Is Neuroscience Rediscovering The Soul? : 13.7: Cosmos And … – NPR

The idea that neuroscience is rediscovering the soul is, to most scientists and philosophers, nothing short of outrageous. Of course it is not.

But the widespread, adverse, knee-jerk attitude presupposes the old-fashioned definition of the soul the ethereal, immaterial entity that somehow encapsulates your essence. Surely, this kind of supernatural mumbo-jumbo has no place in modern science. And I agree. The Cartesian separation of body and soul, the res extensa (matter stuff) vs. res cogitans (mind stuff) has long been discarded as untenable in a strictly materialistic description of natural phenomena.

After all, how would something immaterial interact with something material without any exchange of energy? And how would something immaterial whatever that means somehow maintain the essence of who you are beyond your bodily existence?

So, this kind of immaterial soul really presents problems for science, although, as pointed out here recently by Adam Frank, the scientific understanding of matter is not without its challenges.

But what if we revisit the definition of soul, abandoning its canonical meaning as the "spiritual or immaterial part of a human being or animal, regarded as immortal" for something more modern? What if we consider your soul as the sum total of your neurocognitive essence, your very specific brain signature, the unique neuronal connections, synapses, and flow of neurotransmitters that makes you you?

Just as we have unique fingerprints, our brains, their "connectome," are also unique. Surely, all brains are made of the same stuff, but wired in very individual ways. Recall that our brains are plastic, and mold themselves according to environmental and emotional inputs the stories of our lives. To this, we must add our bodies and their relation to our brains. For the mind is embodied, the self not an isolated property of what's inside your cranium but an emergent property of your whole mind-body integration as mapped through the complex highways of nerves interlocking all of you.

Consider, then, the modern soul as the unique neuronal-synaptic signature integrating brain and body through a complex electrochemical flow of neurotransmitters. Each person has one, and they are all different. That is, or can be considered, your essence from a materialist perspective.

Once we have this definition of the soul, the next question is inevitable. Can all this be reduced to information, such as to be replicated or uploaded into other-than-you substrates? That is, can we obtain sufficient information about this brain-body map so as to replicate it in other devices, be they machines or cloned biological replicas of your body? This would be, if technologically possible, the scientific equivalent of reincarnation, or of the long-sought redemption from the flesh an idea that is at least as old as organized religions in the East and West (as Mark O'Donnell remarked in his book To Be a Machine, reviewed here).

Well, depending on who you talk to, this final transcendence of human into information is either around the corner a logical step in our evolution or an impossibility a mad dream of people who can't accept the inevitability of death, the transhumanist crowd.

Silicon Valley is taking very seriously the possibility that aging is a technological problem that can be hacked. For example, the website of Google's company Calico states right upfront that its mission is to tackle "aging, one of life's greatest mysteries." The company's approach is more one of prolonging life than of uploading yourself somewhere else, but in the end the key word that unites the different approaches is information. If life is a code written genetically, it can be dealt with, including the instructions for aging. Another Google company, DeepMind, is bent on cracking AI: "Solve intelligence to make the world a better place." Google is approaching the problem of death from both a genetic and a computational perspective. They clearly complement one another. Google is not alone, of course. There are many other companies working on similar projects and research. The race is on.

What to make of this? It's inevitable that science will be at the forefront of the quest to prolong or upload life. This is not a bad thing, per se, given that the knowledge this research will surely produce will open new pathways to healthier, longer lives. Accepting death is a hard pill to swallow, the hardest. As I wrote elsewhere, referring to my family in this context: "Every day I have to love them is one less day I have to love them."

However, the possibility of extending life indefinitely also raises all sorts of moral and social questions, and possibly a lot of pain and loss. The curse of the immortal is to lose everyone he loves. Unless everyone jumps in. But how reasonable is this assumption? Who will benefit from these technologies? The very wealthy? The select few that have access to them? What of the rest of society? Would we end up creating a dual species of beings, humans and transhuman demi-gods? Would there be mutual tolerance and respect? I can imagine all sorts of sci-fi scenarios unfolding, utopic and dystopic.

Meanwhile, while the quest for immortality continues, what we can do is eat well, exercise, and try to live a life of meaning, leaving the world a better place than how we found it. Or, perhaps, for some in the future, never leaving it at all.

Marcelo Gleiser is a theoretical physicist and writer and a professor of natural philosophy, physics and astronomy at Dartmouth College. He is the director of the Institute for Cross-Disciplinary Engagement at Dartmouth, co-founder of 13.7 and an active promoter of science to the general public. His latest book is The Simple Beauty of the Unexpected: A Natural Philosopher's Quest for Trout and the Meaning of Everything. You can keep up with Marcelo on Facebook and Twitter: @mgleiser

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Is Neuroscience Rediscovering The Soul? : 13.7: Cosmos And ... - NPR

What do Neuroscience and Deaf Studies Have in Common? Just … – Holy Cross News (blog)

Meet Victoria Mousley. She is senior psychology and deaf studies double major, with a concentration in gender, sexuality, and womens studies. She wants to be a cognitive neuroscientist.

And with an education from Holy Cross, she can.

It all started four years ago when Mousley signed up for her first semester of courses and decided American Sign Language (ASL) sounded like a cool class to take.

I had no idea about deaf studies before Holy Cross, says Mousley. I had never taken a class in high school, or had any exposure to the Deaf community.

Fast forward two semesters of ASL classes and Mousley found herself copying down the address of Sue Philip, president of a non-profit for Deaf victims of domestic violence, and the Deaf woman she would be working for as a part of the community-based learning (CBL) component of her ASL class.

It was a day that probably changed my life, and I didnt know it at the time, says Mousley. The language courses at Holy Cross were important because I needed to be able to communicate, but the CBL experience was what made me fall in love with what I was doing in deaf studies. The meaning came out of engaging with the community, the history, the culture.

