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¿Cómo el arte logra transformar emociones?

¿Cómo el arte logra transformar emociones?




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Emociones sanas desde la percepción de la conciencia.

Emociones sanas desde la percepción de la conciencia.




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cáncer, un problema físico, emocional y financiero.

cáncer, un problema físico, emocional y financiero.




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SANAMENTE EL FORTALECIMIENTO EMOCIONAL ENTRE PADRES E HIJAS ADOLECENTES 28 DE SEPTIEMBRE




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Yoga: avance espiritual, físico y emocional




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¿De qué se trata la alquimia emocional?




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Influencia de las emociones en el bienestar




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Gestión y reconocimiento de las emociones




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Sentimientos y emociones en Navidad




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La música, la voz y su influencia en las emociones y el cerebro

En Sanamente estuvieron Mónica Rocha, cantante, y Carlos Gómez conversando sobre la música y su poder.




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La música, la voz y su influencia en las emociones y el cerebro 2

En Sanamente estuvieron Mónica Rocha, cantante, y Carlos Gómez conversando sobre la música y su poder.




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Sanar las heridas psicológicas y emocionales de un secuestro




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¿Cómo sanar las heridas emocionales?




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Reconocer las emociones del cáncer




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¿Cómo influyen las emociones y los sentimientos en la vida del ser humano?




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Fundación que brinda herramientas socioemocionales a niños y niñas




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Salud mental y emocional de los maestros




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Inteligencia emocional en el ámbito de la salud




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¿Cómo el silencio ayuda en el bienestar emocional?




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Herramienta AMARTE para la autorregulación de las emociones




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Impacto físico y emocional de una ruptura amorosa




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Aprender a identificar y a gestionar las emociones




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El papel de las emociones en la salud




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Influencia de las emociones en la alimentación




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Paro de taxis, mociones de censura y renuncia

La Luciérnaga se enciende para hablar de cómo se desarrollaron las movilizaciones de taxistas a lo largo del país. Además, le contamos sobre lo qué pasa con una moción de censura contra la ministra de Minas. También, ¿El gabinete del presidente Petro está a punto de quedarse con vacantes?La Luciérnaga, un espacio de humor, análisis y opinión de Caracol Radio que acompaña desde hace 30 años a sus oyentes en el regreso a casa.




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Puestos para los amigos, peajes con alzas y nos creemos vivos para los negocios

Escuche el programa de este martes 16 de enero. La Luciérnaga, un espacio de humor y opinión de Caracol Radio que acompaña por más de 30 años a sus oyentes en su regreso a casa.




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FECODE manda más que el ministerio de educación, orden público y ¿para qué sirve las mociones de censura?

Escuche el programa de este miércoles 19 de junio. La Luciérnaga, un espacio de humor y opinión de Caracol Radio que desde hace 31 años acompaña a sus oyentes en su regreso casa.




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“Cantar con Maluma fue emocionante”: Abril Singer, telonera en concierto




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App de Movilidad Turi: ¿Es legal este modelo de negocio en Colombia?




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Wafflería Severo Sinvergüenza: así nació la idea de negocio




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David Murcia Guzmán, cerebro de DMG, confirma que quisiera volver a sus negocios




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Banco del Ají: negocio con más de 50 años de tradición en la Plaza de Mercado de Paloquemao




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Finanzas emocionales: ¿cómo lograr el bienestarr financiero en este 2022?




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'Talented Kitchen', el emprendimiento que une a estrellas del entretenimiento con el negocio de la comida




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La colombiana Catalina Irurita está en la lista de las 100 mujeres más poderosas de los negocios




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Hurtado: "La parte emocional empieza a jugarle una mala pasada a Nacional"




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Pinto: Freddy fue a América más por negocio, jugar en Santa Fe era especial




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Carlos Darwin Quintero: “Estar en el radar de la Selección emociona”




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Harold Santiago Mosquera se mostró emocionado por llegar a Santa Fe




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Cristian Barrios se emocionó por los elogios recibidos de parte de Juan José Peláez




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Los negocios de Juan Fernando Petro en el Muelle 13 de Buenaventura

Nuevamente el hermano del presidente Gustavo Petro estaría envuelto en un escándalo, tras haberse ofrecido como un intermediario para mejorar la relación con el Gobierno y lograr la prórroga del contrato del muelle 13 de Buenaventura.




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El modelo de negocio no era rentable: General Motors sobre cierre de planta

En Caracol Radio estuvo Santiago Chamorro, presidente y director de General Motors Sudamérica, dando detalles sobre el futuro de la compañía




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Mociones de Censura a Ministros quedan sin tramitarse en el Congreso: ¿por qué?

Carolina Arbeláez, Representante a la Cámara por Bogotá, denuncia que se han radicado varias mociones de censura, entre ellos a los ministros de Salud y de Defensa, pero estas se han quedo pendientes en el congreso: no se les ha dado prioridad, ni trámite.




