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Wednesday, February 22, 2012

A step forward in effort to regenerate damaged nerves




The carnage evident in disasters like car wrecks or wartime battles is oftentimes mirrored within the bodies of the people involved. A severe wound can leave blood vessels and nerves severed, bones broken, and cellular wreckage strewn throughout the body – a debris field within the body itself.
It's scenes like this that neurosurgeon Jason Huang, M.D., confronts every day. Severe damage to nerves is one of the most challenging wounds to treat for Huang and colleagues. It's a type of wound suffered by people who are the victims of gunshots or stabbings, by those who have been involved in car accidents – or by soldiers injured on the battlefield, like those whom Huang treated in Iraq.
Now, back in his university laboratory, Huang and his team have taken a step forward toward the goal of repairing nerves in such patients more effectively. In a paper published in the journal PLoS One, Huang and colleagues at the University of Rochester Medical Center report that a surprising set of cells may hold potential for nerve transplants.
In a study in rats, Huang's group found that dorsal root ganglion neurons, or DRG cells, help create thick, healthy nerves, without provoking unwanted attention from the immune system.
The finding is one step toward better treatment for the more than 350,000 patients each year in the United States who have serious injuries to their peripheral nerves. Huang's laboratory is one of a handful developing new technologies to treat such wounds.
"These are very serious injuries, and patients really suffer, many for a very long time," said Huang, associate professor of Neurosurgery and chief of Neurosurgery at Highland Hospital, an affiliate of the University of Rochester Medical Center. "There are a variety of options, but none of them is ideal.
"Our long-term goal is to grow living nerves in the laboratory, then transplant them into patients and cut down the amount of time it takes for those nerves to work," added Huang, whose project was funded by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and by the University of Rochester Medical Center.
For a damaged nerve to repair itself, the two disconnected but healthy portions of the nerve must somehow find each other through a maze of tissue and connect together. This happens naturally for a very small wound – much like our skin grows back over a small cut – but for some nerve injuries, the gap is simply too large, and the nerve won't grow back without intervention.
For surgeons like Huang, the preferred option is to transplant nerve tissue from elsewhere in the patient's own body – for instance, a section of a nerve in the leg – into the wounded area. The transplanted nerve serves as scaffolding, a guide of sorts for a new nerve to grow and bridge the gap. Since the tissue comes from the patient, the body accepts the new nerve and doesn't attack it.
But for many patients, this treatment isn't an option. They might have severe wounds to other parts of the body, so that extra nerve tissue isn't available. Alternatives can include a nerve transplant from a cadaver or an animal, but those bring other challenges, such as the lifelong need for powerful immunosuppressant drugs, and are rarely used.
One technology used by Huang and other neurosurgeons is the NeuraGen Nerve Guide, a hollow, absorbable collagen tube through which nerve fibers can grow and find each other. The technology is often used to repair nerve damage over short distances less than half an inch long.
In the PLoS One study, Huang's team compared several methods to try to bridge a nerve gap of about half an inch in rats. The team transplanted nerve cells from a different type of rat into the wound site and compared results when the NeuraGen technology was was used alone or when it was paired with DRG cells or with other cells known as Schwann cells.
After four months, the team found that the tubes equipped with either DRG or Schwann cells helped bring about healthier nerves. In addition, the DRG cells provoked less unwanted attention from the immune system than the Schwann cells, which attracted twice as many macrophages and more of the immune compound interferon gamma.
While both Schwann and DRG cells are known players in nerve regeneration, Schwann cells have been considered more often as potential partners in the nerve transplantation process, even though they pose considerable challenges because of the immune system's response to them.
"The conventional wisdom has been that Schwann cells play a critical role in the regenerative process," said Huang, who is a scientist in the Center for Neural Development and Disease. "While we know this is true, we have shown that DRG cells can play an important role also. We think DRG cells could be a rich resource for nerve regeneration."
In a related line of research, Huang along with colleagues in the laboratory of Douglas H. Smith, M.D., at the University of Pennsylvania are creating DRG cells in the laboratory by stretching them, which coaxes them to grow about one inch every three weeks. The idea is to grow nerves several inches long in the laboratory, then transplant them into the patient, instead of waiting months after surgery for the nerve endings to travel that distance within the patient to ultimately hook up.
Provided by University of Rochester Medical Center
"A step forward in effort to regenerate damaged nerves." February 21st, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-02-effort-regenerate-nerves.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

