-6 C
New York
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
Home Blog Page 9

Sunlight enhances cognitive performance and brain function

0

In the first study of its kind, neuroscientists have shown the real-world benefits that sunlight gives the brain, beyond laboratory experiments, linking brighter and more regular daytime light to better alertness and faster attention in everyday life.

The University of Manchester researchers wanted to gain a better understanding of whether sunlight exposure had meaningful cognitive benefits – particularly when tested in nature, not a lab. The team assessed the personal light exposure of 58 UK adults without any significant circadian challenges, over a period of seven days. An additional 41 participants took part in a lab experiment that featured pupillometric and psychophysical tests designed to measure melanopsin-driven visual responses – how their pupils responded to light.

The 58 participants wore a daylight exposure monitoring device on their wrist that continuously recorded how much biologically relevant light reached them, day and night. In other words, how the light influenced their internal body clocks. They also used an app called Brightertime, developed at the university, that gathered data on cognitive performance.

The participants were scored on subjective sleepiness (Karolinska Sleepiness Scale), sustained attention (Psychomotor Vigilance Task), working memory (three-back task) and visual search performance. Each task produced measurable reaction times, accuracy and error rates, later reduced into key factors via a pattern-finding analysis.

“Light is a fundamental environmental cue that governs numerous biological processes in humans, including body clocks, sleep, and cognition,” said lead author Dr. Altug Didikoglu from the University of Manchester. “However, despite substantial findings from controlled laboratory studies, little is known about how these effects translate to real-world environments, where light exposure is dynamic and intertwined with daily routines.”

The team measured aspects of light exposure – how bright the natural light was in the 30 minutes to two hours before each phone-based cognitive test, how bright the day was overall, when the darkest periods occurred (usually when lights were off at bedtime) and how regular or irregular the participants’ daily time in natural light was.

Importantly, the researchers examined both immediate light exposure before each test and broader weekly patterns, which were then compared with the results from repeated smartphone measures of sleepiness, attention, working memory and visual search performance.

They found that how often and when you’re exposed to light in daily life can meaningfully shape alertness and cognitive speed, even in healthy adults with nine-to-five routines or regular night-sleep cycles. But the cognitive impact was more nuanced than this.

Recent light exposure (in those 30 to 120 minutes) was linked to feeling less sleepy and faster reaction times in tests measuring sustained attention and working memory. And the impact was strongest the more recent the light exposure had been (30 to 90 minutes), where reaction speed without increased error rates were observed.

Meanwhile, habitual daytime light exposure – consistent across the seven days – was tied to faster reaction times on the vigilance task and fewer errors in the tests measuring working memory and visual search skills.

People whose light exposure was more stable and less fragmented (fewer switches between light and dark) performed better on visual search tasks, produced fewer attention-related errors and were able to focus for longer.

Brighter recent light was also linked to lower sleepiness at any time of day, but this was strongest in the participants with the brightest light exposure during the day and who also had earlier bedtimes.

“Our findings show that outside controlled laboratory conditions, where participants continue their daily routines, both recent and long-term light exposure positively influences cognitive performance,” said Didikoglu. “The beneficial effects were associated with short-term bright light and habitual light exposure patterns characterized by brighter daytimes, earlier bedtimes, and higher consistency in light exposure.”

In an effort to go beyond observational study, the researchers also looked at the mechanisms that could explain this cognitive functioning change. They looked at the brain’s non-visual light-sensing system, driven by melanopsin-containing intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs). Even though the photopigment melanopsin is in the eye, it doesn’t assist sight as such but uses light to regulate alertness, sleep and circadian rhythms.

These melanopsin-containing cells are especially stimulated by short-wavelength (blue-green) light, which sees them signal to the brain regions involved in circadian timing and arousal. Acute exposure to bright, “melanopic light” is known to increase alertness by influencing the brain’s central clock and other arousal systems downstream of it. In this study, the link between recent light exposure and reduced sleepiness plus faster reaction times is consistent with this short-term arousal mechanism.

Meanwhile, habitual exposure to brighter, more regular daytime light – consistency across the week – is thought to strengthen circadian rhythms and support better sleep–wake cycles. Over time, this may improve attention by stabilizing baseline alertness.

The laboratory cohort of 41 participants were used to measure individual differences in melanopsin sensitivity – hence the pupil tests – and the researchers found no link here. So the researchers believe that the positive cognitive results seen in the real-world cohort and light exposure had more to do with the light than their individual biological makeup.