Mousleys weekly meetings with Philip doing administrative work like organizing, attending meetings and drafting minutes turned to more frequent visits and involvement beyond what was required for CBL, as Philip quickly became a mentor and Mousley realized her passion for the Deaf community. Mousley began working as a teaching assistant at The Learning Center for the Deaf in Framingham, Massachusetts, where she became particularly interested in exploring deaf education and the disparities in education for deaf and hard-of-hearing students.

While discovering new passions to bring back to Holy Cross, Mousley recalls, she was also stumbling upon new interests on the Hill some more surprising than others.

This is where the science comes in.

When I got to Holy Cross, I thought, This neuroscience thing sounds really scary and its probably not for me, says Mousley. Science was never really my thing in high school; I was fine at it, but I didnt love it.

But spring semester of her sophomore year, Mousley faced that fear head on in a class on the philosophy and neurobiology of the mind.

I was pretty intimidated when I first realized I had to take this class, and I definitely had no idea that I was going to end up loving it, says Mousley. I like to think I plan my life out in a way that gets me where I want to go, but there are people you meet like Professors Lawrence Cahoone and Alo Basu teaching this class, who change all of that.

Also enrolled in a psychology class on sensation and perception that same semester, all her different interests began to fit together.

Taking these classes together made me realize that the human experience as I was learning about the experiences of deaf people through my CBL was actually tied to all this stuff I was learning about the brain, she said. As I became more interested in cognitive neuroscience, I realized that my specific interest in education wasnt necessarily with teaching, but more with child development.

Mousleys interest in the intersection between deaf studies and neuroscience rose to a new level when she decided to spend a semester away at the worlds only liberal arts university for the deaf and hard-of-hearing. A semester at Gallaudet University, located in Washington, D.C., would be a full immersion experience and a true test of her ASL skills.

I was asking myself, Do I want to leave Holy Cross for a semester? Can I handle this with my signing? Am I ready to go? she remembers.

The answer was yes. Mousley took on five classes conducted in sign language and communicated exclusively in ASL while on campus, from ordering food in the cafeteria to addressing ID card problems. Mousley also had the opportunity to work with Dr. Laura-Ann Petitto, a famous cognitive neuroscientist and the Scientific Director of the Brain and Language Lab for Neuroimaging at Gallaudet University, which is dedicated to studying bilingualism, visual language, and reading.

It was here that her future goals specifically, becoming a cognitive neuroscientist began to crystalize.

I want to be someone who uses science and scientific methods to inform policy and concrete things that affect deaf and hard-of-hearing peoples lives and potentially childrens lives more broadly, she said.

In 2017 Mousley was selected as a Marshall Scholar, which will support her pursuit of masters degrees in language sciences and cognitive neuroscience research at University College London after graduation. In 2016, she was also awarded the Harry S. Truman Scholarship, a national award given to approximately 50 students who plan to pursue careers in public service.

As a senior, writing an honors thesis on the direct effects of stigma on the Deaf community and preparing for life after Holy Cross, Mousley thinks back on how all the pieces came together.

It was a lot of luck and great advising, combined with some amazing professors, says Mousley. I wouldnt have even understood that these intersections were happening if I didnt go to a liberal arts school where people were saying, This is also tied to this subject and to that one.

If you had told Mousley that she would be working towards becoming a cognitive neuroscientist studying sign language and deaf studies as a first-year student, she probably would not have believed you.

But now, she wouldnt doubt you for a second.

Continued here:
What do Neuroscience and Deaf Studies Have in Common? Just ... - Holy Cross News (blog)

Is Neuroscience Rediscovering The Soul? – Public Radio East

The idea that neuroscience is rediscovering the soul is, to most scientists and philosophers, nothing short of outrageous. Of course it is not.

But the widespread, adverse, knee-jerk attitude presupposes the old-fashioned definition of the soul the ethereal, immaterial entity that somehow encapsulates your essence. Surely, this kind of supernatural mumbo-jumbo has no place in modern science. And I agree. The Cartesian separation of body and soul, the res extensa (matter stuff) vs. res cogitans (mind stuff) has long been discarded as untenable in a strictly materialistic description of natural phenomena.

After all, how would something immaterial interact with something material without any exchange of energy? And how would something immaterial whatever that means somehow maintain the essence of who you are beyond your bodily existence?

So, this kind of immaterial soul really presents problems for science, although, as pointed out here recently by Adam Frank, the scientific understanding of matter is not without its challenges.

But what if we revisit the definition of soul, abandoning its canonical meaning as the "spiritual or immaterial part of a human being or animal, regarded as immortal" for something more modern? What if we consider your soul as the sum total of your neurocognitive essence, your very specific brain signature, the unique neuronal connections, synapses, and flow of neurotransmitters that makes you you?

Just as we have unique fingerprints, our brains, their "connectome," are also unique. Surely, all brains are made of the same stuff, but wired in very individual ways. Recall that our brains are plastic, and mold themselves according to environmental and emotional inputs the stories of our lives. To this, we must add our bodies and their relation to our brains. For the mind is embodied, the self not an isolated property of what's inside your cranium but an emergent property of your whole mind-body integration as mapped through the complex highways of nerves interlocking all of you.

Consider, then, the modern soul as the unique neuronal-synaptic signature integrating brain and body through a complex electrochemical flow of neurotransmitters. Each person has one, and they are all different. That is, or can be considered, your essence from a materialist perspective.