A mechanism to improve learning and memory




There are a number of drugs and experimental conditions that can block cognitive function and impair learning and memory. However, scientists have recently shown that some drugs can actually improve cognitive function, which may have implications for our understanding of cognitive disorders such as Alzheimer's disease. The new research is reported 21 February in the open-access journal PLoS Biology.
The study, led by Drs. Jose A. Esteban, Shira Knafo and Cesar Venero, is the result of collaboration between researchers from The Centro de Biología Molecular Severo Ochoa and UNED (Spain), the Brain Mind Institute (EPFL, Switzerland) and the Department of Neuroscience and Pharmacology (Faculty of Health Sciences, Denmark).
The human brain contains trillions of neuronal connections, called synapses, whose pattern of activity controls all our cognitive functions. These synaptic connections are dynamic and constantly changing in their strength and properties. This process, known as synaptic plasticity, has been proposed as the cellular basis for learning and memory. Indeed, alterations in synaptic plasticity mechanisms are thought to be responsible for multiple cognitive deficits, such as autism, Alzheimer's disease and several forms of mental retardation.
The study by Knafo et al. provides new information on the molecular mechanisms of synaptic plasticity, and how this process may be manipulated to improve cognitive performance. They find that synapses can be made more plastic by using a small protein fragment (peptide) derived from a neuronal protein involved in cell-to-cell communication. This peptide (called FGL) initiates a cascade of events inside the neuron that results in the facilitation of synaptic plasticity. Specifically, the authors found that FGL triggers the insertion of new neurotransmitter receptors into synapses in a region of the brain called the hippocampus, which is known to be involved in multiple forms of learning and memory. Importantly, when this peptide was administered to rats, their ability to learn and retain spatial information was enhanced.
Dr. Esteban remarks: "We have known for three decades that synaptic connections are not fixed from birth, but they respond to neuronal activity modifying their strength. Thus, outside stimuli will lead to the potentiation of some synapses and the weakening of others. It is precisely this code of ups and downs what allows the brain to store information and form memories during learning".
Within this framework, these new findings demonstrate that synaptic plasticity mechanisms can be manipulated pharmacologically in adult animals, with the aim of enhancing cognitive ability. Dr. Knafo adds: "These are basic studies on the molecular and cellular processes that control our cognitive function. Nevertheless, they shed light into potential therapeutic avenues for mental disorders where these mechanisms go awry".
More information: Knafo S, Venero C, Sa´nchez-Puelles C, Pereda-Pere´z I, Franco A, et al. (2012) Facilitation of AMPA Receptor Synaptic Delivery as a Molecular Mechanism for Cognitive Enhancement. PLoS Biol 10(2): e1001262. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1001262
Provided by Public Library of Science
"A mechanism to improve learning and memory." February 21st, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-02-mechanism-memory.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

ஆண்மை குறைவு நீங்கி, தாது விருத்தியடைய . . .


* மகிழம்பூவை சுத்தம் செய்து நீர் விட்டுக் காய்ச்சி அந்த நீரை 1- டம்ளர் பால் சேர்த்து சாப்பிட ஆண் மை வீரிய உணர்வு உண்டா கும்.* தேங்காய்ப்பால் எடுத்து அரை டம்ளர் அருந்தி வர தாது விருத்தி யாகும்.* அரசம்பழம், வேர்ப்பட்டை இவைகளை இடித்து தூள் செய்து பாலில் கலந்து குடிக்கவும்.
* அமுக்கராங் கிழங்கு பொடியுடன் தேனும் நெய் யும் கலந்து சாப்பி ட்டு வரவும்.* படுக்கைக்கு செல்ல 3-மணி நேரத்திற்கு முன்பே 1-முழு மாதுளம் பழம் சாப்பிடவும்.
தாது விருந்தி:
* முருங்கைப்பூவை நீர் விட்டுக் காய்ச்சி எடுத்து 1-அவுன்ஸ் பசும் பாலுடன் கலந்து குடித்து வரவும்.
* நெய், மிளகு,உப்பு, பொன்னாங்கண்ணிக்கீரை, அரைக்கீரை, பச லை கீரை, நறுந்தாலி, நலமுருங்கை இவைக ளை சேர்த்து துவை யலாக்கி சாப்பிடவும்.
* கருவேலமரத்தின் பிசினை எடுத்து சுத்தம் செ ய்து காயவைத்து லேசாக வறுத்து தூளாக்கி சாப்பிட்டு வர பழைய நிலைமைக்கு வரலாம்.
* அரசம்பழத்தை இடித்து தூளாக்கி தினமும் 1- ஸ்பூன் சாப்பிட உடன் 1-டம்ளர் பசும்பால் சாப்பி ட தாது பலம் பெறும்.
* வால் முளகு, வாதுமைப்பருப்பு, கற்கண்டு, கச கசா இவற்றை சம அளவு எடுத்து அரைத்து நெய் யையும் சேர்த்து அடுப்பில் வைத்து பதமாக வேக வைத்து தினமும் இரு வேளை சாப்பிட்டு வர தாது வலிமை பெறும்

Are there biosocial origins for antisocial behavior?




