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Vigils Held Worldwide To Protest Jailing Of Iranian Physicians Who Addressed HIV/AIDS
Health professionals on Tuesday held vigils in several cities worldwide to protest the imprisonment of Iranian brothers Kamiar and Arash Alaei -- physicians and leading HIV/AIDS advocates in the country -- following the release of Iranian-American journalist Roxana Saberi, the Albany Times Union reports. Vigils were held in cities such as New York City and Washington, D.C., as a day of global protest against the brothers" imprisonment. Vigils also were held in cities across Africa, Asia, Europe and South America, according to the Times Union.Jonathan Hutson -- a spokesperson for Physicians for Human Rights, which is leading a campaign for the brothers" release -- said, "The release of Ms. Saberi has shifted the world"s attention to the plight of others who are likewise jailed in Iran on trumped-up charges." He added, "This is not an issue of politics, but of global health. The only battle they were engaged in is the public health battle to prevent and treat the deadly epidemic of AIDS. They need to be allowed to return to their lifesaving work" (Grondahl, Albany Times Union, 5/13). Related Editorials
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Evidence Supports Use Of Web- And Computer-Based Programs To Help Adults Quit Smoking
Available evidence supports the use of online or other computer-based smoking cessation programs for helping adults quit smoking, according to a meta-analysis of previously published studies appearing in the May 25 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
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Philips Expands Home Healthcare Commitment With Portable Life-support Ventilator
Royal Philips Electronics (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHI) introduced the Trilogy100 portable at-home life-support ventilator. The highly versatile, lightweight (11 lb / 5 kg) device marks a milestone in home ventilation from a recognized leader in respiratory care. Respironics first introduced bi-level positive airway pressure for noninvasive ventilation nearly 20 years ago.
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Artificial Simulator Of The Human Nervous System Created To Aid Research Into Diseases And Test New Medicines

Researchers of the University of Granada have developed a simulator, so-called EDLUT ("Event driven look up table based simulator"), which allows reproduction of any part of the body"s nervous system, such as the retina, the cerebellum, the hearing centres or the nervous centres. This scientific advance enables them to analyze and understand the functions of the nervous centres, to do research into new pathologies and diseases or test new medicines; it will also be useful to improve the robots and machines inspired by the human body and the nervous system. This simulator has been developed by the research group CASIP, of the department of Architecture and Computer Technology of the University of Granada, to which professor Eduardo Ros Vidal (coordinator of the projects in which the simulator has been developed) belongs to. Unlike other simulators similar to the preceding versions, EDLUT can deal with several hundreds of thousands neurons at the same time, instead of several tens. This is possible thanks to the fact that the simulator "compiles" the behaviour of a neuron or several types of neurons in a first stage and then it simulates medium and large-scale neuronal systems based on these pre-compiled models. "This fact means an essential technological advance and indisputably affects the quality of nervous simulation", says professor Eduardo Ros. Free downloading Another important advantage of the simulator developed at the University of Granada is that it is free software, this is, it can be freely downloaded through the Internet at http://code.google.com/p/edlut/. EDLUT is therefore "an innovative version with regard to other simulators such as NEURON and GENESIS", in the words of Ros, and those companies of the biotechnological sector or research centres interested in this field can use it freely and adapt it to their own needs. This simulator developed at the UGR has been financed by different research projects such as SpikeFORCE and SENSOPAC, initiatives of the European Commission through which research groups of different fields such as neuroscience, biocomputing and electronic engineers have been working since the year 2002 in order to create robots with similar movement skills to those of the animals, and can also perceive a great number of signs of sensors and motors in order to draw cognitive notions. Eduardo Ros Vidal insists that SENSOPAC - a project which also has the participation of DLR (German Aerospace Agency), and several universities such as the University of Edinburgh, Erasmus, Pavia, Lund, Cambridge - "intends to be the definitive boost that technology needs to generalize the use of robots in our everyday life". The results of this research project have been partly published in the renowned journals Neural Computation and Biosystems. Reference: Prof Eduardo Ros Vidal, Department of Architecture and Computer Technology of the University of Granada Eduardo Ros Vidal University of Granada


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