Daily Archives: March 5, 2017

Mind the gap: burn and destroy mission in Bengal fields leaves a few questions – Hindustan Times

Posted: March 5, 2017 at 4:17 pm

From cursory field clearing process to bewildered farmers, inadequate kerosene to half-finished burning of the affected plots, there are just too many gaps in the suspected control symptoms of wheat blast mission that the Bengal government has undertaken in a war footing mode.

Wheat blast is a deadly disease caused by fungus Magnaporthe oryzae. Symptoms similar to this disease that wrecked havoc in April 2016 in Bangladesh (forcing authorities to destroy standing crops on nearly 20,000 hectares) showed up in two districts of Bengal Nadia and Murshidabad. Alarm bells rang in Bengal and Delhi and the Mamata Banerjee government ordered destruction and burning of the wheat on about 1,000 hectare in these districts on an emergency basis.

Central government officers visited Bengal and held meetings with us. There is no other way than to burn the crops. Primarily the symptoms look like what blast. We have to contain it because it will be devastating if it spreads. We have pressed in men and materials at the villages. However, it is a huge exercise and some shortcomings may be there. We are trying our best, said Purnendu Bose, state agriculture minister.

A farmer in Nadia shows the remains of his field after government officials set fire . Part of the crop remained unburnt. (Subhankar Chakraborty/HT PHOTO)

But a visit to some of the affected fields of Chapra blocks of Nadia district on Saturday by HT team exposed quite a few gaps resulting in some of the affected crops remaining untouched.

Read: Deadly wheat blast symptoms enters India through the Bangladesh border, Bengal govt burning crops on war footing

There seems to be fewer agriculture personnel in the districts who can ensure a fool-proof destruction of each and every strand of the wheat crop. They were visiting the fields, since morning but they dont have enough machines to fell the crops and burn them.

The government employees want the farmers to take the initiative to destroy their harvest. But they were suffering from the shock of the disease and the resultant financial loss. The government has announced a compensation, but it is not adequate to cover our loss. Moreover, we have no idea when the money will be paid to us, said Sixty-year-old Dulal Sheikh of Sonpukur village in Chapra Block in Nadia, situated barely 8 kms away from the Bangladesh border.

Bengal government has deployed combined harvester machines to clear the fields. But the numbers of such machines are far less than needed. (Subhankar Chakraborty/HT PHOTO)

They set fire to my field. But a lot of it remains. How will I clear all of it? Who will pay for it? I have already lost the crop, said Dulal Sheikh. The administration is offering Rs 50,375 as compensation for crop destroyed of per hectare.

The scene was the same at Sonpukur, Hatikhola, Mohotpur, Sikra and other villages in Nadia near the Indo-Bangladesh border.

On Saturday, a harvester machine felled more than half the crop on his 12.5 cottah field. But the machine has many fields to work on Saturday was the deadline set by the government for destruction of the crops and has to leave.

The government officials present at the spot set fire to the crops, but they had to leave even if half the crop was not burnt. As the HT team found out, merely setting fire to the crop could not ensure their destruction only the crop ripe for harvest would burn, while the unripe green ones would not.

Goverment officer speaking to villagers in Nadia. There is a need for more officers on the ground to cover all the affected villages. (Subhankar Chakraborty/HT PHOTO)

There were unexpected hurdles.

There is not even sufficient kerosene needed to effectively burn the entire crop. The unripe ones dont burn properly and remain. We are therefore seeking the help of the farmers, said an officer on conditions of anonymity.

At some areas authorities are asking farmers to cut the crop and burn it themselves, making a visit later.

The ramifications can be dangerous. Agri experts conceded that if the fungus crosses the borders of Bengal to reach the wheat basket in the Hindi heartland, the effects can be disastrous.

The record books, however, are unlikely to show these gaps. Government officers are recording the culling and burning process taking a few snaps of the field, the farmers and uploading the information along with the coordinates of the plot on a government website at the end of the day.

Read: Ground Zero: Farmers stare helplessly as govt race against time to contain spread of wheat blast like symptoms

In some fields the fungus, however, may continue to thrive and spread. The disease was first identified in 1985 in Brazil, and thereafter it spread to Bolivia and Paraguay. Last year it spread in six districts of Bangladesh.

