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tv   Tomorrow Today  Deutsche Welle  April 18, 2023 12:30pm-1:01pm CEST

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hey, culture. information. this is lee w. w rave minds. we've got some hot tips for your bucket list ah, manager corner trip hotspot for families and some great cultural memorials to brood w. travel off we go. lulu our senses connect us with the world, our eyes taking millions of pieces of information every 2nd. these sensory perceptions interconnect in our brain sites hearing, taste, touch, smell, and the often forgotten sense of balance. our senses are integral to communication, 2 tiny facial muscles betray how we're feeling and our skin detects the finest of
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touches is sent show for us. revival today show is all about how we communicate. welcome to to morrow to day d. w. science magazine. a soft touch or a firm grip. our skin feels every nuance. it's our largest organ with a surface area of up to 2 square meters. the skin comprises a wide variety of receptors. pain receptors alert us to danger, like overly high temperatures. for example. so called merkel cells help us feel the shape and firmness of objects. meisner co puzzles are experts in sensing light, touch, refining, co puzzles. notice when and how much i'll skip is stretched unperceived ian
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capacity detect vibrations, and it's asking also include sensory cells specialized in perceiving. stroking, they're found only in her covered areas and react when the touch comes from another person, especially when the movement is slow. like in stroking the fact that we have these receptors, suggests that gentle touch is essential for us survival. ooh, no words can make feelings as tangible as a caress. but touch can also relieve pain, strengthen the immune system, and even prolong our lives for a long time. it was largely ignored by scientists, but now it's increasingly the subject of research and often the sense of touch really does appear to be important for our survival. we can't cope without it in this outcome. humans have an amazingly differentiated
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system of perceiving and classifying how we are touched. a touch can signify power and violence. it can make us feel afraid or threatened infractions of a 2nd. different receptors in our skin. tell us what kind of touch that we are experiencing. whether we can relax or need to immediately spring into action because we are in danger. at the beginning of our life in particular, caresses are vital. they stabilize a baby's breathing body temperature and even its blood sugar levels after birth. if animals only have their basic needs met in the months following their birth, many of them die. and those that survive suffer from irreparable psychological and physical damage. their growth is stunted, their immune system is less develop and they even fail simple memory tests. central
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areas of the brain are impaired and less voluminous and experiment in life, 6 touch laboratory to measure our brain waves before, during and after a massage. how does a massage change brain activity? the e g shows the brain's electrical activity, slowing down a state of relaxation, similar to being in a deep sleep. the brain doesn't just react by slowing down. it also produces a cocktail of neurotransmitters and other substances. you but the, i was because you didn't via the hormones and neuro transmitters that are produced, certain substances which other errors are bodies through our blood. but by this organ, his muscles relax, for example, them that a hot frequency decreases lunch,
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but you are breathing becomes shallow. of the ottoman but fluffer, there's an entire series of physical changes. have alicia for endo human touch is far more than skin deep scientists discovered just the decade or so ago. that gentle physical movement activates a special type of sensory nerve cell late to emotion. and unlike our sense of touch, these nerve cells do not provide information about the outside world. instead they tell us whether we like a particular type of bodily contact or not. the discovery of the significance of the so called c t advarance makes it possible to investigate the importance of gentle physical contact for social interactions. a robot is used to gauge precisely how people respond different types of touch. each test person receives exactly the
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same treatment. the experiment showed the more signals received by the ctf lawrence, the more pleasant the experience for those taking part. the effect is most pronounced at $34.00 degrees celsius, approximately the temperature of our fingertips. in inch, se there's more of these now. 5 is here. on the back than there are in the forum. so why the people like having their back massage, where they like having their back massage. good as more of these, no 5 is there. in evolutionary terms. why would you put a reward taught system on the back? well, you can't get to your back to groom it, so you need to get somebody else. another primate needs to come along and groom your back. and if we are gently touched, we usually don't want it to stop hulu. the reward system in our brain makes us
