Monday, February 08, 2021

What Can Covid-19 Teach Us About the Mysteries of Smell?

 Stefan He Qin, 24, Australian man pleads guilty in $US90m cryptocurrency scam case



The best Super Bowl ads: Bruce Springsteen urges Americans to unite, Fiverr mocks Rudy Giuliani's press event at Four Seasons Landscaping and Robinhood app appeals for even more investors


Shifts in global bat diversity suggest a possible role of climate change in the emergence of SARS-CoV-1 and SARS-CoV-2Science 


What If the COVID Pandemic Never Really Ends? New York Magazine 

 

The UK put a venture capitalist in charge of its vaccine procurement.


When Will Life Return to Normal? In 7 Years at Today’s Vaccine Rates Financial Post


Children and COVID-19 spread Harvard Medical School. Kids have high viral loads


How the COVID-19 Vaccine Rollout Was Hobbled by Turf Wars and Magical ThinkingVanity Fair 


America’s Soviet-Style Vaccine RolloutAtlantic


What Can Covid-19 Teach Us About the Mysteries of Smell? 

The New York Times – “…We think that smell is less important to us than our other senses only because we’re fooling ourselves, Sobel told me. After all, you wouldn’t eat a beautiful cake if it smelled like sewage, but you would probably try some ugly gloop that smelled like cinnamon. Covid, he hypothesized, could kick off a sort of global reckoning, forcing our conscious minds to recognize what our brains have known all along. “People are unaware smell is important until they lose it,” he said. “And then they’re terrified.” The growing messof emails that followed Hopkins’s alert in March quickly became so unwieldy that the scientists decided to move to a more formalized group. Within days, it had 500 members, from dozens of countries, and a name: the Global Consortium for Chemosensory Research. (The group eventually stabilized at around 630 members, from 64 countries.) “We decided to become a global organization,” explained Valentina Parma, a psychologist who, along with Reed and seven others, helped found the G.C.C.R.’s leadership committee. “We all got together to try to figure out what’s going on….

In a matter of weeks, 40,000 people took the survey, and the members of the G.C.C.R. began to search for patterns in the data. They quickly establishedthat people who lost smell and tested positive for the coronavirus weren’t encountering the typical nasal blockage — they often referred to the loss as “sudden” and “creepy” — and that they were also noticing genuine impairments not just to their olfaction but in many cases to their taste and trigeminal sensations as well. This clearly wasn’t the typical pathology of smell loss following a virus. The scientists also noticed that a disconnect was forming between what the data showed and how the wider world responded. Early on, data from apps for tracking symptoms showed that smell loss was more common than the fever or cough the virus was known for; it also had the diagnostic advantage of pointing directly to Covid, rather than to another respiratory illness. And yet schools and restaurants and airports continued to use forehead thermometers to screen for fevers — a symptom that many people with Covid never experienced. Later G.C.C.R. analysis showed that smell loss was, in fact, the most reliable predictor of Covid, and that this was true even for people assessing their own smell loss (which, research has shown, is something people tend to be quite bad at). Reed and other researchers also found that objective smell tests, in which patients have to prove themselves against actual stimuli, were able to catch many extra Covid cases among people who failed to realize when their sense of smell had changed. “The better we ask questions about smell,” Parma says, “the more people we find.”..

 

How to Add a Link to an Instagram Story – 7 Inventive Ways

Bulkly – “There’s no way you haven’t heard of Instagram Stories; easily one of the biggest social media features in the world for both personal and social users and businesses alike. With the average Instagram user now using the IG app for an extra ten minutes, on average, since the introduction of the feature, this is the prime way to connect with users and get your content in from of them. You probably already know how to add a link to an Instagram story. However, while this is a very popular and creative feature, getting traffic, leading people onto other places, such as a sales funnel, or basically giving anyone else the ability to go further with what you’re offering, the feature is very limited. It’s only if you have over 10,000 followers, or you’re a verified Instagram user, that you’ll be able to use the Swipe-Up link feature. So, if you don’t have 10,000 followers and you’re not verified, how can you get links into your stories? It doesn’t matter what this link is, whether you’re driving traffic to your website, promoting a new product, or highlighting a new event, today we’re going to explore and detail the best ways to make that happen through your stories…” [h/t Marcus Zillman]



Umberto Eco’s personal library

Tweet and video via @TedGioia who writes on music, literature and popular culture – “I once got to meet Umberto Eco—who was very memorable. But this film clip of him tracking down a book in his personal library makes him seem all the more impressive.” [worth waiting for 60 seconds!]