Abstract In the rush of the technology age, where most people are part of a 24/7 community, itmight seem appropriate to perform more than one job at a time. Multitasking is the idea of having multiple tasks competing for your attention. The fact that attention isa very limited resource is skipped and the overall impression is that you are savingtime, energy, and space forlaterrest. Unfortunately, the study shows otherwise. Whilein the heat of the work you might feel like the output is efficient, the actual outcome -in most cases- is not as good as if you were not “multitasking”
I. Introduction
When you start an activity, it takes time to get fully focused. After some time, you will
probably be doing it with higher efficiency and less effort. That is, the regions responsible for
this specific action are activated and the neurons are already fired up.
In case you want to switch tasks, there are two stages: “the Goal Shifting” which is just
deciding you want to do task 2 now instead of task 1. And stage two: “rule activation” you are
turning off the rules for task 1 and turning on the rules for task 2
II. Like a clown box, but scarier
When focused on a single task, our attentional resources are well directed and uninterrupted
III. Multitasking is contagious
IV. Drawbacks of Multitasking
It is hard to quit multitasking, scary, and might seem unrealistic in some cases. Just to
realize the trueimpact, this is a thorough review of multitasking dangers.
A study published in Plos-One journal
V. Conclusion
To sum up, where multitasking might appear as aperfect solution for sparing time, zooming in a littlereveal that under the name of getting a variety of duties done, time is lost, efficiency is lost, and mental health is lost. Multitasking does not only affect you but those around you as well. Instead of starting alldue tasks at the same time, take them one by one.Limit distractions to increase efficiency.
VI. References
Abstract Scientists have been recently investigating lucid dreams and their side effects because of their potential as therapeutic tools, where it is being claimed that they have positive impacts on immediate waking mood. This paper discusses several techniques of lucid dream induction, like WBTB, MILD, and reality testing. It also goes over several concepts related to lucidity, such as the REM stage, and different methods of dream content modification, such as altering the dream environment through mimicking a real-world scene. It turned out that lucidity does have promising results when being used as a therapeutic tool, except that it might increase negative psychopathologies on frequent use. It was also obvious that there is a partial dissociation between lucid dreams and the memories of the person experiencing them.
I. Introduction
Lucidity is a state of consciousness during sleep that enables dreamers to modify their dream
content. However, it has got its limitations according to various internal and external factors. For
instance, it depends on the place at which the participant sleeps and to what extent he is
accustomed to it. It also depends on how much light is being leaked and the noise the participant is
experiencing. Though they limit the ability of lucid dreaming, external factors can be altered
according to needs, but when it comes to internal ones, it becomes a bit hindering. Recent
studies show that controlling dream content was hard for PTSD patients to achieve, even when lucid
II. REM Stage
Though the study of lucid dreams has many inconsistencies and disagreements, it is
unanimouslyagreed that lucid dreams occur within the Rapid Eye Movement stage of sleep
III. Inducing Lucidity
Most of the lucid dreams studies were just theoretical, with no actual evidence for their
authenticity. So, several lucidity-inducing techniques were developed for the sake of
experimentations. One of the methods, known as reality testing, involves genuinely checking whether
you are in a dream or not throughout the day by searching for any glitches or inaccuracies in the
surrounding environment. Having patients do this technique will increase the likelihood that they do
it when in a dream, and therefore realize they are dreaming. Two other methods, Mnemonic Induction
of
Lucid Dreams (MILD) and Wake Back to Bed (WBTB), are used simultaneously. They involve waking a
patient up after a certain period of time to increase his mental alertness (WBTB) and having him
rehearse a phrase repeatedly, such as “I’ll remember I’m dreaming” while falling back into sleep.
However, recent studies showed that lucidity induction techniques may be associated with sleep
disruption
IV. Effect of lucidity on waking mood
A recent multi-case study proved that there is a link between lucidity and positive waking mood,
which means it can be used as a therapeutic tool.
V. Accessing Episodic Memories
VI. Conclusion
Lucid dreams are being studied on a wide range because of their positive impact on waking mood, which means they could be used as a therapeutic tool. WBTB, MILD, and reality testing have proved their potential as lucidity induction techniques and are currently being used on larger scales than before. It was also proved that there are some inconsistencies in dream scene reinstatements.
