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Classifying bodily exercise from smartphone information


Introduction

On this put up we’ll describe easy methods to use smartphone accelerometer and gyroscope information to foretell the bodily actions of the people carrying the telephones. The information used on this put up comes from the Smartphone-Primarily based Recognition of Human Actions and Postural Transitions Knowledge Set distributed by the College of California, Irvine. Thirty people have been tasked with performing numerous primary actions with an hooked up smartphone recording motion utilizing an accelerometer and gyroscope.

Earlier than we start, let’s load the varied libraries that we’ll use within the evaluation:


library(keras)     # Neural Networks
library(tidyverse) # Knowledge cleansing / Visualization
library(knitr)     # Desk printing
library(rmarkdown) # Misc. output utilities 
library(ggridges)  # Visualization

Actions dataset

The information used on this put up come from the Smartphone-Primarily based Recognition of Human Actions and Postural Transitions Knowledge Set(Reyes-Ortiz et al. 2016) distributed by the College of California, Irvine.

When downloaded from the hyperlink above, the info comprises two completely different ‘components.’ One which has been pre-processed utilizing numerous characteristic extraction methods reminiscent of fast-fourier remodel, and one other RawData part that merely provides the uncooked X,Y,Z instructions of an accelerometer and gyroscope. None of the usual noise filtering or characteristic extraction utilized in accelerometer information has been utilized. That is the info set we are going to use.

The motivation for working with the uncooked information on this put up is to help the transition of the code/ideas to time sequence information in much less well-characterized domains. Whereas a extra correct mannequin could possibly be made by using the filtered/cleaned information offered, the filtering and transformation can differ tremendously from process to process; requiring a lot of guide effort and area data. One of many stunning issues about deep studying is the characteristic extraction is realized from the info, not exterior data.

Exercise labels

The information has integer encodings for the actions which, whereas not vital to the mannequin itself, are useful to be used to see. Let’s load them first.


activityLabels <- learn.desk("information/activity_labels.txt", 
                             col.names = c("quantity", "label")) 

activityLabels %>% kable(align = c("c", "l"))
1 WALKING
2 WALKING_UPSTAIRS
3 WALKING_DOWNSTAIRS
4 SITTING
5 STANDING
6 LAYING
7 STAND_TO_SIT
8 SIT_TO_STAND
9 SIT_TO_LIE
10 LIE_TO_SIT
11 STAND_TO_LIE
12 LIE_TO_STAND

Subsequent, we load within the labels key for the RawData. This file is an inventory of all the observations, or particular person exercise recordings, contained within the information set. The important thing for the columns is taken from the info README.txt.


Column 1: experiment quantity ID, 
Column 2: person quantity ID, 
Column 3: exercise quantity ID 
Column 4: Label begin level 
Column 5: Label finish level 

The beginning and finish factors are in variety of sign log samples (recorded at 50hz).

Let’s check out the primary 50 rows:


labels <- learn.desk(
  "information/RawData/labels.txt",
  col.names = c("experiment", "userId", "exercise", "startPos", "endPos")
)

labels %>% 
  head(50) %>% 
  paged_table()

File names

Subsequent, let’s take a look at the precise information of the person information offered to us in RawData/


dataFiles <- listing.information("information/RawData")
dataFiles %>% head()

[1] "acc_exp01_user01.txt" "acc_exp02_user01.txt"
[3] "acc_exp03_user02.txt" "acc_exp04_user02.txt"
[5] "acc_exp05_user03.txt" "acc_exp06_user03.txt"

There’s a three-part file naming scheme. The primary half is the kind of information the file comprises: both acc for accelerometer or gyro for gyroscope. Subsequent is the experiment quantity, and final is the person Id for the recording. Let’s load these right into a dataframe for ease of use later.


fileInfo <- data_frame(
  filePath = dataFiles
) %>%
  filter(filePath != "labels.txt") %>% 
  separate(filePath, sep = '_', 
           into = c("kind", "experiment", "userId"), 
           take away = FALSE) %>% 
  mutate(
    experiment = str_remove(experiment, "exp"),
    userId = str_remove_all(userId, "person|.txt")
  ) %>% 
  unfold(kind, filePath)

fileInfo %>% head() %>% kable()
01 01 acc_exp01_user01.txt gyro_exp01_user01.txt
02 01 acc_exp02_user01.txt gyro_exp02_user01.txt
03 02 acc_exp03_user02.txt gyro_exp03_user02.txt
04 02 acc_exp04_user02.txt gyro_exp04_user02.txt
05 03 acc_exp05_user03.txt gyro_exp05_user03.txt
06 03 acc_exp06_user03.txt gyro_exp06_user03.txt

Studying and gathering information

Earlier than we are able to do something with the info offered we have to get it right into a model-friendly format. This implies we need to have an inventory of observations, their class (or exercise label), and the info comparable to the recording.

To acquire this we are going to scan via every of the recording information current in dataFiles, search for what observations are contained within the recording, extract these recordings and return all the things to a simple to mannequin with dataframe.


# Learn contents of single file to a dataframe with accelerometer and gyro information.
readInData <- perform(experiment, userId){
  genFilePath = perform(kind) {
    paste0("information/RawData/", kind, "_exp",experiment, "_user", userId, ".txt")
  }  
  
  bind_cols(
    learn.desk(genFilePath("acc"), col.names = c("a_x", "a_y", "a_z")),
    learn.desk(genFilePath("gyro"), col.names = c("g_x", "g_y", "g_z"))
  )
}

# Operate to learn a given file and get the observations contained alongside
# with their courses.

loadFileData <- perform(curExperiment, curUserId) {
  
  # load sensor information from file into dataframe
  allData <- readInData(curExperiment, curUserId)

  extractObservation <- perform(startPos, endPos){
    allData[startPos:endPos,]
  }
  
  # get statement places on this file from labels dataframe
  dataLabels <- labels %>% 
    filter(userId == as.integer(curUserId), 
           experiment == as.integer(curExperiment))
  

  # extract observations as dataframes and save as a column in dataframe.
  dataLabels %>% 
    mutate(
      information = map2(startPos, endPos, extractObservation)
    ) %>% 
    choose(-startPos, -endPos)
}

# scan via all experiment and userId combos and collect information right into a dataframe. 
allObservations <- map2_df(fileInfo$experiment, fileInfo$userId, loadFileData) %>% 
  right_join(activityLabels, by = c("exercise" = "quantity")) %>% 
  rename(activityName = label)

# cache work. 
write_rds(allObservations, "allObservations.rds")
allObservations %>% dim()

Exploring the info

Now that we’ve got all the info loaded together with the experiment, userId, and exercise labels, we are able to discover the info set.

Size of recordings

Let’s first take a look at the size of the recordings by exercise.


allObservations %>% 
  mutate(recording_length = map_int(information,nrow)) %>% 
  ggplot(aes(x = recording_length, y = activityName)) +
  geom_density_ridges(alpha = 0.8)

The actual fact there may be such a distinction in size of recording between the completely different exercise sorts requires us to be a bit cautious with how we proceed. If we practice the mannequin on each class without delay we’re going to must pad all of the observations to the size of the longest, which would go away a big majority of the observations with an enormous proportion of their information being simply padding-zeros. Due to this, we are going to match our mannequin to only the most important ‘group’ of observations size actions, these embrace STAND_TO_SIT, STAND_TO_LIE, SIT_TO_STAND, SIT_TO_LIE, LIE_TO_STAND, and LIE_TO_SIT.

An attention-grabbing future path can be trying to make use of one other structure reminiscent of an RNN that may deal with variable size inputs and coaching it on all the info. Nevertheless, you’ll run the chance of the mannequin studying merely that if the statement is lengthy it’s almost certainly one of many 4 longest courses which might not generalize to a state of affairs the place you have been operating this mannequin on a real-time-stream of information.

Filtering actions

Primarily based on our work from above, let’s subset the info to only be of the actions of curiosity.


desiredActivities <- c(
  "STAND_TO_SIT", "SIT_TO_STAND", "SIT_TO_LIE", 
  "LIE_TO_SIT", "STAND_TO_LIE", "LIE_TO_STAND"  
)

filteredObservations <- allObservations %>% 
  filter(activityName %in% desiredActivities) %>% 
  mutate(observationId = 1:n())

filteredObservations %>% paged_table()

So after our aggressive pruning of the info we may have a decent quantity of information left upon which our mannequin can be taught.

Coaching/testing cut up

Earlier than we go any additional into exploring the info for our mannequin, in an try to be as honest as potential with our efficiency measures, we have to cut up the info right into a practice and check set. Since every person carried out all actions simply as soon as (except for one who solely did 10 of the 12 actions) by splitting on userId we are going to be sure that our mannequin sees new folks solely once we check it.


