Author: Théophile Niyitegeka

  • Burundi has many mass graves, says one association against crimes

    {The National Commission for Truth and Reconciliation-CVR started a month ago to identify the number of mass graves existing in Burundi from 1972 to 2008, but there is a long way to go.}

    “From 1972 up to date, there is an estimated number of 2,500 mass graves in Burundi”, says Aloys Batungwanayo, Chairperson of the Association for the Memory and Protection of Humanity against International Crimes- AMEPCI-Gira Ubuntu. He says, according to the survey conducted by the association, those mass graves are located in each headquarters of Burundi communes, each military installation, toilets, brick pits while other dead bodies were thrown in the rivers. “The mass graves are scattered throughout the country. Even in 2016, two mass graves were discovered in Mutakura and Kanyosha neighborhoods of the capital Bujumbura”, he says.

    Nicodème Bugwabari, Lecturer at the University of Burundi, says, in collaboration with students, the University conducted an investigation in seven former provinces of Burundi and recorded about 140 mass graves of people killed in 1972 and 34 mass graves of people killed in 1988. “The CVR should consider our investigations even if there were oral ones. They were based on testimonies and questions. Concerning the massacres that took place in 1988, 18 mass graves have been discovered in Ntega Commune of Kirundo Province while 16 others have been found in Marangara commune of Ngozi Province,” he says.

    Tatien Sibomana, a political opponent is concerned about the short term given to the National Commission of Truth and Reconciliation to identify the number of mass graves in the country. “We really need to know the number of mass graves and their locations in the country. I don’t think that we expect good results when the CVR term will expire after two years. Or is it going to speculate on victims? ” he says.

    Jean Louis Nahimana, Chairman of CVR says each time they are informed, they do field work. “ We have already discovered mass graves in Kivyuka area of Musigati Commune in Cibitoke Province, Bugarama zone in Muramvya Province, Gasenyi hill of Mwaro Province and recently in Buyenzi neighborhood of Bujumbura City Council”, he says. He also says that when those mass graves are discovered, CVR protects them and suspend all activities carried out in the areas.

    François Xavier Nsabimana, Chairman of survivors and victims’ of 1972 killings says it will be difficult to identify all mass graves in Burundi given that the majority of infrastructures are built on them. “Bujumbura International Airport, schools, hospitals… are all erected on mass graves. How will we succeed to bury our relatives with dignity?” he says.

    The chairman of CVR says the commission has not yet decided what will be done for the infrastructures erected on mass graves. “When we finish investigating all mass graves discovered by those organizations will make a request for the construction of memorial sites if there are infrastructures erected on them ”, he says.

    On this 27 February, CVR in collaboration with some experts are exhuming some dead bodies from the mass grave discovered in Makamba zone of Rusaka Commune in Mwaro Province.

    The National Commission for Truth and Reconciliation-CVR has been created since December 2014 with a four -year term. It has the main objective of establishing the truth on what happened in Burundi including identifying the mass graves and reconciling Burundians.

    Mass grave recently discovered in Makamba zone of Rusaka Commune in Mwaro Province

    Source:Iwacu

  • Woodstoves are good for the soul, bad for the heart

    {Researchers find that air pollution from wood burning linked to increased risk of heart attacks in seniors.}

    The risk of acute myocardial infarction for the elderly living in and around small cities is increased by air pollution caused by biomass burning from woodstoves.

    It is well documented that air pollution in big cities causes heart and lung problems. But what are its consequences on people in smaller urban centres?

    By comparing pollution data from three cities in British Columbia (Prince George, Kamloops and Courtenay/Comox) with hospital admissions, researchers from McGill and Health Canada found that rising concentrations of fine particulate air pollution caused by wood burning were associated with increased hospitalization for myocardial infarction. During the cold season, when pollution from woodstoves is at its highest, the risk of heart attacks among subjects of 65 years and older increased by 19%.

    “We noticed that the association was stronger when more of the air pollution came from wood burning, says McGill University professor Scott Weichenthal, lead author of a new study published in Epidemiology. This suggests that the source of pollution matters and that all particulate air pollution is perhaps not equally harmful when it comes to cardiovascular disease.”

