Africa’s Disappearing Savannahs Threaten Lion Populations

Brett Smith for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

While lions have always been known as the kings of the jungle, the big cats actually roam mostly on Africa´s savannahs. And a new report from Duke University researchers suggests that those friendly environs have been disappearing at an alarming rate.

According to the report, which was published recently in the journal Biodiversity and Conservation, 75 percent of the continent´s savannahs have been compromised by human activity in the past 50 years.

The disappearance of this habitat has had a devastating effect on the lion population, driving their numbers down from around 100,000 to as few as 32,000 in the last half century.

“The word savannah conjures up visions of vast open plains teeming with wildlife,” said co-author Stuart Pimm, a professor at Duke´s Nicholas School of the Environment. “But the reality is that massive land-use change and deforestation, driven by rapid human population growth, has fragmented or degraded much of the original savannah.  Only 25 percent remains of an ecosystem that once was a third larger than the continental United States.”

The researchers used satellite imagery taken from Google Earth, human population density data from Columbia University´s Center for International Earth Science Information Network (CIESIN) and several different estimates and surveys of local lion populations to determine which areas were still favorable for the big cats´ survival.

They were only able to establish 67 isolated areas of suitable grassland across Africa with low human impacts and densities. Only 10 of these spots were determined to be “strongholds” where lions should have an excellent chance of survival and many of the strongholds are already located within protected national parks.

“Existing maps made from low-resolution satellite imagery show large areas of intact savannah woodlands. Based on our fieldwork in Africa, we knew they were wrong,” said lead author Jason Riggio, currently a PhD student in ecology at the University of California at Davis.

“Using very high-resolution imagery we could tell that many of these areas are riddled with small fields and extensive, if small, human settlements that make it impossible for lions to survive.”

The researchers noted that West Africa is without any potential lion strongholds and fewer than 500 animals are broadly scattered across the region´s eight isolated sites.

“Giving these lions something of a fighting chance will require substantial increases in effort. The next 10 years are decisive for this region, not just for lions but for biodiversity, since lions are indicators of ecosystem health,” said Andrew Jacobson, a member of Pimm´s lab.

“This research, which is the most comprehensive assessment of lion numbers to date, is a major step in helping prioritize funding strategies for saving big cats,” said co-author Luke Dollar, currently the grants program director at National Geographic´s Big Cats Initiative. “Of the estimated 32,000 to 35,000 lions, more than 5,000 of them are located in small, isolated populations, putting their survival in doubt. The research will help us better identify areas in which we can make a difference.”

In their study, the authors concluded that more mapping and studying could be done to better enable the conservation of the African lion.

Apps And Mobile Web Drive Explosive Growth Of Social Media

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online

Americans spent 121 billion minutes on social media sites in July 2012, a 37% increase over the previous year, according to Nielsen´s 2012 Social Media Report released on Monday.

The report offers a comprehensive view of the current social media landscape, finding that Americans spend more time on social networks than on any other category of sites.

“Social media and social networking are no longer in their infancy,” Nielsen said.

Consumers now spend around 20 percent of their total time online using social networks via their personal computers, and 30 percent of their time online visiting social networks on mobile devices.

Nielsen said the rapid proliferation of mobile devices and connectivity is playing a major role in the continued growth of social media.

And while the computer remains the primary device for social media access, consumers´ time spent with social media via mobile apps and the mobile web grew 63 percent from 2011 to 2012, the firm said.

Forty-six percent of social media users now say they use their smartphones to access social media, with 16 percent saying they use social media on a tablet device.

Further underscoring the impact that mobile adoption has had on the amount of time consumers spend online, Nielsen found that the U.S. mobile web audience rose 82 percent from July 2011 to July 2012, while the mobile app audience grew 85 percent. By comparison, the U.S. PC audience fell 4 percent during that time.

The total number of minutes spent on social media sites via mobile apps climbed 120 percent year over year, with mobile web usage rising 22 percent and PC usage dipping 4 percent, the report found.

Facebook remains the most-visited social network in the U.S., with 152.2 million PC visitors, 78.4 million visitors using mobile apps and 74.3 million visitors using the mobile website, Nielsen said.

The popular social network is also the top U.S. web brand in terms of time spent, according to the report.

However, the number of social media networks from which consumers can choose has skyrocketed, and countless sites are adding new social features or integrations.

Pinterest, for example, has emerged as a one of the breakout social media stars for 2012, with the largest year-over-year increase in both unique audience and total time spent of any social network across PC, mobile web and apps, Nielsen said.

Pinterest´s growing audience, which trends largely female, spent 1,255,225,000 minutes on the site via PC, 120,486,00 minutes via mobile app and 720,973,00 minutes via the mobile web.

Celebrate National Influenza Vaccination Week By Getting Your Flu Shot

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

Your nose feels stuffy. You feel fatigued and tired, barely able to keep your eyes open. To make matters worse, your throat feels dry and, every so often, you make a cackling cough. These are just a few of the symptoms of the onset of influenza, otherwise known as the flu. From December 2 to December 8, National Influenza Vaccination Week (NIVW) will be held. The awareness event was created to focus on the importance of the influenza vaccination, during holiday season and year round.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), millions of people suffer from coughs, fevers, sore throats, runny or stuffy noses, muscle aches, and sick days at home due to the flu. The flu can affect everyone, from young to old. As such, the CDC recommends that people six months and older obtain an annual flu vaccine.

“Flu season typically peaks in February and can last as late as May,” Dr. Anne Schuchat, Assistant Surgeon General of the U.S. Public Health Service and Director of CDC´s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said in a prepared statement. “We are encouraging people who have not yet been vaccinated to get vaccinated now.”

The flu vaccine is available as a shot and as a nasal spray. “Getting the flu vaccine is simple, and it´s the most important thing you can do to protect yourself and your family from the flu,” continued Schuchat in the statement.

It takes approximately two weeks for the flu vaccine to develop complete defensive immunity for the body. In February, flu activity usually peaks and can continue to May. Flu vaccines are offered in a number of locations, like clinics, the doctor´s office, health departments, pharmacies, retail stores, schools and health centers.

“This is at least a month earlier than we would generally see the beginning of the uptick in cases,” Thomas Frieden, the CDC Director, told USA Today. “So we’re particularly encouraging people who haven’t been vaccinated to do it.”

The CDC has a number of opportunities for individuals to get involved in the event. On Wednesday, Dec. 5, the organization will host a live chat with influenza expert Dr. Mike Jhung on Twitter; the Twitter handle is @CDCFlu and the topic is at #NIVW2012. Held from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, the talk will focus on the benefits of the vaccine and address questions individuals may have on the flu or the flu vaccine.

NIVW comes at an interesting time, as a recent study from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center found that college students have a low rate of getting a flu shot. The research proposed that colleges and universities should produce novel or improved strategies to encourage students to get the influenza vaccine. They recommended giving flu shots at campus-wide events as day-long campaigns, as well as utilizing creative communication efforts to reach out to students who live on and off campus.

“Influenza virus is contagious and is known to circulate through college campuses, enhanced by close living quarters, typical social activities and low vaccine coverage,” explained the study’s lead author Dr. Kathy Poehling, an associate professor pediatrics at Wake Forest Baptist, in a prepared statement. “With influenza virus already being detected this November, it is likely to increase in the next one to three months and may overlap with exam periods. Although it is hard to predict the severity of the coming flu season, we usually have more influenza activity after a mild season like last year’s.”

The findings of the study were recently included in the Journal of American College Health. The paper reported that only one in five college students at the eight North Carolina universities who participated in the study were obtaining flu shots. A total of 4,090 students participated in the confidential, web-based survey in 2009.

The study, considered the first multi-university study focused on flu vaccine coverage, found that 30 percent of the students had been vaccinated during that year.

During the seasonal vaccine period, coverage ranged from 14 percent to 30 percent, which is less than half of the goal of 80 percent coverage of individuals ages 16 to 84 put out by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services´ 2020 Health People mission. To find out more about NIVW, visit the CDC website and find out about planned activities at the national, regional, state and territorial level.

Google’s Motorola Loses Opportunity To Ban Microsoft’s Xbox

Michael Harper for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

On Thursday, a Seattle judge handed down a summary judgment which rules that Motorola will not be able to seek an injunction in their case against Microsoft. These two companies have been battling it out in a Washington courtroom for over a year, ever since Redmond-based Microsoft claimed Motorola has been violating some of their patents. Motorola soon returned fire, saying Microsoft is also guilty of infringing on some of their standards essential patents relating to the H.264 video codec and IEEE 80.11 Wi-Fi patents. This ruling means that Google´s Motorola will not be able to seek a ban on Microsoft´s Xbox. Instead, should the judge find in Moto´s favor, they´ll only be able to seek damages from Microsoft.

Judge James L. Robart handed down this summary judgment after hearing a 2-week long case between these 2 companies, and though he´s said Moto won´t be able to seek an injunction in his court, he has yet to issue a ruling on the case.

This case comes down to the kind of patents being cited, which should be priced according to the RAND (or Reasonable and Non-Discriminatory) basis.

These standards essential patents are just as they sound. Some companies, such as Google, (who owns Motorola) Microsoft and Samsung, own the patents which cover some of the basic ways today´s technology works. Most cell phones and other devices, for example, make use of Wi-Fi connectivity. Judge Robart´s summary judgment helps to solidify previous rulings: Standards Essential Patents (or SEPs) cannot be used to seek an injunction against another company if that company is suspected of violating these patents. Instead, these SEPs should be licensed out according to the RAND (sometimes called FRAND) terms.

Judge Robart´s ruling is also consistent with another ruling against Moto this summer. In the case between Apple and Motorola in an Illinois court, Judge Richard Posner threw out the case with prejudice, calling out Google´s Motorola for seeking an injunction against a company using their patents under a FRAND license and trying to get additional money from Apple outside of their licensing agreement.

In this Seattle case, Motorola argued that they should be exempt from the RAND rules because Microsoft had brought the case first. According to the Foss Patents blog, Judge Robart´s ruling is different from Judge Posner´s in that this recent case will result in a licensing agreement.

In order to have been granted injunctive relief, Google´s Motorola had to prove that they had suffered irreparable harm from Microsoft´s alleged patent violation. In the end, Moto was unable to prove this irreparable harm and, therefore, their chance for an injunction was removed.

“Because Microsoft will pay royalties under any license agreement from the time of infringement within the statute of limitations, this license agreement will constitute Motorola´s remedy for Microsoft´s use of Motorola´s H.264 standard essential patent portfolio to include the Motorola Asserted Patents. Accordingly, Motorola cannot demonstrate that it has been irreparably harmed,” wrote Robart in his ruling.

Now, the two companies will have to reach a license agreement and settle the terms in a future meeting. This agreement could happen as early as late December, though some believe it may not happen until early next year.

New Twist On Microscopic Manipulation From World’s Smallest Wrench

Optical Society of America

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New tool for controlling particles promises to advance biological research, healthcare, and more

Harnessing laser light’s ability to gently push and pull microscopic particles, researchers have created the fiber-optic equivalent of the world’s smallest wrench. This virtual tool can precisely twist and turn the tiniest of particles, from living cells and DNA to microscopic motors and dynamos used in biological and physical research.

This new twist on controlling the incredibly small, developed by physicists at The University of Texas at Arlington, will give scientists the ability to skillfully manipulate single cells for cancer research, twist and untwist individual strands of DNA, and perform many other functions where microscopic precision is essential. The authors describe their new technique, which they dub a fiber-optic spanner (the British term for a wrench), in a paper published today in the Optical Society’s (OSA) journal Optics Letters.

The innovation that distinguishes this technique from other optical tools is that it can, for the first time, spin or twist microscale objects in any direction and along any axis without moving any optical component. It’s able to do this because it uses flexible optical fibers rather than stationary lasers to do the work. This has the added benefit that the optical fibers can be positioned inside the human body, where they can manipulate and help study specific cells or potentially guide neurons in the spinal cord.

Rather than an actual physical device that wraps around a cell or other microscopic particle to apply rotational force, or torque, the fiber-optic spanner is created when two beams of laser light — emitted by a pair of optical fibers — strike opposite sides of the microscopic object.

Individual photons impart a virtually imperceptible bit of force when they strike an object, but an intense beam of laser light can create just enough power to gently rotate microscopic particles. “When photons of light strike and then get reflected back from an object, they give it a small push from an effect called scattering forces,” explains Samarendra Mohanty, assistant professor of physics at The University of Texas at Arlington and lead author of the study. This technique is already used to perform optical “tweezing,” which can move an object forward and backward along a straight line. “Optical tweezing is useful for biomedical and microfluidic research,” said Mohanty. “But it lacks the control and versatility of our fiber optic spanner, especially when it comes to working deep inside.”

In the team’s new optical spanner, the optical fibers use laser beams to first trap an object and then hold it in place. By slightly offsetting the optical fibers, the beams are able to impart a small twisting force, which causes the object to rotate in place. Depending on the positioning of the fibers, it is possible to create rotation along any axis and in any direction. This greatly enhances researchers’ ability to study and image cells and groups of cells for biological research and medical analysis.

In their research, Mohanty and graduate student Bryan Black used their new technique to rotate and shift human smooth muscle cells without damaging them. Demonstrating that the technique may have both clinical and laboratory uses.

For example, the spanner could rotate cells in a microfluidic analysis, image them with tomography, and then move them aside to allow the analysis of subsequent cells in the flow.

The technique could also be used to rotate single cells to determine by their spin if they are normal or cancerous. It could also help examine embryos to aid in in-vitro fertilization. It could mix or pump the fluids in lab-on-a-chip devices, or move and rotate micro-spheres attached to the opposite ends of a DNA strand to stretch and uncoil the molecule, allowing it to be sequenced more efficiently. In a follow-up paper to be published in Applied Physics Letters, Mohanty describes how this method can be used to rotate and fluorescently scan an object, which would reveal details about its chemical properties.

Non-medical macroscopic uses for the tool are also possible. “I envision applications in the direct conversion of solar energy to mechanical energy, rotating large, macroscopic objects using this technique,” Mohanty says. This would “simulate an environment in which photons radiated from the Sun could propel the reflective motors in solar sails, a promising future technology for deep-space travel.”

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Sulphur Dioxide Detected On Venus Points To Active Volcanoes

Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

The European Space Agency (ESA) has been observing Earth´s sister planet for six years with its polar orbiter Venus Express. During its visit of the second planet from the sun, the orbiter has shown huge changes in sulphur dioxide content in the planet´s atmosphere, leading experts to believe volcanic activity has been increasing on the surface of Venus.

ESA officials explain that Venus´s thick atmosphere contains more than a million times as much sulphur dioxide as Earth´s, and offer that most of the pungent, toxic gas must be generated by volcanic eruptions. And most of the sulphur dioxide remains trapped below the dense upper clouds, where the sunlight cannot penetrate and dissolve the gas.

According to these observations, the Venus Express mission scientists believe that sulphur dioxide found in the upper atmosphere above the upper cloud deck must be supplied from below. But while scientists generally concur that Venus is littered with hundreds of volcanoes, it has remained unclear if any were still active today. The observations should help planetary scientists get a better understanding of what is going on beneath Venus´s thick atmosphere.

The clues indicate that volcanism has been on the rise over the past few hundreds of thousands to millions of years. And a recent analysis of infrared radiation from the surface of Venus pointed to lava flows atop a volcano with composition distinct from those of their surroundings, suggesting that the volcano had erupted in the planet´s recent past.

So now, the recent data gleaned from Venus Express provides another clue that volcanic activity has been occurring on the planet for some time. Even as the orbiter arrived at Venus in 2006 it was picking up significant measurements of sulphur dioxide in the upper atmosphere, but then followed by a sharp decline to values roughly ten times lower today than 6 years ago.

A similar decline was also seen during NASA´s Pioneer Venus mission, which visited the planet from 1978 to 1992. During that time, it was believed volcanic activity had probably been on the decline as well.

Dr. Emmanuel Marcq of Laboratoire Atmosphères, Milieux, Observations Spatiales, France, and lead author of a paper on the findings, said that if you detect an increase in sulphur dioxide in the upper atmosphere, “you know that something has brought it up recently, because individual molecules are destroyed there by sunlight after just a couple of days.”

“A volcanic eruption could act like a piston to blast sulphur dioxide up to these levels, but peculiarities in the circulation of the planet that we don´t yet fully understand could also mix the gas to reproduce the same result,” co-author Dr Jean-Loup Bertaux, Principal Investigator for the instrument on Venus Express that made the detections, said in statement.

Since Venus´s atmosphere is in constant motion around the planet, whipping around the planet in just four Earth-days, it is extremely difficult to isolate an individual point of origin for any sulphur dioxide found in the atmosphere. And because of the super-rotating atmosphere and the vast distribution of sulphur dioxide, it´s hard to tell exactly how many volcanoes were responsible for the gas´s release.

The research team, however, speculate that if volcanism is in fact responsible for the initial increase in sulphur dioxide, then it´s possible it came from the gentle increased output of several volcanoes, rather a dramatic eruption from just one volcano.

“Alternatively, and taking into account the similar trend observed by Pioneer Venus, it´s possible that we are seeing decadal-scale variability in the circulation of the atmosphere, which is turning out to be even more complex than we could ever have imagined,” noted Marcq.

ESA´s Venus Express Project Scientist, HÃ¥kan Svedhem, said that clues from the orbiter reveal a pretty good picture of how our sister planet works. He added that the data “could point us to the smoking gun of active volcanism.”

The paper is published in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Women, Not Men, More Likely To Check Out Other Women

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online

While ladies often accuse the men they are romantically involved with of scoping out other women, new scientific research suggests that it is the females themselves that are more likely to do the ogling.

According to Stephen Adams, Medical Correspondent for The Telegraph, researchers from Bristol University recruited subjects and had them review a series of images, including some screen captures from nature documentaries and other films, as well as classical and surrealist artwork.

The film images “included one of the final scenes from Love Actually, starring Hugh Grant and Martine McCutcheon, where the pair appear on a school stage together,” and another “from the 1961 classic Breakfast at Tiffany´s, in which Audrey Hepburn´s tightly-wound character Holly Golightly tussles over a table lamp with her tenant Paul Varjak, played by George Peppard,” Adams explained.

The Bristol University researchers gauged how much time both men and women spent looking at each of the male and female characters in those pictures, as well as what part or parts of the individuals caught the participants’ attention, he said.

Women spent 61-percent of their time looking at McCutcheon and Hepburn and only 39-percent focusing on Grant or Peppard, while men spent 53-percent of their time staring at the actresses and 47-percent of their time looking at the actors. Furthermore, men were more likely to focus on the ladies’ faces, while the women’s eyes tended to survey their entire bodies, Adams added.

“This is counter-intuitive from a sexual perspective if you are thinking about desire, but it´s not surprising if you look at it in terms of sexual competition,” lead author Felix Mercer Moss, a PhD student in the university’s computer science department, told The Telegraph.

