domingo, 6 de febrero de 2011

Review´s NYT

Unafraid of Altering a Winning Formula


MUSIC REVIEW

Unafraid of Altering a Winning Formula

Chad Batka for The New York Times
Linkin Park, with Chester Bennington, left, and Mike Shinoda, playing its early songs along with its newer ones at Madison Square Garden on Friday.
Many a band promises to reinvent itself. Few have done so as thoroughly as Linkin Park, which played Madison Square Garden on Friday night. Its 2010 album, “A Thousand Suns,” is strikingly different from the music that made Linkin Park a blockbuster band in the early 2000s, when it was a major instigator, or perpetrator, of rap-rock. At Madison Square Garden, Linkin Park was like two bands sharing a stage: the old hard-riffing rap-rock band and its newer, statelier, electronics-loving successor.

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On its debut album, “Hybrid Theory,” in 2000 Linkin Park devised a canny balancing act. Chester Bennington sang, and Mike Shinoda rapped. The music switched between power-chorded but melodic grunge and hip-hop stomps (adding low-end rock-guitar crunch). The lyrics pivoted between bitter insecurity (usually the melodic parts) and back-to-the-wall defiance (usually the raps). Wounded, aggressive and overwhelmingly self-absorbed, the songs honored countless adolescent mood swings and sold millions of albums.
“A Thousand Suns” (Warner Brothers) shifts both sound and subject matter. Keyboards and percussion, not guitars, are in the foreground; somber marches and quasi-tribal beats largely replace hard rock. Songs expand with multiple sections; the arrangements are thickly layered. Mr. Shinoda does more singing too.
Instead of Linkin Park’s old first-person rants and plaints, “A Thousand Suns” mulls something larger: the extinction of humanity. Its title comes from the Manhattan Project physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer, who quoted the Bhagavad Gita after viewing atomic-bomb tests. Video screens above the band showed a mushroom cloud during “The Catalyst,” with its refrain, “We’re a broken people living under loaded gun.”
The album is part monument, part folly, but it’s a brave step for a band that already had its winning formula. “Once you have the theory of how the thing works/Everybody wants the next thing to be just like the first,” Mr. Shinoda taunted in “When They Come for Me.”
For this concert the Garden had a standing-room section upfront. It spawned a mosh pit as Linkin Park started the concert with a blast of older rap-rock.
Then the band reconfigured itself with keyboards and drums for newer songs like “Blackout.” It wasn’t entirely a break from the past; Linkin Park does have older keyboard-centered material. But when it played songs like “Numb” and “Breaking the Habit” alongside newer ones from “A Thousand Suns,” keyboards loomed where guitar chords used to charge in.
A few fans gamely kept moshing even when the tempos slowed. But the roar of sing-alongs resumed when Linkin Park reached back again to blunter, decade-old songs like “Papercut” and “Crawling.” (The concert is to be telecast on Feb. 18 on the Fuse cable channel.)
Linkin Park had a style-shifting postscript. As the arena emptied after the finale, the snarling “One Step Closer,” the sound system played a bluegrass version of the same song. Would fans be moshing to that someday?
Linkin Park plays this week in Montreal, Toronto, Washington and, on Friday, Uncasville, Conn., at the Mohegan Sun Arena; linkinpark.com.

What Is Artificial Intelligence?


What Is Artificial Intelligence?

