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Friday, August 26, 2011

50th anniversary of Stanley Milgram's obedience experiments




    (Medical Xpress) -- Stories of torture, corporate greed, fraud, and misconduct are regular features of daily news coverage. For years, psychological scientists have tried to understand why ordinary and decent people are driven to commit such atrocious acts. Much of what we know on this topic can be traced to the work of one man: Stanley Milgram. Fifty years ago, Milgram, an assistant professor of psychology at Yale University, began a famous and controversial series of experiments to test the boundaries of people’s obedience to authority and determine how far normal people would go in inflicting pain on others just because they were told to.

    The experiment involved forty males who each took on the role of a “teacher” who delivered electric shocks to a “learner” when they answered a question incorrectly. Though the “teacher” believed that he was delivering real shocks, the “learner” was actually part of Milgram’s research team and only pretended to be in pain. The “learner” would implore the “teacher” to stop the shocks and the “teacher” would be encouraged to continue despite the learner’s pleas.
    These experiments laid the foundation for understanding why seemingly decent people could be encouraged to do bad things. Thomas Blass, Milgram biographer and a professor of psychology at the University of Maryland Baltimore County, says that Milgram’s obedience experiments provided a powerful affirmation of one of the main guiding principles of contemporary social psychology: “It is not the kind of person we are that determines how we act, but rather the kind of situation we find ourselves in.”
    “What Milgram’s obedience studies revealed above all was the sheer power of social pressure. Suddenly it was conceivable that the sorts of psychological forces producing conformity that social scientists had been interested in for some time could not only explain fashions and stock market gyrations, but also some of the 20th century’s most egregious collective behaviors: genocide, the Holocaust, totalitarianism,” says Dominic Packer, Assistant Professor of Psychology at Lehigh University.
    Milgram’s obedience work sparked an examination of the ethics of psychological research on human subjects and has had a profound and lasting effect on how research in most areas within the social and behavioral sciences is conducted, says Jeffry Simpson, Professor of Psychology at the University of Minnesota,. He argues that the rise of research studying people in their natural lives and environments is one of the most important legacies of Milgram’s work.
    Blass states that Milgram’s obedience experiments are important because they provide a frame of reference for contemporary real-life instances of extreme, destructive obedience. The fact that recent studies have replicated Milgram’s findings demonstrates that Milgram had “identified one of the universals or constants of social behavior, spanning time and place.”
    Now, fifty years later, Milgram’s experiments serve as a turning point in the field of social  reminding us, as Packer observes, that “normal psychological processes – working away in all of us – can give rise to terrible behaviors if we are not careful.”
    Check out these videos that explain the experiments: 

    Clinical study shows young brains lack the wisdom of their elders




    The brains of older people are not slower but rather wiser than young brains, which allows  to achieve an equivalent level of performance, according research undertaken at the University  Institute of Montreal by Dr. Oury Monchi and Dr. Ruben Martins of the Univeristy of Montreal.
    "The older  has experience and knows that nothing is gained by jumping the gun. It was already known that aging is not necessarily associated with a significant loss in cognitive function. When it comes to certain tasks, the brains of older adults can achieve very close to the same performance as those of younger ones," explained Dr. Monchi. "We now have neurobiological evidence showing that with age comes  and that as the brain gets older, it learns to better allocate its resources. Overall, our study shows that Aesop's fable about the tortoise and the hare was on the money: being able to run fast does not always win the race—you have to know how to best use your abilities. This adage is a defining characteristic of aging."
    The original goal of the study was to explore the brain regions and pathways that are involved in the planning and execution of language pairing tasks. In particular, the researchers were interested in knowing what happened when the rules of the task changed part way through the exercise. For this test, participants were asked to pair words according to different lexical rules, including semantic category (animal, object, etc.), rhyme, or the beginning of the word (attack). The matching rules changed multiple times throughout the task without the participants knowing. For example, if the person figured out that the words fell under the same semantic category, the rule was changed so that they were required to pair the words according to rhyme instead.
    "Funny enough, the young brain is more reactive to negative reinforcement than the older one. When the young participants made a mistake and had to plan and execute a new strategy to get the right answer, various parts of their brains were recruited even before the next task began. However, when the older participants learned that they had made a mistake, these regions were only recruited at the beginning of the next trial, indicating that with age, we decide to make adjustments only when absolutely necessary. It is as though the older brain is more impervious to criticism and more confident than the young brain," stated Dr. Monchi.