Once we have this definition of the soul, the next question is inevitable. Can all this be reduced to information, such as to be replicated or uploaded into other-than-you substrates? That is, can we obtain sufficient information about this brain-body map so as to replicate it in other devices, be they machines or cloned biological replicas of your body? This would be, if technologically possible, the scientific equivalent of reincarnation, or of the long-sought redemption from the flesh an idea that is at least as old as organized religions in the East and West (as Mark O'Donnell remarked in his book To Be a Machine, reviewed here).

Well, depending on who you talk to, this final transcendence of human into information is either around the corner a logical step in our evolution or an impossibility a mad dream of people who can't accept the inevitability of death, the transhumanist crowd.

Silicon Valley is taking very seriously the possibility that aging is a technological problem that can be hacked. For example, the website of Google's company Calico states right upfront that its mission is to tackle "aging, one of life's greatest mysteries." The company's approach is more one of prolonging life than of uploading yourself somewhere else, but in the end the key word that unites the different approaches is information. If life is a code written genetically, it can be dealt with, including the instructions for aging. Another Google company, DeepMind, is bent on cracking AI: "Solve intelligence to make the world a better place." Google is approaching the problem of death from both a genetic and a computational perspective. They clearly complement one another. Google is not alone, of course. There are many other companies working on similar projects and research. The race is on.

What to make of this? It's inevitable that science will be at the forefront of the quest to prolong or upload life. This is not a bad thing, per se, given that the knowledge this research will surely produce will open new pathways to healthier, longer lives. Accepting death is a hard pill to swallow, the hardest. As I wrote elsewhere, referring to my family in this context: "Every day I have to love them is one less day I have to love them."

However, the possibility of extending life indefinitely also raises all sorts of moral and social questions, and possibly a lot of pain and loss. The curse of the immortal is to lose everyone he loves. Unless everyone jumps in. But how reasonable is this assumption? Who will benefit from these technologies? The very wealthy? The select few that have access to them? What of the rest of society? Would we end up creating a dual species of beings, humans and transhuman demi-gods? Would there be mutual tolerance and respect? I can imagine all sorts of sci-fi scenarios unfolding, utopic and dystopic.

Meanwhile, while the quest for immortality continues, what we can do is eat well, exercise, and try to live a life of meaning, leaving the world a better place than how we found it. Or, perhaps, for some in the future, never leaving it at all.

Marcelo Gleiser is a theoretical physicist and writer and a professor of natural philosophy, physics and astronomy at Dartmouth College. He is the director of the Institute for Cross-Disciplinary Engagement at Dartmouth, co-founder of 13.7 and an active promoter of science to the general public. His latest book is The Simple Beauty of the Unexpected: A Natural Philosopher's Quest for Trout and the Meaning of Everything. You can keep up with Marcelo on Facebook and Twitter: @mgleiser

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Is Neuroscience Rediscovering The Soul? - Public Radio East

A psychologist, dog poop and human behavior – Albany Times Union

Dr. Allen Carl walks Nellie, a border collie mix, while his wife, Susan Ross, carries Stanley the Maltese in a sling on Sunday, April 2, 2017, in Albany's Washington Park. (Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union) less Dr. Allen Carl walks Nellie, a border collie mix, while his wife, Susan Ross, carries Stanley the Maltese in a sling on Sunday, April 2, 2017, in Albany's Washington Park. (Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times ... more

Dr. Allen Carl holds a roll of dog poop plastic bags on Sunday, April 2, 2017, in Albany's Washington Park. (Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union)

Dr. Allen Carl holds a roll of dog poop plastic bags on Sunday, April 2, 2017, in Albany's Washington Park. (Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union)

Dana Graupe poses with Monty, a 3-year-old St. Bernard mix, on Sunday, April 2, 2017, in Albany's Washington Park. (Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union)

Dana Graupe poses with Monty, a 3-year-old St. Bernard mix, on Sunday, April 2, 2017, in Albany's Washington Park. (Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union)

Stanley, a Maltese, in her preferred transportation mode, a dog sling carried by Susan Ross, on Sunday, April 2, 2017, in Albany's Washington Park. (Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union)

Stanley, a Maltese, in her preferred transportation mode, a dog sling carried by Susan Ross, on Sunday, April 2, 2017, in Albany's Washington Park. (Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union)

Susan Ross with Stanley, a Maltese, in his dog sling, where he falls asleep and snores on walks on Sunday, April 2, 2017, in Albany's Washington Park. (Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union)

Susan Ross with Stanley, a Maltese, in his dog sling, where he falls asleep and snores on walks on Sunday, April 2, 2017, in Albany's Washington Park. (Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union)

Susan Ross and her dogs Nellie and Stanley (in sling) meet Dana Graupe and her dog, Monty, on Sunday, April 2, 2017, in Albany's Washington Park. (Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union)

Susan Ross and her dogs Nellie and Stanley (in sling) meet Dana Graupe and her dog, Monty, on Sunday, April 2, 2017, in Albany's Washington Park. (Paul Grondahl/Special to the Times Union)

Roxie, Stella and Grace from the French bulldog-Boston terrier page on AlbanyDogs.net (Photo by Michael Kalin)

Roxie, Stella and Grace from the French bulldog-Boston terrier page on AlbanyDogs.net (Photo by Michael Kalin)

Caroline and Daisy, best companions for 14 years. (Caroline Grondahl)

Caroline and Daisy, best companions for 14 years. (Caroline Grondahl)

Caroline Grondahl on her 4th birthday, when she got Daisy as a surprise birthday present. (Paul Grondahl)

Caroline Grondahl on her 4th birthday, when she got Daisy as a surprise birthday present. (Paul Grondahl)

Daisy, an Australian shepherd mix (Photo couresy of Jake Dillon)

Daisy, an Australian shepherd mix (Photo couresy of Jake Dillon)

Daisy, an Australian shepherd mix (Photo couresy of Jake Dillon)

Daisy, an Australian shepherd mix (Photo couresy of Jake Dillon)