# get all customers
userIds <- allObservations$userId %>% distinctive()

# randomly select 24 (80% of 30 people) for coaching
set.seed(42) # seed for reproducibility
trainIds <- pattern(userIds, measurement = 24)

# set the remainder of the customers to the testing set
testIds <- setdiff(userIds,trainIds)

# filter information. 
trainData <- filteredObservations %>% 
  filter(userId %in% trainIds)

testData <- filteredObservations %>% 
  filter(userId %in% testIds)

Visualizing actions

Now that we’ve got trimmed our information by eradicating actions and splitting off a check set, we are able to truly visualize the info for every class to see if there’s any instantly discernible form that our mannequin could possibly decide up on.

First let’s unpack our information from its dataframe of one-row-per-observation to a tidy model of all of the observations.


unpackedObs <- 1:nrow(trainData) %>% 
  map_df(perform(rowNum){
    dataRow <- trainData[rowNum, ]
    dataRow$information[[1]] %>% 
      mutate(
        activityName = dataRow$activityName, 
        observationId = dataRow$observationId,
        time = 1:n() )
  }) %>% 
  collect(studying, worth, -time, -activityName, -observationId) %>% 
  separate(studying, into = c("kind", "path"), sep = "_") %>% 
  mutate(kind = ifelse(kind == "a", "acceleration", "gyro"))

Now we’ve got an unpacked set of our observations, let’s visualize them!


unpackedObs %>% 
  ggplot(aes(x = time, y = worth, colour = path)) +
  geom_line(alpha = 0.2) +
  geom_smooth(se = FALSE, alpha = 0.7, measurement = 0.5) +
  facet_grid(kind ~ activityName, scales = "free_y") +
  theme_minimal() +
  theme( axis.textual content.x = element_blank() )

So at the very least within the accelerometer information patterns undoubtedly emerge. One would think about that the mannequin might have bother with the variations between LIE_TO_SIT and LIE_TO_STAND as they’ve an identical profile on common. The identical goes for SIT_TO_STAND and STAND_TO_SIT.

Preprocessing

Earlier than we are able to practice the neural community, we have to take a few steps to preprocess the info.

Padding observations

First we are going to determine what size to pad (and truncate) our sequences to by discovering what the 98th percentile size is. By not utilizing the very longest statement size this can assist us keep away from extra-long outlier recordings messing up the padding.


padSize <- trainData$information %>% 
  map_int(nrow) %>% 
  quantile(p = 0.98) %>% 
  ceiling()
padSize

98% 
334 

Now we merely have to convert our listing of observations to matrices, then use the tremendous useful pad_sequences() perform in Keras to pad all observations and switch them right into a 3D tensor for us.


convertToTensor <- . %>% 
  map(as.matrix) %>% 
  pad_sequences(maxlen = padSize)

trainObs <- trainData$information %>% convertToTensor()
testObs <- testData$information %>% convertToTensor()
  
dim(trainObs)

[1] 286 334   6

Great, we now have our information in a pleasant neural-network-friendly format of a 3D tensor with dimensions (, , ).

One-hot encoding

There’s one last item we have to do earlier than we are able to practice our mannequin, and that’s flip our statement courses from integers into one-hot, or dummy encoded, vectors. Fortunately, once more Keras has equipped us with a really useful perform to do exactly this.


oneHotClasses <- . %>% 
  {. - 7} %>%        # carry integers right down to 0-6 from 7-12
  to_categorical() # One-hot encode

trainY <- trainData$exercise %>% oneHotClasses()
testY <- testData$exercise %>% oneHotClasses()

Modeling

Structure

Since we’ve got temporally dense time-series information we are going to make use of 1D convolutional layers. With temporally-dense information, an RNN has to be taught very lengthy dependencies with the intention to decide up on patterns, CNNs can merely stack a number of convolutional layers to construct sample representations of considerable size. Since we’re additionally merely in search of a single classification of exercise for every statement, we are able to simply use pooling to ‘summarize’ the CNNs view of the info right into a dense layer.

Along with stacking two layer_conv_1d() layers, we are going to use batch norm and dropout (the spatial variant(Tompson et al. 2014) on the convolutional layers and customary on the dense) to regularize the community.


input_shape <- dim(trainObs)[-1]
num_classes <- dim(trainY)[2]

filters <- 24     # variety of convolutional filters to be taught
kernel_size <- 8  # what number of time-steps every conv layer sees.
dense_size <- 48  # measurement of our penultimate dense layer. 

# Initialize mannequin
mannequin <- keras_model_sequential()
mannequin %>% 
  layer_conv_1d(
    filters = filters,
    kernel_size = kernel_size, 
    input_shape = input_shape,
    padding = "legitimate", 
    activation = "relu"
  ) %>%
  layer_batch_normalization() %>%
  layer_spatial_dropout_1d(0.15) %>% 
  layer_conv_1d(
    filters = filters/2,
    kernel_size = kernel_size,
    activation = "relu",
  ) %>%
  # Apply common pooling:
  layer_global_average_pooling_1d() %>% 
  layer_batch_normalization() %>%
  layer_dropout(0.2) %>% 
  layer_dense(
    dense_size,
    activation = "relu"
  ) %>% 
  layer_batch_normalization() %>%
  layer_dropout(0.25) %>% 
  layer_dense(
    num_classes, 
    activation = "softmax",
    title = "dense_output"
  ) 

abstract(mannequin)

______________________________________________________________________
Layer (kind)                   Output Form                Param #    
======================================================================
conv1d_1 (Conv1D)              (None, 327, 24)             1176       
______________________________________________________________________
batch_normalization_1 (BatchNo (None, 327, 24)             96         
______________________________________________________________________
spatial_dropout1d_1 (SpatialDr (None, 327, 24)             0          
______________________________________________________________________
conv1d_2 (Conv1D)              (None, 320, 12)             2316       
______________________________________________________________________
global_average_pooling1d_1 (Gl (None, 12)                  0          
______________________________________________________________________
batch_normalization_2 (BatchNo (None, 12)                  48         
______________________________________________________________________
dropout_1 (Dropout)            (None, 12)                  0          
______________________________________________________________________
dense_1 (Dense)                (None, 48)                  624        
______________________________________________________________________
batch_normalization_3 (BatchNo (None, 48)                  192        
______________________________________________________________________
dropout_2 (Dropout)            (None, 48)                  0          
______________________________________________________________________
dense_output (Dense)           (None, 6)                   294        
======================================================================
Complete params: 4,746
Trainable params: 4,578
Non-trainable params: 168
______________________________________________________________________

Coaching

Now we are able to practice the mannequin utilizing our check and coaching information. Be aware that we use callback_model_checkpoint() to make sure that we save solely the perfect variation of the mannequin (fascinating since in some unspecified time in the future in coaching the mannequin might start to overfit or in any other case cease bettering).


# Compile mannequin
mannequin %>% compile(
  loss = "categorical_crossentropy",
  optimizer = "rmsprop",
  metrics = "accuracy"
)

trainHistory <- mannequin %>%
  match(
    x = trainObs, y = trainY,
    epochs = 350,
    validation_data = listing(testObs, testY),
    callbacks = listing(
      callback_model_checkpoint("best_model.h5", 
                                save_best_only = TRUE)
    )
  )

The mannequin is studying one thing! We get a decent 94.4% accuracy on the validation information, not dangerous with six potential courses to select from. Let’s look into the validation efficiency a bit of deeper to see the place the mannequin is messing up.

Analysis

Now that we’ve got a educated mannequin let’s examine the errors that it made on our testing information. We are able to load the perfect mannequin from coaching based mostly upon validation accuracy after which take a look at every statement, what the mannequin predicted, how excessive a chance it assigned, and the true exercise label.


# dataframe to get labels onto one-hot encoded prediction columns
oneHotToLabel <- activityLabels %>% 
  mutate(quantity = quantity - 7) %>% 
  filter(quantity >= 0) %>% 
  mutate(class = paste0("V",quantity + 1)) %>% 
  choose(-number)

# Load our greatest mannequin checkpoint
bestModel <- load_model_hdf5("best_model.h5")

tidyPredictionProbs <- bestModel %>% 
  predict(testObs) %>% 
  as_data_frame() %>% 
  mutate(obs = 1:n()) %>% 
  collect(class, prob, -obs) %>% 
  right_join(oneHotToLabel, by = "class")

predictionPerformance <- tidyPredictionProbs %>% 
  group_by(obs) %>% 
  summarise(
    highestProb = max(prob),
    predicted = label[prob == highestProb]
  ) %>% 
  mutate(
    reality = testData$activityName,
    appropriate = reality == predicted
  ) 

predictionPerformance %>% paged_table()

First, let’s take a look at how ‘assured’ the mannequin was by if the prediction was appropriate or not.


predictionPerformance %>% 
  mutate(consequence = ifelse(appropriate, 'Appropriate', 'Incorrect')) %>% 
  ggplot(aes(highestProb)) +
  geom_histogram(binwidth = 0.01) +
  geom_rug(alpha = 0.5) +
  facet_grid(consequence~.) +
  ggtitle("Chances related to prediction by correctness")

Reassuringly it appears the mannequin was, on common, much less assured about its classifications for the wrong outcomes than the proper ones. (Though, the pattern measurement is simply too small to say something definitively.)

