Thursday, June 27, 2013

When Running 200 Miles Is Easier on Your Body Than Running 100

After 200 miles and three straight days of running across the Northern Italian Alps, 50-year-old Gregoire Millet wearily walks across the finish line. The brutal 2012 Tor des G?ants is the second ultramarathon he has run, and by pushing his body well beyond what most would consider the brink, he takes the silver medal. He has been racing for nearly 79 hours, much of it in the rain, and has slept for only 6. He has crossed a seemingly endless stretch of rocky crags and endured 15 miles of elevation change. He is exhausted.

Yet, according to new research?which Millet himself helped to author?he'd be more exhausted had he run a race half the distance. "Well, after three days you are not completely fresh, you know" he says, "but it seems the exhaustion is not exponential."

Millet's research team, led by Jonas Saugy, a sports physiologist at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, has tracked the human body's response to the demands of a 200-mile ultramarathon. In a study published today in the journal PLOS ONE, the scientists report that the Tor des G?ants finishers suffered far less muscle damage and fatigue than those who had run an equally mountainous 103-mile race across the French, Italian, and Swiss Alps. "It was a surprise it was such a big difference," Saugy says.

Saugy and his team took blood samples and performed a 20-minute series of tests on their study participants before, during, and after the race. The researchers measured muscle strain in the knee and foot in a custom-built chair with a testing gauge, and recorded the electrical activity of the muscles with electrical stimulation. Their findings: Tor des G?ants racers finished with roughly 30 percent more strength in their lower leg muscles despite running so much farther.

Saugy argues that the more conservative pace?and the eventual surrender to sleep exhaustion?protects an ultramarathoner's muscles. While racers at the 200-mile Tor des G?ants averaged 3.4 mph over the course (a 17.5-minute-mile pace), those who ran only half the distance in the 103-mile race averaged 4.5 mph (13.4-minute miles). Running at a slower pace means running with a softer gait, and, in fact, many of the ultramarathoners spent much of the second half of the race walking. As for sleep, even the top medalists in the Tor des G?ants yielded to sleep exhaustion and all the racers slept an average of 9 hours, usually in 20- or 30-minute naps.

"A shorter distance means higher intensity," says Martin Hoffman, an exercise physiologist at the University of California, Davis, who was not involved with the study. "Any time you do a longer event your intensity has to go down," says Hoffman. But what's unexpected is just how much less the longer event demands from your legs and feet.

There's plenty more to be learned about how the body responds to such a grueling completion?though even getting this much data was a chore. The Tor des G?ants is so difficult that only two thirds of the runners who enter finish it. To complete this study, Saugy and colleagues had to collect enough participants who'd complete the event and agree to the 20-minute midrace examination (the clock didn't stop while the runners stopped to be tested). While Saugy's team collected 25 subjects, 10 dropped out of the race and an additional six wouldn't stop for the midrace test when the time came.

"And to ask people to do something beyond just running the race is a big deal," Hoffman says, "to get as many as they got is pretty remarkable." Still, he says, the data is robust enough to prove the longer-distance racers had lower levels of muscle damage and fatigue.

Previous studies have shown that sleep deprivation doesn't have a direct effect on the muscle strength of the ultramarathon runners. But Saugy's data shows that even brief sleep breaks were nonetheless an important period of rest for the muscles. "The addition of sleep" once the runners have built up a sleep deficit "was the reason for the muscle conservation," Saugy says.

Ultramarathons, still a growing sport, offer researchers a chance to examine the human body under stresses that would be tremendously difficult?and perhaps even unethical?to produce in a lab. "It's a competition where you can push your body to extreme conditions," he says. "You'll never find conditions like these in other competitions."

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/health/breakthroughs/when-running-200-miles-is-easier-on-your-body-than-running-100-15632972?src=rss

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Rhapsody debuts app for Windows 8 at Microsoft Build 2013

Rhapsody debuts app for Windows 8 at Microsoft Build 2013

Today during Microsoft's 2013 edition of Build, Rhapsody announced that it's releasing a version of its music app designed for the Windows 8 operating system. As you might expect, the Win8 variant will bring many of the same features found on its iOS and Android counterparts, including the ability for subscribers to create playlists and stream / download songs from Rhapsody's ample library of tunes. There will be some tidbits tailored specifically for Redmond's OS, however, such as a Snap Mode for simple multitasking and an option that allows tracks to be pinned to the Metro-style home screen. The company told us the application will hit the Windows store shortly, so we'll be sure to update this post as soon as we have a link to the download.

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Source: Rhapsody

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/Vv-_-W_WwBQ/

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Viewing held for 'Sopranos' star Gandolfini in NJ

PARK RIDGE, N.J. (AP) ? A private viewing for James Gandolfini (gan-dahl-FEE'-nee) has ended in a small New Jersey town near where he grew up.

Mourners at Wednesday's invitation-only wake for family and friends left flowers at the Robert Spearing Funeral Home in Park Ridge.

The 51-year-old star of "The Sopranos" grew up in nearby Westwood. He died last week in Italy.

Nurse Robin Caprio wasn't allowed in to the private viewing and stood outside with a photo of herself and Gandolfini taken when his show filmed a scene in Paterson.

Broadway theaters dimmed their marquee lights in memory of Gandolfini, who earned a Tony Award nomination in 2009 for his role in "God of Carnage."

Gandolfini's funeral will be held Thursday at the Cathedral Church of Saint John the Divine in New York City.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/viewing-held-sopranos-star-gandolfini-nj-204443972.html

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Printable travel game | Simple Mom

A few weeks ago our family hit the road as we made the big move from Alberta, Canada to sunny Arizona. Along with packing, cleaning, and the various tasks that come with a move, I knew I?d also need to prepare for the long drive ahead of us.