    Key to Africa’s Progress in Water and Sanitation


    Key to Africa’s Progress in Water and Sanitation

    • African countries that transition to taking a leadership role in safe water and sanitation service delivery can potentially increase access for millions of people by 2015.
    • To accelerate progress, at least an additional US$6 billion a year of domestic and donor funds are needed. 
    • Households that invest in basic sanitation reap up to 7 times their initial investment in economic benefits, including health and access time.
    As global powers debate ways to solve economic challenges, a more menacing fight is happening in East Africa, where the worst drought in decades has caused widespread hunger, deaths, and the loss of subsistence crops and livestock. 
    Even without drought conditions, 564 million and 326 million Africans, respectively, do not have access to improved sanitation or safe drinking water.  Women are disproportionately affected because they spend hours fetching water or seeking sanitation facilities instead of in school or working.  Lack of water and sanitation even accounts for excess mortality among girls in infancy and early childhood.

    Increasing Access
    In 2000, countries in Africa and in other regions set targets to halve by 2015 the number of people without access to these basic services.  Some of them may meet these targets.  In rural Rwanda, where nearly 4 million people gained access to improved sanitation between 1990 and 2008, household access to sanitation facilities has increased faster than in any other country in the region.In fact, according to a new report by the World Bank’s Water and Sanitation Program (WSP), released this week to coincide with Sweden’s annual gathering of global water experts, sub-Saharan Africa has made significant progress in extending access to improved water supply and sanitation. 
    Progress made since 1990 points to a combination of factors, but the key is for countries to own the responsibility for putting in place the necessary frameworks and know-how to coordinate service delivery to people nationwide. 
    “African countries that transition to taking a leadership role in safe water and sanitation service delivery to the millions of people without access have an unprecedented opportunity to drastically reduce these numbers by 2015,” said the report’s author and WSP Senior Financial Specialist Dominick de Waal.
    Increasing Funding Levels to the Sector
    The report added that accelerating progress requires increasing current funding levels by at least US$6 billion a year by raising both domestic and donor financing flows to the sector. 
    The prospects and incentives for countries to make this shift to country-led service delivery are unprecedented.  Improving political stability, economic growth, debt relief, increasing aid volume, and the accompanying renaissance of country-led service delivery in other sectors in Africa, mean opportunities to make an impact are more favorable now than they have been in recent times.
    Improving Quality of Life
    Improving access means improved quality of life for millions.  A separate WSP study released later this week out of East Asia will show that households that invest in basic sanitation reap up to seven times the initial investment in economic benefits, including health and access time.
    Despite current global economic challenges, African countries have a unique opportunity now to accelerate progress in delivering safe water and sanitation to the millions without.

    சனிப்பெயர்ச்சி பலன்கள் 2012 முதல் 2014 வரை ( 12 ராசிகளுக்கும் - நட்சத்திர வாரியாக )