Read this article:

Mind the gap: burn and destroy mission in Bengal fields leaves a few questions - Hindustan Times

Posted in Mind Uploading | Comments Off on Mind the gap: burn and destroy mission in Bengal fields leaves a few questions – Hindustan Times

Augmented and Virtual Reality Spending to Double in 2017 – T.H.E. Journal

Posted: at 4:17 pm

Virtual Reality

As virtual and augmented reality make their way into the mainstream market, a new spending analysis from International Data Corp (IDC) predicts worldwide revenues will double this year.

The research firms Worldwide Semiannual Augmented and Virtual Reality Spending Guide forecasts the AR/VR market to reach $13.9 billion in 2017 up 130.5 percent from the $6.1 billion spent in 2016. Furthermore, AR/VR spending is expected to accelerate over the next several years, achieving a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 198 percent over the 2015-2020 forecast period and reaching $143.3 billion in 2020.

Most of the spending during the forecast period is expected to come from the consumer market, with early adopters expected to spend $6.2 billion this year (up 130.5 percent from 2016). Worldwide spending on VR hardware, software, consulting services and other systems is forecast to surpass AR systems spending this year and next year, largely due to consumer update of games and paid content, according to a news release. However, AR will leapfrog VR spending in 2018, hitting stride in healthcare delivery, product design and management-related use cases.

"On the virtual reality side, producers are quickly moving beyond games to create new content mainstream audiences will embrace, said Tom Mainelli, IDCs Devices & AR/VR program president, in a news release. And on the augmented reality side of the fence we're seeing commercial entities begin to more seriously evaluate the technology and begin to test the waters of app development."

"We expect initial AR spending to lean on mobile workforce-based use cases, where AR headsets are a natural enhancement to existing mobility investments. And we will see education, research and design applications form a foundation of adoption in professional environments, said Marcus Torchia, IDC research director, in a news release.

Geographically, the United States is expected to spend $4.3 billion on AR/VR in 2017. The Asia/Pacific region (excluding Japan) will deliver $2.6 billion, followed by Western Europe with $2.5 billion. The consumer market will be the largest segment of AR/VR spending for all three regions.

To learn more, visit the IDC site.

About the Author

Sri Ravipati is Web producer for THE Journal and Campus Technology. She can be reached at sravipati@1105media.com.

View post:

Augmented and Virtual Reality Spending to Double in 2017 - T.H.E. Journal

Posted in Virtual Reality | Comments Off on Augmented and Virtual Reality Spending to Double in 2017 – T.H.E. Journal

Sloan 2017: Virtual Reality in Sports Still Has a ‘Long Way to Go,’ Panel Says – BizTech Magazine

Posted: at 4:17 pm

The first reaction most fans have when they put on a virtual reality headset is Oh, generally followed by an expletive, said David Cramer, chief operating officer of NextVR.

Its the hardest thing to describe and the easiest thing to show them when you strap the display on their face, added Cramer, a panelist at a forum on VR and augmented reality at the MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference in Boston.

But VR faces some challenges as it seeks to gain a foothold in the sports and entertainment industry. Panelists described the evolutionary path of VR as being in the first inning. And companies developing the technology have a long way to go before they achieve its potential.

To this point, the sports and entertainment industry has used VR for two distinct purposes: training simulations and enhanced fan experiences.

The VR firm STRIVR Labs, based in Stanford, Calif., has focused on using the technology to help improve athletes performance. The company started working with several NCAA football teams and one NFL team (the Dallas Cowboys) in 2015. The technology uses 360-degree cameras to give athletes a first-person vantage point of the experience on the field.

Derek Belch, founder and CEO of STRIVR Labs, says VR is most often used for training by football teams. The fluidity of other sports such as soccer and basketball makes it a challenge for VR to provide a useful experience for training at this point.

STRIVR is working with two Major League Baseball teams, three NBA teams and some MLS teams but the technology just isnt ready yet. Right now, American football really is the best use case.

The technology is beneficial for players to use as a last-minute visualization tool as they prepare for a game. It is also useful for backup players to get practice repetitions in VR that they may not get in a live practice, where starters get the vast majority of the reps.

The training use case for VR has experienced some success. Belch said athletes conducted more than 100,000 play views on the STRIVR platform over the last two years, and the company has posted a profit. Were making money, Belch said.

Delivering content to fans via VR has much greater market potential, but adoption of the technology is slow. The steps that have been taken offer a look at some of VRs potential.

