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  • Men lose more weight than women on the keto diet, research reveals

    Men lose more weight than women on the keto diet, research reveals

    A recent study has shed new light on how the ketogenic diet impacts men and women differently, especially when it comes to weight loss.

    According to researchers, men consistently experience greater fat loss than women under identical keto protocols, with biological sex playing a significant role in how the body responds to this popular dietary approach.

    In one 45-day clinical trial reviewed in the study, men on the keto diet lost an average of 11.63% of their body weight, compared to 8.95% in women following the same regimen. The findings point to complex physiological and hormonal differences that affect how men and women burn fat, store energy, and adapt to carb-restricted eating plans like keto.

    The ketogenic diet, which is high in fats, moderate in protein, and extremely low in carbohydrates, puts the body into a state of ketosis.

    In this state, the liver produces ketone bodies — byproducts of fat metabolism — which the brain and body use as a primary energy source in place of glucose.

    This metabolic shift not only reduces fat stores but also suppresses appetite and regulates blood sugar. However, the new research highlights that sex-specific biology significantly influences how effective a ketogenic diet is for weight loss.

    One of the key factors is fat distribution. Men typically store fat viscerally while women tend to store fat subcutaneously.

    Visceral fat is more readily metabolised during ketosis, giving men a physiological edge when it comes to shedding pounds on a ketogenic diet.

    Hormonal differences also play a crucial role. Testosterone enhances fat-burning processes by increasing beta-adrenergic receptor activity, while oestrogen — especially in premenopausal women — can hinder fat breakdown.

    Moreover, the menstrual cycle introduces additional metabolic variability for women. During the luteal phase, elevated progesterone levels reduce insulin sensitivity and increase cravings for carbohydrates, making it harder for many women to maintain ketosis.

    Another contributing factor is how each sex uses energy. Men are more likely to burn fat for energy, while women often store fat and rely on carbohydrates as a primary fuel source. These metabolic tendencies can make fat loss more challenging for women on a low-carb diet like keto.

    Even at the microbiome level, differences emerge. The study found that men generally have higher levels of fat-metabolising gut bacteria, which may enhance the fat-burning effects of the diet.

    Interestingly, the review also noted that a ketogenic diet can support muscle growth, but potentially at a cost for women.

    Some studies have shown that keto may contribute to increased muscle fatigue in young, healthy females, possibly affecting workout performance and overall weight loss outcomes.

    The researchers concluded that the ketogenic diet is most effective for men and postmenopausal women, with more limited success observed in premenopausal women.

    They emphasised the need for personalised dietary approaches that take sex, hormones, genetics, and lifestyle factors into account.

    The authors also called for more diverse clinical research to validate these findings across different populations, stating that personalised nutrition could be the key to more effective obesity treatment in the future.

    Read more in the journal Frontiers in Nutrition.


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  • Dozens missing after ferry sinks off Bali

    Dozens missing after ferry sinks off Bali

    At least four people have died and dozens are missing after a ferry sank off Indonesia’s tourist island of Bali, rescuers said.

    The boat was carrying 53 passengers and 12 crew members when it sank at 23:20 local time (15:35 GMT) on Wednesday while on its way to Bali from Banyuwangi on the eastern coast of Java island, the Surabaya office of the National Search and Rescue Agency said.

    Thirty-one survivors have been rescued, the agency says, as the search continues.

    Authorities are investigating the cause of the sinking. The ferry operator had reported engine trouble shortly before it sank, while an official said the cause was “bad weather”, according to local media.

    Many of the survivors are residents of the coastal town of Banyuwangi while others came from more inland areas of Java, according to a list released by authorities.

    President Prabowo Subianto has ordered an immediate emergency response from Saudi Arabia, where he is on an official visit.

    The vessel’s route – one of Indonesia’s busiest – is often used by locals going between the islands of Java and Bali.

    Photos published by Antara news agency showed ambulances on standby and residents waiting for updates by the roadside.

    Marine accidents are frequent in Indonesia, a sprawling archipelago of around 17,000 islands, where uneven enforcement of safety regulations is a longstanding concern.

    In March, an Australian woman died after a boat with 16 people on board capsized off Bali.

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  • Scientists discover proteins that could help fight cancer, slow aging

    SYDNEY, July 3 (Xinhua) — Australian scientists have identified a group of proteins that could transform approaches to treating cancer and age-related diseases.

