Saturday, 4 February 2012

Math tells NFL teams to go for it on 4th down

Millions of eyes will be glued to the gridiron this Sunday as the New England Patriots face the New York Giants in Super Bowl XLVI. It's the game of the year in American sports, and fans and pundits will dissect how the performances of key players, decisions by the coaches and calls by the referees affected the ultimate outcome.

And if one team decides to go for it on fourth down ? eschewing a punt or easy field goal ? it will surely be one of the hottest topics of debate. But should it be? Are fourth-down attempts really a bad decision?

The status quo is to trot out the kicking team on fourth down. Unless it's late in a game and the team on offense is losing, fourth downs on the offensive team's side of the field typically translate to an automatic punt. For fourth downs in an opponent's territory within about the 35-yard line, coaches usually opt to send in the field-goal unit, satisfied at a shot to put three points on the scoreboard.

If score is close, losing teams go for it

Yet mathematics pounds this sort of conventional wisdom into the turf. Statistical analyses have shown that to give their team the best chance of winning, coaches should go for it more on fourth down. A lot.

And nowhere is that clearer than on that most tantalizing of fourth-down situations: fourth and one yard to go. "What the numbers suggest ? and sometimes it seems crazy ? but in almost all of those situations, it makes sense to go for it," said Brian Burke, founder of AdvancedNFLStats.com.

Math in the huddle
To reach this conclusion and others, Burke tallied data from 2,400 games during the 2000 through 2008 seasons. He threw out the second- and fourth-quarter data, as teams do unusual things when hurried as the clock ticks toward the half-time break, or in desperate late-game situations.

From this dataset, Burke calculated "expected points," defined as the average potential points a team can expect given a certain situation.

Naturally, expected points peak when an offense is mere yards away from their opponent's end zone, and expected points plummet for an offense mired by its own end zone. (In fact, the expected points dip into the negative for offenses within about their own 10-yard line, meaning the team most likely to eventually score next is the one on defense.)

Burke then summed up what option on fourth down ? punt, field-goal attempt or first-down try ? offered a team the most expected points, and thus a chance of ultimately winning the game.

"They're going for it!"
As it turns out, going for it on fourth and one from anywhere on the field makes statistical sense. Teams convert a fourth and one ? which includes situations ranging from fourth-and-inches to fourth-and-a-yard-and-a-half ? around 74 percent of the time.

Overall, limiting the number of possessions an opponent's offense gets really stacks up in a team's favor. That strategy has grown even sounder in recent years because offenses have exploded. Just this season, quarterbacks racked up four of the six highest-ever totals for passing yardage.

"Offenses have gradually gotten the upper hand," Burke said. "The value of possession is so much greater because of the greater chance of scoring. You never want the other offense to have the ball, and field position" ? usually the argument for punting ? "has become less and less important."

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Punts still do stand as the better option in many cases, for example on fourth and three or more within an offense's own 30-yard line or so. But even at midfield it's statistically smarter to go for it on fourth and sixth, according to Burke's figures.

In fact, in most scenarios of score and time, when between an opponent's 45- and 30-yard line and facing a fourth down and 10 yards to go or less, offenses should stay on the field. A field goal adds up as a wiser move from about fourth and 11-plus at about the opponent's 33-yard line.

Mentally moving the chains
Other analyses, such as a study revised in 2005 by David Romer, an economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley, agree that coaches should be more aggressive when the referee signals fourth down.???

Of course, statistics only speak to generalized, averaged situations. For teams with weak offensive lines, trying to surge ahead on a fourth-and-short to nab a first down is a tougher proposition.

So why do coaches ? who dig through tons of stats looking for a winning edge ? remain gun-shy on fourth down? Burke thinks it?s mostly psychological. "There's an asymmetric intuition about gaining things and losing things," Burke said. "We fear losing something much more than experiencing the happiness of gaining it."

Also, the conventional wisdom in football about when to punt derives from a less-high-powered game of decades ago, when field position mattered more.

Some sports analysts have argued that coaches fear taking the blame for botched, risky fourth-down attempts. Bill Belichick, the Patriots' coach, has been there before. In a Nov. 15, 2009, game against the arch-rival Indianapolis Colts, with 2:08 remaining, Belichick went for it on fourth-and-two from the Patriots' 28-yard line. Punting would have given the ball to quarterback Peyton Manning and a red-hot offense, but the criticisms poured in.?

According to Burke's stats, Belichick made the right call. Other gutsy fourth-down calls in this year's playoffs have Burke thinking that "some coaches are really catching on."

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Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/46257516/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Only 6 days left to help keep jailbreak exemption in DMCA ? act now!

We have 6 days left to keep jailbreaking legal and extend the DMCA exception that is set to expire soon. ifixit.org has an interesting interview up with the EFF (Electronic Frontier Foundation) and Andrew "bunnie" Huang, author of Hacking the Xbox.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/_cXjxDbpAlE/story01.htm

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Friday, 3 February 2012

Maine girl bouncing back after 6-organ transplant

Alannah Shevenell, 9, speaks to a reporter at her home in Hollis, Maine, Thursday, Feb. 2, 2012. Alannah returned home Wednesday afternoon, three months after receiving six new organs in a groundbreaking operation. Doctors at Children?s Hospital Boston replaced Alannah Shevenell?s stomach, liver, spleen, small intestine, pancreas and a portion of her esophagus in October. It?s believed to be the first-ever transplant of an esophagus and the largest number of organs transplanted at one time in New England. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

Alannah Shevenell, 9, speaks to a reporter at her home in Hollis, Maine, Thursday, Feb. 2, 2012. Alannah returned home Wednesday afternoon, three months after receiving six new organs in a groundbreaking operation. Doctors at Children?s Hospital Boston replaced Alannah Shevenell?s stomach, liver, spleen, small intestine, pancreas and a portion of her esophagus in October. It?s believed to be the first-ever transplant of an esophagus and the largest number of organs transplanted at one time in New England. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

Alannah Shevenell, 9, and her grandmother, Debi Skolas, speak to a reporter at their home in Hollis, Maine, Thursday, Feb. 2, 2012. Alannah returned home Wednesday afternoon, three months after receiving six new organs in a groundbreaking operation. Doctors at Children?s Hospital Boston replaced Alannah Shevenell?s stomach, liver, spleen, small intestine, pancreas and a portion of her esophagus in October. It?s believed to be the first-ever transplant of an esophagus and the largest number of organs transplanted at one time in New England. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

Alannah Shevenell, 9, rides on a sled with her grandfather, Jamie Skolas, at their home in Hollis, Maine, Thursday, Feb. 2, 2012. Alannah returned home Wednesday afternoon, three months after receiving six new organs in a groundbreaking operation. Hospital officials say it was the first known esophageal transplant in the world and the largest number of organs transplanted into a person at one time in New England. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

(AP) ? A 9-year-old Maine girl is home from a Boston hospital healthy, active and with high hopes ? and a new stomach, liver, spleen, small intestine, pancreas, and part of an esophagus to replace the ones that were being choked by a huge tumor.

It's believed to be the first-ever transplant of an esophagus and the largest number of organs transplanted at one time in New England.

Spunky and bright-eyed as she scampered around her family's farmhouse outside Portland, Alannah Shevenell said Thursday that she's glad to be feeling well again and able to go sledding, make a snowman, work on her scrapbooks and give her grandmother a little good-humored sass.

The best part, though? "Being home," she said. "Just being home."

It was 2008 when Alannah, then 5, began running a fever and losing weight while her belly swelled. Doctors discovered the tumor that year and twice attempted to remove it, as it made its way like octopus legs from organ to organ. But it was difficult to access what turned out to be a rare form of sarcoma, said Debi Skolas, Alannah's grandmother, and chemotherapy didn't do the trick, either.

All the time, the growth ? known as an inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor ? continued to grow in her abdomen, causing pain, making it hard to eat and swelling her up with fluid. Surgery was the last resort to save her life, and Alannah spent more than a year on a waiting list for the organs, said Dr. Heung Bae Kim, the lead surgeon on the procedure at Children's Hospital Boston.

The family was told there was a 50 percent chance Alannah wouldn't survive the procedure. But without it, she had no chance whatsoever.

Things were more tense than celebratory in October when doctors prepared to remove the growth and the organs in one fell swoop and replace them with organs transplanted in one tangled piece from another child of similar size.

The hardest part was taking out her organs and the tumor, Kim said, calling it a difficult operation with lots of blood loss.

"It's probably one of the most extensive tumor removals ever done," the surgeon said.

Dr. Allan Kirk, professor of surgery at Emory University in Atlanta and the editor-in-chief of The American Journal of Transplantation, said no other esophageal transplant has been reported in medical literature.

After the surgery, Alannah spent three more months at the hospital, with her grandmother sleeping every night in a lounge chair by her bed. She battled infections and complications from the surgery before finally being given the OK to leave.

She arrived back home Wednesday in the 192-year-old house on a country road where she lives with her grandmother and grandfather, Jamie Skolas, in Hollis, a town of 4,500 residents about 20 miles west of Portland.

But just because she's home doesn't mean she's out of the woods. Alannah has to take nine medications each day, some two, three or four times. Her grandparents have to precisely measure what goes in and comes out of her body, and check her blood sugar.

She has an ostomy pouch and feeding tube attached to her for nutrition as she slowly gets used to eating again. Scars from her surgeries look like a roadmap on her stomach. A tutor comes to the home 20 hours a week for her schooling.

Her immune system is so weak that she can't go to places with large numbers of other people, such as school, church or a mall. She can't eat raw vegetables or fruits unless they have thick skins because of concerns over germs, and she'll never be able to swim in a lake because of the bacteria. The Skolases installed ultraviolet lights in their heating ducts to kill mold, mildew and bacteria that might sicken Alannah.

Alannah is aware of her limitations and what she's been through. "Don't even ask," she says when the subject of the medical costs, which have been covered by MaineCare ? Maine's version of Medicaid ? come up.

She's talkative and enjoys bantering with her grandparents.

"Grammy, you're not always right," she said to end a conversation.

The Skolases, who took Alannah in several years ago but declined to discuss the whereabouts of her parents, have made sacrifices for her through the years. Their hand-crafted-furniture business has suffered, with Debi devoting her time to care for Alannah, and the couple has dipped into retirement savings to make ends meet.

Friends have organized a fundraiser to help raise money to offset the costs.

More than anything, though, the family is thankful for the girl's second chance at life and to the family that went through the pain of losing a child and before deciding to donate the organs to help Alannah.

"That was a courageous decision," Debi Skolas said. "I still cry when I think about it."

___

Associated Press writer Bridget Brown in Boston contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2012-02-02-Multiple%20Organ%20Transplant/id-0e55947c450c482196ee37ede1fcb47c

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Thursday, 2 February 2012

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Gunmen kidnap 11 Iranian pilgrims in Syria (AP)

DAMASCUS, Syria ? Gunmen kidnapped 11 Iranian pilgrims heading to the Syrian capital by road from Turkey on Wednesday, a diplomat in Damascus said.

The group of 35 pilgrims were on a bus outside the central city of Hama when armed men ambushed it, said the diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to give details on the abduction.

The gunmen took away 11 men, leaving behind the women, children and elderly men, after stealing money and mobile phones from them, the diplomat said. The pilgrims had been heading to visit Shiite shrines in Syria, he said.

Iran's state-run Press TV also reported the abduction of the 11, but did not provide details.

It was the latest in a string of reported kidnappings of Iranians amid Syria's turmoil, as the regime cracks down on protesters and military defectors. Iran is Syria's closest ally and has strongly backed President Bashar Assad.

Last Friday, gunmen snatched 11 Iranian pilgrims along the same highway, according to Iran's state news agency IRNA. In December seven Iranian engineers building a power plant in central Syria were kidnapped. They have not yet been released.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120201/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iran_syria

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Wednesday, 1 February 2012

Artist Mike Kelley found dead in L.A. home

By Derrik J. Lang, The Associated Press

Horst Ossinger / EPA

A file picture dated July 15, 2011, shows dancers pose in the installation "Test Room" by artist Mike Kelley.

Mike Kelley, the daring and influential contemporary installation artist who counted the band Sonic Youth and artist Paul McCarthy among his collaborators, has died, police said Wednesday. He was 57.

Kelley's body was found at his home Tuesday night and it appeared he had committed suicide, South Pasadena Police Sgt. Robert Bartl said, without providing further information on the death. An autopsy was pending.

The artist's death brings a tragic end to a career empowered by both a punk-rock rebelliousness and pop-culture kitsch. Kelley famously filled art spaces with sculptures and unorthodox objects, and his solo exhibit "Catholic Tastes" at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York," which provocatively combined dolls, drawings and other objects, established him as a major figure in the art world in 1993.

"His work was widely collected and exhibited internationally," said Stephanie Barron, senior curator of modern art at Los Angeles County Museum of Art. "He had a voracious appetite for all kinds of art. He was enormously curious and worked incredibly at his craft. He was never afraid to think really big. Artists like that don't come around very often."

Bartl said authorities went to Kelley's home Tuesday after a concerned family friend went to the residence, and then called 911. The friend told investigators that Kelley had been depressed after recently breaking up with his girlfriend, but no note was found, Bartl said.

Kelley's work will be included in the upcoming 2012 Whitney biennial in New York.

In addition to "Catholic Tastes," other major solo exhibitions included 2004's "The Uncanny" at the Tate Liverpool in the United Kingdom and 2006's "Profondeurs Vertes" at the Louvre in Paris.

"Mike was an irresistible force in contemporary art," Kelley's studio, Gagosian Gallery, said in a statement that the Los Angeles Times published on its website. "We cannot believe he is gone. But we know his legacy will continue to touch and challenge anyone who crosses its path. We will miss him. We will keep him with us."

Kelley's notable works included a life-size re-creation of his childhood home on wheels, tiny rendition of Superman's extraterrestrial birthplace encased in a glass jug and several spherical sculptures made of stuffed animals.

"His works often violated notions of so called good taste and blurred the boundaries between art, music and popular culture," said Barron.

He erected a life-sized Colonel Sanders statue alongside a miniature Sigmund Freud at the Gagosian in Los Angeles in 2011 and was influenced by old yearbooks for a sprawling 2005 exhibition at the Gagosian Gallery in New York that featured a 15-foot-long missile called the "gospel rocket."

Kelley was a student of conceptual artist John Baldessari, and he collaborated with fellow bold artists like Paul McCarthy and Tony Oursler. The band Sonic Youth used Kelley's work on the album cover for "Dirty" released in 1992.

Born in Detroit, Kelley founded the band Destroy All Monsters with three other musicians in 1974. He left the band in 1978 to attend the California Institute of the Arts in Valencia, near Los Angeles, but never strayed far from the music scene, frequently contributing to music journals and always counting music as an inspiration.

"He was extremely intense, very serious, phenomenally well read. He would go very deep into his subjects, a real artist scholar but with a real passion for whatever he was investigating," Barron said.

After encounters with him, Barron said, "I always came away learning something new, thinking about things differently and in awe of his curiosity."

Although she corresponded with him in the last couple of weeks, the last time she saw him was a month ago.

"It's incredibly sad," Barron said. "It's hard to imagine somebody with the life force and intensity that Mike brought to bear is no longer with us. His impact will be seen with distance as all the more powerful and we'll have to begin to process this."

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Source: http://entertainment.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/01/10293691-artist-mike-kelley-found-dead-in-los-angeles-home

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Iran keeping option open on nuclear weapon: U.S. spy chief (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? Iran is keeping the option open to develop a nuclear weapon but U.S. intelligence agencies do not know whether it will eventually decided to build one, the U.S. intelligence chief said on Tuesday.

New U.S. sanctions imposed over Iran's nuclear program were likely to have a greater impact than previous ones, but were not expected to lead to the downfall of Tehran's leadership, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said in prepared testimony on the annual worldwide threat assessment for the Senate intelligence committee.

"We assess Iran is keeping open the option to develop nuclear weapons, in part by developing various nuclear capabilities that better position it to produce such weapons, should it choose to do so," Clapper said. "We do not know, however, if Iran will eventually decide to build nuclear weapons."

Iran is expanding its uranium enrichment capabilities, which can be used for either civil or weapons purposes, he said.

"Iran's technical advancement, particularly in uranium enrichment, strengthens our assessment that Iran has the scientific, technical, and industrial capacity to eventually produce nuclear weapons, making the central issue its political will to do so," Clapper said.

"These advancements contribute to our judgment that Iran is technically capable of producing enough highly enriched uranium for a weapon, if it so chooses," he said.

President Barack Obama signed into law December 31 sanctions on Iran's central bank. The new U.S. sanctions will have a greater impact on Iran because the Central Bank of Iran handles a large volume of foreign bank transactions and receives the revenue for the roughly 70 percent of Iranian oil sold by the National Iranian Oil Company, Clapper said.

"Despite this, Iran's economic difficulties probably will not jeopardize the regime, absent a sudden and sustained fall in oil prices or a sudden domestic crisis that disrupts oil exports," he said.

Iran has sought to "exploit the Arab Spring but has reaped limited benefits, thus far," the testimony said. Its biggest regional concern is Syria where a change in leadership would be a major strategic loss for Tehran.

Nearly a year into the unrest, the situation in Syria is unlikely to be resolved quickly, Clapper said.

"Both the regime and the opposition are determined to prevail, and neither side appears willing to compromise on the key issue of President Bashar al-Assad remaining in power."

CHINA CONCERNED

The Arab Spring uprisings fueled concern among Chinese leaders that similar unrest could undermine their rule, prompting Beijing to launch its harshest crackdown on dissent in at least a decade, Clapper said.

At the same time, worries about the global economy helped heighten Beijing's resistance to external pressure and suspicion of U.S. intentions, he said.

China continued a policy of permitting modest appreciation of the renminbi, "although it remains substantially undervalued," the testimony said.

In North Korea, it is still early to assess the extent of the new leader, Kim Jong-un's authority, Clapper said. Senior North Korean leaders will probably remain cohesive at least in the near term to prevent instability and protect their interests, the testimony said.

U.S. intelligence agencies judge that North Korea tested two nuclear devices, in October 2006 and May 2009, which "strengthen our assessment that North Korea has produced nuclear weapons," Clapper said.

"The Intelligence Community assesses Pyongyang views its nuclear capabilities as intended for deterrence, international prestige, and coercive diplomacy. We judge that North Korea would consider using nuclear weapons only under narrow circumstances," he said.

SPYING THREAT

Espionage by China, Russia, and Iran will remain top threats to the United States in coming years, Clapper said. Russia and China are aggressive and successful in economic espionage against the United States, and "Iran's intelligence operations against the United States, including cyber capabilities, have dramatically increased in recent years in depth and complexity."

Foreign intelligence services have targeted the unclassified and classified computer networks of U.S. government agencies, businesses, and universities. "We assess that many intrusions into U.S. networks are not being detected," he said.

The next two to three years will be a "critical transition phase" for the terrorism threat facing the United States, particularly from al Qaeda and like-minded groups, Clapper said.

Al Qaeda's leadership is expected to become more decentralized, with the core group formerly led by Osama bin Laden diminishing in operational importance. Counterterrorism efforts to keep pressure on the group could lead to fragmentation of the movement within a few years, he said.

Core al Qaeda is in decline and with the death of Osama bin Laden, "the global jihadist movement lost its most iconic and inspirational leader," Clapper said. Most members find al Qaeda's new leader, Ayman al-Zawahri, less compelling and "will not offer him the deference they gave bin Laden."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120131/wl_nm/us_usa_intelligence_threats

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