Moss suggests that the female study participants “might be checking out their sexual rivals, and comparing themselves with them,” though he notes that that theory is only “speculation” and that he has “no proof whatsoever” to support that hypothesis.

“The researchers also found that women tended to avoid looking directly at the eyes of people in the pictures, male or female, directing their gaze just below, to the nose or mouth, when looking at the face,” Adams added.

“Men had no such qualms, looking at Grant, Peppard, McCutcheon and Hepburn straight in the eye,” he added — a phenomenon that the researchers believe may be caused by women being “more sensitive to the negative consequences of making direct eye contact.”

Results are published in the Nov. 30 edition of PLoS ONE.

Tor Node Operator Arrested On Child Porn Charges

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online
A 20-year-old Austrian man has been arrested and charged with distributing child pornography after it was discovered that illegal content had been distributed through privacy network servers that he operated.
According to Paul Mah of FierceCIO Tech Watch, the man in question is William Weber, an IT administrator from Graz who operated seven exit nodes on The Onion Router (Tor).
One of those nodes was allegedly used to transport images of illegal child sex abuse, BBC News added in a Friday report.
Weber told reporters that law enforcement personnel presented him with a court order at his place of work, requiring him to turn over his smartphone and return to his home with the officers for a search of the premises.
During their investigation, police confiscated 20 computers, various storage devices, a couple of tablet computers and handsets, and gaming consoles, Mah said.
“Weber worries that his arrest could set a precedent that Tor operators be held liable for content that is transmitted through their Tor networks,” Nicole Henderson of Web Host Industry Review wrote on Friday.
She also said that Weber says that he ran somewhere between five and ten nodes that were located in the Czech Republic, Poland, Ukraine, Austria, and Hong Kong, and delivered an estimated 30 terabytes of data daily.
Tor was originally invented by the US Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) as a way to “conceal official use” of the Internet, the BBC said. It works by sending data through multiple different nodes — “like the layers of an onion” — to allow people to browse websites anonymously, they explained.
The user’s Internet traffic is encrypted multiple times and is sent through a dedicated server, like the ones operated by Weber, which has its own IP address, Henderson added.
Weber, who is seeking donations to help fund his legal defense, faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted.

New Telescope Could Save World Billions Of Dollars

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

A new telescope in Australia could potentially help save the world billions of dollars by providing early warning of massive solar storms.

The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) radio telescope was unveiled on Friday and its ability to keep an eye on the Sun could provide early warning to prevent damage to communication satellites, electric power grids and GPS navigation systems.

The low-frequency radio telescope will be capable of detecting and monitoring massive solar storms, such as the one that cut power in Canada in 1989 for six million people.

Experts warned back in 2011 that a major solar storm could result in damage to integral power supplies and communications networks of up to $2 trillion. The sun will be entering its solar maximum in 2013 and the increased activity could mean an increase in solar storms.

The new telescope will help identify the trajectory of solar storms, quadrupling the warning period currently provided by near-Earth satellites.

“The MWA will keep watch on the Sun during the upcoming period of maximum solar activity,” Director of the MWA and Professor of Radio Astronomy at Curtin University, Steven Tingay, said in a statement. “It has the potential to deliver very real and immediate benefits to the entire global population. It is a tremendous achievement and testament to the innovative technologies that have been developed to support this instrument.”

The telescope will offer scientists a view of the entire history of the Universe as well, helping astronomers gain a better understanding of how the early Universe formed.

“Understanding how the dramatic transformation took place soon after the Big Bang, over 13 billion years ago, is the final frontier for astrophysicists like me. It has taken eight years to get to this point and it is incredibly exciting to have completed construction and to be collecting scientific data from the MWA,” Professor Tingay said in the statement.

He said preliminary testing of MWA has showed the telescope’s powerful capabilities. These early tests already achieved results that are “on par with the best results ever achieved in the search for the first stars and galaxies,” Tingay said.

“We anticipate a 10-fold improvement in performance when the full capabilities of the MWA are pressed into service in early 2013,” Tingay told a group who attended the telescope´s unveiling.

Professor Brian Schmidt, 2011 Nobel Laureate and member of the Murchison Widefield Array Board, said for the first time, astronomers will be able to look at the transformation of the Universe, rather than an environment filled with just hydrogen and helium.

“This telescope is an exciting and necessary part of the process of discovery and I see it as a step towards, if not the tool for, an important scientific breakthrough,” said Schmidt.

Breaking Through The Crust: Unraveling The Magma Mystery

April Flowers for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

Even though two-thirds of the Earth’s solid surface is covered with oceanic crust, scientists still do not entirely understood the process by which it is made.

But a recent study from the Carnegie Institution for Science, which analyzed more than 600 samples of oceanic crust, reveals a systemic pattern that alters long-held beliefs about how the process works.

Findings of this study, published in the journal Nature, explain a crucial step in understanding Earth’s geological deep processes.

Generated from the melting of the Earth’s mantle, magmas rise up below the oceanic crust. These magmas erupt on the Earth’s surface at mid-ocean ridge systems, the longest mountain ranges in the world. Basalt, the planet’s most common rock and the basis for oceanic crust, forms as the magma cools.

Scientists have long assumed that the composition of magmas erupting out of mid-ocean ridges is altered when minerals that form during cooling sink out of the remaining liquid. This process, called fractional crystallization, in theory, should not affect trace elements that were not included in the crystallizing minerals and their ratios should be the same in the erupting magmas as they were in the original magma before it cooled.

If this theory holds true, trace element ratios in magmas erupting at mid-ocean ridges should represent those of the original parental magma formed in the Earth’s mantle. This process, however, does not account for the high abundance of trace elements found in samples of basalt from mid-ocean ridges around the world, making it clear that the reality of the situation is more complicated than the prevailing theories indicate.

The research team, composed of Frances Jenner of the Carnegie Institution and Hugh O’Neill of the Australian National University, used an extensive array of samples and advanced modeling to demonstrate that the concentration of trace elements is due to the process by which magma is cycled through the oceanic crust prior to eruption on the sea floor.

Under the Earth’s surface, the magma collects in a pool of liquid rock called a magma chamber. New magma frequently flushes each chamber, mixing with the older magma already present. The newly blended magma erupts out onto the ocean floor. After eruption, the magma remaining in the magma chamber undergoes fractional crystallization, meaning that minerals are separated out from the magma as it cools. These minerals only contain minor amounts of the trace elements, however. These minor amounts build up over time, as the magma chamber is continually replenished with new magma entering the system.

“It’s a simple idea, but it fits remarkably well,” Jenner said. “These new findings will permit us to explore the conditions of mantle melting and production of the Earth’s most-common rock.”

Controversial Treatment For Autism Spectrum Disorder Proven Ineffective And Harmful

Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online
A new study conducted by researchers at Baylor University found that a controversial autism treatment is ineffective and harmful. Called chelation, this treatment attempts to eliminate metals from the body in attempt to lessen the grasp of autism spectrum disorder (ASD).
Study coauthor Tonya N. Davis, PhD, assistant professor of educational psychology in Baylor´s School of Education, said: “The chemical substances used in chelation treatment have a myriad of potentially serious side effects such as fever, vomiting, hypertension, hypotension, cardiac arrhythmias and hypocalcemia, which can cause cardiac arrest.”
The research points to a 2008 clinical study that was suspended due to potential safety risks with chelation treatment and a death of a 5-year-old with ASD after receiving intravenous chelation.
“Chelation therapy represents the ‘cart before the horse’ scenario where the hypothesis supporting the use of chelation was not validated prior to using it as a form of treatment,” said Davis. “Evidence does not support the hypothesis that ASD symptoms are associated with specific levels of metals in the body.”
Davis, who is also supervisor of the Applied Behavior Analysis Program at the Baylor Autism Resource Center, said her and her team´s research included the review of five previously published studies on chelation. In one of the studies, 82 participants between the ages of 3 and 14 received chelation treatment over the course of one to seven months.
Of the five studies analyzed, four showed mixed results. There were some positive and some negative outcomes seen in all the study, except for one, which showed all positive outcomes. But after closer review, Davis and colleagues discovered “methodological weaknesses” in all five studies.
She noted that several of these studies “used numerous treatments at once in addition to chelation that made it impossible to determine if the positive results could be attributed to chelation alone.” And through deeper investigation, Davis found that the studies did not support the use of chelation as some have claimed and were “insufficient.”
She noted that using chelation to remove metals from the body to treat ASD is an “unfounded and illogical” move.
Despite the risks and lack of evidence supporting chelation use, an Internet survey showed that close to 8 percent of parents said they have tried chelation treatment for their children.
But often, it´s not validation of a treatment, or lack thereof, that influences which treatments parents elect to use, Davis explained. “Most parents believe in ‘leaving no stone unturned’ when trying to treat their children with ASD and are willing to try anything they believe might help their child.”
Davis said she hopes the findings will help parents make better decisions about which treatments they should focus on for the safety of their children. “My hope is that this research will help parents make informed choices when selecting treatments for their child with ASD.”
The study, published in the journal Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, included several contributing authors from Baylor, the University of Texas at Austin, Texas State University-San Marcos, Texas A&M University, Victoria University of Wellington, University of Bari in Italy and Virginia Commonwealth University.

Doomsday 2012: NASA Debunks The Apocalyptic Prophecies

[WATCH VIDEO: Beyond 2012: Google+ Hangout with NASA]

Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

NASA took time out of its busy schedule this past week to ease the minds of many who believe the world is going to end on December 21, 2012. Following misinterpretations of the ancient Mayan calendar, doomsday seekers have been busy preparing for a front-row seat for the end of all things. However, the US space agency said Mayan apocalypse rumors are just that: rumors.

Growing fears of the apocalypse have led to frightened children everywhere and teens becoming suicidal, among others, trying to make sense of the supposed end of the world. But while the 21st of December can be associated with a number of events, it does not have anything to do with the world meeting its maker.

Not only is NASA trying to help soothe doomsday fears, but Mayan scholars are also playing their part, telling the world that ancient Maya had never seen this day as apocalyptic. The 21st of December is most notably associated with the Winter Solstice, an annual occurrence. Yet, this year, the date also marks the end of the 13th b´ak´tun calendar cycle.

According to ancient-mythology.com, the b´ak´tun calendar cycle is based on Mayan myth that their gods (Quetzalcoatl and Tepeu) wanted to create a people that would both resemble and praise them. However their attempts were less than fruitful, and on the end of the last 13th b´ak´tun (equivalent to 144,000 days) all creation ended and the gods began anew. The last 13th b´ak´tun ended on August 11, 3114 BCE, officially starting the next cycle, which is now set to end on December 21, 2012 AD.

However, Mayans have never seen this date as an end of all creation, only the completion of a cycle. And thus, the Mayans have never associated the end of the b´ak´tun with the end of the world.

“We are speaking out against deceit, lies and twisting of the truth, and turning us into folklore-for-profit. They are not telling the truth about time cycles,” charged Felipe Gomez, leader of the Maya alliance Oxlaljuj Ajpop, according to PhysOrg.

The doomsday myths have ballooned out of control partially due to Hollywood. Several movies and documentaries have promoted the idea that the ancient Mayan calendar predicts the end of the world on 12-21-12. And to further complicate the matter, some governments and groups are heeding the prophecies just in case.

The Culture Ministry is hosting an event in Guatemala City just in case the world does end. And in other places, tour groups are promoting doomsday-themed getaways and retreats.

Gomez has urged the Tourism Institute to rethink their doomsday celebrations, which he is criticizing as a “show” disrespecting the Mayan culture and its beliefs, which have nothing to do with the end of the world.

Oxlaljuj Ajpop released a statement saying that the Maya time cycle simply “means there will be big changes on the personal, family and community level, so that there is harmony and balance between mankind and nature.”

The alliance is holding events it considers sacred in five cities to mark the event and Gomez said the Culture Ministry would be wise to throw its support behind their real celebrations.

It´s safe to say that apocalyptic rumors such as the 2012 doomsday prophecies spread more readily due to the Internet age. While the Internet can be a great resource tool and a good platform for spreading word of developing news, it has also shown that it is a bane for technology as it makes for a grand stage for rumors that often become so virulent, that they affect the lives of millions of people who turn these falsehoods into twisted reality. This starts a snowball that can grow out of control, as has occurred with the 2012 doomsday prophecies.

At NASA, the agency is taking a strong stance to debunk the persistent online stories of doom. One such end of the world rumor is the tale of a fictional dwarf planet that is supposedly on a crash course with Earth. According to the myth, the rogue planet Niburu, supposedly discovered thousands of years ago by the Sumerians, will crash into our planet sometime next month. There are also variations on this myth, with some calling for dwarf planet Eris to come hurtling toward us with apocalyptic vengeance. The myth has also been inaccurately tied to the end of the Mayan calendar.

And along with the end of the Mayan calendar doomsday predictions, several other doomsday rumors are easily picked apart with minimal scrutiny, according to NASA.

“Contrary to some of the common beliefs out there, Dec. 21, 2012 won’t be the end of the world as we know it. However, it will be another winter solstice,” NASA associates wrote in a Google+ post.

NASA has launched a new site called Beyond 2012, dedicated to debunking pseudo-science. The site maintains there is no Niburu (or Planet X, according to some doomsdayers) and there is no worry of Eris coming even remotely close to our planet as it is floating around in the outer solar system about 4 billion miles away. And even if any of these celestial bodies were to come crashing into Earth in the next few weeks or so, they would be easily visible with the naked eye by now.

Other popular doomsday fears countered by NASA on the Beyond 2012 site are the prophecies that there will be an imminent reversal in the Earth´s rotation, giant solar storms that will disrupt and destroy the entire planet, and a disastrous rare alignment of the planets.

The Beyond 2012 social site links to a video of a recent Google+ hangout where a panel of science experts take on a series of 2012 doomsday claims and explain why there aren´t any truths to them.

Among the panelists in the Google+ hangout video is NASA´s own David Morrison, an astrobiologist at Ames Research Center.

At the beginning of the discussion, Morrison said that while 2012 doomsday theories were “a joke to many people” and while there was no real threat to Earth or its citizens, it was nevertheless “appropriate for NASA to answer questions” about such doomsday prophecies, if only to soothe the fears and potentially prevent some from harming themselves.

“There is no true issue here,” said Morrison during the Google+ Hangout event. “This is just a manufactured fantasy.”

Unfortunately, added Morrison, this fantasy ends up having real-life consequences. As one of NASA´s most prominent 2012 doomsday myth speakers, Morrison said he receives numerous emails and letters from people who are worried about the coming apocalypse; most of these letters are from the younger generation. Some of the more notable letters come from people who say they cannot eat, are too worried to sleep, and some who even go as far as to admit they are having thoughts of suicide, he said.

Although these people should have nothing to fear, they have been led to believe the world is in fact coming to an end, and it is wreaking havoc on their well-being.

“I think it’s evil for people to propagate rumors on the Internet to frighten children,” Morrison said.

While NASA is most concerned with how the young are handling these frightening rumors, Morrison said that not every 2012 apocalypse believer thinks the world will end on December 21. Some expect a day of universal peace and spiritual transformation. Yet, even these prophetic beliefs are based on ancient myth rather than cold hard facts.

Ultimately, we should be more concerned about real-world problems that will shape the future of society, such as global warming and climate change, said Andrew Fraknoi, an astronomer at Foothill College in California.

Mitzi Adams, a heliophysicist at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center, agreed.

“The greatest threat to Earth in 2012, at the end of this year and in the future, is just from the human race itself,” Adams said.

Along with the Google+ Hangout video, NASA released a series of answers to the most popular questions revolving around the 2012 doomsday scenarios. You can find the full list of questions and answers at NASA.gov.

Scientists Offer New Insights Into Early Universe

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

Penn State University scientists using techniques from modern physics have developed a new understanding of the earliest eras in the history of the universe.

The scientists now have an extended analyses that include quantum physics farther back in time than ever before, heading back to the very beginning.

The new paradigm of loop quantum origins show that the large-scale structures we see in the universe evolved from fundamental fluctuations in the essential quantum nature of “space-time.”

“We humans always have yearned to understand more about the origin and evolution of our universe,” Abhay Ashtekar, the senior author of the paper, published in the journal Physical Review Letters, said in a statement. “So it is an exciting time in our group right now, as we begin using our new paradigm to understand, in more detail, the dynamics that matter and geometry experienced during the earliest eras of the universe, including at the very beginning.”

The new paradigm provides a conceptual and mathematical framework for describing the exotic “quantum-mechanical geometry of space-time” in the early universe. This paradigm shows that the universe was compressed to such unimaginable densities that its behavior was ruled not by the classical physics of Einstein’s general theory of relativity, but by a more fundamental theory that incorporates strange dynamics of quantum mechanics.

In the quantum-mechanical environment, physical properties naturally would be vastly different from the way they are currently experienced. Ashtekar said these differences include the concept of “time,” as well as the changing dynamics of various systems over time.

No space observatories have helped to detect anything as long ago and far away as the early eras of the universe, but a few have come close. Cosmic background radiation has been detected in an era of the universe when it was just 380 thousand years old. However, after that period, the universe had burst out into a much-diluted version of its earlier super-compressed self.

The density of the universe at the beginning of inflation was a trillion times less than during its infancy, so quantum factors are much less important in ruling the large-scale dynamics of matter and geometry.

Observing the cosmic background radiation shows that the universe had a predominantly uniform consistency after inflation.

The standard inflationary paradigm for describing the early universe treats space-time as a smooth continuum.

“The inflationary paradigm enjoys remarkable success in explaining the observed features of the cosmic background radiation. Yet this model is incomplete. It retains the idea that the universe burst forth from nothing in a Big Bang, which naturally results from the inability of the paradigm’s general-relativity physics to describe extreme quantum-mechanical situations,” Ivan Agullo, who worked on the research as well, said in a statement. “One needs a quantum theory of gravity, like loop quantum cosmology, to go beyond Einstein in order to capture the true physics near the origin of the universe.”

Earlier work on the loop quantum cosmology in the group updated the concept of the Big Bang with the intriguing concept of a Big Bounce, allowing the possibility that our universe emerged from nothing but a super-compressed mass of matter.

When scientists use inflation paradigm along with Einstein’s equations to model the evolution of the seed-like areas sprinkled throughout the cosmic background radiation, they find that irregularities serve as seeds that evolve over time.

Once the scientists used their new loop-quantum origins paradigm with its quantum-cosmology equations, they found that fundamental fluctuations in the very nature of space at the moment of the Big Bounce evolve to become the seed-like structures seen in the cosmic microwave background.

“Our new work shows that the initial conditions at the very beginning of the universe naturally lead to the large-scale structure of the universe that we observe today,” Ashtekar said in his statement. “In human terms, it is like taking a snapshot of a baby right at birth and then being able to project from it an accurate profile of how that person will be at age 100.”

Nelson said the paper pushes back the genesis of the cosmic structure of our universe from the inflationary epoch all the way to the Big Bounce.

“We now have narrowed down the initial conditions that could exist at the Big Bounce, plus we find that the evolution of those initial conditions agrees with observations of the cosmic background radiation,” Nelson said.