An assistant professor at Sam Houston State University, College of Criminal Justice is working to unlock the mysteries surrounding the role that genetics and environmental influences play on criminal and antisocial behavior.
"Biosocial research is a multi-disciplinary way of studying antisocial behavior," said Dr. Brian Boutwell. "It involves aspects of behavioral genetics, neuroscience, evolutionary biology and developmental psychology. Additionally, it incorporates different analytical techniques and research methods to examine criminal and antisocial behaviors."
For centuries now, many scholars have pointed to the role that biological factors play in sculpting human behavior. The incorporation of biology, however, into the study of criminal behaviors remains in its infancy and on the fringes of criminology. Dr. Boutwell specializes in this emerging area of research and has used it in recent studies examining corporal punishment, rape, stalking and IQ.
In an article recently published in the journal Aggressive Behavior, Dr. Boutwell examined the relationship between genetic risk factors for antisocial behavior and the use of corporal punishment in childhood. While prior research has linked the use of corporal punishment with aggression, psychopathology, and criminal involvement, Boutwell explores why not all children who are spanked develop such tendencies.
The study, co-authored by Drs. Courtney Franklin (SHSU), J.C. Barnes (The University of Texas at Dallas) and Kevin M. Beaver (Florida State University), suggested that genetic risk factors conditioned the effects of spanking on antisocial behavior. Specifically, children who possessed a genetic predisposition for antisocial behavior appeared to be most susceptible to the negative influences of spanking. Interestingly, this gene-environment interaction appeared to be especially important for male participants and not female children in the sample.
Dr. Boutwell's research also examined a link between life course persistent offenders and rape. Based on the developmental theory proposed by Terrie Moffitt , the study found that the small segment of the population known to be chronically aggressive—termed life course persistent offenders—are significantly more likely to rape, and do so repeatedly over their lifetime. Based on these findings and prior research, the study suggests that the origins of rape, in part, may be genetic. More studies are ongoing to test this link.
In another ongoing study with SHSU colleagues Drs. Matt Nobles and Todd Armstrong, Dr. Boutwell is examining the genetic and environmental correlates of stalking. Data were gathered from a sample of students enrolled in criminal justice classes at Sam Houston State University, and featured survey questionnaires containing items on behavioral, environmental, and demographic factors, including scales of stalking behaviors, intimate partner violence, and relationship attachment. The study also collected DNA from the participants in the form of a cheek swab in order to examine measured genes that may be linked to stalking behavior.
Finally, Dr. Boutwell and his lab of graduate and undergraduate students are doing research on the link between genetics, antisocial behavior and intelligence. Their findings show a link between the genetic risk factors that corresponded to increased antisocial behavior and decreased cognitive functioning.
Provided by Sam Houston State University
"Are there biosocial origins for antisocial behavior?." February 21st, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-02-biosocial-antisocial-behavior.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Does depression contribute to the aging process?



Stress has numerous detrimental effects on the human body. Many of these effects are acutely felt by the sufferer, but many more go 'unseen', one of which is shortening of telomere length.
Telomeres are protective caps on the ends of chromosomes and are indicators of aging, as they naturally shorten over time. However, telomeres are also highly susceptible to stress and depression, both of which have repeatedly been linked with premature telomere shortening.
The human stress response is regulated by the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, or HPA axis. This axis controls the body's levels of cortisol, the primary stress hormone, and it generally does not function normally in individuals with depression- and stress-related illnesses.
Scientists of a new study published this week in Biological Psychiatry sought to bring all this prior work together by studying the relationships between telomere length, stress, and depression.
They did so by measuring telomere length in patients with major depressive disorder and in healthy individuals. They also measured stress, both biologically, by measuring cortisol levels, and subjectively, through a questionnaire.
They found that telomere length was shorter in the depressed patients, which confirmed prior findings. Importantly, they also discovered that shorter telomere length was associated with a low cortisol state in both the depressed and healthy groups.
First author Dr. Mikael Wikgren further explained, "Our findings suggest that stress plays an important role in depression, as telomere length was especially shortened in patients exhibiting an overly sensitive HPA axis. This HPA axis response is something which has been linked to chronic stress and with poor ability to cope with stress."
"The link between stress and telomere shortening is growing stronger. The current findings suggest that cortisol levels may be a contributor to this process, but it is not yet clear whether telomere length has significance beyond that of a biomarker," commented Dr. John Krystal, editor of Biological Psychiatry.
Future studies will be needed to determine whether normalizing telomere length is an important component of the treatment process.
More information: The article is "Short Telomeres in Depression and the General Population Are Associated with a Hypocortisolemic State" by Mikael Wikgren, Martin Maripuu, Thomas Karlsson, Katarina Nordfjäll, Jan Bergdahl, Johan Hultdin, Jurgen Del-Favero, Göran Roos, Lars-Göran Nilsson, Rolf Adolfsson, and Karl-Fredrik Norrback (doi:10.1016/j.biopsych.2011.09.015). The article appears in Biological Psychiatry, Volume 71, Issue 4 (February 15, 2012).
Provided by Elsevier
"Does depression contribute to the aging process?." February 21st, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-02-depression-contribute-aging.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Alcohol abuse could kill around 210,000 people over the next 20 years, academic warns



A University of Southampton academic has warned the UK is on the ‘potential tipping point’ in the war against alcohol abuse and says failure to reform alcohol laws will result in 210,000 avoidable alcohol-related deaths over the next 20 years.
Dr. Nick Sheron, Head of Clinical Hepatology at the University of Southampton, suggests that the government should move from the voluntary “responsibility deal” with alcohol retailers, which encourages them to reduce alcohol consumption, to imposing lawful measures on the drinks industry, such as banning special offers or instituting a minimum price per unit of alcohol.
Alcohol abuse is rising within the UK and costs the NHS an estimated £2.3billion a year. Alcohol-related liver deaths account for about a quarter of all alcohol-related deaths.
Published in the Lancet today Dr. Sheron and colleagues warns the number of alcohol-related deaths over the next 20 years will be determined by “the effectiveness or otherwise of Government alcohol policy”.
However, he writes: “There are welcome signs that the Government might reconsider the evidence-based strategies of increasing price, reducing availability, and preventing marketing of alcohol to children and young people; most importantly, the Prime Minister recently spoke in support of an effective minimum price per unit.
“The Government will have to withstand powerful lobbying from the drinks industry, but the prize of reversing this tragic toll of alcohol-related deaths is there for the taking.”
Dr. Sheron and his colleagues estimate that there will be around 210,000 avoidable alcohol-related deaths over the following 20 years and have warned that it is becoming an ever increasing problem in younger generations, saying that alcohol is a factor in 26•6 per cent of deaths in men aged 16–24 years.
He believes that the effects of powerful alcohol control policies will have a positive impact on reducing alcohol-related deaths, even though alcohol-related disease may take years to develop.
“It remains entirely within the power of the UK Government to prevent the worst case scenario of avoidable deaths,” Dr. Sheron says. “Effective alcohol policies deliver results quickly, and an effective alcohol strategy implemented now would deliver substantial reductions in mortality within 2 or 3 years.
“We are at a potential tipping point in the UK in taking on the shameful, preventable loss of life caused by alcohol. Can the UK Government afford to duck effective action on alcohol that will have such a positive impact on crime and disorder, work productivity, and health?”
More information: To read the comment in the Lancet visit http://www.thelanc … 0140-6736(12)60244-X/fulltext
Provided by University of Southampton
"Alcohol abuse could kill around 210,000 people over the next 20 years, academic warns." February 21st, 2012.http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-02-alcohol-abuse-people-years-academic.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Poor body image linked with Facebook time