VII. References
Abstract Today’s classical computers are headed to a plateau regarding performance/power increases and size decreases. Many companies are investing in quantum computers as the next generation of computers due to their vast potential. Said potential stems from their ability to exploit bizarre quantum phenomena, such as superposition and entanglement. However, the road is still long to achieve quantum computers capable of doing anything that today’s supercomputers cannot. The road is riddled with design challenges that heavily limit the extent of problems quantum computers can solve. Those challenges include error correction, increasing the number of qubits, and finding more efficient ways to create the super-cooled ultra-vacuum environments necessary for the operation of supercomputers.
I. Introduction
The integrated circuit present in most of today’s modern computers was first introduced in 1959.
Since then, computers have been following a trend termed “Moore’s Law”: In 1965, computer engineer
Gordon Moore observed that the number of components on integrated circuits had been roughly doubling
every 1-2 years since circuits were invented. This allowed circuits to run at higher speeds and
efficiencies per unit area for the same amount of power. Consequently, computers have both been
shrinking in size and growing in computing power over the decades. However, the end to
Moore’s law is looming on the horizon as the size of components on circuits is approaching the
atomic scale, which means that further increases in classical computers’ power are going to be quite
difficult. It’s time to start developing entirely new technology that will succeed today’s computers
as our tool for moving forward, and quantum computers seem to be the perfect candidate
II. How Quantum Computers Work
These technologies enable exchanging secret encryption keys via photons. This allows for
ultra-secure connections that are impossible to hack due to something known as decoherence
(discussed in the next section). In a nutshell, quantum connections cannot be hacked because any
attempt by a third party to access the qubits will alter their delicate quantum state which causes
them to lose their data.
III. Challenges Facing Quantum Computers
There are two main obstacles in the road to achieving quantum supremacy; that is, successfully
designing and implementing a quantum computer superior to any classical supercomputer. Namely, those
obstacles are noise and errors.
The quantum state of qubits is extremely fragile, which inhibits quantum computers from
operating in normal environments or communicating cubits at long distances due to something known as
noise. Even the slightest of changes in environmental conditions, such as temperature or pressure,
is considered as noise, and interaction with noise causes errors/decoherence; i.e., qubits tend to
lose their special quantum state and subsequently lose the data they carry. Therefore, although the
size of quantum chips and circuits is not too large compared with their classical
counterparts, it is the equipment required for preserving the qubits that take up large space and
funds. This equipment includes super-cooled fridges and ultra-vacuum chambers, and it ensures qubits
retain their superposition to achieve their purpose.
IV. Conclusion
Quantum computers are the most promising tools at our hands if we are to explore the next frontiers of science and technology. Nevertheless, they are still very early in development, and we have barely scratched the surface of their power. More work is needed to decrease the size and costs of the equipment needed to shield qubits from noise and to find efficient ways of achieving superposition and entanglement. Current quantum computers haven’t exceeded double digits in terms of qubits, and there’s still a long way to go before we can accomplish anything useful with them.
V. References
Abstract Prions are unconventional infectious agents that cause lethal transmissible neurodegenerative diseases in humans and animals. They were the main cause of a number of diseases including Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD), Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (vCJD), Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker Syndrome, Fatal Familial Insomnia and Kuru. Prions can be distinguished from other pathogens by their lack of nucleic acids. The most important process for prion propagation is the conversion from normal cellular prion protein on the cell membrane to insoluble, limited protease digestion-resistant, pathogenic scrapie prion protein. For several years, many pharmacological and biological tools have been targeting different stages of disease progression. A very few numbers of them have been upgraded to clinical trials. Despite all these treatments being tested, none has been approved as a therapeutic drug for prion diseases in general. In this review, some of these treatments will be discussed to get a basic knowledge of different possible therapies.
I. Introduction
Prion diseases, or transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, are fatal neurodegenerative
diseases in the central nervous system
Prion diseases are rare in humans, but they indeed have a unique biology that had caused them to
be the focus of the scientific world for several years. There is currently no effective treatment
for prion diseases or clear evidence of how they are transmitted, but mostly they are transmitted
through contaminated blood products
II. Treatments for prion diseases: Do they exist?
A short answer is that there is no effective disease-modifying treatment for prion diseases
until now. None has string preclinical evidence from experiments on animals. A good understanding of
the agent’s structure and mechanism is essential for discovering a decent treatment, which is
improving every day.
