Surrogacy Reform – Huffington Post UK

It shouldn't take a car crash for us to react. It shouldn't take sensationalist journalism and broadcasting to prick up your ear. It shouldn't take a parent losing their child for common sense to takeover the driving seat.

Society and the law are interesting bedfellows. One is usually reacting to the other in an eternal race to stay ahead. In the case of surrogacy, it could easily be argued that after 30 years since the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act was introduced, society's views and understanding on the composition of a family has somewhat changed. Is surrogacy a law that time forgot? There was an update in 2008 to include same-sex parental couples the recognition deserved, but most academics agree that something based on a flawed assumption from the start cannot be corrected without a more detailed overhaul.

Recent research in a report commission by Surrogacy UK and comments from senior judges mark this as a thoroughly confusing area of law in dire need for reform. As a practitioner, I witness some marvellous contortions of law in order to fit with the most basic of principles: the best interests of the child. Words which mean one thing are manipulated almost beyond recognition to achieve the right result, provisions are extended and lawyers navigate their way through the corkscrew of statute, caught up in the hurricane of public policy. That judges tell us time and again the statute is not fit for purpose comes as no surprise, but it is a metaphorical car crash when they are forced to judgments, which are not only against in the best interests of the child but also the intended parents or surrogate too.

It was deeply upsetting to read the judgment in Re AB (Surrogacy: Consent) [2016] where the surrogate felt that she was not appreciated or acknowledged enough by the intended parents. She therefore refused to give her vital consent to the parental order which would have granted the intended parents the recognition as the legal parents. Despite not wishing to look after and care for the twins herself, having no biological connection to the children nor any apparent long term goal other than to thwart the intended parent's application so completely and effectively, the court was left muted and unable to proceed. Mrs Justice Theis, an extremely experienced judge in these matters, could do nothing other than urge the surrogate to remember why she undertook the selfless act in the first place and consider the situation from the point of view of these young children.

In a remarkable sense of foresight and acknowledgment of the issues, Baroness Barker and other peers of the House of Lords made similar observations in a debate on 14 December 2016 and also highlighted that without reform, the judges can only do so much contortionism. In May 2016, a judgement of incompatibility with the Human Rights Act was handed down because the right answer was just not possible, however they tried to square the circle. The current system causes incredible difficulties not just for those genuine surrogates who need the help to remove themselves as the legal parent, but also intended parents from those less cooperative surrogates where the best interests of the child have been forgotten.

I have seen in practice and met face-to-face the real misery and heartbreak that childlessness causes couples and individuals alike: Ovarian cancer stripping away your chances of a family; genetic anomalies causing impotence; sexual orientation causing people to give up on ever having a family; graphic road traffic accidents causing losses and pain beyond imagination. There are women in the world who are helping these people fulfil their dreams yet antiquated laws can cause a car crash. These individuals are committed and passionate about becoming parents and to give a child a loving home; not every case before the family courts is so uplifting.

As we forge forward to deal with this head on, are there risks to be considered? Of course there are. We would be blind not to acknowledge the need to protect vulnerable would-be-surrogates and any child, but there are risks in everything we do, including having children the usual way. To follow and quote the words of a cross-bench peer, Lord Berkeley of Knighton, "The imperative to procreate, next to birth and death, is one of the great evolutionary acts of being human--it should belong to all of us."

It is time for reform, and to empower the courts with the tools to reach the right decision for everyone involved and before there is a car crash from which we cannot recover.

Andrew Spearman is an award-winning Surrogacy Lawyer

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Surrogacy Reform - Huffington Post UK

Allen Cell Explorer Launched – Technology Networks

The Allen Institute for Cell Science has launched the Allen Cell Explorer: a one-of-a-kind portal and dynamic digital window into the human cell. The website combines large-scale 3D imaging data, the first application of deep learning to create predictive models of cell organization, gene edited human stem cell lines and a growing suite of powerful tools. The Allen Cell Explorer will be the platform for these and future publicly available resources created and shared by the Allen Institute for Cell Science.

Cells are incredibly complex, with thousands of moving and interacting parts that work together to drive and regulate both cell architecture and behavior, says Rick Horwitz, Ph.D., Executive Director of the Allen Institute for Cell Science. We are beyond excited to launch the Allen Cell Explorer website and to share our cells, incredible image data, predictive models and more with the global scientific community.