Urbana, Ill.
Illustrations by Vance Wellenstein
IN the category “What Do You Know?”, for $1 million: This four-year-old upstart the size of a small R.V. has digested 200 million pages of data about everything in existence and it means to give a couple of the world’s quickest humans a run for their money at their own game.
The question: What is Watson?
I.B.M.’s groundbreaking question-answering system, running on roughly 2,500 parallel processor cores, each able to perform up to 33 billion operations a second, is playing a pair of “Jeopardy!” matches against the show’s top two living players, to be aired on Feb. 14, 15 and 16. Watson is I.B.M.’s latest self-styled Grand Challenge, a follow-up to the 1997 defeat by its computer Deep Blue of Garry Kasparov, the world’s reigning chess champion. (It’s remarkable how much of the digital revolution has been driven by games and entertainment.) Yes, the match is a grandstanding stunt, baldly calculated to capture the public’s imagination. But barring any humiliating stumble by the machine on national television, it should.
Consider the challenge: Watson will have to be ready to identify anything under the sun, answering all manner of coy, sly, slant, esoteric, ambiguous questions ranging from the “Rh factor” of Scarlett’s favorite Butler or the 19th-century painter whose name means “police officer” to the rhyme-time place where Pelé stores his ball or what you get when you cross a typical day in the life of the Beatles with a crazed zombie classic. And he (forgive me) will have to buzz in fast enough and with sufficient confidence to beat Ken Jennings, the holder of the longest unbroken “Jeopardy!” winning streak, and Brad Rutter, an undefeated champion and the game’s biggest money winner. The machine’s one great edge: Watson has no idea that he should be panicking.
Open-domain question answering has long been one of the great holy grails of artificial intelligence. It is considerably harder to formalize than chess. It goes well beyond what search engines like Google do when they comb data for keywords. Google can give you 300,000 page matches for a search of the terms “greyhound,” “origin” and “African country,” which you can then comb through at your leisure to find what you need.
Asked in what African country the greyhound originated, Watson can tell you in a couple of seconds that the authoritative consensus favors Egypt. But to stand a chance of defeating Mr. Jennings and Mr. Rutter, Watson will have to be able to beat them to the buzzer at least half the time and answer with something like 90 percent accuracy.
When I.B.M.’s David Ferrucci and his team of about 20 core researchers began their “Jeopardy!” quest in 2006, their state-of-the-art question-answering system could solve no more than 15 percent of questions from earlier shows. They fed their machine libraries full of documents — books, encyclopedias, dictionaries, thesauri, databases, taxonomies, and even Bibles, movie scripts, novels and plays.
But the real breakthrough came with the extravagant addition of many multiple “expert” analyzers — more than 100 different techniques running concurrently to analyze natural language, appraise sources, propose hypotheses, merge the results and rank the top guesses. Answers, for Watson, are a statistical thing, a matter of frequency and likelihood. If, after a couple of seconds, the countless possibilities produced by the 100-some algorithms converge on a solution whose chances pass Watson’s threshold of confidence, it buzzes in.
This raises the question of whether Watson is really answering questions at all or is just noticing statistical correlations in vast amounts of data. But the mere act of building the machine has been a powerful exploration of just what we mean when we talk about knowing.
Who knows how Mr. Jennings and Mr. Rutter do it — puns cracked, ambiguities resolved, obscurities retrieved, links formed across every domain in creation, all in a few heartbeats. The feats of engineering involved in answering the smallest query about the world are beyond belief. But I.B.M. is betting a fair chunk of its reputation that 2011 will be the year that machines can play along at the game.
Does Watson stand a chance of winning? I would not stake my “Final Jeopardy!” nest egg on it. Not yet. Words are very rascals, and language may still be too slippery for it. But watching films of the machine in sparring matches against lesser human champions, I felt myself choking up at its heroic effort, the size of the undertaking, the centuries of accumulating groundwork, hope and ingenuity that have gone into this next step in the long human drama. I was most moved when the 100-plus parallel algorithms wiped out and the machine came up with some ridiculous answer, calling it out as if it might just be true, its cheerful synthesized voice sounding as vulnerable as that of any bewildered contestant.
It does not matter who will win this $1 million Valentine’s Day contest. We all know who will be champion, eventually. The real showdown is between us and our own future. Information is growing many times faster than anyone’s ability to manage it, and Watson may prove crucial in helping to turn all that noise into knowledge.
Dr. Ferrucci and company plan to sell the system to businesses in need of fast, expert answers drawn from an overwhelming pool of supporting data. The potential client list is endless. A private Watson will cost millions today and requires a room full of hardware. But if what Ray Kurzweil calls the Law of Accelerating Returns keeps holding, before too long, you’ll have an app for that.
Like so many of its precursors, Watson will make us better at some things, worse at others. (Recall Socrates’ warnings about the perils of that most destabilizing technology of all — writing.) Already we rely on Google to deliver to the top of the million-hit list just those pages we are most interested in, and we trust its concealed algorithms with a faith that would be difficult to explain to the smartest computer. Even if we might someday be able to ask some future Watson how fast and how badly we are cooking the earth, and even if it replied (based on the sum of all human knowledge) with 90 percent accuracy, would such an answer convert any of the already convinced or produce the political will we’ll need to survive the reply?
Still, history is the long process of outsourcing human ability in order to leverage more of it. We will concede this trivia game (after a very long run as champions), and find another in which, aided by our compounding prosthetics, we can excel in more powerful and ever more terrifying ways.
Should Watson win next week, the news will be everywhere. We’ll stand in awe of our latest magnificent machine, for a season or two. For a while, we’ll have exactly the gadget we need. Then we’ll get needy again, looking for a newer, stronger, longer lever, for the next larger world to move.
For “Final Jeopardy!”, the category is “Players”: This creature’s three-pound, 100-trillion-connection machine won’t ever stop looking for an answer.
The question: What is a human being?
Richard Powers is the author of the novel “Generosity: An Enhancement.”

En este día....


ON THIS DAY

February 6

On Feb. 6, 1952, Britain's King George VI died; he was succeeded by his daughter, Elizabeth II.
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On Feb. 6, 1895, George Herman 'Babe' Ruth, baseball's great star, was born. Following his death on Aug. 16, 1948, his obituary appeared in The Times.