”Scientists already know that exposure to electrical light at night is known to disrupt sleep quality and delays the biological clock,” said Didikoglu. “Our new study paper now shows that bright daytime light is also critical by supporting cognitive function.

“These improvements in cognitive performance may have practical implications for health, safety, and work efficiency, particularly in low-light workplaces, during extended work hours, or night shifts.”

The study was published in the journal Communications Psychology.

Source: University of Manchester

President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda secures seventh term in office | Latest Update

0

Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni has been re-elected to a seventh term, says the country’s electoral commission.

Museveni, 81, won with 71.65 percent of the vote, the commission said on Saturday.

He defeated his main challenger, 43-year-old Bobi Wine – real name Robert Kyagulanyi – who received 24.72 percent of the vote, according to the official results.

More to come…

Former McKinsey consultant now CEO of Informatica attributes growth to being challenged by intelligent colleagues

0

Consulting giant McKinsey & Co. not only has a reputation for rewarding its star employees with sky-high salaries—the organization is also a well-known stepping stone to the C-suite. Take a stroll through the office halls, and you’re sure to pass by a budding Fortune 500 CEO.

Just like Google’s Sundar Pichai and Doordash’s Tony Xu, Amit Walia, the CEO of $7.6 billion company Informatica, worked at McKinsey after receiving his MBA. And the experience—albiet daunting, and quite rigorous—set him up to thrive in his current role as chief executive. 

“McKinsey was a dream job for me when I went to business school, partly because I was an engineer before business school,” Walia tells Fortune. “And I thought, ‘Look, what a great place to be to learn about business in the broadest way—and, of course, the most intense way.’”

Walia spent nearly five years at the consulting company as a senior engagement manager. He stepped into the role after a couple of stints in management and tech; right after receiving his undergraduate degree, the entrepreneur served as a senior officer for Indian manufacturer Tata Steel, overseeing 20,000 employees at just 22 years old.

Walia then spent two years as a senior engineer at $78 billion business Infosys Technologies before taking the leadership track. He attended Northwestern’s Kellogg School of Management, another training hotbed for top executives, and took the McKinsey job with an MBA in his back pocket. The experience primed him to step into Informatica’s top role in 2020, but it was no cake walk. 

“You really get pushed into difficult situations [at McKinsey]…You have to always have a clear bent of mind to be very analytical, to really distill out the problem to its core. It’s a skill you learn, and that’s the hardest thing in a big job,” Walia continues. “You become a better person by being pushed around by the environment of a lot of other smart people.”

Confronting criticism and imposter syndrome—but growing as a future CEO

Most workers, regardless of title or industry, will doubt their professional chops at some point in their careers. And Walia noticed that even the sharpest business minds will second-guess themselves while working at McKinsey. 

“I always joke [that] I felt everybody over there feels like they’re an imposter, because you’re next to another smart person. So you push yourself, and you learn from everybody,” the Informatica CEO says. 

But McKinsey employees don’t have time to dwell on how they shape up to their peers. Walia says he was pushed into “complex environments” with 100 moving parts; the burgeoning business leaders are trained to hone in on what really matters, finding the core of the issue. And once the problem is brought into the light, he says McKinsey encourages “hypothesis-driven problem-solving” to remedy the situation—even when it’s ambiguous or something new, and there is no “right answer.” He constantly tested himself in the job, having to validate every decision he made. His McKinsey peers weren’t afraid to hold back with their critiques, and Walia soaked it all in. 

“It’s a very learning-based culture. You’re constantly learning, and you get [a] tremendous amount of feedback, which helps you become better all the time,” Walia explains. “I always say, ‘Feedback is a gift.’ It’s not to tell you what you’re not doing right, it should tell you what you could do better. Those are the few things that have helped me grow over time from my McKinsey experience.”

Why McKinsey is the biggest incubator of Fortune 500 CEOs 

McKinsey has a reputation as a standout employer when it comes to incubating the future mover-and-shakers of business. After all, the consulting giant has minted more Fortune 500 CEOs than any other organization in the world. 

Aside from Walia, Pichai, and Xu, other notable alumni including Citigroup leader Jane Fraser and Visa chief executive Ryan McInerney have roamed the office floors of the consulting giant. The company has played a hand in catapulting 18 sitting Fortune 500 CEOs, and 28 globally, to the top job, according to a 2025 analysis from Fortune editor Ruth Umoh. 

