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		<title>Convergent Science Network Podcast</title>
		<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/</link>
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		<description>We can learn a lot from brains and bodies when making machines and robots. But reversely, building complex machine systems can also give ideas about how brains and bodies have implemented their functioning over the evolution of ages. This podcast discusses various themes and aspects in-between robotics, neuroscience, cognitive science, artificial intelligence, biology, and technology.</description>
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		<language>en</language>
		<copyright>Convergent Science Network</copyright>
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		<title>Convergent Science Network Podcast</title>
		<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/</link>
		</image>
		<itunes:summary>We can learn a lot from brains and bodies when making machines and robots. But reversely, building complex machine systems can also give ideas about how brains and bodies have implemented their functioning over the evolution of ages. This podcast discusses various themes and aspects in-between robotics, neuroscience, cognitive science, artificial intelligence, biology, and technology.</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:subtitle>Thoughts, discussions, and achievements in neurobiology, biomimetic and biohybrid systems</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
		<itunes:owner>
		<itunes:name>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:name>
		<itunes:email>paul.verschure@upf.edu</itunes:email>
		</itunes:owner>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		
		<itunes:category text="Education"><itunes:category text="Higher Education" /></itunes:category>
		<itunes:category text="Science &amp; Medicine"></itunes:category>
		
				<item>
				<title>Interview with Christine Aicardi</title>
				<itunes:subtitle>New developments at the intersection of neuroscience and information technology have the potential to be socially and ethically disruptive. We discuss with Christine ideas of social responsibility in science.</itunes:subtitle>
				<itunes:summary><![CDATA[<p>-</p>]]></itunes:summary>
				<description>New developments at the intersection of neuroscience and information technology have the potential to be socially and ethically disruptive. We discuss with Christine ideas of social responsibility in science.</description>
				<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2019-01-08_christine_aircadi.mp3</link>
				<enclosure url="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/media/2019-01-08_christine_aircadi.mp3" length="28553449" type="audio/mpeg"/>
				<guid>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2019-01-08_christine_aircadi.mp3</guid>
				<itunes:duration>38:57</itunes:duration>
				<author>paul.verschure@upf.edu (Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure)</author>
				<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
				<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
				<pubDate>Tue, 11 Sep 2018 10:17:00 +0000</pubDate>
				</item>
				
				<item>
				<title>Interview with Elena Galea</title>
				<itunes:subtitle>-</itunes:subtitle>
				<itunes:summary><![CDATA[<p>-</p>]]></itunes:summary>
				<description>-</description>
				<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2019-01-08_elena_galea.mp3</link>
				<enclosure url="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/media/2019-01-08_elena_galea.mp3" length="59316759" type="audio/mpeg"/>
				<guid>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2019-01-08_elena_galea.mp3</guid>
				<itunes:duration>1:22:16</itunes:duration>
				<author>paul.verschure@upf.edu (Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure)</author>
				<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
				<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
				<pubDate>Mon, 10 Sep 2018 10:20:00 +0000</pubDate>
				</item>
				
				<item>
				<title>Interview with Marco Diana</title>
				<itunes:subtitle>-</itunes:subtitle>
				<itunes:summary><![CDATA[<p>-</p>]]></itunes:summary>
				<description>-</description>
				<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2019-01-08_marco_diana.mp3</link>
				<enclosure url="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/media/2019-01-08_marco_diana.mp3" length="41271734" type="audio/mpeg"/>
				<guid>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2019-01-08_marco_diana.mp3</guid>
				<itunes:duration>1:07:24</itunes:duration>
				<author>paul.verschure@upf.edu (Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure)</author>
				<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
				<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
				<pubDate>Wed, 05 Sep 2018 10:34:00 +0000</pubDate>
				</item>
				