    {{Improving public health}}

    Scott Weichenthal thinks the findings might push cities across Canada to tackle air pollution caused by fireplaces and woodstoves. Increasing winter smog alerts have prompted cities such as Montreal to bring forward bylaws forcing homeowners to register and, eventually, replace their stoves with cleaner sources of heating. The study, says Weichenthal, gives credence to “initiatives aimed at reducing air pollution from residential wood burning in the interest of public health.”

    Researchers find that air pollution from wood burning linked to increased risk of heart attacks in seniors.}

    Source:Science Daily

  • Kinyinya residents commence construction of Police station

    {It is a tradition in Rwanda that every last Saturday of the month, Rwandans at all levels join hands together in community development activities, commonly known as Umuganda.}

    For Kinyinya residents in Gasabo District, they spent the February Umuganda exercise clearing the ground and laying the foundation for the construction of their police station in Bukinanyana Village of Nyagatovu Cell.

    Close to 2000 residents took part in the construction activities and recommitted to see it completed and operational before the end of the year.

    Although Kinyinya had a police station, residents say they need a new and modern police station that will accommodate and facilitate effective delivery of policing services.

    The vice mayor of Gasabo in charge of finance and economic development, Raymond Mberabahizi, during the exercise, lauded the residents for taking the initiative and for their commitment to construct a new and modern police station.

    With residents’ support including both financial contribution and manpower, the vice mayor also pledged to support their ideal project in anyway possible.

    He said that although the existing police station serves the community, working in a conducive environment with all necessary facilities will improve image and services to the community.

    The District Police Commander (DPC), Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Valens Muhabwa, thanked the residents for the initiative and said that this shows the involvement of the masses and equally making security a priority.

    He said that the police station is a commendable idea adding that community policing and maintaining security manifests in many forms and at every household and community level.

    SSP Muhabwa urged them to maintain the spirit and share information on criminals including drug dealers, thieves as well as supporting and strengthening the concepts of neighbourhood watch and night patrols.

    Residents of Kinyinya follow in the footsteps of their neighbours of Gacuriro and Gisozi sectors also in Gasabo, and in other parts of the country, who have so far constructed or facelifted police stations to accommodate two separate detention facilities for male and female suspects, offices, mess and residential for officers, among others.

    Kinyinya residents constructing a police station during community work.

    Source:Police

  • Living with children may mean less sleep for women, but not for men

    New research backs up what many women already know: They’re sleep deprived. Unlike men, a good night’s sleep for women is affected by having children in the house, according to a preliminary study released today that will be presented at the American Academy of Neurology’s 69th Annual Meeting in Boston, April 22 to 28, 2017.

    “I think these findings may bolster those women who say they feel exhausted,” said study author Kelly Sullivan, PhD, of Georgia Southern University in Statesboro, Ga., and a member of the American Academy of Neurology. “Our study found not only are they not sleeping long enough, they also report feeling tired throughout the day.”

    For the study, researchers examined data from a nationwide telephone survey of 5,805 people. Participants were asked how long they slept, with seven to nine hours per day considered optimum and less than six hours considered insufficient. They were also asked how many days they felt tired in the past month.

    Researchers looked at age, race, education, marital status, number of children in the household, income, body mass index, exercise, employment and snoring as possible factors linked to sleep deprivation.

    Among the 2,908 women aged 45 years and younger in the study, researchers found the only factor associated with getting enough sleep was having children in the house, with each child increasing the odds of insufficient sleep by nearly 50 percent.

    For women under 45, 48 percent of women with children reported getting at least seven hours of sleep, compared to 62 percent of women without children.

    No other factors — including exercise, marital status and education — were linked to how long younger women slept.

    The study found that not only was living with children associated with how long younger women slept, but also how often they felt tired. Younger women with children reported feeling tired 14 days per month, on average, compared to 11 days for younger women without children in the household. Having children in the house was not linked to how long men slept.

    “Getting enough sleep is a key component of overall health and can impact the heart, mind and weight,” said Sullivan, “It’s important to learn what is keeping people from getting the rest they need so we can help them work toward better health.”

    Unlike men, a good night's sleep for women is affected by having children in the house, according to a preliminary study

    Source:Science Daily

  • Kicukiro: 41 anti-crime clubs in schools acquire tips on community policing

    {About 328 students, who are among the members of the 41 anti-crime clubs in various schools in Kicukiro District, recently converged at Integrated Polytechnic Regional Centre (IPRC-Kigali) in a one day training that was aimed at improving their understanding on community policing and crime prevention and reduction in particular.}

    Each of the 41 clubs was represented by at least eight students.

