Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Scientists develop heat-resistant materials that could vastly improve solar cell efficiency

Scientists develop heat-resistant materials that could vastly improve solar cell efficiency


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Public release date: 16-Oct-2013
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Contact: Mark Shwartz
mshwartz@stanford.edu
831-915-0088
Stanford University






Scientists have created a heat-resistant thermal emitter that could significantly improve the efficiency of solar cells. The novel component is designed to convert heat from the sun into infrared light, which can than be absorbed by solar cells to make electricity a technology known as thermophotovoltaics. Unlike earlier prototypes that fell apart at temperatures below 2200 degrees Fahrenheit (1200 degrees Celsius), the new thermal emitter remains stable at temperatures as high as 2500 F (1400 C).


"This is a record performance in terms of thermal stability and a major advance for the field of thermophotovoltaics," said Shanhui Fan, a professor of electrical engineering at Stanford University. Fan and his colleagues at the University of Illinois-Urbana Champaign (Illinois) and North Carolina State University collaborated on the project. Their results are published in the October 16 edition of the journal Nature Communications.


A typical solar cell has a silicon semiconductor that absorbs sunlight directly and converts it into electrical energy. But silicon semiconductors only respond to infrared light. Higher-energy light waves, including most of the visible light spectrum, are wasted as heat, while lower-energy waves simply pass through the solar panel.


"In theory, conventional single-junction solar cells can only achieve an efficiency level of about 34 percent, but in practice they don't achieve that," said study co-author Paul Braun, a professor of materials science at Illinois. "That's because they throw away the majority of the sun's energy."


Thermophotovoltaic devices are designed to overcome that limitation. Instead of sending sunlight directly to the solar cell, thermophotovoltaic systems have an intermediate component that consists of two parts: an absorber that heats up when exposed to sunlight, and an emitter that converts the heat to infrared light, which is then beamed to the solar cell.


"Essentially, we tailor the light to shorter wavelengths that are ideal for driving a solar cell," Fan said. "That raises the theoretical efficiency of the cell to 80 percent, which is quite remarkable."



So far, thermophotovoltaic systems have only achieved an efficiency level of about 8 percent, Braun noted. The poor performance is largely due to problems with the intermediate component, which is typically made of tungsten an abundant material also used in conventional light bulbs.


"Our thermal emitters have a complex, three-dimensional nanostructure that has to withstand temperatures above 1800 F (1000 C) to be practical," Braun explained. "In fact, the hotter the better."


In previous experiments, however, the 3D structure of the emitter was destroyed at temperatures of around 1800 F (1000 C). To address the problem, Braun and his Illinois colleagues coated tungsten emitters in a nanolayer of a ceramic material called hafnium dioxide.


The results were dramatic. When subjected to temperatures of 1800 F (1000 C), the ceramic-coated emitters retained their structural integrity for more than 12 hours. When heated to 2500 F (1400 C), the samples remained thermally stable for at least an hour.


The ceramic-coated emitters were sent to Fan and his colleagues at Stanford, who confirmed that devices were still capable of producing infrared light waves that are ideal for running solar cells.


"These results are unprecedented," said former Illinois graduate student Kevin Arpin, lead author of the study. "We demonstrated for the first time that ceramics could help advance thermophotovoltaics as well other areas of research, including energy harvesting from waste heat, high-temperature catalysis and electrochemical energy storage."


Braun and Fan plan to test other ceramic-type materials and determine if the experimental thermal emitters can deliver infrared light to a working solar cell.


"We've demonstrated that the tailoring of optical properties at high temperatures is possible," Braun said. "Hafnium and tungsten are abundant, low-cost materials, and the process used to make these heat-resistant emitters is well established. Hopefully these results will motivate the thermophotovoltaics community to take another look at ceramics and other classes of materials that haven't been considered."


###


Other authors of the study are Nicholas Sergeant, Linxiao Zhu and Zongfu Yu of Stanford; Andrew Cloud, Hailong Ning, Justin Mallek, Ber Kalanyan, Gregory Girolami and John Abelson of Illinois; and Mark Losego and Gregory Parsons of North Carolina State University.


This article was written by Mark Shwartz, Precourt Institute for Energy at Stanford University.


Related information:


Fan Research Group
http://www.stanford.edu/group/fan/


Braun Research Group
http://braungroup.beckman.illinois.edu/


Global Climate and Energy Project
http://gcep.stanford.edu/




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Scientists develop heat-resistant materials that could vastly improve solar cell efficiency


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 16-Oct-2013
[


| E-mail



| Share Share

]

Contact: Mark Shwartz
mshwartz@stanford.edu
831-915-0088
Stanford University






Scientists have created a heat-resistant thermal emitter that could significantly improve the efficiency of solar cells. The novel component is designed to convert heat from the sun into infrared light, which can than be absorbed by solar cells to make electricity a technology known as thermophotovoltaics. Unlike earlier prototypes that fell apart at temperatures below 2200 degrees Fahrenheit (1200 degrees Celsius), the new thermal emitter remains stable at temperatures as high as 2500 F (1400 C).


"This is a record performance in terms of thermal stability and a major advance for the field of thermophotovoltaics," said Shanhui Fan, a professor of electrical engineering at Stanford University. Fan and his colleagues at the University of Illinois-Urbana Champaign (Illinois) and North Carolina State University collaborated on the project. Their results are published in the October 16 edition of the journal Nature Communications.


A typical solar cell has a silicon semiconductor that absorbs sunlight directly and converts it into electrical energy. But silicon semiconductors only respond to infrared light. Higher-energy light waves, including most of the visible light spectrum, are wasted as heat, while lower-energy waves simply pass through the solar panel.


"In theory, conventional single-junction solar cells can only achieve an efficiency level of about 34 percent, but in practice they don't achieve that," said study co-author Paul Braun, a professor of materials science at Illinois. "That's because they throw away the majority of the sun's energy."


Thermophotovoltaic devices are designed to overcome that limitation. Instead of sending sunlight directly to the solar cell, thermophotovoltaic systems have an intermediate component that consists of two parts: an absorber that heats up when exposed to sunlight, and an emitter that converts the heat to infrared light, which is then beamed to the solar cell.


"Essentially, we tailor the light to shorter wavelengths that are ideal for driving a solar cell," Fan said. "That raises the theoretical efficiency of the cell to 80 percent, which is quite remarkable."



So far, thermophotovoltaic systems have only achieved an efficiency level of about 8 percent, Braun noted. The poor performance is largely due to problems with the intermediate component, which is typically made of tungsten an abundant material also used in conventional light bulbs.


"Our thermal emitters have a complex, three-dimensional nanostructure that has to withstand temperatures above 1800 F (1000 C) to be practical," Braun explained. "In fact, the hotter the better."


In previous experiments, however, the 3D structure of the emitter was destroyed at temperatures of around 1800 F (1000 C). To address the problem, Braun and his Illinois colleagues coated tungsten emitters in a nanolayer of a ceramic material called hafnium dioxide.


The results were dramatic. When subjected to temperatures of 1800 F (1000 C), the ceramic-coated emitters retained their structural integrity for more than 12 hours. When heated to 2500 F (1400 C), the samples remained thermally stable for at least an hour.


The ceramic-coated emitters were sent to Fan and his colleagues at Stanford, who confirmed that devices were still capable of producing infrared light waves that are ideal for running solar cells.


"These results are unprecedented," said former Illinois graduate student Kevin Arpin, lead author of the study. "We demonstrated for the first time that ceramics could help advance thermophotovoltaics as well other areas of research, including energy harvesting from waste heat, high-temperature catalysis and electrochemical energy storage."


