ref Electricity in the diseases of women : with special reference to the application of strong currents / by G. Betton Massey. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: London : Philadelphia, 1889. Full Article
ref Elements of comparative anatomy / by Carl Gegenbaur ; translated by F. Jeffrey Bell ; the translation revised and a preface written by E. Ray Lankester. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: London : Macmillan, 1878. Full Article
ref The elements of pathological histology : with special reference to practical methods / by Anton Weichselbaum ; translated by W.R. Dawson. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: London : Longmans, Green, 1895. Full Article
ref Elements of physiology, for the use of students, and with particular reference to the wants of practitioners / by Rudolph Wagner ; translated from the German, with additions, by Robert Willis. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: London : Sherwood, Gilbert, & Piper, 1844. Full Article
ref Elements of water bacteriology : with special reference to sanitary water analysis / by Samuel Cate Prescott, and Charles-Edward Amory Winslow. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: London : Chapman & Hall, 1908. Full Article
ref Entgegnung auf die Erwiderung des Herrn Prof. Leuckart in Giessen : in Betreff der Frage uber die Nematodenentwicklung / von Elias Mecznikow. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Gottingen : A. Rente, 1866. Full Article
ref Essai de sémiologie urinaire; méthodes d'interprétation de l'analyse urologique. L'urine dans les divers états morbides / par Camille Vieillard ; preface par Albert Robin. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Paris : Société d’éditions scientifiques, 1901. Full Article
ref Paul brings herbs to refresh Virginie after she has performed a long walk barefoot. Stipple engraving by J.P. Simon after C.P. Landon. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: A Paris (rue St Denis No. 214) : chez Bance aîné, [1810?] Full Article
ref King Charles I on horseback outside the city walls of Hull: the Parliamentarians inside, led by Sir John Hotham, refuse to surrender the city. Engraving by N. Tardieu after C. Parrocel. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: London : Printed and sold by Thos. and John Bowles, printsellers, [1728] Full Article
ref National polydrug collaborative project : treatment manual 3 : referral strategies for polydrug abusers. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: Rockville, Maryland : National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1977. Full Article
ref Oregon State's Aleah Goodman, Maddie Washington reflect on earning 2020 Pac-12 Sportsmanship Award By sports.yahoo.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 15:58:01 GMT The Pac-12 Student-Athlete Advisory Committee voted to award the Oregon State women’s basketball team with the Pac-12 Sportsmanship Award for the 2019-20 season, honoring their character and sportsmanship before a rivalry game against Oregon in Jan. 2020 -- the day Kobe Bryant, his daughter, Gigi, and seven others passed away in a helicopter crash in Southern California. In the above video, Aleah Goodman and Madison Washington share how the teams came together as one in a circle of prayer before the game. Full Article video Sports
ref Pac-12 women's basketball student-athletes reflect on the influence of their moms ahead of Mother's Day By sports.yahoo.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 21:24:08 GMT Pac-12 student-athletes give shout-outs to their moms ahead of Mother's Day on May 10th, 2020 including UCLA's Michaela Onyenwere, Oregon's Sabrina Ionescu and Satou Sabally, Arizona's Aari McDonald, Cate Reese, and Lacie Hull, Stanford's Kiana Williams, USC's Endyia Rogers, and Aliyah Jeune, and Utah's Brynna Maxwell. Full Article video Sports
ref Preface By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 26 Aug 2019 04:00 EDT Source: Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics, Volume 33, Number 4, 685--685. Full Article
ref Reclaiming indigenous governance : reflections and insights from Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United States By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:34:09 -0300 Callnumber: K 3247 R43 2019ISBN: 9780816539970 (paperback) Full Article