    There are at least 86 anti-crime clubs in Kicukiro, with 21 others composed of commercial cyclists; 14 of commercial motorcyclists; 8 of barbers and hair-dressers, and two of casual labourers.

    During the meeting organized by the District Police Unit (DPU) of Kicukiro, students discussed the role of community policing committees, and the impact of their clubs in improving and maintain security.

    Speaking to the students, the Central Region Police Commander, Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Rogers Rutikanga, reminded the students said that the police values and counts on their contribution to maintaining peace by reporting and preventing crime.

    He said anti-crime clubs are key to raising awareness against crime in schools and among the youth, and urged them to be innovative and continue to streamline their clubs to achieve their intended purpose.

    ACP Rutikanga appealed to students to reach out to their colleagues who could be involved in wrongful acts such as drug abuse and desist from consuming alcoholic drinks, which is against the law at their youthful age.

    “The government can’t afford to have a wasted young generation, and that should be part of your agenda in your clubs to ensure a healthy and focused generation that will continue to drive the development of this country,” ACP Rutikanga told the students.

    He also reminded them of the people that would want to seduce them for better offers abroad telling them that these are tricks used by human traffickers, urging them to always report any person that approaches them with such offers to facilitate police investigations in ascertaining the truth, and arrest criminals involved.

    Kicukiro vice mayor in charge of Social Affairs, Angelique Mukunde, while thanking the police for empowering the youth, urged the students to stay on course and be exemplary to other youth.

    The Central Region Police Commander, Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Rogers Rutikanga speaking to students.

    Source:Police

  • Mars More Earth-like than moon-like

    {New Mars research shows evidence of a complex mantle beneath the Elysium volcanic province.}

    Mars’ mantle may be more complicated than previously thought. In a new study published in the Nature-affiliated journal Scientific Reports, researchers at LSU document geochemical changes over time in the lava flows of Elysium, a major martian volcanic province.

    LSU Geology and Geophysics graduate researcher David Susko led the study with colleagues at LSU including his advisor Suniti Karunatillake, the University of Rahuna in Sri Lanka, the SETI Institute, Georgia Institute of Technology, NASA Ames, and the Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie in France.

    They found that the unusual chemistry of lava flows around Elysium is consistent with primary magmatic processes, such as a heterogeneous mantle beneath Mars’ surface or the weight of the overlying volcanic mountain causing different layers of the mantle to melt at different temperatures as they rise to the surface over time.

    Elysium is a giant volcanic complex on Mars, the second largest behind Olympic Mons. For scale, it rises to twice the height of Earth’s Mount Everest, or approximately 16 kilometers. Geologically, however, Elysium is more like Earth’s Tibesti Mountains in Chad, the Emi Koussi in particular, than Everest. This comparison is based on images of the region from the Mars Orbiter Camera, or MOC, aboard the Mars Global Surveyor, or MGS, Mission.

    Elysium is also unique among martian volcanoes. It’s isolated in the northern lowlands of the planet, whereas most other volcanic complexes on Mars cluster in the ancient southern highlands. Elysium also has patches of lava flows that are remarkably young for a planet often considered geologically silent.

    “Most of the volcanic features we look at on Mars are in the range of 3-4 billion years old,” Susko said. “There are some patches of lava flows on Elysium that we estimate to be 3-4 million years old, so three orders of magnitude younger. In geologic timescales, 3 million years ago is like yesterday.”

    In fact, Elysium’s volcanoes hypothetically could still erupt, Susko said, although further research is needed to confirm this. “At least, we can’t yet rule out active volcanoes on Mars,” Susko said. “Which is very exciting.”

    Susko’s work in particular reveals that the composition of volcanoes on Mars may evolve over their eruptive history. In earlier research led by Karunatillake, assistant professor in LSU’s Department of Geology and Geophysics, researchers in LSU’s Planetary Science Lab, or PSL, found that particular regions of Elysium and the surrounding shallow subsurface of Mars are geochemically anomalous, strange even relative to other volcanic regions on Mars. They are depleted in the radioactive elements thorium and potassium. Elysium is one of only two igneous provinces on Mars where researchers have found such low levels of these elements so far.

    “Because thorium and potassium are radioactive, they are some of the most reliable geochemical signatures that we have on Mars,” Susko said. “They act like beacons emitting their own gamma photons. These elements also often couple in volcanic settings on Earth.”

