Our Intuitive Selves: Why We Are All Psychic and How We Can Awaken, Access and Utilize Our Greatest Gifts
You're reading Our Intuitive Selves: Why We Are All Psychic and How We Can Awaken, Access and Utilize Our Greatest Gifts, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you're enjoying this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles. What if you could easily and effectively tap into your intuitive gifts, talents and abilities, have a direct connection to The Universal Source of information and energy, and use it to serve yourself and others in the highest and best and most benevolent ways possible? What if you could also use this wisdom, information and energy to get answers, guid...
Source: PickTheBrain | Motivation and Self Improvement - January 14, 2020 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Lori Spagna Tags: creativity featured psychology self education self improvement intuitive motivation passion psychic Source Type: blogs

Mental Models for Happiness and Results
The objective modeling approach also recognizes that the world has a say in our results, but it makes a huge, unprovable, and probably false assumption: that your world is the same as other people’s worlds. But what if that isn’t true? What if our worlds are different? Is your reality the same as mine? If not, then in order to be effective, objective models would need to acknowledge the differences between these worlds and provide some kind of translation matrix between them. And they usually don’t. Even when we look at people’s worlds from a purely objective standpoint, it’s hard to cal...
Source: Steve Pavlina's Personal Development Blog - January 3, 2020 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Steve Pavlina Tags: Abundance Creating Reality Source Type: blogs

RSNA 2019 AI Round-Up
Shah Islam Hugh Harvey By HUGH HARVEY, MBBS and SHAH ISLAM, MBBS AI in medical imaging entered the consciousness of radiologists just a few years ago, notably peaking in 2016 when Geoffrey Hinton declared radiologists’ time was up, swiftly followed by the first AI startups booking exhibiting booths at RSNA. Three years on, the sheer number and scale of AI-focussed offerings has gathered significant pace, so much so that this year a decision was made by the RSNA organising committee to move the ever-growing AI showcase to a new space located in the lower level of the North Hall. In some ways it made sense to offe...
Source: The Health Care Blog - December 10, 2019 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Christina Liu Tags: Artificial Intelligence Health Tech Start-Ups AI Hugh Harvey Radiology RSNA RSNA 2019 RSNA19 Shah Islam Source Type: blogs

Science and The People
I actually find it pretty easy to understand why many people reject science that conflicts with their religious beliefs. One obvious reason is that membership in most religious communities requires accepting, or at least pretending to accept, certain factual propositions. Community membership is valuable to people, emotionally and in many situations for practical and material reasons. It ' s hard, and for many people impossible, to walk away from kith and kin.But there is also a deeper reason. The universe discovered by physicists and the sub-discipline of cosmology is grant, wonderful and astonishing but also very cold an...
Source: Stayin' Alive - November 30, 2019 Category: American Health Source Type: blogs

WaTCH Ford v Ferrari (2019) full hd movie Online on 123Movies
You're reading WaTCH Ford v Ferrari (2019) full hd movie Online on 123Movies, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you're enjoying this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles. WATCH NOW > https://bit.ly/2QW4GJi WATCH NOW > https://bit.ly/2QW4GJi Watch Free Ford v Ferrari (2019) : Movies Without Downloading American car designer Carroll Shelby and the British-born driver Ken Miles work together to battle corporate interference, the laws of physics, and their own personal demons to build a revolutionary race car for Ford Motor Company and take on the dominati...
Source: PickTheBrain | Motivation and Self Improvement - November 27, 2019 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: martinmarsha897 Tags: Uncategorized WaTCH Ford v Ferrari (2019) full hd movie Online on 123Movies Source Type: blogs

Electrospinning Drug Delivery Bandages Directly Onto Wounds
Electrospinning is a maturing manufacturing technology that is already being used in medicine to produce unusual materials with novel properties. It involves melting a polymer and extruding it through a narrow nozzle, while an electric field is used to pull and spin the polymer into a very fine mesh. When a biocompatible polymer is used, the printed materials may be applicable for medical applications, as the resulting mesh has an extremely large surface area. The fibers can also have drugs attached to them, resulting in active meshes with interesting therapeutic properties. It would be great to deposit such fiber m...
Source: Medgadget - November 14, 2019 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Medgadget Editors Tags: Critical Care Dermatology Emergency Medicine Materials Plastic Surgery Source Type: blogs

MRI Metamaterials Drastically Enhance Imaging Quality
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) requires very expensive scanners, and special facilities to host them. As things stand, most hospitals around the world can’t afford an MRI machine. Things may soon get a bit easier thanks to new metamaterials, developed at Boston University, that improve the quality of MRI imaging. This development may allow lower power MRI scanners, which also cost less, to deliver imaging quality that is comparable with that of more powerful devices. The most obvious way to improve MRI image quality is to use ever more powerful magnets, but this is also the most expensive route. The Boston Univ...
Source: Medgadget - November 6, 2019 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Medgadget Editors Tags: Materials Radiology Source Type: blogs