				<item>
				<title>Interview with Yoram Vodovotz</title>
				<itunes:subtitle>-</itunes:subtitle>
				<itunes:summary><![CDATA[<p>-</p>]]></itunes:summary>
				<description>-</description>
				<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2019-01-08_yoram_vodovotz.mp3</link>
				<enclosure url="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/media/2019-01-08_yoram_vodovotz.mp3" length="60675097" type="audio/mpeg"/>
				<guid>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2019-01-08_yoram_vodovotz.mp3</guid>
				<itunes:duration>1:17:38</itunes:duration>
				<author>paul.verschure@upf.edu (Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure)</author>
				<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
				<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
				<pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2018 10:36:00 +0000</pubDate>
				</item>
				
				<item>
				<title>Interview with Joscha Bach</title>
				<itunes:subtitle>-</itunes:subtitle>
				<itunes:summary><![CDATA[<p>-</p>]]></itunes:summary>
				<description>-</description>
				<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2019-01-08_joscha_bach.mp3</link>
				<enclosure url="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/media/2019-01-08_joscha_bach.mp3" length="80344933" type="audio/mpeg"/>
				<guid>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2019-01-08_joscha_bach.mp3</guid>
				<itunes:duration>1:43:34</itunes:duration>
				<author>paul.verschure@upf.edu (Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure)</author>
				<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
				<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
				<pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2018 10:25:00 +0000</pubDate>
				</item>
				
				<item>
				<title>
							 Interview with Etienne Koechlin 
							</title>
				<itunes:subtitle>
							 Etienne Koechlin (Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris) discusses with Paul Verschure the functional organization of the human prefrontal-cortex function underpinning reasoning, learning and exploration in the service of decision-making and adaptive behavior. 
							</itunes:subtitle>
				<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Etienne Koechlin (Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris) discusses with Paul Verschure the functional organization of the human prefrontal-cortex function underpinning reasoning, learning and exploration in the service of decision-making and adaptive behavior.]]></itunes:summary>
				<description>
							 Etienne Koechlin (Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris) discusses with Paul Verschure the functional organization of the human prefrontal-cortex function underpinning reasoning, learning and exploration in the service of decision-making and adaptive behavior. 
							</description>
				<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_9sept_etiennekoechlin.mp3</link>
				<enclosure url="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/media/2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_9sept_etiennekoechlin.mp3" length="99159143" type="audio/mpeg"/>
				<guid>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_9sept_etiennekoechlin.mp3</guid>
				<itunes:duration>1:43:17</itunes:duration>
				<author>paul.verschure@upf.edu (Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure)</author>
				<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
				<itunes:keywords>interview, science, neuroscience</itunes:keywords>
				<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
				<pubDate>Thu, 05 Apr 2018 09:50:35 +0000</pubDate>
				</item>
				
				<item>
				<title>
							 Interview with Tim Pierce 
							</title>
				<itunes:subtitle>
							 Tim Pierce (University of Leicester), discusses with Paul Verschure the topic of animal olfaction and the its neural substrate in order to develop computational approaches able to validate empirical findings and to lead to a tangible technological outcome 
							</itunes:subtitle>
				<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Tim Pierce (University of Leicester), discusses with Paul Verschure the topic of animal olfaction and the its neural substrate in order to develop computational approaches able to validate empirical findings and to lead to a tangible technological outcome]]></itunes:summary>
				<description>
							 Tim Pierce (University of Leicester), discusses with Paul Verschure the topic of animal olfaction and the its neural substrate in order to develop computational approaches able to validate empirical findings and to lead to a tangible technological outcome 
							</description>
				<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_13sept_timpierce.mp3</link>
				<enclosure url="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/media/2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_13sept_timpierce.mp3" length="95840547" type="audio/mpeg"/>
				<guid>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_13sept_timpierce.mp3</guid>
				<itunes:duration>1:39:50</itunes:duration>
				<author>paul.verschure@upf.edu (Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure)</author>
				<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
				<itunes:keywords>interview, science, neuroscience</itunes:keywords>
				<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
				<pubDate>Thu, 05 Apr 2018 09:49:33 +0000</pubDate>
				</item>
				