    In their new paper, Susko and colleagues started to piece together the geologic history of Elysium, an expansive volcanic region on Mars characterized by strange chemistry. They sought to uncover why some of Elysium’s lava flows are so geochemically unusual, or why they have such low levels of thorium and potassium. Is it because, as other researchers have suspected, glaciers located in this region long ago altered the surface chemistry through aqueous processes? Or is it because these lava flows arose from different parts of Mars’ mantle than other volcanic eruptions on Mars?

    Perhaps the mantle has changed over time, meaning that more recent volcanic eruption flows differ chemically from older ones. If so, Susko could use Elysium’s geochemical properties to study how Mars’ bulk mantle has evolved over geologic time, with important insights for future missions to Mars. Understanding the evolutionary history of Mars’ mantle could help researchers gain a better understanding of what kinds of valuable ores and other materials could be found in the crust, as well as whether volcanic hazards could unexpectedly threaten human missions to Mars in the near future. Mars’ mantle likely has a very different history than Earth’s mantle because the plate tectonics on Earth are absent on Mars as far as researchers know. The history of the bulk interior of the red planet also remains a mystery.

    Susko and colleagues at LSU analyzed geochemical and surface morphology data from Elysium using instruments on board NASA’s Mars Odyssey Orbiter (2001) and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (2006). They had to account for the dust that blankets Mars’ surface in the aftermath of strong dust storms, to make sure that the shallow subsurface chemistry actually reflected Elysium’s igneous material and not the overlying dust.

    Through crater counting, the researchers found differences in age between the northwest and the southeast regions of Elysium — about 850 million years of difference. They also found that the younger southeast regions are geochemically different from the older regions, and that these differences in fact relate to igneous processes, not secondary processes like the interaction of water or ice with the surface of Elysium in the past.

    “We determined that while there might have been water in this area in the past, the geochemical properties in the top meter throughout this volcanic province are indicative of igneous processes,” Susko said. “We think levels of thorium and potassium here were depleted over time because of volcanic eruptions over billions of years. The radioactive elements were the first to go in the early eruptions. We are seeing changes in the mantle chemistry over time.”

    “Long-lived volcanic systems with changing magma compositions are common on Earth, but an emerging story on Mars,” said James Wray, study co-author and associate professor in the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at Georgia Tech.

    Wray led a 2013 study that showed evidence for magma evolution at a different martian volcano, Syrtis Major, in the form of unusual minerals. But such minerals could be originating at the surface of Mars, and are visible only on rare dust-free volcanoes.

    “At Elysium we are truly seeing the bulk chemistry change over time, using a technique that could potentially unlock the magmatic history of many more regions across Mars,” he said.

    Susko speculates that the very weight of Elysium’s lava flows, which make up a volcanic province six times higher and almost four times wider than its morphological sister on Earth, Emi Koussi, has caused different depths of Mars’ mantle to melt at different temperatures. In different regions of Elysium, lava flows may have come from different parts of the mantle. Seeing chemical differences in different regions of Elysium, Susko and colleagues concluded that Mars’ mantle might be heterogeneous, with different compositions in different areas, or that it may be stratified beneath Elysium.

    Overall, Susko’s findings indicate that Mars is a much more geologically complex body than originally thought, perhaps due to various loading effects on the mantle caused by the weight of giant volcanoes.

    “It’s more Earth-like than moon-like,” Susko said. “The moon is cut and dry. It often lacks the secondary minerals that occur on Earth due to weathering and igneous-water interactions. For decades, that’s also how we envisioned Mars, as a lifeless rock, full of craters with a number of long inactive volcanoes. We had a very simple view of the red planet. But the more we look at Mars, the less moon-like it becomes. We’re discovering more variety in rock types and geochemical compositions, as seen across the Curiosity Rover’s traverse in Gale Crater, and more potential for viable resource utilization and capacity to sustain a human population on Mars. It’s much easier to survive on a complex planetary body bearing the mineral products of complex geology than on a simpler body like the moon or asteroids.”

    Susko plans to continue clarifying the geologic processes that cause the strange chemistry found around Elysium. In the future, he will study these chemical anomalies through computational simulations, to determine if recreating the pressures in Mars’ mantle caused by the weight of giant volcanoes could affect mantle melting to yield the type of chemistry observed within Elysium.