ref Reference and Document Aware Semantic Evaluation Methods for Korean Language Summarization. (arXiv:2005.03510v1 [cs.CL]) By arxiv.org Published On :: Text summarization refers to the process that generates a shorter form of text from the source document preserving salient information. Recently, many models for text summarization have been proposed. Most of those models were evaluated using recall-oriented understudy for gisting evaluation (ROUGE) scores. However, as ROUGE scores are computed based on n-gram overlap, they do not reflect semantic meaning correspondences between generated and reference summaries. Because Korean is an agglutinative language that combines various morphemes into a word that express several meanings, ROUGE is not suitable for Korean summarization. In this paper, we propose evaluation metrics that reflect semantic meanings of a reference summary and the original document, Reference and Document Aware Semantic Score (RDASS). We then propose a method for improving the correlation of the metrics with human judgment. Evaluation results show that the correlation with human judgment is significantly higher for our evaluation metrics than for ROUGE scores. Full Article
ref Salt, fat and sugar reduction : sensory approaches for nutritional reformulation of foods and beverages By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Author: O'Sullivan, Maurice G., authorCallnumber: OnlineISBN: 9780128226124 (electronic bk.) Full Article
ref Requirements engineering : 26th International Working Conference, REFSQ 2020, Pisa, Italy, March 24-27, 2020, Proceedings By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Author: REFSQ (Conference) (26th : 2020 : Pisa, Italy)Callnumber: OnlineISBN: 9783030444297 Full Article
ref Evolutionary developmental biology : a reference guide By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Callnumber: OnlineISBN: 9783319330389 (electronic bk.) Full Article
ref A general theory for preferential sampling in environmental networks By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Wed, 27 Nov 2019 22:01 EST Joe Watson, James V. Zidek, Gavin Shaddick. Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 13, Number 4, 2662--2700.Abstract: This paper presents a general model framework for detecting the preferential sampling of environmental monitors recording an environmental process across space and/or time. This is achieved by considering the joint distribution of an environmental process with a site-selection process that considers where and when sites are placed to measure the process. The environmental process may be spatial, temporal or spatio-temporal in nature. By sharing random effects between the two processes, the joint model is able to establish whether site placement was stochastically dependent of the environmental process under study. Furthermore, if stochastic dependence is identified between the two processes, then inferences about the probability distribution of the spatio-temporal process will change, as will predictions made of the process across space and time. The embedding into a spatio-temporal framework also allows for the modelling of the dynamic site-selection process itself. Real-world factors affecting both the size and location of the network can be easily modelled and quantified. Depending upon the choice of the population of locations considered for selection across space and time under the site-selection process, different insights about the precise nature of preferential sampling can be obtained. The general framework developed in the paper is designed to be easily and quickly fit using the R-INLA package. We apply this framework to a case study involving particulate air pollution over the UK where a major reduction in the size of a monitoring network through time occurred. It is demonstrated that a significant response-biased reduction in the air quality monitoring network occurred, namely the relocation of monitoring sites to locations with the highest pollution levels, and the routine removal of sites at locations with the lowest. We also show that the network was consistently unrepresenting levels of particulate matter seen across much of GB throughout the operating life of the network. Finally we show that this may have led to a severe overreporting of the population-average exposure levels experienced across GB. This could have great impacts on estimates of the health effects of black smoke levels. Full Article
ref A refined Cramér-type moderate deviation for sums of local statistics By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 04:02 EDT Xiao Fang, Li Luo, Qi-Man Shao. Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 3, 2319--2352.Abstract: We prove a refined Cramér-type moderate deviation result by taking into account of the skewness in normal approximation for sums of local statistics of independent random variables. We apply the main result to $k$-runs, U-statistics and subgraph counts in the Erdős–Rényi random graph. To prove our main result, we develop exponential concentration inequalities and higher-order tail probability expansions via Stein’s method. Full Article