Let’s see what actions the mannequin had the toughest time with utilizing a confusion matrix.


predictionPerformance %>% 
  group_by(reality, predicted) %>% 
  summarise(rely = n()) %>% 
  mutate(good = reality == predicted) %>% 
  ggplot(aes(x = reality,  y = predicted)) +
  geom_point(aes(measurement = rely, colour = good)) +
  geom_text(aes(label = rely), 
            hjust = 0, vjust = 0, 
            nudge_x = 0.1, nudge_y = 0.1) + 
  guides(colour = FALSE, measurement = FALSE) +
  theme_minimal()

We see that, because the preliminary visualization prompt, the mannequin had a little bit of bother with distinguishing between LIE_TO_SIT and LIE_TO_STAND courses, together with the SIT_TO_LIE and STAND_TO_LIE, which even have related visible profiles.

Future instructions

The obvious future path to take this evaluation can be to aim to make the mannequin extra basic by working with extra of the equipped exercise sorts. One other attention-grabbing path can be to not separate the recordings into distinct ‘observations’ however as an alternative hold them as one streaming set of information, very like an actual world deployment of a mannequin would work, and see how properly a mannequin may classify streaming information and detect adjustments in exercise.

Gal, Yarin, and Zoubin Ghahramani. 2016. “Dropout as a Bayesian Approximation: Representing Mannequin Uncertainty in Deep Studying.” In Worldwide Convention on Machine Studying, 1050–9.

Graves, Alex. 2012. “Supervised Sequence Labelling.” In Supervised Sequence Labelling with Recurrent Neural Networks, 5–13. Springer.

Kononenko, Igor. 1989. “Bayesian Neural Networks.” Organic Cybernetics 61 (5). Springer: 361–70.

LeCun, Yann, Yoshua Bengio, and Geoffrey Hinton. 2015. “Deep Studying.” Nature 521 (7553). Nature Publishing Group: 436.

Reyes-Ortiz, Jorge-L, Luca Oneto, Albert Samà, Xavier Parra, and Davide Anguita. 2016. “Transition-Conscious Human Exercise Recognition Utilizing Smartphones.” Neurocomputing 171. Elsevier: 754–67.

Tompson, Jonathan, Ross Goroshin, Arjun Jain, Yann LeCun, and Christoph Bregler. 2014. “Environment friendly Object Localization Utilizing Convolutional Networks.” CoRR abs/1411.4280. http://arxiv.org/abs/1411.4280.

Why America’s HIV epidemic hasn’t ended

0


Brenton Williams lastly felt he had the correct medical insurance to ask his physician about PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis), a extremely protecting drug routine for individuals liable to HIV. Williams’ fiancée is HIV constructive, which ought to have made him the proper candidate for PrEP, which prevents HIV transmission within the occasion of publicity to the virus. “I simply actually needed this further layer of safety,” he stated.

His physician wasn’t so positive.

“Effectively, what do you want it for?” she probed, earlier than providing to “look into it.” Williams sensed that she was making an attempt to vary the topic.

”I don’t perceive what the maintain up is,” Williams instructed me two months after his preliminary appointment requesting the remedy. So far as he may inform, his physician appeared unclear about greatest practices for prescribing PrEP, telling Williams that she wanted to be taught extra about it herself. Williams had accomplished the entire needed lab work together with a full bodily, however he nonetheless hadn’t gotten entry to the drug. “I undoubtedly need to proceed to have intercourse, however I additionally need to preserve my physique secure,” he instructed me.

In concept, it has change into miraculously simple to keep away from getting HIV in the USA immediately.

  • What’s PrEP? PrEP is a preventative drugs that significantly reduces your danger of contracting HIV. It comes within the type of a every day tablet or a bimonthly injection.
  • Who’s PrEP for? PrEP is for anybody liable to HIV, together with these with a number of sexual companions, a latest historical past of sexually transmitted infections, inconsistent condom use, or a historical past of drug use.
  • How does it work? Getting on PrEP requires a unfavorable HIV check — plus a couple of different screenings — and a well being care supplier’s prescription.
  • How a lot does it price? Nothing for most individuals. Most insurance coverage suppliers cowl PrEP. There are additionally help choices accessible for uninsured sufferers.
  • Find out how to be taught extra: Yow will discover a close-by PrEP supplier via the HIV Providers Locator, the CDC’s PrEP Locator, or AIDSVu. You may also get a prescription on-line via suppliers like MISTR or state-run telePrEP packages.

For people who find themselves HIV unfavorable, a once-daily PrEP tablet can forestall an infection throughout intercourse with somebody who’s HIV constructive a minimum of 99 p.c of the time. On the similar time, a lot of the 1.2 million Individuals residing with HIV comply with an anti-retroviral remedy routine that’s so efficient that it could possibly make their HIV non-transmissible. These therapies are each a marvel of recent drugs and a residing tribute to the greater than 700,000 Individuals who’ve misplaced their lives to HIV because the first reported circumstances appeared in 1981.

Getting on PrEP, which was accepted by the Meals and Drug Administration in 2012, ought to be about as simple as getting on contraception, one other every day tablet prescribed for sexual well being. In each circumstances, uncomfortable side effects are minimal and uncommon, and the prices are lined by most insurance coverage.

However regardless of all that, PrEP stays exasperatingly out of attain for a whole bunch of hundreds of individuals within the US who want it. Most Individuals — about 60 p.c — don’t learn about PrEP within the first place. Even when they do know sufficient — and have the well being protection they want — to ask a health care provider about it, lower than half of physicians really feel educated sufficient to prescribe PrEP, as Williams discovered. And different individuals nonetheless usually wrestle with stigma from their communities and even from their well being care suppliers.

Consequently, solely about one-third of individuals liable to HIV within the US at the moment take PrEP. Worse but, those that are the most more likely to profit from its safety are sometimes the least more likely to be on the remedy. Amongst individuals liable to HIV, Black and Latino bisexual and homosexual males, girls, and Southerners persistently take PrEP at a lot decrease ranges than the remainder of the inhabitants, which can account for the troubling improve in new HIV infections over the previous decade in some areas within the US.

”We’ve had a dramatic drop in new infections over the previous 15 years, however we’ve plateaued, and we’ve plateaued amongst those self same weak populations,” stated Carl Baloney Jr., president of AIDSUnited. Individuals like Brenton Williams can do the whole lot proper, he stated, and but, they nonetheless get misplaced within the cracks of this nation’s warped well being system, both as a result of they lack medical insurance, or as a result of their suppliers don’t learn about PrEP nicely sufficient to prescribe it.

The gaps in PrEP protection could quickly get even wider, as a result of the Trump administration has slashed a whole bunch of hundreds of thousands of {dollars} in grants earmarked for PrEP outreach and HIV prevention. It’s a maddening time to be an HIV advocate in the USA. After a long time of attending to the purpose the place an America freed from HIV appeared in sight, the nation feels on the verge of a tragic reversal. And the provision of PrEP is without doubt one of the most necessary elements in deciding what comes subsequent.

“It is a illness that, with some sturdy coverage assist and political will, we may finish on this nation in a short time,” Baloney Jr. stated. “There’s actually no excuse for there to be new infections at any measurable fee in the USA of America.”

“An terrible lot of labor for a illness you don’t have”

Sarcastically, among the challenges going through PrEP come from the unbelievable success of battling HIV. Nearly everybody beneath the age of 35 is simply too younger to recollect a time earlier than antiretrovirals, when HIV was a loss of life sentence.

“The scope and the notice of HIV actually modified as soon as extra individuals have been residing with HIV than dying of HIV,” Danielle Houston, govt director of the Southern AIDS Coalition, stated. That may be a large achievement, she stated, however one which has additionally “cloaked the precise epidemic” from public view.

“The scope and the notice of HIV actually modified as soon as extra individuals have been residing with HIV than dying of HIV.”

— Danielle Houston, Southern AIDS Coalition

And although HIV has change into a lot, rather more treatable, it’s nonetheless a widespread illness, extra so in some communities than in others. In Washington, DC, as an example, almost one in 50 residents has HIV, among the many highest charges within the nation. Even with strict therapy regimens — which might price upward of $1 million over a affected person’s lifetime — individuals residing with HIV endure from increased dangers of coronary heart illness and different comorbidities.

However the burden isn’t distributed equally, that means that, in some communities, the precise HIV fee is way increased. At present charges, one in 15 white homosexual and bisexual males nationally can be identified with HIV of their lifetime. For Black homosexual and bisexual males, the chance rises to a startling one in three. For Latino homosexual and bisexual males, it’s one in 4. In DC, for instance, the speed of HIV is starkly segregated, with new infections extremely concentrated within the metropolis’s predominantly Black neighborhoods.

And whereas an increasing number of persons are taking PrEP every year, progress on decreasing HIV charges general has largely stalled and has even reversed in some communities — a pattern that’s tightly linked to PrEP utilization charges. States with excessive ranges of PrEP protection, like New York and Vermont, noticed a 38 p.c lower in new HIV diagnoses between 2012 and 2022, whereas these with low PrEP protection , like West Virginia and Wyoming, noticed a 27 p.c improve, based on a report by AIDSVu.