The Allen Cell Explorer gives an extraordinary view into the organization of human cells" says Allan Jones, Ph.D., President and CEO of the Allen Institute. The first installment of these freely available tools from the Allen Institute for Cell Science follows in our legacy, started with the Allen Institute for Brain Science and the Allen Brain Atlas, of creating and sharing powerful open science tools that fuel innovation around the world.

The Integrated Cell Model, a featured component of the Allen Cell Explorer launch, is the first model to apply deep learning techniques to predict the organization of human stem cells. To create the model, researchers trained a computational tool on thousands of high quality images of human stem cells to learn how their components are organized. The website currently showcases comparisons between the Integrated Cell Models predictions of cellular organization and actual image data, demonstrating the impressive accuracy of the models predictions. Future iterations of the model will also allow users to generate and explore these virtual cells in three dimensions.

This is the first time researchers have used deep learning to try and understand the elusive question of how actual cells are organized, says Horwitz. The cartoons we rely on in textbooks, which are based on an artists interpretation of data from a relatively small number of cells, will eventually be replaced by data driven models of this kind from very large numbers of cells.

An additional tool on the portal, the 3D Cell Viewer, provides online access to the largest publicly available collection of human stem cells visualized in three dimensions. Users can view and manipulate thousands of gene edited cells and explore the astonishing variability of their intracellular organizationeven among cells that are clones of one anotherdirectly in a web browser, or by downloading data to their desktop.

The Allen Cell Explorer also includes access to state-of-the-art biological tools. The Cell Catalog contains detailed information and quality control measures on the Allen Institutes gene edited human stem cell lines, which are available to the community as part of the Allen Cell Collection at the Coriell Cell Repository. To open the door for even more researchers to harness the power of gene editing, the plasmids used to create the lines and instructions on how to use them are available through Addgene.

One of the things that excites me most about the launch of the Allen Cell Explorer is how it uses cells that are far more relevant to human biology than the cultured cells that have been used by necessity for much of modern biomedical research, says Anne E. Carpenter, Ph.D., Director of the Imaging Platform at the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT.

Taken as a whole, this publicly available portal will enable researchers to ask important new questions about the variability of cells, and how they change as they grow, differentiate and respond to drugs, says Horwitz. Working as a community, we can apply and expand on these tools to make leaps forward in the field of cell biology and have great impact on our study of human health and disease.

This article has been republished frommaterialsprovided by the Allen Institute. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source.

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New tool illuminates cell signaling pathways key to disease – Phys.org – Phys.Org

April 6, 2017

In a major advance for fundamental biological research, UC San Francisco scientists have developed a tool capable of illuminating previously inscrutable cellular signaling networks that play a wide variety of roles in human biology and disease. In particular, the technique opens up exciting new avenues for understanding and treating psychiatric disease, the researchers say.

The new technology, described in a paper published April 6, 2016 in Cell, makes it vastly easier for scientists to study the complex workings of a large family of sensor proteins called G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), which sit in cell membranes and enable cells to respond to chemical signals from other parts of the body or the outside world. In a first proof-of-principle study, the UCSF team used their new approach to identify new biochemical players involved in the development of tolerance to opioid painkillerswhich target a particular type of GPCRfindings they anticipate will enable researchers to develop safer and more effective pain control.

"This technology will let us understand how these critical signaling molecules work in a way we've never been able to before," said Nevan Krogan, PhD, a professor of cellular and molecular pharmacology and director of the Quantitative Biosciences Institute (QBI) at UCSF and a senior investigator at the Gladstone Institutes, who was one of the new paper's senior authors.

Roughly 800 different types of GPCR play crucial roles throughout the body, including regulating heart rate, blood pressure and digestion; mediating the senses of sight, smell, and taste; and enabling many forms of chemical communication between cells in the brain. Approximately 40 percent of medicines target one type of GPCR or another, including schizophrenia drugs that target dopamine receptors, painkillers that target opioid receptors, and allergy and heartburn drugs that target different types of histamine receptors, just to name a few.

These many types of GPCR have one feature in common that makes them particularly difficult to study: when they are activated (whether by a beam of light or a blood-borne hormone), they set off a rapid cascade of biochemical reactions, in which the GPCRs themselves physically move from one location to another within the cell and trigger signals that are passed among dozens or hundreds of different protein messengers. Together, these changes end up altering a cell's behaviorfor example changing the excitability of neurons or reprogramming their genetic activity.