    This is a solidified lava flow over the side of a crater rim of Elysium.

    Source:Science Daily

  • Police extends unbeaten run in handball league

    {The reigning national handball league champions – Police – continued their season impressive performance on Day Five and Day Six of the league tournament with easy wins over ADEGI-Gituza of Gatsibo District and St. Aloys of Rwamagana, respectively.}

    The five-time champions thrashed ADEGI 40-20 last Friday before an easy 51-22 win over St. Aloys on Sunday.

    Police, who have lost any league match this season, are looking for their sixth cup and their fourth in a row, which coach Assistant Inspector of Police (AIP) Antoine Ntabanganyimana believes is “likely.”

    “We are currently on top of the table with 18 maximum points; we managed to edge APR, out closest challenger in our first leg. If we can win all the remaining four games of the first round, we will have increased our chances of doing what we have done in the last three consecutive years,” said AIP Ntabanganyimana.

    “Players are very feet and in high spirit for the next match against College de Gisenyi this coming Sunday, we take each match seriously,” he added.

    Other respective games to be played before the first round include against Ecole Secondaire de Kigoma of Ruhango on March 11; Ecole Secondaire Urumuri of Karongi on March 23; and Groupe Scolaire Rambura of Nyabihu to be played on March 29.

    Police handball team

    Source:Police

  • Do you look like your name? People can match names to faces of strangers with surprising accuracy

    {Computers can also be programed to match names and faces, study says}

    If your name is Fred, do you look like a Fred? You might — and others might think so, too. New research published by the American Psychological Association has found that people appear to be better than chance at correctly matching people’s names to their faces, and it may have something to do with cultural stereotypes we attach to names.

    In the study, published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, lead author Yonat Zwebner, a PhD candidate at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem at the time of the research, and colleagues conducted a series of experiments involving hundreds of participants in Israel and France. In each experiment, participants were shown a photograph and asked to select the given name that corresponded to the face from a list of four or five names. In every experiment, the participants were significantly better (25 to 40 percent accurate) at matching the name to the face than random chance (20 or 25 percent accurate depending on the experiment) even when ethnicity, age and other socioeconomic variables were controlled for.

    The researchers theorize the effect may be, in part, due to cultural stereotypes associated with names as they found the effect to be culture-specific. In one experiment conducted with students in both France and Israel, participants were given a mix of French and Israeli faces and names. The French students were better than random chance at matching only French names and faces and Israeli students were better at matching only Hebrew names and Israeli faces.

    In another experiment, the researchers trained a computer, using a learning algorithm, to match names to faces. In this experiment, which included over 94,000 facial images, the computer was also significantly more likely (54 to 64 percent accuracy) to be successful than random chance (50 percent accuracy).

    This manifestation of the name in a face might be due to people subconsciously altering their appearance to conform to cultural norms and cues associated with their names, according to Zwebner.

    “We are familiar with such a process from other stereotypes, like ethnicity and gender where sometimes the stereotypical expectations of others affect who we become,” said Zwebner. “Prior research has shown there are cultural stereotypes attached to names, including how someone should look. For instance, people are more likely to imagine a person named Bob to have a rounder face than a person named Tim. We believe these stereotypes can, over time, affect people’s facial appearance.”

    This was supported by findings of one experiment showing that areas of the face that can be controlled by the individual, such as hairstyle, were sufficient to produce the effect.

    “Together, these findings suggest that facial appearance represents social expectations of how a person with a particular name should look. In this way, a social tag may influence one’s facial appearance,” said co-author Ruth Mayo, PhD, also from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. “We are subject to social structuring from the minute we are born, not only by gender, ethnicity and socioeconomic status, but by the simple choice others make in giving us our name.”

    People appear to be better than chance at correctly matching people's names to their faces, suggests new research.

    Source:Science Daily

  • 5 kinds of people you need in your life if you want to be successful

    There’s a popular saying “show me your friend, and I’ll tell you who you are”.

    The kind of people you have around you can go a long way to determine how far you’ll go in life.

    These people shouldn’t be far off from you:

    {{1. Mentors that will guide you}}

    Having a mentor you can relate with, will help you in life. Your mentor should be someone you look up to who’s better than you and who has achieved more success than you in your desired area of interest. Having someone like this to look up to and guide you, will help you stay focused and also you guide you through difficult paths.