Black Individuals are by far the most certainly to be impacted by HIV on this nation, going through new an infection charges at a lot increased ranges immediately than have ever been reliably recorded amongst white Individuals. Lately, Latinos have confronted an alarming improve in new infections, with charges rising almost 20 p.c between 2018 and 2022.

And each communities of shade and girls take PrEP at low charges, relative to their danger of HIV. Black individuals account for almost 40 p.c of all new HIV diagnoses however make up solely 16 p.c of PrEP customers, the vast majority of whom are white. One in 5 HIV infections happen in girls, however they account for just one in 10 PrEP customers.

A few of which may be as a result of dangerously false perceptions that ladies not often get HIV and are due to this fact much less more likely to profit from preventative companies. Marnina Miller, Williams’ fiancée and co-executive director of the Constructive Ladies’s Community, a gaggle advocating for individuals residing with HIV, first examined constructive for the virus in 2013, a time when PrEP existed however was poorly understood — stigmatized as a “celebration drug” on the grounds that it supposedly inspired promiscuity and barely on the radar of most girls. Even now, “girls are constantly an afterthought within the HIV epidemic,” she stated.

Black and Latino communities even have much less entry to PrEP as an extension of a lot broader, deeply entrenched healthcare disparities. “It’s not that ladies, Black, Hispanic, or Latinx people, or Southern people are being much less accountable about their sexual well being,” stated Houston. “They’re extra weak to healthcare programs and coverage adjustments” that put therapy and preventative companies like PrEP out of attain.

Insurance coverage to cowl the remedy — which might price up to $2,000 per 30 days out of pocket — is one barrier for many individuals. Whereas there are alternatives to get assist paying for PrEP if individuals don’t have insurance coverage, like state-level PrEP packages or affected person help packages supplied by the drug producers themselves, there’s no preventative equal to the federally funded Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program, which helps individuals residing with HIV who’re uninsured or in any other case can’t afford therapy.

People even have to leap via hoops to ensure that not simply the remedy but additionally the entire different prices related to PrEP — “the HIV testing, the labs, the medical doctors visits” — are lined, stated Jeremiah Johnson, govt director of the advocacy group PrEP4All.

After which, even when they do get a prescription, most Individuals take PrEP within the type of a once-a-day-pill, with necessities to test in with their physician each 3 months to resume their prescription. Not coincidentally, someplace between 37 and 62 p.c cease taking PrEP inside six months of beginning.

“The factor that we’ve heard repeatedly from PrEP customers,” Johnson instructed me, “is that that’s an terrible lot of labor for a illness that you simply don’t have.”

Find out how to get extra individuals on PrEP

Navigating the PrEP panorama may be daunting in different methods, too, with vital info usually arriving to individuals late, if it arrives in any respect. Solely one of many two FDA-approved PrEP drugs — Truvada — is legally accepted for individuals assigned feminine at start. Williams, who’s a trans man, was unaware of this till I discussed it throughout our name. “I had no clue,” he stated. “That is the primary time I’m listening to this, however it’s the type of factor my physician ought to have stated to me.”

Marnina Miller, co-executive director of the Constructive Ladies’s Community, and her fiancé Brenton Williams.
Courtesy of Marnina Miller

This sample of unawareness about probably life-changing therapies got here up continuously in my conversations with advocates.

”Listening to about PrEP and what it may do to maintain me HIV unfavorable was transformative,” stated Baloney of AIDSUnited, of when he realized in regards to the tablet a decade in the past. As a Black homosexual man, he stated, “the primary query I had was: How am I simply listening to about this now?”

The excellent news is, extra individuals are listening to about PrEP now. Between 2023 and 2024, PrEP use elevated by about 17 p.c. An enormous a part of that improve was the explosive progress in entry by way of telemedicine pushed largely by MISTR, a telehealth platform — and its femme spinoff, SISTR — which now supplies about one in 5 PrEP prescriptions in the USA, based on a examine by researchers at Emory College’s Rollins College of Public Well being.

Tristan Schukraft, an entrepreneur and self-professed “CEO of the whole lot homosexual” who owns a luxurious boutique lodge chain and a preferred homosexual bar in West Hollywood, based MISTR in 2018, as a result of “plenty of my associates have been having challenges getting on PrEP,” he instructed me. “I noticed that there has bought to be a greater method.”

Whereas some may assume that telehealth platforms skew towards “white males or individuals with means,” stated Schukraft, nearly half of MISTR’s customers are individuals of shade, increased than the common PrEP ratio, based on the Emory College examine. Greater than three-quarters of the platform’s prospects have by no means used PrEP earlier than, and one-third are uninsured. (MISTR additionally helps uninsured sufferers navigate choices for protecting the price.)

Getting on PrEP is difficult if it’s not accessible at “locations the place persons are already at, whether or not that’s via telemedicine or a brick-and-mortar location that’s really accessible to them,” stated Johnson of PreP4All. He credited MISTR and initiatives like Iowa’s state TelePrEP program with actively “remodeling PrEP entry for individuals.”

Many individuals nonetheless profit from community-based outreach too.

Take Gail Prince, a grandmother who discovered in 2024 that her accomplice of 30 years had knowingly contaminated her with an STI that he had been secretly taking drugs to deal with. Nearly instantly, “I went all the way down to the court docket constructing and filed the divorce papers,” she stated. “I used to be like, ‘Nobody else goes to guard me as I may.’”

Prince went to get examined for HIV on the Ladies’s Collective, a clinic in DC that makes a speciality of HIV-related companies for girls of shade. She was unfavorable. However after her husband’s betrayal, “I felt like I used to be nothing, soiled,” she stated. “I didn’t handle myself.” She stopped getting her hair accomplished. However not for too lengthy.

“I knew that I needed to truly take into consideration myself in an effort to be right here to see my grandkids graduate from highschool and school,” stated Prince, who has since gotten again on the courting scene, now protected by PrEP, which she realized about on the Ladies’s Collective. “It makes me really feel higher, as a result of I do know I’m coming first. I’m not ready for a person who may not let you know something.”

She will get her PrEP via Ladies’s Collective and likewise makes use of their meals pantry and participates in a few of their social teams, like their weekly “Espresso Home” chats, additional connecting her to the group and its helps.

“Organizations like ours know that it’s not nearly HIV,” Valerie Rochester, govt director of the Ladies’s Collective, stated. “It’s about the whole lot that’s concerned in an individual’s life” that “may probably forestall them from looking for medical care,” like housing insecurity, an absence of social assist, or substance misuse. “We’re at all times trying to develop any ways in which we are able to discover to interact a shopper and preserve them coming again.”

A Black man’s hands hold a blue pill

Most individuals within the US take PrEP within the type of a every day tablet, however injectables have gotten extra widespread.
Daniel Born/The Instances

Prince is without doubt one of the small fraction of individuals on PrEP in the USA who get the remedy via a shot each two months as an alternative of a as soon as every day tablet. She began off on the tablet Truvada, however like about half of PrEP customers, “it wasn’t actually working for me,” she stated. “I used to be forgetting to take it.” So when the Ladies’s Collective launched her to Apretude, which is a once-every-two-month shot fairly than a every day tablet, she jumped on the probability.

Such injectable types of PrEP — together with the recently-approved Lenacapavir, which requires jabs solely as soon as each six months — have the potential to radically improve the variety of individuals shielded from HIV. Over 80 p.c of people that go the injectables route are nonetheless on PrEP six months after they start therapy, in contrast with about half who take the every day tablet.

PrEP injections do should be given in a clinic, which has led MISTR to arrange — although not but open — seven brick-and-mortar areas situated in “gayborhoods” throughout the nation. Sufferers will have the ability to go to them to get their biannual long-acting PrEP injections, which Schukraft referred to as a “sport changer” — so long as individuals can afford it. MISTR is holding off on truly opening store at these areas till extra insurance coverage corporations start protecting the photographs, which might in any other case price nearly $30,000 per affected person per 12 months.

Many states additionally now permit pharmacists, fairly than simply medical doctors, to prescribe PrEP. And as injectables go mainstream, advocates are working to strive to make sure extra pharmacies are approved to manage them.

A rustic with out HIV is now inside attain — however in danger

Sooner or later, getting on PrEP could also be simply as accessible, destigmatized, and routine as getting on contraception or acquiring different sexual well being therapies. “Say you go and seize your Plan B; there’s PrEP proper subsequent to it,” stated Miller, of the Constructive Ladies’s Community, who hopes to see a world the place “prevention can be an on a regular basis prevalence.”

“We even have the instruments. We all know how you can remove HIV, and so, we are able to nonetheless flip this round.”

