POPULARITY
Los 100 años que cumple la emisora y la calidad de la programación local han sido determinantes para recibir este premio el próximo 30 de enero en Abades Triana, tal y como ha contado en Hoy por Hoy Sevilla Salvador Toscano, presidente de la AEPS
Join Matt Feret as he sits down with Olivia Richardson, the Vice President of Corporate Alliances at Senior Marketing Specialists, in this enlightening episode. With 11 AEPs under her belt, Olivia brings a wealth of experience and insights into the evolving world of Medicare. She's not just an executive but a passionate trainer dedicated to empowering advisors to offer the best services to beneficiaries. Discover the changes, challenges, and opportunities in Medicare, and garner invaluable tips to navigate this essential landscape. Olivia's dedication to making healthcare accessible to everyone makes this episode a must-watch!"This is the annual election period or the AEP. And even sometimes Medicare messes up and calls it the OEP at the open enrollment period. It's not, but basically it's the time period between October 1 and then October 15 to December 7 where people can make changes to their Medicare coverage." - Matt Feret"In the past, what you picked at 65 may not be what you need at 72. This year, what you picked at 65 may not be the same plan you needed at 66" - Olivia RichardsonFull episode transcript, notes, quotes and links:https://themattferetshow.com/episode/navigating-medicare-changes-with-expert-insights/ Be sure to check out my Insider's Guide to Retirement Books!PREPARE FOR MEDICARE BOOK LINK: https://amzn.to/3G4ZWbUPREPARE FOR MEDICARE WORKBOOK LINK: https://amzn.to/39H7cP4PREPARE FOR SOCIAL SECURITY BOOK LINK: https://amzn.to/44IUbwwPREPARE FOR SOCIAL SECURITY WORKBOOK LINK: https://amzn.to/42HF6JBPASSWORD BOOK LINK: https://amzn.to/3LnHCxRFIND US AThttps://themattferetshow.comhttps://prepareformedicare.comhttps://prepareforsocialsecurity.comFOLLOW ME ON SOCIALTwitter: https://twitter.com/feret_mattFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/themattferetshow/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/prepareformedicareInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/matt_feret/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.07.12.548657v1?rss=1 Authors: Retsa, C., Turpin, H., Geiser, E., Ansermet, F., Muller-Nix, C., Murray, M. M. Abstract: More than 10% of births are preterm, and the long-term consequences on sensory and semantic processing of non-linguistic information remain poorly understood. 17 very preterm-born children (born at less than 33 weeks gestational age) and 15 full-term controls were tested at 10 years old with an auditory object recognition task, while 64-channel auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) were recorded. Sounds consisted of living (animal and human vocalizations) and manmade objects (e.g. household objects, instruments, and tools). Despite similar recognition behavior, AEPs strikingly differed between full-term and preterm children. Starting at 50ms post-stimulus onset, AEPs from preterm children differed topographically from their full-term counterparts. Over the 108-224ms post-stimulus period, full-term children showed stronger AEPs in response to living objects, whereas preterm born children showed the reverse pattern; i.e. stronger AEPs in response to manmade objects. Differential brain activity between semantic categories could reliably classify children according to their preterm status. Moreover, this opposing pattern of differential responses to semantic categories of sounds was also observed in source estimations within a network of occipital, temporal and frontal regions. This study highlights how early life experience in terms of preterm birth shapes sensory and object processing later on in life. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info Podcast created by Paper Player, LLC
Welcome Back Drones to our new Season on the Podcast. This time we're bringing you into a new format with some late night vibes and discussions. Join Paradox and Mastermind as they talk about their Nostalgia, past experiences, and what gets them there. Also Mastermind sees some UFOs or AEPs whatever and Paradox gives you a little news update on the terrific anime BLEACH. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kevin-wilson-and-mandi-sellers/support
Joelene Murdoch, who is a MSK and women's health physiotherapist and one of the directors of The Physiotherapy Clinic, joins the podcast to talk about an upcoming conference you are all invited to called Paving the Best way Forward for the Female Athlete taking place in Sydney on May 13, 2022. This conference is for anyone interested in in female athletes, sports physicians, physios, S&C coaches, AEPs, coaches and more. There is the potential for online access at a later date - listen up and stay tuned. Hope to see you there! Details HERE
Amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, the banking world witnessed a huge surge in transactions, one such payment infrastructure was AePS in India. Many providers and government DBT schemes resorted to AePS which led to a huge demand for cash withdrawal by the vulnerable part of the society. This became a much severe issue during the migrant worker's crisis who had to uproot their lives and depend on microATMs for their travel and survival. The issue got accentuated when reports of a spike in transaction failure rates started flooding in. This had serious consequences for the masses who desperately needed to access and remit cash to stay afloat during the crisis. In this episode, we are joined by Malavika Raghavan to talk about the role of technology in enabling financial inclusion, especially among lower-income individuals. Malavika joined London School of Economics this September as a Ph.D. candidate. She is an interdisciplinary researcher working on data