Braun and Fan plan to test other ceramic-type materials and determine if the experimental thermal emitters can deliver infrared light to a working solar cell.


"We've demonstrated that the tailoring of optical properties at high temperatures is possible," Braun said. "Hafnium and tungsten are abundant, low-cost materials, and the process used to make these heat-resistant emitters is well established. Hopefully these results will motivate the thermophotovoltaics community to take another look at ceramics and other classes of materials that haven't been considered."


###


Other authors of the study are Nicholas Sergeant, Linxiao Zhu and Zongfu Yu of Stanford; Andrew Cloud, Hailong Ning, Justin Mallek, Ber Kalanyan, Gregory Girolami and John Abelson of Illinois; and Mark Losego and Gregory Parsons of North Carolina State University.


This article was written by Mark Shwartz, Precourt Institute for Energy at Stanford University.


Related information:


Fan Research Group
http://www.stanford.edu/group/fan/


Braun Research Group
http://braungroup.beckman.illinois.edu/


Global Climate and Energy Project
http://gcep.stanford.edu/




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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/su-sdh101413.php
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Twitter's losses mount ahead of IPO

NEW YORK (AP) — Twitter's losses are mounting as the online messaging service prepares to make its stock market debut.


A regulatory filing Tuesday disclosed the San Francisco company lost nearly $65 million during the three months ending in September.


That's the largest quarterly setback that Twitter has suffered during the past three years. Twitter lost about $22 million at the same time last year.


In a development likely to hearten prospective investors, Twitter's revenue more than doubled from last year to nearly $169 million.


But the company's rising losses could dampen some of the enthusiasm for Twitter's initial public offering. The IPO is expected to be completed next month, though the company hasn't set a target date.


Twitter ended September with 232 million active users, up from 218 million in June.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/twitters-losses-mount-ahead-ipo-000415525--finance.html
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Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Viking's Choice: Acoustic Swagger Exists, And Ryley Walker Has It





Michael Vallera/Courtesy of the artist


Ryley Walker.


Michael Vallera/Courtesy of the artist


Sometimes, friends of friends are the best way to discover new music. Or, at the very least, friends of artists you never want to miss live. This was the case with Ryley Walker, a close friend and frequent tour buddy of American Primitive guitarist Daniel Bachman. Walker would accompany Bachman in seriously raucous and psychedelic live sets only a couple years ago, and Bachman would tell me, "Just wait 'til you hear Ryley's stuff." Well, now it's here — and it's not at all what I expected.




Listen: Ryley Walker, 'The West Wind'


Cover for The West Wind

 




With the charming swagger of jazz-folk troubadour Tim Buckley and the resonant, full picking style of Bert Jansch, "The West Wind" comes from Walker's first widely available release, a three-song 12". With acoustic guitar in hand and a voice like browned butter, Walker swings and sways in a lush string-and-piano arrangement right out of Buckley's Starsailor; it slowly picks up to a swirling gallop without bucking the rhythm.


The West Wind comes out digitally on Oct. 22 — and as a 12" EP on Nov. 29 — via Tompkins Square Records. Ryley Walker is currently touring Europe with Daniel Bachman.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/allsongs/2013/10/15/230815583/vikings-choice-acoustic-swagger-exists-and-ryley-walker-has-it?ft=1&f=1039
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'That Awkward Moment' Trailer: Zac Efron Strips Down, Struggles to Stay Single (Video)


The red band trailer for Zac Efron, Miles Teller and Michael B. Jordan's comedy That Awkward Moment (formerly Are We Officially Dating?) has debuted online.



The preview for the former Film District title also provides a glimpse into one of the new Focus Features' first releases, as it will be distributed by Peter Schlessel's company in January.


REPORT: Zac Efron Completed Stint in Rehab


In the movie, three friends played by Efron, Teller and Jordan struggle to stay single despite vowing to do so after Jordan's character breaks up with his girlfriend.


The risque trailer features a naked Efron sprawled across a toilet after he and his friends' plan to take Viagra so they can still have sex after drinking goes awry.


There's also a comedic dispute over peanut-butter ice cream as Teller and Efron's characters refuse to let Jordan's character drown his sorrows in dessert after his breakup. "Who are you, Bridget Jones?" Efron asks.


STORY: Zac Efron Comedy 'Are We Officially Dating?' Now Titled 'That Awkward Moment'


Perhaps unintentionally, the trailer features another callback to Bridget Jones's Diary when Efron shows up dressed in an inappropriate costume for a formal party with his girlfriend's parents. Ready to rock out with his you-know-what out, Efron freshens up his girlfriend's mom's cocktail.


That Awkward Moment is set to hit theaters Jan. 31, 2014.


The film also marks the first movie produced by Efron's Ninjas Runnin' Wild production company.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/film/~3/hQDeWti7WaE/story01.htm
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Rufus Norris named chief of UK's National Theatre

LONDON (AP) — Britain's National Theatre named stage director and former actor Rufus Norris as its next chief on Tuesday — the first actor since Laurence Olivier to lead Britain's biggest and most influential theater company.


Norris will take over in April 2015 from Nicholas Hytner, who has led the state-subsidized company through a decade of commercial and critical successes, including Broadway runs for shows such as "One Man, Two Guvnors" and "War Horse."


Last year the National's shows played to 3.6 million people around the world — at its London home, on tour and in live cinema broadcasts — and it took in 87 million pounds ($139 million).


Norris acknowledged having some nerves about the scale of the job, but said he would approach it "with gusto" and continue efforts begun under Hytner to attract younger and more diverse audiences and artistic collaborators.


Norris, 48, trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and worked as an actor — "I wasn't quite as good as Olivier" — before making his name as a bold and versatile director of plays, musicals and opera.


He spent five years as associate director of the innovative Young Vic in London, and has directed several shows at the National, including James Baldwin's "The Amen Corner" and David Eldridge's "Market Boy."


His work on Broadway includes a 2008 production of "Les Liaisons Dangereuses" that received five Tony Award nominations.


Norris created the opera "Dr Dee" with Blur frontman Damon Albarn, and made his filmmaking debut in 2012 with "Broken."


Norris is currently working on a movie adaptation of "London Road," a musical he directed at the National about a neighborhood traumatized by a serial killer. But he acknowledged that his film career will have to take a back seat to running the theater.


"I'd like to think you can do this job and direct a movie a year alongside it — but clearly that's not the case," he said. "It's an enormous job."


High-profile directors including Sam Mendes and Kenneth Branagh were rumored to be in the running for British theater's biggest job. Hytner said the most important quality needed — even more than experience — was "appetite."


"Rufus has the appetite, as well as the talent," he said.


___


Online: www.nationaltheatre.org.uk


Jill Lawless can be reached at http://Twitter.com/JillLawless


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rufus-norris-named-chief-uks-national-theatre-122651426.html
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Muslim pilgrims throng Mount Arafat for hajj climax


MOUNT ARAFAT (Saudi Arabia) (AFP) - Pilgrims in their hundreds of thousands thronged Mount Arafat in Saudi Arabia from early Monday for the high point of the annual hajj, praying for an end to disputes and bloodshed.


Officials said they expected around 1.5 million pilgrims to descend on the site, where they were to offer prayers and later in the day to listen to the annual sermon from Saudi top cleric Sheikh Abdulaziz al-Sheikh.


Helicopters hovered overhead and thousands of troops stood guard to organise roads flooded by men, women and children streaming towards Mount Arafat.