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Back to Basics: Selling Sociology

Despite, well, everything, we are trying to get back into the classroom as much as we can at the start of a new academic year. I am scheduled to teach Introduction to Sociology for the first time this coming spring and planning the course this fall. Whether in person or remote, I will be ecstatic […]




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Artificial Intelligence Apps Risk Entrenching India’s Socio-economic Inequities

Artificial Intelligence Apps Risk Entrenching India’s Socio-economic Inequities Expert comment sysadmin 14 March 2018

Artificial intelligence applications will not be a panacea for addressing India’s grand challenges. Data bias and unequal access to technology gains will entrench existing socio-economic fissures.

Participants at an AI event in Bangalore. Photo: Getty Images.

Artificial intelligence (AI) is high on the Indian government’s agenda. Some days ago, Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the Wadhwani Institute for Artificial Intelligence, reportedly India’s first research institute focused on AI solutions for social good. In the same week, Niti Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant argued that AI could potentially add $957 billion to the economy and outlined ways in which AI could be a ‘game changer’.

During his budget speech, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley announced that Niti Aayog would spearhead a national programme on AI; with the near doubling of the Digital India budget, the IT ministry also announced the setting up of four committees for AI-related research. An industrial policy for AI is also in the pipeline, expected to provide incentives to businesses for creating a globally competitive Indian AI industry.

Narratives on the emerging digital economy often suffer from technological determinism — assuming that the march of technological transformation has an inner logic, independent of social choice and capable of automatically delivering positive social change. However, technological trajectories can and must be steered by social choice and aligned with societal objectives. Modi’s address hit all the right notes, as he argued that the ‘road ahead for AI depends on and will be driven by human intentions’. Emphasising the need to direct AI technologies towards solutions for the poor, he called upon students and teachers to identify ‘the grand challenges facing India’ – to ‘Make AI in India and for India’.

To do so, will undoubtedly require substantial investments in R&D, digital infrastructure and education and re-skilling. But, two other critical issues must be simultaneously addressed: data bias and access to technology gains.

While computers have been mimicking human intelligence for some decades now, a massive increase in computational power and the quantity of available data are enabling a process of ‘machine learning.’ Instead of coding software with specific instructions to accomplish a set task, machine learning involves training an algorithm on large quantities of data to enable it to self-learn; refining and improving its results through multiple iterations of the same task. The quality of data sets used to train machines is thus a critical concern in building AI applications.

Much recent research shows that applications based on machine learning reflect existing social biases and prejudice. Such bias can occur if the data set the algorithm is trained on is unrepresentative of the reality it seeks to represent. If for example, a system is trained on photos of people that are predominantly white, it will have a harder time recognizing non-white people. This is what led a recent Google application to tag black people as gorillas.

Alternatively, bias can also occur if the data set itself reflects existing discriminatory or exclusionary practices. A recent study by ProPublica found for example that software that was being used to assess the risk of recidivism in criminals in the United States was twice as likely to mistakenly flag black defendants as being at higher risk of committing future crimes.

The impact of such data bias can be seriously damaging in India, particularly at a time of growing social fragmentation. It can contribute to the entrenchment of social bias and discriminatory practices, while rendering both invisible and pervasive the processes through which discrimination occurs. Women are 34 per cent less likely to own a mobile phone than men – manifested in only 14 per cent of women in rural India owning a mobile phone, while only 30 per cent of India’s internet users are women.

Women’s participation in the labour force, currently at around 27 per cent, is also declining, and is one of the lowest in South Asia. Data sets used for machine learning are thus likely to have a marked gender bias. The same observations are likely to hold true for other marginalized groups as well.

Accorded to a 2014 report, Muslims, Dalits and tribals make up 53 per cent of all prisoners in India; National Crime Records Bureau data from 2016 shows in some states, the percentage of Muslims in the incarcerated population was almost three times the percentage of Muslims in the overall population. If AI applications for law and order are built on this data, it is not unlikely that it will be prejudiced against these groups.

(It is worth pointing out that the recently set-up national AI task force is comprised of mostly Hindu men – only two women are on the task force, and no Muslims or Christians. A recent article in the New York Times talked about AI’s ‘white guy problem’; will India suffer from a ‘Hindu male bias’?)

Yet, improving the quality, or diversity, of data sets may not be able to solve the problem. The processes of machine learning and reasoning involve a quagmire of mathematical functions, variables and permutations, the logic of which are not readily traceable or predictable. The dazzle of AI-enabled efficiency gains must not blind us to the fact that while AI systems are being integrated into key socio-economic systems, their accuracy and logic of reasoning have not been fully understood or studied.

The other big challenge stems from the distribution of AI-led technology gains. Even if estimates of AI contribution to GDP are correct, the adoption of these technologies is likely to be in niches within the organized sector. These industries are likely to be capital- rather than labour-intensive, and thus unlikely to contribute to large-scale job creation.

At the same time, AI applications can most readily replace low- to medium-skilled jobs within the organized sector. This is already being witnessed in the outsourcing sector – where basic call and chat tasks are now automated. Re-skilling will be important, but it is unlikely that those who lose their jobs will also be those who are being re-skilled – the long arch of technological change and societal adaptation is longer than that of people’s lives. The contractualization of work, already on the rise, is likely to further increase as large industries prefer to have a flexible workforce to adapt to technological change. A shift from formal employment to contractual work can imply a loss of access to formal social protection mechanisms, increasing the precariousness of work for workers.