San Francisco-based VR firm LiveLike has created virtual reality experiences for NCAA football games, including the Big 10 championship game, said Miheer Walavalkar, co-founder and chief business officer of LiveLike. The VR gives users the opportunity to interact with the environment and create their own experience.

After New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady threw an interception that was returned for a touchdown in Super Bowl 51, Intel was able to give fans a VR view of the play from Bradys perspective, said James Carwana, general manager of Intel Sports Group.

Our goal is to give the fan the experience of sitting in the best seat in the house, said Cramer of NextVR, In some cases, its better.

For basketball games, the company sets up cameras at numerous spots around the arena, including courtside, at center court and on the basket stanchion. This provides views of the action that are unavailable from anywhere else.

Cramer added that NextVR is also working on VR experiences for music concerts.

The technology, however, still has some issues that are hampering adoption. Users demand more content, and in some ways the technology is stuck in a difficult loop: Fans are generally unwilling to invest in VR hardware unless they have a lot of content to experience, Walavalkar said, but content producers have been waiting for a stable market for their product to emerge.

Further, many VR devices are clunky and uncomfortable, and the resolution isnt up to some fans expectations, Cramer said. Headsets are likely to remain the primary VR hardware, but the devices will become more comfortable and powerful as the technology continues to evolve. He predicted that prices will fall and new features will be added to boost interest in VR.

Ultimately, the technology remains in its earliest stages, and it has significant progress to make before the industry achieves widespread adoption.

Its still a long way to go, Carwana said.

To learn more about how CDW can help your team make better use of its data, visitCDW.com/stadium.

View post:

Sloan 2017: Virtual Reality in Sports Still Has a 'Long Way to Go,' Panel Says - BizTech Magazine

Posted in Virtual Reality | Comments Off on Sloan 2017: Virtual Reality in Sports Still Has a ‘Long Way to Go,’ Panel Says – BizTech Magazine

Does Trump’s ‘Weaponized AI Propaganda Machine’ Hold Water? – Forbes

Posted: at 4:16 pm


Forbes
Does Trump's 'Weaponized AI Propaganda Machine' Hold Water?
Forbes
As today's fake news crisis grows, AI may be our only hope to cut through the propaganda but in the wrong hands, AI is also a powerful propaganda tool in its ...

and more »

View post:

Does Trump's 'Weaponized AI Propaganda Machine' Hold Water? - Forbes

Posted in Ai | Comments Off on Does Trump’s ‘Weaponized AI Propaganda Machine’ Hold Water? – Forbes

Investors Place Their Bet on AI-Generated Music – TOP500 News

Posted: at 4:16 pm

Amper, a startup that has offers an AI platform that composes new music, is garnering the attention of venture capitalists. Last week it attracting $4 million in additional funding, adding to a previous round of seed funding that took place last year.

The new infusion of money came was led by Two Sigma Ventures, along with some help from Foundry Group, Kiwi Venture Partners and Advancit Capital. Last October, Brooklyn Bridge Ventures invested a smaller undetermined amount, probably something between $250,000 and $500,000.

Amper was created by musical composers Drew Silverstein, Sam Estes, and Michael Hobe, whose livliehoods, at least up until recently, relied on creating compositions to sell to other musicians or media artists. But the AI platform they developed writes its own musical creations, and allows anyone to guide the process, whether or not they have a musical background. The results are surprisingly good, and at least to the untrained ear, would be hard to discern from a composition by an actual trained musician. The idea is not to create the great symphonies, but rather fairly short musical scores that can be incorporatedinto other media content. An example is provided below.

The idea, according to Ampers founders, is not to replace composers, but to make it easier for artists with limited resources, especially those involved in lower budget efforts like commercials, online videos, and band startups, get access to music at cut-rate prices. In general, its not economically feasible to contract a composer for such projects, so this is opening up a largely untapped market. Currently, Amper is providing free access to the technology, but when the business is up and running, presumably there will be some sort of reasonable user fee to contend with.

Anyone interested in tapping into your inner Beethoven can go to the website, and give Amper a spin. You basically guide the musical composition, using a variety of parameters mood & style, instrumentation, tempo and duration. Then you hit the Render button, and presto, you have a composition. Again, youre not going to win any Grammys with this, but for quick-and-dirty musical scores, its an impressive product.

Ampers not the only music-generating AI. A short list would include FlowComposer (from Flow Machines) and Jukedeck, and there are research efforts underway at Google, IBM and elsewhere. One gets the feeling that AI music composition is just getting started.