— Vincent Guilamo-Ramos, Institute for Coverage Research on the Johns Hopkins College of Nursing

The nation isn’t there but, however it has been getting nearer. Or, at the least, it was earlier than the Trump administration started gutting the Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention’s HIV prevention and therapy packages and defunding native clinics doing PrEP outreach work final 12 months. Whereas even pink states have been shamed into sustaining funds for HIV therapy within the wake of the Trump cuts, prevention packages stay threatened at a time when PrEP might be extra accessible than ever.

In 2024, the Biden administration appointed Miller as a member of the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS, which has been round since 1995. However Trump — who pledged to finish the HIV epidemic within the US by 2030 throughout his State of the Union tackle in 2019 — dismissed the council final 12 months alongside the complete employees of the Workplace of Infectious Illnesses and HIV Coverage.

Vincent Guilamo-Ramos, director of the Institute for Coverage Research on the Johns Hopkins College of Nursing, is very involved in regards to the impression of the Trump administration on Latino communities, who have been already experiencing a largely hidden surge in HIV diagnoses in recent times.

The Trump administration’s anti-immigrant rhetoric has probably made a rising drawback even worse, he stated. There’s been “a chilling impact for all the Latino neighborhood” in the case of looking for medical care and even gathering in public, and that has prolonged to HIV prevention efforts. A number of months in the past, Guilamo-Ramos accompanied a cellular clinic that parked outdoors of a preferred homosexual Latino nightclub to supply testing and therapy in downtown LA. Usually, he says, such “bilingual and bicultural” neighborhood outreach is the gold customary for getting extra individuals on PrEP.

However, this time, he stated, the membership was empty. “I stated, ‘The place is everyone? It’s Friday evening. Individuals ought to be out,’” stated Guilamo-Ramos. A clinic employee instructed him that individuals have been “afraid to come back” due to considerations about immigration raids.

It’s been tougher to proceed to interact, to succeed in individuals via grassroots neighborhood efforts, he stated, “which is basically the way in which to get to individuals who could have much less expertise with the well being care system.”

However like many different well being care staff who’ve fought to eradicate HIV, Guilamo-Ramos has seen sufficient to know that this isn’t the time to surrender. Within the early Nineties, his job was primarily palliative look after HIV-positive sufferers, serving to “individuals to make that means out of no matter time they have been lucky to have left,” he stated. “That has modified dramatically.”

“Regardless of all these limitations,” the fears, and the funding cuts, “the factor that’s most hopeful, which retains me going, is that we even have the instruments,” he stated. “We all know how you can remove HIV, and so, we are able to nonetheless flip this round.”

For his half, Williams remains to be combating to get on PrEP. He plans to take off work for his birthday this month and go to his physician to advocate for a prescription as soon as and for all. If that doesn’t work, he’ll flip to a different clinic, he says — one that makes a speciality of serving individuals like him.

The stakes are just too excessive, and he has put an excessive amount of effort and time into this already to surrender. However it ought to by no means have been this tough. “I nonetheless should advocate each time I talk with them” about PrEP, he instructed me, which is outlandish, “as a result of that is one thing they themselves ought to be pushing” extra individuals to take.

“I’m making an attempt to be affected person,” he stated, however currently, that persistence has been sporting skinny.

Scientists Uncover an Wonderful New Use For Your Leftover Espresso Grounds : ScienceAlert

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Scientists in South Korea have discovered a intelligent new use on your outdated espresso grounds: Insulation.

A group from Jeonbuk Nationwide College (JBNU) transformed espresso waste into a cloth that was simply as efficient at insulation as supplies presently utilized in buildings.

The benefit is that the brand new materials is constructed from renewable sources reasonably than fossil fuels and, when it comes time to eliminate it, it is biodegradable.

“Espresso waste is produced on a large scale worldwide, but most of it results in landfills or is incinerated,” says Seong Yun Kim, supplies engineer at JBNU.

“Our work reveals that this ample waste stream will be upcycled right into a high-value materials that performs in addition to business insulation merchandise whereas being way more sustainable.”

In a lab experiment, researchers positioned their new materials (EC/SB700/PG-25) beneath a photo voltaic cell and measured the temperature. (Sung Jin Kim & Seong Yun Kim)

Collectively, the world drinks about 2.25 billion cups of espresso daily – and that interprets into an enormous quantity of discarded grounds. Most of this waste is burned or buried, which is as unhealthy for the setting as dumping it down the drain.

As a substitute, scientists are more and more discovering extra helpful issues to do with outdated espresso grounds. Latest research have explored including the stuff to concrete and different paving supplies, utilizing it to take away herbicides from the setting, and even extracting new drug compounds from it.

Within the new examine, the JBNU group investigated how effectively espresso grounds may perform as a thermally insulating materials.

First, spent espresso grounds have been dried out in an oven at 80 levels Celsius (176 levels Fahrenheit) for every week. Then, they have been cooked at a lot larger temperatures to provide a carbon-rich materials referred to as biochar.

Espresso is among the most consumed drinks on the earth. (Daniel Haug/Second/Getty Photos)

Subsequent, this biochar was handled with environmentally pleasant solvents – water, ethanol, and propylene glycol – after which combined with a pure polymer known as ethyl cellulose. Lastly, the powdery combination is compressed and heated right into a composite materials.

The polymer stabilizes the biochar, whereas the solvents are added to stop the polymer from clogging the fabric’s pores. These pores are an vital property: they entice air, which is a really efficient insulator in opposition to warmth.

A cloth’s thermal conductivity is expressed as watts per meter per Kelvin – mainly, how a lot thermal vitality (watts) will move by a cloth of a sure thickness (meters) given the temperature distinction (Kelvin) between the 2 sides.

Supplies with conductivity under 0.07 watts per meter per Kelvin are typically thought-about insulators. The simplest model of the JBNU group’s coffee-based composite boasted a thermal conductivity of simply 0.04 watts per meter per Kelvin.

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In lab assessments, the researchers positioned a variety of insulating supplies, together with their coffee-based one, beneath a photo voltaic cell and measured the temperature of the air in a small chamber under the cell.

This tiny benchtop mannequin replicated how insulation blocks extra warmth radiating from photo voltaic panels, stopping it from penetrating rooftops and heating houses.

The model with the brand new materials stayed constantly cooler than the one with out.

The brand new materials’s efficiency was on par with that of expanded polystyrene, probably the greatest business insulating supplies presently out there.

The distinction, although, is that polystyrene is an artificial polymer constructed from fossil fuels, so its manufacturing and eventual disposal are way more environmentally dangerous.

Most espresso waste is just discarded. (PamWalker68/iStock/Getty Photos Plus)

In biodegradability assessments, the coffee-based materials had misplaced greater than 10 p.c of its weight after simply three weeks. Polystyrene, then again, remained mainly unchanged after the identical period of time.

Associated: Scientists Uncover an Wonderful Sensible Use For Peanut Shell Waste

The researchers recommend that this sort of materials may very well be greatest used for insulation in buildings, conserving the inside cool even whereas photo voltaic cells are working laborious on the rooftops.

“This strategy not solely improves materials efficiency but additionally contributes to a round financial system,” says Kim.

“By turning waste right into a useful product, we are able to scale back environmental burdens whereas creating new alternatives for sustainable supplies.”

The analysis was printed within the journal Biochar.

Approximation to unravel an indirect triangle

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The earlier submit gave a easy and correct approximation for the smaller angle of a proper triangle. Given a proper triangle with sides ab, and c, the place a is the shortest facet and c is the hypotenuse, the angle reverse facet a is roughly

in radians. The earlier submit labored in levels, however right here we’ll use radians.

If the triangle is indirect slightly than a proper triangle, there an approximation for the angle A that doesn’t require inverse trig capabilities, although it does require sq. roots. The approximation is derived in [1] utilizing the identical collection that’s the foundation of the approximation within the earlier submit, the facility collection for two csc(x) + cot(x).

For an indirect triangle, the approximation isA approx frac{6 sqrt{(s - b)(s - c)}}{2sqrt{bc} + sqrt{s(s-a)}}

the place s is the semiperimeter.

s = frac{a + b + c}{2}

For comparability, we are able to discover the precise worth of A utilizing the regulation of cosines.

a^2 = b^2 + c^2 - 2 bc cos A

and so

A = cos^{-1}left(frac{b^2 + c^2 - a^2}{2bc}right)

Right here’s a bit Python script to see how correct the approximation is.

from math import sqrt, acos

def approx(a, b, c):
    "approximate the angle reverse a"
    s = (a + b + c)/2
    return 6*sqrt((s - b)*(s - c)) / (2*sqrt(b*c) + sqrt(s*(s - a)))

def actual(a, b, c):
    "actual worth of the angle reverse a"    
    return acos((b**2 + c**2 - a**2)/(2*b*c))

a, b, c = 6, 7, 12
print( approx(a, b, c) )
print( actual(a, b, c) )

This prints

0.36387538476776243
0.36387760856668505

exhibiting that in our instance the approximation is nice to 5 decimal locations.

[1] H. E. Stelson. Word on the approximate resolution of an indirect triangle with out tables. American Mathematical Month-to-month. Vol 56, No. 2 (February, 1949), pp. 84–95.