protection & privacy, inclusion, technology and consumer protection in finance. She founded and led the Future of Finance Initiative for Dvara Research in partnership with the Gates Foundation from 2016 until 2020, anchoring its research agenda and policy advocacy on issues at the intersection of technology, finance and inclusion. She serves on the Steering Committees of the Digital Identity Research Initiative (DIRI) at the Indian School of Business, and the Steering Committee of the Data Governance Network at the IDFC Institute. She is a member of the Asian Privacy Scholars Network. In this episode, we discuss the role of technology in enabling financial inclusion, especially among lower-income individuals. The discussion draws on Malavika's research into the gaps in the AePS and their implications (conducted in May 2020). You can find the link to the report titled, "Transaction failure rates in the Aadhaar enabled Payment System: Urgent issues for consideration and proposed solutions", below: https://www.dvara.com/research/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Transaction-failure-rates-in-the-Aadhaar-enabled-Payment-System-Urgent-issues-for-consideration-and-proposed-solutions.pdf
Sam Queeno is the Director of Digital Identity and Physical Security for a major utility: American Electric Power (AEP). We have a great conversation around the journey toward AEPs convergence of physical and logical security, first organizationally, then through the baby steps they are taking with the tools. The conversation then became centered on something all security leaders consider a less then desirable situation: when something bad is happening and you are the last one to know. This led to a focus on proactive intelligence, first with the hiring of a leader with an analyst background, the manual gathering of information on persons of interest (POI), and eventually the digital transformation of the intelligence gathering process through the purchase of a protective intelligence platform. (Ontic) “We now have intelligence served up to us”, said Sam. Public records from disparate sources are organized, stored, managed, and delivered to the key people on Sam's team. However, what Sam said later was telling. I was looking for business and security executives applauding his team's progress. He corrected that assumption by acknowledging this is the baseline everyone expects their program to have. “This is expected”, said Sam.
Episode 22 is all about the solar market in our great state of Pennsylvania. Laura Rigell was Director of the Philadelphia Energy Authority at the time of this recording and has since moved on to new and exciting things. She was joined by C. Baird Brown, principal at eco(n)law and legal counsel for the PEA. Baird shares his perspective on the state of solar here in PA, including an overview of AEPS, net metering, the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, and roadblocks / issues we need to address in order for solar to blossom here. Emily discusses the discrepancy they (the PEA) discovered in the way Net Metering was being implemented in PA, and what her team and Baird have done to right the issue.
I detta avsnitt så pratar Jonathan och Elias om pistoler! Vad finns det för olika alternativ och vad ska man tänka på? Tyvärr så är ljudkvalitén kass detta avsnitt men det hindrar oss inte ifrån att leverera till folket! Vidare så försvann Elias ljud under de sista 5 minuterna vilket gör att vi tyvärr inte täcker AEPs men det kommer i framtiden!Glöm inte att spana in Tactical Stores hemsida för dina villhöver, rabattkoden WestnyGames ger dig 10%!COLT SAA PEACEMAKERCOLT JUNIOR BLACKTOKYO MARUI T17 (Glock17)WE EU17 GBB (Glock17)ASG P09CYBERGUN COLT M1911ASG CZ SP-01 WE HI-CAPA 5.1 GEN.2ASG MK23
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.09.25.313809v1?rss=1 Authors: Bruzzone, S. E. P., Haumann, N. T., Kliuchko, M., Vuust, P., Brattico, E. Abstract: Overlapping neurophysiological signals are the main obstacle preventing from using cortical event-related potentials (ERPs) in clinical settings. Children ERPs are particularly affected by this problem, as their cerebral cortex is still maturing. To overcome this problem, we applied a new version of Spike-density Component Analysis (SCA), an analysis method recently introduced, to isolate with high accuracy the neural components of auditory ERP responses (AEPs) in 8-year-old children. Electroencephalography was used with 33 children to record AEPs to auditory stimuli varying in spectrotemporal features. Three different analysis approaches were adopted: the standard ERP analysis procedure, SCA with template-match (SCA-TM), and SCA with half-split average consistency (SCA-HSAC). SCA-HSAC most successfully allowed the extraction of AEPs for each child, revealing that the most consistent components were P1 and N2. An immature N1 component was also detected. Superior accuracy in isolating neural components at the individual level even in children was demonstrated for SCA-HSAC over other SCA approaches. Reliable methods of extraction of neurophysiological signals at the individual level are crucial for the application of cortical AEPs for routine diagnostic exams in clinical settings both in children and adults. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
Today, in solar..... Pennsylvania! PA is a notoriously complex place as it relates to energy. Jared and Micah talk through the short history and basic policies in Pennsylvania, and review available incentive programs like Solarize programs and the Philadelphia Solar Rebate. In this episode: Short history of Pennsylvania solar policy Overview of the Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards (AEPS) SRECs and their relationship to the AEPS Solarize Philadelphia Philadelphia Solar Rebate Deregulated Electric Markets