See original here:

Investors Place Their Bet on AI-Generated Music - TOP500 News

Posted in Ai | Comments Off on Investors Place Their Bet on AI-Generated Music – TOP500 News

Three Israeli Firms Among Top 50 Artificial Intelligence Companies – TheTower.org

Posted: at 4:16 pm

Fortune magazine last week released a list of 50 Companies Leading the AI Revolution, and the prestigious list includes three hot Israeli companies in the artificial intelligence sector: Logz.io, Voyager Labs, and Zebra Medical Vision.

Fortunes infographic includes only six countries and features an equal number of notable AI companies from Israel (population 8.5 million) as China (population 1.38 billion) and the United Kingdom, and more than France and Taiwan. Only the United States has more companies on the graph.

Fortune relied on research firm CB Insights AI 100 list of the most promising artificial intelligence startups globally, based on factors like financing history, investor quality, business category, and momentum.

The CB Insights list also includes Israeli companies Prospera Technologies (ag-tech at work in Spain, Mexico, and New York) and Chorus.ai (conversation intelligence for sales teams).

A look at the 50 largest startups on the list, ranked by total funds raised, shows that investment in AI is surging worldwide, Fortune writes. That number in 2016 was $5 billion.

Logz.ios AI-powered log analysis platform helps DevOps engineers, system administrators, and developers centralize log data with dashboards and visualizations and discover critical insights within their data.

Voyager Labs, established in 2012, has raised $100 million and recently came out of stealth mode with its artificial intelligence engine to extract real-time tailored insights into human behavior by analyzing massive amounts of publicly available unstructured data. The company has R&D roots in Tel Aviv, and offices in New York, Washington, and London.

Zebra Medical, whose technology teaches computers to read medical images, last month unveiled a new algorithm to detect compression and other vertebral fractures, and was named on Fast Companys Top 10 AI list.

(via Israel21c)

[Photo: A Health Blog / Flickr ]

See the rest here:

Three Israeli Firms Among Top 50 Artificial Intelligence Companies - TheTower.org

Posted in Artificial Intelligence | Comments Off on Three Israeli Firms Among Top 50 Artificial Intelligence Companies – TheTower.org

Immortality (Celine Dion song) – Wikipedia

Posted: at 4:15 pm

"Immortality" is a single from Celine Dion's album Let's Talk About Love. It was released on 8 June 1998 outside the United States. The Bee Gees can be heard on the background vocals, and are credited as special guests on/for the recording.[1] It was used as a theme song for the Brazilian telenovela "Torre de Babel". For that occasion was release a promo CD Single only in Brazil with various remixes.

"Immortality" was composed especially for Dion by brothers Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb, and Maurice Gibb, the members of the Bee Gees, and was produced by Walter Afanasieff. A demo version of the song featuring just the brothers can be found on subsequent greatest hits albums of the Bee Gees.

There are two music videos. The first one, directed by Scott Floyd Lochmus, shows Dion and the Bee Gees in the recording studio in 1997. It was included as a bonus on the Au cur du stade DVD. The second one was directed by Randee St. Nicholas and released at the end of July 1998. This more elaborate video deals with themes of love, loss and reincarnation, with a cameo from the Bee Gees themselves.

The song was a commercial success reaching number 2 in Austria and Germany, number 4 in Europe, number 5 in the United Kingdom, and number 8 in Switzerland. In Brazil, the Cuca mixes became very popular. However, the track was never released as a single in the United States, where Sony Music Entertainment instead decided to release "To Love You More."

"Immortality" was certified platinum in Germany (for over 500,000 copies sold), gold in Sweden (15,000),[2] and silver in France (145,000)[3] and the UK (200,000).

The live version of this song was included on the One Night Only CD and DVD by the Bee Gees, released on 3 November 1998. Dion also performed this song during her Let's Talk About Love Tour. The song was performed also on British TV programme Top of the Pops on July 1998. For the first time in 16 years, Dion performs the song in her current residency show Celine at the The Colosseum at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada.

"Immortality" became a part of non-American versions of Dion's later greatest hits: All the Way A Decade of Song and My Love: Essential Collection.

In 2001, Donny Osmond covered "Immortality" for his 2001 album This Is the Moment. For the 2001 Greatest Hits album "The Record", The Bee Gees re-recorded the song without Dion's vocals, instead having Barry Gibb as the lead singer and Maurice and Robin on back-up vocals.