I am certain somebody on the studio sooner or later described this mission as Colossus meets Rosemary’s Child

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I have never seen Demon Seed in who is aware of what number of years. I remembered it
being properly accomplished, and the ending definitely caught with me, however till I noticed
this video, I hadn’t given a lot thought to the movie or to how properly the
main parts had aged. In case you remade the movie below a unique title,
I doubt many viewers would suspect that the supply novel was over 50
years outdated.

The Tragic Betrayal within the Modifying Room of Demon Seed (1977)

It is essential to notice not simply how carefully Demon Seed tracks with present narratives about AI, however how properly established all of those parts have been no less than a decade earlier than the film was made. A supercomputer had taken over the world in Colossus. The unique Star Trek (which was at all times a dependable reflection of the favored sci-fi of the postwar period) had featured a number of rogue AIs and no less than one episode the place the plot hinged on deepfakes. We can’t even attempt to cowl I Have No Mouth, and I Should Scream and the entire different notable examples from ’50s and ’60s quick tales and novels.

On the danger of oversimplifying the matter and ignoring quite a lot of exceptions, it’s usually protected to say that the thought of what we now name the long run emerged within the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and reached its remaining type within the quarter century following the tip of World Battle II. What’s maybe most exceptional about that is how static, some would even say stagnant, the notion of the long run has been during the last 50 years. Apart from some cyberpunk trappings, the outdated visions of tech visionaries virtually invariably encompass flashbacks to the Eisenhower administration. 

Amazon Fast for advertising: From scattered information to strategic motion

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Think about the next situation: You’re main advertising campaigns, creating content material, or driving demand era. Your campaigns are scattered and your insights are buried. By the point you’ve pieced collectively what’s working, the second to behave has already handed.

This isn’t a instruments drawback as a result of you’ve got loads of these. It’s a connection drawback. Your advertising programs and instruments are disconnected, so that you spend time transferring information between programs as a substitute of bettering campaigns or sharing outcomes along with your staff.

Amazon Fast modifications how you’re employed. You may set it up in minutes and by the tip of the day, you’ll marvel the way you ever labored with out it. Fast connects along with your functions, instruments, and information, creating a private information graph that learns your priorities, preferences, and community. It doesn’t simply reply your questions. It is aware of the way you wish to work. Ask a query, get a solution grounded in your actual enterprise information. Give it a activity and it acts.

One individual’s perception turns into the entire staff’s benefit.

Marketing campaign efficiency intelligence in minutes, not hours

The problem: guide information meeting kills momentum

You always launch campaigns and should monitor efficiency throughout a number of sources. However pulling information from every system, creating charts, and writing summaries consumes hours every week. By the point you’ve assembled the image, the marketing campaign window has closed, and the second to behave has handed.

The answer: conversational marketing campaign intelligence

Ask one other AI assistant to guage your final marketing campaign’s efficiency and you’ll get a listing of metrics to have a look at. Ask Fast and you’ll get the precise outcomes, conversion charges out of your advertising automation system, spend information out of your advert accounts, and the pipeline affect from Salesforce—multi functional view.

Ask: “How are my April product campaigns performing?” Fast reads, indexes, and understands your enterprise information throughout each system you employ. It returns a efficiency abstract and detailed evaluation in minutes, not hours.

From hours to minutes

You used to spend 4–5 hours weekly compiling marketing campaign studies by hand. With Fast, that point goes again to technique.

  • See efficiency at a look. Get conversion charges, lead metrics, and spend information pulled collectively routinely, no guide chart-building required.
  • Evaluate campaigns in context. Ask Fast to benchmark your present marketing campaign towards final quarter’s outcomes and get a side-by-side evaluation immediately.
  • Act on what the information is telling you. Fast surfaces patterns and recommends subsequent steps, so that you’re not simply studying numbers, you’re prepared to maneuver.

Asking questions via chat is highly effective. However the true transformation occurs whenever you cease asking and begin automating. Arrange a Fast Circulate to generate weekly efficiency abstract emails routinely. No extra guide queries. No extra ready for solutions. Your insights arrive on schedule, each time.

Aggressive intelligence studies in half-hour, not days

The problem: Analysis takes time you don’t have

You need to keep present on rivals in a quickly evolving trade, however gathering info, synthesizing findings, formatting studies, and sustaining correct citations can devour hours and even days. By the point you’ve accomplished the analysis, the aggressive panorama already shifted.

This isn’t a capability drawback. It’s a connection drawback. Your product info, previous aggressive analyses, and market intelligence exist in separate programs or scattered throughout the online. You’re ranging from scratch each time as a substitute of constructing on what you already know.

The answer: automated aggressive intelligence

With Fast Analysis, you’ll be able to conduct complete aggressive evaluation throughout massive volumes of information and paperwork. Enter your analysis aims like “Analyze [competitor name]’s product capabilities, pricing technique, and aggressive positioning towards our product.” Fast Analysis analyzes a whole lot of paperwork, studies, and internet sources concurrently to establish developments and patterns, then generates a complete report with full citations in roughly half-hour.

From days to minutes

You used to spend hours, generally days, researching every competitor. With Fast, that work occurs in minutes.

  • Outline your framework as soon as. Set your analysis parameters akin to firm overview, product capabilities, pricing, aggressive positioning, and Fast does the remaining.
  • Floor each report in your personal information. Create a Fast Area along with your product’s authoritative info as your single supply of fact, so each evaluation begins from the suitable basis.
  • Get structured intelligence, quick. Obtain a complete aggressive report with full citations in minutes, not days.

The following evolution: automate it altogether

Construct your aggressive intelligence Circulate as soon as. Enter a competitor’s identify and URL and Fast handles the remaining. Run it month-to-month for lively rivals, quarterly for the broader panorama, or on demand when new gamers emerge. Your studies arrive routinely, persistently structured, and correctly cited.

No guide analysis. No ready. Solely intelligence whenever you want it.

Content material creation that scales with out sacrifice

The problem: The clean web page doesn’t wait

Management needs extra campaigns. Your pipeline gained’t wait. However you’re nonetheless manually drafting, repurposing, and coordinating belongings throughout channels, ranging from scratch each time.

This isn’t a capability drawback. It’s a connection drawback. Your campaigns, model tips, and efficiency information dwell in separate programs. You may’t rapidly construct on what works as a result of you’ll be able to’t discover it.

The answer: from temporary to polished content material bundle

Fast helps you go from clean web page to polished pitch deck, e-mail sequence, or one-pager in minutes. Temporary it as soon as, get a full content material bundle again—pulled out of your previous profitable campaigns, model tips, and efficiency information to remain on-brand from the beginning.

Quicker content material creation

You used to spend hours assembling a marketing campaign content material bundle. With Fast, that point goes again to technique:

  • Develop a quick in minutes. Flip a marketing campaign thought right into a structured temporary with out ranging from scratch.
  • Create an entire content material bundle in a single dialog. Pitch deck, e-mail sequence, social posts—generated collectively, grounded in your model.
  • Overview, refine, and distribute multi functional place. No extra chasing belongings throughout instruments or inboxes.

In a research of 444 professionals, AI reduce doc creation time by 40% and lifted output high quality by 18%. Groups operating enterprise implementations have gone additional, shrinking content material manufacturing from three hours to beneath 20 minutes with out sacrificing model requirements*.

Much less time assembling. Extra time to behave. Extra output, similar excessive requirements. That’s not simply effectivity; that’s a aggressive benefit.

How Fast works for advertising groups

Fast offers advertising professionals with an clever assistant that brings scattered insights collectively via:

AI-powered search throughout your advertising instruments

Fast connects to the instruments your staff already makes use of together with Adobe, HubSpot, Salesforce, Slack, and Asana, with clear pricing and the flexibleness to increase to different programs via an MCP and OpenAPI.

Customized brokers for advertising workflows

Construct conversational brokers that perceive your product terminology, model tips, and efficiency benchmarks. A “Marketing campaign Advisor” agent, for instance, pulls collectively efficiency information, aggressive intelligence, and optimization suggestions in a single dialog, so your staff will get solutions grounded in your precise enterprise context, not generic frameworks.

Automated flows for recurring duties

Arrange Flows to generate weekly efficiency summaries, month-to-month aggressive intelligence studies, or quarterly marketing campaign retrospectives routinely. The work that used to sit down on somebody’s to-do checklist now runs on schedule—persistently structured, correctly cited, and prepared whenever you want it.

Enterprise-grade safety

Your information stays in your surroundings. Fast is constructed on AWS, which suggests enterprise safety and compliance come commonplace. Queries and solutions are by no means used to coach exterior fashions, and role-based entry controls imply your groups solely see what they’re presupposed to see.

From execution to technique

You don’t want extra instruments. You want your current instruments to work collectively.

Fast replaces scattered advertising information with unified intelligence, enabling your staff to scale marketing campaign quantity and content material manufacturing with out proportional headcount development or sacrificing model requirements. One individual’s perception turns into the entire staff’s benefit.

