The pandemic messed with our brains. This is a thread about how we can help them bounce back. 👇 trib.al/45IpzMz
There’s a lot of trauma to process from the pandemic, @SmithDanaG writes. It’s not just our families, our communities, and our jobs that have changed; our brains have changed too. We’re not the same people we were 18 months ago.
Every experience changes your brain, either helping you to gain new synapses—the connections between brain cells—or causing you to lose them. But stress can not only destroy existing synapses but also inhibit the growth of new ones.
Scientists haven’t been able to directly study physical brain changes during the pandemic, but they can make inferences from mental health surveys conducted over the last 18 months and what they know about stress and the brain from previous research. nature.com/articles/s4138…
So that’s the bad news. The pandemic hit our brains hard. Here’s what you can do to mend your broken pandemic brain. Help your brain help itself. While everyone’s brain is different, try the following activities to give your brain the best chance of recovering from the pandemic.
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The Olympic and Paralympic games are set to begin on July 23 in Tokyo, where covid-19 cases are rising, prompting the city to announce its fourth state of emergency since the start of the pandemic.
The rising caseload is especially troubling because the country’s vaccination rate remains low, with just 18% of Japan’s population fully vaccinated. nytimes.com/interactive/20…
🧵 A few lonely academics have been warning for years that solar power faces a fundamental challenge that could halt the industry’s breakneck growth. Simply put: the more solar you add to the grid, the less valuable it becomes. technologyreview.com/2021/07/14/102…
The problem is that solar panels generate lots of electricity in the middle of sunny days, frequently more than what’s required, driving down prices—sometimes even into negative territory.
Unlike a natural gas plant, solar plant operators can’t easily throttle electricity up and down as needed, or space generation out through the day, night and dark winter. It’s available when it’s available, which is when the sun is shining.
📢 HOT OFF THE PRESS: The latest issue of our magazine is here. Though we’ve called it the “Change” issue, it’s really about two things: reflection and empowerment. technologyreview.com/2021/06/30/102…
For far too many of us, the pandemic has been a study in feeling powerless, and we’ve had little time to reflect, @Reillymj writes. We’ve been forced to cope almost constantly with the twisting, morphing uncertainties that life has thrown at us. technologyreview.com/2021/06/30/102…
And yet in this unprecedented environment incredible stories of hope and empowerment have emerged. We see people finding ways to respond to suffering and injustice with positive change.
If you’ve applied for a job lately, it’s all but guaranteed that your application was reviewed by software, in most cases, before a human ever laid eyes on it. This is a thread about episode one of our four-part investigation into the world of automated hiring.
They called it a conspiracy theory. But this postdoctoral research tweeted life into the idea that the virus came from a lab. Here’s a thread about how she did it—and why it matters to the search for the origin of covid-19. technologyreview.com/2021/06/25/102…
.@Ayjchan started asking questions in March 2020. She was chatting with friends on Facebook about the virus spreading out of China. She thought it was strange that people were saying it had come out of a food market. If that was so, why hadn’t anyone found any infected animals?
She wondered why no one was admitting another possibility, which seemed very obvious to her: the outbreak might have been due to a lab accident.
Was the covid-19 pandemic caused by a laboratory accident? A year ago, this idea was denounced as a conspiracy theory. Now, a group of prominent biologists say there needs to be a “safe space” for asking this question. technologyreview.com/2021/05/13/102…
In a letter in the journal @ScienceMagazine, 18 prominent biologists—including the world’s foremost coronavirus researcher—are lending their weight to calls for a new investigation of all possible origins of the virus.
They are also calling on China’s laboratories and agencies to “open their records” to independent analysis.