Chanting "Labaik Allahum Labaik" (I am responding to your call, God), many of them camped in small colourful tents and took shelter under trees to escape temperatures of around 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit). Special sprinklers were also helping cool the pilgrims.


Numbers are sharply down from last year, due to fears linked to the MERS virus and to multi-billion-dollar expansion work at the Grand Mosque to almost double its capacity to around 2.2 million worshippers.


Governor of Mecca province and head of the central hajj committee Prince Khaled al-Faisal said 1.38 million pilgrims had arrived from outside of the kingdom while ony 117,000 hajj permits were issued for domestic pilgrims.


This puts the number of pilgrims this year at almost 1.5 million, less than half of last year's 3.2 million after Riyadh slashed hajj quotas.


Prince Khaled told the official SPA news agency late Sunday that authorities had turned back 70,000 nationals and expatriates for not carrying legal permits and had arrested 38,000 others for performing the hajj without a permit.


Authorities had also seized as many as 138,000 vehicles for violating the hajj rules and its owners will be penalised, the prince said.


Saudi health authorities have stressed that no cases of the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) virus has been detected so far this pilgrimage. The disease has killed 60 people worldwide, 51 of them in Saudi Arabia itself.


The pilgrims were arriving at Arafat from nearby Mina where most of them spent the night following the traditions of Islam's Prophet Mohammed who performed the rituals 14 centuries ago.


They had moved to Mina on Sunday from the holy city of Mecca, home to the Grand Mosque, Islam's holiest place of worship which houses the cube-shaped Kaaba structure towards which all Muslims pray daily five times.


On reaching Arafat, they crowded onto the hill and the vast plain surrounding it to pray until sunset, when they are due to set off for nearby Muzdalifah.


"I will pray the whole day for God to improve the situation for Muslims worldwide and an end to disputes and bloodshed in Arab countries," 61-year-old Algerian pensioner Saeed Dherari said.


Sitting at the side of many of Arafat roads and reading from the Koran, Islam's holy book, Syrian Ahmad al-Khader prayed for oppressed Syrians to be victorious.


"I hope that God will grace all Muslims with security and stability," said 75-year-old Khader who hails from the southern province of Daraa.


"The regime is tyrannical and I pray for God to help the oppressed people," he said.


In Muzdalifa, pilgrims will spend the night before moving on in the morning to start the ritual of symbolically stoning the devil.


The hajj, which officially ends on Friday, is one of the five pillars of Islam that every capable Muslim must perform at least once.





Source: http://news.yahoo.com/muslim-pilgrims-throng-mount-arafat-hajj-climax-065848537.html
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Beginners' Portfolio: Tesco PLC Helps Us To A 50% Gain!



This article is the latest in a series that aims to help novice investors with the stock market. To enjoy past articles in the series, please visit our full archive.


The Beginners' Portfolio is a virtual portfolio, which is run as if based on real money with all costs, spreads and dividends accounted for.


It's a little while since we've caught up with news and taken a look at our portfolio valuation, so let's start with a quick look at how much cash we'd have in the kitty if we sold up, before we take a look at the latest from Tesco (Other OTC: TSCDF - news) .


As of 11 October, the portfolio has broken the 50% profit mark:


Company



Shares



Buy price



Total (NYSE: TOT - news) cost



Bid price



Proceeds



Gain/loss



% change



































































































Vodafone (LSE: VOD.L - news)



289



168.5p



£499.51



218.7p



£622.04



£122.53



24.5%



Tesco



159



305.5p



£498.23



357.9p



£559.06



£60.83



12.2%



GlaxoSmithKline (Other OTC: GLAXF - news)



34



1,440.5p



£502.22



1,554p



£518.36



£16.14



3.2%



Persimmon



79



617.9p



£500.55



1,195p



£934.05



£433.50



86.6%



Blinkx (Other OTC: BLNKF - news)



1,319



36.9p



£499.68



151.8p



£1,992.24



£1,492.56



298.7%



BP (LSE: BP.L - news)



112



434.5p



£499.01



437.8p



£480.34



-£18.67



-3.7%



Rio Tinto (Xetra: 855018 - news)



16



3,048.4p



£500.18



3,043p



£476.88



-£23.30



-4.7%



BAE Systems (LSE: BA.L - news)



146



332.3p



£497.59



437.6p



£628.90



£131.31



26.4%



Apple (NasdaqGS: AAPL - news)



2



$458.4



£605.98



$487.2



£591.50



-£14.48



-2.4%



Aviva (LSE: AV.L - news)



146



321.4p



£499.71



427.0p



£613.42



£115.71



23.2%



Dividends



 



 



 



 



£281.08



£281.08



 



Total



 



 



£5,100.66



 



£7,697.87



£2,597.21



50.9%


That includes the latest dividends -- £7.36 from a 4.63p-per-share interim payment from Tesco, and £8.18 from Aviva's 5.6p interim.


One interesting thing to note is that our investment in Apple has fallen into loss, purely because of exchange rate movements -- which is one extra source of risk when buying non-UK shares.


I'll catch up on the rest next week, but for today, here's what's been happening at Tesco:


Britain's top supermarket


Firstly, we passed Tesco's ex-dividend date on 9 October, so that gets us the interim payment I've already mentioned -- the cash isn't actually paid on ex-dividend date, but as that's the guarantee then it's the most convenient date to use for our accounting.


More importantly, we had the actual first-half figures on 2 October, and they were a bit downbeat. For the 26 weeks to 24 August, trading profit fell 8% from £1,718m to £1,588m.


Europe was tough, with a 68% fall, and profit from Asian markets dropped 7% after opening hours were hit by new Korean regulatory restrictions.


But the UK was robust, with sales excluding petrol up 1.7%, like-for-like food up 1% in the second quarter, and margins stable. Clothing sales in Q2 were up 8.6%, and online sales picked up very nicely -- up 13% in the UK and 54% overseas.


The share price took a bit of a dip as a result, but with a P/E of 11 based on full-year forecasts and a dividend yield of better than 4% expected, I still see today's price of 359p as undervalued.


China looking good


Developments in China, which has the potential to be a lucrative market, are going well as Tesco's deal with China Resources Enterprise (HKSE: 0291.HK - news) (CRE) progresses. The two firms have entered into definitive agreements for a merger of their retail operations in the country.


The joint venture, in which Tesco will have a 20% stake, will have sales approaching £10bn and will be China's biggest multi-format retailer.


I find this development pretty exciting, and it shows Tesco learning how best to approach individual markets. Going it alone in China was not working, but the next approach holds great potential.


Overall, then, I still rate Tesco as a 'Buy' and I'm happy to hold.


Finally, if you're looking for investments that should take you all the way from beginner to wealthy pensioner, I recommend the Fool's special report detailing five blue-chip shares. They'll be familiar names to many, and they've already provided investors with decades of profits.


But the report will only be available for a limited period, so click here to get your hands on these great ideas -- they could set you on the road to long-term riches.


> Alan does not own any shares mentioned in this article. The Motley Fool owns shares in Tesco and Apple.



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/beginners-portfolio-tesco-plc-helps-081020871.html
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Automatic cuts re-emerge as budget battle issue

WASHINGTON (AP) — The broad, automatic spending cuts known as sequestration have re-emerged as a central issue in efforts to end the partial government shutdown and avert a federal default.


Many conservatives view the past seven months of lower spending levels as one of their rare accomplishments in dealing with President Barack Obama and want to continue them.


But GOP defense hawks complain that the next round of automatic cuts falls almost entirely on the Pentagon, and many Republicans want to shift that burden to domestic programs.


