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The Modern Vacation: Fully Wired, Totally Ruined

Weekend getaways and romantic dinners used to be sweet escapes from the daily grind. Nowadays, R and R is often interrupted by a buzzing Blackberry or the ding of an instant message on the wireless laptop.

That's not news to modern workers, many of whom may just be getting back from a long winter break during which they worked more than in years past.

An AP poll last year found that one-fifth of Americans tote a laptop on vacation. Countless more carry cell phones, many of which can be used to check company e-mail.

And why not? With wireless coverage extending, staying connected is simple. Recently, JetBlue Airways announced a trial of free e-mail and instant messaging services for passengers on one of its aircraft. Other airlines are expected to follow suit. 

But there's a hidden cost to companies: employee burnout.  

"Using work cell phones and checking company e-mail at the poolside is not a vacation," said
Dov Eden, an organizational psychologist at Tel Aviv University. Eden studies the psychological effects of respites ranging from family trips to lengthy sabbaticals, including how they bring relief from chronic
job stress.

"If I were a manager, I would insist that my employees leave their cell phones at work during vacation and not check their e-mail while away," Eden said. "In the long run, the employee will be better rested and better able to perform his or her job because true respite affords an opportunity to restore depleted psychological resources."

A nine-year study of more than 12,000 middle-aged men at high risk of heart disease showed that participants who vacationed more had a lower risk of dying than the vacation-deprived. The study, conducted by Brooks Gump of the State University of New York-Oswego and a colleague, was published in 2000 in the journal Psychosomatic Medicine.

Connoisseurs of stress

Americans, however, are passionate connoisseurs of stress.

In a nationwide survey conducted this year by the American Psychological Association, nearly half of the 2,000 adult respondents said stress has increased in the past five years, with 75 percent ranking money and work as the leading causes of stress.

Seventy-seven percent reported physical symptoms related to stress, including fatigue, less interest in sex and even teeth grinding, while 73 percent indicated psychological symptoms such as irritability and wanting to cry at times.

Women, in particular, need more time off. A study in 2005 found that 42 percent of American women "get away from it all" less than once a year.

Beat the stress

One way to beat work stress could be to work from home or another remote location.

Research published in a recent issue of the Journal of Applied Psychology and based on a review of nearly 50 studies that involved about 13,000 employees suggests this alternative work arrangement is a win-win set-up.

"Our results show that telecommuting has an overall beneficial effect, because the arrangement provides employees with more control over how they do their work," said lead author Ravi Gajendran of Penn State.

Gajendran and his colleague found that telecommuters reported more job satisfaction, less motivation to leave the company, less stress, improved work-family balance and higher performance ratings by supervisors.

An estimated 45 million Americans telecommuted in 2006, up from 41 million in 2003, according to WorldatWork, a not-for-profit professional association that focuses on work-life balance and workplace benefits. 

PR
The Invisible Ingredient in Every Kitchen

It’s hard to measure and hard to control. It’s not a material like water or flour, to be added by the cup. In fact, it’s invisible.

It’s heat.

Every cook relies every day on the power of heat to transform food, but heat doesn’t always work in the way we might guess. And what we don’t know about it can end up burning us.

We waste huge amounts of gas or electricity, not to mention money and time, trying to get heat to do things it can’t do. Aiming to cook a roast or steak until it’s pink at the center, we routinely overcook the rest of it. Instead of a gentle simmer, we boil our stews and braises until they are tough and dry. Even if we do everything else right, we can undermine our best cooking if we let food cool on the way to the table — all because most of us don’t understand heat.

Heat is energy. It’s everywhere and it is always on the move, flowing out as it flows in. It roils the chemical innards of things, exciting their molecules to vibrate and crash into each other. When we add a lot of heat energy to foods, it agitates those innards enough to mix them up, destroy structures and create new ones. In doing so it transforms both texture and flavor.

There are, however, uncountable ways to misapply heat. In most cooking, we transfer energy from a heat source, something very hot and energetic, to relatively cold and inert foods. Our usual heat sources, gas flames and glowing coals and electrical elements, have temperatures well above 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Boiling water is around 212 degrees.

Cooks typically heat food to somewhere between 120 degrees (for fish and meats that we want to keep moist) and 400 degrees (for dry, crisp, flavorful brown crusts on breads, pastries, potatoes, or on fish and meats).