On This Date

1756Aaron Burr, America's third vice president, was born in Newark, N.J.
1788Massachusetts became the sixth state to ratify the U.S. Constitution.
1895Baseball Hall of Famer George Herman "Babe" Ruth was born in Baltimore.
1899A peace treaty between the United States and Spain was ratified by the U.S. Senate.
1933The 20th Amendment to the Constitution was declared in effect. It moved the start of presidential, vice-presidential and congressional terms from March to January.
1945Reggae musician Bob Marley was born in St. Ann parish in Jamaica.
1952Britain's King George VI died.
1993Tennis Hall of Famer Arthur Ashe, who had conracted HIV through a tainted blood transfusion, died at age 49.
1999Excerpts of former White House intern Monica Lewinsky's videotaped testimony were shown at President Bill Clinton's impeachment trial in the Senate.
2000First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton launched her successful candidacy for the U.S. Senate.
2001Ariel Sharon was elected Israeli prime minister in a landslide over Ehud Barak.
2003Rapper 50 Cent's debut CD, "Get Rich or Die Tryin'," was released.
2004An explosion ripped through a Moscow subway car during rush hour, killing 41 people in a terrorist attack blamed on Chechen separatists.

Current Birthdays

Natalie Cole, Singer
Singer Natalie Cole turns 61 years old today.
AP Photo/Matt Sayles
Rip Torn, Actor (“The Larry Sanders Show”)
Actor Rip Torn ("The Larry Sanders Show") turns 80 years old today.
AP Photo/Hermann J. Knippertz
1917Zsa Zsa Gabor, Actress, turns 94
1939Mike Farrell, Actor ("M*A*S*H," "Providence"), turns 72
1940Tom Brokaw, Broadcast journalist, author, turns 71
1943Fabian, Singer, turns 68
1957Kathy Najimy, Actress, turns 54
1957Robert Townsend, Actor, director, turns 54
1962Axl Rose, Rock singer (Guns N' Roses), turns 49
1966Rick Astley, Singer, turns 45

Historic Birthdays

80Aaron Burr 2/6/1756 - 9/14/1836
3rd Vice President of The United States
73Sir Charles Wheatstone 2/6/1802 - 10/19/1875
English physicist
83William Maxwell Evarts 2/6/1818 - 2/28/1901
American lawyer/statesman
31Jeb Stuart 2/6/1833 - 5/12/1864
American Confederate cavalry officer
67Sir Henry Irving 2/6/1838 - 10/13/1905
English actor/stage manager
57F. W. H. Myers 2/6/1843 - 1/17/1901
English writer/cofounder of the Society for Psychical Research
48George Tyrrell 2/6/1861 - 7/15/1909
Irish-bn. English Jesuit priest/philosopher
68Ronald Reagan 2/6/1911 - 6/5/2004
40th president of the United States
68Melvin Tolson 2/6/1898 - 8/29/1966
African-American poet
33Eva Braun 2/6/1912 - 4/30/1945
German mistress/wife of Adolf Hitler
83Mary Douglas Leakey 2/6/1913 - 12/9/1996
English-bn. archaeologist/paleoanthropologist
52Francois Truffaut 2/6/1932 - 10/21/1984
French film critic/producer

Enfermedad hemolítica en el feto y el recién nacido: tendencias actuales y perspectivas


Enfermedad hemolítica en el feto y el recién nacido: tendencias actuales y perspectivas
Hemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn: Current trends and perspectives.
Basu S, Kaur R, Kaur G.
Asian J Transfus Sci [serial online] 2011 [cited 2011 Jan 21];5:3-7.  
The spectrum of hemolytic disease of the newborn has changed over the last few decades. With the implementation of Rhesus D immunoprophylaxis, hemolytic disease due to ABO incompatibility and other alloantibodies has now emerged as major causes of this condition. Though in developing countries, anti D is still a common antibody in pregnant women, many Asian countries have identified alloantibodies other than anti D as a cause of moderate-severe hemolytic disease. The most concerned fact is that, some of these have been described in Rh D positive women. It appears that universal antenatal screening in all pregnant women needs to be initiated, since Rh D positive women are just as likely as D negative women to form alloantibodies. Many developed nations have national screening programs for pregnant women. This is necessary to ensure timely availability of antigen negative blood and reduce effects on the newborn. Although universal screening seems justified, the cost and infrastructure required would be immense. Developing countries and under resourced nations need to consider universal antenatal screening and frame guidelines accordingly.
Keywords: Newborn hemolytic disease, red cell alloimmunisation, antenatal antibody screening.

Disponibl en HTML en texto completo:
http://www.ajts.org/text.asp?2011/5/1/3/75963
 

Atentamente
Dr. Enrique Hernández-Cortes
Anestesiología y Medicina del Dolor