Ashtekar said it is exciting that they may soon be testing different predictions from these two theories against future discoveries.

“Such experiments will help us to continue gaining a deeper understanding of the very, very early universe,” he concluded.

W3C Announces Peter Swire For Help With Tracking Protection Working Group

Michael Harper for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is the standards group which oversees HTML development and other web standards, such as Do Not Track, or DNT. This standard aims to keep an Internet user´s activity and behavior hidden from advertisers.

Yesterday, the W3C announced a new co-chair for the group in Peter Swire, who will begin working as the co-chairman of the W3C´s Tracking Protection Working Group.

Companies have to advertise on the web just as they have to advertise on billboards, radio and television. These advertisers also take care to understand who will be affected by the placement of these ads. After all, a billboard for a liquor store in Texas might not be so effective in the mountains of Utah.

In the same way, companies want to make sure their online advertising dollars are being spent well and reaching the correct demographics. In order to do that, they rely on tracking services which follow and monitor the online activities and behavior of Internet users.

As privacy concerns become more prevalent in our society, many consumer advocacy groups have become skeptical about these tracking services and which to not be watched by advertisers while online. Thus, the Do Not Track (or DNT) standard. DNT is now featured in all major browsers and can be turned on by the user in the browser´s settings.

Microsoft recently brought this standard to the forefront when they announced the latest version of their browser, Internet Explorer 10, would ship with DNT turned on by default. This move angered many advertisers who depend on this kind of information to create the most effective and targeted ads.

While many consumers may feel that DNT is a great option, the full implementation and standards of which are still being hammered out and debated.

Peter Swire, a law professor from Ohio State University and a former White House privacy official will now enter this debate and work to solidify a standard both advertisers and consumer advocacy groups can be happy with.

It´s a difficult debate to settle. In the same way television programs depend on advertising dollars to continue making new content, Web sites and services depend on advertising to keep them online. These advertisers want to make sure they´re getting their money´s worth in efficient and targeted ads.

Consumer advocacy groups, on the other hand, are concerned that the tools used to gather this information may be too obtrusive. Furthermore, these groups believe consumers should have a choice as to whether they want to share this information with others.

Mr. Swire has said he hopes to find a middle ground between these two sides and find an appropriate balance. He likened DNT to the national Do Not Call list which is meant to keep telemarketers from making unsolicited and unwanted calls.

“People can choose not to have telemarketers call them during dinner. The simple idea is that users should have a choice over how their Internet browsing works as well,” said Mr. Swire in an interview with the New York Times.

“The overarching theme is how to give users choice about their Internet experience while also funding a useful Internet.”

However, just as the Do Not Call registry hasn´t stopped all annoying phone calls, advertisers still have the choice to obey a DNT request. As a part of this debate, it´s not yet been decided if these companies have to abide by a consumer´s request to not be tracked. Adobe, Google and Yahoo, for instance, all supported the notion of ignoring a DNT request in June. Apple and Mozilla, on the other hand, voted that all requests should be respected.

Study Says Veggies Enhance Perception Of Both Food And Cook

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

Researchers from Cornell University´s Food and Brand Lab recently released a study showing that including vegetables in a meal could positively change perceptions and expectations about both the dish and the person cooking.

In particular, the scientists were interested in finding out about the psychological motivations for adding a vegetable to a plate. Interesting enough, only 23 percent of meals currently consumed by individuals in the U.S. include a vegetable. The findings on vegetables were published in the September 2012 issue of the journal Public Health Nutrition.

“From the point of view of increasing vegetable serving and consumption, promoting vegetables may best be accomplished not in isolation but as a complement to a main course or meal. This approach is promising, given the clear implication that adding a vegetable to a meal enhances that meal in a variety of ways,” explained the writers in the paper.

“This may be an especially good tactic in families where the nutritional gatekeeper is not a ℠veggie lover´. Characterizing vegetables not merely as ℠good for you´ or as part of a balanced meal but as a flavour enhancer could motivate a meal preparer.”

The study was done in two phases, in which 22 laddering interviews were conducted along with a national survey of 500 mothers in the U.S. who had two or more children under 18 years old. In the survey, the participants were asked to grade meals that were given with or without a vegetable as well as the cooks who did or did not include a vegetable on the dinner plate. Then, the meal preparer could be described with adjectives from a list of 12 different qualities like “loving” or “selfish.” On the other hand, kids were asked to provide the name of their favorite vegetable.

Based on the results, the researchers found that dishes that included a vegetable had much higher scores than dishes that only contained chicken, steak or pasta. The scientists believe that meals are viewed more favorably when a vegetable is included since it indicates that a cook spent more time and energy in preparing the meal.

For example, a steak served alone received a score of 7.0, compared to a dish of steak and broccoli that was awarded a score of 8.08. That same dish of broccoli and steak were also given adjectives like “loving.” Similarly, the person who cooked the meal was described with positive adjectives such as “attentive,” “capable” and “thoughtful” along with a decrease of negative adjectives like “boring,” “neglectful,” and “selfish.” Interesting enough, the evaluators said that the vegetables “made the meal” in terms of boosting the expectations of the dish as well as improving the individuals´ general opinion of the cook.

The team of investigators also found out important information about children´s favorite vegetables. In particular, the researchers saw that preference for a vegetable tended to change over time. When kids were younger, they preferred carrots and corn. When they became older, however, they started to prefer broccoli. The researchers believe that with so many favorite vegetables, an increased variety could possibly boost their total consumption of veggies over time.

Overall, the scientists say that vegetables can improve the pleasure of consuming a dish.

“These two studies show new hedonic and heroic motivations for serving vegetables: (i) they increase the hedonic appeal of the meal and (ii) they increase the heroic appeal of the cook. More vegetables are likely to be served with a meal if preparers know that the addition of vegetables makes them appear to be both a better cook and a better person,” concluded the authors of the paper.

Researchers Say Double Mastectomies Often Unnecessary

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

Researchers from the University of Michigan (U-M) recently discovered that while concern about the recurrence of breast cancer is a major issue for women, most patients who have double mastectomies do not need them.

In particular, the team of investigators stated that, of the women who had both breasts removed, 70 percent had only low risk of developing cancer in their healthy breast. The findings from the Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center will be presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology´s Quality Care Symposium on Nov. 30.

“Women appear to be using worry over cancer recurrence to choose contralateral prophylactic mastectomy. This does not make sense, because having a non-affected breast removed will not reduce the risk of recurrence in the affected breast,” says Sarah Hawley, an associate professor of internal medicine at U-M Medical School, in a prepared statement.

The results of the study highlight the potential overtreatment with the aggressive surgery known as contralateral prophylactic mastectomy. In the study, 90 percent of women who had both breasts removed stated that they were very anxious about breast cancer developing in their other breast. However, the researchers believe that for most women, breast cancer diagnosis in one breast cannot elevate the possibility of breast cancer occurring in the other breast.

In total, scientists observed 1,446 females who underwent treatment for breast cancer and who did not have a recurrence of the disease. They asked the patients about their family history with breast and ovarian cancer. They also obtained the findings from any genetic tests that the patient had taken. Of the 1,446 participants, about seven percent had undergone double mastectomies.

The researchers described how there are certain factors that may make a physician recommend a double mastectomy. For example, women who have had two or more immediate family members (such as daughters, mothers and sisters) diagnosed with breast or ovarian cancer could be advised to have the operation. On the other hand, individuals who test positive for genetic mutation in genes called BRCA1 or BRCA2 are sometimes advised to have both breasts removed due to the high risk of a new cancer developing. However, the team of investigators believes that these factors do not have a high likelihood of developing into a second cancer.

“For women who do not have a strong family history or a genetic finding, we would argue it’s probably not appropriate to get the unaffected breast removed,” continued Hawley, who also serves as a research investigator at the Ann Arbor Center of Excellence in Clinical Care Management Research.

Related to other complications and a strenuous recovery, double mastectomies are considered a “bigger operation.” Individuals who also need chemotherapy or radiation therapy following their surgery may slow their overall recovery time by undergoing the invasive procedure. Based on these findings, the researchers believe that it is important to provide education to females about the possibility that double mastectomies may not necessarily decrease the risk of cancer recurrence.

“I believe surgeons are telling their patients that a contralateral mastectomy won’t reduce their risk of recurrence and that it is associated with higher morbidity. But this procedure is still done and it’s done in women who don’t need to have it done. A decision tool like ours will solicit common misconceptions about breast cancer treatment and give women feedback to help them fully understand the options and risks involved,” concluded Hawley, a member of the U-M Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation, in the statement.

Gene Mutations Began Showing Up In Last 5,000 Years Of Human Evolution

Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

In a world that´s more than 4 billion years old, humans have only existed for a fraction of that–roughly 200,000 years. In those 200,000 years of existence, not a lot is known about genetic mutation until we close in on the last 5 to 10 thousand years. It is within that time that researchers believe nearly 75 percent of gene mutations have occurred, making our DNA distinctly different now than it was way back when.

This finding has been calculated in new research from the University of Washington, published in this week´s issue of the journal Nature. The results, based on a genetic study of roughly 6,500 Americans (4,298 European-Americans and 2,217 African-Americans), were gleaned from studying 1 million single-letter variations in the human DNA code. These variations revealed that most of the mutations seen are of recent origin. And more than 86 percent of the harmful protein-coding mutations found occurred during the past 10 millennia. In all, about 14 percent of mutations identified were found to be harmful.

While the researchers found instances of harmful mutations, most were benign and had no effect on people, and a few more may even be beneficial. While each specific mutation is rare, the findings of the study suggest that the human population acquired abundance of single-nucleotide genetic variants in a relatively short time.

“Recent human history has profoundly shaped patterns of genetic variation present in contemporary populations,” study researcher Joshua Akey, of the University of Washington, told Business Insider in an email. “Our results suggest that ~90% of evolutionary deleterious variants arose in the last 200-400 generations.”

Akey said the expanding human growth in population has enabled DNA errors to occur more abruptly. He noted that people with European ancestry have shown the most of these new deleterious mutations because the population boom was more recent among Europeans, and natural selection has yet to remove them.

“There´s an enormous amount of recently arisen, rare mutations that´s directly attributable to the explosive population growth over the last two to four generations,” Akey told Business Week´s Elizabeth Lapatto in a phone interview.

The population of the planet has just soared beyond 7 billion, according to US Census Bureau data. That´s nearly triple the 1950 population of 2.5 billion. Such a rapid increase in population could allow unusual combinations of gene mutations to affect more people albeit remaining relatively rare, Akey said.

While some mutations are seen in the lettering of our genes, other mutations change the way the proteins made from those genes act. Some of these deleterious mutations can have negative impacts on humans’ ability to survive and reproduce, while others could be evolutionary fodder for improving the human race.

“Each generation, humanity incurs on the order of 10^11 new mutations,” Akey said. “The vast majority of these either have no phenotypic or functional consequences, or are deleterious. However, a small fraction are expected to be advantageous [sic].”

“What specific traits they may influence would just be pure speculation, but we can reasonably posit they exist and will be potential substrates for natural selection to act on in the future,” Akey wrote.

Akey added that as the population continues to balloon, so too will new mutations. The growing population makes it more likely that new mutations will be introduced, such as those linked to autism, leading to an increase in other diseases.

The study´s findings are also consistent with the “out of Africa” theory of human evolution, which explains that modern humans emerged in Africa before spreading across the world, according to researchers.

Eric Topol, a professor of translational genomics at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, said events such as the Black Death, a plague that wiped out nearly a third of the European population, could be seen through their effects on the genome. He added that today´s data could provide other hints of how the human population expanded, much like tree rings can provide records of past weather.

“This helps us understand bottlenecks and how humans evolved,” said Topol, who wasn´t involved in the study. Now when scientists see new genes or mutations, they “can also begin to ask when did they crop up,” he said.

The data garnered from such studies may also help doctors identify the genetic basis of disease, he said. Researchers tend to look for frequent variations in common ailments, such as diabetes and heart disease. The results from this new study suggest rare variants occur so often that they contribute to common illnesses more than once thought.

In the past, scientists have not been able to detect increasing mutations. This is because past studies have relied on smaller samplings, and also population changes have occurred so rapidly.

Now, because of larger sampling, scientists know much more about these mutations. For instance, it is known from skeletons that humans have grown much larger over the past 1,000 years, a finding that was not detectable in smaller analyses of the exome, the part of the genome that codes proteins.

“It turns out the reason we couldn´t see it before is because the growth happened so recently that you need thousands to see it,” Akey said. “There´s a massive signature of growth.”

He explained that, “on average, each person has about 150 new mutations not found in either of their parents“¦The number of such genetic changes introduced into a population depends on its size.”

He said that as populations continue to multiply, there exists more opportunities for new mutations to appear. The number of mutations thereby increases with accelerated population growth, such as the population explosion that began roughly 5,000 years ago.

In the study, Akey and colleagues found that, compared to Africans, people of European descent had an excess of harmful mutations in essential genes–those required to grow to adulthood and have offspring–and in genes linked to Mendelian (single-mutation disease).

The team also observed that the older the genetic variant was, the less likely it was to be deleterious. They also learned that certain genes harbored only younger, more damaging mutations that surfaced less than 5,000 years ago. These include 12 genes linked to diseases such as premature ovarian failure, Alzheimer´s, hardening of the arteries and inheritable paralysis.

The study also led to researchers predicting that about 81 percent of the single-nucleotide variants in European samples, and 58 percent in African samples, arose in the past 5,000 years. They further found that older single-nucleotide variants–those first appearing more than 5,000 years ago–were most prevalent in African samples.

Akey and colleagues point out that the study results highlight the profound effect recent human evolutionary history has had on the burden of damaging mutations in contemporary populations.

Although the rapid population growth has triggered an onslaught of new gene mutations and greater incidence of genetic disorders, there is a bright side to this story, according to the researchers. Genetic mutations have fostered a great variety of traits in modern humans. “They also may have created a new repository of advantageous genetic variants that adaptive evolution may act upon in future generations,” the team said.

The project, which began in 2008, was funded by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. The work stems from collaboration among numerous genome scientists, medical geneticists, molecular biologists and biostatisticians at the University of Washington, University of Michigan, Baylor College of Medicine, the Broad Institute at MIT and Harvard, and the Population Genetics Working Group.

Cell Phones, Like Credit Cards, Are Addictive

Michael Harper for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

It might not come as a surprise that one can be addicted to a cell phone. These little devices are never too far from their owner and are often the first thing their owner sees in the morning and the last thing touched just before falling asleep. Smartphones likely have an even stronger effect, keeping users plugged into social pipelines and that other addictive substance, the Internet.

Today, one Texas university is challenging the notion that behavioral addictions and substance addictions are two separate afflictions.

According to a new study conducted by Baylor University, cell phone and instant messaging addictions are similar to credit card addiction and other pathologies.

Dr. James Roberts, author of the new study, worked together with Dr. Stephen Pirog III, and has had this study published in the Journal of Behavioral Addictions.

“Cell phones are a part of our consumer culture,” explained Dr. Roberts, professor of marketing at Baylor´s Hankamer School of Business.

“They are not just a consumer tool, but are used as a status symbol. They´re also eroding our personal relationships.”

According to Drs. Roberts and Pirog´s study, our impulsive and materialistic natures drive cell phone addictions, saying these devices act as both ritual and pacifier for the impulsive consumer.

It´s this impulsiveness, says Dr. Roberts, that behavioral and substance abuse have in common.

Materialism, while not altogether a bad thing, is what helps us make decisions as consumers. When this is considered with the increased use of cell phones, we can get a better picture of why people become addicted to their mobile devices.

This new study cites previous research which suggests the average young adult sends nearly 110 text messages a day, while receiving 113 texts daily. Every day, the average young adult will check their cell phone 60 times and spend nearly 7 hours interacting with their phone in one way or another.

“At first glance, one might have the tendency to dismiss such aberrant cell phone use as merely youthful nonsense – a passing fad. But an emerging body of literature has given increasing credence to cell phone addiction and similar behavioral addictions,” said Dr. Roberts in the press release.

To gather data for this study, Drs. Roberts and Pirog asked 191 business students at two American universities to respond to a survey about their cell phone usage. More than 90% of American college students have cell phones and, according to Dr. Roberts, these devices “serve more than just a utilitarian purpose.”

Cell phones are accessible at nearly every hour of the day and college students especially are never too far from these devices. Dr. Roberts noted these students are likely to pull out their phones during class time and, as their functionality expands, it´s likely we´ll be using our cell phones more and more in the coming years.

In closing, Dr. Roberts said the majority of young people he´s spoken with have said losing their cell phone would be “disastrous to their social lives.”

While many have accepted that substance addiction can be a real affliction, Dr. Roberts said fewer people are willing to recognize behavioral addiction can be just as dangerous. If this is the case, it only makes sense we should be cautious when it comes to how much time we spend with our cell phones.

Silk-based Implantable Optics Multi-task In The Body

Tufts University

Dissolvable micro-mirrors enhance imaging, administer heat, deliver and monitor drugs

Tufts University School of Engineering researchers have demonstrated silk-based implantable optics that offer significant improvement in tissue imaging while simultaneously enabling photo thermal therapy, administering drugs and monitoring drug delivery. The devices also lend themselves to a variety of other biomedical functions.

Biodegradable and biocompatible, these tiny mirror-like devices dissolve harmlessly at predetermined rates and require no surgery to remove them.

The technology is the brainchild of a research team led by Fiorenzo Omenetto, Frank C. Doble Professor of Engineering at Tufts. For several years, Omenetto; David L. Kaplan, Stern Family Professor of Biomedical Engineering and Biomedical Engineering chair, and their colleagues have been exploring ways to leverage silk’s optical capabilities with its capacity as a resilient, biofriendly material that can stabilize materials while maintaining their biochemical functionality.

The technology is described in the paper “Implantable Multifunctional Bioresorbable Optics,” published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences online Early Edition the week of November 12, 2012.

“This work showcases the potential of silk to bring together form and function. In this case an implantable optical form — the mirror — can go beyond imaging to serve multiple biomedical functions,” Omenetto says.

Turning Silk into Mirrors

To create the optical devices, the Tufts bioengineers poured a purified silk protein solution into molds of multiple micro-sized prism reflectors, or microprism arrays (MPAs). They pre-determined the rates at which the devices would dissolve in the body by regulating the water content of the solution during processing. The cast solution was then air dried to form solid silk films in the form of the mold. The resulting silk sheets were much like the reflective tape found on safety garments or on traffic signs.

When implanted, these MPAs reflected back photons that are ordinarily lost with reflection-based imaging technologies, thereby enhancing imaging, even in deep tissue.

The researchers tested the devices using solid and liquid “phantoms” (materials that mimic the scattering that occurs when light passes through human tissue). The tiny mirror-like devices reflected substantially stronger optical signals than implanted silk films that had not been formed as MPAs.