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hungry for more hormones are produced, the brains own drugs. each type of physical contact makes it different cocktail. these include endorphins, so called happiness hormones, which make us feel high, but also oxy chosen that is necessary for bonding in attachment. it makes us feel close to people who couples with the long term show elevated levels of oxy chosen even live longer and they are less prone to stress. their blood pressure is lower, their pain tolerance is higher, and even their ability to learn is better for ah, despite this we've been observing for years that we are lesson less direct contact
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in the increasingly digital world we live in. the cove at 19 pandemic has exacerbated this trend, forcing physical separation of hot us to day, people tend to touch their smartphones, tablets, more than they touch other people. you can be in contact with people thousands of commanders away. but physically isolated. loneliness has become a mass phenomenon with grave repercussions for our health. if we use the protection of the group, our bodies going high, alert our cortisol levels rise, and the risk of heart attack, stroke and depression increases. ah, the all right, so with early death, the smoking, diabetes, pollution it such as may be 3540 percent. the other rice have an early death, maloney, this is something like 45 percent. that's what i said, that's almost
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a global content because its own right. but nobody's really woken up to the file or what lonely people don't get is touched when it's hot of hot cold when the going gets tough. plenty, as the pandemic has shown, and then what becomes evident is that we have a yearning, ultimately not a technology, but for real people. island under someone who go for a bear with us and all readers poems, bill clinton good order, they're on the dish to for least, ah, often we don't realize just how strongly touch influences our mood, our health and our relationships. but we are becoming more aware of how important it is gentle, physical contact. just keep us happy throughout our lives. we also communicate through touch. no matter how many emoji we send, they count compared to a real analog hug. it is possible though,
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to transport our emotions over the telephone or in a video called artificial intelligence is also becoming better at reading human emotions from our faces that can detect the very subtle list of feelings. i go with. a laughter lightens up the mood and is contagious, especially when it's sincere and comes from the heart. but what is a sincere laugh? research is in germany, a looking into whether computers can tell the difference in order to help psychologists with all heard about software, the scans are faces using artificial intelligence. but can i also detect whether were upbeat or angry, delighted, or sat, or indeed laughing. authentic clue the schools are probably most dusty,
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the cohesive in comes parent and yet them, this has to be listen, michigan. we don't know how they actually work in the sense of which materials or faces they've been learning from. so we thought we'd test different algorithms against each other. linda sanders, we have sheet, and i bookman jacket and getting them on the test. the manheim research team have taken a i programs from a variety of companies to see how they perform while it comes to recognizing different emotions. under laboratory conditions is in here, does freshman spies, though? we can see a specific movement in the face already being registered. what, ma'am? the action unit 12 is the solution asked us there wondering to the a i has learned that the corner of the mouth going up is a component of a smile. does have he cut the 20th to make social justice fit? and the next step is using these expressions to find out what emotions in individualist feelings sworn and by swine up as one point. test. participants are
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shown photos of faces displaying strong emotions and then asked to imitate them the amos to find out what the programs also work reliably under standardized laboratory conditions. this is one of the basic requirements for perspective late to use in scientific research. there are several dozen muscles and the human face, and we need to flex 17 of them to conjure up a law. ah m. yes, convers in dusty pro bond in chi bush on the subject. now has 3 specific movements in her face. i in the corner, pulled us. we had 1st, there is a corner polar and listened, busy not out in cheek razor. then we have the razor with a cheek squeezed the eyes and make them a part of the smile. i am looking on the alden's or to long middle, it won't hurt typical for an authentic smile as are the lips being slightly party. last d m, lipman life go from. and then once i skills that, as we were able to show that his artificial intelligence is also very good at
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detecting intense emotions, like these, with normal people in a typical lab setting hams, washington's even normal to an aussie, i called a company called the big question now is whether this is also the case for that montane, as and more subtle emotion is and will to an order from us. until now, psychologists have been documenting the subtle nuances of our feelings with the help of electro. my o graphy or e m g. senses on the skin, measure the electrical activity of muscles and nerves. the stronger the impulse, the clearer the emotion. can artificial intelligence do this without he m j. m. it's eloquent of them. we now have electrodes attached to this. i go mass at this major school. this is the lab muscle which is involved in many positive emotions, warned and right after that will stick e m g electrodes on the congregate arnold, our crown muscle, which expresses many unpleasant motion long anymore.