 
Poor body image linked with Facebook timeDr Amy Slater
Teenage girls are spending a concerning amount of time on the Internet, potentially leading to low self-esteem and body dissatisfaction, research by Flinders University reveals.
As part of the NetGirls project, Flinders psychologist Dr Amy Slater has surveyed 1100 adolescent girls from 18 different high schools across South Australia to determine how the Internet impacts their sense of identity and body image.
The survey found girls in Years 8-9 were spending more than one and a half hours a day on social networking sites and had an average of 215 Facebook “friends” – with some girls having more than 600 contacts.
On average, survey participants spent three hours and 27 minutes a day using Facebook, chat sites and watching TV – well above the Australian guidelines that recommend no more than two hours of screen time per day for adolescents.
More than 40 per cent of respondents said they were dissatisfied with their weight and girls who spent more time grooming, listening to music and using the Internet generally felt worse about themselves and their bodies, and experienced higher feelings of depression.
In comparison, girls who reported spending more time doing homework had more positive feelings about their bodies, a stronger sense of identity and reduced feelings of depression.
Dr Slater, a research fellow in the School of Psychology, said that although TV commercials, magazines and other forms of mass media are frequently criticised for their portrayal of women, the Internet is likely just as influential in shaping teenage girls’ views of themselves and their bodies.
“The same ideals that are presented about women’s bodies on TV and in magazines are also reflected on the Internet, for instance we found high levels of beauty products and weight loss ads on websites aimed at young girls,” Dr Slater said.
“Body dissatisfaction consistently comes up as one of the biggest, most important issues for young people and our research has shown that the alarming amount of time these girls are spending on the Internet may have a huge impact on the way they think and feel about their bodies.”
Despite the countless worldwide studies on the representation of women in the media, Dr Slater said the role of the Internet and social networking needs further investigation.
“There’s not a great deal of research about it at the moment so once we’ve finished this study we’d like to look at the issue in more detail, including how girls are using Internet sites, the types of pictures they’re posting of themselves and how this makes them feel.”
She said the ongoing NetGirls project, which is part of an Australian Research Council funded project awarded to Flinders University Professor Marika Tiggemann, will be repeated later this year with the same group of girls to examine how internet use and attitudes develop with age.
Dr Slater’s work, including studies on the premature sexualisation of young girls, received one of Flinders Vice Chancellor’s Awards for Early Career Researchers, an annual acknowledgment of researchers who have made a noteworthy contribution to the University since finishing their PhD.
Provided by Flinders University
"Poor body image linked with Facebook time." February 21st, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-02-poor-body-image-linked-facebook.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

New approach could more effectively diagnose personality disorders




(Medical Xpress) -- Personality disorders could be more effectively diagnosed by identifying and targeting the disrupted neurobiological systems where the disorders originate, report Cornell researchers.
The way that these mental illnesses are now classified -- based on particular patterns of thought and behavior -- is misguided and has little hard evidence to support it, reports Cornell neuroscientist Richard Depue and his colleague in a special issue of the Journal of International Review of Psychiatry (23:3).
"The behavioral features used to diagnose personality disorders do not coalesce into coherent disorders in any research," says Depue, professor of human development in the College of Human Ecology, who co-authored the article with graduate student Yu Fu. "As currently defined, the different personality disorders have overlapping behavioral symptoms that also merge imperceptibly with normal behavior. A diagnosis should define a coherent behavioral pattern and predict a particular course, prognosis and treatment. No personality disorder diagnosis can do that."
Their findings fly in the face of current medical practice. Nearly one in 10 Americans suffers from a personality disorder, a group of disabling conditions characterized by serious, sometimes catastrophic, problems with relationships and work. Behavioral features can vary widely, from pervasive disregard for the law and the rights of others (antisocial personality disorder) to extreme mood instability (borderline personality disorder).
The researchers drew their conclusions by conducting a detailed review of the brain systems that underlie the major human personality traits.
Humans have about six major personality traits, each with its own neurobiological foundation that influences such behaviors as how anxious or impulsive we are, Depue notes. For example, the underlying systems and associated personality traits in their model include anxiety/stress-reactivity (thought to underlie neuroticism and negative emotionality) and neural constraint (thought to underlie conscientiousness), among others. The variety of behaviors associated with personality disorders arise from the influence of an individual's genetic make-up and environment on neurobiological functioning, they say.
In their multidimensional model, a person's personality traits can be plotted in three-dimensional space where the axes represent the underlying neurobehavioral systems. The patterns of behavior associated with personality disorders emerge from the interaction of extremely high or low values or levels of normal traits; such extremes lead to impaired interactions, they say.
"Our model links personality traits with the underlying neurobiology, which provides a better framework for understanding how and why personality disorders develop and how they can be treated," he says. "It allows us to better predict interventions, such as certain drugs and/or environmental interventions, which may be of benefit. We can also start thinking of treatments that modify multiple neurobiological variables, rather than just one or two."
And recent discoveries in neuroscience point to the important role environment plays, particularly during early childhood, in how genes are expressed, Depue says. "So, risks for personality disorders can be either magnified or reduced by the interaction of the individual's circumstances with their genetic make-up, in a process called epigenetics. We see evidence for this in personality disorders, which are much more prevalent in those who have suffered from a variety of childhood stresses and abuse."
Their theoretical analysis has implications for the criteria used for classifying personality disorders in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. It also contributes to a growing body of evidence that calls for a rethinking of the approach to classifying these illnesses, based on the underlying biochemical and neural processes that result in the symptoms.
Provided by Cornell University
"New approach could more effectively diagnose personality disorders." February 20th, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-02-approach-effectively-personality-disorders.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Researchers find classical musical compositions adhere to power law