Preventing Infection, Fighting Cancer

The Tufts researchers also demonstrated the silk mirrors’ potential to administer therapeutic treatments.

In one experiment, the researchers mixed gold nanoparticles in the silk protein solution before casting the MPAs. They then implanted the gold-silk mirror under the skin of mice. When illuminated with green laser light, the nanoparticles converted light to heat. Similar in-vitro experiments showed that the devices inhibited bacterial growth while maintaining optical performance.

The team also embedded the cancer-fighting drug doxorubicin in the MPAs. The embedded drug remained active even at high temperatures (60 degree C), underscoring the ability of silk to stabilize chemical and biological dopants.

When exposed to enzymes in vitro, the doxorubicin was released as the mirror gradually dissolved. The amount of reflected light decreased as the mirror degraded, allowing the researchers to accurately assess the rate of drug delivery.

“The important implication here is that using a single biofriendly, resorbable device one could image a site of interest, such as a tumor, apply therapy as needed and then monitor the progress of the therapy,” says Omenetto.

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Study Looks At Possible Vaccines Developed From Canine Virus

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

Dogs are known to be man´s best friend. However, on closer inspection, canines could provide even more than friendly companionship and become a gateway to infection protection. In particular, researchers from the University of Georgia (UGA) recently revealed that a common virus found in dogs could possibly help develop novel vaccines to treat fatal human diseases.

The virus, known as a parainfluenza virus 5 (PIV5), is usually targeted by canine vaccines to stop kennel cough and respiratory infections from developing. Researchers believe that the virus could be a foundation to help protect humans against diseases that have defended against vaccines in the past.

“We can use this virus as a vector for all kinds of pathogens that are difficult to vaccinate against,” explained the study´s principal investigator Biao He, a professor of infectious diseases at UGA’s College of Veterinary Medicine, in a prepared statement. “We have developed a very strong H5N1 flu vaccine with this technique, but we are also working on vaccines for HIV, tuberculosis and malaria.”

As PIV5 doesn´t lead to the development of diseases in humans, the team of investigators was able to place antigens from other viruses or parasites inside PIV5 so that it can act as a vehicle to deliver essential pathogens that can produce antibodies. These antibodies can then defend the body against possible infections. The researchers believe that this method allows for full exposure to the vaccine in a safer manner.

“Safety is always our number one concern,” remarked He, who also serves as a Georgia Research Alliance distinguished investigator, in the statement. “PIV5 makes it much easier to vaccinate without having to use live pathogens.”

Researchers believe that, while utilizing viruses to deliver pathogens is not new, there have been difficulties with previous experiments. In particular, if humans or animals are already immune to the virus utilized for delivery, then the vaccine may not be effective. As a result, the immune system may destroy the virus too quickly.

“Pre-existing immunity to viruses is the main reason most of these vaccines fail,” noted He, also a member of the Faculty of Infectious Diseases.

In the current study, the team of investigators showed that immunity to PIV5 didn´t change the effectiveness of the virus in acting as a delivery mechanism. They discovered that a single dose inoculation with PIV5 was able to defend the mice against a strain of influenza that was related to the seasonal flu. Another single dose of an experimental vaccine was able to defend the mice against the H5N1 virus, otherwise known as the bird flu.

Overall, the researchers have studied this topic for the past 154 years and believe that the research findings will be a jumping off point in terms of developing vaccines that can protect both humans and animals.

“I believe we have the best H5N1 vaccine candidate in existence,” concluded He in the statement. “But we have also opened up a big field for a host of new vaccines.”

The findings on PIV5 were recently featured in the journal PLOS ONE.

Tropical Storm Bopha Intensifying In Micronesia Seen By NASA

NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
Tropical storm warnings are in effect in Micronesia as NASA and other satellite imagery indicates that Tropical Storm Bopha continues to intensify.
The Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) instrument that flies aboard NASA’s Aqua satellite captured an infrared image of Tropical Storm Bopha on Nov. 27 at 0241 UTC that indicated a lot of power exists in the strengthening tropical storm. The AIRS image captured the eastern half of the tropical storm and showed a large area of very cold, very high cloud tops, where temperatures colder than -63 Fahrenheit (-52 Celsius) have the potential for dropping heavy rainfall.
On Nov. 27, the National Weather Service in Tiyan, Guam noted that “Residents of Satawal in Yap State should closely monitor the progress of Tropical Storm Bopha, as a tropical storm watch could be required Wednesday, Nov. 28.” A tropical storm warning remained in effect for Nukuoro in Pohnpei State and Lukunor in Chuuk State. A tropical storm watch remains in effect for Losap, the Chuuk Lagoon Islands and Puluwat in Chuuk State.
At 1500 UTC (10 a.m. EST/1 a.m. CHST local time) the center of Tropical Storm Bopha was located near latitude 4.7 degrees north and longitude 155.2 degrees east, only 55 miles north-northeast of Nukuoro. Bopha was also about105 miles southeast of Lukunor and 225 miles southeast of Losap. Tropical Storm Bopha was nearly stationary but the National Weather Service expects Bopha to start moving westward.
Bopha’s maximum sustained winds have increased to 50 mph and Tropical Storm Bopha is expected to continue intensifying. Tropical storm force winds extend outward up to 45 miles from the center, making the storm almost 100 miles in diameter.

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Scientists Use Crowdfunding To Raise Funds And Awareness For Autism Research

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

Thanksgiving may be over, but the gift-giving frenzy is just about to start. If you´re looking for a unique gift this holiday season, look no further. For those generous loved ones who believe that giving is receiving, one increasingly popular gift idea is to donate to a research project listed on so-called ℠crowdfunding´ sites. Crowdfunding gives individuals the chance to network together and pool their resources to support people or organizations.

Three groups of researchers from universities across the country are utilizing this innovative online platform to raise both money and awareness for autism research. Crowdfunding an autism research project gives donors the opportunity to both support critical research in the early detection of this debilitating developmental disorder as well as to become a virtual research project team member by receiving regular progress updates from their university labs.

Here are three cutting-edge autism research projects to check out.

Autism and Protein Markers

When most non-scientists hear the word “protein”, they tend to think of a food group. However, researchers at Clarkson University have embarked on a project that uses proteins and a lab analysis technique known as mass spectrometry in an attempt to create the first biological diagnostic test for autism.

Led by Costel Darie and Alisa Woods, assistant professors of Chemistry and Biomolecular Science at Clarkson University and members of the Darie Research Group, the group has set out to analyze proteins found in the blood and saliva of children diagnosed with autism. These test results are then compared to the results of children who do not have autism, and Woods says that the team has already found several biomarkers that present exciting possibilities for determining autism risk. Following-up on these promising finds, however, will require extensive additional research, which means that additional funding is also needed.

Woods is no ivory-tower researcher, and she says that she was motivated to start this project based on her own personal experiences with the disease.

“My son has autism and that made me really interested in autism,” she said.

In the lab the researchers work with either saliva or blood collected from study participants. They start by separating proteins from the fluids using either a solution or a gel depending on the specific proteins that they are looking for.

“When the samples are soluble (e.g. saliva, sera), in solution works best. When they are membrane proteins or cellular proteins (organelle, plasma membrane, etc.), the in-gel digestion works best. However, there is no best defined choice,” explained Darie in an email with redOrbit. “The in gel and in-solution digestion reveal a different set of proteins and therefore, they complement with each other. Most people use only one approach. We use these two, plus additional protocols that allow us to extract most of the information from the samples.”

The next step involves mass spectrometry to produce spectra. “There´s nothing original about the test using mass spectroscopy, but what´s original is about the new technology and the variety of ways approaching it,” explained Woods.

A database called Mascot is used to determine the types of proteins and to quantify them. Lastly, analysis takes place with the use of a hi-tech program called Scaffold that allows the researchers to learn about the identified proteins. The Scaffold software costs thousands of dollars, and the team is currently using a 14-day trial version of the program which is set to expire soon. Funds donated to this project will go to purchasing analytical software.

Emphasizing the importance of this software for their research, the group´s website says: “We have tried to obtain funding by applying for grants, but without extensive data we were unable to obtain funding. It is hard to obtain enough data without our own version of the software. If we can get Scaffold then we could obtain the data and have a better chance of getting funded by a large organization like the National Institute of Health. National Institute of Health or other funding could support our research for an extended time and we could move forward with our investigation of autism biomarkers.”

Find out more about the project and donate online before Dec. 14 by visiting the research team´s RocketHub website “Autism and Protein Markers

Autism Intervention: Seeing Faces as a Whole

Video gamers unite! In this project, researchers from Penn State have set out to build and experiment with computer-based interventions for children diagnosed with autism. These tests can then help boost the kids´ social skills along with their ability to process facial features.

Children with autism face challenges with socially related skills such as making eye contact, recognizing other people´s faces or understanding facial expressions that are linked to various emotions. With this in mind, the team of investigators at Penn State is conducting an Autism Intervention Round 1, where they are looking at ways to improve the face-processing ability of young kids with autism, and an Autism Intervention Round 2, where they plan to develop a video game that makes these interventions more engaging.

“I thought we could do a lot better job of making learning fun while still being effective. What we´re looking to do is adding more gaming features to social skills intervention—gaming features like awarding points, having a storyline more integrated and dynamic, highlighting educational gestures rather than making [kids] feel like they are just pushing buttons and not doing something,” explained Dr. Elisabeth Whyte, a psychology post-doc research assistant, lecturer and member of the Laboratory of Developmental Neuroscience at Penn State University.

“Serious game literature really highlights how engagement is an important aspect. Features of games can make children and adolescents and, even adults, attend to the material and learn better when they are really engaged.”

Similar to Alisa Woods, Whyte was also motivated to conduct research on autism based on her personal interactions with children who were diagnosed on the autism spectrum disorder.

“When I was an undergraduate, my friends would ask me questions that science hadn´t answers to yet,” Whyte explained. “We didn´t know a whole lot about autism, and it´s been exciting to be in a field of research that has grown in leaps and bounds in recent years “¦ It´s a collaborative research team at Penn State with a couple of researchers from different departments that are coming together to help build this new technology.”

The funds raised for this project will support research projects that are slated to begin at the start of the spring 2013 semester (January) and continue through the end of the summer semester (August). This includes the Autism Intervention Round 1, where researchers are looking to bring in participants to the lab, and the Autism Intervention Round 2, where the team is looking to supplement supplies and incidentals that are needed for the video game.

Find out more about the project and donate online before Dec. 14 by visiting the research team´s RocketHub website “Autism Intervention: Seeing Faces As A Whole

KOULE the Smart Ball

One in 88 children are diagnosed with autism according to Que Innovations. With its crowdfunding site, the company plans to raise money to manufacture and ship KOULE (pronounced “cool”), a child development device that comes pre-loaded with games for autism-specific applications.

“[The games] are all specifically designed to help your child in some way, whether the focus of the game is to get them moving and exercising “¦ to get them learning things “¦ to help with autism issue, or the focus of the game could just be to encourage social interaction or to help with emotional well being,” said Tamie Salter in a video clip about KOULE.

KOULE is a hi-tech robotic ball equipped with motion, lights, colors, sounds and even touch sensors. The company has already developed a prototype that has been tested in trials with kids.

The funds raised for this project will help the team complete the commercial design, pay for the final touches on the software “games/apps,” and end in the completion of the final product.

Find out more about the project and donate online before Dec. 14 by visiting the research team´s IndieGogo website “KOULE, the smart ball

Shock Tube Used By Researchers For Insight Into Physics Early In Blasts

Sandia National Laboratories

Sandia´s one-of-a-kind multiphase shock tube began with a hallway conversation that led to what engineer Justin Wagner describes as the only shock tube in the world that can look at how shock waves interact with dense particle fields.

The machine is considered multiphase because it can study shock wave propagation through a mixture of gas and solid particles.

Shock tubes – machines that generate shock waves without an explosion – have been around for decades. What makes Sandia´s unique is its ability to study how densely clustered particles disperse during an explosion. That´s important because better understanding of the physics during the first tens of microseconds of a blast leads to better computer models of what happens in explosions.

“Not having this correct in those codes could have implications for predicting different explosives properties,” Wagner said.

Understanding how particles move and react in the early part of a blast will help Sandia respond to such national security challenges as improving explosives, mitigating blasts or assessing the vulnerability of personnel, weapons and structures.

The project started when Steve Beresh of Sandia´s aerosciences department and Sean Kearney of the Labs´ thermal and fluid experimental sciences asked a since-retired colleague what he´d like to measure that he hadn´t been able to. He started talking about some of the physics missing from the models used for predicting explosives, “and Sean and I looked at each other and said, ℠We think we could do that,´” Beresh said.

They came up with the idea of a multiphase shock tube that would enable researchers to study particle dispersal in dense gas-solid flows.

The machine was fired for the first time in April 2010. Experiments and diagnostics are complicated, so team members are still gathering data they eventually will incorporate into codes used at Sandia and elsewhere.

“It´s clear that we´ve learned some things that weren´t known before,” Beresh said. “Those physics are important to a code.”

The stainless steel and aluminum shock tube, about 22 feet long, is divided into a high-pressure or driver section that creates the shock wave and a low-pressure or driven section, with a diaphragm between the two. Pressure builds up in the cylindrical driver section and when it gets high enough, the diaphragm ruptures. Spherical particles loaded into a hopper above the low-pressure section flow into the shock tube before the diaphragm breaks, creating a dense particle curtain that´s hit by the shock wave.

The project, initially funded under Sandia´s Laboratory Directed Research and Development program, hired Wagner to oversee the machine´s design and building. “When we hired Justin we had an empty room and a blank sheet of paper. Now we have a shock tube that is different from what anybody else in the world has,” Beresh said.

Particles in an explosion start out tightly packed. As the explosive process continues, they disperse and quickly become widely spaced. But the physics of the densely packed particles at the start of the explosion are crucial to everything that comes later.  They are not yet fully understood, and thus limit current models, Wagner and Beresh said.

“The important thing about the shock tube is it generates a planar shock wave,” Wagner said. “We study the interaction of the shock wave with a dense field of particles to understand the physics relevant to explosives processes.”

Sandia´s machine uses such diagnostics as high-speed pressure measurements, high-speed imaging and flash X-ray to measure gas and particle properties, and it´s adding laser-based diagnostics, team members said.

“We can get different things from the X-ray diagnostics, different things from the laser-based diagnostics, different things from temperature and pressure measurements, and by piecing all of that together we get a better view of the physics that are occurring in the shot,” Beresh said.

The machine´s unique diagnostic capabilities demonstrate Sandia´s ability to collaborate. The team particularly singled out the X-ray expertise offered by Enrico Quintana and Jerry Stoker´s group in the experimental mechanics/non-destructive evaluation & model validation organization. Elton Wright of geothermal research also made sizeable contributions.

The diagnostics required to get useful information from the machine are difficult and expensive, Wagner said. “There´s a reason why it hasn´t been done thoroughly in the past,” he said.

A lot of data for modeling comes from explosions, but it´s difficult to isolate what happens in each part of a blast, Kearney said. “Whereas if you do an experiment like this you can delve deeper into what is really happening,” he said. “But it´s just one piece of the puzzle and they´re all important.”

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Evidence Shows Vitamin D Helps Slow Cancer Cells

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

McGill University researchers have discovered vitamin D helps to slow the progression of cells of cancer from premalignant to malignant states.

The researchers reported in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences vitamin D helps to inhibit both the production and function of the protein cMYC, which drives cell division and is active at elevated levels in more than half of all cancers.

Vitamin D has been known to have a wide range of physiological effects. Scientists have understood that a correlation exists between insufficient amounts of vitamin D and increased incidence of a number of cancers.

The correlations between the vitamin and cancers are strong for those cancers of the digestive tract, including colon cancer and certain forms of leukemia.

“For years, my lab has been dedicated to studying the molecular mechanisms of vitamin D in human cancer cells, particularly its role in stopping their proliferation,” Professor John White of the Faculty of Medicine’s Department of Physiology, said in a statement.

Vitamin D can be obtained from limited dietary sources as well as from direct exposure to the sun during the spring and summer months. Having a lack of exposure to the sun, mixed with a combination of poor dietary intake, has created vitamin D deficiency or insufficiency in large populations around the world.

White said the team discovered vitamin D controls both the rate of production and the degradation of cMYC. They also found it strongly stimulates the production of a natural antagonist of cMYC known as MXD1, which shuts down cMYC function.

For the study, the researchers applied vitamin D to the skin of mice and observed a drop in the level of cMYC, discovering evidence of a decrease in its function. They also found strongly elevated levels of cMYC in a number of tissues, including skin and the lining of the colon.

“Taken together, our results show that vitamin D puts the brakes on cMYC function, suggesting that it may slow the progression of cells from premalignant to malignant states and keep their proliferation in check,” White said in the statement.

He said the team hopes the study will encourage people to maintain adequate vitamin D levels. Also, he said they hope the results will stimulate the development of large trials to test the effects of adequate supplementation.

Marine Algae Just As Capable As Fresh Water Algae In Producing Biofuels

University of California, San Diego

The scientists genetically engineered marine algae to produce five different kinds of industrially important enzymes and say the same process they used could be employed to enhance the yield of petroleum-like compounds from these salt water algae. Their achievement is detailed in a paper published online in the current issue of the scientific journal Algal Research.

The ability to genetically transform marine algae into a biofuel crop is important because it expands the kinds of environments in which algae can be conceivably grown for biofuels. Corn, for example, which is used to produce ethanol biofuel, requires prime farmland and lots of fresh water. But the UC San Diego study suggests that algal biofuels can be produced in the ocean or in the brackish water of tidelands or even on agricultural land on which crops can no longer be grown because of high salt content in the soil.

“What our research shows is that we can achieve in marine species exactly what we´ve already done in fresh water species,” said Stephen Mayfield, a professor of biology at UC San Diego, who headed the research project. “There are about 10 million acres of land across the United States where crops can no longer be grown that could be used to produce algae for biofuels. Marine species of algae tend to tolerate a range of salt environments, but many fresh water species don´t do the reverse. They don´t tolerate any salt in the environment.”

“The algal community has worked on fresh water species of algae for 40 years,” added Mayfield, who also directs the San Diego Center for Algae Biotechnology, or SD-CAB, a consortium of research institutions in the region working to make algal biofuels a viable transportation fuel in the future. “We know how to grow them, manipulate them genetically, express recombinant proteins–all of the things required to make biofuels viable.  It was always assumed that we could do the same thing in marine species, but there was always some debate in the community as to whether that could really be done.”

That debate came to a head last month when a National Academy of Sciences committee examining the future potential of algal biofuels for the U.S. Department of Energy published a report pointing out that the production of algal biofuels might be limited by fresh water because no published research study had demonstrated the feasibility of using engineered marine species of algae.

“But now we´ve done it,” said Mayfield. “What this means is that you can use ocean water to grow the algae that will be used to produce biofuels. And once you can use ocean water, you are no longer limited by the constraints associated with fresh water. Ocean water is simply not a limited resource on this planet.”

