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Nikocado Avocado: The rise and fall of mukbanger who lost 90 pounds
Nikocado Avocado: The rise and fall of mukbanger who lost 90 pounds
Since 2016, YouTube audiences have been riveted by Avocado devouring everything listed on fast-food menus
2023-05-16 17:48
BOE a Step Closer to Launching Digital Pound After Project Rosalind Study
BOE a Step Closer to Launching Digital Pound After Project Rosalind Study
The Bank of England is a step closer to launching its own digital currency after a yearlong project
2023-06-16 17:18
Scientists discover that people who live past 90 have key differences in their blood
Scientists discover that people who live past 90 have key differences in their blood
Centenarians have become the fastest-growing demographic group in the world, with numbers approximately doubling every 10 years since the 1970s. Many researchers have sought out the factors and contributors that determine a long and healthy life. The dissolution isn't new either, with Plato and Aristotle writing about the ageing process over 2,300 years ago. Understanding what is behind living a longer life involves unravelling the complex interplay of genetic predisposition and lifestyle factors and how they interact. In a recent study published in GeroScience, researches have unveiled common biomarkers, including levels of cholesterol and glucose, in people who live past 90. The study is one of the largest that has been conducted in this area, comparing biomarker profiles measured throughout life among those who lived to be over the age of 100 and their shorter-lived peers. Data came from 44,000 Swedes who underwent health assessments at ages 64-99. These participants were then followed through Swedish register data for up to 35 years. Of these people, 2.7 percent (1,224) lived to be 100 years old. 85 percent of these centenarians were female. The study's findings conduced that lower levels of glucose, creatinine - which is linked to kidney function and uric acid, a waste product in the body caused by the digestion of certain foods - were linked to those who made it to their 100th birthday. The findings suggest a potential link between metabolic health, nutrition, and exceptional longevity. In terms of lifestyle factors, the study didn't allow for any conclusions to be made, but the authors of the study added that it's reasonable for factors such as nutrition and alcohol intake play a role. Overall, the fact that differences in biomarkers could be observed a long time before death suggests that genes and lifestyle play a role, but of course, chance likely has an input too. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-10-17 00:21
UAE Oil Giant Doubles Carbon Capture Target Ahead of COP Summit
UAE Oil Giant Doubles Carbon Capture Target Ahead of COP Summit
The United Arab Emirates’ biggest oil producer is doubling its carbon-capture target as the company works toward a
2023-10-01 18:45
Micron’s China Blow Darkens Its Path Toward Recovery
Micron’s China Blow Darkens Its Path Toward Recovery
Just as Micron Technology Inc. investors were starting to glimpse the end of a painful demand slump, the
2023-05-23 21:54
Wesleyan University: Top US college says it will end 'legacy' admissions
Wesleyan University: Top US college says it will end 'legacy' admissions
The university says it is "important" to end the policy, seen as a perk for the white and wealthy.
2023-07-19 23:58
Meta Unveils Android Beta Program for Threads
Meta Unveils Android Beta Program for Threads
Meta is giving Android users the opportunity to check out features for its newest app
2023-07-09 01:25
Google directed a sick burn at Apple during I/O 2023
Google directed a sick burn at Apple during I/O 2023
At Google I/O 2023, the company snuck in a dig at Apple. "We hope every
2023-05-11 03:55
Is Barbie Coming to Fortnite?
Is Barbie Coming to Fortnite?
Barbie is likely not coming to Fortnite despite the hype surrounding the movie. Fans can play the BARBENHEIMER island in Creative mode to see Barbie in Fortnite.
2023-08-04 01:55
Twitch streamer Boggles receives ban from Dreamhack for spraying deodorant on gamers
Twitch streamer Boggles receives ban from Dreamhack for spraying deodorant on gamers
Boggles has been banned from attenting any future events of Dreamhack, however, he publicly apologized for his misbehavior
2023-05-11 17:50
A new accent from 'Antarctica' has been discovered by scientists
A new accent from 'Antarctica' has been discovered by scientists
Antarctica might be the only continent on Earth with no natural human habitation, but it’s emerged that an “Antarctica accent” is very much a thing. Despite having no locals, thousands of scientists have made up an ever-changing population in research stations over the years. The continent is so isolated and the level of interaction between researchers is so intense, that a common accent is beginning to emerge there despite people coming from different parts of the world. At its busiest points in the year during the summer, Antarctica is home to around 5,000 people. Only around 1,000 people live there during the winter months. The idea of accents changing due to human interaction on Antarctica is no different to the phenomenon seen throughout history at a glacial pace. However, given the very specific sample size, it’s an opportunity for scientists to study it at a much quicker rate and on a much smaller scale. Experts at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich published a study in 2019 which focused on the change in accents observed in 11 people who took part in the British Antarctic Survey. @human.1011 There’s an Antarctic Accent! #language #linguistics #english #antarctica Of the 11 who were studied, eight came from England, one from the US, one from Germany and one from Iceland. Their voices were recorded every six weeks, and the team found that over time they developed longer vowel sounds. There was a physical change too, with participants pronouncing the “ou” sound in the front of their mouths rather than the back of their throats. Speaking to IFL Science, Jonathan Harrington, study author and Professor of Phonetics and Speech Processing at the Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich said: "The Antarctic accent is not really perceptible as such – it would take much longer for it to become so – but it is acoustically measurable. "It's mostly an amalgamation of some aspects of the spoken accents of the winterers before they went to Antarctica, together with an innovation. It's far more embryonic [than conventional English accents] given that it had only a short time to develop and also, of course, because it's only distributed across a small group of speakers.” Sign up for our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-08-25 23:45
Google to pay $8 million to settle claims of deceptive ads -- Texas AG
Google to pay $8 million to settle claims of deceptive ads -- Texas AG
WASHINGTON Google, a unit of Alphabet, has agreed to pay $8 million to settle claims it used deceptive
2023-05-12 23:47