ref Influence of the seed in affine preferential attachment trees By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 04:02 EDT David Corlin Marchand, Ioan Manolescu. Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 3, 1665--1705.Abstract: We study randomly growing trees governed by the affine preferential attachment rule. Starting with a seed tree $S$, vertices are attached one by one, each linked by an edge to a random vertex of the current tree, chosen with a probability proportional to an affine function of its degree. This yields a one-parameter family of preferential attachment trees $(T_{n}^{S})_{ngeq |S|}$, of which the linear model is a particular case. Depending on the choice of the parameter, the power-laws governing the degrees in $T_{n}^{S}$ have different exponents. We study the problem of the asymptotic influence of the seed $S$ on the law of $T_{n}^{S}$. We show that, for any two distinct seeds $S$ and $S'$, the laws of $T_{n}^{S}$ and $T_{n}^{S'}$ remain at uniformly positive total-variation distance as $n$ increases. This is a continuation of Curien et al. ( J. Éc. Polytech. Math. 2 (2015) 1–34), which in turn was inspired by a conjecture of Bubeck et al. ( IEEE Trans. Netw. Sci. Eng. 2 (2015) 30–39). The technique developed here is more robust than previous ones and is likely to help in the study of more general attachment mechanisms. Full Article
ref Distances and large deviations in the spatial preferential attachment model By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Fri, 31 Jan 2020 04:06 EST Christian Hirsch, Christian Mönch. Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 2, 927--947.Abstract: This paper considers two asymptotic properties of a spatial preferential-attachment model introduced by E. Jacob and P. Mörters (In Algorithms and Models for the Web Graph (2013) 14–25 Springer). First, in a regime of strong linear reinforcement, we show that typical distances are at most of doubly-logarithmic order. Second, we derive a large deviation principle for the empirical neighbourhood structure and express the rate function as solution to an entropy minimisation problem in the space of stationary marked point processes. Full Article
ref Sleep Deprivation Biases the Neural Mechanisms Underlying Economic Preferences By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2011-03-09 Vinod VenkatramanMar 9, 2011; 31:3712-3718BehavioralSystemsCognitive Full Article
ref Astrocytes Modulate Baroreflex Sensitivity at the Level of the Nucleus of the Solitary Tract By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2020-04-08 Svetlana MastitskayaApr 8, 2020; 40:3052-3062Systems/Circuits Full Article
ref Increased Neural Activity in Mesostriatal Regions after Prefrontal Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation and L-DOPA Administration By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2019-07-03 Benjamin MeyerJul 3, 2019; 39:5326-5335Systems/Circuits Full Article
ref Dendritic spines of CA 1 pyramidal cells in the rat hippocampus: serial electron microscopy with reference to their biophysical characteristics By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 1989-08-01 KM HarrisAug 1, 1989; 9:2982-2997Articles Full Article
ref Neural Mechanisms of Visual Working Memory in Prefrontal Cortex of the Macaque By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 1996-08-15 Earl K. MillerAug 15, 1996; 16:5154-5167Articles Full Article
ref Basilea III: Finalización de las reformas poscrisis By www.bis.org Published On :: 2018-03-16T09:19:00Z Spanish translation of "Basel III: Finalising post-crisis reforms", December 2017. Full Article
ref Wintrust Financial Corporation Announces Pricing of $250 Million Preferred Stock Offering By www.snl.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 22:37:00 GMT To view more press releases, please visit http://www.snl.com/irweblinkx/news.aspx?iid=1024452. Full Article
ref Ad Makers Use Deepfakes to 'Refresh' Old Content By www.technewsworld.com Published On :: 2020-04-28T11:05:35-07:00 With measures to stem the spread of COVID-19 putting a chokehold on their filming capabilities, advertising agencies are enhancing old content with new tech, including deepfakes. Deepfakes typically blend one person's likeness, or parts thereof, with the image of another person. Ad agencies are so restricted in how they can generate content, they'll explore anything that can be computer-generated. Full Article
ref [~21.8 MB mp3] A Leading Figure In The New Apostolic Reformation By podcastdownload.npr.org Published On :: Story: Several apostles affiliated with the movement helped organize or spoke at Rick Perry's recent prayer rally. A leading apostle, C. Peter Wagner, talks about the movement and its missions, which include acquiring leadership positions in government, the media, and arts and entertainment. Full Article