				<item>
				<title>
							 Interview with Cyriel Pennartz 
							</title>
				<itunes:subtitle>
							 Cyriel Pennartz (University of Amsterdam), interviewed by Paul Verschure, focuses on the role of pre-frontal cortex in associative learning and reward prediction coding and its possible interactions with other brain areas like hippocampus and striatum. 
							</itunes:subtitle>
				<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Cyriel Pennartz (University of Amsterdam), interviewed by Paul Verschure, focuses on the role of pre-frontal cortex in associative learning and reward prediction coding and its possible interactions with other brain areas like hippocampus and striatum.]]></itunes:summary>
				<description>
							 Cyriel Pennartz (University of Amsterdam), interviewed by Paul Verschure, focuses on the role of pre-frontal cortex in associative learning and reward prediction coding and its possible interactions with other brain areas like hippocampus and striatum. 
							</description>
				<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_12sept_cyriel_pennartz.mp3</link>
				<enclosure url="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/media/2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_12sept_cyriel_pennartz.mp3" length="86484114" type="audio/mpeg"/>
				<guid>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_12sept_cyriel_pennartz.mp3</guid>
				<itunes:duration>1:12:04</itunes:duration>
				<author>paul.verschure@upf.edu (Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure)</author>
				<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
				<itunes:keywords>interview, science, neuroscience</itunes:keywords>
				<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
				<pubDate>Thu, 05 Apr 2018 09:49:32 +0000</pubDate>
				</item>
				
				<item>
				<title>
							 Interview with Paul Verschure 
							</title>
				<itunes:subtitle>
							 Paul Verschure (Pompeu Fabra University), interviewed by Tony Prescott and Tim Pierce, presents his theory of consciousness and its evolution, suggesting how it could be computationally explained within a biologically grounded cognitive architecture. 
							</itunes:subtitle>
				<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Paul Verschure (Pompeu Fabra University), interviewed by Tony Prescott and Tim Pierce, presents his theory of consciousness and its evolution, suggesting how it could be computationally explained within a biologically grounded cognitive architecture.]]></itunes:summary>
				<description>
							 Paul Verschure (Pompeu Fabra University), interviewed by Tony Prescott and Tim Pierce, presents his theory of consciousness and its evolution, suggesting how it could be computationally explained within a biologically grounded cognitive architecture. 
							</description>
				<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_10sept_paulverschure.mp3</link>
				<enclosure url="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/media/2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_10sept_paulverschure.mp3" length="75842663" type="audio/mpeg"/>
				<guid>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_10sept_paulverschure.mp3</guid>
				<itunes:duration>52:40</itunes:duration>
				<author>paul.verschure@upf.edu (Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure)</author>
				<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
				<itunes:keywords>interview, science, neuroscience</itunes:keywords>
				<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
				<pubDate>Thu, 05 Apr 2018 09:49:22 +0000</pubDate>
				</item>
				
				<item>
				<title>
							 Interview with Alex Kacelnik 
							</title>
				<itunes:subtitle>
							 Alex Kacelnik (Oxford University) together with Paul Verschure and Tony Prescott elaborates on animal cognition addressing tool use habits of birds from an evolutionary perspective and discussing topics like learning and problem solving. 
							</itunes:subtitle>
				<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Alex Kacelnik (Oxford University) together with Paul Verschure and Tony Prescott elaborates on animal cognition addressing tool use habits of birds from an evolutionary perspective and discussing topics like learning and problem solving.]]></itunes:summary>
				<description>
							 Alex Kacelnik (Oxford University) together with Paul Verschure and Tony Prescott elaborates on animal cognition addressing tool use habits of birds from an evolutionary perspective and discussing topics like learning and problem solving. 
							</description>
				<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2013-10-17_bcbt_2013_6sept_alexkacelnik.mp3</link>
				<enclosure url="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/media/2013-10-17_bcbt_2013_6sept_alexkacelnik.mp3" length="94756571" type="audio/mpeg"/>
				<guid>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2013-10-17_bcbt_2013_6sept_alexkacelnik.mp3</guid>
				<itunes:duration>1:18:58</itunes:duration>
				<author>paul.verschure@upf.edu (Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure)</author>
				<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
				<itunes:keywords>interview, science, neuroscience</itunes:keywords>
				<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
				<pubDate>Thu, 05 Apr 2018 09:49:21 +0000</pubDate>
				</item>
				