Technique Lets Scientist Sleuth Out Secretive Biochemical Networks

The last major breakthrough in understanding GPCR biology was the resolution of their chemical structure, research which garnered the 2012 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. But taking the next step towards understanding GPCR biology has been slow: without better tools for charting the chemical cascades triggered by GPCRs, it has been extremely challenging for researchers to get a clear picture of how these signals work, how they go awry in disease, or how to better control them with drugs. But Krogan and von Zastrow believe their new technique will change all that:

"The methodology that our collaborative team developed allows one to precisely define the local protein environment of receptors as they dynamically change partners and move within the cell," said Mark von Zastrow, MD, PhD, a professor of psychiatry and cellular and molecular pharmacology at UCSF and the paper's other senior author. "We ourselves were surprised by the high degree of spatial and temporal resolution that this methodology can achieve."

Postdoctoral researchers Braden T. Lobingier, PhD, and Ruth Httenhain, PhD, who were co-first authors on the new study, led the development of the new tool, which lets researchers study GPCR signaling cascades by operating like police detectives mapping the criminal network of a secretive crime boss: Starting with a list of proteins that are known collaborators of a particular GPCR, researchers trigger GPCR activity and use a biochemical tracking device to identify these proteins' associates in other parts of the cell.

To build this network of associates, the researchers turned their receptor of interest into an "informant" by outfitting it with a tracking device in the form of an enzyme called APEX, which can be triggered to spray any nearby proteins with a chemical tag. Researchers can then use this tag to track down and identify suspected participants in the GPCR cascade using a technique called mass spectrometry. By triggering APEX tagging at different times after activating the GPCR, the researchers were able to begin building a detailed and unbiased map of the protein network underlying a cell's response to activation of a particular GPCR.

Study Reveals Potential Mechanisms of Opioid Painkiller Tolerance

In a proof-of-principle experiment, Krogan and von Zastrow's team used their technique to answer a long-standing mystery about the biological mechanisms of opioid tolerancethe phenomenon by which, over time, patients tend to need higher and higher doses of opioid painkillers such as morphine to achieve the same level of pain management.

This is an important puzzle to solve, because increased opioid use in response to tolerance puts patients at risk of serious adverse side effects and also promotes addiction. Researchers know that tolerance occurs when cells respond to long-term opioid use by destroying or "down-regulating" the GPCR opioid receptors that these drugs target, but what triggers cells to do this is unknown.

Using their APEX-based tool, the UCSF researchers found that two cellular proteins not previously known to interact with opioid receptors in fact partner closely with delta-opioid receptors (a subtype of opioid receptor) at precisely the time and place at which the cell targets these receptors for destruction. They then confirmed, using genetic manipulations, that both proteins are essential for the down-regulation process.

Understanding the protein partners involved in opioid tolerance could enable researchers to develop improved pain control strategies, or adapt present strategies to be safer and more effective, the researchers say.

Krogan and von Zastrow emphasize that not all suspects revealed by their technique will prove to be important in a given GPCR cascade. But the ability to quickly and easily identify likely participants in a given cascade should dramatically quicken the pace toward understanding these complex signaling processes, and to develop more targeted treatments for diseases in which they go awry.

Researchers Set Their Sights on Common Mechanisms of Psychiatric Disease

Krogan and von Zastrow are particularly interested in the many classes of GPCR that mediate chemical signaling in the brain. The new approach is the centerpiece of a new large-scale collaborative project Krogan and colleagues are launching within QBI, called the Psychiatric Cell Mapping Initiative, the goal of which is to understand how abnormal biochemical network activity in different cell types in the brain might contribute to many different psychiatric disorders.

Most of the brain's chemical signals - neurotransmitters such as dopamine, serotonin, glutamate, and GABA - bind to their own class of GPCR to influence brain activity. These neurotransmitter receptors are deeply involved in many psychiatric diseases, including major depression, schizophrenia, and addiction, and are the targets of many psychiatric and psychoactive drugs.

"We still know so little about the biology of psychiatric disease, and even less about psychiatric drugs," Krogan said. "Our goal with this initiative is to use this and other new tools to gain a better understanding of the common cell biology behind major psychiatric diseases. This new tool will let us study how GPCRs work differently in psychiatric diseases, which could help us understand why these disorders arise, and will also let us test how psychiatric drugs actually alter the workings of their target cells in a way no one has ever been able to before."

