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Monday, April 16, 2012

Nanoparticles Home in On Brain Tumors, Boost Accuracy of Surgical Removal


Human brain scans. Like special-forces troops laser-tagging targets for a bomber pilot, tiny particles that can be imaged three different ways at once have enabled Stanford University School of Medicine scientists to remove brain tumors from mice with unprecedented accuracy. (Credit: © svedoliver / Fotolia)                                                                             Science Daily — Like special-forces troops laser-tagging targets for a bomber pilot, tiny particles that can be imaged three different ways at once have enabled Stanford University School of Medicine scientists to remove brain tumors from mice with unprecedented accuracy.

About 14,000 people are diagnosed annually with brain cancer in the United States. Of those cases, about 3,000 are glioblastomas, the most aggressive form of brain tumor. The prognosis for glioblastoma is bleak: the median survival time without treatment is three months. Surgical removal of such tumors -- a virtual imperative whenever possible -- prolongs the typical patient's survival by less than a year. One big reason for this is that it is almost impossible for even the most skilled neurosurgeon to remove the entire tumor while sparing normal brain.In a study published online April 15 in Nature Medicine, a team led by Sam Gambhir, MD, PhD, professor and chair of radiology, showed that the minuscule nanoparticles engineered in his lab homed in on and highlighted brain tumors, precisely delineating their boundaries and greatly easing their complete removal. The new technique could someday help improve the prognosis of patients with deadly brain cancers.
"With brain tumors, surgeons don't have the luxury of removing large amounts of surrounding normal brain tissue to be sure no cancer cells are left," said Gambhir, who is the Virginia and D.K. Ludwig Professor for Clinical Investigation in Cancer Research and director of the Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford. "You clearly have to leave as much of the healthy brain intact as you possibly can."
This is a real problem for glioblastomas, which are particularly rough-edged tumors. In these tumors, tiny fingerlike projections commonly infiltrate healthy tissues, following the paths of blood vessels and nerve tracts. An additional challenge is posed by micrometastases: minuscule tumor patches caused by the migration and replication of cells from the primary tumor. Micrometastases dotting otherwise healthy nearby tissue but invisible to the surgeon's naked eye can burgeon into new tumors.
Although brain surgery today tends to be guided by the surgeon's naked eye, new molecular imaging methods could change that, and this study demonstrates the potential of using high-technology nanoparticles to highlight tumor tissue before and during brain surgery.
The nanoparticles used in the study are essentially tiny gold balls coated with imaging reagents. Each nanoparticle measures less than five one-millionths of an inch in diameter -- about one-sixtieth that of a human red blood cell.
"We hypothesized that these particles, injected intravenously, would preferentially home in on tumors but not healthy brain tissue," said Gambhir, who is also a member of the Stanford Cancer Institute. "The tiny blood vessels that feed a brain tumor are leaky, so we hoped that the spheres would bleed out of these vessels and lodge in nearby tumor material." The particles' gold cores, enhanced as they are by specialized coatings, would then render the particles simultaneously visible to three distinct methods of imaging, each contributing uniquely to an improved surgical outcome.
One of those methods, magnetic resonance imaging, is already frequently used to give surgeons an idea of where in the brain the tumor resides before they operate. MRI is well-equipped to determine a tumor's boundaries, but when used preoperatively it can't perfectly describe an aggressively growing tumor's position within a subtly dynamic brain at the time the operation itself takes place.
The Gambhir team's nanoparticles are coated with gadolinium, an MRI contrast agent, in a way that keeps them stably attached to the relatively inert spheres in a blood-like environment. (In a 2011 study published in Science Translational Medicine, Gambhir and his colleagues showed in small animal models that nanoparticles similar to those used in this new study, but not containing gadolinium, were nontoxic.)
A second, newer method is photoacoustic imaging, in which pulses of light are absorbed by materials such as the nanoparticles' gold cores. The particles heat up slightly, producing detectable ultrasound signals from which a three-dimensional image of the tumor can be computed. Because this mode of imaging has high depth penetration and is highly sensitive to the presence of the gold particles, it can be useful in guiding removal of the bulk of a tumor during surgery.
The third method, called Raman imaging, leverages the capacity of certain materials (included in a layer coating the gold spheres) to give off almost undetectable amounts of light in a signature pattern consisting of several distinct wavelengths. The gold cores' surfaces amplify the feeble Raman signals so they can be captured by a special microscope.
To demonstrate the utility of their approach, the investigators first showed via various methods that the lab's nanoparticles specifically targeted tumor tissue, and only tumor tissue.
Next, they implanted several different types of human glioblastoma cells deep into the brains of laboratory mice. After injecting the imaging-enhancing nanoparticles into the mice's tail veins, they were able to visualize, with all three imaging modes, the tumors that the glioblastoma cells had spawned.
The MRI scans provided good preoperative images of tumors' general shapes and locations. And during the operation itself, photoacoustic imaging permitted accurate, real-time visualization of tumors' edges, enhancing surgical precision.
But neither MRI nor photoacoustic imaging by themselves can distinguish healthy from cancerous tissue at a sufficiently minute level to identify every last bit of a tumor. Here, the third method, Raman imaging, proved crucial. In the study, Raman signals emanated only from tumor-ensconced nanoparticles, never from nanoparticle-free healthy tissue. So, after the bulk of an animal's tumor had been cleared, the highly sensitive Raman-imaging technique was extremely accurate in flagging residual micrometastases and tiny fingerlike tumor projections still holed up in adjacent normal tissue that had been missed on visual inspection. This, in turn, enabled these dangerous remnants' removal.
"Now we can learn the tumor's extent before we go into the operating room, be guided with molecular precision during the excision procedure itself and then immediately afterward be able to 'see' once-invisible residual tumor material and take that out, too," said Gambhir, who suggested that the nanoparticles' propensity to heat up on photoacoustic stimulation, combined with their tumor specificity, might also make it possible for them to be used to selectively destroy tumors. He also expressed optimism that this kind of precision could eventually be brought to bear on other tumor types.
The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the National Cancer Institute's Center for Cancer Nanotechnology Excellence, the Ben and Catherine Ivy Foundation, the Canary Foundation and the Leon Levy Foundation.
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Home Remedies for FATTY LEVER


