AU$73.4

    AU$69.4

    (“Est” = FCF growth rate estimated by Simply Wall St)
    Present Value of 10-year Cash Flow (PVCF) = AU$1.1b

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  • Bezos Will Beat Musk to Mars.. That has to hurt… | by Will Lockett | Jul, 2025

    Bezos Will Beat Musk to Mars.. That has to hurt… | by Will Lockett | Jul, 2025

    New Glenn — Blue Origin

    That has to hurt…

    Like many of you, I don’t think billionaires should exist. It’s not migrants, the disabled, Muslims or trans people making life a pain; it’s these rich eejits doing everything they can, including trying to topple our democracies, so they can strip us of as much wealth as possible. Through this lens, the new-age private space race just looks like a painful dick-swinging competition between the worst people on planet Earth. But we can expect even worse dick-swinging to come, because Bezos’ Blue Origin has now been predicted to eventually beat Musk’s SpaceX to Mars. Grab your popcorn, because this is going to get messy!

    Firstly, how has this happened?

    Well, Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket, which successfully reached orbit with a 20-tonne payload on its first test launch (take note, Elon!), is in the process of undergoing its second flight. They conducted static fire tests of its second stage way back in April, and according to Ars Technica, they are now in the final stages of preparation, with a launch in September or August looking likely.

    New Glenn isn’t as large as Starship, but it is still bigger than SpaceX’s ubiquitous Falcon 9 and categorised as a heavy-launch vehicle. That means it can carry serious payloads to other celestial bodies, such as the Moon or Mars. As such, it is actually…

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