				<item>
				<title>
							 Interview with Marc Toussaint 
							</title>
				<itunes:subtitle>
							 Marc Toussaint (University of Stuttgart), interviewed by Paul Verschure, presents his computational approach to planning and optimal control introducing an hypothesis on how neural systems might solve stochastic optimal control and RL problems. 
							</itunes:subtitle>
				<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Marc Toussaint (University of Stuttgart), interviewed by Paul Verschure, presents his computational approach to planning and optimal control introducing an hypothesis on how neural systems might solve stochastic optimal control and RL problems.]]></itunes:summary>
				<description>
							 Marc Toussaint (University of Stuttgart), interviewed by Paul Verschure, presents his computational approach to planning and optimal control introducing an hypothesis on how neural systems might solve stochastic optimal control and RL problems. 
							</description>
				<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_12sept_marctoussaint.mp3</link>
				<enclosure url="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/media/2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_12sept_marctoussaint.mp3" length="75313527" type="audio/mpeg"/>
				<guid>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2013-10-18_bcbt_2013_12sept_marctoussaint.mp3</guid>
				<itunes:duration>52:18</itunes:duration>
				<author>paul.verschure@upf.edu (Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure)</author>
				<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
				<itunes:keywords>interview, science, neuroscience</itunes:keywords>
				<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
				<pubDate>Thu, 05 Apr 2018 09:49:19 +0000</pubDate>
				</item>
				
				<item>
				<title>
							 Interview with Huoseng Hu 
							</title>
				<itunes:subtitle>
							 Huoseng Hu (University of Essex, UK) moved from industrial to service &amp; field robotics. He discusses the building of robot fish with Tony Prescott, but also the development of a semi-robotic wheelchair controlled with thoughts. 
							</itunes:subtitle>
				<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Huoseng Hu (University of Essex, UK) moved from industrial to service &amp; field robotics. He discusses the building of robot fish with Tony Prescott, but also the development of a semi-robotic wheelchair controlled with thoughts.]]></itunes:summary>
				<description>
							 Huoseng Hu (University of Essex, UK) moved from industrial to service &amp; field robotics. He discusses the building of robot fish with Tony Prescott, but also the development of a semi-robotic wheelchair controlled with thoughts. 
							</description>
				<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2012-03-08_interview_huoseng_hu.mp3</link>
				<enclosure url="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/media/2012-03-08_interview_huoseng_hu.mp3" length="37572061" type="audio/mpeg"/>
				<guid>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2012-03-08_interview_huoseng_hu.mp3</guid>
				<itunes:duration>31:03</itunes:duration>
				<itunes:image href="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/images/2012-03-08_interview_huoseng_hu.jpg" />
				<author>paul.verschure@upf.edu (Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure)</author>
				<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
				<itunes:keywords>interview,science,robotics,biomechanics,technology</itunes:keywords>
				<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
				<pubDate>Thu, 05 Apr 2018 09:46:52 +0000</pubDate>
				</item>
				