FATTY LEVER
   
Fatty liver is the accumulation of fat in the cells of the liver. About one in 10 Australians are affected by this condition.
 
Fatty liver disease is often caused by an excessive alcohol intake, but it is increasingly being found in people who do not drink to excess but who are obese or have diabetes.
Fatty liver disease can also occur, although far less commonly, with malnutrition, certain medicines and occasionally as a complication of pregnancy.
 
The major factor in the development of non-alcohol-related fatty liver disease is insulin resistance, a condition usually associated with obesity.
 
Normally, the hormone insulin tells the body�s cells to take up glucose (a type of sugar) from the bloodstream to use as fuel. In insulin resistance, however, the cells don�t respond properly to insulin. They cannot take up sufficient glucose and are therefore deprived of fuel. The blood does not have much glucose removed from it by the cells, so blood glucose levels rise.
 
Doctors have not yet discovered exactly how insulin resistance causes fat to be deposited within liver cells. However, it is clear that fatty liver disease is not necessarily caused by eating too much fat.
 
DiagnosisFatty liver disease usually does not cause any symptoms. Occasionally, people with the condition will complain of feeling tired or generally unwell, but this varies between individuals, and the degree of symptoms does not usually equate to the severity of the disease.
 
Often fatty liver disease is diagnosed after finding an abnormality incidentally on blood tests or an abdominal ultrasound. Alternatively, your doctor may detect an enlarged liver while examining your abdomen.
 
A biopsy of your liver is the only test that can definitively diagnose fatty liver disease, but this is not always necessary, as other tests can be sufficiently suggestive to warrant treatment.
 
OutlookOriginally, fatty liver disease was thought to be a harmless condition, but it is now known that it has the potential to progress to more serious liver conditions, such as cirrhosis.
 
TreatmentThere is no proven cure for fatty liver disease, but active lifestyle changes can significantly improve the condition and perhaps even reverse it. These changes include:
  • Avoiding alcohol and medicines that may affect your liver, such as steroids.
  • Losing weight. This is not easy for many people with fatty liver disease, so having a well-designed management plan designed by a doctor or dietitian can be beneficial. Gradual weight loss is the key, as sudden, severe weight loss can actually make the condition worse.
  • Exercising. Even if this does not result in weight loss, it is worthwhile as it can reduce the amount of fat around your abdominal organs.
  • Controlling your blood sugar levels if you have diabetes.
  • Treating high cholesterol.
There are a number of medicines that have been suggested for the treatment of fatty liver disease, although research into these is continuing. These are sometimes prescribed by doctors in particular cases.
 