The most frequent targets are PrPc, PrPsc, and the conversion process between PrPc to PrPsc. The
main goal of targeting PrPc is to enable knocking down or completely remove substrates for prion
propagation, which can be applied for all types of prion diseases.
Targeting PrPsc may be the most logical approach; however, such therapies could not influence
disease progression, and they may even enhance or prolong the disease. Conversely, targeting the
process of conversion from PrPc to PrPsc includes various pathways. Inhibition of PrPC trafficking
to the plasma membrane, stabilization of the PrPC structure with chemical chaperones, and
interference of the interaction between PrPC and PrPSc are examples of such therapies
III. Timing of treatment: Does it make a difference?
Before any neural loss in mouse scrapie, spongiform change and synapse loss occur
IV. Using RNAi for Therapeutic Gene Knockdown
“Transgene-mediated reduction of PrPC” is an expression that opens a new door when it comes to
possible therapeutic strategies regarding prion diseases in general. It has been discussed before
how the prevention of PrPsc formation may be a possible cure for prion diseases; a way to do so is
by disabling or “silencing” the gene responsible for the formation of PrPsc. Nevertheless, that
expression does not contain any direct therapeutic possibilities in human patients. Recent
developments in the field of RNA interference (RNAi) constitute a new opportunity to achieve such
therapeutic gene silencing in vivo.
RNAi is a naturally occurring highly-conserved sequence-specific mechanism for
post-transcriptional gene silencing in eukaryotes. It is associated with the presence of
double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), which is exogenously introduced as viral RNA to the cell and
endogenously encoded as microRNAs (miRNAs), which is an RNA responsible for regulating gene
expression. Exogenously introduced dsRNA is recognized as a cytoplasmic ribonuclease known as Dicer.
Its function is to cleave dsRNA into 21–23 nt sequences called short interfering RNAs (siRNAs)
V. Chemotherapeutic Approach
Treatments targeting early or preclinical acquired prion diseases may find success by targeting peripheral replication and blocking neuroinvasion. However, effective therapies for symptomatic disease will most likely require a combination of approaches, such as inhibiting pathogenic PrP formation, destabilizing or enhancing the clearance of existing pathogenic PrP, blocking neurotoxic effects of the infection, or promoting the recovery of lost functions in the central nervous system. There is a long list of chemical classes of compounds that have been screened and tested in vitro, and some even in vivo. The majority of anti-prion compounds were examined to stop the conversion of PrPC to PrPSc. This may happen through direct binding of PrPC and/or PrPSc, causing prevention of interaction or block polymerization. Hence, a compound may redistribute PrPC to a location where conversion cannot occur. Others affect conversion by interfering with important accessory molecules or by suppressing PrPC expression altogether.
VI. Conclusion
Our vision and knowledge about Prion diseases and PrPsc especially are in constant progress each day. While increasing our understanding of their structure & formation, various methods of treatment have emerged on the scene, perhaps not all of them have proven remarkable progress in vivo, but this increased knowledge will help in the future to open other doors for various biological and pharmacological tools.
VII. References
Abstract Quantum teleportation plays a crucial role in information science for its property of completely secure transmission. It was first demonstrated as a means of transferring the quantum state. Later, it has been extended greatly in the field of quantum computing, quantum network, and quantum communication, and other fields. The first part of this article will talk briefly about the basic theory of quantum teleportation and the applications that have been achieved in recent years for both commercial and scientific purposes. Next, the results of current experiments and the challenges that should be overcome in the future will be presented. The final section will be a discussion about the development of quantum teleportation and its future implementations.