				<item>
				<title>
							 Interview with John Doyle 
							</title>
				<itunes:subtitle>
							 John Doyle discusses with Paul Verschure control architectures in single cellular organisms. These small systems seem to very successfully combine small-time scale robustness with long term adaptibility. 
							</itunes:subtitle>
				<itunes:summary><![CDATA[John Doyle (CALTECH, Pasadena, USA) discusses with Paul Verschure control architectures in single cellular organisms. These small systems seem to very successfully combine small-time scale robustness with long term adaptibility.]]></itunes:summary>
				<description>
							 John Doyle discusses with Paul Verschure control architectures in single cellular organisms. These small systems seem to very successfully combine small-time scale robustness with long term adaptibility. 
							</description>
				<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2011-08-23_interview_with_john_doyle.mp3</link>
				<enclosure url="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/media/2011-08-23_interview_with_john_doyle.mp3" length="14185572" type="audio/mpeg"/>
				<guid>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2011-08-23_interview_with_john_doyle.mp3</guid>
				<itunes:duration>59:33</itunes:duration>
				<itunes:image href="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/images/2011-08-23_interview_with_john_doyle.jpg" />
				<author>paul.verschure@upf.edu (Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure)</author>
				<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
				<itunes:keywords>interview,science,control systems,biology</itunes:keywords>
				<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
				<pubDate>Wed, 04 Apr 2018 07:43:44 +0000</pubDate>
				</item>
				
				<item>
				<title>
							 Interview with Ricardo Sanz 
							</title>
				<itunes:subtitle>
							 After the speaker's talk at the Barcelona Cognition, Brain and Technology  Summerschool 2010 at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Paul Verschure and Tony Prescott go deeper into the subjects presented. 
							</itunes:subtitle>
				<itunes:summary><![CDATA[<p>This post-lecture interview was conducted during the BCBT Summerschool held at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, september 2010. </p><p>The brian is often approached as a control system; as an implemented, crucial strategy to cope with a changing environment through adaptation of behavior. Reversely, for the field of control systems, engineering the brain is an important inspiration of how systems can be developed to deal with dynamic complexity. <a href="http://www.aslab.org/%7Esanz/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=blogsection&amp;id=6&amp;Itemid=30">Ricardo Sanz</a> (Polytechnic University of Madrid, Spain) argues that the required level of complexity for current systems in society has become too high to be controllable by humans: system behavior has become too complex to be analytically solvable, and failures cannot be understood anymore by humans. With Paul Verschure he discusses a strategy to develop and build complex systems that control themselves, and can learn to do so, on inspired and based by some capabilities of the brain like self-awareness, an idea that goes back to classic Cybernetics. In his view, the brain is but one particular example implementation of a system that can cope with changing environmental demands, and that can learn itself how problems in the world could be solved. Control systems are classically not engineered to control themselves, or to be able to adjust to wrong estimates of the controller, instead of wrong estimates of the world (or 'plant'): there is always some human involved for control. But the human brain is not a perfect example, according to Sanz, it is a 'good enough' solution that evolved given the environments of humans; so to copy, or merely mimic the brain is in his view at best insufficient. He theorizes a much higher level of control systems, only partially bio-inspired, that might eventually incorporate elements of self-awareness, but moreover is capable to control processes too complex for current machines, and humans.</p><p>About the lecturerRicardo Sanz is professor in systems engineering and automatic control and researcher in the field of autonomous systems at the <a href="http://tierra.aslab.upm.es/public/index.php?option=com_frontpage&amp;Itemid=1" target="_blank">UPM Autonomous Systems Laboratory</a>. </p>]]></itunes:summary>
				<description>
							 After the speaker's talk at the Barcelona Cognition, Brain and Technology  Summerschool 2010 at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Paul Verschure and Tony Prescott go deeper into the subjects presented. 
							</description>
				<link>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2010-10-06_interview_with_riccardo_sanz.mp3</link>
				<enclosure url="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/media/2010-10-06_interview_with_riccardo_sanz.mp3" length="38517010" type="audio/mpeg"/>
				<guid>http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/?name=2010-10-06_interview_with_riccardo_sanz.mp3</guid>
				<itunes:duration>31:58</itunes:duration>
				<itunes:image href="http://csnetwork.eu/podcast/images/2010-10-06_interview_with_riccardo_sanz.jpg" />
				<author>paul.verschure@upf.edu (Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure)</author>
				<itunes:author>Convergent Science Network: by Prof. Paul Verschure</itunes:author>
				<itunes:keywords>interview,science,robotics,cognition,technology</itunes:keywords>
				<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
				<pubDate>Tue, 03 Apr 2018 11:24:05 +0000</pubDate>
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