By focusing on reversible factors associated with fatty liver disease, it may be possible to prevent progression of the disease.

Warning: The reader of this article should exercise all precautionary measures while following instructions on the home remedies from this article. Avoid using any of these products if you are allergic to it. The responsibility lies with the reader and not with the site or the writer.This information is solely for informational purposes. IT IS NOT INTENDED TO PROVIDE MEDICAL ADVICE and should not be treated as a substitute for the medical advice of your own doctor.

Memory in Adults Impacted by Versions of Four Genes


Scientists have advanced understanding of the genetic components of Alzheimer's disease and of brain development. (Credit: © adimas / Fotolia)                                                    Science Daily  — Two research studies, co-led by UC Davis neurologist Charles DeCarli and conducted by an international team that included more than 80 scientists at 71 institutions in eight countries, has advanced understanding of the genetic components of Alzheimer's disease and of brain development. Both studies appear in the April 15 edition of the journal Nature Genetics.

The second paper identifies two genes associated with intracranial volume -- the space within the skull occupied by the brain when the brain is fully developed in a person's lifespan, usually around age 20.The first study, based on a genetic analysis of more than 9,000 people, has found that certain versions of four genes may speed shrinkage of a brain region involved in making new memories. The brain area, known as the hippocampus, normally shrinks with age, but if the process speeds up, it could increase vulnerability to Alzheimer's disease, the research suggests.
DeCarli is a pioneer in the field of neuroimaging of the aging brain who has been at the forefront of developing and using quantifiable imaging techniques to define the relationship between structure and function in the healthy aging brain and to characterize the changes associated with vascular and Alzheimer's dementias. He is professor of neurology and director of the UC Davis Alzheimer's Disease Center and the UC Davis Imaging of Dementia and Aging Laboratory.
Genetic variants of hippocampus study
The gene variants identified in the first study do not cause Alzheimer's, but they may rob the hippocampus of a kind of "reserve" against the disease, which is known to cause cell destruction and dramatic shrinkage of this key brain site. The result is severe loss of memory and cognitive ability.
Scientists calculated that hippocampus shrinkage in people with these gene variants accelerates by about four years on average. The risk of Alzheimer's doubles every five years beginning at age 65, so a person of that age would face almost twice the Alzheimer's risk if he or she had these versions of the gene.
Looked at another way, if a person with one of these variants did get Alzheimer's, the disease would attack an already compromised hippocampus and so would lead to a more severe condition at a younger age than otherwise, the research suggests.
"This is definitely a case of 'bigger is better,'" said DeCarli. "We already know that Alzheimer's disease causes much of its damage by shrinking hippocampus volume. If someone loses a greater-than-average amount of volume due to the gene variants we've identified, the hippocampus is more vulnerable to Alzheimer's."
Why the aging hippocampus normally decreases in volume is unclear. The new research shows that the genes most strongly linked to shrinkage are involved in maturation of the hippocampus and in apoptosis, or programmed cell death -- a continual process by which older cells are removed from active duty.
The scientists suggest that if the gene variants they identified do affect either maturation or the rate at which cells die, this could underlie at least some of the increased rates of hippocampus shrinkage.
"Either by making more or healthier hippocampal neurons or preventing them from dying with advancing age, the healthy versions of these genes influence how people remember as they get older," said DeCarli. "The alternate versions of the genes may not fully provide these benefits."
The researchers hope that they can find ways to protect the hippocampus from premature shrinkage or slow its decline by studying the normal regulation of the proteins coded by these genes.
The genetic analysis draws on what is known as a genome-wide association study -- research aimed at finding the common genetic variants associated with specific diseases or other conditions. Different versions of a gene usually come down to changes in just one of the tens of thousands of DNA "letters" that make up genes. These one-letter differences are known as single-nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs.
The research involved more than 80 scientists at 71 institutions in 8 countries. Many researchers are needed for such a study in order to put together the large samples, or cohorts, of people whose genetic makeup is to be investigated, to measure the hippocampus from magnetic resonance pictures of the brain and for the labor-intensive statistical analysis of the findings.
The study used a very large assemblage of genetic and disease data called the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology Consortium, or CHARGE. The consortium brings together several population-based cohorts in the United States and Europe.
The cohort was made up of 9,232 dementia-free volunteers with an average age of 67. The study identified four different gene variants associated with hippocampus volume decline. One, known as rs7294919, showed a particularly strong link to a reduced hippocampus volume, suggesting that this gene is very important to hippocampus development or health.
The findings were then assessed in two other cohorts. One, including both normal and cognitively compromised people with an average age of 40, showed that three of the suspect SNPs were linked to reduced hippocampus volume. Analysis of results from the third group, comprised primarily of older people, showed a significant association between one of the SNPs and accelerated memory loss.
"With this study, we have new evidence that aging, the hippocampus and memory are influenced by specific genes," DeCarli said. "Understanding how these genes affect the development and aging of the hippocampus may give us new tools to delay memory loss with advanced age and possibly reduce the impact of such diseases as Alzheimer's disease."
Genetic variants of Intracranial-volume study
While the first study deals with the genetic associations with brain shrinkage, the second deals with associations impacting intracranial volume, which is an indirect measure of the size of the brain at full development.
Though brain volume and intracranial volume are both highly heritable, the genetic influences on these measures may differ. To assess the genetic influence on these two measures, researchers in the second study performed a genome-wide association study on cross-sectional measures of intracranial volume and brain volume in 8,175 elderly in the CHARGE consortium.
They found no associations for brain volume, but they did discover that intracranial volume was significantly associated with two loci: rs4273712, a known height locus on chromosome 6q22, and rs9915547, tagging the inversion on chromosome 17q21.
"Since geneticists are already familiar with the other functions of these same genes, associating these particular genes with intracranial volume may help us better understand brain development in general," said DeCarli. "For instance, we know that one of these genes has played a unique evolutionary role in human development, and perhaps we as a species are selecting this gene as a way of providing further advances in brain development."
Both studies involved international teams representing scores of institutions, funded by a variety of NIH grants as well as grants from agencies around the world.