    {{2. People who inspire you}}

    Associate yourself with people who inspire you. There are three kinds of people; the ones who will make you think lowly of yourself and your situation, the ones who will make you satisfied with stagnation, and the ones that will push you to reach the top. Associate with people who will inspire you to reach greater heights.

    {{3. People who support you}}

    Having a very good support system around you will help you get to certain heights in life. Rather than associate with people that’ll bring you down, associate with people who will support you and be there for you when others won’t.

    {{4. People with vision}}

    When your circle of friends lack vision, don’t be surprised when you also lose the desire to follow your vision in life. If you want to achieve success, then you should surround yourself with people who have vision to succeed as well.

    {{5. Positive-minded people}}

    Positive-minded people see light where others see darkness; they see hope where others see doom, they see success where others see failure, and they see opportunities where others see adversities. Associate with people who have this mentality, and your mentality will experience a huge transformation.

    If you want to have the right people around you, these are the kinds you need, if you want to be successful.

    Source:Elcrema

  • Brain imaging headband measures how our minds align when we communicate

    {Great ideas so often get lost in translation — from the math teacher who can’t get through to his students, to a stand-up comedian who bombs during an open mic night.}

    But how can we measure whether our audiences understand what we’re trying to convey? And better yet, how can we improve that exchange?

    Drexel University biomedical engineers, in collaboration with Princeton University psychologists, are using a wearable brain-imaging device to see just how brains sync up when humans interact. It is one of many applications for this functional near-infrared spectroscopy (or fNIRS) system, which uses light to measure neural activity during real-life situations and can be worn like a headband.

    Published in Scientific Reports, a new study shows that the fNIRS device can successfully measure brain synchronization during conversation. The technology can now be used to study everything from doctor-patient communication, to how people consume cable news.

    “Being able to look at how multiple brains interact is an emerging context in social neuroscience,” said Hasan Ayaz, PhD, an associate research professor in Drexel’s School of Biomedical Engineering, Science and Health Systems, who led the research team. “We live in a social world where everybody is interacting. And we now have a tool that can give us richer information about the brain during everyday tasks — such as natural communication — that we could not receive in artificial lab settings or from single brain studies.”

    The current study is based on previous research from Uri Hasson, PhD, associate professor at Princeton University, who has used functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) to study the brain mechanisms underlying the production and comprehension of language. Hasson has found that a listener’s brain activity actually mirrors the speaker’s brain when he or she is telling story about a real-life experience. And higher coupling is associated with better understanding.

    However, traditional brain imaging methods have certain limitations. In particular, fMRI requires subjects to lie down motionlessly in a noisy scanning environment. With this kind of set-up, it is not possible to simultaneously scan the brains of multiple individuals who are speaking face-to-face.

    This is why the Drexel researchers sought to investigate whether the portable fNIRS system could be a more effective approach to probe the brain-to-brain coupling question in natural settings.

    For their study, a native English speaker and two native Turkish speakers told an unrehearsed, real-life story in their native language. Their stories were recorded and their brains were scanned using fNIRS. Fifteen English speakers then listened to the recording, in addition to a story that was recorded at a live storytelling event.

    The researchers targeted the prefrontal and parietal areas of the brain, which include cognitive and higher order areas that are involved in a person’s capacity to discern beliefs, desires and goals of others. They hypothesized that a listener’s brain activity would correlate with the speaker’s only when listening to a story they understood (the English version). A second objective of the study was to compare the fNIRS results with data from a similar study that had used fMRI, in order to compare the two methods.

    They found that when the fNIRS measured the oxygenation and deoxygenation of blood cells in the test subject’s brains, the listeners’ brain activity matched only with the English speakers. These results also correlated with the previous fMRI study.

    This new research supports fNIRS as a viable future tool to study brain-to-brain coupling during social interaction. The system can be used to offer important information about how to better communicate in many different environments, including classrooms, business meetings, political rallies and doctors’ offices.

    “This would not be feasible with fMRI. There are too many challenges,” said Banu Onaral, PhD, the H. H. Sun Professor in the School of Biomedical Engineering, Science and Health Systems. “Now that we know fNIRS is a feasible tool, we are moving into an exciting era when we can know so much more about how the brain works as people engage in everyday tasks.”

    This is a cartoon image of brain 'coupling' during communication.

    Source:Science Daily