Daisy, an Australian shepherd mix (Photo couresy of Jake Dillon)

Daisy, an Australian shepherd mix (Photo couresy of Jake Dillon)

Daisy, an Australian shepherd mix (Photo couresy of Jake Dillon)

Daisy, an Australian shepherd mix (Photo couresy of Jake Dillon)

Daisy, an Australian shepherd mix (Photo couresy of Jake Dillon)

Daisy, an Australian shepherd mix (Photo couresy of Jake Dillon)

Max, a jumbo-sized Shetland sheepdog (Photo courtesy of Norma Chepaitis Shook)

Max, a jumbo-sized Shetland sheepdog (Photo courtesy of Norma Chepaitis Shook)

Max, a jumbo-sized Shetland sheepdog (Photo courtesy of Norma Chepaitis Shook)

Max, a jumbo-sized Shetland sheepdog (Photo courtesy of Norma Chepaitis Shook)

The best memory with Willow, a service dog at Pine Bush Elementary School (Drawing by Sanjana Stephen)

The best memory with Willow, a service dog at Pine Bush Elementary School (Drawing by Sanjana Stephen)

Micah the yellow Lab (Photo courtesy of Sue Raynis)

Micah the yellow Lab (Photo courtesy of Sue Raynis)

Micah the yellow Lab (Photo courtesy of Sue Raynis)

Micah the yellow Lab (Photo courtesy of Sue Raynis)

Minnie the shepherd mix on the dog bed she hated. (Photo courtesy of Claire Lynch)

Minnie the shepherd mix on the dog bed she hated. (Photo courtesy of Claire Lynch)

Minnie, a shepherd mix, enjoying Washington Park in Albany. (Photo courtesy of Claire Lynch)

Minnie, a shepherd mix, enjoying Washington Park in Albany. (Photo courtesy of Claire Lynch)

Jake the beagle with Kim Kendrick's son Michael. (Photo courtesy of Kim Kendrick)

Jake the beagle with Kim Kendrick's son Michael. (Photo courtesy of Kim Kendrick)

Tucker the cocker spaniel (Drawing by Conner Len)

Tucker the cocker spaniel (Drawing by Conner Len)

Bandit, a dog who thinks he's a cat. (Drawing by Lauren, a 5th grader at Pine Bush Elementary School)

Bandit, a dog who thinks he's a cat. (Drawing by Lauren, a 5th grader at Pine Bush Elementary School)

Gerty, my funny puppy (Drawing by Erika Para)

Gerty, my funny puppy (Drawing by Erika Para)

Gerty the Funny Puppy (Drawing by Erika, a 5th grader at Pine Bush Elementary School)

Gerty the Funny Puppy (Drawing by Erika, a 5th grader at Pine Bush Elementary School)

Precious, a cocker spaniel who lived up to her name. (Photo by Ed DerGurahian)

Precious, a cocker spaniel who lived up to her name. (Photo by Ed DerGurahian)

Precious, a beloved cocker spaniel and faithful companion. (Photo by Ed DerGurahian)

Precious, a beloved cocker spaniel and faithful companion. (Photo by Ed DerGurahian)

Kosmo the Sheltie was named after Cosmo Kramer of Seinfeld show fame (Photo courtesy of Dianne L. Patterson)

Kosmo the Sheltie was named after Cosmo Kramer of Seinfeld show fame (Photo courtesy of Dianne L. Patterson)

Kosmo the Sheltie was named after Cosmo Kramer of Seinfeld show fame (Photo courtesy of Dianne L. Patterson)

Kosmo the Sheltie was named after Cosmo Kramer of Seinfeld show fame (Photo courtesy of Dianne L. Patterson)

Raymond G. Shepherd as a young dog. (Photo courtesy of Dan Doyle)

Raymond G. Shepherd as a young dog. (Photo courtesy of Dan Doyle)

Raymond G. Shepherd at Lake Harris (Photo courtesy of Dan Doyle)

Raymond G. Shepherd at Lake Harris (Photo courtesy of Dan Doyle)

Red "The Houndicorn," a bloodhound. (Photo courtesy of Shelby Cady)

Red "The Houndicorn," a bloodhound. (Photo courtesy of Shelby Cady)

Red "The Houndicorn," a bloodhound. (Photo courtesy of Shelby Cady) ORG XMIT: Gf9lqfJtNms_KWVN14GS

Red "The Houndicorn," a bloodhound. (Photo courtesy of Shelby Cady) ORG XMIT: Gf9lqfJtNms_KWVN14GS

John Runfola's dog, Sailor Bob. (Courtesy John Runfola)

John Runfola's dog, Sailor Bob. (Courtesy John Runfola)

John Runfola's dog, Sailor Bob. (Courtesy John Runfola)

John Runfola's dog, Sailor Bob. (Courtesy John Runfola)

Scamp, a Schnoodle -- Schnauzer and poodle cross -- meets some children at Dr. Jonathan Pasternack's Delmar pediatric office. (Photo courtesy of Lois Pasternack)

Scamp, a Schnoodle -- Schnauzer and poodle cross -- meets some children at Dr. Jonathan Pasternack's Delmar pediatric office. (Photo courtesy of Lois Pasternack)

Lois Pasternack with Scamp, her Schnoodle. (Photo courtesy of Lois Pasternack)

Lois Pasternack with Scamp, her Schnoodle. (Photo courtesy of Lois Pasternack)

Maxwell, a black Lab/spaniel mix. (Photo courtesy of Connie Jo Fedorwich)

Maxwell, a black Lab/spaniel mix. (Photo courtesy of Connie Jo Fedorwich)

Maxwell, a black Lab/spaniel mix. (Photo courtesy of Connie Jo Fedorwich)

Maxwell, a black Lab/spaniel mix. (Photo courtesy of Connie Jo Fedorwich)

Simba, a Lab/chow mix (Photo courtesy of Clare Mertz)

Simba, a Lab/chow mix (Photo courtesy of Clare Mertz)

Clockwise from top, Jack Huber, Sunny and Julia Huber, at their home in Delmar in 2008.