Home Remedies for ITCHING


ITCHING
Itching can be best described as a peculiar tingling or uneasy irritation of the skin that creates a desire to scratch the affected area. Itching is a common problem faced by many people at some or the other point in life. Itching could be the result of a variety of reasons such as allergies (to food, plants or pets), insect bites, stings, skin disease or even poor hygiene. Itching can be annoying as the skin is irritated and gives you the constant need to scratch the affected area. Constant or repeated scratching can bruise the skin, making it sore and even painful. Itching could be generalized where in the whole body is affected or localized wherein a particular area is irritated.
Itching is in fact one of the most common of problems and is not even regarded as a condition in itself, but is usually seen as a symptom. The medical term for itching is pruritus and this can be a localized or generalized problem. If it is localized it means that the itch simply affects a specific and limited area of the body, while a generalized itch would cause itching all over. A localized itch is quite obviously easy to treat and most treatments can provide some effective relief. A generalized itch on the other hand is quite troublesome and in most cases the causes of itching are not easy to identify. This poses a problem because any effective itching treatment would necessarily be directed towards the causes of itching. Any other treatments are simply meant to minimize the symptoms or relieve the itch. 
Itching is one of the most common symptoms to accompany skin rashes and other skin conditions, which is why itching skin is very often accompanied by other problems like skin lesions, blisters, or other skin problems. In such cases it is important that you seek medical treatment, as simply using natural itching skin remedies will not help to treat the underlying condition. In such cases you would probably need to be treated by a dermatologist as conditions like scabies and eczema would need special care. 
In minor cases of itching or where it is simply a temporary phenomenon that does not require intensive treatment you could relieve the condition by using some simple itching home remedies and making some small changes to your lifestyle. Your skin care routine is an important aspect of treatment and cannot be neglected under any circumstance. Avoid using harsh cosmetic and skin products that contain chemicals that could aggravate or damage your skin and always make sure that the products you use are suited to your skin type. Try and use natural skin care products and preferably unperfumed soaps and lotions. Clothing that is rough on the skin like wool and at times nylon should also be avoided. Cotton clothes would be the best option. Similarly use gentle soft towels and cotton bed sheets. Very often the detergents that you use to wash your clothes and linen can contribute to the problem as they contain harsh chemicals and the residue may remain in the fabric causing skin reactions. Try and use mild detergents, avoid using excessive amounts of detergent and wash and rinse out the clothes thoroughly.