With an ample snack assortment, ?a handful of dollar store toys and some favorite movies, I was surprised to find that one of the kids? favorite activities on the trip was a simple ?search and find? game that I?d printed out off the internet.

Printable travel game [SimpleMom.net]

I?ve expanded on the original printout I used and wanted to share this fun little travel game with you in the hopes that it will come in handy on your next family road trip.

sm_travelgame5

You can download the printable game cards to the travel game here. There are four sheets, 48 game cards in total. I printed mine out at home on white cardstock and cut out the cards using a paper trimmer. I added an extra step and used a punch to round the corners of each card but that?s completely optional.sm_travelgame6

Once you?ve printed and cut out your travel game cards, you could have them laminated to make them more durable. The amount of white paper and ink needed to print these is pretty inexpensive, so leaving them as-is is fine, too ? printing out another page or two if they get worn won?t break the bank.

You can store the cards in a ziplock bag or in one of my favorite storage containers for carrying small items like felts, crayons and card games in the car.

sm_travel_game4

What to do with your travel game cards:

? play a family game of ?I Spy?, using the cards as prompts for what to look for

? have each family member draw a card, and the first person to find the item on their card wins

? deal each player five cards, then players search for the items on their cards. As you find an item, draw a new card and continue until all the cards are found

? print out two sets of the game cards and play a game of go fish

? have the whole family work together to find each item in the deck of cards throughout your trip

And for a free printable BINGO version of this fun travel game, please visit my blog.

Our family loves taking road trips together; they can be a lot of fun and a great family bonding experience.

Are you planning a family road trip this summer? Where are you headed? What are some of your family?s favorite things to do in the car for fun?

Source: http://simplemom.net/printable-travel-game/

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This is the Modem World: Internet radio is inhuman

Each week Joshua Fruhlinger contributes This is the Modem World, a column dedicated to exploring the culture of consumer technology.

DNP This is the Modem World Internet radio is inhuman

I gripped the handset, twirling the coiled wire around my wrist, listening for a ring tone. Instead, a busy signal triggered an autonomous twitch reaction in my teenage hand: hang up, wait for dial tone, hit redial, listen for ring tone. Again. Again.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/oZoCg4hg7K4/

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Laser guided codes advance single pixel terahertz imaging

June 25, 2013 ? The universe is awash in terahertz (THz) waves, as harmless as they are abundant. But unlike other regions of the electromagnetic spectrum, THz has proven to be extremely difficult to manipulate in order to capture novel images of objects and materials with which these light waves interact.

Most existing THz imaging devices employ prohibitively expensive technology or require several hours and cumbersome manual controls in order to generate a viable image, according to Boston College Professor of Physics Willie J. Padilla.

Padilla and researchers in his lab recently reported a breakthrough in efforts to create accessible and effective THz imaging. Using both optical and electronic controls, the team developed a single-pixel imaging technique that uses a coded aperture to quickly and efficiently manipulate stubborn THz waves, according to a recent report in the journal Optics Express.

In the so-called terahertz gap, a region of wavelengths that falls between microwave and infrared frequencies, conventional electronic sensors and semiconductor devices are ineffective. Some systems capture only a fraction of a scene and the means to tune these THz waves are inefficient. This has fueled the search for new imaging technologies in order to manipulate THz waves.

Efforts to overcome the challenges of mechanics, cost and image clarity are viewed as a crucial step in efforts to tame the THz gap since imaging and sensing at this frequency holds the potential for advances in areas as divergent as chemical fingerprinting, security imaging of hidden weapons, even real-time skin imaging to promote simple detection of skin cancer.

Central to this challenge is the development of a technology to create efficient masks -- similar to the aperture of a camera -- capable of tuning THz radiation in order to produce clear images in just a few seconds.

Padilla and graduate students David Shrekenhamer and Claire M. Watts report their new single pixel imaging method centers on what they describe as a "coded aperture multiplex technique" where a laser beam and electronic signals are used to send a set of instructions to a semiconductor so it can guide the reproduction of the image of an object after THz waves have passed through it.

A digital micro-mirror device encodes the laser beam with instructions that direct certain segments of the silicon mask to react and allow a selected sample of the THz waves to pass freely through, consistent with the image pattern. The combination of optical instructions and the reaction of the semiconductor create a THz spatial light modulator, the team reports. Functioning like the aperture of a conventional camera, the modulator then guides the digital reconstruction of the entire image based on a broad sampling of THz waves that have passed through the object.

The team's experiments found the method could produce masks of varying resolutions, ranging from 63 to 1023 pixels and acquire images at speeds up to .5 Hz, or about 2 seconds. The early findings "demonstrate the viability of obtaining real-time and high-fidelity THz images using an optically controlled SLM with a single pixel detector," the team concluded.

Padilla said the findings have spurred additional research by his lab into ways to further control THz waves, such as by using the intricate patterns of an engineered metamaterial to further manipulate terahertz waves to create images faster and with increased efficiency.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/technology/~3/KpntEshym90/130625141221.htm

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PHOTOS: Leslie Mann & Judd Apatow Joke with Paparazzi!

When screaming photographers chase celebrities for unwanted photo-ops, some stars keep their heads down and ignore the paparazzi, while others just walk the other way.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/leslie-mann-and-judd-apatow-trick-paparazzi-emma-stone/1-a-539960?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Aleslie-mann-and-judd-apatow-trick-paparazzi-emma-stone-539960

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