The UC San Diego biologists focused their study on a marine species of alga, Dunaliella tertiolecta, which had been earlier targeted by scientists for potential biofuels production because of its high oil content and ability to grow rapidly under a wide range of salinity and acidic conditions. To demonstrate that it could be used in commercial biofuel production, they introduced five genes into the alga that produced five different kinds of enzymes that could be used in an industrial setting to not only convert biomass to fuel, but also increase nutrient availability in animal feed. Some of these enzymes, for example, came from a fungus that degrades plant material into simple sugars.

The scientists said in their paper that “we hope to eventually determine whether whole algae, post-oil extraction, may be used as a feed additive to improve animal feeds. Animal feed is a relatively high volume market that may be able to benefit from algae-produced proteins as a feed additive.”

The UC San Diego biologists–who included D. Ryan Georgianna, Michael Hannon, Marina Marcuschi, Alex Lewis, James Hyun–collaborated on their project with three scientists from Sapphire Energy, Inc., a San Diego algal biotechnology company–Shuiqin Wu, Kyle Botsch and Michael Mendez. Their research effort was funded by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the State of California Energy Commission.

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Scientists Decode Watermelon Genome, May Provide Future Benefits For Crop Improvement

BGI Shenzhen

An international team led by Beijing Academy of Agriculture and Forestry Sciences, BGI, and other institutes has completed the genomic sequence of watermelon (Citrullus lanatus) and the resequencing of 20 watermelon accessions. The genomic data presented in this study will shape future efforts on watermelon genetics and evolutionary research, and also provide an invaluable resource for other plants research and crop genetic improvement. The results were published online in Nature Genetics.

Watermelon is an important cucurbit crop and one of the most important fruits that contributes to food and economic security in addition to human nutrition. It is favored for the sweet, low calorie, high fiber, nutrient rich characters—— and now, there’s more. Evidence from lots of studies suggests that watermelon is also a useful crop species for genetic research because of its small genome size, and the diverse genetic mutants and variants. The availability of a reference genome for a crop is extremely important in the deeper understanding of its molecular breeding and evolutionary history. In the watermelon genome study published in Nature Genetics, researchers presented a high-quality genome sequence of an East-Asia watermelon cultivar 97103 and resequencing of 20 watermelon accessions spanning the genetic diversity of C. lanatus.

Genome-wide duplication is a common event for angiosperms, and represents an important molecular mechanism that has shaped modern plant karyotypes. To access the origin of modern cucurbit genome structures, researchers analyzed the syntenic relationships between watermelon, cucumber, melon and grape. They proposed an evolutionary model that has shaped the eleven watermelon chromosomes from the seven-chromosome eudicot ancestors, through the transition from the 21-chromosome eudicot intermediate ancestors involving 81 fissions and 91 fusions.

Many of the watermelon cultivars have narrow genetic diversity and are susceptible to a large number of diseases and pests. In the study, researchers resequenced 20 watermelon accessions representing three different C. lanatus subspecies. As expected, wild watermelon contains greater genetic diversity than the cultivars. The results provide genetic opportunity for watermelon improvement.

The watermelon crop suffers significant losses from numerous diseases. It is urgent for researchers to investigate the molecular basis for better improving the pathogen resistance of this important crop. The results in this study showed that many resistance genes were located on chromosomes in clusters, indicating tandem duplications may serve as the evolutionary basis of resistance genes in watermelon genome. Moreover, evidence from the study supported the previous hypothesis that a large portion of disease resistance genes have been lost during watermelon domestication.

The integrative genomic and transcriptomic analysis yielded important insights into aspects of phloem-based vascular that held both in watermelon and cucumber. It is noteworthy that the watermelon phloem contained 118 transcription factors (TFs), whereas in cucumber only 46 TFs were identified and 32 TFs exit in both. Moreover, the team identified several genes associated with the valuable fruit quality traits, including sugar accumulation and citrulline metabolism.

Jianguo Zhang, Project Manager from BGI, said, “The high-quality genomic sequence opens a new way for the further studies of watermelon. The data resources could serve as a robust tool for better exploring the mechanisms underlying significant economic traits and regulatory networks and further for breeding improvement. It will also promote the evolutionary research of cucurbit crops and other basic biological studies such as sugar metabolisms.”

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Throwing Away Thoughts A Cure For Negative Nancies

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

Tired of being cynical? How about you try writing those thoughts down and trashing them, a new study suggests.

Researchers found that when people wrote down their thought on a piece of paper and threw the paper away, it helped them to mentally discard the thoughts as well. They also found that people were more likely to use their thoughts when making judgements if they first wrote them down on a piece of paper and tucked the paper away in a pocket.

Richard Petty, co-author of the study and professor of psychology at Ohio State University, said this is the first study to look into how throwing away thoughts helps patients.

“At some level, it can sound silly. But we found that it really works — by physically throwing away or protecting your thoughts, you influence how you end up using those thoughts. Merely imagining engaging in these actions has no effect,” Petty said in a statement.

He said that the findings suggest that people can treat their thoughts as a material, concrete object.

“We talk about our thoughts as if we can visualize them. We hold our thoughts. We take stances on issues, we lean this way or that way. This all makes our thoughts more real to us,” he said.

During the study, researchers used 83 Spanish high school students. The students believed the study was regarding body image.

Each of the participants were told to write down either positive or negative thoughts about his or her body during a three-minute period. All of the participants were asked to look back at the thoughts they wrote.

Researchers told half of the students to contemplate their thoughts and then throw them in a trash. The other half were told to contemplate their thoughts and check for any grammar or spelling mistakes.

The students then rated their attitudes about their own bodies on three 9-point scales, including bad-good, unattractive-attractive, and like-dislike.

The researchers found that keeping their thoughts and checking them for mistakes affected the way participants reported a positive or negative thought about their bodies. They also saw that those who threw away their thoughts had more positive attitudes towards their bodies than those who kept them.

During a second study, the team used 284 students in a similar experiment, however this time they were asked to write negative or positive thoughts about the Mediterranean diet.

Some threw the thoughts away, some left them on their desk, and other students were told to put the paper in their pocket, wallet or purse. All of the participants were then asked to rate their attitudes towards the diet and intentions to use the diet for themselves.

The team determined that the participants who wrote positive thoughts about the Mediterranean diet and put those thoughts in their pocket ranked the diet more favorably than those who wrote positive thoughts and kept them in their desk.

“This suggests you can magnify your thoughts, and make them more important to you, by keeping them with you in your wallet or purse,” Petty said.

He said the team plans to see if this technique could work to help people who have recurrent negative thoughts that are intrusive and bothersome.

“It is often difficult to get rid of these thoughts. We want to find out if there is a way to keep those thoughts from coming back, at least for longer periods of time,” Petty said.

The research was published in the journal Psychological Science.

Learn To Relax And Ease Those Menopause Symptoms

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

Tired of feeling those hot flashes that come as a result of menopause? There is one remedy you may just be ecstatic to find out about.

A study at Linköping University and Linköping University Hospital shows that women who learn to relax can reduce their menopause symptoms by half.

The researchers found that seven out of every ten women going through menopause have at some point experienced problems with hot flashes and sweating. They also found that one in ten women had problems that persisted for at least five years.

Some women have alleviated menopausal effects with estrogen, however, new observations have shown that the treatment increases the risk of breast cancer and cardiovascular disease.

Researchers wrote in the journal Menopause that they have discovered an all natural treatment for menopause: relaxation.

The team conducted a therapy based on learning to find the muscle groups in one’s body, and getting the body to relax with the help of breathing techniques.

Researchers assigned 60 women who saw a doctor for moderate to severe symptoms occurring at least 50 times a week to one of two groups. One group had ten sessions of group therapy, and the other received no treatment whatsoever.

“The participants were given exercises to practice daily at home,” Women´s Clinic consultant Elizabeth Nedstrand said in a statement. “The goal was for them to learn to use the method on their own and to be able to manage their own symptoms.”

During the therapy sessions, and for three months afterwards, the women kept a diary of their hot flashes. They also filled out a “quality of life” survey on three occasions, and submitted a saliva sample for analysis of the stress hormone cortisol.

The researchers found that the women in the treatment group reduced the number of hot flashes per day from an average of 9.1 to 4.4 The effect remained for three months after the last therapy session, according to the researchers. The control group saw a decrease as well, but just from 9.7 to 7.8.

Women who underwent the treatment also reported improved quality of life as regards to memory and concentration, sleep and anxiety.

“The study confirms that applied relaxation can help women with menopausal troubles. My hope is that women can be offered this treatment in primary care and from private health care providers,” Nedstrand concluded.

Pediatric Group Recommends Advance Prescriptions For Emergency Contraception For All Teenage Girls

Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

The United States has the highest rate of teenage pregnancies in the world, yet efforts to curb these types of unplanned pregnancies have been largely avoided. Current federal policy bans the sale of over-the-counter birth control pills to girls under 17, and often young girls do not have immediate access to emergency contraceptives when they need them.

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) is now pushing to change this, calling on the country´s pediatricians to counsel all of their adolescent patients about emergency contraception and offer advance prescriptions for all girls under the age of seventeen. They say emergency contraception is safe and effective for teenage girls, and it should be made accessible to them when they need it, regardless of age and insurance.

Nearly 80 percent of teenage pregnancies in the US are unplanned, usually a result of contraception failure or nonuse, according to AAP data.

“The discussion of emergency contraceptions methods [sic] with patients must also include the fact that none of these methods will protect from sexually-transmitted infections,” wrote Krishna Upadhya, MD, Cora Breuner, MD, and colleagues of the AAP Committee on Adolescence in a statement.

The authors of the report noted that despite significant declines in teen birth rates over the past 20 years, teen birth rates in the US are still “significantly higher than other industrialized nations.” They further wrote that emergency contraception use can reduce the risk of pregnancy up to 120 hours after sexual intercourse, though they are most effective when used within 24 hours afterwards.

The authors said that teens are also “more likely to use emergency contraception if it has been prescribed in advance of need.”

Emergency contraception, contraceptives that are taken after intercourse to avoid unwanted pregnancy, have been around since the 1970s, when doctors first advised patients to use them along with their regular birth control pills in a method called “Yuzpe.” Since then many products have been approved for use either by prescription or over-the-counter.

Breuner said despite its broad availability, there are still many people who do not know about emergency contraception (EC) or have unfounded fears about using it.

EC works by inhibiting ovulation and disrupting the production of key cells needed in a woman´s body to conceive. While it can be effective up to 120 hours after sex, it will not work once a woman becomes pregnant. EC is available with a prescription for all patients and without for women over 17 years of age. The pill costs up to $80.

Susan Wood, former assistant commissioner for women’s health at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), called the AAP decision “significant.” She said, “it’s not often you see physician organizations saying that their patients are better off without the physician involvement.”

While AAP leaders remain optimistic, they say it´s anyone´s guess whether pediatricians will follow the group´s recommendations.

“We do hope that pediatricians read the policy statement and follow the recommendations,” said Breuner, a pediatrician at Seattle Children’s Hospital. “The Academy prides itself on a devoted membership.”

EC for adolescents has been one of the most politically tense issues in healthcare for nearly a decade.

The FDA in 2005 declined approval of any over-the-counter sales of Plan B, the “morning-after pill,” overruling its own panel of experts and scientists. The FDA then reversed that stance and approved over-the-counter sales with no age limits. But the measure was then overruled by Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius in December 2011 ordering that girls under 17 could only get the pill with a prescription.

The new policy presents a “significant barrier” said Wood in an interview with Sharon Begley at Reuters Health. Women in their 20s and 30s must present proof of age to receive over-the-counter EC, and teenagers could be out of luck “if they suddenly need emergency contraception at midnight on a Saturday.”

Wood, who resigned from the FDA in 2005 over the agency´s Plan B decision, is now director of the Jacobs Institute of Women´s Health at George Washington University in Washington, DC.

According to the AAP´s new statement, nearly 45 percent of teen girls between the ages of 15 and 19 have had sex, and adolescent girls are among the largest portion of sexually active females that are at high risk of skipping birth control pills or failing to use contraceptives.

“Cognitively, teens tend to be very concrete — they make decisions based on ‘right now’,” Breuner said. “They can be impulsive.”

Thus, the main focus of the new recommendations is the importance of offering prescriptions ahead of time. In a 2010 review in the Journal of Pediatrics and Adolescent Gynecology, researchers concluded that advance prescriptions of EC decreased the time before usage, making it more effective, and did not increase sexual activity among teens.

“From a strictly scientific point of view, there’s not much controversy — the medicine is pretty safe and pretty effective,” Dr. John Santelli, a pediatrician and chair of the department of population and family health at Columbia University‘s Mailman School of Public Health, told Catherine Pearson at HuffPost. “To say that emergency contraceptive is controversial goes back to the fundamental issue that many adults in this country are uncomfortable with adolescent sexuality and sexual behavior.”

Breuner stressed that scientific literature has typically not shown that greater use of EC would affect rates of unplanned teen pregnancies. In the US, teen pregnancy rates have fallen to an all-time low in 2011, with 333,000 unintended births from 15- to 19-year-old women. Still, that is significantly higher than other in other similarly-developed nations.

A 2006-08 survey found that 14 percent of sexually active girls had used EC, up from 8 percent in a 2002 survey. The most common reason for EC use was condom failure, but a small percentage was also due to rape.

“As pediatricians, our job is to help make sure adolescents have healthy, productive lives with families that they plan,” she said. “Our job is to [explain] that there are options out there. Knowledge is power.”

Bill Alpert, chief program officer of the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, said it is “common sense that requiring a prescription is a barrier“¦If an august and respected medical group like AAP is suggesting providing emergency contraception to minors is OK, that is a big deal.”

The AAP report authors, said pediatricians “have a duty to inform their patients about relevant, legally available treatment options,” and one of the most important options would be to offer ahead-of-time prescriptions for EC.

There are no good data on how many physicians currently write prescriptions ahead of time. “But we do know that pediatricians don’t even talk about it, let alone offer advance prescriptions,” said Breuner. “We tend not to like bringing up stuff that’s controversial.”

In addition to informing patients about EC, pediatricians should also encourage both male and female patients to get tested for sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and discuss ongoing contraception methods following use of EC.

The authors also noted that, at the policy level, “pediatricians should advocate for increased nonprescription access to emergency contraception for teenagers regardless of age and for insurance coverage of emergency contraception to reduce cost barriers.”

Facebook Resorts To Propaganda To Make Android Users Out Of Their Employees

Michael Harper for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

There´s a term for using a product or service which you´ve helped to create. It´s called “dogfooding,” and now Facebook is encouraging its employees to partake…with heavy emphasis on Android.

They´re calling it “Droidfooding,” and the posters they´ve reportedly hung throughout their Menlo Park campus have a decidedly war propaganda feel about them.

As it turns out, many Facebook employees have been so happy with their iPhones, they´ve been focusing more time perfecting Facebook´s iOS app. With fewer Android users on campus, many have begun to feel as if the Googley version of Facebook has been lacking. With fewer employees carrying Android handsets, there are fewer developers who truly care about making a great Android app.

Soon after Facebook released their new and speedier version of their iOS app, Owen Thomas wrote in the Business Insider that employees were being “nudged, cajoled, and even ordered” to switch from iPhone to Android.

Perhaps it was the recent attention and effort going into the iOS app which made some at Facebook realize how lacking their Android app has been?

In a way, Facebook could have created this iOS-centric monster roaming their campus.

“In the early days we gave employees iPhones primarily,” explains one spokesperson, speaking to TechCrunch.

With their employer handing out free iPhones, it´s likely many Facebookers simply stayed on Apple´s platform, never having any real reason to switch. Now, it appears as if Facebook is turning up the heat on those guilt-ridden iPhone-toting employees, resorting to propaganda posters. One poster simply asks, “Do you ℠droidfood?” then implores users to “switch today.”

Another poster uses a graph from the International Data Corporation (IDC) which claims Android handsets will out-ship iPhone by 2016. If these numbers hold true and the majority of Facebook employees still use iPhone, they could potentially be ignoring a large user base.

When asked, another Facebook representative seemingly denied pushing employees to switch to the Green Robot, saying: “We don´t encourage one device over another. We let employees choose.”

This led Josh Constine with TechCrunch to ask about the ratio of Android to iOS handsets. The spokesperson replied: “I don´t have a ratio but with the early focus on our iPhone app and the multi-year cycle of carrier contracts we do have more iPhones deployed.”

The Facebook spokesperson then says that this campaign has caused many employees to become aware as to how many Android options there are out there. They also claim that employees in all departments are carrying around Android and iOS devices.

While researching for this story, Constine also found a way that Facebook makes it easy for their employees to stay up-to-date on beta versions as well as file bug reports. The company reportedly pushes out the latest updates to the beta versions automatically, without the messy business of checking for updates in the respective app store. This ensures that every employee is able to file bug reports on the same version of software. To file these bugs, the employee only needs to give their phone (Android or otherwise) a good shake. The feature, called “Rage Shake,” automatically records the state of the software and the hardware and sends off a bug report to the developers.

Judging from the material hanging in the halls of 1 Hacker Way, Facebook wants their employees to begin violently shaking Android handsets rather than focus on further improvements for the iOS app.

Liquid Metals Have Different Breaking Points

DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Mathematical methods developed by a Berkeley Lab researcher help explain why liquid metals have wildly different breaking points, depending on how they are made

Metallic glass alloys (or liquid metals) are three times stronger than the best industrial steel, but can be molded into complex shapes with the same ease as plastic. These materials are highly resistant to scratching, denting, shattering and corrosion. So far, they have been used in a variety of products from golf clubs to aircraft components. And, some smartphone manufacturers are even looking to cast their next-generation phone cases out of it.

But despite their potential, the mechanical properties of these substances are still a scientific mystery. One lingering question is why they have such wildly different toughness and breaking points, depending on how they are made. Although this may not be a huge concern for small applications like smartphone cases it will be extremely important if these materials are ever used in structural applications where they would need to support large loads.

Recently, Christopher Rycroft of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory’s (Berkeley Lab’s) Computational Research Division has developed some novel computational techniques to address this question. When Rycroft combined these techniques with a mechanical model of metallic glass developed by Eran Bouchbinder and his colleagues at Israel’s Weizmann Institute, the two were able to propose a novel explanation of the physical process behind the large variations in breaking points of metallic glasses. Their results are also in qualitative agreement with laboratory experiments.

“We hope that this work will contribute to the understanding of metallic glasses, and aid in their use in practical applications. Ultimately, we would like to develop a tool capable of making quantitative predictions about the toughness of metallic glasses depending on their preparation method,” says Rycroft.

Rycroft and Bouchbinder are co-authors on a paper recently published in Physical Review Letters.

What is a Metallic Glass? And, Why is it So Difficult to Model?

Scientists define “glass” as a material that cools from a liquid state to a solid state without crystallizing–which is when atoms settle into a lattice, or a highly regular spatial pattern. Because many metal lattices are riddled with defects, these materials “deform”, or permanently bend out of shape, relatively easily. When crystallization does not occur, the atoms settle into a random arrangement. This atomic structure allows metallic glasses to spring back into shape instead of deforming permanently. And without the defects, some metallic glasses also have extremely efficient magnetic properties.