Obama and Democrats would do away with them altogether, substituting new taxes and maybe some spending cuts elsewhere in their place. Republicans are agreeable — Democrats much less so — to trimming future Social Security benefits or making wealthier retirees pay higher premiums for Medicare in place of the automatic cuts.


Sequestration deals mostly with the day-to-day operating budgets of federal agencies. The Veterans Administration is exempt, as are the biggest "mandatory" benefit programs like Social Security, food stamps and Medicaid. The president's health care program — "Obamacare" —also is exempt.


The impact of the automatic cuts that went into effect in March was not as harsh as many people feared. Some agencies were able to move money around to prevent or reduce furloughs.


For many Americans, however, the impacts have been real. Health research has slowed, thousands of Head Start slots have been eliminated and poor people have been left hanging on waiting lists for housing subsidy vouchers.


The future is uncertain but easing or eliminating a new round of automatic spending cuts in January is likely to be a focus of any budget talks once the government reopens fully. Giving agencies more flexibility to adjust to reduced funding levels also is being discussed.


A brief primer on the automatic spending cuts and what might happen next:


—Sequestration was established by the 2011 Budget Control Act to reduce government spending by $1.2 trillion over 10 years. The cuts were to be divided between defense and domestic programs and achieved through caps on the money Congress can appropriate each year.


—For fiscal 2013 ending Sept. 30, sequestration lowered Congress' spending cap from $1.043 trillion to $988 billion. Of the $55 billion in spending cuts, $22 billion was from a 4.5 percent cut in domestic programs and $33 billion was from a 6 percent cut in military spending. That reduced the Pentagon's budget this past year from $552 billion to $519 billion. In addition, benefit programs were cut $17 billion. Of that, $11 billion was from fee reductions for Medicare providers like doctors and hospitals. The other $6 billion was spread among smaller programs like farm subsidies. Altogether the sequester produced total budget savings of $72 billion in 2013.


—For fiscal 2014, the sequester lowers the cap on what Congress can spend to $967 billion. Virtually all of the additional savings would come from new and deeper cuts to the military. The Pentagon's budget would drop from $519 billion to $498 billion.


—The debate: House Republicans want to maintain the $967 billion cap for fiscal 2014 but shift all the sequester cuts from the Pentagon to domestic programs. Democrats want to do away with the sequester entirely and set the spending cap at $1.06 trillion.


Congressional leaders tentatively have agreed to extend the 2013 cap of $988 billion for three months while they attempt to negotiate a broader deal for easing or replacing the automatic spending cuts.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/automatic-cuts-emerge-budget-battle-issue-060358892--finance.html
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Sunday, October 13, 2013

A Decade On, A Boy, A Ball And A West Bank Wall






  • Hide caption

    Almost a decade ago, an Israeli filmmaker made a short documentary about Palestinian Ishaq Amer and his family after a part of Israel's separation barrier was built around their home in the West Bank. Ishaq was cut off from his soccer buddies then. Now, at 19, he's a husband and a father.





    Emily Harris/NPR






  • Hide caption

    Fences and a wall separate Ishaq's family home from their village. The road in front is for the Israeli military only. Behind the home, a double fence runs between the house and an Israeli settlement.





    Emily Harris/NPR






  • Hide caption

    At first, Ishaq's family had to wait for Israeli soldiers to open this gate and let them come or go. Now, the family has a key.





    Emily Harris/NPR






  • Hide caption

    Ishaq's mother waters plants in the family's garden. The family lost a nursery business to the barrier, but have planted a few fruit trees and flowers.





    Emily Harris/NPR






  • Hide caption

    Ishaq now lives in the nearby Palestinian village, away from the barrier and Israeli settlement. He visits his parents and younger brother often, sometimes kicking a soccer ball around the same place he frequently played alone as a kid.





    Emily Harris/NPR





A little more than a decade ago, in an effort to improve security, Israel began building a physical barrier in and around the West Bank.


The Amer family is among the Palestinians whose lives were disrupted. The concrete wall and fence cut them off from their village. Their son was separated from his soccer buddies, the most important thing in the world to him at the time.


A young American who recently saw a film about the family asked me to find out what happened to the Palestinian boy in the years since the barrier was built.


Simon Hatcher saw the 15-minute documentary about the Amer family last year, in his sixth-grade class in Oregon. It stuck in his mind.





Ishaq's parents watch the documentary about their family.



Emily Harris/NPR


Ishaq's parents watch the documentary about their family.


Emily Harris/NPR


"I watched it in class and I thought, wow, there's really this kid that can't leave his house because there are walls on both sides of it, which must be so hard for him," Simon said. "I was just like — I was really sad."


The movie, Offside, shows Ishaq Amer, who was then 13, kicking a soccer ball around by himself and waiting a lot — mostly for Israeli soldiers. At first the family could leave or come home only if soldiers unlocked a gate. Seeing the film almost a decade after it was shot, Simon wanted the rest of the story.


"I'd like to know if his situation has gotten any better and I'd like to know if he is able to play soccer with his friends, and I'd like to know how his life is able to go on with a wall built on all sides of his house," he told me.


We found Ishaq, who is now 19 and recently became a dad. He lives in the village and works in construction.


"I grew up, got married, I come and go," he says.


He visits his mother, father and younger brother regularly. They still live in the house on the Israeli side of the barrier. But now the family has a key to the gate.





Ishaq, 19, still loves to play soccer with his family and friends.



Emily Harris/NPR


Ishaq, 19, still loves to play soccer with his family and friends.


Emily Harris/NPR


A road from the village dead ends at the yellow metal gate. On the left, concrete barriers rise more than 20 feet toward the sky. On the right is a mesh fence with electronic sensors. Barbed wire is strung above.


Just inside, there is a paved road for Israeli military use only. Across that road is Ishaq's family home. Behind the house, a double fence separates this Palestinian family from an Israeli settlement. Ishaq says he's only partly glad he doesn't live here anymore.


"It's true that where I'm living now, I'm freer. There's no wall and no settlement," he says. "But I'm separated from my family and I don't like that. My feelings toward the wall are the same. It must go."


The Amer family lost their nursery business when the barrier went up, but they have planted some fruit trees and flowers around the house.


They raise a few sheep and other animals on their quarter acre, too.


Ishaq's mother, Munira, waters petunias as she talks about the first years of the wall. She says even after the family got the key, their movement was restricted and Ishaq was frequently not able to cross the barrier to play soccer with his friends.


"I remember very well when Ishaq had to play here on his own. I felt really bad for Ishaq, but what could I do?" Munira says.


An Israeli court finding in the case notes that the military offered to provide a home or land closer to the village. But Ishaq's father, Hani, is proud the family is still in their home.



"What is similar from those days is that our house is still walled in. What's different is that we have the key," he says. "We fought for this, and this is freedom compared to before. This makes me optimistic for the future."


Ishaq's younger brother, Shaddad, barely remembers life before the wall. He is 13 now, the same age Ishaq was when the film was made.


"This wall is a prison," he says. "I don't know if it will ever go."


Unlike his older brother, Shaddad likes farming and writing more than soccer. Even now, Ishaq still finds some time to kick a ball around with friends.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/parallels/2013/10/13/231460515/a-decade-on-a-boy-a-ball-and-a-west-bank-wall?ft=1&f=1009
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Friday, October 11, 2013

A Free App Can Save Your iPhone 5C From Looking Hideous In Its Case

A Free App Can Save Your iPhone 5C From Looking Hideous In Its Case


If you snatched up the colorful iPhone 5C and its perforated case before you realized what an eyesore it is, there's now a cheap and simple solution to the problem. The developers at LunarLincoln have just released a free app called CaseCollage that lets you create and print an insert that fills all those cheese grater holes with whatever images or graphics you want.

