World’s Safest Airlines – 2012


The top 10 safest airlines in the world have been revealed, with Finland’s national carrier, Finnair, being named as the safest, followed by Air New Zealand.

Europe’s Jet Airliner Crash Data Evaluation Centre (JACDEC) released the list this week.

The website monitors crashes all around the world, photographing planes in the worst possible state.

Virgin Australia beat Qantas on the list taking the number nine position. British Airways scored the final number 10 position.

 JACDEC said that their list is ‘based on their annual safety calculations which include all hull loss accidents and serious incidents in the last 30 years of operations in relation to the revenue passenger kilometers (RPK) performed in the same time.’

The list of top 10 safest airlines in the world is as follows:

1. Finnair

        finnair_a340

2. Air New Zealand

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3. Cathay Pacific

cathay-b777-300er

4. Emirates

Emirates-A380-aircraft

5. Etihad

EtihadA380

6. Eva Air (Taiwan)

md11_EVA_AIR_CARGO

7. TAP (Portugal)

061208-TAP-CS-TTP

8. Hainan Airlines

hainan_airlines_boeing737-800

9. Virgin Australia

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10. British Airways

British_Airways_Airbus_A3801

Synchronized Brains: Feeling Strong Emotions Makes People’s Brains ‘Tick Together’


Experiencing strong emotions synchronizes brain activity across individuals, a research team at Aalto University and Turku PET Centre in Finland has revealed.

                                       Experiencing strong emotions synchronizes brain activity across individuals.

(Credit: Image courtesy of Aalto University)

Human emotions are highly contagious. Seeing others’ emotional expressions such as smiles triggers often the corresponding emotional response in the observer. Such synchronization of emotional states across individuals may support social interaction: When all group members share a common emotional state, their brains and bodies process the environment in a similar fashion.

Researchers at Aalto University and Turku PET Centre have now found that feeling strong emotions makes different individuals’ brain activity literally synchronous.

The results revealed that especially feeling strong unpleasant emotions synchronized brain’s emotion processing networks in the frontal and midline regions. On the contrary, experiencing highly arousing events synchronized activity in the networks supporting vision, attention and sense of touch.

“Sharing others’ emotional states provides the observers a somatosensory and neural framework that facilitates understanding others’ intentions and actions and allows to ‘tune in’ or ‘sync’ with them. Such automatic tuning facilitates social interaction and group processes,” says Adjunct Professor Lauri Nummenmaa from the Aalto University, Finland.

“The results have major implications for current neural models of human emotions and group behavior. It also deepens our understanding of mental disorders involving abnormal socioemotional processing,” Nummenmaa says.

Participants’ brain activity was measured with functional magnetic resonance imaging while they were viewing short pleasant, neutral and unpleasant movies.

White Christmas: Images of Stunning Snowy Landscapes


                                   Winter Wonderland

Winter Wonderland Credit: mikie11 | shutterstock
Here’s hoping for a white Christmas! FromAustralia to Antarctica, we’ve rounded up breathtaking images of snow-filled landscapes from around the world.

The above winter scene of a rosy sunset’s rays over the snow was captured in Finland.

Winter Wonderland

Winter WonderlandCredit: mikie11 | shutterstock
Here’s hoping for a white Christmas! FromAustralia to Antarctica, we’ve rounded up breathtaking images of snow-filled landscapes from around the world.

The above winter scene of a rosy sunset’s rays over the snow was captured in Finland.

Dr. Seuss Trees

Dr. Seuss TreesCredit: Kotenko Oleksandr | shutterstock
This otherworldly shot also shows snow-covered trees in front of the Carpathian Mountains in Ukraine.

Winter Twilight

Winter TwilightCredit: Marcel Baumgartner | shutterstock
This tranquil photograph was snapped in the historic town of Schaffhausen, which was a city-state during the Middle Ages. Located in the northernmost corner of Switzerland, the town rests on the beautiful Rhine riverside.

Frozen Flatirons

Frozen FlatironsCredit: Coloradophotos | shutterstock
The jagged peaks of the Flatirons, a rock formation located in Chautauqua Park, rise above the snow-covered trees of Boulder, Colo. One of Boulder’s most iconic geological features, the Flatirons is a popular destination for mountain climbers.

Snowy Archway

Snowy Archway Credit: Hiroshi Ichikawa | shutterstock
This photo of the snow-tipped stratovolcano Mount Fuji was taken through arching braches on the island of Honshu in Japan. At 12,388 feet (3,776 meters), Mount Fuji is the highest mountain in Japan.

Russian Forest

Russian ForestCredit: Leonid Ikan | shutterstock
The above shot of a sunset over a forest was taken in Russia. During the winter, the days in Russia are quite short, with the sun setting just before 5 p.m. in Moscow during December. The parts of Russia that are to the North of the Polar Circle experience a polar night, which occurs when there is no sunlight during the winter season because the sun’s rays do not reach over from the horizon in those areas.

Roadside Icicles

Roadside IciclesCredit: Repina Valeriya | shutterstock
Here, a snowy-white roadside in rural Russia. Tree branches can look like they’ve been spray-painted white from every angle — not just from above, as is the case after a snowfall — when water particles in fog settle and freeze on surfaces, forming a frosty outer layer that is known as rime.

Australian Snow

Australian SnowCredit: Ashley Whitworth | shutterstock
The above wind-swept landscape overlooks Mount Bogong in Falls Creek, Australia. Located in Alpine National Park, Mount Bogong is a popular skiing and snowboarding location during the mid winter-spring months — the only time that the mountain is covered in snow.

Fog and Frost

Fog and FrostCredit: Sergey Shandin | shutterstock
A fog creeps over a snow-covered road in the village of Mrzla Vodica in Croatia.

Winter Landscape

Winter LandscapeCredit: Dhoxax | shutterstock
The above winter landscape of frosty trees and shrubbery is in Denmark, a Scandinavian country in Northern Europe. The days are short in Denmark during the winter, with sunsets occurring at about 3:45 p.m.

The Great Outdoors

The Great OutdoorsCredit: Volodymyr Goinyk | shutterstock
Seagulls rest on the dazzling snow-capped mountains of Antarctica. Winter is tourism season in the icy region, which is located around the Earth’s South Pole. Adventure-seekers pay upwards of $30,000 to experience Antarctica’s breathtaking sights, extreme climate and stunning wilderness.

Icy Bridge

Icy BridgeCredit: Mika Heittola | shutterstock
A sunset illuminates a cozy home near a frost-covered bridge in Finland. If you love winter, Finland is the place to be, as Finns experience three to seven months of wintertime, depending on which part of the country they live in.

Sand and Snow

Sand and SnowCredit: morrbyte | shutterstock
The snow-covered shores of Ballybunion Beach, situated at the mouth of the River Shannon in County Kerry, Ireland, feature 14th-century ruins of Ballybunion Castle.

Amazing Alps

Amazing AlpsCredit: Luca Placido | shutterstock
The sun beams down on the smooth snow of Valnontey Valley, located within Italy’s Alps. The Alps mountain range stretches from Austria and Slovenia, through Italy, Switzerland, Germany and Liechtenstein to France.

Frosty Riverside

Frosty RiversideCredit: Govert Nieuwland | shutterstock
The picturesque riverside paths along Kleine Dommel, which starts in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, make for popular tourist attractions.

Winter Windmill

Winter WindmillCredit: Eric Gevaert | shutterstock
A windmill stands in stark contrast against the snowy landscape of the Dutch village of Oosthuizenthe in North Holland, the Netherlands.

Remy Melina