Explore further: How proteins find one another

More information: Cell (2017). dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2017.03.022

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New ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Promo Traumatizes Fans With Plane Crash Flashbacks – Moviefone

Not again, Shonda! That's what we thought when we first heard that "Grey's Anatomy" Season 13 was setting an entire episode on a plane, with a crisis unfolding mid-flight, and that's what more fans are saying now that ABC has shared a promo for the hour.

We initially hoped the crisis would just be medical, and not a problem with the flight itself, but not only does there seem to be more than bad turbulence on the April 13 flight, "In the Air Tonight," the seriously bad flight is suffered, once again, by Meredith Grey (Ellen Pompeo).

Mer is probably still feeling traumatized by the loss of Lexie Grey (Chyler Leigh) in the Season 8 finale. If fans are still mourning Little Grey, she must be, too. The episode looks like it might be a bonding hour for Mer and Nathan Riggs (Martin Henderson) -- and they may join the Mile High Club while mid-air -- but still. The torture of Meredith Grey, and "Grey's fans, has not gone unnoticed.

"Grey's" fans reacted to the promo exactly as you might expect:

There are so many more tweets just like that. This plane *probably* won't crash, but it looks like everything else goes wrong, including some kind of medical issue. Mer just can't catch a break.

"Grey's Anatomy" Season 13 airs Thursdays at 8 p.m. on ABC.

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Shonda Rhimes, creator of ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ and ‘Scandal’, joins Planned Parenthood board – Washington Post

Shonda Rhimes, one of Hollywoods most popular and powerful women, has joined the national board of Planned Parenthood.

Rhimes, creator and producer of prime-time television shows Greys Anatomy and Scandal, assumes a formal role in the organization at a time when antiabortion activists and some Republican lawmakers have set their sights on defunding Planned Parenthood.

The fact is that womens health is under fire right now, Rhimes said in an interview with Elle Magazine, which first reported the news. And so to me, it feels like its important to help fight back.

Rhimes has used her shows to present leading female characters who are celebrated for exercising their agency, and for exploring a range of social issues including abortion. Olivia Pope, the heroine of Scandal, had an abortion in a 2015 episode that also included a floor fight in Congress over defunding Planned Parenthood. In 2011, a female character in Greys Anatomy also had an abortion.

[Scandal stuns views with an abortion scene]

Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood, told Elle that the organization would look to use Rhimess creative energy and storytelling ability to educate the public about the organizations work.

And she couldnt be joining us at a better time, Richard said. When so much basic health care is under attack, as we saw just a few weeks ago as a room full of men negotiated away maternity benefits for women, its never been more important for peoples stories to be told.

She was referring to a much-criticized White House meeting in which President Trump and Vice President Pence met with members of the House Freedom Caucus to discuss a plan to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. Among the benefits under consideration for elimination was maternity care. The effort failed after factions within the GOP failed to agree on an overall plan. The Republican-led Congress also has been unable to come up with a measure to defund Planned Parenthood.

[Conservatives fall short of another goal: Defunding Planned Parenthood]

Anti-abortion groups and conservative lawmakers have for years sought to block the use of Medicaid funds to reimburse Planned Parenthood for services it provides to low-income patients. Federal law prohibits the use of Medicaid funds for abortions, except in the case of rape, incest or to the save the life of the mother.

Planned Parenthood has argued that the vast majority of its services involve providing basic gynecological health care, including Pap smears, offering low-cost contraceptives and providing referrals for other screenings, such as mammograms.

Rhimes, who has served on the Planned Parenthood Los Angeles board, told Elle that shes never used the organizations services but has friends who have.

The fact that Ive never had to use a Planned Parenthood, the fact that Ive never been in need of medical services I couldnt afford or didnt have access to, doesnt mean I shouldnt be concerned about the fact that other women dont have that access, she said.