At the bottom of that range, a difference of just 5 or 10 degrees can mean the difference between juicy meat and dry, between a well-balanced cup of coffee or tea and a bitter, over-extracted one. And as every cook learns early on, it’s all too easy to burn the outside of a hamburger or a potato before the center is warm.

That’s the basic challenge: We’re often aiming a fire hose of heat at targets that can only absorb a slow trickle, and that will be ruined if they absorb a drop too much. Are you ever annoyed by pots that take forever to heat up, or frustrated by waiting for dry foods to soften? A kitchen that becomes hot enough to be a sauna? Big jumps in the utility bill when you do a lot of cooking? The problem, as you will notice if you pay more attention to your kitchen’s thermal landscape, even in terms of what you can feel, is how much heat escapes without ever getting into the food.

Among the major culprits here are inefficient appliances. According to the United States Department of Energy, a gas burner delivers only 35 to 40 percent of its heat energy to the pan; a standard electrical element conveys about 70 percent. Anyone thinking about kitchen renovation should know that induction cooktops, which generate heat directly within the pan itself, are around 90 percent efficient. They can out-cook big-B.T.U. gas burners, work faster, don’t heat up the whole kitchen, and are becoming more common in restaurant kitchens.

Maximizing the transfer of heat from burner to pot produces better food. In deep frying, the faster the burner can bring the oil temperature back up after the food is added, the quicker the food cooks and the less oil it absorbs. In boiling green vegetables, a fast recovery time means better retention of vibrant color and vitamins.

No matter how efficient an appliance is, the cook can help simply by covering pots and pans with their lids. Some of the heat that enters through the bottom of the pot exits through the top, but a lid prevents much of it from escaping into the air. This is especially true when you’re bringing a pot of water to the boil. With the lid on, it will start bubbling in as little as half the time. Turning water into steam takes a lot of energy, and every molecule that flies away from the water surface takes all that energy with it into the air. Prevent its escape, and the energy stays with the pot to heat the rest of the water.

Once a liquid starts to boil and is turning to steam throughout the pot — the bubbles of a boil are bubbles of water vapor — nearly all the energy from the burner is going into steam production. The temperature of the water itself remains steady at the boiling point, no matter how high the flame is underneath it. So turn the burner down. A gentle boil is just as hot as a furious one.

Cooking doesn’t get much more straightforward than boiling and steaming vegetables, grains, and the like. But sometimes it takes forever, which either delays dinner or results in crunchy beans and diners suffering for it later. And you can’t speed the process by raising the heat.

In fact it’s easy to save loads of time and energy and potential discomfort with grains, dry beans and lentils, and even pasta. But it requires a little thinking ahead. It turns out that the most time-consuming part of the process is not the movement of boiling heat to the center of each small bean or noodle, which takes only a few minutes, but the movement of moisture, which can take hours. Grains and dry legumes therefore cook much faster if they have been soaked. However heretical it may sound to soak dried pasta, doing so can cut its cooking time by two-thirds — and eliminates the problem of dry noodles getting stuck to each other as they slide into the pot.

The trickiest foods to heat just right are meats and fish. The problem is that we want to heat the center of the piece to 130 or 140 degrees, but we often want a browned, tasty crust on the surface, and that requires 400 degrees.

It takes time for heat to move inward from the surface to the center, so the default method is to fry or grill or broil and hope that the browning time equals the heat-through time. Even if that math works out, the area between the center and surface will then range in temperature between 130 and 400 degrees. The meat will be overcooked everywhere but right at the center.

The solution is to cook with more than one level of heat. Start with very cold meat and very high heat to get the surface browned as quickly as possible with minimal cooking inside; then switch to very low heat to cook the interior gently and evenly, leaving it moist and tender.

On the grill, this means having high- and low-heat zones and moving the food from one to the other. On the stove top or in the oven, start at 450 or 500 degrees, and then turn the heat down to around 250, ideally taking the food out until the pan or oven temperature has fallen significantly.

Another solution is to cook the food perfectly with low heat, let it cool some, and then flavor its surface with a brief blast of intense heat from a hot pan or even a gas torch. More and more restaurants are adopting this method, especially those that practice sous-vide cooking, in which food is sealed in a plastic bag, placed in a precisely controlled water bath and heated through at exactly the temperature that gives the desired doneness.