Clockwise from top, Jack Huber, Sunny and Julia Huber, at their home in Delmar in 2008.

Jack Huber and Sunny, who can barely keep his eyes open, at their home in Delmar in 2007.

Jack Huber and Sunny, who can barely keep his eyes open, at their home in Delmar in 2007.

Julia Huber and Sunny at their home in Delmar in 2008.

Julia Huber and Sunny at their home in Delmar in 2008.

Syliva the bull terrier (Photo courtesy of Mark Schaming)

Syliva the bull terrier (Photo courtesy of Mark Schaming)

Kaiser Von Buckingham Streeter, the "King of Buckingham," after the Albany neighborhood pond. (Photo courtesy of Elmer Streeter)

Kaiser Von Buckingham Streeter, the "King of Buckingham," after the Albany neighborhood pond. (Photo courtesy of Elmer Streeter)

Rudy the beagle with a Stewart's milk carton (Photo courtesy of Gina Giuliano)

Rudy the beagle with a Stewart's milk carton (Photo courtesy of Gina Giuliano)

Rudy the beagle as a puppy (Photo courtesy of Gina Giuliano)

Rudy the beagle as a puppy (Photo courtesy of Gina Giuliano)

Nellie Bly, a black Lab mix (Photo courtesy of Holly McKenna)

Nellie Bly, a black Lab mix (Photo courtesy of Holly McKenna)

Nellie Bly, a black Lab mix (Photo courtesy of Holly McKenna)

Nellie Bly, a black Lab mix (Photo courtesy of Holly McKenna)

Daisy, Maggie and Kalie the German shorthaired pointers (Photos courtesy of Renee Pizzo-Roy)

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A psychologist, dog poop and human behavior - Albany Times Union

Sociologists urge use of big data to study human interaction … – Stanford University News

The internet dominates our world and each one of us is leaving a larger digital footprint as more time passes. Those footprints are ripe for studying, experts say.

A new paper urges sociologists and social psychologists to focus on developing online research studies with the help of big data to advance theories of social interaction and structure. (Image credit: pixelfit / Getty Images)

In a recently published paper, a group of Stanford sociology experts encourage other sociologists and social psychologists to focus on developing online research studies with the help of big data in order to advance the theories of social interaction and structure.

Companies have long used information they gather about their online customers to get insights into performance of their products, a process called A/B testing. Researchers in other fields, such as computer science, have also been taking advantage of the growing amount of data.

But the standard for many experiments on social interactions remains limited to face-to-face laboratory studies, said Paolo Parigi, a lead author of the study, titled Online Field Experiments: Studying Social Interactions in Context.

Parigi, along with co-authors Karen Cook, a professor of sociology, and Jessica Santana, a graduate student in sociology, are urging more sociology researchers to take advantage of the internet.

What I think is exciting is that we now have data on interactions to a level of precision that was unthinkable 20 years ago, said Parigi, who is also an adjunct professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.

In the new study, the researchers make a case for online field experiments that could be embedded within the structure of existing communities on the internet.

The researchers differentiate online field experiments from online lab experiments, which create a controlled online situation instead of using preexisting environments that have engaged participants.

In their new study, sociology Professor Karen Cook and her co-authors make a case for online field experiments that could be embedded within the structure of existing communities on the internet. (Image credit: L.A. Cicero)

The internet is not just another mechanism for recruiting more subjects, Parigi said. There is now space for what we call computational social sciences that lies at the intersection of sociology, psychology, computer science and other technical sciences, through which we can try to understand human behavior as it is shaped and illuminated by online platforms.

As part of this type of experiment, researchers would utilize online platforms to take advantage of big data and predictive algorithms. Recruiting and retaining participants for such field studies is therefore more challenging and time-consuming because of the need for a close partnership with the platforms.

But online field experiments allow researchers to gain an enhanced look at certain human behaviors that cannot be replicated in a laboratory environment, the researchers said.

For example, theories about how and why people trust each other can be better examined in the online environments, the researchers said, because the context of different complex social relationships is recorded. In laboratory experiments, researchers can only isolate the type of trust that occurs between strangers, which is called thin trust.

Most recently, Cook and Parigi have used the field experiment design to research the development of trust in online sharing communities, such as Airbnb, a home and room rental service. The results of the study are scheduled to be published later this year. More information about that experiment is available at stanfordexchange.org.

Its a new social world out there, Cook said, and it keeps expanding.

Using big data does come with a greater need for ethical responsibility. In order for the online studies of social interactions to be as accurate as possible, researchers require access to private information for their participants.

One solution that protects participants privacy is linking their information, such as names or email addresses, to unique identifiers, which could be a set of letters or numbers assigned to each research subject. The administrators of the platform would then provide those identifiers to researchers without compromising privacy.

Its also important to make sure researchers acquire the permission of the online platforms participants. Transparency is key in those situations, Cook said.

The research was funded by the National Science Foundation.

See the article here:
Sociologists urge use of big data to study human interaction ... - Stanford University News

Adoption Of Bow Use In Ancient Hunting May Have Set Off Societal Changes – New Hampshire Public Radio

At a point during human prehistory, hunters' reliance on the spear-thrower, or atlatl, shifted to another kind of weapon the self-bow.

This change happened on multiple continents (though bows never really caught on in Australia, where atlatls tended to yield only later, to firearms).