The insights that you just want exist already and Fast brings them collectively.

Prepared to vary how your advertising staff operates?


Concerning the writer

Zach Conley is a Product Advertising Supervisor at Amazon Internet Companies centered on Amazon Fast. Based mostly in Austin, Texas, he helps advertising groups perceive how AI can remodel the best way they work, from marketing campaign intelligence to content material creation.

The place to start a cloud profession

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Why free programs work so properly

Efficient programs aren’t nearly worth; they’re about construction. Good introductory cloud programs progress from ideas to examples to platform navigation, educating learners to consider areas, zones, VMs, storage, identification, networking, and managed providers earlier than precise implementation abilities are required. Many new learners fail by leaping into instruments too quickly. They attempt to deploy earlier than they will clarify. Free basis programs keep away from this by establishing context first, making hands-on studying more practical.

Individuals getting into the cloud market from nontraditional backgrounds ought to word that not all future cloud professionals want coding abilities. Many profitable cloud careers begin in techniques administration, safety, undertaking supply, enterprise evaluation, operations, knowledge administration, or technical gross sales. Free programs assist by specializing in ideas and platform literacy relatively than deep engineering, making the sphere extra accessible. This accessibility is a power, serving to cloud increase throughout industries.

Deal with free programs as a place to begin in a broader technique, not the entire journey. They supply basis. For instance, you possibly can begin with an IBM overview, adopted by AWS or Azure fundamentals to realize familiarity with a significant supplier, then Google Cloud to increase horizons. Subsequent, have interaction in hands-on labs, structure diagrams, small deployments, and role-based studying in areas like safety, networking, AI, knowledge engineering, or finops. Free programs are the launch level, not the tip level.

Google DeepMind Introduces Decoupled DiLoCo: An Asynchronous Coaching Structure Reaching 88% Goodput Underneath Excessive {Hardware} Failure Charges


Coaching frontier AI fashions is, at its core, a coordination drawback. 1000’s of chips should talk with one another constantly, synchronizing each gradient replace throughout the community. When one chip fails and even slows down, the whole coaching run can stall. As fashions scale towards lots of of billions of parameters, that fragility turns into more and more untenable. Google DeepMind is now proposing a distinct mannequin completely.

Google DeepMind researchers launched Decoupled DiLoCo (Distributed Low-Communication), a distributed coaching structure that decouples compute into asynchronous, fault-isolated ‘islands,’ enabling massive language mannequin pre-training throughout geographically distant knowledge facilities with out requiring the tight synchronization that makes standard approaches brittle at scale.

The Drawback with Conventional Distributed Coaching

To know why Decoupled DiLoCo is necessary, it helps to grasp how distributed coaching usually works. Commonplace Information-Parallel coaching replicates a mannequin throughout many accelerators (GPUs or TPUs), every processing a distinct mini-batch of information. After every ahead and backward move, gradients have to be averaged throughout each system — a course of known as AllReduce — earlier than the following coaching step can start. This blocking synchronization step means each system should watch for the slowest one. Throughout hundreds of chips spanning a number of knowledge facilities, that bottleneck is not only inconvenient; it makes global-scale coaching successfully impractical.

Bandwidth is one other arduous constraint. Typical Information-Parallel coaching requires roughly 198 Gbps of inter-datacenter bandwidth throughout eight knowledge facilities — far past what commonplace wide-area networking (WAN) can help between geographically distributed amenities.

How Decoupled DiLoCo Works

Decoupled DiLoCo builds on two prior techniques from Google. The primary is Pathways, which launched a distributed AI system based mostly on asynchronous knowledge move, permitting totally different compute assets to work at their very own tempo with out blocking on each other. The second is DiLoCo, which dramatically diminished the inter-datacenter bandwidth required for distributed coaching by having every employee carry out many native gradient steps earlier than speaking with friends — dramatically lowering how a lot knowledge must move between knowledge facilities.

Decoupled DiLoCo brings each concepts collectively. Constructed on high of Pathways, coaching is split throughout separate clusters of accelerators known as learner items — the ‘islands’ of compute. Every learner unit trains semi-independently, performing many native steps, earlier than sharing a compressed gradient sign with an outer optimizer that aggregates updates throughout all learner items. As a result of this outer synchronization step is asynchronous, a chip failure or gradual learner unit in a single island doesn’t block the others from persevering with to coach.

The bandwidth financial savings are dramatic. Decoupled DiLoCo reduces required inter-datacenter bandwidth from 198 Gbps to only 0.84 Gbps throughout eight knowledge facilities — a number of orders of magnitude decrease — making it appropriate with commonplace internet-scale connectivity between datacenter amenities quite than requiring customized high-speed community infrastructure.

Self-Therapeutic By means of Chaos Engineering

Some of the technically vital properties of Decoupled DiLoCo is its fault tolerance. The analysis workforce used chaos engineering, a technique that intentionally introduces synthetic {hardware} failures right into a operating system to check its robustness throughout coaching runs. The system continued coaching after the lack of total learner items, after which seamlessly reintegrated these items once they got here again on-line. This conduct is what the analysis workforce describes as ‘self-healing’.

In simulations involving 1.2 million chips underneath excessive failure charges, Decoupled DiLoCo maintained a goodput (the fraction of time the system is performing helpful coaching) of 88%, in comparison with simply 27% for normal Information-Parallel strategies. Goodput is the sensible metric that issues right here: a coaching run with excessive nominal compute however low goodput wastes vital assets.

https://deepmind.google/weblog/decoupled-diloco/?

Critically, these resilience good points include minimal degradation in mannequin high quality. In real-world experiments utilizing Gemma 4 fashions, Decoupled DiLoCo achieved a mean ML benchmark accuracy of 64.1%, in comparison with 64.4% for the standard baseline — a distinction properly throughout the noise of typical analysis variance.

Coaching a 12B Mannequin Throughout 4 U.S. Areas

The analysis workforce validated Decoupled DiLoCo at manufacturing scale by efficiently coaching a 12 billion parameter mannequin throughout 4 separate U.S. areas utilizing simply 2–5 Gbps of wide-area networking, a bandwidth stage achievable with current industrial web infrastructure between knowledge middle amenities. The system achieved this greater than 20 instances quicker than standard synchronization strategies. The important thing cause: quite than forcing compute to pause and watch for communication to finish, Decoupled DiLoCo incorporates required communication into longer durations of computation, eliminating the “blocking” bottlenecks that make standard distributed coaching gradual at world scale.

Mixing {Hardware} Generations

An underappreciated implication of the structure is its help for heterogeneous {hardware}. As a result of learner items function asynchronously, they don’t have to run on an identical {hardware} on the identical clock pace. The analysis workforce demonstrated coaching runs that combined TPU v6e and TPU v5p chips — totally different {hardware} generations with totally different efficiency traits — in a single coaching job, with out degrading ML efficiency relative to homogeneous runs.

This has two sensible penalties value noting. First, it extends the helpful lifetime of current {hardware}, permitting older accelerators to proceed contributing meaningfully to large-scale coaching. Second, as a result of new {hardware} generations don’t arrive in every single place directly, with the ability to practice throughout generations can alleviate the recurring logistical and capability bottlenecks that come up throughout {hardware} transition durations — an actual operational problem at organizations operating massive coaching infrastructure.

Key Takeaways

  • Decoupled DiLoCo eliminates the single-point-of-failure drawback in large-scale AI coaching by dividing coaching throughout asynchronous, fault-isolated “islands” of compute known as learner items — so a chip or cluster failure in a single island doesn’t stall the remainder of the coaching run.
  • The structure reduces inter-datacenter bandwidth necessities by orders of magnitude — from 198 Gbps right down to 0.84 Gbps throughout eight knowledge facilities — making globally distributed pre-training possible over commonplace wide-area networking quite than requiring customized high-speed infrastructure.
  • Decoupled DiLoCo is self-healing: utilizing chaos engineering to simulate actual {hardware} failures, the system maintained 88% goodput in comparison with simply 27% for normal Information-Parallel coaching underneath excessive failure charges, and seamlessly reintegrated offline learner items once they got here again on-line.
  • The strategy was validated at manufacturing scale, efficiently coaching a 12 billion parameter mannequin throughout 4 U.S. areas — reaching this greater than 20 instances quicker than standard synchronization strategies by folding communication into computation quite than treating it as a blocking step.
  • Decoupled DiLoCo helps heterogeneous {hardware} in a single coaching run, demonstrated by mixing TPU v6e and TPU v5p chips with out efficiency degradation — extending the helpful lifetime of older accelerators and easing capability bottlenecks throughout {hardware} technology transitions.

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Beautiful 132 million-year-old dinosaur tracks are rewriting historical past

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Southern Africa is known for its wealthy file of prehistoric life, together with dinosaurs. However round 182 million years in the past, large volcanic eruptions unfold lava throughout a lot of the inland Karoo Basin, the place many dinosaurs as soon as lived. After this occasion, the fossil file within the area turns into surprisingly quiet through the Jurassic Interval (which lasted from 201 million to 145 million years in the past).