Read more...

Source: http://gizmodo.com/a-free-app-can-save-your-iphone-5c-from-looking-hideous-1443840925
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Tuesday, June 11, 2013

NASA's veteran Mars rover driving to new spot

This image provided by NASA shows a panoramic view from NASA's Mars Exploration rover Opportunity of "Solander Point." The space agency said Friday June 7, 2013, the six-wheel, solar-powered rover is driving to a new spot in Endeavour Crater after spending 20 months at a site brimming with evidence of water-altered rocks. Opportunity began the trip to its next destination, Solander Point, several weeks ago so that it can be in place well before the next Martian winter. (AP Photo/NASA)

This image provided by NASA shows a panoramic view from NASA's Mars Exploration rover Opportunity of "Solander Point." The space agency said Friday June 7, 2013, the six-wheel, solar-powered rover is driving to a new spot in Endeavour Crater after spending 20 months at a site brimming with evidence of water-altered rocks. Opportunity began the trip to its next destination, Solander Point, several weeks ago so that it can be in place well before the next Martian winter. (AP Photo/NASA)

This image provided by NASA shows a rock that the NASA Mars rover Opportunity recently examined. The six-wheel, solar-powered rover is leaving its current location in Endeavour Crater and headed for a new spot ahead of the next Martian winter. (AP Photo/NASA)

(AP) ? NASA's Opportunity rover is rolling across the Martian surface again, leaving behind a clay-rich rock in search of more discoveries.

Mission managers said Friday that the plan calls for arriving at its new destination ? 1 1/2 miles to the south ? by August so that the solar-powered rover can be in a favorable spot before the next Martian winter.

Opportunity has been exploring Endeavour Crater since 2011. It's the largest of five craters examined by the six-wheel rover so far and contains some of the oldest deposits dating back to the first billion years of Mars' history.

Before trekking off last month, Opportunity used a grinder to scrape away the top layer of a light-colored rock for a peek inside. The rock was so lumpy and covered with crud that it took the rover several tries to crack open its secrets.

Unlike other rocks that Opportunity inspected during the past nine years, the latest told a different story: It contained clay minerals, a sign that water coursed through it, and formed in an environment that might have been suitable for microbes.

Previous rock studies by Opportunity pointed to a watery past on Mars, but scientists said the water was acidic.

"This is water you can drink," said mission chief scientist Steve Squyres of Cornell University.

Since landing on opposite ends of the red planet in 2004, Opportunity and its twin, Spirit, have impressed scientists with their longevity. Both outlasted their original, three-month warranty.

While Opportunity continues to plow ahead, Spirit's mission came to an end when it got stuck in sand and stopped communicating in 2010.

Project manager John Callas said Opportunity showed signs of wear, but was otherwise in good health. It recently experienced a bout of amnesia with its flash memory, but Callas said it was not serious.

Opportunity is not the only Mars rover on the move. Earlier this week, NASA said its newest rover, Curiosity, will soon head to a Martian mountain.

___

Follow Alicia Chang at http://twitter.com/SciWriAlicia

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2013-06-07-Mars%20Rover/id-5068ae02ad3b411b82ca2e84253e4fb4

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Monday, June 10, 2013

This Is the Most Awesomerest Feature in Apple iOS 7

This Is the Most Awesomerest Feature in Apple iOS 7

Redesign, schmedesign. Apple's designmeister Jony Ive can harp all he wants about harmonious grids, elegant typography and the holy essence of genius contained in Dieter Ram's underpants. But the fact is that the most oooh!-aaah! feature in his new iOS 7 is the parallax effect you can see in this animated GIF. It's like magic distilled from squeezed rainbow unicorn ponies sandwiched between glass and metal.

I know it's not as useful as the other features introduced in iOS 7 today. But it is useful: it allows to make a distinction between different layers of information, giving a sense of space that will help the user understa?ok, it's just awesome and I can't wait to use it.

Source: http://front.kinja.com/this-is-the-most-awesomerest-feature-in-apple-ios-7-512390674

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I Am So Fucking Over This Already (Balloon Juice)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/311619803?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Harsher sentence sought for Tunisian feminist

TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) ? A lawyer says a prosecutor has appealed a sentence that a court gave to a Tunisian feminist for possessing pepper spray as not harsh enough.

Amina Sboui is a member of the Ukrainian feminist group Femen.

Known by her pseudonym Amina Tyler, she shocked Tunisia by protesting the treatment of women by posting topless photos of herself on Internet.

In May, she was arrested in the central city of Kairouan while planning another protest. She was convicted of carrying pepper spray and fined about $180 under an 1894 law against carrying "burning objects."

Defense lawyer Mokhtar Jannene said Monday that a prosecutor is demanding the maximum sentence of six months.

Sboui remains in prison while the court also considers other charges against her.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/harsher-sentence-sought-tunisian-feminist-171049745.html

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The Ryders - Part 1

Awh questions...how I loath thy. Haha okay.

1. Ryders are humans with the special gift to be able to control magic and magical creatures (so their basically wizards)
2. Ryders were mixed with the rest of society though they lived in very small villages usually.
3. Cree is a world based off of Earth. The world Cree actually came from the word "cr?" which is the word "Earth" in Irish. The difference between Cree and Earth is that most of Cree is one big landmass surrounded by smaller islands then the never ending ocean. (and you may if you want)
4. The word "Ryder" is just a different way to write the word "rider" to say that they ride with their companion around the world protecting civilizations from Diablo and his army, the Deamhain. And, if you're asking what a Ryder name can actually mean, it could mean whatever you want. Though Ryders could be described as warriors, fighters, protectors, guardians and the like.

Hope that answered your questions. ^-^ if you need anything else, just ask.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/f-7ICtaAooI/viewtopic.php

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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

See Jennifer Lawrence Naked, Covered in Body Paint!

The actress is feeling blue for 'X Men'! Check out other cute and candid moments from the stars

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/celebrity-twitter-pictures/1-b-229669?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Acelebrity-twitter-pictures-229669

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NASA launching experiment to examine the beginnings of the universe

May 21, 2013 ? When did the first stars and galaxies form in the universe? How brightly did they burn their nuclear fuel?

Scientists will seek to gain answers to these questions with the launch of the Cosmic Infrared Background ExpeRIment (CIBER) on a Black Brant XII suborbital sounding rocket between 11 and 11:59 p.m. EDT, June 4 from the Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia.

Jamie Bock, CIBER principal investigator from the California Institute of Technology, said, "The first massive stars to form in the universe produced copious ultraviolet light that ionized gas from neutral hydrogen. CIBER observes in the near infrared, as the expansion of the universe stretched the original short ultraviolet wavelengths to long near-infrared wavelengths today. CIBER investigates two telltale signatures of first star formation -- the total brightness of the sky after subtracting all foregrounds, and a distinctive pattern of spatial variations."

"The objectives of the experiment are of fundamental importance for astrophysics, to probe the process of first galaxy formation, but the measurement is also extremely difficult technically," he noted.

This will be the fourth flight for CIBER on a NASA sounding rocket. The previous launches were in 2009, 2010, and 2012 from the White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico. After each flight the experiment or payload was recovered for post-calibrations and re-flight.

For this flight CIBER will fly on a larger and more powerful rocket than before. This will loft CIBER to a higher altitude than those previously obtained, thus providing longer observation time for the instruments. The experiment, which will safely splash down in the Atlantic Ocean more than 400 miles off the Virginia coast, will not be recovered.