musicImage: Wikipedia.
(PhysOrg.com) -- A team of researchers, led by Daniel Levitin of McGill University, has found after analyzing over two thousand pieces of classical music that span four hundred years of history, that virtually all of them follow a one-over-f (1/f) power distribution equation. He and his team have published the results of their work in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
One-over-f equations describe the relative frequency of things that happen over time and can be used to describe such naturally occurring events as annual river flooding or the beating of a human heart. They have been used to describe the way pitch is used in music as well, but until now, no one has thought to test the idea that they could be used to describe the rhythm of the music too.
To find out if this is the case, Levitin and his team analyzed (by measuring note length line by line) close to 2000 pieces of classical music from a wide group of noted composers. In so doing, they found that virtually every piece studied conformed to the power law. They also found that by adding another variable to the equation, called a beta, which was used to describe just how predictable a given piece was compared to other pieces, they could solve for beta and find a unique number of for each composer.
After looking at the results as a whole, they found that works written by some classical composers were far more predictable than others, and that certain genres in general were more predictable than others too. Beethoven was the most predictable of the group studied, while Mozart was the least of the bunch. And symphonies are generally far more predictable than Ragtimes with other types falling somewhere in-between. In solving for beta, the team discovered that they had inadvertently developed a means for calculating a composer’s unique individual rhythm signature. In speaking with the university news group at McGill, Levitin said, “this was one of the most unanticipated and exciting findings of our research.”
Another interesting aspect of the research is that because the patterns are based on the power law, the music the team studied shares the same sorts of patterns as fractals, i.e. elements in the rhythm that occur the second most often happen only half as often, the third, just a third as often and so forth. Thus, it’s not difficult to imagine music in a fractal patterns that are unique to individual composers.
More information: Musical rhythm spectra from Bach to Joplin obey a 1/f power law, by Daniel Levitin, Parag Chordia, and Vinod Menon, PNAS, 2012.
© 2011 PhysOrg.com
"Researchers find classical musical compositions adhere to power law." February 21st, 2012. http://www.physorg.com/news/2012-02-classical-musical-compositions-adhere-power.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Is the deal on? Study shows why herd mentality best mode for group buying sites




We might like to think we're not influenced by other people.
But a new study into group buying mechanisms -- like those used on popular internet websites such as Groupon and LivingSocial -- reveals that telling buyers who come later to the offer how many have already signed up increases the number of purchasers.
Researchers at the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management wanted to understand why group buying sites that have entered the market recently have enjoyed greater success than those operating a decade ago, such as Mercata and MobShop. Earlier attempts typically left potential buyers waiting for days before confirming whether or not they had got the offer they had signed up for.
"We think one of the reasons group-buying has been successful recently is because of the short time horizon," says Rotman Prof. Ming Hu, who co-wrote the study with Prof. Mengze Shi and PhD student Jiahua Wu. "It allows for a herding effect."
Another reason is the use of an information structure that discloses to later arrivals how many have already signed onto the deal.
Researchers looked at two ways of designing the purchasing mechanism for a group buy: a simultaneous mechanism, where no one knows how many buyers have come before them, and a sequential mechanism, where a second group of buyers has the advantage of knowing the size of the first group.
The researchers' analytical model shows the most successful mechanism is the sequential one because it eliminates uncertainty for those coming later to the deal, and improves the confidence of those who sign on early, as they're able to track the numbers of those who come after them.
"That boosts confidence," says Prof. Hu, who teaches operations management. Deals for "luxury" services, vs. everyday items, work better in a group buy scenario because they offer consumers a greater benefit.
Group buying sites have become increasingly popular recently, but group buying has appeared in various incarnations for hundreds of years. The website Kickstarter.com links artists with potential buyers who can contribute to the artist's proposed project. If enough buyers commit to financially support the project, the project goes ahead. Musicians such as Beethoven and Mozart used the same mechanism to sell tickets to their concerts.
Group buying has also been used to obtain discounts -- if enough buyers commit within a certain timeframe, they can obtain a substantial cut on the regular price. Although a hallmark of most group buying sites is that committed money is refunded if the deal gets called off, purchasers still experience a "psychological loss" when that happens, and may be more willing to sign on to a deal they feel is guaranteed to happen.
Provided by University of Toronto, Rotman School of Management
"Is the deal on? Study shows why herd mentality best mode for group buying sites." February 21st, 2012. http://www.physorg.com/news/2012-02-herd-mentality-mode-group-sites.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