All these are two-step processes, but the same principle works for three steps or more. Rotisserie cooking alternates high and low heat many times: as the meat turns on the spit, each area of the surface is briefly exposed to high browning heat, then given time for that dose of energy to dissipate, part of it into the meat but part back out into the cool air. So the meat interior cooks through at a more moderate temperature. Similarly, steaks and chops cook more evenly on high grill heat — and faster as well — if you become a human rotisserie and turn them not once or twice but as often as you can stand to, even dozens of times, every 15 or 30 seconds.

Tough cuts of meat require longer cooking to dissolve their connective tissue, and stewing or slow braising in a low oven is a simple and popular method of doing so. But many recipes don’t give the best results, simply because they don’t take into account the vast difference between cooking with the lid on and off. Even in an oven set as low as 225 or 250 degrees, if the pot is covered, the contents will reach the boil, and the meat will overcook and dry out.

Leave the lid ajar or off, and evaporation of the cooking liquid cools the pot and moderates the meat temperature, keeping it closer to 160 to 180 degrees. This is hot enough to soften the connective tissue in a few hours without also driving out most of the meat’s moisture.

The challenge of heat management doesn’t end when you’ve cooked something to perfection. How often have you found that the dish that was perfect in the kitchen seems to have lost something by the time you sit down and take the first bite? That something certainly includes heat.

Heat knocks molecules at the surface of food into the air where we can sniff them, so it increases the aroma. Inside the food, agitated molecules make sauces more fluid and hot meat more tender. And the sensation of a food’s warmth is satisfying in itself. The moment hot food is put on a plate, its heat energy begins to flow out into the cooler surroundings. Aromas fade, sauces thicken, fats congeal.

So when you transfer heat’s handiwork from the kitchen to the table, take along some extra. Warm the plates to prolong the pleasure. And encourage everyone to sit down and eat it while it’s hot.

Migration, Interrupted: Nature’s Rhythms at Risk

The world is etched with invisible paths, the routes taken each year by uncountable swarms of geese, elk and salmon, of dragonflies, zebras and leatherback turtles.

Their migrations speak to us in some unfathomably deep way. Birders flock to stopover sites like Cape May, N.J., to watch birds on their journeys to the far north in the spring and back to the tropics in the fall. Eco-tourists head for the Serengeti to train binoculars on herds of wildebeest that stretch to the horizon. American schoolchildren watch monarch butterflies hatch from chrysalises in their classrooms and then see them off on their trip to Mexico.

But in his new book “No Way Home,” David Wilcove, a Princeton biologist, warns that “the phenomenon of migration is disappearing around the world.”

Despite their huge numbers, migratory species are particularly vulnerable to hunting, the destruction of wild habitat and climate change. Humans have already eradicated some of the world’s greatest migrations, and many others are now dwindling away. While many conservation biologists have observed the decline of individual migrations, Dr. Wilcove’s book combines them into an alarming synthesis. He argues that it is not just individual species that we should be conserving — we also need to protect the migratory way of life.

As a scientist, Dr. Wilcove finds the disappearance of the world’s migrations particularly heartbreaking because there is so much left for him and his colleagues to learn. What are the cues that send animals on their journeys? How do they navigate vast distances to places they have never been? How do some species travel for days without eating a speck of food?

Scientists will never be able to answer those questions for migrations that have been wiped out. The journeys of tens of millions of buffalo on the Great Plains will remain a mystery.

But today, scientists are inventing new ways to learn about the surviving migrations. They can tag dragonflies with tiny monitors and analyze the chemistry of feathers to discover the hidden wintering grounds of birds.

Unfortunately, a lot of what they are learning is about all the threats a human-dominated world poses to migrations.

Animals are particularly susceptible to hunting as they migrate, because they swarm in vast groups at predictable times and places. The survival of migratory animals depends on all the habitats along their journey. And a migratory bird’s numbers may dwindle if the forests where it winters are cut down, or if its summering grounds are destroyed, or if its stopovers are eradicated.