Itching skin is not really a serious threat in itself, particularly if there is itching with no rash. The main threat from itching would stem from our natural and instinctive response to scratch at the itchy area. This could result in, soreness, lesions, bruising and secondary skin infections that can cause other complications. The primary goal should therefore be to relieve the itching and you could even use pharmaceutical products like topical ointments to treat itching. Steroid creams and antihistamines or calamine lotions are often used to treat the problem of itching skin.

Red Spots, Scaly Patches

½ Tendency to scratch continually to relieve itching sensation 
½ Redness of skin 
½ Scraped skin as a result of vigorous scratching 
½ Prolonged scratching and rubbing can result in thick and scarred skin 
½ Red spots 
½ Scaly patches 
½ Blisters 

Dry Skin is a Common Cause for Itching

Itching can be caused by a plethora of reasons. Some of the most common causes for itching include:

½ Exposure or contact with chemicals.
� Sunburn can cause itching.
� Insect bites or stings.
½ Certain infectious diseases such as chicken pox cause itching on the skin.
½ Parasites on the body such as body, head or pubic lice can cause itching. 
½ Itching can be the result of an allergic reaction to certain foods, plants or pets. 
½ Dry skin is a common cause for itching. This is usually seen in older people as aging skin is often dehydrated. 
½ Cold weather, overexposure to water and hot baths typically cause itching. 
ï½ An unfavorable medication could cause itching as a reaction. 
½ Itching can happen during the later part of pregnancy due to the stretching of the skin especially on the lower abdomen area. 
ï½ Skin conditions such as Psoriasis, Seborrheic dermatitis, Urticaria, Pityriasis rosea can cause severe itching.

Causes of Itching

The causes of itching are not always easy to identify as they may not always stem from physiological conditions. Stress and anxiety can at times cause itching and at other times it may aggravate itching, which may be occurring as a symptom of some other underlying condition. The causes of itching could therefore include psychological factors, skin conditions like dry skin or sunburn, metabolic or glandular disorders, like a thyroid condition or kidney disease, or also due to cancers, drug reactions or simply on account of an allergy or reaction to insect bites, stings, or other irritants. These could be some of the most common causes of itching skin. 

Certain Skin conditions or diseases would require itching treatment from a dermatologist and could include conditions as mundane as dry skin, or conditions like eczema, psoriasis, lichen planus and utricaria. 

Allergies and skin reactions are common causes of itching on the skin, particularly on the hands and feet, and also on the face. The common culprits of such reactions are cosmetics, dyes used on fabrics, contact with certain metals like the bracelets or necklace you just wore, or also due to allergies to certain medications. Allergic reactions to certain plants like poison ivy would also cause such sensations of intense itching. 

Parasitic creatures like insects are another common cause of skin itching and some causes of this nature would include scabies mites, lice infestations or any other stinging or biting insects like ants and spiders among others. Itching caused by such factors will usually be localized. Infections could include viral, bacterial or even fungal infections. Viral infections like chickenpox would cause itching as one of the many other symptoms, while fungal infections like ringworm, jock itch or athlete�s foot only affect the skin in a specific area. Fungal infections therefore usually have itching as the primary symptom. Yeast infections are also a common cause of itching around the private parts. 

Systemic diseases may also be responsible for itching in some conditions and in such a scenario you would need to visit your doctor for a thorough diagnosis and appropriate itching treatment. Treatment would actually not be directed towards the itching, but towards the underlying condition, while relief is sought from the itching. Some conditions of this nature would include diabetes, hyperthyroidism, hypothyroidism, conditions like liver cirrhosis or hepatitis, leukemia, Hodgkin's disease or anemia. 

Hormonal imbalances and fluctuations may be another cause of itching. Because of changes in hormonal levels women may be susceptible to itching during pregnancy and menopause. If the condition persists or worsens however it would require medical investigation.
 

Use of Weak Carbolic Acid Lotion

Itching caused due to non-medical conditions can to a great extent be treated using home remedies. Some that can be used to control or treat itching are as follows :

� Take a bath in one can of evaporated milk; you can add other combinations such as oatmeal, baking soda etc. The milk works well to soothe the itching.

� Apply Aloe Vera, cod liver oil, lemon juice, vitamin E oil, wheat germ oil, or witch hazel tea to the itchy area. 

� Take burdock, chickweed, goldenseal, plantain, or yellow dock in capsule form. 