     சனி பகவான் கன்னி ராசியிலிருந்து துலாம் ராசிக்கு பெயர்ச்சியாகிறார். இதோ நாள் நெருங்கி விட்டது. வாக்கியப் பஞ்சாங்கப்படி 21 -12 -2011 அன்று சனிப் பெயர்ச்சி. சார், இன்னும் அவ்வளவு நாள் இருக்குதான்னு புலம்ப ஆரம்பிச்சுடாதீங்க. திருக்கணிதப் படி 15 -11 -2011 அன்று காலை 10 .15
     மணிக்கு துலாம் ராசிக்குள் , பிரவேசிக்கிறார். ஆனால், ஏற்கனவே அவர் பெயர்ச்சி ஆனாற்போல எல்லோருக்குமே தோன்றும். பொதுவாக , மூன்று மாதங்களுக்கு முன்பே , அதற்குரிய பலன்களை தர ஆரம்பித்து விடுவார்.
    http://t0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcShphrxLhyIUkPPqeRVcJJbMEmTvdJF2kR_QsMusECUiHnIJv01
     துலாம் ராசிக்காரர்களைப்  பார்த்தால் இது புரியும். நல்லாத்தானேயா போய்க்கிட்டு இருந்துச்சு. இடையிலே யார்யா புகுந்து ஆட்டையை கலைக்கிறதுன்னு பீல் பண்ண ஆரம்பிச்சு இருப்பாங்க..

     சிம்ம ராசி, கும்ப ராசிக்காரங்கல்லாம்  உடனே சந்தோசத்துலே குதிக்க ஆரம்பிச்சுடாதீங்க... இன்னும் முழுசா முடியலை.. கொஞ்சம் பொறுமை.. இன்னும் ஒரு நாலு மாசத்துக்கு எச்சரிக்கையாவே இருங்க.. அவசரம் வேண்டாம்..

     மீனம், துலாம், விருச்சிகம், கடகம், மேஷம், தனுசு - இந்த ஆறு ராசிக்காரர்களும் - கொஞ்சம் அளவு கடந்த பொறுமையுடன் செயல்படுதல் நலம்.

    இந்த சனி பெயர்ச்சியை முன்னிட்டு 12 ராசிகளுக்கும், 27 நட்சத்திரங்கள் வாரியாக - மிக முக்கிய பலன்களையும், பரிகாரங்களையும் தெரிந்து கொள்ள , கீழே உள்ள லிங்க்-ஐ க்ளிக் பண்ணுங்க.

    மிக முக்கியமான , துல்லியமான - ரத்தின சுருக்கமான விஷயங்கள் கொடுக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன. இது பால ஜோதிடம் இதழில் வந்த பலன்கள்

    http://www.ziddu.com/download/16147170/Sanipeyarchipalangal2011-2014.pdf.pdf.html
     


    Read more: http://www.livingextra.com/2011/08/2012-2014-12.html#ixzz1W6bf31MP

    15 MOVIE QUOTES WITH SOLID BUSINESS ADVICE




    Movies may not be real, but the people who write the scripts most certainly are. Guess what? Sometimes they hit it right on. These quotes hail from a diverse group of movies, but they all have one thing in common: great business advice. Take a moment to explore what Hollywood offers and bank on their tips!
    Forbes highlights these great quotes…
    1. Catch Me If You Can (2002)
    “Two little mice fell into a bucket of cream. The first mouse quickly gave up and drowned, but the second mouse, he struggled so hard that he eventually churned that cream into butter and he walked out. Amen.” — Frank Abagnale Jr. after he was asked to say grace
    2. Boiler Room (2000)
