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Can you shock yourself into relaxation? The science of vagus nerve stimulation - National Geographic Health (No paywall)
Vagus nerve stimulation is a social-media sensation, promising instant stress relief. Here’s what the science really says about the body’s built-in “chill” circuit.
Can you really calm your nervous system with a tiny jolt of electricity? That’s the promise behind a new wave of wellness gadgets designed to stimulate the vagus nerve, which helps the body regulate stress, digestion, and mood. On social media, users say they are a “life changer” and that daily use helps them “sleep through the night,” and “get out of a panic attack in 20 seconds.”
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WorkWorkCompanies predict 2026 will be the worst college grad job market in five years - WSJ Employers have a warning for the Class of 2026: Next spring's graduate-hiring market is likely to be even worse than this year's.Six months out from graduation season, more than half of 183 employers surveyed by the National Association of Colleges and Employers rate the job market for the Class of 2026 as poor or fair. That is the most pessimistic outlook since the first year of the pandemic, according to the survey, which is widely seen as an early signal of graduate hiring each year. WorkWorkWorkWorkWorkGoogle's DeepMind Cracks a Century-Old Physics Mystery With AI - BI For over a century, mathematicians and physicists have wrestled with the chaotic nature of fluid movement -- how air whirls around airplane wings or water churns in a pipe. Google's DeepMind lab recently made a significant breakthrough in this field, utilizing artificial intelligence. WorkJeffrey Epstein's network: 'Life among the lucrative and louche' - FT A fresh cache of files from Jeffrey Epstein's estate sheds light on a network of men in politics, media and finance bound by power and access.More than 20,000 pages of documents disclosed on Wednesday by members of the House oversight committee include emails between Epstein and influential figures including ex-Clinton Treasury secretary Lawrence Summers, Trump's former chief strategist Steve Bannon and billionaire financier Leon Black. WorkWorkParamount, Comcast, Netflix prepare bids for Warner as deadline approaches - WSJ Paramount, Comcast and Netflix are preparing bids for Warner Bros. Discovery, according to people familiar with the matter.The initial deadline to submit nonbinding first-round bids is Nov. 20, some of the people said. Warner Discovery is holding the auction process in the hopes of having it completed by the end of the year, the people said. WorkExtreme age protects against cancer in mouse study For most of our lives, that model seems to hold true: When plotted against age, cancer incidence in the general population rises sharply beginning around 50 years and peaks around 70 to 80 years. But after about 85, the curve plateaus and even drops. WorkAI is making hedge funds unable to hedge The concentration of market gains into a basket of AI stocks ($5 trillion Nvidia mainly) is making it harder for hedge funds to hedge, as they are becoming dangerously correlated with the broader stock market. Why it matters: Higher correlations increase the chance of bigger losses when there is a downturn, defeating the primary purpose of hedge funds. What they're saying: "A lot of investors are going to be caught surprised," Jon Caplis ... WorkWorkSpiraling housing costs behind plummeting birth rate: Study Couillard said in his study, which focused on rent, that he found that "rising costs since 1990 are responsible for 11 percent fewer children, 51 percent of the total fertility rate decline between the 2000s and 2010s, and 7 percentage points fewer young families in the 2010s." WorkThe hidden risks in Taiwan's boom Taiwan is ENVIED for its exporting prowess: it is home to all of the world's cutting-edge chipmaking. Just as extraordinary, but much less appreciated, is its towering current-account surplus, the result not just of a trade boom but of a long-undervalued currency. This aided Taiwan's export-led rise, but it has long outlived its purpose. While manufacturers have been coddled, ordinary Taiwanese consumers have been deprived of the fruits of growth, and financial risks are building up. It is time for Taiwan to loosen its grip on its currency. WorkWorkWorkWorkMarriott Deal Was Sonder Cofounders Toughest. Now He's Left Shocked. - BI "Making this deal happen -- along with the multi-party, complex capital raise I orchestrated -- was the hardest thing I've ever done," Davidson wrote in the June post commemorating his last day as the company's CEO.Now, Davidson told Business Insider that he's left stunned by the company's bankruptcy plans and its subsequent downfall following the collapse of Sonder's partnership with Marriott. WorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkMexico, a country caught between mafiasThe murders of the Uruapan mayor and the leader of the lemon growers' guild in Michoacan reveal a paradigm shift in organized crime, where complex extortion schemes have taken over entire regions WorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkThe era of safe bets in psychiatric medicine is over Khutaija Noor is a clinical researcher with advanced training from Harvard who serves as a clinical trial lead for studies at Amicis Clinical Trials and formerly contributed to clinical research at Washington University. She is also a corresponding member of the scientific committee at the American Psychiatric Association. WorkWorkWorkWorkChina's Trade Model Is Built on Keeping Others Poor - Bloomberg The world has, for the most part, welcomed the trade truce between the US and China. Exporters, in particular, are hoping for a period of quiet that will allow them to adjust to a new world with higher tariffs and more restrictions.Yet for workers and companies across the developing world, the possibility of a return to a status quo ante isn't an entirely comforting notion, either. A new normal that preserves China's dominance of global trade hurts them far more than it does the US or other Western nations. WorkWorkLisa Nandy: BBC review will examine political appointments to board The programme was broadcast a week before the US election. The spliced clip suggested that Trump told the crowd: “We’re going to walk down to the Capitol and I’ll be there with you, and we fight. We fight like hell.” The words were taken from sections of his speech almost an hour apart. TradeBriefs Publications are read by over 100,000 Industry Executives |
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