Fans of Shonda Rhimes's shows already know Meredith Grey, Olivia Pope and Annalise Keating, and they're about to get acquainted with Alice Vaughan on "The Catch." Here's how Rhimes's newest TV drama uses some signature traits of a Shondaland show. (Nicki DeMarco/The Washington Post)

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Shonda Rhimes, creator of 'Grey's Anatomy' and 'Scandal', joins Planned Parenthood board - Washington Post

Anatomy of a secure internet-connected thing – Electronics Weekly – Electronics Weekly

Many of the things we use on a daily basis are becoming smart and connected to the Internet. The Internet of Things (IoT) will improve our lives by helping us reach our health and fitness goals, reduce resource consumption, increase productivity, and track and secure our assets. Many embedded developers realise the potential benefits of the IoT and are actively developing various applications, from connected home devices to wearables and home security systems. However, along with these benefits come risks. No one wants to design an application thats prone to hacking or data theft. Undesirable events like high-profile hacks can lead to serious damage to brand images and loss of customer trust, and, in the worst cases, slow down or permanently reduce the adoption of the IoT.

The IoT is often referred to as an industrial revolution. The number of connected devices will grow rapidly in the coming years. If there is any disagreement among analysts who follow the IoT, it is in the number of billions of devices that will be connected. The economic value to society is estimated to be in the range of $4-11 trillion dollars.

In the race to accelerate time-to-market for connected device products, implementing proper security is inconvenient because it adds component cost, development effort and design complexity. At the same time, in some industries, it is not crucial to have adequate security. Rather, having adequate security is a key to not being hacked. Major security and privacy issues and bad press after a vendors product has been hacked might temporarily or permanently slow down the adoption of IoT. Many consumers are already skeptical about connecting even simple devices in our homes and daily lives, and some researchers and industry watchers believe the IoT is a security catastrophe waiting to happen. In fact, quite recently, there have been a number of highly publicised hacks that are gaining wide attention so one could argue that the catastrophe is already on its way.

Hacking of quantum cryptography

The current IoT security situation resembles that of quantum cryptography, often referred to as quantum key distribution. Unlike other key distribution schemes, quantum cryptography promises unconditional security based on the laws of physics. In comparison, most key distribution schemes rely on assumptions of the computational complexity of factoring large numbers or the discrete logarithm problem.

Although quantum cryptography was discovered in 1984, it took until the year 2000 before commercial cryptography systems were brought to market. Relying on single photons, a quantum cryptographic system is complicated to build, and yet time-to-market is of the essence. In 2010, the first security loophole that completely broke the security of these quantum cryptography systems was published. Quantum cryptography is, theoretically, impossible to break, but, in reality, side-channels, or loopholes, were not considered during system design. Also, interestingly, no loopholes were discovered until a dedicated team was assembled to break into such systems. Up until the time this team was established, the entire industry was focused on making quantum cryptography systems robust and getting them to market.

The quantum cryptography analogy teaches us important lessons. Most notably, it shows how security is an ongoing process requiring a multidisciplinary approach to anticipate potential hacks. When striving to make something as complex as a quantum cryptographic system work, the same engineering team cannot possibly be able to understand how an attacker could break into the system. These are conflicting thought processes. Thus, a quality assurance and security team needs to be separate from the engineering team building secure systems.

Another key point is that the hacking of the quantum cryptography system surely has temporarily, if not permanently, reduced market acceptance of and belief in this technology. Thus, it would probably have been beneficial for the industry to invest more in security up-front, leading to a longer time-to-market and greater cost but also substantial gain in the end.

Anatomy of a secure IoT thing

The technology necessary to make the IoT secure already exists. But the lack of knowledge of how to implement this technology is usually the root cause of most security loopholes. A secure Internet-connected thing does not, however, guarantee a secure system. Nevertheless, developers should at least be aware of the following types of security.

Hardware-level security

The secure IoT-device has a number of security features. First and foremost, it uses asymmetric cryptography to perform secure boot and secure boot loading or over-the-air (OTA) firmware updates. The secure IoT-device also uses hardware cryptographic accelerators that are faster, more energy efficient and less vulnerable to side-channel analysis.

In a secure IoT device, the debug port is closed. If it is necessary at some point to reopen the debug port (in the case of a remote memory access or for other reasons), this is accomplished by an authenticated challenge response scheme using public key authentication.

While secure boot and boot loading prevent adversaries from modifying the program memory, the secure IoT device further restricts access to reading the program memory. This means devices that feature internal memory or on-board flash. In the case of external memory, it also means that the contents of the external memory are signed and encrypted.