I. Introduction
Numerous questions about information transfer have been raised from the quantum entanglement now between EPR pairs. It is impossible to deliver information simultaneously over a long range, but it is feasible to take quantum entanglement as a protocol to encrypt information. In 1993, physicists Asher Peres and William Wootters first proposed the concept of quantum teleportation. In their paper, the way to achieve quantum teleportation could be generally explained as measuring an unknown quantum state of a system then reconstructing it at a remote location. But the teleportation is only meaningful in the perspective of quantum information for the reason that the original particle does not move physically, and the state is changed. More importantly, the process of teleportation requires two channels, a traditional one and a quantum one. The traditional channel is used to transport the result yielded from the Bell measurement. And the quantum protocol is used in the unitary transformation to retrieve the original state and information. The 1997 quantum teleportation was first verified by Dik Bouwmeester experimentally through pairs of entangled photons. Later, it suddenly became a hot spot in information science. Not only does quantum teleportation provide a complete secure information transmission but also it boosts the development of quantum technologies. From the perspective of traditional communication protocol, it is a revolutionary watershed. In the point of quantum technologies, it serves as an indispensable foundation. Lots of technologies like quantum gate teleportation, computing, port-based teleportation, and quantum networks are derived from the basis of quantum teleportation. Quantum teleportation has been achieved in many laboratories with different approaches. With the great progress of the experiment, some extensions of quantum teleportation have been brought to the real world for commercial and scientific purposes.
II. Theory of quantum teleportation
For simplicity, the sender and receiver will be called Alice and Bob. In the preparation process, Alice prepares an EPR pair (particle A, particle B) and particle C that carries the information which needs to be transferred. Then, Alice performs a joint measurement which is also known as Bell measurement with particle A and particle C, and gets a result that is used to transport. Since the state of particle C is changed, the technique survives the no-cloning principle of quantum mechanics. After Bob gets the outcome of the Bell measurement from Alice through the traditional protocol, Bob can apply the unitary transformation to the result with his particle B to retrieve the state of particle A and the information contained in particle C.
III. Applications
i. Quantum network
In 2016, a scientific team in China successfully achieved quantum teleportation in relatively long-range communication using the existing fiber network. Almost at the same time, the Canadian scientific team also achieved quantum teleportation independently for several kilometers using a slightly different from the previous one. And China’s ‘first commercial quantum private communication network’ was built for national defense, finance, and other aspects in 2017. Their success may serve as an important milestone in building an international quantum network in the real world.
ii. Quantum computing system
In 2019, IBM revealed a quantum computing system named ‘IBM Q’ which is the first industrial-grade system built with integrated commercial universal quantum systems for business and science applications. It is a critical step towards the quantum computing system to break off from the lab.
IV. Experimental status
i. Teleportation between light and matter
A scalable quantum network requires numerous nodes and those nodes may be far away from each other; thus, long-range teleportation is of importance.
Another study focuses on diamonds. In this experiment, each node of teleportation is diamond with a nitrogen-vacancy center surrounded by carbon nuclei. And the nitrogen impurity provides a magnetic field to the electron enabling the entanglement between the hyperfine coupled electron and carbon spins under a zero magnetic field. In this study, the quantum state encoded in the emitted photon is transferred into carbon through theabsorption of the electron which is entangled with the carbon nucleus on another node.
ii. High dimension teleportation
As previous experiments established, most of the experiments are limited to two-dimensional teleportation. This has been a stumbling block for the development of quantum technologies. For instance, a large number of small gates are required for simple computation, which badly influences the development of multiple qubit computers. And each particle can only carry a few pieces of information, which lowers the efficiency of communication. There is one solution that can improve the performance of the communication system and reduce the number of gates in quantum circuits, and that is to improve the dimensions of quantum states.
By using the scheme proposed in this paper, the quantum technologies could be extended to a higher dimension so that the efficiency of simulation and computation will be improved. The high-dimensional quantum states also mean large information contained in single-particle more capacity and noise resilience of the quantum communication system.
V. Challenges
For optimal quantum teleportation, many conditions should be satisfied.
In many cases, only a few subsets of the Bell measurement are feasible and the feed-forward is either unaccomplished or simulated in post-processing, thus the conditions (3) and (4) are not satisfied generally. When it comes to reality, the problem that emerged in teleportation may be slightly different. While scaling up the dimension from 2 to N, for instance, one thing that should be considered carefully is whether all N dimensions still can form a coherent superposition to maintain the teleportation intact. For genuine N-dimensional teleportation, the scheme may need to combine some hypotheses that only fit in N dimensions with some basic hypotheses that can be applied to all dimensional teleportation. There are other issues to consider like the propagation losses of light and the atomic coherence lifetime raised from the classical protocol.
