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List of All Articles with Tag 'an'

Swedish landlord SBB rules out state support as finances deteriorate
Swedish landlord SBB rules out state support as finances deteriorate
By Marie Mannes STOCKHOLM (Reuters) -Swedish property group SBB on Friday ruled out state support as it sought to repair
2023-07-14 17:19
UK regulator extends Microsoft-Activision deadline to Aug. 29
UK regulator extends Microsoft-Activision deadline to Aug. 29
LONDON Britain's competition regulator on Friday extended the date by which it would consider Microsoft's submissions relating to
2023-07-14 16:50
Doctors reattach boy's head after suffering 'internal decapitation'
Doctors reattach boy's head after suffering 'internal decapitation'
Doctors have performed a minor miracle after re-attaching a “'decapitated” boy’s head after he was hit by a car. The miraculous surgery occurred after Suleiman Hassan, a Palestinian boy from the West Bank, was severely injured after being hit by a car while out riding his bike. He was airlifted to Hadassah Ein Kerem’s Trauma Unit in Jerusalem and went straight to surgery. He suffered what is known as an internal decapitation – this occurs when the base of the skull and top of the spine become detached by the skin remains intact. This extremely rare injury can occur when a strong, sudden impact on the head results in the muscles and ligaments that hold the head in place to sever, accounting for less than one per cent of spinal injuries. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Doctors explained that Hassan’s head was “'almost completely detached from the base of his neck” before he underwent painstaking surgery taking several hours. The procedure involves reattaching the skull and spinal column using technology such as screws, rods, plates and bone grafts. One of the surgeons who operated on Hassan, Dr Ohad Einav, told The Times of Isreal: “We fought for the boy’s life.” Dr Einav continued: “The procedure itself is very complicated and took several hours. While in the operating room, we used new plates and fixations in the damaged area… “Our ability to save the child was thanks to our knowledge and the most innovative technology in the operating room.” Surgeries such as the one that saved Hassan’s life are only possible if internal decapitation victims have their major blood vessels intact, keeping the brain alive. Hassan’s surgery took place in June but has only recently been made public as the boy continues to recover at home with rehabilitation. Miraculously, Hassan can walk unaided and has no neurological problems following the shocking injury. 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.
2023-07-14 16:49
Dollar hovers near 15-month low as easing inflation spurs rate peak bets
Dollar hovers near 15-month low as easing inflation spurs rate peak bets
By Ankur Banerjee and Joice Alves SINGAPORE/LONDON The dollar hovered near a 15-month low on Friday and was
2023-07-14 16:47
Top Hollywood agency CAA in talks to sell itself to Kering boss -Bloomberg News
Top Hollywood agency CAA in talks to sell itself to Kering boss -Bloomberg News
Creative Artists Agency (CAA), one of Hollywood's biggest talent agencies, is in advanced talks to sell a majority
2023-07-14 16:46
Small business distress index hits mid-2020 high
Small business distress index hits mid-2020 high
(In JULY 13 story corrects to read Gotshal (not Gotschal), paragraph 1) By Chiara Elisei LONDON (Reuters) -Corporate distress among
2023-07-14 16:30
Putin says Russian mercenary group has no legal basis so 'doesn't exist'
Putin says Russian mercenary group has no legal basis so 'doesn't exist'
Russian President Vladimir Putin is claiming that the Wagner private military company “simply doesn't exist” as a legal entity
2023-07-14 16:27
Scientists have discovered that humans can actually hear silence
Scientists have discovered that humans can actually hear silence
It is possible for human beings to hear silence, according to a team of philosophers and psychologists, in a huge win for 1960s crooners Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel. In a study published on Monday by Johns Hopkins University researchers, the team decided that it’s not just sound that human hears pick up: silence is, indeed, something we can hear too. Rui Zhe Goh, a Johns Hopkins graduate student in philosophy and psychology who was the study’s lead author, wrote: "We typically think of our sense of hearing as being concerned with sounds. But silence, whatever it is, is not a sound — it's the absence of sound. Surprisingly, what our work suggests is that nothing is also something you can hear.” Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Per the study, published in the journal PNAS, researchers had participants listen to an array of audio illusions. They also periodically substituted the noise for pure nothingness, the measure whether people’s brains would react in the same way. “Philosophers have long debated whether silence is something we can literally perceive, but there hasn’t been a scientific study aimed directly at this question,” said study co-author Chaz Firestone, an assistant professor of psychological and brain sciences and the director of the Johns Hopkins Perception & Mind Laboratory. “Our approach was to ask whether our brains treat silences the way they treat sounds.” "If you can get the same illusions with silences as you get with sounds, then that may be evidence that we literally hear silence after all." The 1,000 participants’ responses were measured across seven different tests. Across all of them, their brains reacted the same way to silence as they did to noise. “We show that silences can 'substitute' for sounds in event-based auditory illusions,” said the study. “Seven experiments introduce three 'silence illusions,' adapted from perceptual illusions previously thought to arise only with sounds.” “In all cases, silences elicited temporal distortions perfectly analogous to their sound-based counterparts, suggesting that auditory processing treats moments of silence the way it treats sounds. Silence is truly perceived, not merely inferred,” it said. “The kinds of illusions and effects that look like they are unique to the auditory processing of a sound, we also get them with silences, suggesting we really do hear absences of sound too,” added study co-author Ian Phillips, a John Hopkins philosopher and psychologist. Hello darkness my old friend… 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.
2023-07-14 16:23
Harry Kane: Tottenham chief Daniel Levy meets with Bayern Munich
Harry Kane: Tottenham chief Daniel Levy meets with Bayern Munich
Daniel Levy met with Bayern Munich in London this week, with Harry Kane's future among the topics discussed.
2023-07-14 15:57
Major Australian REIT limits withdrawals from unlisted office fund
Major Australian REIT limits withdrawals from unlisted office fund
(This story has been corrected to read Blackstone, not BlackRock, in paragraphs 8 and 12) By Lewis Jackson SYDNEY (Reuters)
2023-07-14 15:51
European shares open lower but eye best week in over three months
European shares open lower but eye best week in over three months
European shares dipped on Friday, but remained on course for their biggest weekly percentage jump in over three
2023-07-14 15:27
Exclusive-China invites global investors for rare meeting as economy sputters-sources
Exclusive-China invites global investors for rare meeting as economy sputters-sources
By Xie Yu and Julie Zhu HONG KONG China's financial regulators have invited some of the world's biggest
2023-07-14 15:15
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