Sunday, 5 July 2015

6 July, 2015

Revealed – what your selfie says about your personality

Let’s admit it, we all take selfies once in a while if not always. But did you know your selfie reveals something about your personality? Experts say that the facial expressions, emotions and other personality secrets could be judged through a selfie.
Researchers from Nanyang Technological University Singapore, said the pose of taking selfie, the place from where it is taken and even the angle of selfie can bring forward several aspects of a person’s personality. Read - would you join a selfie course?

For example, if a person looks happy and smiling in a selfie, he/she is likely to be kind hearted and co-operative, the study said.
People who take selfie of below their face are able to adjust in all kind of circumstances. Similarly the people who are crazy to take selfies in public places seem to be very honest, it said.
Experts feel that selfies reveal more about an individual’s personality than any other ordinary photo because in the selfies, people have to handle the camera themselves.
So what does your selfie tell you about yourself? Here’s how to take a good selfie.


06.07.2015



Diabetes drug may help obese people lose weight


A drug originally meant for diabetics may help obese individuals without diabetes shed weight and also keep it off, suggests a research.
A little more than one year of treatment with the drug named Liraglutide was found to reduce at least five percent of body weight in over 60 percent of study participants.

‘It is a very effective drug. It seems to be as good as any of the others on the market, so it adds another possibility for doctors to treat patients who are having trouble either losing weight or maintaining weight loss once they get the weight off,’ Xavier Pi-Sunyer, professor of medicine at the Columbia University Medical Center in New York City was quoted as saying by Live Science.
The researchers conducted a 56-week trial involving 3,731 patients who did not have Type-2 diabetes and who had a body-mass index (BMI) of 30 or a BMI of at least 27 if they if they also had high cholesterol or high blood pressure.

They randomly assigned patients in a 2:1 ratio to receive once-daily shot of of Liraglutide at a dose of 3.0 mg (2,487 patients) or placebo (1,244 patients).
The researchers found that a total of 63.2 percent of the patients in the liraglutide group as compared with 27.1 percent in the placebo group lost at least five percent of their body weight.

Among the patients on liraglutide, 33 percent lost at least 10 percent of their body weight.
Only 11 percent of the placebo group lost that much weight.
The study was published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

06.07.2015











It is better to know and be disappointed than to never know and always wonder


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