Rycroft notes that one of the biggest mysteries in condensed matter physics is how glass transitions from a liquid state to a solid state. To successfully create metallic glass, the metal has to cool relatively quickly before atomic lattices form.

“Depending on how you prepare or manipulate these metallic glasses, the breaking points can differ by a factor of 10,” says Rycroft. “Because scientists don’t completely understand how glass transitions from liquid to solid state, they have not been able to fully explain why the breaking points of these materials vary so widely.”

According to Bouchbinder, computer models also have a hard time predicting the breaking points of metallic glass because the timescale of events varies dramatically–from microseconds to seconds. For instance, researchers can bend or pull the material for several seconds before it breaks, which occurs almost instantaneously. And the material’s internal plastic deformation–the process where it irreversibly deforms–occurs on an intermediate timescale.

“We’ve actually been able to develop some numerical methods to capture these differences in timescales,” says Rycroft, of the techniques used in the recent paper.

When Rycroft incorporated these methods into Bouchbinder’s mechanical model and calibrated it based on available data, the duo managed to simulate and better understand the breaking points of metallic glass alloys based on their preparation process. He notes that this model is rather unique as it combines novel and flexible numerical methods with recent insights about the physics of glasses. The simulations have also been able to predict the large decreases in toughness that are seen in laboratory experiments.

“If you can vary the way metallic glass is prepared in computer models and capture the differences in how it breaks, you can pose a reasonable explanation for why this occurs. This might also give you a better idea about how the glass transitions from a liquid to a solid, as well as the mechanical properties of a glass,” says Rycroft. “We’ve essentially created something that might evolve into a tool for predicting the toughness of metallic glasses.”

“For quite some time I’ve wanted to calculate the fracture toughness of metallic glasses, but knew that this was a very tough mathematical and computational challenge, certainly well above my abilities, and probably above the capabilities of conventional computational solid mechanics,” says Bouchbinder. “I think that Rycroft’s methods have opened the way to new possibilities and I am enthusiastic to see where this can lead us.”

On The Net:

Ask An Expert – The Woodward Effect And General Relativity

John P. Millis, Ph.D. for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

This article is the latest installment in a new series where redOrbit´s in-house experts will answer questions submitted by you, the reader. Got a science or space question that´s stumping you? Each week we´ll select a handful of the wiliest questions you can whip up to tease the brains of our resident gurus (we call them ℠geeks´).

Question:

The Woodward effect is a weird result of General Relativity. It states that by rapidly changing the energy density of an object, you can actually cause transient fluctuations in its inertial mass. This means that if you arrange things such that you push on the object when it’s more massive and pull on it when it’s less massive, you’ll produce a net force, seemingly violating Newton’s Third. The result of this is that it’s possible to create a propellant-less spaceship engine. Is the Woodward Effect real or is it just too good to be true, like electro-gravity and cold fusion? – Gordon

Answer:

The Woodward effect is one of many effects that can be derived from the framework of general relativity. The mathematics can be somewhat opaque and so it can be difficult to determine if the resulting effect is a physical, or purely mathematical construct.

On the most basic level, the premise that fluctuations of an object´s inertial mass are possible is not a problem. Depending on how you define the system, Newton´s laws are not violated because the total momentum is conserved.

Some experiments suggest that mass fluctuations may exist at levels more than two orders of magnitude greater than those suggested by the Woodward effect. While other experiments have yielded inconclusive results.

In short, whether the Woodward effect is physical remains to be seen. From a mathematical perspective there have been challenges to Woodward´s derivation, such as his reliance on Mach´s Principle — itself an ill-defined statement relating mass distribution and inertia — as well as his application of the principle to general relativity.

Space Craft Design

The greater question is whether the Woodward effect, or any effect of general relativity that would result in variable inertial mass in an accelerating reference frame, could be used as a means to motivate a space ship.

Certainly, the engineering that would be required to create an engine based on the Woodward effect would be a considerable hurdle. I am currently unaware of any design studies that have been done that could take advantage of the effect, though that does not mean it is impossible.

On the plus side, an engine based on the Woodward effect would not require any sort of exotic matter — a problem that plagues other proposed propulsion designs, such as warp-drive technology which would require large amounts of negative energy.

So is the Woodward effect pie-in-the-sky science? The underlying principle may be physical, though more experiments need to be done to verify the effect. However, creating a propulsion device based on the Woodward effect is likely far off in the future, if it is possible at all.

Brain Tissue Damage Experienced By Children With Fetal Alcohol Exposure

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online

Drinking during pregnancy can have a severe, adverse effect on the central nervous systems of children after birth, researchers from Poland have discovered.

The study, which was presented Sunday at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA), looked at 200 children who were exposed to alcohol during their fetal stage, as well as 30 other kids whose mothers did not drink while pregnant or during lactation.

The researchers used a trio of different MRI techniques in order to study the brain development of both groups of subjects. First, they used standard MRI scans to observe the size and shape of the corpus callosum, which is a group of nerve fibers that oversees communication between the two halves of the brain.

Fetal alcohol exposure is believed to be one of the primary causes of impaired development of the corpus callosum, and sure enough, the MRI scans revealed those who had been exposed to alcohol had “statistically significant thinning of the corpus callosum“¦ compared with the other group,” the RSNA said in a statement.

They also used diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) to study six areas of the central nervous system in both groups. The DWI technique maps the diffusion of water in the brain and can be more successful in detecting tissue abnormalities than regular MRI scans, the researchers explained.

Again, children who had been exposed to alcohol “exhibited statistically significant increases in diffusion on DWI” than their counterparts — an indication there had been damage to the brain tissue, or the presence of neurological disorders, according to Dr Andrzej Urbanik, chair of the Department of Radiology at Jagiellonian University.

Finally, they used proton (hydrogen) magnetic resonance spectroscopy (HMRS) to study the metabolism in the youngsters’ brains. The results uncovered “a high degree of metabolic changes that were specific for particular locations within the brain,” according to Dr. Urbanik.

The RSNA, citing US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) statistics, reports as many as 1.5 out of every 1,000 children born alive suffer from fetal alcohol syndrome, and the costs of treating those victims tops $4 billion annually in America alone.

Keeping The Brain Busy Late In Life Has Positive Outcomes

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online

Reading a book or playing a spirited game of chess could actually help seniors preserve the structural integrity of their brains, according to a new research presented Sunday at the Radiological Society of North America’s (RSNA) annual meeting.

Building upon previous research that established a link between cognitive activity and improved astuteness and discernment later in life, researchers from the Rush University Medical Center and the Illinois Institute of Technology analyzed what impact such activity could have on the white matter of a person’s brain — i.e., axons, or the nerve fibers that transmit information throughout the center of the nervous system.

In order to do so, they used a form of magnetic resonance imaging known as diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) to create data on diffusion anisotropy. Diffusion anisotropy is a measurement of how water molecules move throughout the brain, and in white matter, the process takes advantage of the fact water moves more easily in a direction parallel to the brain’s axons and less easily in a direction perpendicular to those nerve fibers.

Typically, as a person ages (or as they are injured or contract diseases), the anisotropy values decline, lead author Dr. Konstantinos Arfanakis explained in a statement. If a person has lower neuronal density, or the amount of myelin — which typically impedes the perpendicular travel of the water — then the water “has more freedom” to travel in that direction.

As part of their research, Dr. Arfanakis and colleagues recruited 152 subjects from the Rush Memory and Aging Project, a study seeking risk factors for Alzheimer’s disease. Those participants, who had a mean age of 81 and were given a clinical evaluation to make sure they did not suffer from dementia, were asked to rate the frequency with which they completed certain “mentally engaging activities” — including reading newspapers, writing letters, and playing card or board games — over the past year, the RSNA explained.

“Participants underwent brain MRI using a 1.5-T scanner within one year of clinical evaluation. The researchers collected anatomical and DTI data and used it to generate diffusion anisotropy maps,” the organization added. “Data analysis revealed significant associations between the frequency of cognitive activity in later life and higher diffusion anisotropy values in the brain.”

“Several areas throughout the brain, including regions quite important to cognition, showed higher microstructural integrity with more frequent cognitive activity in late life. Keeping the brain occupied late in life has positive outcomes,” added Dr. Arfanakis. “Reading the newspaper, writing letters, visiting a library, attending a play or playing games, such as chess or checkers, are all simple activities that can contribute to a healthier brain.”

Greenhouse Gas Emissions From Drained Wetlands Equal To Industrial Sources

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online

Greenhouse gas emissions originating from drained wetlands are roughly equal to that given off by industrial factories, a team of Swedish researchers claim in a new study.

Experts from the University of Gothenburg and the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) were commissioned by the Swedish Environmental Protection Agency to analyze and compile a report about the amount of greenhouse gases given off by forests and agricultural fields on areas that once had been wetlands.

They discovered those forests and fields, which comprise as much as 10-percent of the country’s total surface area, become a “significant source of greenhouse emissions” once the wetlands have been drained, the university said in a statement released Friday.

“We note that drained wetlands which have been forested or used for agricultural purposes are a significant potential source of greenhouse gases of a magnitude that is at least comparable with the industrial sector´s greenhouse gas emissions in Sweden,” they said.

Those emissions can be reduced, the researchers said, if the land is rewetted. However, doing so would hamper forestry production in those areas, which means that some compromised between environmentalists and industrialists might be necessary.

“As long as wetlands remain wet, only methane is given off,” Dr. Kasimir Klemedtsson of the University of Gothenburg’s Department of Earth Sciences, said. “However, for more than a hundred years land has been drained for agriculture and forestry, producing large quantities both carbon dioxide and nitrous oxide.”

“New rules were introduced at last year´s Durban Climate Change Conference with the second Kyoto Protocol phase,” the university added. “These rules include the possibility of reporting wetland drainage or rewetting of drained wetlands. Sweden now faces the choice of whether to include these ahead of the second Kyoto Protocol phase.”

Hawaiian Volcano Insects And Spiders To Be Studied For Biodiversity

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online

Researchers from the University of California, Berkeley plan to collect insect and spider DNA from several Hawaiian volcanoes in order to better understand the origins of biodiversity, officials from the school announced on Wednesday.

According to Robert Sanders of the university’s media relations department, Rosemary Gillespie, head of the UC Berkeley Essig Museum of Entomology, will use a new $2 million National Science Foundation (NSF) grant to study how the hexapods and chelicerates explored their environments and settled into new niches, and how that led to the eventual increase in biodiversity.

“One of the most puzzling features of the high diversity of species on remote islands is that these species almost certainly arose from one or very few colonizers,” Gillespie, who is also a professor of environmental science, policy and management, said. “How was variability regained after such genetic bottlenecks, and how did it give rise to ecological diversity?

“The islands of Hawaii are a great system for exploring how biodiversity changes in response to ecological change because it provides a chronological sequence of habitats from 0 to 1 million years ago on the Big Island, and further back in time as we go on to the older islands,” she added. “The basic question is, ‘How do you go from an empty habitat on a newly emerged island to a complex mixture of populations like we see on the Big Island of Hawaii, where things are just starting, to a fairly discrete set of species like we see on Maui?'”

To answer that question, Gillespie and her colleague will begin by collecting DNA from the five volcanoes that make up the island of Hawaii, which was colonized by insects and arachnids over the past one million years, Sanders said.

They are attempting to discover how different species and populations adapted on volcanoes of various ages, as well as how they continually adapt to an environment that is frequently undergoing changes due to eruptions, landslides, and other geological events and how they ultimately evolve into “defined and recognizable species.”

“They hope to find out how quickly animals diverge in these new environments, and also whether the structure of the communities changes in a predictable way over time,” Sanders explains. “This latter component makes use of a sophisticated ecological theory that looks at whether properties of communities are predictable.”

“We are trying to see which animals get there first — something that eats plants or animals, dead or alive, for example — and whether the pattern of arrival and the community thus formed is predictable,” Gillespie added. “Then we can see how the community of organisms thus assembled might allow its members to diversify.”

Along with Gillespie, members of the research team include John Harte, professor of energy and resources; Patrick O´Grady, associate professor of environmental science, policy, & management; Rasmus Nielsen, professor of integrative biology; and Neo Martinez, an affiliate of the energy and resources group; all of whom hail from UC Berkeley.

Collaborators from other institutions and organizations include Cornell University evolutionary biologist Kerry Shaw, British Museum evolutionary biologist Diana Percy, University of Hawaii at Hilo evolutionary biologist Donald Price, and University of Maryland community ecologist Daniel Gruner.

What Is HPV’s Role In Contracting Genital Warts

Alan McStravick for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

Unless you have been living in a cave for the past decade, chances are you have heard of human papillomavirus (HPV) in the news or addressed on your favorite medical drama. Even with all of this attention, many are still in the dark as to exactly what HPV is, how it is spread, its potential effects to one´s health, and how to successfully prevent it.

To date, there are more than 70 different types of HPV. Of these, certain types can increase your chances of diagnosis of cancer. This is because they have been found to cause precancerous changes in the cervix and anus. These HPV strains are considered high-risk.

The most common HPV infection occurs on or around the genitals. Most who have HPV show no symptoms and are not even aware they are infected. Consultation with a medical professional is usually the most fail-safe method for detection of infection. In fact, in women, HPV can easily spread to the inside walls of the vagina and cervix, making them nearly impossible to detect without specific special medical procedures.

Genital warts, caused by HPV, are soft growths on the skin and mucus membranes of the genitals. They are found on the penis, vulva, in the urethra, vagina, cervix, or around the anus. Infection from HPV is transmitted during sexual intercourse.

Once contracted, an individual may not see warts for 6 weeks to as long as 6 months after infection. Some individuals may not even notice them for years. And, due to individual immunities and tolerances, not everyone who comes into contact with HPV will develop genital warts as a result.

There are several factors that increase your likelihood of infection from HPV. Interestingly enough, it has been found that regular use of alcohol and tobacco are one of these factors. Another has to do with having become sexually active at a young age. Women who are pregnant are also at an increased risk of contraction. HPV can be passed to an infant that is born vaginally if the mother is infected at the time of birth. Also, individuals who already suffer from a viral infection, like herpes, or who have a weakened immune system due to illness or medication are at an increased risk for infection.

If you have itching in the genital area, see small flesh-colored bumps in or around your genitals, or have an increase in dampness of the genitals, it is important to consult your healthcare provider to undergo a physical exam. For women, this would entail a pelvic examination that requires the use of colposcopy, or magnification, to spot warts not seen with the naked eye. Also, the use of a watered down vinegar (acetic acid) helps the physician to better see any warts.

If it is determined that you carry HPV, the use of an HPV DNA test will help determine if the HPV you have contracted is considered high-risk. These high-risk HPV´s are known to cause cervical cancer.

It is important to note that if you notice you have genital warts that you not use over-the-counter medications that are intended for treatment of other types of warts. HPV must be treated by a physician. That treatment can range from in-office skin treatments to a prescription medication regimen to possible surgeries to excise the warts from your genitals.

Once a diagnosis of HPV has been made by your physician, it is important that all of your sexual partners also undergo examination for the virus. Even if they have no symptoms, treatment is the only way to successfully prevent future complication and spread of HPV to others.

A vaccine for young women aged 9-26 has been shown to be effective in preventing certain high-risk HPV´s that could lead to cervical cancer. This vaccine regimen is administered in a series of three shots. Even if a female has already been diagnosed with genital warts prior to receiving the vaccine, undergoing the treatment is still recommended.

Studies have shown that many sexually active young women have been infected with HPV. In many cases, HPV can go away on its own. It seems infection from HPV has much more deleterious effects on women than on men. Men, very often, never develop symptoms or suffer problems due to infection. They can, however, actively transmit HPV to current and even future sexual partners.

This is not to say men are immune to dangerous health outcomes from HPV. Certain high-risk strains have been found to cause both penile and anal cancers.

The types of HPV that can cause genital warts are not the same as the types that can cause penile or anal cancer.

The only certain way to protect oneself from infection is to avoid sexual contact. As this is an often unlikely possibility, it is recommended to maintain a monogamous sexual relationship with a partner you know is not a carrier of HPV.

Condoms are effective at the prevention of STD´s, but are not foolproof when used for protection from HPV. This is because the virus can be found on nearby skin, passing from one individual to another through skin to skin contact where the condom is not protecting. HPV can be transmitted from an infected individual to one who is not even when there are no visible warts or symptoms.

The most important thing to remember regarding HPV is that only you can take an active role in protecting yourself. Have yourself examined and make certain that your partner or partners are also free of the virus. Being bashful with your partner or ignorant of HPV´s causes could lead to unfortunate and even dire consequences if left untreated.

Hacker Arrested For Stealing Personal Data Of Majority Of The Greek Population

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports – Your Universe Online

Greek police arrested a 35-year-old computer programmer on Tuesday for allegedly stealing the personal data of the majority of the country´s population, Reuters reported.

Athens police said the man “had digital files with personal data of more than nine million citizens, such as identification card data, addresses, tax identification number and vehicle registration numbers,” which the man is also suspected of trying to sell.

Greece’s population is about 11 million.

The man’s occupation as a computer programmer is what lead authorities to suspect he obtained the data through hacking. Police are also investigating whether the suspect may have obtained the files by hacking into government servers, and whether he had an accomplice working for the government.

“We are investigating what was the source of the data, how they were used by the man arrested, as well as the possibility of him providing them to someone else,” police spokesman Christos Manouras told reporters.

While the scale of the stolen data is startling, police point out that much of the information is duplicated, making it hard to put a precise figure on the number of people affected.

However, it’s still likely that a majority of Greeks are now victims of identity theft.

Authorities have not yet pressed any formal charges against the man, who is expected to appear in court this week.

For Dogs, Learning To Associate Words With Objects Is A Different Process

[ Watch the Video: Familiarization with Word ]

April Flowers for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

A research team from the University of Lincoln, UK, have discovered that dogs learn to associate words with objects in different ways than humans do.

Human children between the ages of two and three typically learn to associate words with the shapes of objects, rather than their size or texture. If you teach a toddler what a “ball” is and then present them with an array of other objects similar in shape, size, or textures, the child will choose a similarly shaped object as “ball” rather than one of similar texture or size.

Dogs can learn to associate words with categories of objects, such as “toy,” previous studies have shown. But it was still unknown whether their learning process was the same as that of humans.

In this current study, published in the journal PLOS ONE, the research team used a five year old border collie named Gable. They presented Gable with similar choices to see if this “shape bias” exists in dogs as well as humans. After a brief training period, Gable learned to associate the name of an object with its size. Gable would then identify objects of similar size by the same name. Longer periods of exposure to both names and objects allowed Gable to learn to associate a word to objects of similar textures, but not object of similar shapes.