The video opens with Celine walking through a graveyard. She and the Bee Gees then appear as ghosts in a manor house where Dion meets a man (presumably her lover). Celine and the Bee Gees later appear at a club where she is a singer. The video then ends in the graveyard where Dion walks away.[citation needed]

Entertainment Weekly editor David Browne called this song 'banal' and said that it is "flimsy concoction that droops under the weight of its arrangement." [4] The New York Observer editor Jonathan Bernstein called this collaboration "dispiriting".[5]

European CD single

Japanese CD single

UK cassette single

Australian CD maxi single

European CD maxi single

UK CD maxi single

UK CD maxi single #2

More here:

Immortality (Celine Dion song) - Wikipedia

Posted in Immortality | Comments Off on Immortality (Celine Dion song) – Wikipedia

Immortality | RuneScape Wiki | Fandom powered by Wikia

Posted: at 4:15 pm

Immortality is an ultimate Defence ability. When activated any damage the user receives is reduced by 25% for 30 seconds. If the user dies, they will return to life but the effect will be consumed completely.

When the user dies, an ethereal, blue hand appears and grabs the user, preventing them from falling down, and the player is immediately healed for 40% of their health. While this animation is playing, the user becomes immune to damage, including typeless damage, similar to the effect of a short-lasting Barricade. Players should take caution as there is no indication when the effect expires aside from dying or the cooldown dissipating.

Upon being revived you get the message: "In a heroic stand you gain a second wind."

If a player is wearing a sign of life or sign of death,or ifthey have a portent of lifeor portent of death in their inventory while immortality is active and they die, the ability will be consumed instead of the sign or portent.

Immortality cannot revive the player if they are killed by Telos, the Warden's anima bomb in phase 5 if he is being fought at 1000% enrage or higher.

Immortality does not share a cooldown with Rejuvenate or Ice Asylum, and has a cooldown only 40% as long.

More here:

Immortality | RuneScape Wiki | Fandom powered by Wikia

Posted in Immortality | Comments Off on Immortality | RuneScape Wiki | Fandom powered by Wikia

Building set to start on Australia’s first cryonics lab – Cowra Guardian

Posted: at 4:14 pm

The company proposing Australia's first cryonics lab has gained approval to build in Holbrook, southern NSW, and plan to begin freezing and stories bodies next year.

Approval has been granted for the world's second cryonics facility outside the United States to be built in Holbrook.

Building is set to start now the plans have been given the tick by Greater Hume Shire Council and by next year Southern Cryonics plans to begin storing and freezing dead bodies in the expectation that in the future science will be able to bring them back to life.

Company secretary Matt Fisher and his team of four had hoped to unveil a facility in 2014 under the company name Stasis Systems, but ran into difficulties.

In the intervening years, despite there still being no scientific guarantee of revival, Australians had warmed to the idea of cryonics.

"We have had quite a lot of people express interest, perhaps a dozen at this stage, that want to sign up as clients once we are up and running," he said.

A price has not been set for the service but Mr Fisher said whole body preservation would cost $A80,000-$90,000.

The facility will have the capacity to store 40 bodies in 10 specialised stainless steel vessels.

It is hard to get a clear picture of how many people have been cryopreserved to date as there is no system of recording this information. However, there are estimated to be several hundred in the US and Russia where facilities exist.

It has been a long road, but Mr Fisher said it was essential to find an appropriately zoned site for cemetery and mortuary use, in a location with low risk of disaster and bushfire.

Safeguarding the facility was a priority, as was developing a corporate structure to survive as long as the built one.

Greater Hume Council general manager Steven Pinnuck said there were no objections to the development but to satisfy the terms of the approval, Southern Cryonics needed to seek licenses from NSW Health to hold and store remains on site.

"It is certainly a different type of activity. We are quite comfortable with it," he said.

"It's going to be in an industrial area and as it turns out, it will be almost adjacent to the local cemetery so we don't see it as being out of character with the area."

"The patient has to be declared legally dead for any cryopreservation procedures to begin," Mr Fisher said.

"The patient is put in an ice bath and medications are administered to prevent blood clotting."

Bodies are brought down to dry ice temperature (-78.5 Celsius) as a temporary phase.

"Once they get to the facility, Southern Cryonics would take over and bring that down further to liquid nitrogen temperature which is -196 Celsius."