� Cornstarch helps relieve itching. You can pour some into your bath water or dust it onto your body. 

� Scrub the affected area lightly with a pumice stone. Then wash with soap, apply rubbing alcohol, and dab a thick layer of Vaseline over it. This will provide relief from itching. 

� Take a bath with a little peppermint or yellow dock to relieve itching. 

� Add 2 tablespoons of apple cider vinegar to your bath water to relieve itchy skin. 

� Baking soda can be used in cool bath water to soothe other skin irritations and alleviate itching from prickly heat, bee stings, insect bites, and other minor skin ailments. 

� Another trusted home remedy is to use a weak carbolic acid lotion or a solution of bicarbonate of soda (commonly known as baking soda) and applying it over the itchy part. 

� Apply cold compress to the itchy areas, it is thought to bring relief from itching. 

� Fresh stinging nettle oil can be used on the affected areas. 

� Drinking 1 to 2 cups of Nettle tea daily is thought to help relieve itching. Add boiling water to 1 tsp of the dried leaves for each cup. Steep for 15 minutes. 

� Apply Burdock root oil to the skin to help heal rashes and itching. 

� Fresh Chickweed poultice is good for itching. This can be made by soaking 2 large handfuls in water. When the plants soften, cool them and apply directly on the skin.

Take a Diet Rich in Vitamin C, Beta-Carotene, Vitamin E and Zinc

Diet can play an important role to combat itching that result from food allergies. If you have identified foods that cause itching, it�s best to avoid them completely. 

Increase your intake of Vitamin C, beta-carotene, Vitamin E and zinc through diet by having foods rich in the above mentioned vitamins and minerals.

Avoid Scratching or Rubbing

Avoid scratching or rubbing itchy areas as this worsens the problem. Keep finger nails short to prevent skin damage from scratching. 
  • Wear loose, light and cool nightwear. Do not use thick, rough clothing like wool over itchy areas. 
  • Take bath with lukewarm water. 
  • Apply a soothing lotion on to the skin after bath. 
  • Avoid exposure to heat and humidity. 
  • Keep your body and affected areas dry and clean at all times. Moisture can worsen itching. 

Warning: The reader of this article should exercise all precautionary measures while following instructions on the home remedies from this article. Avoid using any of these products if you are allergic to it. The responsibility lies with the reader and not with the site or the writer.This information is solely for informational purposes. IT IS NOT INTENDED TO PROVIDE MEDICAL ADVICE and should not be treated as a substitute for the medical advice of your own doctor. 

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Of Robots and Cocktails



by Daniel Cossins 
 
Scientists call it the "cocktail party problem." To understand the person talking to you in a noisy room, you've got to filter out all of the conversations, clinking glass, and other noises in the background. Fortunately, our brains are up to the challenge, and now—thanks to a little help from a humanoid robot—researchers have found new clues to how we do it.
A group of hearing scientists at NTT Communication Science Laboratories in Kanagawa, Japan, conducted the study. The researchers didn't head out to their local bar to investigate the cocktail party problem. Instead, they opted for a far more antisocial environment. They recruited volunteers and asked them to sit alone in a small room and face a speaker. Then the team played a combination of two different tones (somewhat like the sound file at right). At first, just like people at a loud party, the volunteers heard the sound as one cacophonous noise. But within a few seconds, they were able to isolate one tone from the other.
Then the researchers brought in the robot. Team leader Hirohito Kondo explains that he and his colleagues wanted to know if head movements could reset the cocktail party effect—that is, once we've filtered out the background noise, does turning our heads bring back the cacophony? It's not an easy question to answer. When we turn our heads, sounds reach our ears in a different way, the sources of various sounds appear to shift, and we even pay attention to different things. The robot—a humanoid head with built-in microphones designed to mimic how we hear—helped Kondo's team figure out which, if any, of these factors could reset the cocktail party effect.
Here's how the experiments worked. In one room a human volunteer listened to the two-toned sound relayed from microphones in the robot's ear canal. At various points, the researchers would instruct the volunteer to turn his or her head. In another room, the robot turned its head in synch with the person's. With a series of trials using this setup—some in which only the source of the sound changed, some where there was only head motion, and some with both—the team was able to isolate the consequences of head motion on the cocktail party effect.
Rapid head motion resets the cocktail party effect, Kondo and colleagues report online today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. But just changing the things we pay attention to—in this case, the human looking at different LED lights placed across the room—does not. And when the cocktail party effect is reset and the cacophony returns, the researchers found, it only takes a few seconds for our brain to sift out the noises again. So a quick swivel of the head makes us reset our perception of what we're hearing. We then start the process of teasing out the separate parts of the noise again.
Josh McDermott, a hearing scientist at New York University, describes the research as "highly novel" and points out that the key result is surprising. "If you move your head such that the acoustic stimulus at the ears changes, but the environment itself doesn't, you wouldn't have thought you would need to restart the process of interpretation," he says.
This setup does not appear to be optimal, he adds, because it means that you're re-evaluating the auditory scene for no good reason. "For me the take home from this paper is that this is not actually adaptive. It reveals a little bit of a bug in the system: that your brain can't completely discount the effect of the head motion."
Al Bregman, a hearing scientist at McGill University in Montreal, Canada, was impressed by the research but is reluctant to believe that such a flaw in the brain exists. Instead, he suggests, there could be a problem with the sound stimulus used in these sorts of studies. "The system is so exquisite in its capabilities, able to detect sub-millisecond asynchronies between the signals at the two ears," he says, "that it is hard for me to believe that the Kondoet al. results reflect a crude flaw in the system."
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