How social media help save an endangered language




(PhysOrg.com) -- There was a time when everyone in Michigan grew up speaking the native language of the area's indigenous people. Less than 10 people born in the state are fluent, yet more than 2,700 people "like" the language on Facebook.
Howard Kimewon, who teaches in the University of Michigan's Ojibwe Language program, part of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts Program in American Culture, was born in Ontario and grew up speaking the language there. His colleague Margaret Noori learned the language later in life in Minnesota, where she grew up. And now, she is combining her background in linguistics and marketing with a facility for social media and technology to leverage her interest in the language she has come to love.
"I want to use every available platform to its utmost," said Noori, director of the U-M Comprehensive Studies Program and a lecturer in the Ojibwe language and literature. Noori is presenting on crossing the digital divide to help save endangered and minority languages on Feb.17 at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) annual meeting in Vancouver, Canada.

In her talk, she will explore ways that tools of modern life, from Facebook and Twitter to YouTube, are helping to keep the native language of the Ojibwe people—called Ashininaabemowin—alive.
"We started our website — www.ojibwe.net — in 2006," Noori said. The goals: to produce proficiency in the next generation and to archive the contributions of fluent elders.
"We save all the posts of fluent elders, and archive them at the Bentley, adding information about this endangered language to the storehouse."
The website now contains over 450 audio files, lessons, songs, and stories. In 2011, more than 9,000 people made 16,519 visits to the website, according to Noori. The site contains a series of spoken lessons and examples of the language aimed at people who are auditory and visual learners. And the social media sites are all accessible from the website, to encourage feedback and help connect visitors to each other.
According to Noori, about 400 people in Michigan now use the language, but about 80 per cent of Anishinaabemowin speakers are over the age of 65. She estimates the total number of speakers, including those from other states and from Canada, at about 15,000 or less.
This language is one of about 27 Algonquian languages spoken in and around the Great Lakes. At one point, more than 200 reservations, or reserves—as they're called in Canada—would have used Anishinaabemowin as their home language.
Provided by University of Michigan
"How social media help save an endangered language." February 21st, 2012. http://www.physorg.com/news/2012-02-social-media-endangered-language.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Teenage Tourrette’s Outbreak?



School-district officials in northwestern New York State are puzzled by a spate of high school students reporting symptoms of the neuropsychiatric disorder.

By Edyta Zielinska | 
Flickr, KB35Flickr, KB35
In May 2011, students at LeRoy Central School District in northwestern New York State started exhibiting tics, spasms, and nonsense speech. Some even claimed to  suffer blackouts and seizures. A total of 19 students from various grades and classes have reported symptoms. After searching for potential infectious causes, the school district last week approved further environmental tests, according to Nature.
New York State Health Department investigators have ruled out some environmental factors and infectious agents, including Streptococcus, which can cause a tic-like syndrome called PANDAS or PANS for Pediatric Acute-onset Neuropsychiatric Syndrome.
Although investigators found no contaminants in the air or water within the school, the building is located some 5 kilometers from the site of a 1970 chemical spill that released “cyanide crystals” and trichloroethene (TCE) into the surrounding area, and some worry that this could be affecting the students. Though TCE has been linked to conditions such as cancer, liver damage, nausea, as well as increased risk of Parkinson’s, the development of tics is not listed among the observed symptoms of TCE exposure. TCE levels were not elevated in the school water.
Comment:
~ Conversion disorder ~
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

வாழைப்பழப் போட்டி


ஒவ்வொரு ஊருக்கும் ஒவ்வொரு விசேஷம் இருக்கும். அதைப்போல் சிவபுரிக்கும் இருந்தது.

சிவபுரியின் பிரசித்தமானது அதன் பள்ளிக்கூடம் அடிதடி, சண்டை, வம்பு, தும்பு இத்தனைக்கும் பேர் போனது. இப் பள்ளி மாணவர்கள் எப்போதும் இரண்டு அல்லது மூன்று கோஷ்டிகளாகப் பிரிந்து சண்டையிட்டுக் கொண்டே இருப்பார்கள். இதை சரிசெய்வதற்குள் ஆசிரியர்களுக்கு பெரும்பாடாக இருக்கும். ஆசிரியர்கள் இப் பள்ளியிலிருந்து விடுதலை கிடைக்கும் நாளை ஆவலோடு எதிர் நோக்கி இருப்பார்கள். அதேபோல் சிவபுரி பள்ளிக்கு மாறுதல் என்றால் ஆசிரியர்களுக்கு வயிற்றில் புளியைக் கரைக்கும். இந்த சமயத்தில் மாணவர் மத்தியில் ஒரு செய்தி வேகமாகப் பரவி கொண்டிருந்தது. தேவராஜன் என்ற ஒரு புதிய தலைமை ஆசிரியர் சிவபுரி பள்ளிக்கு வரப்போகிறார் என்பது. அதுவும் அவரே விரும்பி இந்த பள்ளிக்கூடத்திற்கு வருகிறாராம். இந்த பள்ளியைத் திருத்துவதற்கே அரசாங்கம் இவரை அனுப்புகிறதாம்.