Software security considerations

To ensure that the software running on the secure IoT device further enhances security, it must be hardened in critical sections. This means that it can resist skipping single instructions. Examples include the secure boot signature check or a password signature check. This approach ensures that if an adversary is able to make the processor skip an instruction, it does not have security-critical consequences. Furthermore, to avoid security issues in the code or a third-party library causing system-wide access, TrustZone for ARM v8M can be used to compartmentalise the various libraries.

Secure communications

Most integrated circuits communicate with other ICs, other IoT-devices, gateways and/or the cloud, and it is necessary to secure these communication channels. When communicating with other ICs, it means turning on encryption and authentication to ensure integrity and confidentiality. One example could be storing data on off-chip memory or the wired bus between sensors or communication ICs and the main processor.

When communicating with other IoT-devices, communication protocols such as ZigBee, Thread or Bluetooth low energy are typically used. Most of these protocols have security options, and it is important to turn on these security options.

Another important consideration is device commissioning. Once secrets have been deployed between the communicating devices, securing data traffic is straightforward. However, it is not straightforward to distribute the secrets. For wireless devices, this typically involves the commissioning step in which the device is brought on to the wireless network, e.g., using Bluetooth to commission a connected light bulb to a ZigBee-based lighting mesh network. The options for commissioning depend on the systems general capabilities, as well as a trade-off between ease-of-use and security. Suffice it to say that the secure IoT-device does not compromise security. In addition, the secure IoT-device uses TLS/DTLS to establish secure end-to-end connections to the cloud.

Application layer

The application layer might be on the device, in the cloud service or a combination of the two. In many applications, it is necessary to have password protection, typically in the application layer. The secure IoT-device forces the user to change the password and blacklists the most frequently used passwords. If possible, the device can even enforce two-factor authentication.

System considerations

From a system point of view, a number of seemingly harmless subsystems can add up to an insecure system as a whole. Therefore, to make a secure IoT-device, there are few assumptions for implementing security within each subsystem. Each subsystems security is independent or minimally dependent upon the other subsystems security.

It is necessary for developers, device makers and service providers involved in the IoT ecosystem to accept the costs and time-to-market delays of implementing effective security at all levels within the IoT, from device to cloud, and from the beginning of each development effort. Concerted efforts to implement security throughout the IoT will help prevent devastating security loopholes, resulting bad press, and a market that might not want to invest in IoT even when the loopholes have been closed.

Lars Lydersen, director of product security, Silicon Labs,was a part of the team that broke into unbreakable commercial quantum cryptographic systems. Currently, he has shifted his focus to classical embedded security systems and works at Silicon Labs in Oslo, Norway. Lydersen holds an MsC in electronics and a PhD in quantum cryptography from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology.

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Anatomy Of A Masterpiece: The Making Of ‘Pet Sounds’ – MediaPost Communications

If the Beach Boys' "Pet Sounds" album was such a masterpiece, why did they end up being depicted on its cover cavorting with a bunch of goats?

Band member Al Jardine provides the answer in a documentary about the 1966 album that premieres on Showtime Friday night (April 7).

Basically, says Jardine, the suits at Capitol Records didnt understand the record because its sound and subject matter had veered so far away from the formula that had made the Beach Boys successful up to that time, which was surfing and hot-rod records.

They just didnt understand it ," Jardine says in the one-hour documentary, titled "The Beach Boys: Making Pet Sounds." "They didnt know what to do with it.

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"Theyre a marketing firm, he said of Capitol. How do you market [the] Beach Boys with 'Pet Sounds'? Well, we'll send you down to the San Diego Zoo and well photograph you with a bunch of damn goats. I mean, whats that all about? That was the biggest miscarriage of justice of all," he says with a laugh.

Like so many other masterpieces throughout the histories of various arts, "Pet Sounds" did not sell well at the outset, nor was it critically acclaimed.

"It took 20 years for it to go platinum, which was ridiculous," says Beach Boy Mike Love in the documentary, although the doc implies that even Love wasnt entirely on board with this new direction in the Beach Boys music.

As the documentary makes clear, "Pet Sounds" was a pet project of Brian Wilson (seen in the above photo, left, producing the album). No one argues that Wilson had been the genius behind the Beach Boys sound from the very beginning.

Wilson was interviewed at length for this documentary, and he appears frequently in it. In pushing the record company and his bandmates to participate in the production of "Pet Sounds," Wilsons goal was largely a creative one: He wanted to "write something better than surf songs and car songs," he explains.