CIBER previously flew on two-stage Black Brant IX sounding rockets. Bock said, "The collection of data from the three flights allows us to compare data and rigorously test sources of potential systematic error from both the instrument and astrophysical foregrounds. We have been through the end-to-end process in analyzing our data, so we understand the benefits of going with a non-recovered Black Brant XII. We also know the performance of the instrument very well from these flights and that makes us confident going forward with this more capable but final flight."

The 70-foot tall four-stage Black Brant XII rocket will carry CIBER to an altitude of about 350 miles. According to Bock, "This flight is pioneering a new direction in the astrophysics program in that we are flying our instrument on a non-recovered Black Brant XII. The XII gives us a significantly higher trajectory, providing about 560 seconds of flight time above 250 km (155 miles) altitude, compared with 250 seconds on standard Black Brant IX flights out of White Sands."

"Our experience in the near-infrared waveband is that we see appreciable emission from the atmosphere up to 250 km. The higher trajectory allows us to do some new things that are not possible on a Black Brant IX. For example, we expect to have enough independent images of the sky to directly determine the in-flight gain of the infrared cameras, which will allow us to measure background fluctuations in single exposures. This gives us a much more direct way to compare with satellite data than the statistical combinations we have had to use to date. The higher trajectory of course comes with a price in that the payload is not recovered," he said.

CIBER is a cooperative instrument designed and built by the California Institute of Technology, University of California Irvine, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), and the Korean Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI). The same team is also developing an improved follow-on experiment, with more capable optics and detector arrays, that will be completed next year.

Backup launch days for this project are June 5 -- 10.

To find out more about NASA's sounding rocket missions, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/sounding-rockets/

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/sky5GQFeHfc/130521134036.htm

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Teen Symposium on Holocaust marks 25th anniversary - Lifestyles ...

Textbooks only accomplish so much in conveying the gravity of the Holocaust.

But when students - and their teachers - meet people with a tangible connection to it, they gain a deeper understanding of one of the darkest chapters in human history.

That's been the longtime goal of the annual Teen Symposium on the Holocaust, sponsored by the Holocaust Education Resource Center of the Jewish Federation of Northeastern Pennsylvania.

The symposium will celebrate its 25th anniversary today and Wednesday at Marywood University. Over its two days, about 1,450 students and teachers from more than 20 schools will spend a full day in classroom workshops geared to different aspects of the Holocaust, Nazi Germany's systematic murder of six million European Jews during World War II.

This year's symposium keynote speaker is Sonia Goldstein, a survivor of the Stutthof concentration camp. She's making her second symposium appearance.

Also slated to appear at the symposium are: World War II veteran Alan Moskin, one of the liberators of the Gunskirchen Lager concentration camp; Ela Weissberger, a member of the children's cast of the opera "Brundib?r" at the Theresienstadt concentration camp; Sol Lurie, a survivor of the Buchenwald camp; and local survivor Sam Rosen, a regular visitor to the symposium.

"This gives students the chance to meet the people who experienced (the Holocaust) in different ways. It allows the history to come alive for them, and allows for interchange," said Tova Weiss, director of HERC. "The point is to have them here, to sensitize them, to bring history to life."

Through the sessions, students not only gain better insight into the intolerance and bigotry that led to the Holocaust, but they also learn how many good people put themselves in harm's way and tried to help, Mrs. Weiss said.

In addition, parallels are drawn between the Holocaust and more recent genocides, like the ones in Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur, leading to many interesting discussions. Each classroom includes a trained facilitator to help initiate conversations between students, teachers and speakers.

Mary Jo Walsh, principal of Fell Charter School in Carbondale, has sent the school's eighth-graders to the symposium for the past six years. She's been so impressed with the symposium that the school is now getting ready to implement its own Holocaust curriculum for grades four and higher.

"I think the biggest thing they get out of it is empathy. It is amazing to watch," Ms. Walsh said. "They come back from this, and they are completely changed. It's almost as if someone has lifted a shade and they can see the whole world now. ... It's had an impact on my teachers, too."

Slow shift

Holocaust education didn't figure all that prominently in schools back when HERC formed in the 1980s, nor were there many survivors speaking publicly about their experiences, Mrs. Weiss said.

HERC started by donating books to school libraries, but eventually the organization came to the realization that it should bring students and teachers together for an immersive, all-day experience.

The first symposium drew about 250 people. Each year, it grew a little more, to the point where HERC needed to add a second day to give more schools the chance to participate.

Over the years, the symposium has featured survivors of Auschwitz and the Kindertransport, as well as the African-American World War II vet Leon Bass, who witnessed the liberation of Buchenwald while himself being subjected to racism and segregation. The late local vet and concentration camp liberator Abe Plotkin was a regular, and the keynote address is named in his honor.

"The students have been exposed to a very broad variety of speakers," Mrs. Weiss said.

Mrs. Weiss said some students get so much out of the experience that they ask to come back the next year. As she sees it, if a kid goes back to his or her school and refuses to take part in a racist joke in the lunch room, then the symposium has made a difference for the better.

"We've heard from so many teachers who've said it's changed kids' behavior," she said. "A lot of them feel that in some ways it's life changing."

Contact the writer: jmcauliffe@timesshamrock.com, @jmcauliffeTT on Twitter

Source: http://thetimes-tribune.com/lifestyles/teen-symposium-on-holocaust-marks-25th-anniversary-1.1492324

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After Getting Booted From Apple's App Store, Mobile Privacy App Clueful Returns On Android

clueful2Clueful, the mobile privacy app Apple booted from its App Store for being too revealing -- or possibly because of its own behavior?-- is staging a comeback. This time around, Clueful's maker Bitdefender is targeting Android users instead, with plans to reveal what the apps on your phone are doing, and how your privacy may be compromised in the process.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/lXF6SGj25CM/

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

JMIR--Mapping mHealth Research: A Decade of Evolution | Fiordelli ...


Advertisement: Preregister now for the Medicine 2.0 Congress

Review

Mapping mHealth Research: A Decade of Evolution

Maddalena Fiordelli, PhD; Nicola Diviani, PhD; Peter J Schulz, PhD

Institute of Communication and Health, Faculty of Communication Sciences, University of Lugano, Lugano, Switzerland

Corresponding Author:
Maddalena Fiordelli, PhD

Institute of Communication and Health
Faculty of Communication Sciences
University of Lugano
Via G. Buffi, 13
Lugano, 6900
Switzerland
Phone: 41 586664757
Fax: 41 586664647
Email:


ABSTRACT

Background: For the last decade, mHealth has constantly expanded as a part of eHealth. Mobile applications for health have the potential to target heterogeneous audiences and address specific needs in different situations, with diverse outcomes, and to complement highly developed health care technologies. The market is rapidly evolving, making countless new mobile technologies potentially available to the health care system; however, systematic research on the impact of these technologies on health outcomes remains scarce.
Objective: To provide a comprehensive view of the field of mHealth research to date and to understand whether and how the new generation of smartphones has triggered research, since their introduction 5 years ago. Specifically, we focused on studies aiming to evaluate the impact of mobile phones on health, and we sought to identify the main areas of health care delivery where mobile technologies can have an impact.
Methods: A systematic literature review was conducted on the impact of mobile phones and smartphones in health care. Abstracts and articles were categorized using typologies that were partly adapted from existing literature and partly created inductively from publications included in the review.
Results: The final sample consisted of 117 articles published between 2002 and 2012. The majority of them were published in the second half of our observation period, with a clear upsurge between 2007 and 2008, when the number of articles almost doubled. The articles were published in 77 different journals, mostly from the field of medicine or technology and medicine. Although the range of health conditions addressed was very wide, a clear focus on chronic conditions was noted. The research methodology of these studies was mostly clinical trials and pilot studies, but new designs were introduced in the second half of our observation period. The size of the samples drawn to test mobile health applications also increased over time. The majority of the studies tested basic mobile phone features (eg, text messaging), while only a few assessed the impact of smartphone apps. Regarding the investigated outcomes, we observed a shift from assessment of the technology itself to assessment of its impact. The outcome measures used in the studies were mostly clinical, including both self-reported and objective measures.
Conclusions: Research interest in mHealth is growing, together with an increasing complexity in research designs and aim specifications, as well as a diversification of the impact areas. However, new opportunities offered by new mobile technologies do not seem to have been explored thus far. Mapping the evolution of the field allows a better understanding of its strengths and weaknesses and can inform future developments.