The rule of thumb with cryonics was the faster the better and the colder the better.

The focus of cryonics is to preserve the brain to the highest fidelity so deaths with trauma to the brain or head or degenerative conditions such as dementia were problematic.

Mr Fisher said while there were known concerns which would limit the success of a possible future revival, clients would not be medically assessed by Southern Cryonics.

The elderly and others with illnesses had made inquiries but Mr Fisher said a growing number of young people were keen to know more, particularly as it was soon to be a real third end-of-life option.

Mr Fisher, a software engineer, had his father's brain frozen - or what's called neurally coded - at a facility in Sydney.

His passion for cryonics stems from the assumption that medical technology will improve to the point where people can live "in a healthy physical state in perpetuity", meaning theoretically that life expectancy would become open-ended.

"Anyone who has died in the years leading up to that point is going to miss out on the amazing opportunity of experiencing being fit and healthy for however long that they want to," he said.

"I would like to be on the other side of that transition and want everyone I know and care about to be on the other side of that transition as well."

The story Building set to start on Australia's first cryonics lab first appeared on The Sydney Morning Herald.

Read more from the original source:

Building set to start on Australia's first cryonics lab - Cowra Guardian

Posted in Cryonics | Comments Off on Building set to start on Australia’s first cryonics lab – Cowra Guardian

Real or Synthetic: The Truth Behind Whole-Food Supplements

Posted: at 4:13 pm

By Daniel H. Chong, ND

Americans are now spending more than $17 billion a year on supplements for health and wellness. Strangely enough, the rates of some forms of chronic disease have not changed, while the rates of others have actually increased. There are a number of reasons for these poor statistics and many things remain a mystery.

One thing seems fairly clear, however. Most supplements aren't helping very much.

I'm not saying there are no helpful supplements out there. There certainly are. What is becoming more apparent, however, is supplements will not help much if one does not first address the necessary basics of health and healing.

What is also clear is that not all supplements are created equal. The basics of health and healing were discussed in another of my articles, The Six Foundations of Healing. I believe these areas must be addressed for true healing to occur in any chronic disease. In this article, I will discuss some things you should consider if you need to or want to take some supplements. Specifically, I will address the differences between whole foods versus synthetic or isolated nutritional supplements.

Whole Food Nutrients Vs. Synthetic, Isolated Nutrients

Most people who read the eHealthy News You Can Use newsletter are at least somewhat familiar with the idea that whole foods are better for you than refined foods. Although there are numerous viewpoints on what kind of foods we should or should not be eating, as well as the ideal ratio of these foods, everyone from all corners of the diet and nutrition world seems to agree on one thing: No matter which foods we choose and in what ratios we eat them, whole foods are better for you than refined foods.

This fact has never really been argued. Everyone agrees raw honey is better for you than white sugar or that brown rice is better for you than white rice. Why should it be any different for vitamins?

Often, I have been puzzled by the average naturopath or nutritionist who goes on and on about the value of whole foods and how refined foods -- having been robbed of all the extra nutrients they naturally come with -- are not healthy for you. Then, they go on to prescribe a shopping bag full of isolated, refined vitamins for you to take!

Just like refined foods, these refined vitamins have been robbed of all of the extra accessory nutrients that they naturally come with as well. In turn, like refined foods, they can create numerous problems and imbalances in your body if taken at high levels for long periods of time. They can also act more like drugs in your body, forcing themselves down one pathway or another. At the very least, they won't help you as much as high quality food and food-based supplements.

Whole Food Supplements

Whole food supplements are what their name suggests: Supplements made from concentrated whole foods. The vitamins found within these supplements are not isolated. They are highly complex structures that combine a variety of enzymes, coenzymes, antioxidants, trace elements, activators and many other unknown or undiscovered factors all working together synergistically, to enable this vitamin complex to do its job in your body.

Nutrients from within this complex cannot be taken apart or isolated from the whole, and then be expected to do the same job in the body as the whole complex is designed to do.

The perfect example of this difference can be seen in an automobile. An automobile is a wonderfully designed complex machine that needs all of its parts to be present and in place to function properly. Wheels are certainly an important part of the whole, but you could never isolate them from the rest of the car, call them a car or expect them to function like a car. They need the engine, body and everything else.

The same analogy applies to the vitamin C (ascorbic acid) or vitamin E (delta tocopherol) you can find on most health food store shelves. They are parts of an entire complex that serve a purpose when part of the whole. However, they cannot do the job of the entire complex by themselves.

