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Letters.


Keep plant names rooted

As a newcomer to the study of plant families, a byproduct by·prod·uct or by-prod·uct  
n.
1. Something produced in the making of something else.

2. A secondary result; a side effect.

Noun 1.
 of my interest in herbal medicine herbal medicine, use of natural plant substances (botanicals) to treat and prevent illness. The practice has existed since prehistoric times and flourishes today as the primary form of medicine for perhaps as much as 80% of the world's population. , I see the great need for reclassifying plants based more on their evolutionary relationships and chemical components ("Botanists uproot their old tree of life," SN: 8/7/99, p. 85). But rather than turning the whole system upside-down, why not consider a simple solution? Add a prefix or suffix to the plant names, thus leaving them in their current order for identification purposes but allowing them also to be grouped by their emerging properties. With today's computer technology, searching either way would be a matter of a few simple keystrokes.

Eleanor K. Sommer Sommer is a surname, from the German and Danish word for the season "summer".

It may refer to:
  • Alfred Sommer (ophthalmologist) (born 1943), American academic
  • António de Sommer Champalimaud
  • Barbara Sommer (born 1948), German politician (CDU)
 Gainesville, Fla.

Computers on the brain

You might be interested to know that the first brain-to-computer communication actually took place in the mid-to-late 1960s ("Mind over matter," SN: 8/28/99, p. 142). Edmond Dewan de·wan  
n.
Any of various government officials in India, especially a regional prime minister.



[Hindi d
, then at the Data Sciences Laboratory of the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories in Bedford, Mass., described the research in NATURE. A subject remained motionless while voltages from electrodes placed on the scalp were amplified and filtered, then sent to a computer. The subject attempted to control his alpha waves while listening to computer feedback of both alphawave content and the computer's interpretation in Morse code. The first communication transmitted by this method, direct from brain to computer, was the word cybernetics cybernetics [Gr.,=steersman], term coined by American mathematician Norbert Wiener to refer to the general analysis of control systems and communication systems in living organisms and machines. . I know about the experiment firsthand, as I was the programmer who developed the program.

Shel Michaels Hollis, N.H.

The article left the impression that quadriplegics can only write letters by blinking to a human scribe. In fact, there is computer technology out there that can help. First, eyetrackers exist, which can tell roughly where a person's eye is pointing. And second, computer software can throw up lists of letters and words that are sorted by the probability of use. For example, if t has been typed, then he is prominent in the subsequent list.

Don Lindsay Sunnyvale, Calif.

Several sea sources

There is little doubt that the tsunami in Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea (păp`ə, –y  was caused by an undersea slump ("Seabed slide blamed for deadly tsunami," SN: 8/14/99, p. 100). This is not a new phenomenon. The seawave that destroyed parts of Valdez, Alaska, during the Good Friday Earthquake The Good Friday Earthquake (also called the Great Alaska Earthquake) of Friday, March 27, 1964 (Good Friday, a Christian holy day associated with a historical earthquake[1]), 5:36 P.M. AST (03:36 3/27 UTC) had a magnitude of 9.  was very convincingly shown to be caused by a failure of glacial clays and similar sediments.

It has also been shown that tsunamis are often generated by earthquakes--in some cases by fault displacement and, in the biggest earthquakes, by excitation of the fundamental oscillation of Earth generated by the movement of large masses of the crust. The simple truth is that seawaves can be generated by several sources. It does not require a new paradigm New Paradigm

In the investing world, a totally new way of doing things that has a huge effect on business.

Notes:
The word "paradigm" is defined as a pattern or model, and it has been used in science to refer to a theoretical framework.
 to judge each on its merits.

David Saint-Amand Ridgecrest, Calif.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Publication:Science News
Date:Oct 23, 1999
Words:467
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