The authors claim that the results suggest dogs (or at least Gable) process and associate words with objects in qualitatively different ways than humans. The way dogs and humans perceive shape, texture and size might be due to differences in how evolutionary history has shaped each species senses.

The bottom line according to the researchers: although your dog might bring back the right object when you command, “fetch the ball,” he probably thinks of the object in very different ways than you do.

“Where shape matters for us, size or texture matters more for your dog. This study shows for the first time that there is a qualitative difference in word comprehension in the dog compared to word comprehension in humans.”

Gable isn’t an anomaly, however. Last year, ABC News reported on a border collie named Chaser whom they touted as “the world’s smartest dog.”

Chaser’s owner, John Pilley, spends four to five hours a day working with Chaser on her vocabulary. Pilley is an 82-year-old retired psychology professor in Spartanburg, S.C., and he has trained Chaser to have a vocabulary of over 1,000 words and simple phrases using objects.

Chaser has quite a collection: 800 stuffed animals, 116 balls, 26 “Frisbees,” and other assorted items. Each item has its own distinct name. Chaser can identify each object by its own name. To test this, astrophysicist and PBS host Neil deGrasse Tyson brought along a new object which he named “Darwin.”

A random sampling of toys was selected and placed in a different room from Chaser and the humans. As Tyson called out names, Chaser would go into the other room, select the correct toy and bring it back. “Darwin,” which Chaser had never seen before, was placed in the room and Chaser located it amid the other toys.

Pilley has taught Chaser verbs as well, including “find,” “paw,” and “nose.” She will perform each action, as requested, on any of the 1,000 objects.

“The flexibility we see in dogs seems to be very similar to what you see in young children at a very important age in their development,” said animal researcher Brian Hare at the Duke Institute for Brain Sciences.

Hare studies chimps and bonobos, among other primates. Chimps and bonobos have shown the ability to learn sign language and solve sophisticated problems. Compared with Chaser, however, their ability to learn is slow.

Hare attributes this to social intelligence. Unlike dogs, chimps don’t pay attention to their trainers. Dogs are always sensitive to their human masters.

“When I see my dog, my dog wants me to be around. He wants me to be his social partner. He actually needs me, whereas a bonobo and a chimpanzee — they don’t need me,” Hare said.

Researchers hypothesize that domestication, literally tens of thousands of years of association with humans, has allowed dogs to develop a humanlike social learning ability. Hare and other primate researchers are starting to set up dog research labs to test this theory.

Researchers Create White Odor Based On Concept Behind White Noise

Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

When it comes to white, we use our senses in different ways to make astute judgments of what we are seeing, touching and perhaps hearing. Now, researchers from the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel are showing us what white smells like.

The color white is a blend of many different wavelengths of light. When you mix a few colors you get a brand new color, and with a mix of several colors, eventually white is created. Other research shows that the same concept applies to sounds. If you combine tones of different frequencies, you eventually arrive at a perceptual hum called “white noise.” Going a step further, researchers Tali Weiss and Kobi Snitz, said the same can be said for smell. By mashing together an ensemble of distinct smells, you are inherently left with “white odor.”

Publishing their work in this week´s Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), Weiss and Snitz unveil Laurax (or “olfactory white”). Laurax is a new fragrance, which according to a panel of sniffers, is neither appealing nor revolting–the most common response is that it is “intermediately pleasant.”

While the fragrance will unlikely be featured in any top magazine perfume ads, the scientific implications of this creation are fascinating. The researchers happened onto the scent by mixing together sets of completely different fragrances that all ended up smelling roughly the same. The team says Laurax is the odorous version of “white.”

By mashing up groups of differently-scented molecules, Weiss and Snitz were able to create complex mixtures that all smelled the same–even when none of the ingredients shared any common traits. They noted that the result is not a specific odor, but more like a unified perception.

Perhaps the oddity seen here is the fact that with uniquely pleasant odors, such as the smell of coffee or the scent of a rose, complex mixtures of chemicals are implemented naturally to produce such distinctive and easy to recognize smells. But in the lab, abundantly mixing uniquely-distinct chemicals always produce the same end result.

Weiss and Snitz produced their concoctions working with 86 single-molecule odors that hailed from all corners of “perceptual space.” They diluted the individual components of each molecule so they all smelled equally intense, and then mixed them into nearly 200 groups, each containing between 4 and 43 ingredients. They enlisted the help of 59 sniffers to rate their concoctions, which were doled out in pairs for the volunteers to make comparative judgments.

The team found that “the more components there were in each of two mixtures, the more similar the smell of those two mixtures became, even though the mixtures had no components in common”. As more and more unique components were added to the two concoctions, the more similar they smelled. And by adding enough chemicals, everything smelled the same.

Going further, the duo created four fragrances, each made from a different subset of 40 ingredients, and labeled each as “Laurax.” They asked a dozen volunteers to familiarize themselves with one of the four scents over a three-day period.

On the fourth day, the volunteers had to assign labels to four new mixtures containing between 1 and 40 components; the choices were “Laurax” and three other names given by a professional perfumer. The volunteers were more likely to describe a fragrance as “Laurax” if it had a large number of ingredients, even if the ingredients were very different than the original blend they had initially become accustomed to.

When blends were at 21 ingredients, the volunteers could easily tell the concoction was not “Laurax.” But when the blends reached 30 ingredients, volunteers labeled them as “Laurax.”

The team noted that the various olfactory whites weren´t entirely identical. Some of the volunteers were still able to distinguish between different versions of “Laurax.” Based on the data, the sniffers had no trouble ruling out smells as olfactory white when the blends were unevenly balanced, and when they included less than 30 ingredients.

But the key finding is that olfactory white may not even exist in nature. Most natural aromas have ingredients that number in the hundreds or perhaps thousands, and many are not as diverse in chemistry, or as balanced in intensity, as those found in Laurax. A rose, for example, may have hundreds of unique molecules, but just one of these–phenylethyl alcohol–accounts for 70 percent of the mixture. But, if you smell this molecule alone, you will unlikely smell a rose.

Like previous research into white light and white noise, Weiss and Snitz’s research into white odor has taught researchers a lot about how our sense of smell works. The duo are now planning to study brain activity of volunteers as they take a whiff of “Laurax.” The researchers have also submitted a patent “for a wide range of potential applications for olfactory white.”

“On the one hand, the findings expand the concept of ℠white´ beyond the familiar sight and sound. On the other, they touch on the most basic principles underlying our sense of smell, and these raise some issues with the conventional wisdom on the subject,” Professor Noam Sobel, head of the lab where Weiss and Snitz conducted their work, said in a prepared statement.

The most widely accepted view, for instance, describes the sense of smell as a sort of machine that detects odor molecules. But the Weizmann study implies that our smell systems perceive whole scents, rather than the individual odors they comprise, Sobel added.

Professional perfumer Danyel Gafsou described the various olfactory white blends as unique. When volunteers were asked to rate the blends according to 147 different descriptions, they avoided specific words like “leather” and “coffee,” and chose more generic terms such as fragrant, chemical, perfumery, floral, soapy and medicinal. Compared to most smells, “Laurax” seems to fall right in the middle between pleasant and unpleasant. According to the team, its as intermediate as you can get.

Weiss and Snitz said: “the best way to appreciate the qualities of olfactory white is to smell it.” And so they listed three recipes for “Laurax,” two of which share no components. But for the third, they suggest one mix and enjoy.

New Documents Detail The Ineffective Regulation Efforts Of The FDA In The Meningitis Outbreak

Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

New details have emerged over the US Food and Drug Administration´s (FDA) ineffective efforts to regulate a Massachusetts drug maker that has been at the center of the national meningitis health crisis this year.

The deadly meningitis outbreak, which has so far sickened close to 500 people, and has killed 34, is directly linked to steroidal injections produced by Massachusetts-based New England Compounding Center. In documents released Tuesday, the FDA said it would use its full authority to force NECC into compliance, only to back down because of lack of jurisdiction.

The NECC cooperated with FDA inspectors in some instances and promised it would improve its drug making procedures, but at other times defied the agency´s authoritative stance and refused to provide records and continued to ship drugs out with no concerns on safety.

Congressional committees, which held hearings on the meningitis outbreak last week, had reviewed the documents and criticized the FDA for failing to act on information about the unsafe practices at the company as far back as 2002. According to the documents, it took the FDA 684 days to issue a warning letter after uncovering infractions at the compounding facility in 2002. In return, the NECC chastised the FDA in a January 2007 letter, calling the agency out for taking 18 months longer than the its average response time to issue a warning.

“We believe that FDA’s nearly two year delay in issuing the Warning Letter contradicts FDA’s rhetoric regarding the asserted risks associated with our compounded products,” NECC co-owner and chief pharmacist Barry Cadden said in the letter, released by the FDA under an open records request through the Freedom of Information Act.

In an October 2008 letter, the FDA acknowledged there had been a “significant delay” in its response but insisted that the delay “in no way diminishes our serious concerns about your firm’s operations.”

Erica Jefferson, a spokeswoman for the FDA said on Wednesday that the delay in issuing a warning letter was due to the agency´s limited authority on the issue.

“During the time between the inspection of NECC and the issuance of the warning letter, there was ongoing litigation pertaining to pharmacy compounding and significant internal discussion about how to regulate compounders, all of which delayed FDA,” she said.

By law, compounding pharmacies are regulated at the state level, rather than by federal authority. But because these types of pharmacies have grown so large in recent years and have become major suppliers to hospitals and medical facilities all across the country, the FDA was seeking for clearer authority on policing them. But some lawmakers in Congress believed the FDA already had enough power to handle the issue. And a November 19 congressional panel meeting told the FDA not to expect new authority until all documents have been released.

On November 20, defense lawyers for NECC´s owners told a US District Judge in Boston there was nothing to show they had a direct hand in the cause of the meningitis outbreak. But the company´s efforts to defy attempts by regulators to enforce compliance has further tainted the image of a company that has had numerous violations as far back as 1999.

Meanwhile, further testing by the FDA on steroidal injections produced by NECC has turned up more contaminants in additional drugs. The agency has updated its list of lot numbers for contaminated drugs produced by compounding pharmacy after finding unknown fungal growths and bacteria in triamcinolone and betamethasone. However, there have been no known reports of infections in these drugs. So far, all illnesses of meningitis have been linked to preservative-free methylprednisolone acetate administered in epidurals or joint injections as a treatment for pain.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is “unaware of infections among patients that can be definitively linked to exposure to these drugs,” Curtis Allen, a spokesman for the CDC, told Tom Wilemon at USA Today.

Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University, said the bacterial contaminants in betamethasone and triamcinolone are not recognized pathogens.

“They are environmental bacteria that are present just everywhere in the environment,” Schaffner said. “You can find them on inanimate surfaces. You can find them out in the soil and the like. They obviously should not be in these medications. Could this bacteria, however, if inoculated produce an infection? On occasion they could. But they are not what we call professional pathogens.”

Even Exserohilum rostratum, the fungus behind the meningitis outbreak, had never been known to cause such an illness until it was introduced into patients through spinal injections, he noted.

Ongoing inspections at NECC by the FDA and Massachusetts Board of Pharmacy have found several possible sources for the contamination, including leaking water, uncontrolled temperature and dirty conditions. Also found were equipment soiled with greenish-yellow residue, according to inspection reports.

New Way Of Measuring True Biological Age

April Flowers for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

If you look around at your friends and family, it is clear our biological clocks tick differently. Women tend to live longer than men do, some individuals can look years younger — or older — than their chronological age, and diseases can affect our aging process.

The University of California, San Diego School of Medicine led a new study, published online in the journal Molecular Cell, that describes markers and a model that quantifies how aging occurs at the level of genes and molecules. This provides a more precise way to determine how old someone is, and also perhaps anticipate or treat ailments and diseases that come with the passage of time.

“It’s well known that people age at different rates,” said Kang Zhang, MD, PhD, professor of ophthalmology and human genetics at the Shiley Eye Center and director of the Institute for Genomic Medicine, both at UC San Diego. “Some people in their 70s look like they’re in their 50s, while others in their 50s look like they’re in their 70s.”

Precisely quantifying the actual rate of aging in individuals and identifying markers has been challenging, however. Researchers have been looking at telomeres, for example. Telomeres are repeating nucleotide sequences that cap the ends of chromosomes which shorten with age. The researchers have found that other factors, such as stress, can affect the telomeres as well.

Dr. Zhang and his colleagues, including scientists from Sage Bionetworks, UCSD Institute for Genomic Medicine, and Johns Hopkins University among others, focused on DNA methylation, which is a fundamental, life-long process in which a methyl group is added or removed from the cytosine molecule in DNA to promote or suppress gene activity and expression. More than 485,000 genome-wide methylation markers were measured in blood samples of 656 persons ranging in age from 19 to 101.

According to Zhang, this is a robust way of predicting aging that has subsequently been validated on a second sampling of several hundred blood samples from a separate cohort of human individuals.

The team found that a person’s “methylome”, which is the entire set of human methylation markers and changes across a whole genome, predictably varies over time. This provides a way to determine a person’s actual biological age from a blood sample.

“It’s the majority of the methylome that accurately predicts age, not just a few key genes,” said Trey Ideker, PhD, a professor of medicine and chief of the Division of Medical Genetics in the UC San Diego School of Medicine and professor of bioengineering in the Jacobs School of Engineering. “The methylation state decays over time along the entire genome. You look in the body, into the cells, of young people and methylation occurs very distinctly in some spots and not in others. It’s very structured. Over time, though, methylation sites get fuzzier; the boundaries blur.”

These boundaries do not blur, however, at the same rate in everyone. The researchers found that at the molecular level it was clear that individual bodies age at varying rates. Even within the same body, they said, different organs age differently. To add another layer of complication, cancer cells age at a different rate than their surrounding healthy cells. These findings have broad practical implications, for example, they could be used in forensics to determine a person’s age based only upon a blood or tissue sample.

Zhang says that one of the most profound findings of this study is that the methylome provides a measure of biological age, in other words, how quickly or slowly a person is experiencing the passage of time. This kind of information could have a potentially huge medical importance.

“For example, you could serially profile patients to compare therapies, to see if a treatment is making people healthier and ‘younger.’ You could screen compounds to see if they retard the aging process at the tissue or cellular level.”

By identifying lifestyle changes that might slow molecular aging, assessing an individual’s methylome state could improve preventive medicine. Ideker noted that much more research remains to be done, however.

“The next step is to look to see whether methylation can predict specific health factors, and whether this kind of molecular diagnosis is better than existing clinical or physical markers. We think it’s very promising,” Ideker said.

Researchers Believe They Are On The Right Track For An Antidote For Hypersomnia

[ Watch the Video: Waking Sleeping Beauty ]

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

A new study by scientists at Emory University found that some patients who suffer from hypersomnia also have an antidote in their cerebrospinal fluid that works similarly to a sleeping pill.

In particular, hypersomnia occurs when individuals have a higher need for sleep. This sleep disorder will make it difficult for people to wake up, with some sleeping over 70 hours. The effects of hypersomnia can hurt people´s progress in school and work, making it difficult for them to focus on tasks and assignments. According to Fox News, the strange molecule, otherwise called “somnogen,” is thought to cause the condition. The research on the sleep disorder first started five years ago when a patient, an Ivy League-graduated lawyer, slept as much as 57 hours consecutively.

“These individuals report feeling as if they’re walking around in a fog — physically, but not mentally awake,” remarked the study´s lead author Dr. David Rye, a professor of neurology at Emory University School of Medicine, in a prepared statement. “When encountering excessive sleepiness in a patient, we typically think it’s caused by an impairment in the brain’s wake systems and treat it with stimulant medications. However, in these patients, the situation is more akin to attempting to drive a car with the parking brake engaged. Our thinking needs to shift from pushing the accelerator harder, to releasing the brake.”

The clinical study included seven patients who reported feeling sleepy even after normal amounts of sleep and treatment with stimulants. In some cases, the participants became more alert with the drug flumazenil but it wasn´t seen with all seven patients. In the past, flumazenil has been used for overdoses of benzodiazepines, a commonly used type of anesthetic and sedative. The researchers measured the alertness of the study subjects with a psychomotor vigilance test, which tracked reaction time.

“Primary hypersomnias are disabling and poorly understood. This study represents a breakthrough in determining a cause for these disorders and devising a rational approach to therapy,” explained Merrill Mitler, who serves as a program director at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, in the statement. “Further research is required to determine whether or not the results apply to the majority of patients.”

The researchers found that the cerebrospinal fluid in the patients was not a benzodiazepine drug. They believed that the fluid has a substance that improves the effects of gamma-amino butyric acid (GABA), a chemical in the brain. Considered one of the inhibitory chemicals in the nervous system, GABA can be enhanced by alcohol, barbiturates, and benzodiazepines.

“In some of the more severely affected patients, we estimated the magnitude of the GABA-enhancing effect as nearly equivalent to that expected for someone receiving sedation for outpatient colonoscopy,” noted Rye, who also works as the director of research for Emory Healthcare’s Program in Sleep, in the statement. “This is a level of impaired consciousness that many subjects had to combat on almost a daily basis in order to live their usual lives.”

Researchers are not clear as to the makeup of the GABA-enhanced substance. The team of investigators posits that it could be peptide due to its size and response to specific enzymes. Further investigation of the body-produced substance could help the group of scientists better understand how the brain moderates states of consciousness like alertness and sleep.

“In some of the more severely affected patients, we estimated the magnitude of the GABA-enhancing effect as nearly equivalent to that expected for someone receiving sedation for outpatient colonoscopy,” concluded Rye in the statement. “This is a level of impaired consciousness that many subjects had to combat on almost a daily basis in order to live their usual lives.”

Other medical experts believe that the results of the findings are important. According to Bloomberg News, hypersomnia is so debilitating that some of the study participants applied for disability and others took time away from school and work to rehabilitate.

“It´s a breakthrough,” remarked Rochelle Zak, a sleep medicine specialist at the University of California San Francisco Medical Center, in an interview with Bloomberg News. “It gives a mechanism for doing clinically relevant future studies, both in terms of understanding the mechanism and in terms of developing an effective therapy.”

The research findings were published recently in the journal Science Translational Medicine.

Controversial Diabetes Drug Benefits Alzheimer’s Patients

Brett Smith for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

A controversial drug may have a new lease on life as researchers at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston have found it could have unintended benefits for people with Alzheimer´s disease.

The anti-insulin-resistance drug rosiglitazone, marketed by Glaxo-Smith Kline as Avandia, has been shown to enhance learning and memory in mice that have been genetically engineered to serve as models for Alzheimer’s patients, according to the researchers report in the Journal of Neuroscience.

If rosiglitazone were found to have a significant benefit for Alzheimer´s patients, it would join other drugs that are prescribed for “off label” use, like Viagra, which the FDA has approved for treating pulmonary hypertension and increasing blood flow as a way to avoid amputations.

“Using this drug appears to restore the neuronal signaling required for proper cognitive function,” said UTMB professor Larry Denner, the lead author of a paper. “It gives us an opportunity to test several FDA-approved drugs to normalize insulin resistance in Alzheimer’s patients and possibly also enhance memory, and it also gives us a remarkable tool to use in animal models to understand the molecular mechanisms that underlie cognitive issues in Alzheimer’s.”

