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Icelandair Group hf : Candidates for the Board of Directors of Icelandair Group at the AGM on 12 March 2021

Icelandair Group hf.: Candidates for the Board of Directors of Icelandair Group at the AGM on 12 March 2021 March 05, 2021 12:10 ET | Source: Icelandair Group hf. Icelandair Group hf. Reykjavík, ICELAND Icelandair Group hf.: Candidates for the Board of Directors of Icelandair Group at the AGM on 12 March 2021 The following candidates, listed in alphabetical order, have declared their candidacy for the Board of Directors of Icelandair Group at the Annual General Meeting on 12 March 2021: Guðmundur Hafsteinsson; ID no. 290875-3319 John F. Thomas; ID no. 250359-3409 Martin J. St. George; ID no. n/a Nina Jonsson; ID no. 100567-3189 Steinn Logi Björnsson; ID no. 010959-5869

Teen curfews or leisure cards — what drug prevention might look like in N B

Teen curfews or leisure cards — what drug prevention might look like in N.B. Last week, the government of New Brunswick announced it would adopt a version of the Icelandic model as part of its plan to fill gaps in mental health care. For a community in Ontario, the model is already helping understand the issues plaguing its youth. Social Sharing

API in Reykjavik, Iceland: Business, Computer Science, and Engineering

API in Reykjavik, Iceland: Business, Computer Science, and Engineering
uloop.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from uloop.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

API in Reykjavik, Iceland: Business, Computer Science, and Engineering

API in Reykjavik, Iceland: Business, Computer Science, and Engineering
uloop.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from uloop.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Anonymous cell phone data can quantify behavioral changes for flu-like illnesses

Cell phone data that is routinely collected by telecommunications providers can reveal changes of behavior in people who are diagnosed with a flu-like illness, while also protecting their anonymity, a new study finds. The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) published the research, led by computer scientists at Emory University and based on data drawn from a 2009 outbreak of H1N1 flu in Iceland.  “To our knowledge, our project is the first major, rigorous study to individually link passively-collected cell phone metadata with actual public health data,” says Ymir Vigfusson, assistant professor in Emory University’s Department of Computer Science and a first author of the study. “We’ve shown that it’s possible to do so without comprising privacy and that our method could potentially provide a useful tool to help monitor and control infectious disease outbreaks.” 

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