progestin (synthetic, non bioidentical progestogens)
progesterone (the stuff that human bodies produce)
and looking into the papers (they link) there is a strong suggestion that progestines are the ones causing the risks, bioidentical progesterone does (almost) not.
@risingphoenix@Impossible_PhD up to a certain degree this is useful because it helps people to notice that there is a 1-2 metric ton box rolling towards/past them.
in the early days of the reemergence of electric cars there were a few accidents because people walked in front of slow moving ones as they did not hear the cars at all and just walked over a street.
so almost everywhere governments implemented laws that they have to make some sound that makes it recognizable as a car.
@hankg@evacide they have to accept that their view of the world is fundamentally wrong. the changes that came with (the visibility&acceptance of) homo people did not shake up the roots of their worldview even nearly as much.
because sexual orientation almost only affects relationships between people and is comparatively private, gender is engraved into every aspect of society and messing with worldviews on such a deep level frightens some people a lot.
ich quitte das freelander dasein und suche eine festanstellung als web entwickler, level senior in berlin. ich kann react, php, css, a11y und dank jahren in einer agentur: auch alles andere, falls es der pitch notwendig macht.
bin von agentur, über unternehmen, ngo bis verband für alles offen. gerne was mit sinn und ohne ecommerce. falls wer was hört oder wen kennt, gerne weiterleiten.
@blinry i did something similar once, and added a tiny bit of miso paste. gives it a bit more umami flavor.
do not remember the exact ratio, but with the amount of cashews in your recipe less than 1/4 of a teaspoon should be enough, otherwise it tastes only like it.
What some people don’t seem to be able to understand is that for the ones with executive disfunction number of steps matters a lot.
I just put away all my dried laundry aside of duvet cover.
Why? Because for all the other things it’s easy one-step task: grab all the knickers and shove them into the drawer, get the home clothes and put it into home clothes cube box(that cubed Ikea shelf is such a helper for people like me, I just have a cube for every thing).
But the linen shelf is at the top of the bathroom closet, and it’s almost full. So I need a stepladder to be able to put the duvet cover there(I can try to shove it there without, I kinda reach the shelf itself, but in its current state the cover is likely to fall from there, and probably with some other things, so that would upset me which I am not ready to deal with now).
But the stepladder is now occupied by my winter shoes which were drying there before I put them away for summer.
But to put them away I need to get two big boxes from under my bed, empty one by putting everything that is there into the other one, put all the shoes there, put the boxes back under the bad, ensure all the boxes there are arranged in a way that is allowing my cat to play in that labyrinth, and probably clean up after that as I suppose there’s going to be a few dust bunnies.
Gosh, I got tired by just typing all that.
Going through all those steps may bot take too much time(if I don’t get distracted by something, including the urge to sort everything perfectly), but the very thought of going through all those steps just discourages me so much that I can’t find energy to start. “It’s just one duvet cover!” - they say. “It’s a shitton of steps!” - I answer.
Well, the cover is drying in a way that obscures a view from my bed which irritates me enough to maybe develop enough anger to put it away in the weekend.
Did you know that putting floating solar on only 10% of the surface of all the reservoirs that humans have built could provide 110% of the electricity that we now are producing? Well, now you do.
@HistoPol@GreenFire the oceans are so much bigger than any reservoirs, so i doubt that even having all of them (the reservoirs) covered with solar would change the atmospheres humidity in any noticeable way.
but it would save a lot of water for agriculture and drinking (with less effort to put into than saltwater)
@2ndStar@necrosis eins muss man denen lassen, sie können sich das was da auf der toilette aus c-gpt fällt lange genug merken um es im prüfungsraum auf zu schreiben. das hätte bei mir nicht geklappt...
The honeybee brain hosts over 600,000 neurons, at a density higher than that of mammalian brains:
"Our estimate of total brain cell number for the European honeybee (Apis mellifera;
≈ 6.13 × 10^5, s = 1.28 × 10^5; ...) was lower than the existing estimate from brain sections ≈ 8.5 × 10^5"
"the highest neuron densities have been found in the smallest respective species examined (smoky shrews in mammals; 2.08 × 10^5 neurons mg^−1 [14] and goldcrests in birds; 4.9 × 10^5 neurons mg^−1 [16]). The Hymenoptera in our sample have on average higher cell densities than vertebrates (5.94 × 10^5 cells mg^−1; n = 30 species)."
Ants, on the other hand ...
"ants stand out from bees and wasps as having particularly small brains by measures of mass and cell number."
@albertcardona my hypothesis for why they can achieve a higher neuron density would be that because the brains are smaller, nutrients and such do not have to travel as far into it they need less gaps to supply the cells further into the center.
would be interesting if this holds up for any (or at least most) creatures brain size in relation to its neuron density.
and could this relation be estimated with some linear, or i assume more likely a logarithmic or exponential function?