The result was an album whose best-known songs are the singles "Wouldnt It Be Nice" and "God Only Knows." True fans of the album know the rest of the songs just as well, including "Thats Not Me," "Dont Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)," "I Know Theres an Answer," "I Just Wasnt Made for These Times" and the instrumental "Pet Sounds."

This fascinating documentary makes a strong case for the albums status as a masterpiece of the recording arts. The film delves deeply into how the sounds on "Pet Sounds" were produced. Testimony is given by many who were there, including members of the group of L.A. recording session players known as The Wrecking Crew.

Among those interviewed is Tony Asher, co-writer on eight of the songs on "Pet Sounds." Asher, who had been a composer of commercial jingles before "Pet Sounds, tells a great story about meeting Brian Wilson by happenstance in a hallway at a recording studio where they were both working. From that meeting, they forged an unlikely songwriting partnership.

Among other things, various witnesses note that Wilson was a fan of Phil Spectors "Wall of Sound" approach to making records, and under Wilsons direction, the "Pet Sounds" recording sessions featured an ever-growing body of musicians.

For example, there was not one piano, but usually three, remembers one interview subject.

For all the challenges and difficulties that went into making "Pet Sounds," the documentary gives the impression that the record company execs thought well enough of Wilson that they dont seem to have exerted any disruptive efforts to rein him in as the recording sessions dragged on and the studio became full of musicians who needed to be paid.

As for the goat photo on the album jacket, maybe no one ever explained to the Capitol execs what the title "Pet Sounds" was supposed to mean in the first place. Ironically, its not explained in the documentary either.

"The Beach Boys: Making Pet Sounds" premieres Friday night (April 7) at 8 Eastern on Showtime.

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Episode 17: State of the Art – Coronary Physiology – TCTMD

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Episode 17: State of the Art - Coronary Physiology - TCTMD

Nuun Debuts Natural Endurance Drink Mix Based on the Latest in … – BevNET.com

Seattle, WA (April 5, 2017) Nuunand company, the leading sports drink brand in sports specialty and natural foods retail, is introducing Performance, the cleanest endurance drink mix formulated from science and rooted in nature, designed for sustained and intense activities. The nuun team partnered with world-renowned Exercise Physiologist and Sports Nutritionist Stacy T. Sims, PhD to use the latest understanding of how athletes systems react under stress, to create a hydration product that is lighter and yet more effective than what has been available. Pure ingredients and Non-GMO Project Verified sourcing contribute to the superior absorption and minimized gastric impact. Performance will be debuted at nuuns expo presence at the Boston Marathon April 13th 16th and Sea Otter Classic April 20th 23rd and will begin being served on course at events this summer.

We challenged ourselves to do what no other sports drink has done. The nuun team wanted to create a product that delivered superior performance withoutcompromising the pure sources that ultimately hydrate you, said Kevin Rutherford, nuun President and CEO. The reality is that we are not as smart as nature which is why thisproduct is the perfect blend of sports science and natural foods.

Performance is the only product to use multiple non-gmo sugar sources, dextrose and sucrose. The combination activates multiple absorption pathways and eliminates the build up of gastric distress. A fifth electrolyte, chloride, has also been added through potassium chloride given its rapid assimilation into the body. Chloride plays a key role in hydration at the cellular level and is needed for the absorption of fluid during prolonged activity.

I am very honored to partner with nuun to continue to evolve the sports drink industry, and Performance is a culmination of everything I have learned through my over 20 years of research in sport nutrition, added Stacy T. Sims PhD. The selection and purity of ingredient sourcing supports the latest research, and this line strategically maximizes fluid absorption and minimizes cellular stress in the digestive system during exercise.

Performance is formulated to work for your body with ingredients that are as close to nature as possible, compromising nothing, from the farm to the bottle. The flavoring is provided from dried fruit powder through an innovative process that maximizes the fruits bioavailability not requiring any fillers. It is also sourced with vegan cane sugar as opposed to the widely used conventional sugar that is processed through bone char. Demonstrating nuuns external commitment to sourcing purity, all ingredients are third party certified as Non-GMO Project Verified and Informed Choice Safe for Sport.

We learned from the latest nuun tablet formulas that using the purist sources of ingredients allows the body to process and utilize them more efficiently while limiting the amount of surplus within the product. shared Vishal Patel, nuun Chief Nutritionist. This methodology was applied to Performance creating a higher performing, lighter hydration powder than was previously available on the market.