The first bows we know of conclusively, from archaeology, come from pine arrow shafts found at a bog site in Germany called Stellmoor, dating to around 11,000 years ago. Though, it's possible bows were in use much earlier in Africa.

Why did the bow replace the atlatl, and what social consequences may have followed from that shift? These are questions being asked by University of Wyoming PhD candidate in anthropology Brigid Sky Grund in a new paper in American Anthropologist, from which I took the above information.

As Grund notes in the article, most theories about this shift have pointed to the bow's greater accuracy and faster reload rate in hunting smaller fauna or in warfare. But Grund herself is looking instead at a different factor: the comparative learnability of each weapon. She writes:

"Most studies of bow and atlatl performance characteristics focus on the inherent qualities of the weapons themselves, neglecting to consider that functional weapons are wielded by capable individuals of various ages, sexes, strengths, dexterities, and skill levels."

I like this insight, because it puts people, in all our formidable variation, back into the equation, front and center. It's a dynamic-systems analysis if you will, in which a weapon and its user are inseparable.

In her analysis of learnability, Grund uses modern-day, long-term data sets up to eight years' worth from competitors participating in the World Atlatl Association International Standard Accuracy Contest (ISAC) and the Society for Creative Anachronism Inter-Kingdom Archery Competition (IAC).

Because she was able to track individual competitors' scores over time, she could see something about the rapidity of the learning curve for each weapon. As it turned out, individuals' atlatl scores increase rapidly right from the start, whereas people's bow scores don't in fact only in the fourth year of competition do bow users begin to approach maximum skill level.

In addition, youth scores from the two competitions, taken together with anthropological data on real-world hunting-weapon use, show that "biological constraints may preclude juveniles from wielding bows until later ages than atlatls."

Grund thinks, then, that less strong weapon users in the past based on contemporary differences in strength and dexterity in men and women, this group was likely to have included some women as well as juveniles may have been more likely to learn how to use an atlatl effectively. The stronger, skilled members of a population would, then, be the ones more likely to readily learn how to use a bow successfully.

In an email message last week, Grund elaborated on this point:

"If entire family groups comprised of people of varying ages, sexes, and strengths wield projectile technologies as part of hunting parties, atlatls may be favored over bows because they are accessible to wider segments of human populations.

On the other hand, if only a few individuals from a family or cultural group are required to participate in hunting behavior, then the exclusivity of bow technology might not matter, since projectiles would only be wielded by a few hunting specialists within that group."

It's that line of reasoning that leads Grund straight into the realm of prehistoric social behavior. In her paper, she concludes that the bow's favoring of highly skilled weapon users probably "exacerbated prehistoric social disparities and likely catalyzed emergent age- and-sex-based social divisions in prehistory."

If she's right, that's a broadly important finding in anthropology, because it clues us in to a cascade of major social changes in human groups over time.

But what about our why question: Why the shift from an easier-to-use to a harder-to-use hunting weapon?

Echoing the behavioral-ecology perspective in her paper, Grund said (excerpted from a lengthier answer):

"Chronologically, in many regions of the world, the adoption of bow technology seems to be coarsely correlated with a broadening of diet breadth and an increased preponderance of small game hunting.

Many human behavioral ecology studies of modern foragers have shown that under broad diet breadth and/or high resource stress conditions, the sexual division of labor increases. Therefore, a shift towards hunting smaller game under many prehistoric scenarios was likely associated with an increase in the division of labor, simply as a product of fluctuating resource exploitation strategies and dietary needs."

As she continues, Grund explains more precisely where the atlatl-to-bow shift comes in:

"Increased divisions of labor associated with broadened diet breadth and the appearance of hunting 'specialists' might cause a shift from atlatl to bow technology, and, reciprocally, the adoption of bow technology might inherently intensify emergent divisions of labor since it is less accessible to people of varying ages, sexes, strengths, and/or dexterities.

Though I haven't disentangled cause and effect yet, it seems that both the shift from atlatl to bow and chronologically associated fluctuations in resource exploitation strategies likely worked together to increase divisions of labor in prehistoric societies."

An acknowledgment that cause and effect can't easily be distinguished in this case is welcome. Still, I think Grund is on to something by thinking broadly about generalists versus specialists in weapon use.

In our prehistory, at certain times and places, individuals became more specialized for certain tasks that others in the group couldn't, or didn't, carry out and this in turn set social changes into effect. Precisely how human groups might be affected by the exclusion of certain group members from effective use of hunting technology such as bows may vary by region and will require new hypotheses and further work.

While discussing all this, I learned that for Grund, atlatls aren't merely academic. She threw her first atlatl dart back in high school, continued to experiment with atlatls during archaeology fieldwork, and in 2011 took first place in the novice/"non-regular competitor" women's division of an informal atlatl competition organized by the World Atlatl Association and the Wyoming Archaeological Society.

"We shot at homemade Pleistocene animal targets, including a paper mch mammoth," Grund explained.

That paper mch mammoth isn't credited in Grund's American Anthropologist paper. But who knows? Grund's hands-on experience may have played a role in her coming up with an innovative hypothesis about hunting patterns in our past.