(J Med Internet Res 2013;15(5):e95)
doi:10.2196/jmir.2430

KEYWORDS

mHealth; systematic review; health outcomes

In the last decade, mobile health (mHealth), the branch of eHealth broadly defined as ?the use of mobile computing and communication technologies in health care and public health? [1], has been constantly expanding. Mobile applications for health can target heterogeneous audiences such as doctors, nurses, patients, or even healthy people [1]. Different features of mobile phones may address specific needs in different situations. Available literature suggests that the use of mobile phones serves a wide variety of purposes [2], such as smoking cessation, weight loss, diet and physical activity, treatment adherence, and disease management. The biggest advantages of using mobile devices, and in particular mobile phones, for health are that these devices are personal, intelligent, connected, and always with people [3,4]. Therefore, they can serve patients both in everyday life and during hospitalization or rehabilitation, as well as health care providers during emergency or routine visits. Current evidence suggests that the use of mobile technology can improve diagnosis and compliance with treatment guidelines, as well as patient information, and can increase administrative efficiency [5]. In particular, short message service (SMS) text messaging reminders have been shown to be a simple and efficient option for health services to use in order to improve service delivery, resulting in health benefits for the patients who receive them [6]. Mobile phone technologies have also been shown to be effective in smoking cessation, weight loss, physical activity, diabetes management, STD prevention and treatment, and hypertension [7].

The mobile phone market is constantly evolving. The first digital mobile phones appeared in the early 1990s, and since then, mobile technology has continued to be refined thanks to the development of new features and better networks. Current smartphones have been defined as ?mobile telephones with computer features that may enable them to interact with computerized systems, send e-mails, and access the web? [8]. Over a third of US mobile phone users own a smartphone [3,9], and it is estimated that 67.6% of adults worldwide own a mobile phone [2,10], making it the most equitable communication technology [1]. It has been argued that mobile phones could be a solution to overcome the traditional digital divide derived from the introduction of the Internet because they provide new opportunities to reach underserved and previously unreachable parts of the population worldwide, especially in developing countries [2].

Mobile technology, with its diffusion and characteristics, holds a great potential for health care applications. However the use of mobile phones in health care delivery has not been fully explored, and the diverse outcomes of mHealth have barely been documented. Although some literature reviews cover one part or the other of the field [6,11,12], an overall picture is still missing, possibly due to the field?s constant evolution. A recent methodological review sought to map the domain of mobile phone health interventions [13], but it relied on describing the design of the interventions, with a clear focus on technology, rather than the outcomes. As the authors stated, their motivation lay in the fact that ?effectiveness reviews can be best done at the level of a particular pathology?, while they wanted to draw a more comprehensive taxonomy of the field.

The main objective of this paper, as stated in the title, is to map the field, but without omitting the outcome measures. This means that our intention is to investigate how the impact of mobile phones on health has been assessed in peer-reviewed scientific literature. In particular, we are interested in understanding the evolution over the past decade, how the interventions have been developed, the main health care delivery areas where the impact of mobile technologies has been assessed, the methodology and features used, and finally, the type of outcome measures and general impact of the intervention.

The second objective of this review is to understand, after the 5 years since the introduction of the new generation of smartphones (eg, the iPhone in 2007), whether and how these devices have triggered research. The appeal of these new devices resides in the fact that they include several computer-like built-in features (eg, the GPS or the accelerometer) allowing the monitoring of a whole series of behaviors. Additionally, new mobile operating systems allow users to customize their devices according to their needs, by downloading apps available for free or for a low price from a central store. Klasnja and Pratt named this kind of feature ?native application? [13], which is a typical complex and sophisticated application that can be implemented on major smartphone platforms (iOS, Android, Symbian, BlackBerry, webOS, and Windows Phone). In 2012, smartphone users spent US $8 billion for paid apps in the top 5 app platforms, and the European mobile app market size reached ?1.68 billion [14]. Therefore, iPhones and similar devices are potentially very interesting for application in health care?they already integrate most of the features that researchers previously had to add to traditional mobile phones in order to use them for health-related purposes and monitoring [15,16].

The objective of this study was to provide a comprehensive picture of how the impact of mHealth was assessed in the scientific literature in its first decade of existence. For this purpose, a systematic literature review was conducted in which relevant studies were categorized in a two-step process. The first step included the review of the titles and abstracts of all publications that were identified as potentially relevant, with the goal of assessing whether they might meet the inclusion criteria for the systematic review. Selected abstracts were categorized at this stage using general typologies partly adapted from existing literature [1,2,12] and partly created inductively from a subsample of the publications. Categories referred to the type of methodology used, the impact area (ie, remote monitoring, data gathering, communication, self-management, training/education, improve adherence, health promotion), and the type of study. In a second step, all the publications not excluded during the abstract and title review stage underwent a full-text review. All publications that met all eligibility criteria (see below) made up the final sample.

Search Strategy

In February 2012, five electronic databases (CINAHL, Communication and Mass Media Complete, PubMed, PsycINFO, and Web of Science) were systematically searched. The choice of databases was deemed to reflect the multidisciplinary nature of the field. Among the most used medical databases, we decided to include PubMed only, since it comprises MEDLINE, while Embase was excluded because it has a stronger drug coverage, which was not relevant for the purposes of our research. A list of keywords was created around the two domains of ?health? and ?mobile technology?. A search string was constructed using both the conjunction ?AND? and the disjunction ?OR? logical operators ([health OR medicine OR medical OR telemedicine OR health care OR ?mHealth? OR ?mobile health? OR ?m?health? OR ?mobile?health?] AND [?mobile phone? OR ?cell phone? OR ?cellphone? OR ?cell?phone? OR ?smartphone? OR ?iPhone? OR ?blackberry? OR ?android?]). The search was based on metadata, ie, title, abstract, and keywords. Reference lists of selected studies were also checked for other potentially relevant studies.

Selection Criteria

Eligibility criteria for inclusion were as follows: records had to be written in English and discuss/acknowledge the role of mobile technology as a tool for promoting, managing, or monitoring health. This could include interventions, cross?sectional studies, literature reviews, conceptual papers, etc. All articles dealing with health effects of mobile phones (eg, effects of non-ionizing radiation on health or effect of mobile phone use on adolescents) were excluded. Records had to be officially published, either online or in print in a peer-reviewed publication (ie, journal articles, book chapters, and published proceedings papers). This means that poster presentations, (extended) abstracts, and encyclopedia entries were excluded. No time restriction was given; all publication dates were eligible for inclusion. Also, there was no restriction on the field of studies, ie, records that could be classified as social sciences, humanities, medicine, and others were all included.