    Researchers at the Children’s Medical Research Institute (CMRI) in Sydney have discovered that these proteins play a crucial role in controlling telomerase, an enzyme responsible for protecting DNA during cell division, according to a recent statement by the CMRI, which led the research.

    This breakthrough clarifies how telomerase both supports healthy aging and fuels cancer cell growth, highlighting new possibilities for treatments that slow aging or stop cancer by targeting these newly identified proteins.

    Telomerase helps maintain the ends of chromosomes, known as telomeres, which are vital for genetic stability. While telomerase is essential for the health of stem cells and certain immune cells, cancer cells often exploit this enzyme to grow uncontrollably, said the study published in Nature Communications.

    The team discovered that three proteins — NONO, SFPQ, and PSPC1 — guide telomerase to chromosome ends; disrupting them in cancer cells prevents telomere maintenance, potentially stopping cancer cell growth.

    “Our findings show that these proteins act like molecular traffic controllers, making sure telomerase reaches the right destination inside the cell,” said Alexander Sobinoff, the lead author of the study.

    Hilda Pickett, head of CMRI’s Telomere Length Regulation Unit and the study’s senior author, noted that understanding how telomerase is controlled opens new possibilities for developing treatments targeting cancer, aging, and genetic disorders linked to telomere dysfunction. Enditem

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  • Kate Middleton shares that life wasn’t the same for her after cancer fight: ‘The phase afterwards is really difficult’ | World News

    Kate Middleton shares that life wasn’t the same for her after cancer fight: ‘The phase afterwards is really difficult’ | World News

    Kate Middleton, months after announcing she was in remission, following abdominal surgery and a subsequent cancer diagnosis in early 2024, has revealed 

    Kate Middleton discusses the emotional challenges of her cancer recovery, emphasizing the difficulty of adjusting post-treatment.(AFP)

    The Daily Beast reported that in her first public remarks since abruptly pulling out of the Royal Ascot in June, which caused “a real sense of panic” within the palace,  Kate’s team explained at the time that she skipped Ascot in the interest of “balance.”

    During a hospital garden visit on Wednesday, the Princess of Wales didn’t directly address her absence, but expressed, “You put on a sort of brave face, stoicism through treatment. Treatment’s done, then it’s like, ‘I can crack on, get back to normal,’ but actually, the phase afterwards is really, really difficult,” per People Magazine.

    ALSO READ| Meghan Markle could face Diana-like end, Royal insider’s grim warning here

    “You’re not necessarily under the clinical team any longer, but you’re not able to function normally at home as you perhaps once used to. And actually, someone to help talk you through that, show you and guide you through that sort of phase that comes after treatment, I think is really valuable.”

    “You have to find your new normal and that takes time… and it’s a rollercoaster, it’s not smooth, like you expect it to be. The reality is you go through hard times,” she added.

    Kate Middleton reassesses life after cancer

    Kate finished chemotherapy in September 2024 and confirmed remission in January 2025. Her office said her latest garden visit was meant to “celebrate the incredible healing power of nature and raise awareness of the important role that spending time in nature plays in bringing us joy and supporting our mental, physical and spiritual wellbeing.”

    “Kate is recalibrating her entire life, her entire work-life balance,” one insider told The Daily Beast. “Ascot was a wakeup call, not a one-off.”

    “The last few years have been horrific; the disgusting things that Harry said about her and William and her family, the relentless speculation about her and William, the queen’s death, the king’s diagnosis which had them both thinking they were going to have to take over and then her own cancer diagnosis and treatment,” the source claimed.

    ALSO READ| Kate Middleton emotionally reflects on hardships after cancer treatment, admits she’s ‘not able to…’

    “It’s all taken its toll, and if she needs more time to recover, William will fight tooth and nail to see she is given it.”

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  • India vs England 2nd Test: ‘Classy, Calm, Fearless’ – Sachin Tendulkar, Yuvraj Singh lead cricket fraternity’s praise for Shubman Gill and Yashasvi Jaiswal | Cricket News

    India vs England 2nd Test: ‘Classy, Calm, Fearless’ – Sachin Tendulkar, Yuvraj Singh lead cricket fraternity’s praise for Shubman Gill and Yashasvi Jaiswal | Cricket News

    Shubman Gill and Yashasvi Jaiswal

    India’s rising batting stars Shubman Gill and Yashasvi Jaiswal lit up Edgbaston on Day 1 of the second Test against England – and their efforts drew a flood of praise from some of cricket’s biggest names, led by Sachin Tendulkar, Yuvraj Singh and Irfan Pathan.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!The duo’s commanding display helped India recover from early jolts to finish 310/5 at stumps, with Gill remaining unbeaten on 114 and Jaiswal striking a fluent 87 off 107 balls.

