plant lover, cookie monster, shoe fiend
16934 stories
·
20 followers

Opinion | The Real Roots of the Debate Over Schools During Covid - The New York Times

1 Comment
Read the whole story
sarcozona
31 minutes ago
reply
“anything is true if you get the right level of abstraction”
Epiphyte City
Share this story
Delete

Startling Discovery: Cancer Can Arise Without Genetic Mutations

1 Share
Read the whole story
sarcozona
48 minutes ago
reply
Epiphyte City
Share this story
Delete

Stop children using smartphones until they are 13, says French report | France | The Guardian

1 Comment

Children should not be allowed to use smartphones until they are 13 and should be banned from accessing conventional social media such as TikTok, Instagram and Snapchat until they are 18, according to a report by experts commissioned by Emmanuel Macron.

The French president had asked scientists and experts to suggest screen use guidelines for children with a view to France taking unprecedented steps on limiting their exposure. It was unclear how the government might now proceed after the report’s publication. Macron said in January: “There might be bans, there might be restrictions.”

The hard-hitting report said children needed to be protected from the tech industry’s profit-driven “strategy of capturing children’s attention, using all forms of cognitive bias to shut children away on their screens, control them, re-engage them and monetise them”.

Children were becoming “merchandise” in this new tech market, the report said, adding: “We want [the industry] to know we’ve seen what they’re doing and we won’t let them get away with it.”

A three-month study by scientists and experts led by a neurologist, Servane Mouton, and Amine Benyamina, the head of the psychiatry and addiction service at Paul-Brousse hospital, said children under three should have no exposure to screens – television included – and no child should have a phone before the age of 11.

Any phone given to a child aged between 11 and 13 should be a handset without access to the internet, it said, setting the minimum age at which they should be allowed a smartphone connected to the internet at 13.

The report said a 15-year-old should be able to access only what it called “ethical” social media, such as Mastodon. Conventional, mass-marketed, profit-driven social media such as TikTok, Instagram or Snapchat should not be available to teenagers until they reached 18, it found. Teenagers should also receive better education on the science behind the need to get enough sleep.

The report made equally stringent recommendations for the very young, saying phones and screens should be limited as much as possible on maternity wards to help parents bond with their babies. Phone use should also be addressed among childminders, it said.

For children up to the age of six, screens of all kinds should be “strongly limited” and only very rarely used for education content when sitting with an adult. Screens should be totally banned from nursery schools for children under six. In primary schools, children should not be given individual tablets or digital devices to work on, unless it was for a specific disability.

The report also suggested banning connected toys, except those used as audio for storytelling.

“Before the age of six, no child needs a screen in order to develop,” Mouton said. “In fact, screens can stop them developing properly at this age.”

The scientists said they did not want to chide parents, who themselves were “victims of a powerful tech industry”. They said parents should instead be helped to avoid what they called “techno-ference” – when parents constantly checking their own phones interfered with their ability concentrate on talking to, eating with or playing with their children.

This was harming young people’s emotional development, the report said. It included adults scrolling on their phones while feeding young children, or homes where a television was constantly on in the background.

Scientists said parents were not to blame and more should be done in society as a whole, such as allowing adults to properly disconnect from work out of hours, limiting screens in public places, introducing screen-free restaurants and cafes, or parents putting their phones in a box when they got home from work.

The scientists said “parental controls” should not be seen as a sufficient means of protecting children. Rather, they were an ineffective distraction, peddled by the tech industry “to get itself off the hook” for creating algorithms, particularly within social media, designed to addict and monetise children.

Benyamina said: “Tech is and will remain a fantastic tool, but it has to act in people’s service, not people being reduced to serving a product.”

He said screens had negative effects on children “in terms of their eyesight, their metabolism … their intelligence, concentration and cognitive processes”.

He said addictions to screens were not to the product itself but to content. He said: “Algorithms that re-engage and stimulate the pleasure system and are built to avoid you losing interest in the content have a type of addictive dynamic.”

He said people should be vigilant on social media if they noticed that content was re-engaging them. “If you decided you wanted to look at one or two videos and you were on it all evening, you need to question it.”