Consumer preferences are changing amongst athletes and there is a movement across the country toward natural sports nutrition products for use during training and competition. Major events are reflecting this trend, shifting to plant-based, low sugar, electrolyte rich and environmentally friendly brands like nuun and away from artificial, high sugar products on course. Performance demonstrates nuuns commitment to the health conscious athlete and the race directors that are serving this significant population. The line will be served on course at nuun sponsored marathons and cycling events over the next year including Seattle to Portland, San Francisco Marathon, the Aids Lifecycle Ride, Long Beach Marathon, NYC Century, and Austin Marathon.

Nuun Performance is debuting with two flavors Mango Orange and Blueberry Strawberry. It will be sold in a 16-serving pouch for $19.99 and single serve sachets for $1.99. The line will be available in April across sports specialty retailers including REI, Performance Bike and Fleet Feet.

Aboutnuun & company nuun, based in Seattle, WA, is on a mission to inspire a healthier, happier, more active lifestyle so that everyone can achieve lifes next personal best. As the pioneer of electrolyte enhanced drink tablets, nuun is passionate about and committed to replenishing active people and our planet by using clean ingredients and practices in the great tasting and industry leading sports drink.Founded in 2004, nuun was the first to separate hydration from fueling, andtwelve years laternuun active hydration remains the #1 selling sport drink product in bike, run, outdoor specialty, and outdoor chain stores. To learn more, visit http://www.nuunlife.comor follow them on social media.

About Stacy Sims Dr. Stacy T. Sims has contributed to the environmental exercise physiology and sports nutrition fields for more than 15 years leading groundbreaking research and innovations throughout her academic and consulting career. Stacy is currently a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Waikato Adams Centre for High Performance advancing research in environmental considerations and sex differences across elite athletes to the general public. Prior, Stacy created natural sports nutrition products to solve problems of gastrointestinal distress and hydration for all athletes. She served as an exercise physiologist and nutrition scientist at Stanford University, the University of Otago and Massey University specializing in sex differences of environmental and nutritional considerations for recovery and performance. Stacy has continually applied her knowledge in the field educating and supporting athletes at the highest level of sport, including Olympians and Tour de France riders, and is an elite athlete herself. Recently she published ROAR with Selene Yeager focusing on food and fitness matched to the female physiology.

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Nuun Debuts Natural Endurance Drink Mix Based on the Latest in ... - BevNET.com

Research Assistant (Physiology) – The Conversation Job Board – The Conversation AU

at Monash University

Job No. 561096 Faculty / Portfolio: Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences School of Biomedical Sciences Department of Physiology Location: Clayton campus Employment Type: Full-time Duration:12 month fixed-term appointment Remuneration: $64,563 - $74,160 pa HEW Level 05 (plus 9.5% employer superannuation)

Achieve at a world top 100 university

Clayton campus

If you're after a rewarding career, Monash University can help make it happen. With leading academics and world-class resources, combined with a ranking in the top 100 universities worldwide, we offer all you need to build a brighter future.

The Opportunity The Department of Physiology is seeking a highly motivated individual to join the research groups of two successful laboratories within the department. The selected candidate will assist with a variety of projects investigating the role of previously unlinked compounds on the metabolic status of mice.

You will be responsible for performing a range of researchrelated activities (including laboratory preparation, and operational and administrative duties) to support the delivery of in vivo physiology studies.

The role involves animal handling, monitoring and colony management; performing glucose tolerance tests, intraperitoneal / subcutaneous / intracerebroventricular injections, blood collection and sample processing; anaesthesia and implantation surgeries; and euthanasia and tissue harvest.

Ideally we are seeking a candidate who has completed a Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Biomedical Science or equivalent degree, or someone who has substantial relevant skills and work experience leading to the development of practical expertise in metabolic research.

Enquiries Ms Lauren Kelly, Senior Project Manager, 03 9905 2377

Apply for this role.

If you apply for this position please say you saw it on The Conversation.

Monash University was established in 1958 and welcomed its first intake of students in 1961. In its fifty year history, the university has established itself as one of Australias finest tertiary institutions, building an enviable reputation for both its outstanding teaching and its transformative research. Today, Monash is Australias largest university, boasting a global network of more than 250,000 alumni.

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Research Assistant (Physiology) - The Conversation Job Board - The Conversation AU