With similar logic in place, one can analyze what a typical multivitamin truly is. The automobile equivalent of creating a multivitamin would be going to a junk yard, finding all of the separate parts you would need to make up an entire automobile, throwing them together in a heap (or capsule in terms of the multivitamin) and expecting that heap to drive like a car!

Obviously, there is a difference. Science cannot create life. Only life can create life.

Synthetic or Isolated Nutritional Supplements

Isolated nutrients or synthetic nutrients are not natural, in that they are never found by themselves in nature. Taking these isolated nutrients, especially at the ultra-high doses found in formulas today, is more like taking a drug. Studies show the body treats these isolated and synthetic nutrients like xenobiotics (foreign substances).

By the same token, food-based supplements are never treated like this by your body. For example, your urine will never turn florescent yellow, no matter how much meat (a good source of B vitamins) you eat. This sort of rapid excretion happens only with foreign substances in your body.

Not only are isolated nutrients treated like drugs or other chemicals by your body. Like drugs, they can create problems for you too. Nature does not produce any nutrient in an isolated form. The nutrients in foods are blended together in a specific way and work best in that format. For an isolated nutrient to work properly in the body, it needs all the other parts that are naturally present in the food too.

If the parts are not all there from the start, they are taken from the body's stored supply. This is why isolated nutrients often work for a little while, then seem to stop working. Once your body's store of the extra nutrients is used up, the isolated nutrient you're taking doesn't work as well anymore. Worse yet, a deficiency in these extra nutrients can be created in your body.

And, because most nutrients are isolated from the foods they come in -- using a wide array of potentially nasty solvents and other chemicals -- taking high amounts of these products can also expose you to these potentially toxic chemicals, if care is not taken to remove them. With the burden we are already facing from the high number of chemicals in our environment, why would anyone want to add more?

Synergy and Potency

The various parts of a natural vitamin complex work together in a synergistic manner. Synergy means that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. Nutritionist Judith DeCava puts it best: "Separating the group of compounds (in a vitamin complex) converts it from a physiological, biochemical, active micronutrient into a disabled, debilitated chemical of little or no value to living cells. The synergy is gone."

In other words, the automobile, in its original form, will drive better than a pile of its individual parts. Most people don't follow this logic when examining a nutritional supplement.

Supplement makers typically try to stuff as much as possible in a capsule, telling us that the more we take, the better it is for us. This is simply not the case. As you now know, it is not necessarily the amount of a nutrient you ingest that is important, but its form and how much is bioavailable that counts the most. In fact, remembering that ingesting single nutrients can actually create imbalances in the body, logic would dictate the higher the level of a single nutrient that you take in, the quicker this imbalance will occur.

What all of this means: The potency of a supplement has much more to do with synergy than with actual nutrient levels. It is a combined effect of all the parts of the food, rather than the chemical effect of a single part, that is most important.

Don't Forget the Basics

I fear all of this talk of supplements -- food-based, isolated or synthetic -- has detracted from the most important part of health and healing. The basics of proper diet, exercise, detoxification, structure, mental/emotional and spiritual health must all be in order for true healing to occur. No supplement will work on its own if these foundations are not in place.

However, even when these foundations are in place, or if the situation is acute enough to necessitate a more immediate treatment response, supplement support may still be needed for a while. You may also want to take one or more food-based supplements to ensure you are getting an adequate array of nutrients in your diet. When these situations arise, I strongly recommend food-based supplements be your first choice.

Keys to a Good Nutritional Supplement

How do you tell whether or not a supplement you're looking at is a good choice? For starters, make sure it has the following characteristics:

Dr. Daniel Chong is a licensed naturopathic physician practicing in Portland, Ore. His practice focuses on chronic disease and pain management. Contact him at:

Chiropractic and Naturopathic Physicians Clinic 12195 SW Allen Blvd. Beaverton, OR 97005 (503) 646-0697 http://www.drdanielchong.com

Resources

Related Articles:

Americans Still Depend Far Too Much on Their Supplements

Beware--Food is Your Medicine, Not Supplements

Get Your Vitamins From Foods Not Supplements

Should You Take Vitamin Supplements?

See original here:

Real or Synthetic: The Truth Behind Whole-Food Supplements

Posted in Food Supplements | Comments Off on Real or Synthetic: The Truth Behind Whole-Food Supplements