A dozen former and current McKinsey alumni told Umoh that the firm’s strategy is intentional, and echoing Amit’s experience, incredibly rigorous. The company cycles its staffers through industries, geographies, and departments, purposefully putting them out of their comfort zone. McKinsey also encourages a culture of constructive disagreement, where all employees—reguardless of seniority—have their assumptions and strategies challenged. 

“You start to believe that more is possible,” Liz Hilton Segel, a senior partner at McKinsey, told Fortune last year. “You build pattern recognition that comes from helping a client do something they didn’t think was even achievable—and that builds confidence you carry forever.”

Yoweri Museveni on track for victory as police refute Bobi Wine abduction allegations

0

Anita Nkonge,BBC Africaand

Lucy Fleming

Getty Images Bobi Wine in a black shirt flanked by a police officer and his wife in a blue shawl on voting day.Getty Images

Bobi Wine, President Museveni’s main rival, has questioned the credibility of the results

Police in Uganda have denied allegations that presidential candidate Bobi Wine was abducted on Friday evening as vote counting continues in the East African nation amid an internet blackout.

Wine’s party had said a helicopter landed in the grounds of his house in the capital, Kampala, and forcibly took him to an unknown location.

But the opposition leader has since issued a statement saying he managed to escape during the night raid by the security forces and was no longer at his home, but his wife and other relatives were still under house arrest.

The latest results from Thursday’s election show that President Yoweri Museveni has a commanding lead and is set to extend his 40 years in power.

He has 72% of the vote, with Wine on 24%, based on returns from 94% of polling stations. The final result is expected to be declared later on Saturday.

Wine has condemned the “fake results” and “ballot stuffing” but has not provided any evidence. The authorities have not responded to his allegations.

Speaking at a press conference on Saturday morning, police spokesman Kituuma Rusoke said Wine was still in his home and that Wine’s family members were spreading “untrue” and “unfounded” claims.

He said Wine’s movements were restricted because his home was an area of “security interest”.

“We have controlled access to areas which are security hotspots,” Uganda’s Daily Monitor paper quoted him as saying.

“We cannot allow people to use some places to gather and cause chaos. All our actions are intended to prevent anybody from creating violence or destabilising our security,” he said.

Overnight Wine’s son, Solomon Kampala, posted updates on social media admitting he was getting conflicting reports about the security situation at his parents’ home.

Difficulty accessing the internet in the country has made it hard to verify information.

Just after midday local time (09:00 GMT), Wine posted a statement on Facebook explaining that it had been “very difficult” at his home in Kampala’s Magere district on Friday night.

“The military and police raided us. They switched off power and cut off some of our CCTV cameras. There were helicopters hovering over.

“I want to confirm that I managed to escape from them. Currently, I am not at home, although my wife and other family members remain under house arrest,” he said, adding that the nationwide internet shutdown had added to speculation about events.

“Given the commotion that happened at our house at night, and given that no-one is allowed to access the house, our neighbours concluded that they had succeeded in abducting us and spread the news.”

The campaign has been marred by violence and on Friday, news emerged that at least seven opposition supporters had been killed overnight on Thursday in disputed circumstances in Butambala, about 55km (35 miles) south-west of the capital.

The US embassy then issued an alert to its citizens because of reports the security forces were “using tear gas and firing into the air to disperse gatherings”.

Anadolu/Getty Images Police in blue camouflage and helmets on a Kampala street douse items with water from jerry cans - smoke rises from the pile.Anadolu/Getty Images

Police on Friday were pictured dealing with pockets of demonstrators in Kampala

During Thursday’s vote, voting was delayed by up to four hours in many polling stations around the country as ballot boxes were slow to arrive and biometric machines, used to verify voters’ identity, did not work properly.

Some have linked the problems to the network outage.

Election chief Simon Byabakama said on Friday that the vote counting had not been affected by the internet blackout and the final results would be out before 17:00 local time (14:00 GMT) on Saturday.

President Museveni, 81, is seeking a seventh term in office. He first took power as a rebel leader in 1986.

Wine, a 43-year-old pop star-turned-politician, says he represents the youth in a country where most of the population is aged under 30.

He has promised to tackle corruption and impose sweeping reforms, while Museveni argues he is the sole guarantor of stability and progress in Uganda, a country with a history of conflict.

Although there are six other candidates, the presidential poll is a two-horse race between Museveni and Wine.

The campaign period was marred by the disruption of opposition activities – security forces have been accused of assaulting and detaining Wine’s supporters.

Rusoke, the police spokesperson, dismissed these complaints, accusing opposition supporters of being disruptive.