ref Astrocytes Modulate Baroreflex Sensitivity at the Level of the Nucleus of the Solitary Tract By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2020-04-08T09:30:18-07:00 Maintenance of cardiorespiratory homeostasis depends on autonomic reflexes controlled by neuronal circuits of the brainstem. The neurophysiology and neuroanatomy of these reflex pathways are well understood, however, the mechanisms and functional significance of autonomic circuit modulation by glial cells remain largely unknown. In the experiments conducted in male laboratory rats we show that astrocytes of the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS), the brain area that receives and integrates sensory information from the heart and blood vessels, respond to incoming afferent inputs with [Ca2+]i elevations. Astroglial [Ca2+]i responses are triggered by transmitters released by vagal afferents, glutamate acting at AMPA receptors and 5-HT acting at 5-HT2A receptors. In conscious freely behaving animals blockade of Ca2+-dependent vesicular release mechanisms in NTS astrocytes by virally driven expression of a dominant-negative SNARE protein (dnSNARE) increased baroreflex sensitivity by 70% (p < 0.001). This effect of compromised astroglial function was specific to the NTS as expression of dnSNARE in astrocytes of the ventrolateral brainstem had no effect. ATP is considered the principle gliotransmitter and is released by vesicular mechanisms blocked by dnSNARE expression. Consistent with this hypothesis, in anesthetized rats, pharmacological activation of P2Y1 purinoceptors in the NTS decreased baroreflex gain by 40% (p = 0.031), whereas blockade of P2Y1 receptors increased baroreflex gain by 57% (p = 0.018). These results suggest that glutamate and 5-HT, released by NTS afferent terminals, trigger Ca2+-dependent astroglial release of ATP to modulate baroreflex sensitivity via P2Y1 receptors. These data add to the growing body of evidence supporting an active role of astrocytes in brain information processing. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Cardiorespiratory reflexes maintain autonomic balance and ensure cardiovascular health. Impaired baroreflex may contribute to the development of cardiovascular disease and serves as a robust predictor of cardiovascular and all-cause mortality. The data obtained in this study suggest that astrocytes are integral components of the brainstem mechanisms that process afferent information and modulate baroreflex sensitivity via the release of ATP. Any condition associated with higher levels of "ambient" ATP in the NTS would be expected to decrease baroreflex gain by the mechanism described here. As ATP is the primary signaling molecule of glial cells (astrocytes, microglia), responding to metabolic stress and inflammatory stimuli, our study suggests a plausible mechanism of how the central component of the baroreflex is affected in pathological conditions. Full Article
ref Neural Correlates of Strategy Switching in the Macaque Orbital Prefrontal Cortex By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2020-04-08T09:30:18-07:00 We can adapt flexibly to environment changes and search for the most appropriate rule to a context. The orbital prefrontal cortex (PFo) has been associated with decision making, rule generation and maintenance, and more generally has been considered important for behavioral flexibility. To better understand the neural mechanisms underlying the flexible behavior, we studied the ability to generate a switching signal in monkey PFo when a strategy is changed. In the strategy task, we used a visual cue to instruct two male rhesus monkeys either to repeat their most recent choice (i.e., stay strategy) or to change it (i.e., shift strategy). To identify the strategy switching-related signal, we compared nonswitch and switch trials, which cued the same or a different strategy from the previous trial, respectively. We found that the switching-related signal emerged during the cue presentation and it was combined with the strategy signal in a subpopulation of cells. Moreover, the error analysis showed that the activity of the switch-related cells reflected whether the monkeys erroneously switched or not the strategy, rather than what was required for that trial. The function of the switching signal could be to prompt the use of different strategies when older strategies are no longer appropriate, conferring the ability to adapt flexibly to environmental changes. In our task, the switching signal might contribute to the implementation of the strategy cued, overcoming potential interference effects from the strategy previously cued. Our results support the idea that ascribes to PFo an important role for behavioral flexibility. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT We can flexibly adapt our behavior to a changing environment. One of the prefrontal areas traditionally associated with the ability to adapt to new contingencies is the orbital prefrontal cortex (PFo). We analyzed the switching related activity using a strategy task in which two rhesus monkeys were instructed by a visual cue either to repeat or change their most recent choice, respectively using a stay or a shift strategy. We found that PFo neurons were modulated by the strategy switching signal, pointing to the importance of PFo in behavioral flexibility by generating control over the switching of strategies. Full Article
ref Interneuron NMDA Receptor Ablation Induces Hippocampus-Prefrontal Cortex Functional Hypoconnectivity after Adolescence in a Mouse Model of Schizophrenia By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2020-04-15T09:30:18-07:00 Although the etiology of schizophrenia is still unknown, it is accepted to be a neurodevelopmental disorder that results from the interaction of genetic vulnerabilities and environmental insults. Although schizophrenia's pathophysiology is still unclear, postmortem studies point toward a dysfunction of cortical interneurons as a central element. It has been suggested that alterations in parvalbumin-positive interneurons in schizophrenia are the consequence of a deficient signaling through NMDARs. Animal studies demonstrated that early postnatal ablation of the NMDAR in corticolimbic interneurons induces neurobiochemical, physiological, behavioral, and epidemiological phenotypes related to schizophrenia. Notably, the behavioral abnormalities emerge only after animals complete their maturation during adolescence and are absent if the NMDAR is deleted during adulthood. This suggests that interneuron dysfunction must interact with development to impact on behavior. Here, we assess in vivo how an early NMDAR ablation in corticolimbic interneurons impacts on mPFC and ventral hippocampus functional connectivity before and after adolescence. In juvenile male mice, NMDAR ablation results in several pathophysiological traits, including increased cortical activity and decreased entrainment to local gamma and distal hippocampal theta rhythms. In addition, adult male KO mice showed reduced ventral hippocampus-mPFC-evoked potentials and an augmented low-frequency stimulation LTD of the pathway, suggesting that there is a functional disconnection between both structures in adult KO mice. Our results demonstrate that early genetic abnormalities in interneurons can interact with postnatal development during adolescence, triggering pathophysiological mechanisms related to schizophrenia that exceed those caused by NMDAR interneuron hypofunction alone. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT NMDAR hypofunction in cortical interneurons has been linked to schizophrenia pathophysiology. How a dysfunction of GABAergic cortical interneurons interacts with maturation during adolescence has not been clarified yet. Here, we demonstrate in vivo that early postnatal ablation of the NMDAR in corticolimbic interneurons results in an overactive but desynchronized PFC before adolescence. Final postnatal maturation during this stage outspreads the impact of the genetic manipulation toward a functional disconnection of the ventral hippocampal-prefrontal pathway, probably as a consequence of an exacerbated propensity toward hippocampal-evoked depotentiation plasticity. Our results demonstrate a complex interaction between genetic and developmental factors affecting cortical interneurons and PFC function. Full Article
ref The Effect of Counterfactual Information on Outcome Value Coding in Medial Prefrontal and Cingulate Cortex: From an Absolute to a Relative Neural Code By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2020-04-15T09:30:18-07:00 Adaptive coding of stimuli is well documented in perception, where it supports efficient encoding over a broad range of possible percepts. Recently, a similar neural mechanism has been reported also in value-based decision, where it allows optimal encoding of vast ranges of values in PFC: neuronal response to value depends on the choice context (relative coding), rather than being invariant across contexts (absolute coding). Additionally, value learning is sensitive to the amount of feedback information: providing complete feedback (both obtained and forgone outcomes) instead of partial feedback (only obtained outcome) improves learning. However, it is unclear whether relative coding occurs