In their report, the scientists said the drug produced this cognitive effect by reducing the negative influence of Alzheimer’s on a key brain-signaling molecule, extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK). In the brains of the genetically modified mice, the molecule becomes hyperactive and this excessive activity disrupts synaptic transmission between neurons. The result, scientists say, is the disruption of learning and memory.

By bringing ERK signaling back into line, rosiglitazone corrects this signaling disruption and allows for proper cognitive functioning.

Researchers at UTMB said they were aware of the connection between ERK signaling and Alzheimer´s, but were unable to put together the pieces necessary for a complete picture. The latest breakthrough only came after an interdisciplinary team of animal cognitive neuroscientists, biochemists, molecular biologists, mass spectrometrists, statisticians and bioinformaticists was assembled at the university.

“We were extraordinarily lucky to have this diverse group of experts right here on our campus at UTMB that could coalesce to bring such different ways of thinking to bear on a common problem,” Denner said. “It was quite a challenge to get all of these experts communicating in a common scientific language. But now that we have this team working, we can move on to even more detailed and difficult questions.”

The results of the new study could be a boost for rosiglitazone. Approved by the FDA in 1999 as an anti-diabetic drug, Avandia sales peaked at around $2.5 billion in 2006. In 2007, the FDA began investigating the drug after receiving reports it played a role in increased heart attack risk. That investigation concluded Avandia did not significantly increase the risk of heart attack.

In 2010, the Senate Finance Committee, in a panel investigation, found GSK documents that suggest the company downplayed scientific findings about potential Avandia safety risks. That panel eventually resulted in a mixed vote, resulting in the drug staying on the market, but with a revised warning label.

In 2012, the Justice Department announced that GSK had agreed to pay a $3 billion fine and plead guilty to charges it had withheld the results of two studies on the drug´s cardiovascular safety between 2001 and 2007.

Study Finds Chimps, Bonobos Practice Reciprocal Gifting

Alan McStravick for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

If your mother was anything like mine, you learned early on that it is better to give than to receive. There is something seemingly inherent in our biology that gives us a certain amount of joy when bestowing gifts and favors upon those we love and care for. But what about more casual relationships, such as with the neighbor or co-worker? Do we offer favors and gifts to them out of mere philanthropy or are we expecting a quid pro quo recompense? New research offered out of the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) might shed a little light on this quirk of gift giving.

The team, lead by Adrian Jaeggi, a postdoctoral researcher in anthropology at UCSB, and a junior research fellow at the school’s SAGE Center for the Study of the Mind, has decided to explore this question of inter-relational reciprocity by examining the behaviors of chimpanzees and bonobos. Their results have been published in the current online issue of the journal Evolution & Human Behavior.

“The article focuses on the question of whether individuals do favors because they expect them to be reciprocated at some other time, and, more specifically, whether such exchanges have to happen immediately, or can take place over longer time spans,” Jaeggi explained. “We studied the question in chimpanzees and bonobos —— our two closest living relatives —— and looked at the exchanges of grooming and food sharing, which are two common types of favors among these apes.”

What Jaeggi and his team learned was interesting, on two fronts. Some of the results showed there was evidence of quid pro quo immediate exchanges between the primates. However, the stronger evidence discovered supported the idea that exchanges were made with an eye on the long term. The researchers found that calculated exchanges, ones made where a detailed score of past exchanges is kept, happen far less frequently in stable relationships.

“In the chimp group we studied, we knew there was a lot of this long-term exchange,”  Jaeggi said in a prepared statement. “We didn’t find any evidence for a short-term effect.”

Chimpanzees live in stable social groups, he continued, and have a relatively long life span. They recognize others in the group, form long-term relationships, and associate with individuals who have helped them in the past.

“In the wild, for example, chimps hunt for smaller monkeys, and they commonly share the meat. It’s similar to what hunters and gatherers do,” Jaeggi said. “Our experiment is meant to mimic the situation in which you have a large monopolized food item.”

Using grooming as the favor, the researchers studied whether or not a chimp that had just been groomed was more likely to share food with the pal who had groomed him. “That would provide evidence for keeping track of who has done a favor,” Jaeggi said. However, grooming releases endorphins, he added, and that general sense of wellbeing on the part of the food owner might lead to more indiscriminate food sharing.

“We found that sharing was predicted by who the chimps’ long-term friends and partners were,” he said. “Grooming just before didn’t play a role. Food owners didn’t share specifically with their groomers. Nor did the groomers act in return. They didn’t pay for the food, and they didn’t reward the food owner’s generosity afterward.”

On the other side of the hierarchical structure, however, live the bonobos. Where chimpanzees have established a dominance hierarchy, bonobos have no such social structure. This means that at any given time, bonobos are unable to recognize where they might fit within the group. Bonobos also don´t form coalitions like the chimpanzees.

“The food sharing situation sort of freaked them out,” said Jaeggi. “All of a sudden there´s all this food that´s owned by one individual, and they don´t really know what to do about it. They want to get it, but they don´t dare, because they don´t know what the consequence will be.”

Also of note from the study was how the bonobos engaged in the act of grooming more frequently. According to Jaeggi, this is most likely because they sought the calming effects of the endorphins. “And there we did see an effect of grooming on sharing,” he said. “Chimps would go and take food pretty confidently, but Bonobos were more reticent. They´d reach out and then groom. It seemed to be that they´d groom to release tension, and then there would be these short-term reciprocal exchanges.”

The researchers pointed out they believe, however, these short exchanges were more of a byproduct of the need to reduce tension rather than short-term contingencies that were used to establish a relational reciprocity.

“It´s really not qualitatively different from what people do,” Jaeggi commented. “They establish these lasting relationships, and within them, services are exchanged without the participants keeping close track of who´s doing what for whom.”

But if you´ve ever been in a less stable or casual relationship, you´ll probably recognize that we humans have the ability to keep tabs on what we give compared to what we receive. That scorecard style of reciprocity raises questions for Jaeggi and his team, regarding its purpose and how it came to be developed. “Maybe that´s something that´s more culturally learned.”

Low Muscular Strength An Emerging Risk Factor For Major Causes Of Death In Young Adulthood

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online
According to new findings published in the British Medical Journal, low muscle strength in adolescence is associated with a greater risk of early death.
The study authors tracked more than one million Swedish male adolescents aged 16 to 19 years old for a 24 year period.
During the study period, participants underwent three reliable muscular strength tests at the start of the study, including knee extension strength, handgrip strength and elbow flexion strength. BMI and blood pressure were also measured during the period.
The team found that 2.3 percent of the group died during the follow-up period, with suicide being the most common cause of death, followed by cancer.
Researchers found that high muscular strength was associated with a 20 to 35 percent lower risk of early death from any cause, and also from cardiovascular diseases, independently or BMI or blood pressure.
Stronger adolescents had a 20 to 30 percent lower risk of early death from suicide, and were up to 65 percent less likely to have any psychiatric diagnosis, such as schizophrenia and mood disorders.
The study authors said results from the study suggest that physically weaker individuals might be more mentally vulnerable.
They say that low muscular strength in adolescents “is an emerging risk factor for major causes of death in young adulthood, such as suicide and cardiovascular diseases.”  They added that the effect of these associations is similar to classic risk factors like body mass index and blood pressure.
Researchers suggest that muscular strength tests could be assessed with good reliability in most places, including clinical settings, schools and workplaces.
“People at increased risk of long term mortality, because of lower muscular strength, should be encouraged to engage in exercise programs and other forms of physical activity,” the authors wrote.
The effect of low muscle strength is similar to well established risk factors for early death like being overweight or having high blood pressure. The authors suggest young people engage in regular physical activity to help boost their muscular fitness.
“The benefits of being physically active at any age are well established with studies showing it can prevent children from developing diseases later on in life, as well as improving their concentration at school, their overall mental health and well-being,” a spokeswoman for the British Heart Foundation told BBC.
Stephen Evans, professor of pharmacoepidemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said the study did not show doing more exercise would necessarily prolong your life.
“Sadly the trials of an intervention to increase exercise have not shown notable benefits, though that does not discourage me and many others from exercising,” Evans told BBC News.

Hacker Found Guilty Of Stealing AT&T iPad User Information

Michael Harper for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online
One of the hackers responsible for breaking into AT&T´s stores of data and stealing the personal information of more than 100,000 iPad owners has been found guilty. According to Wired, the jury was able to reach their verdict quickly, finding Andrew Auernheimer, a 26-year old from Arkansas, guilty on one count of identity fraud and one count of conspiracy to access a computer without authorization.
Better known at the time as “Goatse Security,” Auernheimer and Daniel Spitter, a 26-year old from San Francisco, discovered a security hole in AT&T´s Web site 2 years ago which allowed them to access customer information.
Apple had just debuted their first generation iPad months before and, just as it was in the early days of iPhone, the iPad operated in America solely on AT&T. Those iPads with 3G connectivity used ICC-IDs, identifiers which AT&T used to authenticate the SIM for each iPad. These ICC-IDs are specific to each Pad. Auernheimer and Spitter had discovered that the AT&T Web site would release the account holder´s email address if they only supplied it with this ICC-ID. The two then created a tool to generate these IDs, called the “iPad 3G Account Slurper,” and set it to work, feeding the Web site with generated ICC-IDs and receiving, in turn, a confirmed ID and the email address associated with it.
Before too long, Auernheimer and Spitter had gathered the personal information of more than 100,000 early adopters, many of whom were government and military officials, as well as corporate CEOs and media personalities.
In order to call attention to this security hole, the 2 hackers went to Gawker to tell their story. AT&T quickly repaired the hole, saying they fixed it after hearing complaints from a “business customer,” rather than hear about it from Gawker.
During Auerenheimer´s trial, the prosecutors presented several chat sessions wherein Auernheimer and Spitter discuss (in rather poor English) how they would steal the data from AT&T, where they would leak this data, and what they hoped to achieve through it all.
“dunno i would collect as much data as possible the minute its dropped, itll be fixed BUT valleywag i have all the gawker media people on my facecrook friends after goin to a gawker party,” writes Auernheimer in the chat sessions.
The two also mention that these actions could be illegal and that the two could face being sued if they go forward with their plan. In the chat sessions, these 2 hackers also mention their satisfaction when the AT&T stock price fell, something they believe “Goatse Security” had a hand in.
After Auernheimer was found guilty on Tuesday, he sent out a Tweet saying he expected these results.
“Hey epals don´t worry! We went in knowing there would be a guilty here. I´m appealing of course,” wrote Auernheimer.
Tor Ekeland, Aurenheimer´s lawyer, also said they plan to appeal. Speaking to Bloomberg, Ekeland said, “This is a dangerously vague and broad interpretation of what constitutes unauthorized access under the computer fraud and abuse act.”
“It criminalizes normal behavior.”
Spitter has already pleaded guilty to these charges.

Mars Mission Agreement Between Russia And Europe Approved

April Flowers for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

Russia has come to an agreement with the European Space Agency (ESA) member states to take a significant role in planned Red Planet missions in 2016 and 2018. The 2016 mission will look for methane and other trace gases in the atmosphere and another in 2018 that aims to put a rover on the Martian surface.

Russia stepping up fills a void left by the US who pulled back from the projects earlier this year. The American withdrawal looked as though it would cancel the missions, called ExoMars, but the Russian desire to pick up many of the elements the US dropped has put ExoMars on a much surer footing.

The US was forced to withdraw from the ExoMars mission when NASA’s planetary science budget was slashed by 21% in February.

Although the documentation remains to be signed by all parties, the ESA member states indicated their happiness with the cooperation text this past Monday. The signing is likely to happen before the end of the year.

ESA officials say that they want the ExoMars partnership with Russia to be a catalyst for future planetary exploration ventures.

“We have other opportunities to consider cooperation – for Jupiter missions, for example,” Frederic Nordlund, the head of international relations at ESA, told BBC News. “ESA has selected Juice, a large mission for Jupiter, and in Russia there is a plan for a Ganymede lander which is of interest to Europe. We are initiating discussions to see how we could co-operate on those missions. But this could extend to lunar robotics where we would like to see if we could join forces as well.”

“Russia already has its Luna-Glob and Luna-Resurs missions, which are already being implemented, but we’re considering other opportunities for this in other areas.”

According to the new agreement, Russia will provide the Proton rockets to send the two ExoMars missions into space. Instrument space will also be made available for Russia on both missions and Russian researchers would join the science teams that exploit the missions’ data.

Russian industry will build the landing system that places the rover on the planet’s surface, with the exception of a few key components.

The ExoMars mission was initiated in Europe in 2005. ESA has spent in excess of 400 million Euros on technology development so far, and the final budget for the European side is projected to be about 1.2 billion Euros for the two missions.

The final budget has not been met yet, but so far 850 million has been committed and officials are confident of closing the gap.

The 2016 satellite orbiter’s mission will be to track down the source of methane gases that have been observed on Mars. The presence of methane in the Martian atmosphere is intriguing for scientists because it could conceivably indicate biological activity on the planet.

The satellite will also provide communications for the 2018 rover mission in which the six wheeled vehicle will look for signs of past or present life. The rover will have the ability to drill 2 meters into the ground.

Diabetic Wound Healing Has A New Fighter In Its Corner – Sweat Glands

Connie K. Ho for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

Researchers from the University of Michigan recently discovered that sweat glands can impact how human wounds heal, thus paving the way for new, effective therapies that can deal with diabetic ulcers and other conditions.

To begin, the human skin has millions of eccrine sweat glands that allow the body to cool down. Individuals can notice the reduction in heat in places like the gym, where the body will gradually change from hot to cold during a workout. Interesting enough, while sweat glands are found in primates like humans, they are not found in laboratory animals such as pigs, rabbits, and rodents. The scientists believe that the glands can also help provide needed cells to recover from wounds like burns, ulcers or scrapes.

“Skin ulcers — including those caused by diabetes or bed sores — and other non-healing wounds remain a tremendous burden on health services and communities around the world,” remarked the study´s lead author Laure Rittié, a research assistant professor of dermatology at the University of Michigan Medical School, in a prepared statement. “Treating chronic wounds costs tens of billions of dollars annually in the United States alone, and this price tag just keeps rising. Something isn´t working.”

With the findings, the team of investigators stated that the glands could possibly be used to develop treatments to heal wounds.

“By identifying a key process of wound closure, we can examine drug therapies with a new target in mind: sweat glands, which are very under-studied,” explained Rittié in the statement. “We´re hoping this will stimulate research in a promising, new direction.”

In addition, the study showed that sweat glands can produce keratinocyte outgrowths that can create new epidermis.

“It may be surprising that it´s taken until now to discover the sweat glands´ vital role in wound repair,” continued Rittié in the statement. “But there´s a good reason why these specific glands are under-studied — eccrine sweat glands are unique to humans and absent in the body skin of laboratory animals that are commonly used for wound healing research.”

Furthermore, the results showed that the rate at which keratinocyte outgrowth expands from eccrine sweat glands is similar to the rate of reepithelialization, otherwise known as wound healing.

“We have discovered that humans heal their skin in a very unique way, different from other mammals,” concluded Rittié in the statement. “The regenerative potential of sweat glands has been one of our body´s best-kept secrets. Our findings certainly advance our understanding of the normal healing process and will hopefully pave the way for designing better, targeted therapies.”

The new research comes at a particular important time as health providers continue to investigate the prevention of and treatment of ulcers related to diabetes. According to the Cleveland Clinic, an ulcer appears when there has been a breakdown in the skin and lesions are common results of ulcers. Ulcers can be serious as infections of an ulcer can lead to negative outcomes and need to be dealt with local and system therapy. An estimated 15 percent of people suffering from diabetes will develop foot ulceration sometime during their life.

The results of the study were recently published in the American Journal of Pathology.

Hormone Alteration In Monkeys Caused By Eating Estrogenic Plants

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com — Your Universe Online

A new study says eating certain vegetables may influence hormone levels and behaviors like aggression and sexual activity in monkeys.

The research from the University of California, Berkeley is the first to observe the connection between plant-based estrogenic compounds and behavior in wild primates.

They found that the more leaves of Millettia dura the male red colobus monkeys ate, the higher their levels of estradiol and cortisol. Also, the team saw the altered hormone levels brought on more acts of aggression and sex.

“It´s one of the first studies done in a natural setting providing evidence that plant chemicals can directly affect a wild primate´s physiology and behavior by acting on the endocrine system,” study lead author Michael Wasserman, said in a statement. “By altering hormone levels and social behaviors important to reproduction and health, plants may have played a large role in the evolution of primate – including human – biology in ways that have been underappreciated.”

The team followed a group of red colobus monkeys in Uganda’s Kibale National Park for 11 months, documenting what the primates ate. They focused on aggression for key behavioral observations, marking down the number of chases and fights, the frequency of mating and time spent grooming.

The team collected fecal samples once a week from each of 10 adult males in the group to assess changes in hormone levels. Over 407 samples were collected and analyzed for estradiol and cortisol levels.

They found seasonal variation in the consumption of estrogenic planets, making up 32.4 percent of the red colobus diet in any given week sometimes.

The higher the consumption of estrogenic plants, the higher the levels of estradiol and cortisol for the males, which are two steroid hormones important to reproduction and the stress response.

“With all of the concern today about phytoestrogen intake by humans through soy products, it is very useful to find out more about the exposure to such compounds in living primates and, by analogy, human ancestors,” study co-author Katharine Milton, said in a statement. “This is particularly true when determining the influence of phytoestrogens on reproductive behavior, which is the whole keystone of natural selection.”

The researchers emphasized that estrogenic plant consumption is one of multiple factors influencing primate hormone levels and behavior. They also noted the tendency for certain behaviors to occur can be affected by complex interactions between endogenous hormones and phytoestrogens.

Previous research found eating estrogenic plants could disrupt fertility and affect behavior in animals like rodents, monkeys and sheep. Effects of phytoestrogen consumption in other studies have included more aggression, less body contact, more isolation, higher anxiety and impaired reproduction.

The team is now examining the relationship between phytoestrogens and other primate species, including the chimpanzee, which is the human’s closest-living relative.

“Human ancestors took most of their diet from wild tropical plants, and our biology has changed little since this time, so similar relationships as those found here are expected to have occurred over our evolutionary history,” Wasserman said in the statement.

The team noted the red colobus diet contains a higher percentage of leaves, while the diet of chimpanzees, other apes and human ancestors consists primarily of fruits.

“If phytoestrogens make up a significant proportion of a fruit-eating primate´s diet, and that consumption has similar physiological and behavioral effects as those observed in the red colobus, then estrogenic plants likely played an important role in human evolution,” said Wasserman. “After studying the effects of phytoestrogens in apes and fruit-eating primates, we can then get a better sense of how these estrogenic compounds may influence human health and behavior.”

The study was published in the current issue of the journal Hormones and Behaviors.