The adoption of AI technologies is also unlikely in the short- to medium-term in the unorganized sector, which engages more than 80 per cent of India’s labor force. The cost of developing and deploying AI applications, particularly in relation to the cost of labour, will inhibit adoption. Moreover, most enterprises within the unorganized sector still have limited access to basic, older technologies – two-thirds of the workforce are employed in enterprises without electricity. Eco-system upgrades will be important but incremental. Given the high costs of developing AI-based applications, most start-ups are unlikely to be working towards creating bottom-of-the-pyramid solutions.

Access to AI-led technology gains is thus likely to be heavily differentiated – a few high-growth industries can be expected, but these will not necessarily result in the welfare of labour. Studies show that labour share of national income, especially routine labour, has been declining steadily across developing countries.

We should be clear that new technological applications themselves are not going to transform or disrupt this trend – rather, without adequate policy steering, these trends will be exacerbated.

Policy debates about AI applications in India need to take these two issues seriously. AI applications will not be a panacea for addressing ‘India’s grand challenges’. Data bias and unequal access to technology gains will entrench existing socio-economic fissures, even making them technologically binding.

In addition to developing AI applications and creating a skilled workforce, the government needs to prioritize research that examines the complex social, ethical and governance challenges associated with the spread of AI-driven technologies. Blind technological optimism might entrench rather than alleviate the grand Indian challenge of inequity and growth.

This article was originally published in the Indian Express.




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A Virtual In Vivo Dissection and Analysis of Socioaffective Symptoms Related to Cerebellum-Midbrain Reward Circuitry in Humans

Emerging research in nonhuman animals implicates cerebellar projections to the ventral tegmental area (VTA) in appetitive behaviors, but these circuits have not been characterized in humans. Here, we mapped cerebello-VTA white matter connectivity in a cohort of men and women using probabilistic tractography on diffusion imaging data from the Human Connectome Project. We uncovered the topographical organization of these connections by separately tracking from parcels of cerebellar lobule VI, crus I/II, vermis, paravermis, and cerebrocerebellum. Results revealed that connections between the cerebellum and VTA predominantly originate in the right cerebellar hemisphere, interposed nucleus, and paravermal cortex and terminate mostly ipsilaterally. Paravermal crus I sends the most connections to the VTA compared with other lobules. We discovered a mediolateral gradient of connectivity, such that the medial cerebellum has the highest connectivity with the VTA. Individual differences in microstructure were associated with measures of negative affect and social functioning. By splitting the tracts into quarters, we found that the socioaffective effects were driven by the third quarter of the tract, corresponding to the point at which the fibers leave the deep nuclei. Taken together, we produced detailed maps of cerebello-VTA structural connectivity for the first time in humans and established their relevance for trait differences in socioaffective regulation.




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Socionext Accelerates SoC Design Breakthroughs with Cadence Signoff Tools

Socionext, a leader in SoC design, recently made significant strides in enhancing its design efficiency for a complex billion-gate project. Faced with the initial challenges of lengthy eight-day iterations and a protracted two-month timing signoff process, the objective was to reduce the iteration cycle to just three days. By integrating Cadence's cutting-edge solutions—Certus Closure Solution, Tempus Timing Solution, and Quantus Extraction Solution—Socionext achieved remarkable improvements.

Notably, the Tempus DSTA tool dramatically cut timing closure time by 73%, outperforming conventional single-machine STA methods. This achievement, combined with the synergistic use of Cadence's Certus Closure and Tempus Timing solutions, allowed Socionext to meet their ambitious three-day iteration target and double productivity. Additionally, integrating these solutions significantly decreased both human and machine resource needs, slashing memory and disk costs by up to 90% and halving engineering resources during the optimization and signoff phases.

For more on this collaboration, check out the "Designed with Cadence" success story video on Cadence's website and YouTube channel.

Also, don't miss the on-demand webinar "Fast, Accurate STA for Large-Scale Design Challenges," which provides a deeper dive into Socionext's breakthroughs and the innovative solutions that powered their success.




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The Hacking of Culture and the Creation of Socio-Technical Debt

In an era in which internet companies dominate both public and private life, both power and culture are increasingly corporate, write Kim Córdova and Bruce Schneier.




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A 150 years record of polycyclic aromatic compounds in the Sihailongwan Maar Lake, Northeast China: impacts of socio-economic developments and pollution control

Environ. Sci.: Processes Impacts, 2024, 26,1748-1759
DOI: 10.1039/D4EM00309H, Paper
Jianing Zhang, Chong Wei, Yongming Han, Benjamin A. Musa Bandowe, Dewen Lei, Wolfgang Wilcke
The geochemical composition of sediment cores can serve as a proxy for reconstructing past human and nature-driven environmental and climatic changes.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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The Public and Their Platforms : Public Sociology in an Era of Social Media [Electronic book] / Mark Carrigan, Lambros Fatsis.

Bristol : Bristol University Press, [2021]