Latest discoveries are starting to alter that image. They present that dinosaurs continued to reside in southern Africa lengthy after these dramatic lava flows.

New Dinosaur Tracks on South Africa’s Coast

In 2025, scientists reported dinosaur tracks about 140 million years outdated on a distant stretch of shoreline in South Africa’s Western Cape. These had been the primary tracks from that point interval within the area (the Cretaceous, 145 million to 66 million years in the past).

Now, researchers have uncovered much more proof.

As ichnologists (finding out fossil tracks and traces), the staff recurrently works alongside the Western Cape coast close to Knysna. Most of their analysis focuses on tracks preserved in coastal aeolianites (cemented sand dunes) which are between 50,000 and 400,000 years outdated.

Throughout a go to in early 2025, they explored a small outcrop of rock fashioned within the early Cretaceous Interval. It’s the solely close by publicity of rock from that point, and far of it’s submerged at excessive tide. The staff hoped they may discover a theropod (dinosaur) tooth like one found there by a 13-year-old boy in 2017.

As a substitute, they discovered one thing much more thrilling. Linda Helm, a member of the group, noticed dinosaur tracks. A better look revealed greater than two dozen attainable footprints.

A Tiny Website With Large Significance

The Brenton Formation publicity may be very small, measuring not more than 40 meters lengthy and 5 meters large, with cliffs rising as much as 5 meters above the shore. Discovering dozens of tracks in such a restricted space means that dinosaurs had been pretty frequent on this area through the Cretaceous.

The researchers estimate the tracks are about 132 million years outdated. That makes them the youngest recognized dinosaur tracks in southern Africa (50 million years youthful than the youngest tracks reported from the Karoo Basin). Additionally they signify solely the second recognized set of Cretaceous dinosaur tracks in South Africa, and the second from the Western Cape. Some tracks are preserved on flat rock surfaces, whereas others seem in cross part inside the cliffs.

Southern Africa’s Dinosaur Fossil Document

Southern Africa holds an intensive file of vertebrate tracks and traces from the Mesozoic Period (the “Age of Dinosaurs,” from 252 million to 66 million years in the past, a time span that features the Jurassic), particularly within the Karoo Basin, which is stuffed with thick layers of sedimentary rock.

Tracks from the Triassic and Jurassic durations are frequent in Lesotho and close by areas of South Africa, together with the Free State and Jap Cape.

Nonetheless, later volcanic exercise created the Drakensberg Group, protecting many of those fossil-bearing layers with lava. Some dinosaurs could have briefly survived the preliminary eruptions, however they had been possible among the many final animals to reside within the Karoo Basin at the moment.

Because the supercontinent Gondwana started to interrupt aside close to the top of the Jurassic Interval and into the early Cretaceous Interval, smaller basins fashioned in what at the moment are the Western Cape and Jap Cape. These areas include restricted deposits from the Cretaceous.

Physique fossils from these deposits, primarily within the Jap Cape, embody a variety of dinosaurs. Amongst them are the primary dinosaur recognized within the southern hemisphere, now recognized to be a stegosaur, together with sauropods, a coelurosaurian, and younger iguanodontids.

In distinction, fossil stays from the Western Cape are uncommon. They embody just a few remoted sauropod tooth, scattered bones possible from a sauropod, and two finds close to Knysna: the theropod tooth found earlier and a part of a tibia.

Now, consideration is popping to footprints as an alternative of bones.

Dinosaurs of Knysna

The newly found tracks lie within the fashionable intertidal zone, the place they’re coated by seawater at excessive tide twice a day.

The atmosphere 132 million years in the past would have seemed very totally different from immediately’s shoreline, estuary, and developed panorama. At the moment, dinosaurs possible moved by tidal channels or alongside level bars (river seashores), surrounded by vegetation in contrast to something within the space now.

The tracks seem to have been made by a mixture of dinosaurs. These embody theropods and presumably ornithopods (each these sorts of dinosaur had been bipedal, strolling on two legs), in addition to attainable sauropods (enormous dinosaurs with very lengthy necks and really lengthy tails that had been quadrupedal, strolling on 4 legs). Theropods had been meat eaters, whereas ornithopods and sauropods had been plant eaters.

Figuring out the precise kind of dinosaur from footprints alone might be tough. Theropod and ornithopod tracks can look related, and sauropod tracks, though bigger, don’t all the time present clear toe impressions.

Due to these challenges, the researchers selected to not “over-interpret” the trackmakers. Their examine focuses on documenting the presence and abundance of dinosaur tracks from this time interval within the Brenton Formation.

Extra Discoveries Might Be Forward

The presence of early Cretaceous dinosaur tracks in each the Robberg Formation and the Brenton Formation means that extra websites should still be ready to be discovered. Different non-marine Cretaceous rock exposures exist within the Western Cape and Jap Cape.

Future systematic searches of those areas might reveal further dinosaur bones, extra tracks, and presumably traces of different historic animals.

Mark G. Dixon and Fred van Berkel of the African Centre for Coastal Palaeoscience, Nelson Mandela College, contributed to this analysis.

When the previous comes calling – EpidemioLogical

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When you pay shut consideration to the issues I write… And I believe you do, since you’re studying this. Why else would you place your self via my writing? I digress… When you pay shut consideration to the issues I write, you might discover that I usually write about my experiences up to now and the way they form my present pondering. That is nothing novel, by the best way. Loads of individuals write concerning the previous and the way their lives made them who they’re in the present day. However I’ve been toying with some totally different sort of fiction recently.

No, you received’t discover that fiction right here, or over on Medium or Substack. It’s in a darkish nook of the web, underneath a pen title, and solely those that know me since beginning will know what that pen title is. Effectively, those that know me since beginning and/or those that can learn all of the clues I depart round on social media.

Anyway, the kind of fiction I’ve been writing is about altering the previous and the results for in the present day. You see, this was an enormous plot gap within the Again to the Future films, for my part. Within the first film, Marty McFly goes to the previous and modifications the lives of his mum or dad a lot in order that they’re a distinct household when he will get again. The bully from his dad and mom’ highschool days is now serving his dad and mom and even washing Marty’s truck. His father, George McFly, is an completed creator. Marty’s mom is not the sad spouse she appeared to be originally of the film.

However what about Marty? How did he change? Certainly, the improved lives of his dad and mom as he was rising up should have led to a distinct him ultimately. I imply, Biff (the bully) turned subservient. George Grew to become extra assertive and profitable. Lorraine is happier and more healthy. That will have made for a Marty who’s totally different in some ways if his dad and mom modified that a lot. Or did nature must do extra with who he was all through the collection of films than nurture did?

So my newest quick tales have been based mostly round my child being a time traveler and having to return in time to “put issues proper the place they as soon as went improper.” But it surely wasn’t that issues went improper within the first run of the universe. What occurs is {that a} unusual determine from my previous goes again to attempt to undo what as soon as went proper, making it improper, and my daughter has to place make it proper once more.

And no, I’m not enjoying the previous scifi trope of my daughter disappearing from existence if she doesn’t change issues. She nonetheless will get to exist in some kind, and she or he involves the belief that the Novikov self-consistency precept is a factor. Issues will all the time occur the best way they’re purported to, even when issues up to now are modified. It’s onerous to clarify. You must learn the tales.

All of this has led me to consider how we people get hung up on the previous and may’t appear to let it go. Positive, we would cope with the previous to the purpose that we’re not drowning in dread over how issues might have been had we not completed sure issues. Or we’re reminded of how we damage individuals after we didn’t imply to, pushing them away. However these individuals and experiences sill creep up and make us really feel disagreeable emotions.

For some individuals, these issues up to now come again and make them interact in self-harming habits. I’ve seen it in my circle of relatives, and amongst my associates. And I’ve seen it take a life. Tough stuff.

For me, these emotions concerning the previous manifest themselves extra in a way of asking “what if?” What if I don’t “dodge these bullets”? And, to be trustworthy, I don’t even like occupied with it as a result of so many issues result in not assembly my spouse, to my daughter not being born. That’s unimaginable to me, and I even have nightmares about it. In some desires, I’ve to ensure I do all the things precisely the identical as I did so I get to fulfill my spouse and have her fall in love with me.

It wasn’t simple the primary time round, and it wouldn’t be simple to do once more. If I believed in luck, I’d say that it was dumb luck to simply get right here now.

Apart from coping with the previous and accepting them — and/or having a full lobotomy — I don’t understand how we people with our huge brains can get away from the previous. It has introduced us to who we’re, whether or not we prefer it or not. And, not like the tales I write about my time-traveling daughter, there’s nothing we will do about it.

Or is there?

I suppose we will settle for the previous and transfer on. That’s one factor we can do, and ought to do. And we will additionally be taught from our previous errors and never repeat them (as an alternative, making entire new errors). And we will, in fact, restore the issues we broke as greatest we will.

That’s, in fact, in the event you care to restore them in any respect.