ஒரு திங்கட்கிழமை அன்று தேவராஜன் தலைமை ஆசிரியராகப் பொறுப்பேற்றார். தேவராஜன் ஆசிரியர்களை அழைத்து பேசினார். மாணவர்களை அழைத்துப் பேசினார். அவர்களின் பிரச்சினைகள் என்ன என்று தெரிந்து கொண்டார். மாணவர்கள் மத்தியில் ஒற்றுமை இல்லாதது தான் இதற்குக் காரணம் என்று புரிந்து கொண்டார். அடுத்த நாள் காலை பள்ளியின் எதிரில் பிரேயருக்காக மாணவர்கள் கூடினர். வகுப்பு வாரியாக மாணவர்கள் வரிசையில் நின்றனர். ஆசிரியர்கள் பக்கத்தில் நின்றனர்.

"நீராருங் கடலுடுத்த" பாடலுடன் பிரேயர் தொடங்கியது. தலைமை ஆசிரியர் மைக் முன்னால் வந்து நின்றார். "மாணவர்களே இன்று உங்களுக்கு நான் ஒரு புதிர் விளையாட்டுப் போட்டி ஒன்றை வைக்கப் போகிறேன்" என்றார். "பிரேயரில் விளையாட்டா" என்று மாணவர்கள் கிண்டலடித்தனர். ஆசிரியர்களும் முகத்தைச் சுளித்தனர். "நான் இப்பொழுது உங்களுக்கு ஆளுக்கு ஒரு வாழைப்பழம் தரப் போகிறேன். இதை நீங்கள் நான் சொல்லும் வரை சாப்பிடக்கூடாது" என்றார்.

அதற்குள் வாழைப்பழக் கூடைகள் வந்து இறங்கின. தலைமை ஆசிரியரும், இதர ஆசிரியர்களும் வாழைப் பழத்தை மாணவர்களுக்கு ஒவ்வொன்றாகக் கொடுத்தனர். "மாணவர்களே இப்போது உங்கள் கையில் இருக்கும் வாழைப் பழத்தை சாப்பிடலாம். ஆனால் உங்கள் கையை மடக்கக் கூடாது" என்றார் தேவராஜன். மாணவர்களிடம் சலசலப்பு ஏற்பட்டது. கையை மடக்காமல் எப்படி வாழைப்பழத்தை சாப்பிடுவது? பல மாணவர்கள் பலவிதமாக முயற்சித்தனர். ஆசிரியர்கள் கூட சிலர் மாணவர்களுக்குப் பதிலாக முயற்சித்தனர். "நீங்கள் உங்கள் கையில் இருக்கும் பழத்தை நான் சொன்ன முறையில் சாப்பிட்டு விட்டால் நீங்கள் சொல்வதையெல்லாம் நான் கேட்கிறேன். அப்படி இல்லை எனில் கை மடக்காமல் சாப்பிடும் வித்தையை நான் சொல்லித் தருகிறேன். ஆனால் அதற்குப்பிறகு நான் சொல்வதை நீங்கள் கேட்க வேண்டும். என்ன சொல்கிறீர்கள்?" என்றார் தேவராஜன். சிறிது நேரத்திற்குப் பின்னர் கை மடக்காமல் நீங்கள் சாப்பிட முடியாது. ஆனால் அடுத்தவர் கை மடக்காமல் உங்களுக்குக் கொடுக்கலாம் அல்லவா? என்றார் தேவராஜன். அடுத்த நிமிடம் மாணவர்கள் பழங்களை தின்று தீர்த்தனர். மாணவர்கள் தலைமையாசிரியரின் புத்திக் கூர்மையைப் பாராட்டினர்.

"ஒருவருக்கொருவர் விட்டுக் கொடுத்து ஒற்றுமையாக இருந்தால் பயன் எல்லோருக்கும் கிடைக்கும் அல்லவா?" என்று கேட்டார். அன்று முதல் மாணவர்கள் தலைமையாசிரியரின் வார்த்தைக்குக் கட்டுப்பட்டனர். மாணவர்கள் ஒற்றுமையுடன் சிறந்து விளங்கினர். அந்த ஆண்டு அந்த பள்ளி மாநிலத்திலேயே சிறந்த பள்ளியாகத் தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டது.


கர்ணன்

நாமும், எண்ணங்களும்...


நண்பகல் நேரம், மத்தியான வெயில் கொளுத்திக்கொண்டிருந்தது. மரத்தடியில் ஒருவன் நன்றாக உறங்கிக்கொண்டிருந்தான்.


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அந்த வழியாக வந்த விறகுவெட்டி அவனைப்பார்த்தான். “கடுமையான உழைப்பாளியாக இருக்க வேண்டும் உழைத்த களைப்பால்தான் இந்த வெயிலிலும் இப்படிஉறங்குகிறான்.” என நினைத்துக்கொண்டே சென்றான்.

அடுத்ததாக திருடன் ஒருவன் அந்த வழியாக வந்தான்  “இரவு முழுவதும் கண்விழித்து திருடி இருப்பான் போல தெரிகிறது அதனால்தான் இந்த சுட்டெரிக்கும் வெயிலிலும் அடித்துப்போட்டதுபோல் தூங்குகிறான் “ என நினைத்துக்கொண்டே சென்றான்.