நீரிழிவு நோயை தடுக்கும் கோவைக்காய்




சர்க்கரை நோய் எனப்படும் நீரிழிவு நோய்களின் எண்ணிக்கை நாளுக்கு நாள் பெருகி வருகிறது. கொஞ்சம் நம்முடைய உணவுப் பழக்க முறைகளில் கூடுதல் கவனம் செலுத்தினால் நீரிழிவு நோய் வராமல் தப்பித்துக் கொள்ளலாம்.
சாதாரணமாக எல்லா காய்கறி அங்காடிகளிலும் தாராளமாகக் கிடைக்கக் கூடியது தான் கோவைக்காய். கொஞ்சமாய் துவர்ப்புச் சுவையுடைய இந்த கோவைக்காயில் பொறியல், வற்றல், கூட்டு, சாம்பார் செய்து உணவில் சேர்த்து கொள்வதுண்டு.
மற்றும் கோவைக் காய் பச்சடி சிறந்த மருத்துவ குணமுள்ள உணவு. சிறு சிறு துண்டுகளாக நறுக்கிய கோவைக்காயுடன் மோர், மிளகு பொடி, சீரகப் பொடி, இஞ்சி சிறிது சேர்த்து தேவையான அளவு உப்பு கலந்து விட்டால் அவ்வளவு தான் கோவைக்காய் பச்சடி தயார்.
இதனை வாரம் 2 நாள் பகல் உணவில் சேர்த்தால் வாய்ப் புண் குணமாகும். நீரிழிவு நோயாளிகளின் ரத்தத்தில் சேரும் சர்ககரை அளவைக் கட்டுப்படுத்தும். ஆனால் நிறைய பேர் பாகற்காயை ஒதுக்குவது போல் கோவைக் காயையும் உணவில் சேர்த்துக் கொள்ளாமல் ஒதுக்கி விடுகிறார்கள்.
நாக்கு சுவையை மட்டுமே கருதாமல் உடல் நலத்தையும் கருத்தில் எடுத்துக் கொண்டால் எல்லா உணவுகளும் விருப்பமுடையதாகத் தான் ஆகும். இதனைப் பொதுவாக எல்லோருமே சாப்பிடலாம்.
பரம்பரை காரணமாக நீரிழிவு நோய் இருப்பவர்கள் கோவைக்காயை 35 வயது முதலே உணவில் சேர்த்துக் கொண்டால் நல்லது. நீரிழிவு நோய் வராமல் தடுக்கலாம். பச்சையாகவே கோவைக்காயை மென்று துப்பி விட்டாலே வாய்ப்புண் ஆறிடும்.
வயிற்றுப் புண் இருப்பவர்கள் வாரம் 2 நாள் கோவைக்காயை சேர்த்துக் கொள்ளலாம். கோவைக்காயை பீன்ஸ் போல பொறியல் செய்து சாப்பிட்டாலும் சுவையாக இருக்கும்.
ஒரே ஒரு கோவைக்காயை எடுத்து மோருடன் சேர்த்து அரைத்து குடித்தாலும் மேற்சொன்ன பலன்களை பெறலாம்.