Chimps show greater genetic diversity than humans


London,Groups of chimpanzees within central Africa are more different genetically than humans living on different continents, a study has found. The Oxford University-led study published in the journal PLoS Genetics suggests that greenomics can provide a valuable new tool for use in chimpanzee conservation. It has the potential to identify the population of origin of an individual chimpanzee or the provenance of a sample of bush meat, a release from Oxford University said. Common chimpanzees in equatorial Africa have long been recognised as falling into three distinct populations or sub-species: western, central and eastern chimpanzees. A fourth group, the Cameroonian chimpanzee, has been proposed to live in southern Nigeria and western Cameroon but there has been considerable controversy as to whether it constitutes a distinct group. Oxford University researchers, along with scientists from the University of Cambridge, the Broad Institute, the Centre Pasteur du Cameroun and the Biomedical Primate Research Centre, examined DNA from 54 chimpanzees. They compared the DNA at 818 positions across the genome that varied between individuals. Their analysis showed that Cameroonian chimpanzees are distinct from the other, well-established groups. And previous conclusions that Cameroonian and western chimpanzees are most closely related were shown to be untrue. Instead, the closest relationships to Cameroonian chimpanzees are with nearby central chimpanzees, the release added. Dr Rory Bowden from the Department of Statistics at Oxford University, who led the study, said, “These findings have important consequences for conservation. All great ape populations face unparalleled challenges from habitat loss, hunting and emerging infections, and conservation strategies need to be based on sound understanding of the underlying population structure,” he said. Bowden further said, “The fact that all four recognised populations of chimpanzees are genetically distinct emphasises the value of conserving them independently. The researchers also contrasted the levels of genetic variation between the chimpanzee groups with that seen in humans from different populations. Surprisingly, even though all the chimpanzees live in relatively close proximity, chimpanzees from different populations were substantially more different genetically than humans living on different continents. That is despite the fact that the habitats of two of the groups are separated only by a river. Professor Peter Donnelly, director of the Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics at Oxford University and a senior author on the study, noted, “Relatively small numbers of humans left Africa 50, 000-100, 000 years ago. All non-African populations descended from them, and are reasonably similar genetically.” The conservation implications of the study extend to other species. New techniques such as next-generation sequencing will allow a catalogue of genetic variation to be obtained cheaply and easily for any species.  Source: Indian ExpressImage
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By 2018 computers 'will have 5 senses



Some day soon, you'll be able to order a wedding dress on your tablet and feel the fabric and the veil just by touching the screen. When you feel an object, your brain registers the series of vibrations on your skin as being smooth, rough, sharp, etc. Computer sensors are becoming sophisticated enough to do that too.Within the next five years, vibrators within smartphones will be precise enough that they could be designed to mimic the vibrations experienced when your fingers touch a particular surface. Even though you'll  just be touching glass, it will feel like you're touching whatever object is displayed on the screen. Source: The Coming Crisis
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Projection design ships 2nd gen LED units

The 2nd generation of projectiondesign’s ReaLED illumination engine, used in the FS33 IR projectors, delivers improved pitch black performance. The FS33 IR is optimised for use in simulation scenarios involving night vision goggles thanks to a wide colour gamut, which gives very saturated colour. The LED engine gives it a lifetime of up to 100,000 hours and the projector is available in 1080p or WUXGA models. Source: InAVate
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Soon, ‘thinking’ underwear to monitor modern soldiers during combat

Deccan Chronicle, ANI , Washington: Modern war fighters may soon be wearing underwear's equipped with sensors, which would not just help in monitoring warriors during combat and identifying critical casualties but also train and select them for missions. Dubbed as 'wear and forget physiological sensing system,' these thinking undergarments may be the next-generation drawers for the modern war-fighter. Gel-free sensors form an electronic network in the fabric to monitor respiration and heart rate, activity, body postureand skin temperature - transmitting that data through the soldiers’ layers of clothing to a central system. The U.S. Army Medical Research and Material Command office (USAMRMC) and the Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center (TATRC) have been working with Foster-Miller and Malden Mills Industries to create the new low-cost knitted undergarments, Discovery News reported. Source: Deccan Chronicle Source: Daily-Protein
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Virgin Galactic's first commercial spaceship to test-fly this year

Virgin Galactic, an offshoot of Richard Branson's Virgin Group, is planning to test-fly its first spaceship beyond the Earth's atmosphere this year, with commercial suborbital passenger service to follow in 2013 or 2014, company officials have announced. Nearly 500 customers have signed up for rides on SpaceShipTwo, a six-passenger, two-pilot spaceship being built and tested by Scaled Composites, an aerospace company founded by aircraft designer Burt Rutan and now owned by Northrop Grumman. The suborbital flights, which cost 200,000 dollars per person, are designed to reach an altitude of about 68 miles, giving fliers a few minutes to experience zero gravity and glimpse Earth set against the blackness of space. "In the suborbital area, there are a lot of things to be done. This is an area that has been essentially absent for about four decades," the Telegraph quoted Neil Armstrong, who was a test pilot for the 1960s-era X-15 research plane before becoming a U.S. astronaut and commander of the  first  mission
to land on the moon, as saying. "There's a lot of opportunities," Armstrong told about 400 people attending the Next-Generation Suborbital Researchers Conference in Palo Alto, California. "I certainly hope that some of the new approaches will prove to be profitable and useful," he said. Virgin Galactic is the most visible of a handful of companies developing spaceships for tourism, research, educational and business purposes. SpaceShipTwo, the first of Virgin's planned five-ship fleet, has completed 31 atmospheric test flights – 15 attached to its carrier aircraft WhiteKnightTwo, and 16 glide tests, William Pomerantz, Virgin Galactic's vice president of special projects, said in a speech to the conference. Preparations for the ship's first rocket-powered flights are under way at Scaled Composites' Mojave, Calif., plant and expected to take place this year. "We hope to have the rocket motor in the spaceship later this year and start powered flight testing," Virgin Galactic chief test pilot David Mackay told the conference. "We would like to be the first to do this, but we're not in a race with anyone. This is not a Cold War-era space race," he added. Pomerantz told reporters later "We flow pretty quickly from first powered flight tofirst flight to space and then it's not terribly long from there until we have our first commercial flight to space." He said passenger service could begin in 2013 or 2014, depending on the results of the test flights and other factors, such as pilot training. Source: Ananta-Tec
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