Internet access was suspended on Tuesday, with Uganda’s Communications Commission saying the blackout was necessary to prevent misinformation, fraud and the incitement of violence – a move condemned by the UN human rights office as “deeply worrying”.

BBC election graphics
Getty Images/BBC A woman looking at her mobile phone and the graphic BBC News AfricaGetty Images/BBC

Randy Grimmett steps down as CEO of Irving Azoff’s GMR, Jeff Toig named new CEO

0

Global Music Rights, Irving Azoff‘s $3.3 billion-valued PRO, has a new CEO.

Jeff Toig, previously Chief Business Officer at GMR, has been promoted to the Chief Executive Officer position at the US-headquartered Performing Rights organization.

He succeeds Randy Grimmett, GMR’s co-founder, who has been elevated to Executive Chairman.

The leadership change arrives just over 12 months after the company struck a deal with private equity firm Hellman & Friedman that valued GMR at USD $3.3 billion.

Founded by Azoff and Grimmett in 2013, Global Music Rights represents a roster of superstar songwriters and composers, including Harry Styles, who just this week announced the release of his upcoming fourth album, Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally, on March 6, via Columbia.

GMR’s roster also includes Drake, Pearl Jam, Billie Eilish, Eagles, and the Estates of John Lennon, Prince, and George Harrison, among others.

According to a press release, both leadership promotions “underscore the continuity, stability, and connection to GMR’s differentiated long-term vision in this space”.

GMR added that Grimmett will remain “deeply involved in the strategic direction” of the PRO, while Toig assumes day-to-day leadership of the company.

Toig has served as Global Music Rights’ Chief Business Officer since 2018, overseeing all revenue and licensing operations for the company.

Commenting on the promotions, Irving Azoff said: “Randy and Jeff have been working side by side for a long time, building GMR into what it is today.”

Shutterstock

“Randy and Jeff have been working side by side for a long time, building GMR into what it is today.”

Irving Azoff

Added Azoff: “This is a natural evolution for GMR, which allows us to continue to set the industry standard for excellence and transparency for the world’s best songwriters and the folks who want to perform their incredible songs.”

“Jeff and I share the same values, the same commitment to our songwriters, and the same vision for GMR.”

Randy Grimmett

Randy Grimmett said: “Jeff and I share the same values, the same commitment to our songwriters, and the same vision for GMR.

“Elevating my role allows me to work with Jeff to shape the future strategy of the business while continuing to work closely with GMR’s incredible roster of songwriters, composers, and publishers for many years to come.”

“I’m honored to lead the business into the future and excited to work with our world-class clients, partners and the entire GMR team as we continue to set the standard for excellence in our industry.”

Jeff Toig

Jeff Toig added: “For over 8 years, I’ve been proud to work alongside Randy and Irving to build GMR into the truly special company it is today. GMR’s client-led approach remains unchanged and has been the hallmark of the company since its founding.

“I’m honored to lead the business into the future and excited to work with our world-class clients, partners, and the entire GMR team as we continue to set the standard for excellence in our industry.”


Elsewhere in the PRO landscape, in a ‘landmark’ move last September, GMR and SESAC joined ASCAP and BMI’s ‘Songview’ copyright database, expanding the platform to 38m+ worksMusic Business Worldwide

Manchester United to face off against Manchester City in Premier League showdown | Football News

0

Challenge from the Client

0



Client Challenge



JavaScript is disabled in your browser.

Please enable JavaScript to proceed.

A required part of this site couldn’t load. This may be due to a browser
extension, network issues, or browser settings. Please check your
connection, disable any ad blockers, or try using a different browser.

Pokémon store in New York City robbed by armed group

0

New York City police are searching for multiple suspects after a masked group stole Pokémon merchandise at a Manhattan store on Wednesday, 14 January.

Security footage shows three people entered the Poké Court store, stole Pokémon merchandise, smashed glass displays, and appeared to point a weapon at customers and staff.

The store’s owner told NBC New York that approximately $100,000 (£74,7300) worth of stock was stolen.

Police say no one was injured and no arrests have been made.

Rights group reports over 3,000 deaths in Iran protests

0

Death toll in Iran protests over 3,000, rights group says

Canada and China to Reduce Certain Tariffs in ‘Enhanced Strategic Partnership’

0

new video loaded: Canada and China Will Lower Some Tariffs in ‘New Strategic Partnership’

Prime Minister Mark Carney of Canada announced that Canada would slash tariffs on some Chinese electric vehicles and that, in return, China would reduce tariffs on Canadian canola products.

By Shawn Paik and Axel Boada

January 16, 2026