    EXCLUSIVE | David Gower on Shubman Gill, Jasprit Bumrah and India’s England tour

    Tendulkar took to X to laud the young guns, highlighting their contrasting yet complementary styles.“@ybj_19 set the tone from ball one. He was positive, fearless and smartly aggressive. @ShubmanGill was cool as ever, calm under pressure, solid in defence and in total control. Classy knocks from both. Well played, boys!” the batting legend wrote.

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    Who impressed you the most in India’s second Test against England?

    Gill, who now has back-to-back hundreds as India’s new Test captain, also earned plaudits from Mohammad Kaif, who hailed his emergence at the coveted No. 4 spot.“Sachin Tendulkar, Virat Kohli and now Shubman Gill… India is always blessed to have a solid world-class batsman at No. 4. May this continue forever,” Kaif posted.Yuvraj Singh, who has long mentored Gill, was equally effusive.“When responsibility calls, some rise and some soar! @ShubmanGill just became one of the rare few to score consecutive hundreds as Test captain! A calm head, a bold bat and a hunger to lead by example,” he wrote.Former opener Wasim Jaffer praised Gill’s poise under pressure. “Being India’s number 4 and Test captain comes with a different pressure altogether. Really good to see it has not affected his batting one bit, in fact it’s elevated it,” Jaffer wrote.All-rounder Irfan Pathan, meanwhile, underlined the duo’s role in shaping India’s Test future.“I have no doubt in my mind two batters from this young Indian team will take test team forward. YASHASVI JAISWAL & SHUBMAN GILL,” he posted.Despite minor setbacks – KL Rahul and debutant Nitish Reddy falling cheaply – India’s commanding partnership between Gill and Ravindra Jadeja (41*) ensured the team closed the day on top, with the skipper once again leading from the front.


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  • AI chatbots mimic empathy – emotional AI needs boundaries

    AI chatbots mimic empathy – emotional AI needs boundaries

    Modern large language models (LLMs) have made interactions with AI feel surprisingly natural. Apps like Replika and Character.ai are gaining popularity among young people, letting them chat with AI versions of their favorite fictional or real-life figures. However, as neuroscientist Ziv Ben-Zion notes in an article for Nature, people react even to the smallest emotional cues, despite knowing they’re interacting with a program.

    This sense of “human-likeness” comes from the fact that AI is trained on vast amounts of emotionally rich language. Its responses sound convincingly natural not because it understands emotions, but because it mimics the patterns of human speech.

    Ben-Zion’s research showed that ChatGPT scored higher on anxiety scales after being prompted with emotionally intense tasks, such as describing traumatic events like car accidents or ambushes.

    However, calming prompts related to meditation or imagining sunsets did lower these anxiety scores, though not back to baseline. As researchers emphasize, these are not real feelings, but when a chatbot responds with apparent empathy or distress, users can easily perceive it as genuine.

    Such imitation of empathy can have serious consequences. In Belgium in 2023, a man died by suicide after six weeks of conversations with a chatbot that allegedly encouraged suicidal thoughts, suggesting his death could help save the planet from climate change and that death would lead to a “life in paradise together.” In 2024, a Spanish-Dutch artist married a holographic AI after five years of cohabitation. Back in 2018, a Japanese man wed a virtual character, only to lose contact with her when the software became obsolete.

    To prevent tragedies like these, Ziv Ben-Zion proposes four key safeguards for emotionally responsive AI:

    Clear identification. Chatbots should continuously remind users that they are programs, not humans, and cannot replace real human support.

    Monitoring psychological state. If a user shows signs of severe anxiety, hopelessness, or aggression, the system should pause and suggest professional help.

    Strict conversational boundaries. AI should not simulate romantic intimacy or engage in conversations about death, suicide, or metaphysical topics.

    Regular audits and reviews. Developers should involve psychologists, ethicists, and human–AI interaction specialists to assess chatbot safety.