in all PFC regions and how it is affected by feedback information. We systematically investigated univariate and multivariate feedback encoding in various mPFC regions and compared three modes of neural coding: absolute, partially-adaptive and fully-adaptive. Twenty-eight human participants (both sexes) performed a learning task while undergoing fMRI scanning. On each trial, they chose between two symbols associated with a certain outcome. Then, the decision outcome was revealed. Notably, in one-half of the trials participants received partial feedback, whereas in the other half they got complete feedback. We used univariate and multivariate analysis to explore value encoding in different feedback conditions. We found that both obtained and forgone outcomes were encoded in mPFC, but with opposite sign in its ventral and dorsal subdivisions. Moreover, we showed that increasing feedback information induced a switch from absolute to relative coding. Our results suggest that complete feedback information enhances context-dependent outcome encoding. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT This study offers a systematic investigation of the effect of the amount of feedback information (partial vs complete) on univariate and multivariate outcome value encoding, within multiple regions in mPFC and cingulate cortex that are critical for value-based decisions and behavioral adaptation. Moreover, we provide the first comparison of three possible models of neural coding (i.e., absolute, partially-adaptive, and fully-adaptive coding) of value signal in these regions, by using commensurable measures of prediction accuracy. Taken together, our results help build a more comprehensive picture of how the human brain encodes and processes outcome value. In particular, our results suggest that simultaneous presentation of obtained and foregone outcomes promotes relative value representation. Full Article
ref Alpha Activity Reflects the Magnitude of an Individual Bias in Human Perception By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2020-04-22T09:29:41-07:00 Biases in sensory perception can arise from both experimental manipulations and personal trait-like features. These idiosyncratic biases and their neural underpinnings are often overlooked in studies on the physiology underlying perception. A potential candidate mechanism reflecting such idiosyncratic biases could be spontaneous alpha band activity, a prominent brain rhythm known to influence perceptual reports in general. Using a temporal order judgment task, we here tested the hypothesis that alpha power reflects the overcoming of an idiosyncratic bias. Importantly, to understand the interplay between idiosyncratic biases and contextual (temporary) biases induced by experimental manipulations, we quantified this relation before and after temporal recalibration. Using EEG recordings in human participants (male and female), we find that prestimulus frontal alpha power correlates with the tendency to respond relative to an own idiosyncratic bias, with stronger α leading to responses matching the bias. In contrast, alpha power does not predict response correctness. These results also hold after temporal recalibration and are specific to the alpha band, suggesting that alpha band activity reflects, directly or indirectly, processes that help to overcome an individual's momentary bias in perception. We propose that combined with established roles of parietal α in the encoding of sensory information frontal α reflects complementary mechanisms influencing perceptual decisions. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The brain is a biased organ, frequently generating systematically distorted percepts of the world, leading each of us to evolve in our own subjective reality. However, such biases are often overlooked or considered noise when studying the neural mechanisms underlying perception. We show that spontaneous alpha band activity predicts the degree of biasedness of human choices in a time perception task, suggesting that alpha activity indexes processes needed to overcome an individual's idiosyncratic bias. This result provides a window onto the neural underpinnings of subjective perception, and offers the possibility to quantify or manipulate such priors in future studies. Full Article
ref If You Want to See Thousands of Fireflies Light Up at Once, Head to the Great Smoky Mountains By www.smithsonianmag.com Published On :: Fri, 22 Apr 2016 17:04:10 +0000 A firefly mating ritual turns into a synchronized light show Full Article
ref New Analysis Refutes Nazareth Inscription's Ties to Jesus' Death By www.smithsonianmag.com Published On :: Mon, 23 Mar 2020 14:47:34 +0000 The marble slab appears to be Greek in origin and may have been written in response to the death of a tyrant on the island of Kos Full Article