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tim her fling then shows the participant different pictures to react. take boring. photos are alternated with ones that are proven to trigger emotional reactions. in addition to the m g senses, the facial recognition program scanned facial expressions and record that changes. but the reactions on the test person's face a week, it takes a trained human emotion analysts to measure their intensity. tim halfling has this training and because he knows how time consuming it, as he hopes that i, i programs will eventually take a for this job. we couldn't find a c consistently can be found that the artificial intelligence corresponds closely with the e m. g measurements, as well as the subjective evaluations of the participants. but only for the positive stimuli we presented for the negative stimuli. we couldn't demonstrate any relations with the e. m. g, or would the subject subjective evaluations in obama?
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wasn't so the i recognize as positive feelings, but not negative ones necessarily. this is true for all 3 algorithms because the performance of the i programs hardly differs. they all still have a lot to learn. nevertheless, the 1st video called providers in the us are already considering integrating automatic emotion recognition into their software in the top. the dust said calltum dismisses recently been discussed by large video conferencing software providers. integrating a module that automatically recognizes the facial expressions of the participants, interprets them and then of course, allows the employer the counterpart to draw conclusions about what someone is supposedly feeling in that moment. buskie mand m gable is shrewd. andy, some woman is this laughter authentic or fake? the algorithms definitely can't tell yet, but gail outputs can dish, wasn't it,
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guns or francis? the advantages are fairly obviously, until now it has been extremely time consuming to do this type of analysis manually things we can do that way. however, you have to train employees intensively all the more weeks of training. here one kid trained the software was good with the right material. and theoretically it would always work. so neil, quick humans are still far superior to a i software when it comes to interpreting emotions correctly. after all, we can also empathize with feelings and that ourselves be affected by laughter. especially if it comes from the hans with a joyful giggle or a delighted wrong, different laugh expressing very from saying estimates suggest that such nonverbal
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ways of speaking make up more than 90 percent of our total communication. and it's not just our hands all face that talk, but also our smell and our whole minds. these and other substances communicates within us something alvin calais from malawi. wanted to know more about ah, how do you sales communicate with each other? i, our bodies consist of around $200.00 different types of cells. we only stay healthy if they can all communicate with each other properly. our pancreas, for example, produces hormones. it releases them into the blood. the blood then transports the messenger substances to the places in the body where they are supposed to be used. nerve cells need to talk to each other quickly and effectively. to do so, they use electrical impulses and so called neurotransmitters,
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which send information from one cell to the next. many cells also forms so called exit zones in order to come into contact with others. to do this, they lace up their outer skin to form packets that contain molecules such as proteins. they then send these packets on their journey throughout the body. ah, different cells interact when healing a wound. immediately after an injury, platelets must 1st ensure that the blood clots, while immune cells clean the wound. when it's cleaned, connective tissue cells produce college and, and filled the wound. then at the feel you'll cells for my skin over the entire wound. almost all of our shelves are linked to their neighbors. the channels that directly connect the sales contents to one another. loo through those
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channels, the cells can exchange electrically charged particles and small molecules, such as messenger substances. this communication pathway was discovered in the 19 sixty's, researchers labeled individual cells with luminescent molecules and observed that the fluorescent spread rapidly. channels like these are involved in many bodily functions. they ensure that the eyes can adapt to different light conditions and they help synchronize the contraction of our hard muscle cells. they also play important role in the formation of our organs in the womb. neurons and synopsis a key when it comes to communication within the body,
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the more developed an animal, the more sophisticated it's nervous system instead of a brain jellyfish have a diffused network of nerves. ass lands have a centralized nervous system which runs through the body like a right bladder. meanwhile, mammals do have a real brain, the structure of which is important for cognitive performance. and more than that to do. in fact, neuron density also plays a major role. the more neurons, the more likely cognitive performance is to be increased. but you also have to look at the ratio between brain and body mass. a house mouse, for example, has about 71000000 urines and a very small brain. a cat has 10 times as many neurons, but it's also much larger. a peg is smarter than you think that