மூன்றாவதாக குடிகாரன் ஒருவன் அந்த வழியாக வந்தான் . “காலையிலேயே நன்றாக குடித்துவிட்டான் போல இருக்கிறது அதனால்தான் குடிமயக்கத்தில் இப்படி விழுந்து கிடக்கிறான்” என நினைத்துக்கொண்டே சென்றான்.

சிறிது நேரத்தில் துறவி ஒருவர் வந்தார். “இந்த நண்பகலில் இப்படி உறங்கும் இவர் முற்றும் துறந்த ஞானியாகத்தான் இருக்க வேண்டும் வேறு யாரால் இத்தகைய செயலை செய்ய முடியும்” என அவரை வணங்கிவிட்டு சென்றார்.


கதையின் நீதி:-
நாம் எப்படியோ நம் எண்ணங்களும் அப்படி அப்படியே.!!!

எலுமிச்சையிலிருந்து மின்சாரம்



குற்றாலம் ஹில்டன் மெட்ரிக் மேல்நிலைப் பள்ளியில் ஆறாம் வகுப்பு படித்து வருபவர் மாணவன் முஹம்மது ஹம்தான், இவர் எலுமிச்சம் பழத்திலிருந்து மின்சாரம் தயாரித்து சாதனை படைத்துள்ளார்.
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அதுபற்றிய விவரம் வருமாறு:-
தென்காசியை சார்ந்த மெக்கானிக்கல் இன்ஜினியர். காதர் முகைதீன், ஷமீமா தம்பதிகளின் மகன் முகம்மது ஹம்தான். இவர் பழையகுற்றாலத்தில் உள்ள ஹில்டன் மெட்ரிக் பள்ளியில் 6-ம் வகுப்பு படித்து வருகிறார். இவர் நேற்று பலரின் முன்னிலையில் எலுமிச்சம்பழத்தில் இருந்து மின்சாரம் தயாரிக்கலாம் என்பதை செய்து காண்பித்து அங்கிருந்தவர்களை ஆச்சரியத்தில் ஆழ்த்தினார்.

நான்கு எலுமிச்சை பழங்களை எடுத்துக் கொண்டு ஒவ்வொரு பழத்திலும் இரும்பு ஆணி மற்றும் காப்பர் கம்பியை செருகினார். இதன் பின்னர் காப்பர் கம்பியை தனி வயரிலும், இரும்பு ஆணியை தனி வயரிலும் இணைத்து சிறிய 2 வோல்ட் திறன் கொண்ட சிறிய பல்பினை எரிய வைத்து இந்த சாதனையை நிகழ்த்தி காட்டினார்.

இந்த கண்டு பிடிப்பு குறித்து மாணவன் நிருபர்களிடம் கூறியதாவது:-
"எனது தந்தை காதர் முகைதீன் மெக்கானிக்கல் என்ஜினீயர். அவர் கத்தார் நாட்டில் பணிபுரிந்தார். நானும் அங்கு வசித்தேன். நான் அங்குள்ள டெல்லி பப்ளிக் பள்ளியில் 5-ம் வகுப்பு வரை படித்தேன். இந்நிலையில் எனது தந்தை நெல்லையில் ஏற்றுமதி-இறக்குமதி கம்பெனி தொடங்கியதால் நாங்கள் தென்காசி வந்துவிட்டோம். நான் பழையகுற்றாலத்தில் உள்ள ஹில்டன் பள்ளியில் சேர்ந்து 6-ம் வகுப்பு படித்து வருகிறேன். அறிவியல் பாடத்தில் சிட்ரிக் அமிலத்தில் இருந்து மின்சாரம் தயாரிக்க முடியும் என்று படித்தேன்.

அப்போதுதான் புதுவழியில் சிட்ரிக் அமிலத்தில் இருந்து மின்சாரம் எடுக்க வேண்டும் என்று எனக்கு ஆசை வந்தது. எலுமிச்சம்பழத்தில் சிட்ரிக் அமிலம் உள்ளதால் அதி லிருந்து மின்சாரம் எடுக்க நினைத்தேன். அதன்படி எலுமிச்சம்பழத்தில் இரும்பு மற்றும் செம்பு கம்பிகளை சொருகி அவற்றை மின்கம்பி களால் இணைத்து பார்த்த போது மின்சாரம் வந்தது. ஒரு எலுமிச்சம்பழத்தில் இருந்த 0.5 வாட்ஸ் மின்சாரம் கிடைக்கும். 4 பழங்களில் இருந்து 2வாட்ஸ் பல்பு எரிகிறது.

மேலும் "எலுமிச்சை, பல்லாரி, உருளைக்கிழங்கு, தக்காளி, கத்தரிக்காய், ஆரஞ்சு, வாழைப்பழம் உள்ளிட்டவைகளில் இருந்து மின்சாரம் தயாரிக்கலாம் என எனக்கு பாடம் நடத்திய ஆசிரியை கூறினார்கள். அதனை நான் செயல்படுத்தி மின்சாரம் கிடைப்பதை உறுதிபடுத்திக் கொண்டேன்." இவ்வாறு மாணவன் முஹம்மது ஹம்தான் கூறினார்.


Engr. சுல்தான் 

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