VI. Conclusion
More than two decades have passed since the concept of quantum teleportation was proposed and verified. Now branches of it like quantum gate teleportation, quantum computing, port-based teleportation, photonic qubits, photonic qubits, optical modes, nuclear magnetic resonance, atomic ensembles, and trapped atomic qubits are achievable both theoretically and experimentally. The technologies mentioned above performed well in some aspects and failed in others, therefore certain technologies only correspond to a certain kind of practical situation. For example, trapped atomic qubits are appreciated in the quantum circuit for their short-term interaction, high fidelity, and relatively long quantum memory. While constructing a scalable quantum network, the atomic assembly is the preferred candidate for its long-range interactions. Those technologies are imperfect more or less in some aspects, which raises lots of engineering questions as most of them are expected to be solved when more experiments are devised. Future aspects of quantum teleportation might focus on long-range quantum teleportation between light and macroscopic matter or even quantum energy teleportation proposed in recent years.
VII. References
Abstract
Air pollution appears as a more straightforward problem which is facing the whole world, where it
affects the ecosystem; it harms animals in general and humans in particular. As a result, scrubbers
were used in industries to remove harmful chemicals and acids from polluted gas
I. Introduction
II. Mechanism
III. Types of Scrubbers
There are two main types of scrubbers: Wet scrubbers and dry scrubbers. Their main use is
protecting the environment by removing harmful chemicals and acids from polluted gases. Furthermore,
there are multiple types of scrubbers that aim to support the process, including wet and dry
scrubbers
IV. Advantages and Disadvantages
Advantages of Scrubbers can be determined by describing their uses, which are removing the contaminants from an industrial use or flue gas stream with high efficiency. Scrubbers is an ideal solution for industries’ emissions, but they also have some disadvantages that are discussed below:
Advantages
1- One of the effective advantages of using scrubbers is the positive environmental impact. Actually, the removal of harmful substances from exhaust gas is important as it prevents a large number of pollutants from escaping into the air. 2- Developments in wet scrubbers have allowed it to increase the efficiency in pollutant removal. One of the major developments has been to take full advantage of the total surface of the liquid with which the polluted gas associates, as more surface area means that more of the particles can be singled out of the gas. 3- Dry scrubbers produce relatively little wastes. Actually, most of these materials that are sprayed into the exhaust are burned off in the heat of the stream or caught in a filter. 4- The use of dry scrubbers is not expensive as there is no linked cost with removing, transferring, and storing waste water from wet scrubbers 5- The design of the dry scrubber allows it to remove sulfur dioxide with high efficiency that can reach 98%.
Disadvantages
1- The residual waste powder that used in scrubbing must be disposed of because it is a risky
material. This waste must be handled by specialists because of its chemical makeup.
2- Using scrubbers causes a high potential for corrosion problems which will cause a significant
deterioration of natural and historic monuments along with increasing the risk of terrible equipment
failures
V. Corrosion
Corrosion has been one of the biggest problems that scrubbers cause. When metal reacts with another substance such as oxygen, it corrodes. Furthermore, it can also happen when metals are put under stress. Thus, it cracks. Stainless steel that is used in scrubbers can cause diverse types of corrosion depending upon the nature of the agent. Corrosion actually takes place in microscopic cells wherever conditions are suitable. The typical conditions for corrosion are imperfections in metal surfaces, metal exposed to electrolytic solutions, and obviously, the presence of chemicals in solution that can react with the oxygen and hydroxyl ions.
VI. Conclusion
As a matter of fact, the effects of air pollution are alarming. They are known to create several respiratory and heart conditions along with cancer and other threats to the human body. Scrubbers have two main types: Wet and dry scrubbers. Those two types of scrubbers approach achieving air pollution reduction through different mechanisms. Using scrubbers to remove harmful chemicals and acids from polluted air made it much easier to reduce air pollution. Scrubbers appear as an ideal solution for industries’ emissions. However, it causes corrosion which is one of the biggest problems of the scrubbers as in most cases, they use stainless steel.
VII. References