The FDA has approved AI-based PET/MRI “denoising”. How safe is this technology?
By LUKE OAKDEN-RAYNER, MD Super-resolution* promises to be one of the most impactful medical imaging AI technologies, but only if it is safe. Last week we saw the FDA approve the first MRI super-resolution product, from the same company that received approval for a similar PET product last year. This news seems as good a reason as any to talk about the safety concerns myself and many other people have with these systems. Disclaimer: the majority of this piece is about medical super-resolution in general, and not about the SubtleMR system itself. That specific system is addressed directly near the end. Zoom...
Source: The Health Care Blog - November 1, 2019 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Christina Liu Tags: Artificial Intelligence Health Tech Health Technology AI Luke Oakden-Rayner MRI Radiology SubtleMR SubtlePET super resolution Source Type: blogs

What Can Quantum Computing Do To Healthcare?
A leap from bits to qubits: this two-letter change could mean entirely new horizons for healthcare. Quantum computing might bring supersonic drug design, in silico clinical trials with virtual humans simulated ‘live’, full-speed whole genome sequencing and analytics, the movement of hospitals to the cloud, the achievement of predictive health, or the security of medical data via quantum uncertainty. Jaw-dropping, isn’t it? Quantum supremacy, light bulbs, and 42 If you want annoying people to stay away from your birthday party or scare off unwanted relatives from visiting, just start to talk about quantum comput...
Source: The Medical Futurist - October 31, 2019 Category: Information Technology Authors: nora Tags: Future of Medicine Future of Pharma AI connected DNA genetics genomics Health Health 2.0 Healthcare Hospital patient technology in silico trials drug development drugs health data security smart quantum quantum comp Source Type: blogs

Leveraging Time by Doing Less in Each Chronic Care Visit
By HANS DUVEFELT, MD So many primary care patients have several multifaceted problems these days, and the more or less unspoken expectation is that we must touch on everything in every visit. I often do the opposite. It’s not that I don’t pack a lot into each visit. I do, but I tend to go deep on one topic, instead of just a few minutes or maybe even moments each on weight, blood sugar, blood pressure, lipids, symptoms and health maintenance. When patients are doing well, that broad overview is perhaps all that needs to be done, but when the overview reveals several problem areas, I don’t try to cover them a...
Source: The Health Care Blog - October 25, 2019 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Christina Liu Tags: Medical Practice Physicians Primary Care chronic disease chronic disease management Hans Duvefelt Source Type: blogs

3D Printed Cells and Bioinks for Making Implantable Blood Vessels
Researchers based in South Korea and Hong Kong have developed a method to create biomimetic blood vessels by directly 3D printing vascular cells and bioinks containing collagen and vascular tissue extracellular matrix components. The resulting constructs closely mimic natural blood vessels, suggesting that such techniques could pave the way for custom vascular grafts to treat various cardiovascular diseases. Vascular grafts typically involve removing a healthy blood vessel and implanting it elsewhere to restore blood flow or replace a diseased vessel. However, suitable vessels are not always available, and even if they ...
Source: Medgadget - October 25, 2019 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Conn Hastings Tags: Cardiac Surgery Materials News Vascular Surgery Source Type: blogs

World First: Man Controls Two Powered Prosthetic Arms with His Mind
There has been a lot of progress over the past few years in the field of brain-computer interfaces, a technology that may give severely paralyzed people the ability to use robotic arms and legs. As anyone with two arms knows, one is not enough for many tasks. So researchers at Johns Hopkins University have successfully implanted two microelectrode arrays, one on each side of a disabled man’s brain, that have been used to control two independent robotic arms and to also deliver tactile sensations. This is the first time that anyone has been able to accomplish such a feat, and it bodes well for the future of the field....
Source: Medgadget - October 22, 2019 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Medgadget Editors Tags: Neurology Neurosurgery Rehab Source Type: blogs

Post Truth
There have always been widespread beliefs that do not accord with reality. As readers know I put all of religion in that category. But post-Enlightenment we ' ve generally adopted a compromise that places religion in a separate epistemological category. Hence for example, the Catholic Church can accept the truth of the claims of physicists and biologists about the antiquity of the earth and origin of species while simultaneously embracing mystical doctrines such as Original Sin which are inconsistent with science.In the realm of non-mystical, non-religious reality, the mainstream view is, or at least has been, that can be ...
Source: Stayin' Alive - October 4, 2019 Category: American Health Source Type: blogs

POCUS Physics 202
Jo Deverill POCUS Physics 202 Following up from POCUS Physics 101; here is the second vid in the series, we drum in acoustic impedance, and learn: (Source: Life in the Fast Lane)
Source: Life in the Fast Lane - October 3, 2019 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Jo Deverill Tags: Ultrasound Library physics ultrasound basics ultrasound physics Source Type: blogs