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.06.09.142950v1?rss=1 Authors: Garrett, M., Vasilkov, V., Mauermann, M., Wilson, J. L., Henry, K. S., Verhulst, S. Abstract: Damage to auditory-nerve-fiber synapses (i.e. cochlear synaptopathy) degrades the neural coding of sound and is predicted to impair sound perception in noisy listening environments. However, establishing a causal relationship between synaptopathy and speech intelligibility is difficult because we have no direct access to synapse counts in humans. Hence, we rely on the quality of noninvasive auditory-evoked potential (AEP) markers developed in rodent studies of histologically-verified synaptopathy. However, there are a number of reasons which render the interpretation of these markers in humans difficult. To bridge this translational gap, we apply a multi-method approach to enable a meaningful interpretation of the relationship between the histopathology of sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) and speech perception. We first selected a synaptopathy-sensitive AEP marker and verified its sensitivity (i) in an animal model using a Kainic-acid induced synaptopathy, and (ii), via auditory model simulations which connect the histopathology of SNHL to the source generators of AEPs. Secondly, we restricted the frequency content of the speech-material to ensure that both AEP and speech metrics targeted similar cochlear frequency regions and associated auditory coding mechanisms. Following this approach, we studied the relative contribution of AEP markers of synaptopathy and hearing sensitivity to speech recognition thresholds in 44 listeners (24 women) of different ages and SNHL profiles. Our analysis shows that synaptopathy plays an important role for speech intelligibility in noise, but that outer-hair-cell integrity predicts performance in the absence of noise. Our results corroborate conclusions from animal studies regarding the prevalence of age-related synaptopathy, and its occurrence before outer-hair-cell loss damage. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.06.05.136184v1?rss=1 Authors: Vasilkov, V., Garrett, M., Mauermann, M., Verhulst, S. Abstract: Auditory de-afferentation, a permanent reduction in the number of inner-hair-cells and auditory-nerve synapses due to cochlear synaptopathy or damage, can reliably be quantified using temporal bone histology and immunostaining. There is, however, an urgent need for non-invasive markers of synaptopathy to study its perceptual consequences in live humans and to develop effective therapeutic interventions. While animal studies have identified candidate auditory-evoked-potential (AEP) based markers for synaptopathy, their interpretation in humans has suffered from translational issues related to neural generator differences, unknown hearing-damage histopathologies or measurement sensitivity. To render AEP-based markers of synaptopathy more robust and differential to the synaptopathy aspect of sensorineural hearing loss, we followed a combined computational and experimental approach. Starting from the known characteristics of auditory-nerve physiology, we optimized the stimulus envelope for envelope-following-responses (EFRs) to optimally and synchronously stimulate the available auditory-nerve population and consequently generate a strong AEP. We additionally used model simulations to explore which stimuli evoked a response which was sensitive to synaptopathy, while being insensitive to possible co-existing outer-hair-cell pathologies. We compared the model-predicted trends to AEPs recorded in younger and older listeners (N=44, 24f) who either had normal or impaired audiograms. We conclude that optimal stimulation paradigms for EFR-based quantification of synaptopathy should have sharply rising envelope shapes, a minimal plateau duration of 1.7-2.1 ms for a 120 Hz modulation rate, and inter-peak intervals which contain near-zero amplitudes. From our recorded conditions, the optimal EFR-evoking stimulus had a rectangular envelope shape with a 25% duty cycle and a 95% modulation depth. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
MachNation's Josh Taubenheim talks with IoT application enablement platform (AEP) vendors about many topics. One of the first questions is often about the definition of an IoT AEP and various technology aspects that separate excellent from poor-quality AEPs. In our quick conversation, we talk to Josh about IoT platforms and platform capabilities. We focus on the definition of IoT AEPs and what it takes to be a best-in-class AEP. Finally, Josh shares some final thoughts […]
The IoT platform is generally thought of as networking tech – middleware to connect all the IoT components together – and often it is, but a certain class of platforms, the so-called, application enablement platforms, or AEPs, also provide the development and execution environment for the digital twin. In this episode of the IoT Business Show, the third in a series on the digital twin, I speak with Jason Schern and Jeff Miller about the dt and its relationship to the AEP. Read the rest of the show analysis notes including the transcripts at: http://bit.ly/IoTPodcast86notes This show is brought to you by DIGITAL OPERATING PARTNERS Related links you may find useful: Season 1: Episodes and show notes Season 1 book: IoT Inc Season 2: Episodes and show notes Season 2 book: The Private Equity Digital Operating Partner Training: Digital transformation certification
Bibliotecas Escolares do Agrupamento Escolas de Ponte de Sor
As Bibliotecas Escolares no AEPS
Prashant Mali, expert in cyber and privacy law, talks about India’s evolving privacy culture and the need for additional security and privacy dialogue in the country’s government-led Smart Cities Mission. He shares his perspective on how technology can be used to solve real-world problems, and discusses India’s AePS (Aadhar-enabled Payment System) through a local privacy and security lens.