    “A sale is made on every call you make. Either you sell the client some stock, or he sells you a reason he can’t. Either way, a sale is made, the only question is who is gonna close?” — Jim Young (Ben Affleck) in a tyrannical sales-training session.
    3. Big Night (1996)
    “I am a businessman. I am anything I need to be at any time.” — Pascal (Ian Holm), owner of a competing restaurant
    4. Goodfellas (1990)
    “And when the cops, when they assigned a whole army to stop Jimmy, what’d he do? He made ‘em partners.” — Henry Hill, narrating
    5. Citizen Kane (1941)
    “It’s no trick to make a lot of money, if what you want to do is make a lot of money.” — Berstein (Everett Sloane), Kane’s business manager
    6. Rudy (1993)
    “No one, and I mean no one, comes into our house and pushes us around.” — Dan Devine (Chelcie Ross) in a speech to the team before their final game of the season.
    7. Scarface (1983)
    “Don’t underestimate the other guy’s greed.” — Frank Lopez (Tony’s Mentor) to Tony
    8. The Apartment (1960)
    “Normally, it takes years to work your way up to the twenty-seventh floor. But it only takes 30 seconds to be out on the street again. You dig?” — J.D. Sheldrake (Fred MacMurray) to C.C. Baxter (Jack Lemmon) during a conversation in which Baxter attempts to set his boss straight.
    9. Star Wars Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    “Do or do not, there is no try.” — Yoda
    10. Miracle (2004)
    “You think you can win on talent alone? Gentlemen, you don’t have enough talent to win on talent alone.” — Coach Herb Brooks (Kurt Russell) to team USA before their game against the Russians.
    11. Risky Business (1983)
    “In a sluggish economy, never ever f— with another man’s livelihood.” — Guido (the “killer pimp”) to Joel.
    12. Working Girl (1988)
    “Never burn bridges. Today’s junior prick, tomorrow’s senior partner!” — Katherine Parker (Sigourney Weaver), McGill’s boss.
    13. Any Given Sunday (1999)
    “No intensity, no victory.” — Christina Pagniacci (Cameron Diaz), owner of the Sharks, to D’Amato.
    14. Jerry Maguire (1996)
    “The key to this business is personal relationships.” – Dicky Fox (Jared Jussim) offering advice to Jerry.
    15. “Greed, for lack of a better word, is good. Greed is right, greed works. Greed clarifies, cuts through, and captures the essence of the evolutionary spirit. Greed, in all of its forms; greed for life, for money, for love, knowledge has marked the upward surge of mankind.” — Gekko, rallying support at a shareholders meeting.