Barbara J. King is an anthropology professor emerita at the College of William and Mary. She often writes about the cognition, emotion and welfare of animals, and about biological anthropology, human evolution and gender issues. Barbara's new book is Personalities on the Plate: The Lives and Minds of Animals We Eat. You can keep up with what she is thinking on Twitter: @bjkingape

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Adoption Of Bow Use In Ancient Hunting May Have Set Off Societal Changes - New Hampshire Public Radio

Curetis Starts Subsidiary Ares Genetics to Advance Genetic Antibiotic Resistance Testing – Yahoo Finance

Curetis Starts Subsidiary Ares Genetics to Advance Genetic Antibiotic Resistance Testing

- Successful completion of GEAR asset and know how transfer from Siemens to Curetis

Amsterdam, the Netherlands, and Holzgerlingen, Germany, April 6, 2017 -- Curetis N.V. (the "Company" and, together with Curetis GmbH, "Curetis"), a developer of next-level molecular diagnostic solutions, today announced that the Company has established Ares Genetics GmbH, a wholly owned subsidiary of Curetis GmbH. Ares Genetics builds on GEAR GEnetic Antibiotic Resistance and Susceptibility Database and associated assets recently acquired for Siemens. The Company will use GEAR to investigate the genetic foundations of antibiotic resistance and develop and subsequently commercialize novel approaches to improve the rapid detection of antibiotic resistance in patients with microbial infections as well as tools to accelerate antibiotic research. Ares Genetics has been established in Vienna, Austria, in close proximity to the Vienna Biocenter VBC and is headed by Dr. Andreas Posch, who has joined Curetis in March from Siemens as Director GEAR & Bio-IT and one of the Managing Directors of Ares Genetics. Dr. Posch headed the bioinformatics activities at Siemens Healthcare and was responsible for GEAR prior to the asset transfer to Curetis. In addition to Dr. Posch, Curetis` CCO Dr. Achim Plum will act as a further Managing Director of Ares Genetics.

GEAR contains the entire DNA sequences of more than 11,000 bacterial strains as well as related sensitivity data for 21 antibiotics. The strains were isolated from patient samples at over 200 sites across the world over the last three decades. It is the most comprehensive set of genotype-phenotype combinations for antibiotic resistance today and builds on 30 Terabytes of Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) and drug susceptibility raw data. It allows to assemble and annotate bacterial genomes from NGS raw data, identify genetic variations in those genomes and correlate them with the response of the respective bacterial strain to antibiotics. GEAR was developed and compiled by Siemens in collaboration with two academic partners, the Institute of Clinical Molecular Biology (IKMB) at Kiel University and the Clinical Bioinformatics Group of Saarland University headed by Prof. Dr. Andreas Keller who will continue working with Curetis as a key academic partner to further develop GEAR and investigate the genetics of antibiotic resistance.

Via its subsidiary Ares Genetics, Curetis will use GEAR as a biomarker engine to rapidly identify potential novel biomarkers, biomarker combinations, and algorithms predicting antibiotic resistance, as well as potential novel targets for antimicrobial drugs. In the future, GEAR may also pave the way towards fully genetic antibiograms and provide a reference for NGS-based clinical diagnostics.

"We are planning to leverage GEAR as a source for novel genetic markers to further improve the accuracy of rapid genetic tests for antibiotic resistance in life-threatening infections," said Dr. Achim Plum, CCO of Curetis and the second Managing Director at Ares Genetics. "GEAR is a perfect fit for Curetis and will allow us to stay on top of the development of novel resistances."

"GEAR will expand Curetis` content leadership with novel antibiotic resistance markers and form the basis for additional business, including clinical decision support, pharma research or next-generation sequencing interpretation services," said Dr. Andreas Posch, Managing Director at Ares Genetics. "We will pursue a partnership-based model for future R&D and commercialization. Our goal is to advance GEAR as a collaborative research platform for academic and translational research, public health, and industry partners. This will establish GEAR as the enabling technology platform for a broad and effective alliance against antibiotic resistances."

To this end, the newly founded company is currently putting together a strong core team of bioinformatics expertise and life science project management to lead and coordinate all GEAR related R&D within the Curetis Group as well as collaborative projects with partners in industry and academia.

To demonstrate the potential of GEAR in our understanding of the genetics of resistance and to attract further partners in the clinical and scientific communities, Curetis together with its leading academic partners from the Clinical Bioinformatics Group of Saarland University is pursuing a comprehensive publication strategy to share numerous aspects of the data set.

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"Together with Prof. Keller and our partners at Saarland University, we have already published a first paper on the accuracy of species identification using NGS data and further publications on genetic factors of resistances are in the pipeline. Following the publications, we also intend to make certain aspects of the GEAR database publicly available to stimulate our engagement with the relevant academic communities", commented Dr. Posch.

###

About Curetis Founded in 2007, Curetis is a molecular diagnostics company, which focuses on the development and commercialization of reliable, fast and cost-effective products for diagnosing severe infectious diseases. The diagnostic solutions of Curetis enable rapid multi-parameter pathogen and antibiotic resistance marker detection in only a few hours, a process that today can take up to days or even weeks with other techniques.

To date, Curetis has raised EUR 44.3 million in an IPO on Euronext Amsterdam and Euronext Brussels and private equity funds of over EUR 63.5 million. Furthermore, Curetis has entered into a debt financing facility with EIB for up to EUR 25 million. The company is based in Holzgerlingen near Stuttgart, Germany. Curetis collaborates with Heraeus Medical, pharmaceutical companies, and has entered into several international distribution agreements covering many countries across Europe, the Middle East and Asia.

In 2017, Curetis established Ares Genetics GmbH, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Curetis GmbH in Vienna, Austria. Ares Genetics is dedicated to maximize the R&D and related scientific and business opportunities of the GEAR assets acquired in 2016 for the entire Curetis Group.

For further information, please visit http://www.curetis.com

Legal Disclaimer This document constitutes neither an offer to buy nor to subscribe securities and neither this document nor any part of it should form the basis of any investment decision in Curetis.

The information contained in this press release has been carefully prepared. However, Curetis bears and assumes no liability of whatever kind for the correctness and completeness of the information provided herein. Curetis does not assume an obligation of whatever kind to update or correct information contained in this press release whether as a result of new information, future events or for other reasons.

