• AI Governance Models drive accountability, compliance, and enterprise AI trust. Follow ai technology news and ai trending news for strategic insights.

    #AIGovernanceModels
    #aitechnologynews #Ainews

    Read More: https://ai-techpark.com/ai-governance-models-managing-ethical-ai-challenges/
    AI Governance Models drive accountability, compliance, and enterprise AI trust. Follow ai technology news and ai trending news for strategic insights. #AIGovernanceModels #aitechnologynews #Ainews Read More: https://ai-techpark.com/ai-governance-models-managing-ethical-ai-challenges/
    AI-TECHPARK.COM
    AI Governance Models and Their Role in Managing Ethical AI Challenges
    Explore how effective AI governance models help organizations manage ethical challenges, ensure regulatory compliance, and build trustworthy AI systems.
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  • New model just dropped (please forget all our sins now)
    New model just dropped (please forget all our sins now)
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  • Feeling sleepy around someone you love isn’t weakness — it’s your brain sensing safety.
    When you’re with someone you deeply trust, your nervous system shifts from alert mode to calm mode, allowing the body to relax.

    Love and affectionate touch lowers stress hormone cortisol and increases oxytocin, the bonding hormone.
    This slows the heart, relaxes muscles, and signals the body that it’s safe to rest and recharge.
    Feeling sleepy around someone you love isn’t weakness — it’s your brain sensing safety. When you’re with someone you deeply trust, your nervous system shifts from alert mode to calm mode, allowing the body to relax. Love and affectionate touch lowers stress hormone cortisol and increases oxytocin, the bonding hormone. This slows the heart, relaxes muscles, and signals the body that it’s safe to rest and recharge.
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  • In South Korea, women-only night buses were introduced because fear itself can limit freedom.
    When women feel unsafe after dark, the brain shifts into threat mode — stress rises, routines shrink, and mobility decreases.

    With CCTV, panic buttons, and trained staff, these buses increased ridership and improved feelings of safety.
    Visible safety restores control, lowers anxiety, and expands behavioral freedom — proving infrastructure can reshape both movement and mental well-being.
    In South Korea, women-only night buses were introduced because fear itself can limit freedom. When women feel unsafe after dark, the brain shifts into threat mode — stress rises, routines shrink, and mobility decreases. With CCTV, panic buttons, and trained staff, these buses increased ridership and improved feelings of safety. Visible safety restores control, lowers anxiety, and expands behavioral freedom — proving infrastructure can reshape both movement and mental well-being.
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  • Scientists successfully revived a plant from 32,000-year-old seeds discovered frozen in Siberian permafrost — making it the oldest organism ever brought back to life.

    The seeds belonged to Silene stenophylla and were found buried 124 feet underground near the Kolyma River, preserved inside an Ice Age squirrel’s burrow. Constantly frozen at about 19°F (-7°C), the extreme cold prevented cellular decay since the time of the woolly mammoths . Although the mature seeds were damaged, researchers extracted living tissue from immature ones and grew them in a sterile lab environment. The regenerated plants not only bloomed but produced fertile seeds, showing slight evolutionary differences from modern varieties.

    Beyond reviving ancient life, the breakthrough offers valuable insight for biodiversity preservation . Studying how these cells survived for millennia could strengthen global seed banks and help protect plant genetics against future climate disasters.
    Scientists successfully revived a plant from 32,000-year-old seeds discovered frozen in Siberian permafrost — making it the oldest organism ever brought back to life. The seeds belonged to Silene stenophylla and were found buried 124 feet underground near the Kolyma River, preserved inside an Ice Age squirrel’s burrow. Constantly frozen at about 19°F (-7°C), the extreme cold prevented cellular decay since the time of the woolly mammoths . Although the mature seeds were damaged, researchers extracted living tissue from immature ones and grew them in a sterile lab environment. The regenerated plants not only bloomed but produced fertile seeds, showing slight evolutionary differences from modern varieties. Beyond reviving ancient life, the breakthrough offers valuable insight for biodiversity preservation . Studying how these cells survived for millennia could strengthen global seed banks and help protect plant genetics against future climate disasters.
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