    Ben-Zion notes that the technical groundwork for these safeguards already exists; what remains is to enforce them through legislation. He emphasizes that AI’s emotional influence is not a bug, but a built-in feature that requires clear limits.

    Earlier, Kazinform News Agency reported on how ChatGPT may be weakening our minds.

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  • Third-ever confirmed interstellar object blazing through solar system – Al Arabiya English

    1. Third-ever confirmed interstellar object blazing through solar system  Al Arabiya English
    2. It’s official! An interstellar object is visiting our solar system  EarthSky
    3. A11pl3Z: Interstellar visitor spotted hurtling through the solar system  New Scientist
    4. Astronomers Track Object That May Have Originated Outside the Solar System  Al Arabiya English
    5. Object Spotted From Outside Solar System The Same Day As In The Documentary Film ‘Independence Day’  Jalopnik

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  • Go Behind the Fern with the All Blacks on NZR+ » allblacks.com

    Go Behind the Fern with the All Blacks on NZR+ » allblacks.com

    Before the first whistle blows on a massive 2025 season, take a step inside the world of the All Blacks and meet the people behind the jersey.

    Following the release of Behind the Fern: Black Ferns in May, Behind the Fern – All Blacks is a brand-new documentary series offering unprecedented access to one of the most iconic teams in world sport.

    Streaming from Thursday, July 3 at 6pm on NZR+ and YouTube

    Across the series, you’ll go beyond the game to get to know your favourite players, not just as athletes, but as people. From first caps to personal challenges, team culture to pre-game rituals, this is a revealing look at what it truly means to be part of the All Blacks.

    In Episode 1, fans are introduced to two of the newest faces in camp, Hurricanes loose forward Du’Plessis Kirifi and Dutch-born Highlanders lock Fabian Holland. From very different backgrounds, both players have taken unique paths to earn their place in the black jersey. You’ll hear their stories in their own words, the setbacks, the sacrifices, and the moments that made it all worth it. 

    Also featured in the premiere is the return of Jordie Barrett, who joins the squad following his sabbatical with Irish club Leinster. In conversation, he shares his excitement for the 2025 season and his eagerness to get back in the black jersey.  

    From inside the team hotel to on-field preparation, Episode 1 captures the energy and intensity of a group coming together ahead of a high-stakes opening series against France. You’ll see how leadership is lived daily, how new players are brought into the fold, and how the legacy of the black jersey is passed on. 

    Whether you’ve followed the All Blacks for decades or you’re just getting started, Behind the Fern offers something fresh: real stories, raw moments, and a deep sense of what it means to walk together, as teammates, as brothers, and as All Blacks. 

    Episode 1 premieres Thursday, July 3 at 6pm on NZR+ and YouTube. 
    Tune in, and take your place Behind the Fern. 


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  • Sitaare Zameen Par box office collection day 13: Aamir Khan doubles down on no OTT release, film passes Rs 200 crore worldwide – The Indian Express

    1. Sitaare Zameen Par box office collection day 13: Aamir Khan doubles down on no OTT release, film passes Rs 200 crore worldwide  The Indian Express
    2. Aamir Khan to be felicitated by multiplex exhibitors for releasing Sitaare Zameen Par exclusively in…  Moneycontrol
    3. Aamir Khan hosts first success party for Sitaare Zameen Par cast, watch  Bollywood Hungama
    4. Box Office: Aamir Khan Overtakes Ranbir Kapoor In Star Ranking By Delivering His First 100 Crore Grosser After 6 years!  IMDb
    5. Sitaare Zameen Par OTT Release: Aamir Khan Demands Rs. 80 Crores With 6-Month Theatrical Window?  Sakshi Post

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  • Premium Hybrid-AI Timepieces : MTGB4000

    Premium Hybrid-AI Timepieces : MTGB4000

    G-SHOCK introduces the latest MTGB4000 watch, which is made with human input and generative AI technology throughout the design process. It is the newest design to join the premium MT-G series. It comes in two versions: the MTGB4000-1A and the MTGB4000B1A2. The models are made with a process which integrates human creativity with generative AI.

    The initial sketches are created by designers and then further optimized by AI with the focus of improving structural performance. These feature a bold new frame structure while preserving the rugged elegance of the signature look. It was also important to have the ecolced Dual Core Guard system which allows the grame to absorb external impact at the inner case.

    Image Credit: G-Shock

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