At least the birds enjoy the luxury of flying; when salmon in the Pacific Northwest swim from the oceans into rivers to reach their spawning grounds, they now must struggle past chains of dams. Redfish Lake in Idaho was named for the color it turned when it filled with thousands of sockeye salmon that had just swum the 900 miles from the sea. This year only four sockeye reached the lake.

In “No Way Home,” Dr. Wilcove also describes threats that have only recently come to light. Cowbirds can devastate migrating songbirds in the United States by parasitizing their nests, for example. Cowbird mothers throw out the songbirds’ eggs and lay their own instead. It turns out that fragmenting forests are an excellent habitat for cowbirds.

In years to come, Dr. Wilcove warns, global warming may come to have a huge effect on migrations, by dismantling ecosystems and leaving migrating animals without the food they depend on.

It is difficult to come up with a strategy to preserve a phenomenon as multifaceted as an annual migration. If a species of tree that lives only in part of Florida is endangered, the solution is straightforward: try to conserve that little patch of habitat. But migratory animals don’t respect international borders. The preservation of their migrations demands that countries to work together to find solutions. Dr. Wilcove points to some good models — Tanzania and Kenya’s conservation of the Serengeti plains, and the United States and Canada’s efforts to protect the sandhill crane.

But a bird like the red knot, which summers in the Arctic and winters in Tierra del Fuego, the southern tip of South America, stopping along the way to refuel in North and South America, will require an unprecedented level of cooperation.

It is, Dr. Wilcove writes, a worthy fight: “It all adds up to one of the most daunting yet rewarding challenges in wildlife conservation.” 

Unmanned Seaplane Takes Off

The Flying Fish
The Flying Fish
Flying fish were the inspiration for an unmanned seaplane, pictured here, with a 7-foot wingspan. Developed at the University of Michigan, the autonomous craft is believed to be the first seaplane that can initiate and perform its own takeoffs and landings on water.

For the first time, scientists have engineered an unmanned seaplane that can take off and land, independently, on water.

The Flying Fish autonomous vehicle, like its namesake, dwells mostly in the water. When the time comes, it takes off and flies over the waves at distances of tens to thousands of feet.

Equipped with GPS and eventually energy-harvesting solar cells, the UAV has the potential to expand the kinds of water-monitoring tasks currently limited by the expense of a ship or by the stationary nature of water buoys.

For example, a fleet of the autonomous crafts could be sprinkled across an ocean region, each gathering data in its own designated circle. When a plane reaches the edge of its circle, it could take off, fly to the opposite side of the monitoring area, land, and begin taking measurements again.

"They live in the water. They don't need a structure to be launched from or landed on and that makes them more independent," said team member Ella Atkins, associate professor of aerospace engineering and associate professor of electrical engineering and computer science at the University of Michigan.

The project is led by Guy Meadows, director of the university's Marine Hydrodynamics Laboratories and funded by the Department of Defense's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency as part of its "persistent ocean surveillance" program, which will result in a floating field of smart sensors designed to observe the undersea environment.

In a recent sea trial demonstration, the 20-pound craft used GPS and an onboard computer to take off and land in the water 22 times.

Although the seaplane's electric engine currently gets it power from a battery, the team hopes to add alternative energy harvesting equipment, such as solar panels. That could make the UAV "drop and go."

"If you can only deploy it for a few hours, you need ship there anywhere. Solar power is the key to being able to drive your ship away," said Atkins.

And that can save money. According to Hanumant Singh, an associate scientist who specializes in underwater imaging and robotics at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute in Woods Hole, Mass., a ship can cost $35,000 a day.

"We spend a lot of ship time driving in circles and doing the basic set-up work for an expedition," said Hanumant.

"The ability to take off from and land on water is a huge step forward," he said.

In addition, he said, a UAV such as the Flying Fish would allow scientists to maximize the amount of data that they accumulate on any given mission.

For example, when underwater robotic vehicles gather deep-ocean measurements or images, they transmit the data up to the water's surface via sonar. A ship needs to be directly over the underwater robot to capture the best signal. But if Singh had a Flying Fish, he would let the seaplane collect the data, while the ship performed other parts of the mission.

"Once it gets that, either we talk to [the plane] wirelessly or fly it back it to the ship," he said.

Before the Flying Fish is cruising the drafts above the waves, it will need more funding. The first step will be to outfit the seaplane with the solar cells and add more sensors. 

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