Karachi: The trouble-prone Pakistan
cricket team dressing room was once again witness to some drama and it
took PCB chairman Shaharyar Khan’s intervention to diffuse the
controversy generated by Misbah-ul Haq’s decision to rest from the third
ODI against Australia.
Misbah-ul-Haq
Khan had to talk to the
media in Abu Dhabi during the third ODI to defuse the impression that
Misbah had been coerced or pressurised into not playing the third ODI by
the team management, which is totally behind Shahid Afridi who led the
side in the match on Sunday.
Although
Misbah took pains to make politically correct appearances during the
match to give the impression that everything was alright in the dressing
room but former players still didn’t spare the PCB for its sudden
decision to hand over the captaincy to Afridi.
Shaharyar said that Misbah was not forced to sit out.
“Neither
me nor management have influenced Misbah to sit out, he has done it on
his own, he is determined to return. I had an half hour chat with him.
He says if ‘I am back to form I would like to lead to the World Cup’,”
Khan told the media.
After
Pakistan lost the match, former fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar waded into
head coach Waqar Younis and even manager/chief selector Moin Khan and
the PCB for even accepting Misbah’s wish to take a break.
“What
is happening? What sort of message is being conveyed to the cricket
world? Four months before the World Cup, we don’t know who is going to
be our ODI captain. The PCB and management is only adding to the
confusion with their strange statements,” Akhtar said.
Former
Test captain, Ramiz Raja said if Misbah wanted to rest, a younger
player should have been given charge of the team instead of Afridi.
London: A blonde recently made heads turn when she took a polar bear out for a stroll in Tokyo, Japan.
People clicked pictures, which showed the bear
crossing the world-famous Shibuya Scramble crossing, however, some of
the people believed that it wasn't real and could have been a "robot,"
the Daily Star reported.
The woman who walked the bear was
accompanied by some men, and all of them were clad in similar T-shirts
with the words "LALSH" printed on them, a name which as per the reports
belongs to some unspecified group from Russia.
The group,
which is also listed on Facebook as an organisation, has promised some
sort of reveal in Shinjuku at the end of this month.
New Delhi: The Indian Railway Catering and Tourism
Corporation, better known as IRCTC, has at long last launched its
official app for Google's mobile platform, Android. The app can now be
downloaded from Google Play India, requires about 12MB of free space,
and will work on devices running Android 4.1 Jelly Bean or above.
The new IRCTC Connect app for Android will allow users to do
pretty much everything that they can do on the website – booking
tickets, checking reservation status, train schedules, train routes and
more. Users can even login to their IRCTC accounts to search, book and
cancel train tickets, and even receive upcoming journey alerts.
IRCTC
launched its official ticket booking app for Blackberry's BBOS 10 in
August this year, while the version for Windows Phones and PCs was
released last year. While it's odd that the Indian railways chose to
bring their service to less popular platforms first, there has been a
beta version of the IRCTC app for Android for some time now.
In
any case, Android users will now be able to book Indian railway tickets
right from the smartphone app, eliminating the requirement to access
the IRCTC website. The app boasts of being an easy and quick way of
booking tickets, checking reservation status and canceling them, but for
a first hand experience you can download the app from here.
London: The importance of yeast in beer brewing has
long been underestimated but researchers from University of Leuven in
Belgium now report that beer yeasts produce chemicals that mimic the
aroma of fruits in order to attract flies that can transport the yeast
cells to new places.
Interestingly, yeasts are essential for the flavour of beverages such as beer and wine.
“In
fact, yeasts may even be responsible for much of the 'terroir', the
connection between a particular growing area and wine flavour which
previously often was attributed to differences in the soil,” said Kevin
Verstrepen from University of Leuven, also known as KU Leuven.
The new collaborative study from VIB, a life sciences
research institute, and KU Leuven shows that the fruity volatiles
produced by yeast cells are highly appealing to fruit flies.
This
attraction allows some yeast cells to hitch a ride with the insects who
carry the otherwise immobile microbes to new food sources.
Flies are strongly attracted to normal yeast cells when compared to mutant yeasts that do not produce esters.
“Knowing
that esters make beer taste good, it seems that the same flavours that
allow us to enjoy our beer probably evolved to attract flies and to help
yeast disperse into broader ecosystems,” explained neuroscientist Emre
Yaksi from Neuro-Electronics Research Flanders (NERF), an academic
research initiative.
The team believes that their findings have far-reaching implications.
“We
all know that flowers attract insects by producing aromas. But there is
also a lot of microbes living inside flowers and the chemicals they
produce may also play an important role,” added Joaquin Christiaens from
VIB who performed the experiments with yeast cells.
London: Scientists have developed a new app enabling users to operate their smartphone with gestures.
The app developed by Professor Otmar Hilliges and his
staff at ETH expands the range of potential interactions with such
devices and the gesture control significantly expands the range of
smartphone functionality.
The app lets the smartphone
understand gestures such as movement of your index finger to the left,
or right or spreading out of your fingers, or imitate a pair of pliers
or the firing of a pistol.
This gesturing wizardry is made
possible by a new type of algorithm that uses the smartphone's built-in
camera to register its environment and then executes the gesture
command associated with the gesture it observes.
The
program also recognizes the hand's distance from the camera and warns
the user when the hand is either too close or too far away and currently
recognizes six different gestures and executes their corresponding
commands.
The researchers are convinced that this new way
of operating smartphones greatly increases the range of interactivity.
The researcher's objective is to keep the gestures as simple as
possible, so that users can operate their smartphone effortlessly.
London: Scientists have now created a veggie burger that has the taste of the actual cheeseburger.
Stanford professor, Patrick Brown has crafted The
Impossible Cheeseburger, which is made by using "plant blood" that holds
the secret the replicate the taste of meat, the Independent reported.
