The Daily Populous

Sunday December 31st, 2017 evening edition

image for Self-injury more about coping than a cry for help

New research has revealed that most people who harm themselves do it as a way to deal with their emotional pain, rather than a cry for help.

While people do harm themselves as a way to communicate with, or to influence the behaviour of, others, only about 23% to 33% of people who self-injure say they do this.

Clinical Psychologist Dr Peter Taylor, from The University of Manchester found that between 63% and 78% of non-suicidal people who self-injure do it as a short-term strategy to ease their emotional distress.

However, though self-injuring may work for short periods, the effect can be short lived, and make matters worse in the long term.

Studies say it is associated with a range of psychological difficulties including depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder.

Though many use it as a way to cope, it is also a risk factor for later suicide.

The study was carried out by researchers from The University of Manchester, University of Liverpool, Leeds Beckett University, and Edith Cowan University in Australia. »

Iran cuts off internet access in several cities as mass protests continue

Authored by english.alarabiya.net

Several reports indicate that telecoms providers in Iran have begun blocking internet access across several cities in the country as mass protests erupted for the third day in a row.

READ MORE: Three killed in shooting by Revolutionary Guards during protests in central Iran.

Iran’s two main internet and communications service providers are the Telecommunication Company of Iran (TCI) and Irancell. »

Genetically Engineering Pigs to Grow Organs for People

Authored by theatlantic.com

The second problem is less obvious: Pig genomes are rife with DNA sequences of viruses that can infect human cells.

Quite suddenly, however, solving these two problems has become much easier and much faster thanks to the gene-editing technology CRISPR.

With CRISPR, scientists can knock out the pig genes that trigger the human immune response. »

Green Bay Packers defensive coordinator Dom Capers not expected to return next season

Authored by espn.com

Green Bay Packers defensive coordinator Dom Capers, who has been with the team since 2009, is not expected to return next season, league sources told ESPN's Adam Schefter.

Capers, 67, is coming to the end of his ninth season in charge of the Packers' defense.

Capers hasn't fielded a defense ranked in the top 10 since the Super Bowl season of 2010, when it was fifth. »

Gal Gadot Is the Highest-Grossing Actress of 2017

Authored by vanityfair.com

Gal Gadot is officially Forbes’s highest-grossing actress of 2017, having raked in $1.4 billion in movie tickets worldwide for portraying the same superhero twice in six months.

Forbes reports that Gadot is not only the top actress of the year, she’s also the top third highest-grossing actor, period.

Scarlett Johansson was the highest-grossing actor, period, of 2016, after appearing in the Coen brothers’ Hail, Caesar! »