    Do You Know How Many Species on Earth? 8.7 million



    “Most precise estimate ever is based on novel, validated analytical technique; Yet to be discovered, described, catalogued: 91 percent of marine species, 86 percent of species overall.”
    Caption: The innovative analytical model plots data from higher taxonomic levels on an exponential graph to predict 7.7 million species in Kingdom Animalia. Credit: CoML
    Eight million, seven hundred thousand species (give or take 1.3 million).
    That is a new, estimated total number of species on Earth — the most precise calculation ever offered — with 6.5 million species found on land and 2.2 million (about 25 percent of the total) dwelling in the ocean depths.
    Announced today by Census of Marine Life scientists, the figure is based on an innovative, validated analytical technique that dramatically narrows the range of previous estimates. Until now, the number of species on Earth was said to fall somewhere between 3 million and 100 million.
    Furthermore, the study, published today by PLoS Biology, says a staggering 86% of all species on land and 91% of those in the seas have yet to be discovered, described and catalogued.
    Says lead author Camilo Mora of the University of Hawaii and Dalhousie University in Halifax, Canada: “The question of how many species exist has intrigued scientists for centuries and the answer, coupled with research by others into species’ distribution and abundance, is particularly important now because a host of human activities and influences are accelerating the rate of extinctions. Many species may vanish before we even know of their existence, of their unique niche and function in ecosystems, and of their potential contribution to improved human well-being.”
    “This work deduces the most basic number needed to describe our living biosphere,” says co-author Boris Worm of Dalhousie University. “If we did not know — even by an order of magnitude (1 million? 10 million? 100 million?) — the number of people in a nation, how would we plan for the future?”
    Caption: This shows the distribution of species by kingdom. Credit: CoML.
    “It is the same with biodiversity. Humanity has committed itself to saving species from extinction, but until now we have had little real idea of even how many there are.”
    Dr. Worm notes that the recently-updated Red List issued by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature assessed 59,508 species, of which 19,625 are classified as threatened. This means the IUCN Red List, the most sophisticated ongoing study of its kind, monitors less than 1% of world species.
    The research is published alongside a commentary by Lord Robert May of Oxford, past-president of the UK’s Royal Society, who praises the researchers’ “imaginative new approach.”
    “It is a remarkable testament to humanity’s narcissism that we know the number of books in the US Library of Congress on 1 February 2011 was 22,194,656, but cannot tell you — to within an order-of-magnitude — how many distinct species of plants and animals we share our world with,” Lord May writes.
    “(W)e increasingly recognize that such knowledge is important for full understanding of the ecological and evolutionary processes which created, and which are struggling to maintain, the diverse biological riches we are heir to. Such biodiversity is much more than beauty and wonder, important though that is. It also underpins ecosystem services that — although not counted in conventional GDP — humanity is dependent upon.”
    Drawing conclusions from 253 years of taxonomy since Linnaeus
    Caption: Yet to be discovered and cataloged, scientists estimate, are between 74,000 and 90,000 plant species, some of which may help increase world food production, according to the PLoS Biology commentary by Lord Robert May of Oxford. This wild rice, for example, Oryza officinalis, photographed in the Philippines, inherently resists pests and diseases and tolerates extreme environmental conditions and its genes are used to improve cultivated rice varieties. Photo: CoML
    Swedish scientist Carl Linnaeus created and published in 1758 the system still used to formally name and describe species. In the 253 years since, about 1.25 million species — roughly 1 million on land and 250,000 in the oceans — have been described and entered into central databases (roughly 700,000 more are thought to have been described but have yet to reach the central databases).
    To now, the best approximation of Earth’s species total was based on the educated guesses and opinions of experts, who variously pegged the figure in a range from 3 to 100 million — wildly differing numbers questioned because there is no way to validate them.
    Drs. Mora and Worm, together with Dalhousie colleagues Derek P. Tittensor, Sina Adl and Alastair G.B. Simpson, refined the estimated species total to 8.7 million by identifying numerical patterns within the taxonomic classification system (which groups forms of life in a pyramid-like hierarchy, ranked upwards from species to genus, family, order, class, phylum, kingdom and domain).
    Analyzing the taxonomic clustering of the 1.2 million species today in the Catalogue of Life and the World Register of Marine Species, the researchers discovered reliable numerical relationships between the more complete higher taxonomic levels and the species level.
    Says Dr. Adl: “We discovered that, using numbers from the higher taxonomic groups, we can predict the number of species. The approach accurately predicted the number of species in several well-studied groups such as mammals, fishes and birds, providing confidence in the method.”
    When applied to all five known eukaryote* kingdoms of life on Earth, the approach predicted:
    1. ~7.77 million species of animals (of which 953,434 have been described and cataloged)
    2. ~298,000 species of plants (of which 215,644 have been described and cataloged)
    3. ~611,000 species of fungi (moulds, mushrooms) (of which 43,271 have been described and cataloged)
    4. ~36,400 species of protozoa (single-cell organisms with animal-like behavior, eg. movement, of which 8,118 have been described and cataloged)
    5. ~27,500 species of chromista (including, eg. brown algae, diatoms, water moulds, of which 13,033 have been described and cataloged)