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has 2200000000 neurons in its brain. and a raven has about the same number, but in a much smaller brain with very little body mass. a chimpanzee has 28000000000 neurons. and an adult human has approximately 86000000000. and elephant has about 3 times as many, but its brain is also 3 times as heavy blue. which factors influence brain size and intelligence in mammals? oh, that's what evolutionary biologists sandra head starts is researching at the university of zurich. she works with the skulls of various species to measure their brain volumes, she fills the skulls, would lead pellets
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a time honored method. it should have been a mac. now this is a mac skull. let's say we can fit almost a 100 milliliters in there that as a had e. think feel may that's a lot more than, oh ma'am, i'm so why did he go form them with the ground hog warm as the edible gather more? 15000000. if the cut, the skull only fits 15 milliliters, so the brain is 8 times smaller homes. so the miss donna, i have to enter that into the database. the researchers have compiled a database of $1200.00 brains from a wide range of mammalian species. xander hedged up and a college have measured the majority of them. for months they went from museum to museum in the usa, filling a wide variety of schools with their pellets. as
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we imagine of our thing that fascinated me, the most was the whale skull. we measured in a boat, it was a sperm whale thing that adequate, and we really pulled the pellets into it with a 10 liter bucket hurdle and only got half full of men if we didn't have enough pellets to fill the whole brain with the be cut from that was fascinating. of beth ish, a fascinating thing that i'll be got asked the spam well, skeleton was really huge, and the oxy shown with the skull was bigger than we are. he them shaddon will grow and we filled it with our little pellets. they knocked out the hood galena, enact feel, attend there. headstart wants to find out the circumstances under which a brain can grow in terms of evolution. it's clear that brains need a lot of energy to grow. a brain must literally be fed constantly. the evolutionary biologist is looking in reference books for possible factors that
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could influence the brain size of a species and correlates them. for example, what do they eat? how do they live? but also social factors such as group behavior and how they raised their young for example, animals that hibernate generally have smaller brains. and carnivores generally have larger brains than herbivores. it's been proven in many studies that brain science correlates directly to an animal's intelligence. like in this study, which compared 39 carnivorous mammals, it clearly showed that the size of the brain in proportion to body weight directly corresponds to the skill level of the animal. the type of food they get and how reliably they get it, when they're young is more important for brain growth than previously assumed. a st
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. john and last minutes of an i as a form, what we found that's new is that the food supply has to be reliable. that from which the crash that they think, for example, siblings often bring fed to the bar, right? it's got it. but when they don't see any one waiting late at themselves on that up events, st. this near moleck or the seed investors, it's different with the parents or does it make them in fact, that if the environmental conditions are bad, then the father brings the young even more fade. and even though he's going hungry himself only for that, so they all get a bully, a fell, but then hit the the combination of safe, high calorie food with slow development and social learning ensures intelligent animals with large brains. if our blood is red, why i do you have a science question, send it to us as a video, text or voice message. if we answer it on the show, we'll send to you a little surprise as a thank you. i come on. just ask you
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can find us and other science related stories on the web and on twitter. got sick from tomorrow to day d. w science program during this next week, until then stay curious. with
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with a pulse ah, the beginning of a story that moves us and takes us along for the ride. it's only about the perspective culture
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information. this is dw and d. w made from mines. not one more reads, the answers half on the easiest grade. a boy, she could have saved her life and yet the doctors were afraid to help. poland has one of the strictest passion goes into europe and it's dividing the country polish women struggle fighting for abortion rights. close up with 90 minutes. d w. ah. in many pollution. so now the way right now, the climate change, if any, off the story, this is my plan,
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the way from just one week. how much was going to really get we still have time to go. i'm going all with his subscriber along with that has to voted you do before. i played tennis. fantastic. she survived auschwitz, thanks to music. and he was the not favorite conductor to musicians under the swastika documentary about the sounds of power and inspiring story about survival. music in nazi germany. watch now on youtube. d. w documentary . ah, ah
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ah ah, ah, this is steve w. news live from berlin sedans. army reported he agrees to a cease fire effective from 6 pm local time. following days, the violence, the commander of the paramilitaries, the rapids support forces states its approval for a pause in fighting that has killed scores and endangered.

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