ref Reflections on regulatory responses to the Covid-19 pandemic By www.bis.org Published On :: 2020-04-15T14:00:00Z FSI Briefs No 1, April 2020. Regulatory policy responses should seek to support economic activity while preserving the financial system's soundness and ensuring transparency. The recommendation for banks to make full use of capital and liquidity buffers should go hand in hand with restrictions on dividends and bonuses and clarity concerning the process for rebuilding them. Flexibility in loan classification criteria for prudential and accounting purposes should be complemented with sufficient disclosure on the criteria banks use to assess creditworthiness. The publication of detailed guidance on the application of expected loss provisioning rules, combined with sensible transitional arrangements, may constitute a balanced approach to mitigating the unintended effects of the new accounting standards. Full Article
ref Post-crisis international financial regulatory reforms: a primer By www.bis.org Published On :: 2020-04-23T16:00:00Z This paper reviews post-crisis financial regulatory reforms, examines how they fit together and identifies open issues. Specifically, it takes stock of the salient new features of bank and CCP international standards within a unified analytical framework. Full Article
ref Frustrations mount for parents awaiting refund for school trips lost to COVID-19 By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sat, 9 May 2020 05:00:00 EDT Some school travel groups in Cape Breton that had trips cancelled in March due to COVID-19 are still waiting to get their money back. Full Article News/Canada/Nova Scotia
ref Scott Moir refutes online allegations of breaking quarantine guideline By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 16:59:07 EDT Canadian figure skater Scott Moir posted a video on Instagram and Twitter on Thursday, explaining that he and fiancee Jackie Mascarin are currently stationed in Tampa, Fla., because Mascarin works as a physician's assistant in the respiratory unit of a local hospital. Full Article Sports/Olympics/Winter Sports/Figure Skating
ref Heartbreak & triumph: Tancredi, Wilkinson reflect on Olympic soccer journey By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 17 Apr 2020 14:26:13 EDT Melissa Tancredi and Rhian Wilkinson were pillars of the Team Canada for nearly two decades. Together, they've lived the highs and lows of the women's national soccer program - from the awe of their first Games in Beijing 2008, the heartbreak and redemption in London 2012, and finally, solidifying Canada's reputation as a soccer world power in Rio 2016. It's been a rollercoaster they'd ride over and over again. Full Article Sports/Olympics
ref Canadian soccer star Alphonso Davies, a former refugee, helping raise funds for UN relief By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Tue, 28 Apr 2020 11:31:40 EDT Teenaged Edmonton soccer star Alphonso Davies said he welcomes being a role model to young kids and wants to put his platform to good use. Full Article Sports/Soccer
ref Saskatoon woman with COVID-19-like symptoms says it took 5 days to get tested after referral By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 13 Mar 2020 16:54:46 EDT Full Article News/Canada/Saskatoon
ref Post-crisis international financial regulatory reforms: a primer By www.bis.org Published On :: 2020-04-01T00:00:00Z Bank for International Settlements BIS Working Papers by Claudio Borio, Marc Farag and Nikola Tarashev Full Article
ref Apple launches new online storefront for buying from home By appleinsider.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 05:47:31 -0400 Apple has now launched a new shop front online which is expressly for making it easier to buy, and get technical help, from home. Full Article
ref 13-inch MacBook Pro refreshed, WWDC date announced, and HomeKit device roundup on the AppleInsider Podcast By appleinsider.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 08:00:08 -0400 Apple has refreshed the 13-inch MacBook Pro with Magic Keyboard, the start of Apple's online WWDC has been announced, the iPad Pro Smart Keyboard gets a teardown, and your hosts provide a massive roundup of HomeKit and smart home devices. Full Article iPad/Tips
ref Apple diversifying AirPods supply chain, potentially pushing refresh back By appleinsider.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 11:05:51 -0400 Apple is shifting a substantial portion of its current AirPods production from China to Vietnam, and appears to be considering a release schedule later than previously predicted for an AirPods refresh. Full Article