All posts tagged: halves

UN Food Agency Halves Syria Food Aid, Halts Bread Subsidy Over Funding Shortages

UN Food Agency Halves Syria Food Aid, Halts Bread Subsidy Over Funding Shortages

May 13 (Reuters) – The World Food Programme said on ⁠Wednesday ⁠it had halved emergency food ⁠assistance in Syria due to funding shortages, warning that millions ​remained vulnerable despite signs of stabilisation in parts of the country. The U.N. agency’s biggest donor, the ‌United States, has slashed its ‌foreign aid under President Donald Trump, and other countries have also made or announced ⁠cuts in ⁠development and humanitarian assistance.   The WFP said in a statement the number ​of people receiving emergency food aid in Syria fell to 650,000 in May from 1.3 million, while scaling back operations in all 14 Syrian governorates to just seven. Meanwhile, 7.2 million people ​in Syria remain acutely food insecure, including 1.6 million facing severe hunger, the WFP ⁠said. ⁠Many households were already reducing ⁠meal portions, ​eating less nutritious food or skipping meals altogether, it added. “The reduction in WFP’s assistance ​is driven solely by ⁠funding constraints, not by a decrease in needs,” Marianne Ward, the WFP’s country director in Syria, said in the statement. The WFP also halted a …

Brain halves become less alike as kids grow, especially in highly intelligent teens

Brain halves become less alike as kids grow, especially in highly intelligent teens

As children grow into adolescence, corresponding regions on the left and right sides of their brain function less identically, reflecting a transition toward specialized mental labor. A recent study observed that individuals with superior intelligence scores experience this functional division at an accelerated rate. These findings were published in the journal *Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience*. The human brain features two distinct halves. These left and right hemispheres frequently communicate to manage everything from basic sensory input to high-level reasoning. Historically, discussions of brain organization have focused on spatial lateralization. This concept suggests that certain cognitive domains, like language processing or spatial awareness, rely heavily on one side of the brain. Both hemispheres actually cooperate constantly to support cognitive demands. To understand this cooperation, neuroscientists measure functional homotopy. This concept describes the similarity in brain activity between mirroring regions on the left and right hemispheres. High functional homotopy means both sides of the brain are performing identical or highly synchronized roles. Lower functional homotopy indicates that the hemispheres are differentiating their duties to operate somewhat independently. Researchers …

‘It feels so taboo’: Natalie Palamides on playing both halves of a toxic couple and her shocking next show | Comedy

‘It feels so taboo’: Natalie Palamides on playing both halves of a toxic couple and her shocking next show | Comedy

She’s the toast of Off-Broadway now but nothing about the early work of LA clown Natalie Palamides screamed mainstream darling. In her debut show Laid, a maternal-anxiety antic that won her best newcomer at the Edinburgh comedy awards, she gave birth to eggs then broke them on stage. In her second, Nate, she cross-dressed as a beer-chugging douchebag to workshop sexual assault and consent with her astonished audience. Who foresaw that this loose cannon would soon be Hillary and Chelsea Clinton’s clown coach, in the series Gutsy? Who then saw an extended New York City run beckoning, thronged with celebrity attendees? “Drew Barrymore came, Kevin Bacon came,” says Palamides, on a video call. “Sabrina Carpenter came: that was nuts. Dua Lipa, Nathan Fielder, Neil Patrick Harris.” The show was Weer, and the run (until shortly before Christmas) was at “the birthplace of Off-Broadway”, the Cherry Lane theatre, recently relaunched by hip movie studio A24. When we speak, Palamides, 36, is laid low with flu, her body’s revenge for that marathon three-month run. “I thought a …