Paired associative stimulation (PAS) consisting of repeated application of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) pulses and contingent exteroceptive stimuli has been shown to induce neuroplastic effects in the motor and somatosensory system. The objective was to investigate whether the auditory system can be modulated by PAS. Acoustic stimuli (4 kHz) were paired with TMS of the auditory cortex with intervals of either 45 ms (PAS(45 ms)) or 10 ms (PAS(10 ms)). Two-hundred paired stimuli were applied at 0.1 Hz and effects were compared with low frequency repetitive TMS (rTMS) at 0.1 Hz (200 stimuli) and 1 Hz (1000 stimuli) in eleven healthy students. Auditory cortex excitability was measured before and after the interventions by long latency auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) for the tone (4 kHz) used in the pairing, and a control tone (1 kHz) in a within subjects design. Amplitudes of the N1-P2 complex were reduced for the 4 kHz tone after both PAS(45 ms) and PAS(10 ms), but not after the 0.1 Hz and 1 Hz rTMS protocols with more pronounced effects for PAS(45 ms). Similar, but less pronounced effects were observed for the 1 kHz control tone. These findings indicate that paired associative stimulation may induce tonotopically specific and also tone unspecific human auditory cortex plasticity.
Medizinische Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU - Teil 03/19
Der Meningitis-assoziierte Hörschaden ist trotz Antibiotikatherapie und intensivmedizinischer Versorgung der Patienten inakzeptabel hoch. Grund des Hörverlusts bei bakterieller Meningitis ist bisher weitgehend unbekannt und sollte im Rahmen dieser Promotion näher untersucht werden. Dazu wurde ein Ratten- und ein Mausmodell des Hörschadens bei Pneumokokkenmeningitis etabliert. Nach intrathekaler Injektion von Streptococcus pneumoniae wurde das Muster des Hörverlusts mittels AEPs im Akutstadium und nach erfolgreicher Antibiotikatherapie charakterisiert. Die Charakteristik des Hörschadens war ähnlich wie sie bei Patienten mit Meningitis beobachtet wird: Der Inokulum-abhängige Hörschaden war in der Akutphase der Erkrankung teilweise transient, mündete aber meistens in einen permanenten Hörverlust. Hohe Frequenzen waren dabei stärker betroffen als niedrige Frequenzen. Als morphologisches Korrelat des akuten Hörverlusts fand sich eine granulozytäre Entzündung der Perilymphräume, die in der basalen Windung der Scala tympani akzentuiert war. Neben der eitrigen Entzündung konnte erstmals auch eine Störung der Blut-Labyrinth-Schranke identifiziert werden, die in der Akutphase der Erkrankung sehr stark mit dem Hörschaden korrelierte. Die immunhistochemisch beobachtete starke Expression von iNOS, eNOS und Nitrotyrosin in Kochleae von infizierten Tieren und die protektive Wirkung der ONOO- Fänger und Antioxidantien MnTBAP und Harnsäure deuten auf ONOO- als Mediator der Blut-Labyrinth- Schädigung im Akutstadium hin. Die im Akutstadium nachweisbare neuronale Nekrose (Histologie, TUNEL, PARP p85-Spaltprodukt Immunhistochemie) mündete in eine verminderte Neuronendichte im Ganglion spirale. Dieser Neuronenverlust war zwei Wochen nach Infektion neben einer fibrozytären Okklusion der perilymphatischen Räume (beginnende Labyrinthitis ossificans) äußerst stark mit dem Hörverlust korreliert und scheint hauptverantwortlich für den Langzeithörschaden nach Pneumokokkenmeningitis zu sein. Zum ersten Mal konnte in dieser Studie eine otoprotektive Wirkung für die Antioxidantien MnTBAP und NAC bei Meningitis-assoziierter eitriger Labyrinthitis gezeigt werden: Zwei Wochen nach Infektion waren der Hörverlust und dessen morphologische Korrelate (Neuronenverlust, Okklusion der Perilymphräume und Blut-Labyrinth-Schrankenstörung) bei den adjuvant behandelten Tieren geringer ausgeprägt als bei den nur antibiotisch behandelten Tieren. Vor allem der Therapieerfolg von NAC ist klinisch viel versprechend und lässt auf eine verbesserte Therapie des Meningitis-assoziierten Hörschadens hoffen.