    Total: 8.74 million eukaryote species on Earth.
    (* Notes: Organisms in the eukaryote domain have cells containing complex structures enclosed within membranes. The study looked only at forms of life accorded, or potentially accorded, the status of “species” by scientists. Not included: certain micro-organisms and virus “types”, for example, which could be highly numerous.)
    Within the 8.74 million total is an estimated 2.2 million (plus or minus 180,000) marine species of all kinds, about 250,000 (11%) of which have been described and catalogued. When it formally concluded in October 2010, the Census of Marine Life offered a conservative estimate of 1 million+ species in the seas.
    “Like astronomers, marine scientists are using sophisticated new tools and techniques to peer into places never seen before,” says Australian Ian Poiner, Chair of the Census’ Scientific Steering Committee. “During the 10-year Census, hundreds of marine explorers had the unique human experience and privilege of encountering and naming animals new to science. We may clearly enjoy the Age of Discovery for many years to come.”
    “The immense effort entering all known species in taxonomic databases such as the Catalogue of Life and the World Register of Marine Species makes our analysis possible,” says co-author Derek Tittensor, who also works with Microsoft Research and the UN Environment Programme’s World Conservation Monitoring Centre. “As these databases grow and improve, our method can be refined and updated to provide an even more precise estimate.”
    “We have only begun to uncover the tremendous variety of life around us,” says co-author Alastair Simpson. “The richest environments for prospecting new species are thought to be coral reefs, seafloor mud and moist tropical soils. But smaller life forms are not well known anywhere. Some unknown species are living in our own backyards — literally.”
    “Awaiting our discovery are a half million fungi and moulds whose relatives gave humanity bread and cheese,” says Jesse Ausubel, Vice-President of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and co-founder of the Census of Marine Life. “For species discovery, the 21st century may be a fungal century!”
    Mr. Ausubel notes the enigma of why so much diversity exists, saying the answer may lie in the notions that nature fills every niche, and that rare species are poised to benefit from a change of conditions.
    In his analysis, Lord May says the practical benefits of taxonomic discovery are many, citing the development in the 1970s of a new strain of rice based on a cross between conventional species and one discovered in the wild. The result: 30% more grain yield, followed by efforts ever since to protect all wild varieties of rice, “which obviously can only be done if we have the appropriate taxonomic knowledge.”
    “Given the looming problems of feeding a still-growing world population, the potential benefits of ramping up such exploration are clear.”
    Based on current costs and requirements, the study suggests that describing all remaining species using traditional approaches could require up to 1,200 years of work by more than 300,000 taxonomists at an approximate cost of $US 364 billion. Fortunately, new techniques such as DNA barcoding are radically reducing the cost and time involved in new species identification.
    Concludes Dr. Mora: “With the clock of extinction now ticking faster for many species, I believe speeding the inventory of Earth’s species merits high scientific and societal priority. Renewed interest in further exploration and taxonomy could allow us to fully answer this most basic question: What lives on Earth?”

    Cars could run on recycled newspaper, Tulane scientists say



    “Tulane scientists have found a way to convert newspaper and other plant based material into car fuel.”
    Caption: Tulane has applied for a patent for a method to produce the biofuel butanol from organic material, a process developed by associate professor David Mullin, right, postdoctoral fellow Harshad Velankar, center, and undergraduate student Hailee Rask.
    Here’s one way that old-fashioned newsprint beats the Internet. Tulane University scientists have discovered a novel bacterial strain, dubbed “TU-103,” that can use paper to produce butanol, a biofuel that can serve as a substitute for gasoline. They are currently experimenting with old editions of the Times Picayune, New Orleans’ venerable daily newspaper, with great success.
    TU-103 is the first bacterial strain from nature that produces 
butanol directly from cellulose, an organic compound.
    “Cellulose is found in all green plants, and is the most abundant organic material on earth, and converting it into butanol is the dream of many,” said Harshad Velankar, a postdoctoral fellow in David Mullin’s lab in Tulane’s Department of Cell and Molecular Biology. “In the United States alone, at least 323 million tons of cellulosic materials that could be used to produce butanol are thrown out each year.”
    Mullin’s lab first identified TU-103 in animal droppings, cultivated it and developed a method for using it to produce butanol. A patent is pending on the process.
    “Most important about this discovery is TU-103′s ability to produce butanol directly from cellulose,” explained Mullin.
    He added that TU-103 is the only known butanol-producing clostridial strain that can grow and produce butanol in the presence of oxygen, which kills other butanol-producing bacteria. Having to produce butanol in an oxygen-free space increases the costs of production.
    As a biofuel, butanol is superior to ethanol (commonly produced from corn sugar) because it can readily fuel existing motor vehicles without any modifications to the engine, can be transported through existing fuel pipelines, is less corrosive, and contains more energy than ethanol, which would improve mileage.
    “This discovery could reduce the cost to produce bio-butanol,” said Mullin. “In addition to possible savings on the price per gallon, as a fuel, bio-butanol produced from cellulose would dramatically reduce carbon dioxide and smog emissions in comparison to gasoline, and have a positive impact on landfill waste.”