Frontiers | Online Morphological Adaptation for Tactile Sensing Augmentation frontiersin.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from frontiersin.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Beijing Criticizes Chinese Youth’s ‘Do-Nothing’ Approach to Life
“I don’t want to lean in. I want to lie down,” this famous line of comedian Ali Wong describes the desire to do nothing in one’s life and career. Unexpectedly, the “lying down” approach is catching on among young people in mainland China and has caught the attention of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). The Party’s propaganda labeled the “lying down” trend “disgraceful” as the regime is concerned about its repercussions on society.
“Lying down” or
tang (lie) and
ping (flat) has become a popular slang in the mainland. People who choose the “lying down” lifestyle say that they don’t want to be money-making machines. They want to be minimalists and don’t plan on establishing a career, owning a home, and raising a family.
Conclusion (~1,700 words).
All backed up by over 200 references (~6,500 words).
We must stop crediting the wrong people for inventions made by others.
Instead let s heed the recent call in the journal
Nature: Let 2020 be the year in which we value those who ensure that
science is self-correcting [SV20].
Like those who know me can testify, finding and citing original sources of scientific and technological innovations is important to me, whether they are mine or other people s [DL1][DL2][HIN][NASC1-9]. The present page is offered as a resource for computer scientists who share this inclination.
By grounding research in its true intellectual foundations and crediting the original inventors,
New Study May Explain Why Yawning Is Contagious
Amelia Ward
| Last updated
5:45 PM, April 04 2021 GMT+1
Although it s well known that yawning is contagious, even among mammals, not much has been discovered as to why - until now.
Researchers recently spent five months following two prides of lions living at the Makalali Game Reserve in South Africa and their findings give some idea as to why the weird phenomenon occurs.
One of the study s senior authors Elisabetta Palagi, an ethologist at the University of Pisa in Pisa, Italy, noticed that lions catch each other s yawns.
Credit: PA
10
Palagi said: The data showed a clear picture: After yawning together, two lions would engage in highly synchronous behaviour.
Many mammals are contagious yawners—this might be why nationalgeographic.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nationalgeographic.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.