The exclusion criteria that accounted for the biggest number of excluded articles included the following: the study provided descriptive summaries of mHealth programs but failed to provide an evaluation of the program; study provided a short description of multiple mHealth programs without providing specific details on an mHealth intervention; and the study focused on mHealth application design. The title and abstract review allowed us to exclude system design articles and to better identify all the studies that involved people in the testing of the intervention. A full-text article review was therefore conducted only on studies evaluating and assessing mHealth applications. The categories for full-text review were the following: continent where the study took place, condition addressed, type of technology, features used, basis for the intervention development, study design, sample size, aim of the evaluation, outcome measures, and overall impact assessed.

The flowchart in Figure 1 summarizes the different steps of the literature search and review process. A first search identified 4039 articles. After checking for duplicates, 747 articles met the predefined inclusion criteria. Initially, articles were categorized by type of study: quantitative, qualitative, mixed methods, review, and system design. Since articles in the last typology described the development of a mobile technology but did not include any actual testing, they were excluded from further analysis together with reviews, reducing the final sample to 352 articles. More than half of the 352 studies (56%) included at least some testing of a mobile phone application via proper interventions or in small samples. Most of the studies analyzed (86%) applied a quantitative methodology and were designed to address simultaneously one or more impact areas. An upsurge was noted, starting from 2008, when the articles doubled in comparison with the previous year, and this upward trend reached its maximum in 2011 (36% of the total in a 10-year time period). The search of scientific databases without a time limit yielded an article distribution on the topic over 10 years, from 2002 to 2012.

The final sample for the full-text review included 117 [17-133] articles out of the 352 described above. After title and abstract review, an additional 157 articles were excluded because of no actual testing, while another 78 were excluded during full-text revision for different reasons (eg, no patients involved, mobile device other than phone, study duplicates). Looking at this past decade (Figure 2), we again observed an upsurge in the field: from 1 article in 2002 to 30 articles in 2011. The largest upsurge again came between 2007 and 2008, when the articles almost doubled, similar to what was already noted during the abstract review phase.

In order to better reflect the objectives of our review and to mirror the development over time, all the results are presented by splitting our observation period in two halves (2002-2007 and 2008-2012). The first period includes 23 articles, while the second period includes 94. The 117 articles in the final sample were published in 77 different journals, which can be grouped in four disciplinary fields: technology, medicine, social sciences, and the intersection between technology and medicine. During the first half of the observed decade, most of the articles on mHealth were published in medical journals (52%) and in journals focused on medicine and technology (44%).The remaining 4% of articles were published in journals focused only on technology. In the second half, the share of articles published in medical journals grew from 52% to 60%, while coverage of the topic by technology journals did not change (4%). At the same time, a decrease in the share of articles published by journals dealing with medicine and technology was observed (from 44% to 35%). In the second period, we found one article from a new disciplinary field, the social sciences.

The geographical areas focusing on this type of research were mainly Europe (34%) and North America (33%). However, if we look at results split by time periods, Europe?s interest seems to decrease from the first period (52%) to the second (30%), and the same happens in Asia (from 17% to 10%). A different picture can be found on all the other continents, where the number of studies in the field increased. This is the case in North America (from 17% to 37%), Australia (from 13% to 15%), and especially Africa (from 0% to 6%) and South America (from 0% to 2%).

Specific health conditions addressed in the studies ranged from diabetes to mental health, from obesity to well-being and postoperative care. Figure 3 shows the number of articles for every health condition for which mHealth applications were studied. As shown in the graph, diabetes has received a great deal of attention. Moreover, after grouping the conditions into larger classes, it becomes clear that the focus of mHealth research is chronic conditions (74 studies), followed by prevention/well-being (22 studies), and acute conditions (21 studies).

In reviewing the background of the studies, we found that a description of the development of the intervention, and especially of how this was grounded, occurred more often in the second period (84%) than in the first (65%). During the last 5 years, only 1 study was uniquely theory-based (1%), while the majority was evidence-based (73%) or based both on theory and evidence (10%); 15 studies (16%) provided a more general description that was based on neither theory nor previous evidence.

From a methodological point of view, the majority of articles were clinical trials (50%), followed by pilot studies (44%). However, both of these study designs diminished over the last years of our observation period as new types of research designs were introduced, namely observational studies (2% of all articles in the second part of the observation period), case studies (2%), case series (2%), and cross-sectional studies (2%). The samples used to test mobile health applications were mostly small (less than 50 people) in both the first (61%) and the second half (49%) of our observation. Interestingly in the second half, the number of medium-sized samples increased (from 17% to 33%). Larger samples were used in 21 (19%) articles; however, they were more frequent in the first half of the observation (22%) than in the second half (18%).

Moving from research methodology to the actual target of investigation, ie, mobile phones, our classification highlighted a more rigorous and diversified description of the technology used in interventions. In recent years, new kinds of mobile phones have been used, such as smartphones (8%) and ad hoc phones (3%), which are devices developed specifically by the researchers to manage a specific condition. Unfortunately, the kind of mobile phone used was not even specified most of the time (71% of the overall sample).

We identified seven main categories of mobile features used in the studies, and an article could fall in one or more of these (ie, the categories were not mutually exclusive). Half of the studies (49%) applied text messaging, and 32% applied some features developed ad hoc for a specific condition. Add-ons (eg, a glucometer to measure blood sugar or a pedometer for physical activity) were used in 12% of the cases together with ad hoc features. Other features such as voice (10%), video (6%), and multimedia messaging service (MMS) (3%) were used less frequently. Native applications for smartphones were applied in 7 studies (6%) out of the 8 using smartphones. However, none of them applied already existing and publicly available apps.

The impact areas to which interventions were directed were coded into seven categories, again not mutually exclusive. The majority of articles addressed health promotion (38%) and self-management (33%), but also communication (22%), remote monitoring (21%), data gathering (21%), improvement of adherence (20%), and training/education (13%). The focus on most of these areas increased over time, eg, on self-management (from 30% to 33%) and communication (from 17% to 23%). Only health promotion (from 29% to 27%) and training/education (from 13% to 10%) had a slight decrease.

Regarding the aims of the interventions, both the evaluation of the technology itself (35%) and of its impact on health outcomes (43%) dominated in the first 5 years. In the second half, however, interest clearly moved toward evaluating the impact of mobile technology on health outcomes (73%). While the majority of the studies investigated only the impact of the mobile application on health outcomes (51%), some also assessed both the technology and its impact on health outcomes (22%).

Another point of interest was the outcome measure used to assess the impact of mobile phones. In the majority of cases, the outcome measures were a combination of both self-reported and objective data (44% of the overall sample). If we look at the evolution over time, self-reported measures increased (from 9% to 20%), whereas objective measures decreased slightly (from 39% to 36%), and this was also the case for the combination of self-reported and objective measures (from 52% to 43%).

Our examination of the type of data collected showed that clinical measures were often the only outcomes observed (30%), and this phenomenon increased over time (from 22% to 31%). 14% of the articles were focused only on user assessment of the technology, even if this decreased during the observation period (from 17% to 13%). Psychosocial measures were the outcome in 9% of the studies, and this increased slightly over time (from 9% to 10%). The remaining articles (53%) considered outcomes deriving from all possible combinations of these main three. The most frequent combination was clinical measures together with user assessment of technology (17%).

An overall positive impact of the intervention was described by a total of 69 studies (60%). In the first period, the impact of the interventions was mainly either mixed (43%) or positive (57%). In the second part of the observation, the number of interventions with a positive impact slightly increased (60%), while the number of those with mixed impact decreased (33%). In this second period, interventions with negative (6%) or no impact (1%) were reported as well.

Source: http://www.jmir.org/2013/5/e95/

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