The
sanguine liquid has the same consistency and metallic taste of blood
and comes from the same molecule found in haemoglobin, which plays a big
part in steak's distinctive taste.
The Wall Street Journal said after a taste test that it has the consistency of animal tissue and isn't overly spongy like tofu.
Brown
said that the system that is used for the production of meat and cheese
was totally "unsustainable" and had awfully harsh environmental
consequences.
Human beings have long believed that it is our unique level of
intelligence that separates us from other animals. Our ability for
higher learning, creative thought, and – perhaps most importantly – our
sophisticated communication via speech and language, defines us as a
superior species. However, as we expand our understanding of how the
brain works, and use animal experiments to learn more about the genes
involved in intelligence, will we reach a point where we can pull other
species onto our intellectual plane?
The idea of enhancing animal
intelligence may not be as far-fetched as it sounds. Consider a study
published last month by Ann Graybiel and colleagues at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology about the relationship between intelligence and
genes. The team genetically engineered mice to produce the human form of FOXP2
– a gene known to be linked to the human brain's capacity to learn and
process speech – to see whether it would improve the rodents’ ability to
learn. Sure enough, when the boosted mice were made to navigate a maze
in order to get a reward of chocolate milk, they learned the route
faster than the mice without the added human gene.
The results are
exciting for anyone interested in understanding the genetic changes in
our prehistory that helped us become the wise – or “sapient” – ape. But
the nature of this study speaks to another question: whether through
fundamental alterations and improvements to mouse brains we could create
sentient animals with levels of intelligence to rival our own – a
concept known as “uplifting”.
In the past, uplifting has been explored mainly
in science fiction. One of this summer's biggest movies was Dawn of the
Planet of the Apes, which depicts a civilisation of intelligent primates
descended from test subjects altered by scientists hoping to find a
cure for Alzheimer's.
And yet the movie has parallels with real
research now under way. In 2011, a research team led by Sam Deadwyler of
Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, used five rhesus monkeys to study the factors that lead people with diseases like Alzheimer’s to lose control of their thought processes.
The researchers trained the monkeys in an intelligence task that
involved learning and identifying images and symbols. They were then
given doses of cocaine in order to dull their intelligence and made to
repeat the test, with predictably less impressive results.
What
happened in the next stage of the research was remarkable. The same
monkeys were fitted with neural prosthetics – brain implants designed to
monitor and correct the functions of the neurons disabled by the
cocaine. These implants successfully restored normal brain function to
the monkeys when they were drugged – but crucially, if they were
activated before the monkeys had been drugged, they improved the
primates’ performance beyond their original test results. The aim of the
experiments was to see whether neural prosthetics could theoretically
be used to restore decision-making in humans who have suffered trauma or
diseases such as Alzheimer's – but as far as these specific tests were
concerned at least, the brain prosthetics appeared to make the monkeys
smarter.
All this means we may have already entered the era of animal uplifting, says George Dvorsky of the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies,
a think tank that focuses on the implications of future technology.
"But as for more substantive, impactful augmentations, that's still a
way off,” he says. “The kind of uplift that appears in science fiction
will require technologies far more advanced than anything we have
today.” This doesn’t mean we won’t eventually develop these
technologies, he adds, particularly as they will primarily help us use
animals to learn about cognitive problems in humans, including
neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's.
It’s an important
point: even if the idea of uplifting may seem fantastical – and not the
sort of goal we should be pursuing – the potential medical benefits in
terms of combating human disease and injury suggest further progress
down a path that leads to uplifting is inevitable. Certainly such
manipulation of animals has advanced enough to become a serious matter
to bio-ethicists: in 2011, the Academy of Medical Sciences in the UK
reported on the ethics of research involving animals containing human material, and devoted an entire section to brain and cognitive manipulation.
The
matter has also become a passionate debate for theorists. Some, like
Dvorsky, suggest that the debate should be pushed even further, beyond
considering just the medical and scientific advances. He believes in an
“ethical imperative to uplift”, arguing that if the technology is
developed it should be shared with animals in order to free them from
the anguish of 'survival of the fittest' as much as it is to free
humans: "As the stewards of this planet, it is our moral imperative to
not just remove ourselves from the Darwinian paradigm, but all the
creatures on Earth as well. Our journey to a post-biological,
post-Darwinian state will be a mutual one."
For David Brin, a science fiction author whose
novels helped popularise the concept of uplifting, the reasons to pursue
the idea are slightly more pragmatic. He hopes that newly intelligent
species would help us share the responsibility of protecting the
environment. "The oceans of planet Earth are a vast mystery, filled with
both physical wealth and unique treasures to preserve,” he says. “We
are trying to learn to be good planetary managers, but I doubt we could
fill that role all by ourselves, anywhere near as well as if sapient
dolphin partners (and critics) were by our side. The same holds for
countless other opportunities for both profit and wisdom."
For
others the whole idea is far more problematic. Paul Graham Raven, a
researcher at the University of Sheffield, believes the pro-uplifting
stance represents biological and scientific arrogance and a misguided
belief in human superiority over nature, where human intelligence is
viewed as the pinnacle of evolution.
This is perhaps the biggest
moral dilemma of the whole uplifting debate: even if Dvorsky, Brin, and
others believe granting intelligence to other species would be for their
benefit, Raven questions whether we possess the moral authority to make
that decision for them without their consent. "It assumes we know
what's best for species other than ourselves. Given we show little
evidence of knowing what's best for our own species, I'm inclined to
mistrust that assumption, however well intended," he says. If you would like to comment on this story or anything else you have seen on Future, head over to our Facebook or Google+ page, or message us on Twitter.