Read the whole story
sarcozona
1 hour ago
reply
It’s telling that we’re trying to control children instead of terrible businesses trying to exploit them
Epiphyte City
Share this story
Delete

Europeans have more time, Americans more money. Which is better?

1 Comment
Read the whole story
sarcozona
6 hours ago
reply
Time time time
Epiphyte City
Share this story
Delete

Folks who insist on “data are” don’t understand how language works | Scientist Sees Squirrel

1 Comment
Read the whole story
sarcozona
7 hours ago
reply
My supervisor insists on data are and it kills me
Epiphyte City
Share this story
Delete

Location, location location: Why real estate's golden rule also applies to morel mushrooms | CBC News

1 Comment

It turns out morel mushrooms and real estate have something in common.

Location, location, location is the golden rule for buying or selling a home as much as it is for morels — the elusive and prized edible variety of mushroom that often grows in the same place every year and, according to a fungus expert, can be potentially dangerous depending on where you pick them. 

Morels are brown, black or yellow and have elongated caps with a ridged and pitted appearance that resembles a honeycomb. With a strong and distinct flavour, they're prized by chefs and amateur cooks alike for their ability to bring new life to dishes. 

For those in the know, places where morels grow are closely guarded secrets. For the uninitiated, finding them while out on a walk in the woods is rare, according to Andrew Murray, an amateur naturalist who often spends his free time admiring the beauty of nature.

"I just take pictures and leave them be," he said, noting he's never eaten one. "They're quite rare in my experience. I see maybe one every few years. The last one was in 2021." 

False and true morels easy to discern

The mushroom's elusive nature and coveted status might be why people seem to be so keen to put pictures of them online every spring. 

Over the past few weeks, morel hunters across Canada have been posting their hauls to social media groups — from a lonesome mushroom plucked from the lawn by a suburban dad, to morels gathered by the dozen, harvested from a top-secret hunting ground.  

Murray doesn't eat them because there are false morels out there and, as he puts it, "I don't trust my fungal identification skills."

False morels can cause severe illness and, in rare cases, death if ingested, according to the UBC Beaty Biodiversity Museum in Vancouver.

The good news is spotting the difference between a false morel and a real one is relatively easy, said Greg Thorn, a biology professor at Western University in London, Ont., who studies fungus.

"The false morel looks more like the brain on a stick than a honeycomb, so it has quite a different morphology," he said, noting, "'false morel' is just called that because they occur at the same season in the spring when there's not very many other mushrooms out there."

Morel lesson: Stick to conservation areas, parks 

Thorn said the most important consideration for morel hunters is where they harvest their mushrooms. Morels have a tendency to absorb and concentrate toxins found in their environments, according to research.

"They're renowned for taking up toxins in the soil, including metals like lead, or cadmium or arsenic." He noted that while abandoned apple orchards are prime locations for morel hunting, they should be avoided because of the historical reliance on arsenic-based pesticides on apple crops. 

A 2010 study found concentrations of lead and arsenic in morel mushrooms harvested from a former apple orchard in New Jersey;  a 2018 study found concentrations of radionucleides from wild mushrooms gathered in Chornobyl, the site of an accident at its nuclear power plant in 1986.

Thorn said mushrooms are the fruiting body of a much larger organism that lives underground, a vast hidden network of filaments and threads that take nutrients from soil or a rotten log. 

"Fungi, for whatever reason, we don't know why they don't discriminate between compounds they do need and compounds they don't need, like a radioactive cesium," Thorn said. "They're very, very good at concentrating these compounds.

"You really don't want to be eating a dinner of radioactive cesium or arsenic."

It's why Thorn recommends sticking to conservation areas or parks to gather mushrooms and to avoid areas that are known to be polluted, such as abandoned apple orchards or brownfield sites. 

Thorn said that given the early spring, it's likely this year's morel season will stretch well into May, meaning the mushrooms could continue to sprout until Mother's Day on May 12.

Read the whole story
sarcozona
8 hours ago
reply
I have morels growing in my artichoke tub this year!
Epiphyte City
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories