Traffic reportedly STOPPED on major route into Essex causing chaos
Traffic has reportedly been stopped on a major route into Essex following a crash near Cambridge.
Traffic reportedly STOPPED on major route into Essex causing chaos
Traffic has reportedly been stopped on a major route into Essex following a crash near Cambridge.
Afternoon slumps, extreme fatigue and brain fog are being MISTAKEN for symptoms of the menopause - but millions of women could have troubles reversed with a shot of this crucial vitamin
Vitamin B12 has long been the quiet workhorse of nutrition - essential yet often overlooked because we generally get enough through a balanced diet. But that assumption is starting to shift...
Victoria Beckham boogies on the set of her GAP photoshoot after Brooklyn's wedding dance 'hijack' claims
Victoria Beckham looked chic in a slouchy suit a she danced on the set of a photoshoot for her fast-selling GAP range on Tuesday.
Ex-Coronation Street star and pop singer Adam Rickitt granted restraining order against stalker who told of fantasies about raping a child during abuse campaign
Adam Rickitt, who runs a pub in Knutsford, Cheshire, had barred Ron Kleihues and called police over the threat, but was hounded with letters and messages during a year-long terror campaign.
Brit father-and-son wine entrepreneurs are sued by Italian state body for 'misusing the Prosecco name' and selling 'fake fizz'
The Consortium for the Protection of Controlled Designation of Origin Prosecco claim Michael Goldstein and his father, Ralph, exploited the protected Prosecco name.
Rachel Nickell's three-year-old son tells of moment he witnessed mother's murder: Youngster reveals how killer 'stuck knife' into her while walking dog on Wimbledon Common
Rachel Nickell, 23, was stabbed 49 times on Wimbledon Common in London while walking her dog Molly with her son Alex on July 15, 1992 in a crime that shocked the nation.
POLL OF THE DAY: Should people get benefits for anxiety, depression and stress?
Halting benefit payments for conditions such as anxiety, depression and stress now has widespread public support, according to a study by Tony Blair's think tank.
Why Adam Thomas has mysteriously disappeared after his controversial I'm A Celebrity win...
Viewers were left with their jaws on the floor as they watched the I'm A Celebrity... South Africa final descend into mayhem live on ITV.
Melania Trump is bringing back the skirt suit! How this chic ensemble is officially cool again - after the First Lady sported butter yellow set for King Charles and Queen Camilla's state visit
The skirt suit may be synonymous with the 1980s, but its influence has proved anything but fleeting.
The Silent Frequency That Makes Old Buildings Feel Haunted
Researchers say infrasound -- low-frequency vibrations from things like pipes, HVAC systems, and traffic that humans can't consciously hear -- may help explain why some old buildings feel unsettling or "haunted." Rodney Schmaltz, senior author and professor at MacEwan, says: "Consider visiting a supposedly haunted building. Your mood shifts, you feel agitated, but you can't see or hear anything unusual. In an old building, there is a good chance that infrasound is present, particularly in basements where aging pipes and ventilation systems produce low-frequency vibrations. If you were told the building was haunted, you might attribute that agitation to something supernatural. In reality, you may simply have been exposed to infrasound." ScienceBlog.com reports: Infrasound sits below roughly 20 Hz, the lower limit of what the human ear can ordinarily detect. It's generated by storms, by volcanic activity, by tectonic rumblings deep in the Earth's crust, and (this is the part that matters) by the mundane mechanical heartbeat of cities: ageing pipes, HVAC systems, traffic, industrial machinery. "Infrasound is pervasive in everyday environments, appearing near ventilation systems, traffic, and industrial machinery," says Schmaltz. Most of the time, we walk through it without a second thought. The question the team wanted to answer was whether walking through it was actually doing something to us, whether the frequency was registered somewhere below consciousness, somewhere we couldn't readily name.
The experimental setup was deliberately ordinary. Thirty-six undergraduate students filed one at a time into isolated testing rooms and sat alone with a piece of music, either a calming instrumental or a horror-themed ambient track designed to provoke discomfort. Hidden subwoofers, including a 12-inch unit positioned in an adjacent hallway and a 16-inch speaker oriented toward the ceiling in a neighboring room, pumped infrasound at approximately 18 Hz into half those spaces. The participants had no idea. That last point turned out to be rather important. When the team ran the numbers, they found that participants couldn't reliably identify whether infrasound had been present. Their guesses were, statistically speaking, no better than chance. And according to Schmaltz, participants' beliefs about whether the infrasound was on had no detectable effect on their cortisol or mood. The physiological response didn't care what the participants thought was happening. It just happened anyway.
What happened, specifically, was this: those exposed to infrasound reported higher irritability, lower interest in the music, and a tendency to rate the music as sadder, irrespective of whether it was the calming or the horror track. Cortisol levels, measured before and about 20 minutes after exposure, were also elevated. Kale Scatterty, the PhD student who led the work, notes that irritability and cortisol do tend to move together under ordinary stress, but adds that "infrasound exposure had effects on both outcomes that went beyond that natural relationship." That distinction matters more than it might seem. Previous theories about infrasound and paranormal experience have often leaned on anxiety as the explanatory mechanism, the idea that low-frequency sound triggers a kind of free-floating dread that the mind then reaches for supernatural explanations to account for. The new data don't really support that picture. Measures of anxiety didn't budge significantly. What went up was irritability and disinterest, a kind of sour, low-grade aversion rather than fear. That's perhaps a more honest description of how a lot of ghost stories actually feel in the telling: not screaming terror, but wrong atmosphere, a sense of unease that never quite crystallizes into something you can point at. The study has been published this week in Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Essex vets-on-wheels finally hits the road
After weeks of work and fitting out a large van with sterile counters, x-ray scanners and other veterinary apparatus, the surgery-on-wheels is ready to go.
Moment masked gang steal £140,000 worth of motorbikes from warehouse after police suspect employee left shutter door open
Striking footage shows the 12-strong gang target Noatum Logistics on the Isle of Grain in Kent in the early hours of July 5 last year.
How the entire Kinahan cartel was nearly taken out: Gang leader feared 'whole bloodline could have been wiped out' in Dublin hotel gun attack
Sean McGovern's conversation with a senior gang member, 'Cap', took place within two days of the strike on the Regency Hotel, in which he was shot.
The traveller camps hiding asylum seekers across Britain: How illegal migrants are secretly subletting caravans in sprawling sites.. and are forced into work by criminal gangs
With hundreds of mobile homes strewn haphazardly along a maze of dirt tracks, Buckles Lane feels more Wild West than 21st-century Britain.
Essex woman banned from driving after police spotted empty drink cans in her car
A police officer found empty spirit and mixer cans in the passenger footwell
Knock knock, moo's there? Moment Ring doorbell alerts homeowner to a COW on her driveway
Leanne Cross, 36, from Silsden, West Yorkshire, said the unusual moment happened while she was at work.
My anxiety was so bad I spent three months in hospital. Could the treatments that helped me work for YOU? INDIA STURGIS
It has just gone 7am, but I have been awake for hours - trapped in a living nightmare.
Ex-partner of fashion guru who died at 47 battles family in High Court over £1million will - saying he is struggling to work due to walking his dog
Tibor Matyas was the 'romantic and business partner' of Chris Liu at the time of the designer's death in 2017 and is now suing for 'reasonable provision' from the will.
Underworld row erupts over the REAL reason Melbourne's gangsters are firebombing nightclubs
For months now, nightclub owners, the general public and police have searched for a reason for the latest onslaught of violence.