This press release includes statements that are, or may be deemed to be, "forward-looking statements". These forward-looking statements can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology, including the terms "believes", "estimates", "anticipates", "expects", "intends", "may", "will", or "should", and include statements Curetis makes concerning the intended results of its strategy. By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties and readers are cautioned that any such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance. Curetis` actual results may differ materially from those predicted by the forward-looking statements. Curetis undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise forward-looking statements, except as may be required by law.

Contact details

Curetis Max-Eyth-Str. 42 71088 Holzgerlingen, Germany Tel. +49 7031 49195-10 pr@curetis.com or ir@curetis.com http://www.curetis.com - http://www.unyvero.com

International Media & Investor Inquiries akampion Dr. Ludger Wess / Ines-Regina Buth Managing Partners info(@)akampion.com Tel. +49 40 88 16 59 64 Tel. +49 30 23 63 27 68

U.S. Media & Investor Inquiries The Ruth Group Lee Roth lroth@theruthgroup.com Tel. +1 646 536 7012

Curetis_Logo 20170406_Curetis_PR_EN

This announcement is distributed by NASDAQ OMX Corporate Solutions on behalf of NASDAQ OMX Corporate Solutions clients.

The issuer of this announcement warrants that they are solely responsible for the content, accuracy and originality of the information contained therein. Source: Curetis via GlobeNewswire HUG#2094192

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Curetis Starts Subsidiary Ares Genetics to Advance Genetic Antibiotic Resistance Testing - Yahoo Finance

Why NewLink Genetics, Harmonic, and Innophos Holdings Slumped … – Madison.com

Wednesday was an up-and-down day for the stock market, but major market benchmarks ended up on the short end of the stick and finished with losses of 0.2% to 0.5%. Throughout much of the day, investors seemed to be pleased with continuing signs of growth in the U.S. economy, pointing to the likelihood that a recession is still far away and that the bull market in stocks could continue indefinitely. Yet later in the afternoon, the release of the latest minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee meeting set a different tone. In addition, some stocks posted particularly poor showings, and NewLink Genetics (NASDAQ: NLNK), Harmonic (NASDAQ: HLIT), and Innophos Holdings (NASDAQ: IPHS) were among the worst performers on the day. Below, we'll look more closely at these stocks to tell you why they did so poorly.

Shares of NewLink Genetics dropped 14% after the biopharmaceutical company released interim results from its phase 2 study of experimental melanoma treatment indoximod. NewLink said that objective response rates came in between 50% and 60% in the study of 60 patients, with disease control rates of 70% to 80%. Yet although Chief Medical Officer Nicholas Vehanian said that the data "further underscore the potential for indoximod in combination with other agents," characterizing the rates as "highly encouraging," investors seemed unimpressed and concerned that failing to produce even stronger performance might leave NewLink vulnerable to competition. With a long road ahead of it, NewLink will inevitably have ups and downs with future study results as the trials progress.

Harmonic stock declined 8% despite the company having showcased new technology at an industry conference. The video delivery infrastructure specialist offered new software-based solutions that it believes could transform the future of media processing, allowing users to take full advantage of changes in media environments. In particular, Harmonic's over-the-top and cloud-based solutions will give customers the ability to release broadcast, live, and on-demand video offerings quickly and with high quality and low cost. Yet investors didn't appear convinced that the conference showcase would result in a faster road to success for Harmonic, whose stock still trades at a third less than what it did in early 2015.

Finally, shares of Innophos Holdings fell 8%. The specialty-ingredient specialist released its "Vision 2022" strategic plan today, which includes a five-year growth trajectory that it hopes to achieve through several key initiatives. In particular, Innophos believes it needs to strengthen its core business in its phosphate-based food, health, and industrial products while growing through acquisition. At the same time, strategic partnerships with customers, suppliers, and marketing and technology partners could help bolster Innophos' business, and the company expects to keep cutting costs to boost efficiency. Yet the company wasn't able to improve its guidance for 2017, which includes a 4% drop in expected sales and flat earnings from 2016 levels. Until these efforts bear fruit, Innophos could see continuing pressure to perform.

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Why NewLink Genetics, Harmonic, and Innophos Holdings Slumped ... - Madison.com

BRIEF-Myriad Genetics, Beigene sign agreement – Reuters

April 6 Myriad Genetics Inc:

* Myriad Genetics and Beigene sign agreement to develop companion diagnostics for use with Beigene's novel parp inhibitor, BGB-290

* Myriad Genetics Inc - specific terms of deal were not disclosed.

* Myriad Genetics-under deal Beigene to use co's mychoice HRD, bracanalysis CDX companion diagnostic tests to support clinical development of BGB-290 Source text for Eikon: Further company coverage:

* Says it buys 50 percent stake in Barrick Gold's Veladero gold mine in Argentina for $960 million

* Cardiome's partner steadymed announces successful completion of trevyent clinical validation study

* Ant Financial Services Group says issued letter to Moneygram Community as it relates to Ant Financial's agreement to merge with Moneygram

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BRIEF-Myriad Genetics, Beigene sign agreement - Reuters

NewLink Genetics Corporation (NLNK) Plunges 14% on April 05 – Equities.com

Market Summary Follow

NewLink Genetics Corporation is a A biopharmaceutical company

NLNK - Market Data & News

NLNK - Stock Valuation Report

NewLink Genetics Corporation (NLNK) had a rough trading day for Wednesday April 05 as shares tumbled 14%, or a loss of $-2.91 per share, to close at $17.88. After opening the day at $20.79, shares of NewLink Genetics Corporation traded as high as $20.79 and as low as $17.84. Volume was 2.26 million shares over 14,772 trades, against an average daily volume of 371,077 shares and a total float of 29.22 million.

As a result of the decline, NewLink Genetics Corporation now has a market cap of $522.44 million. In the last year, shares of NewLink Genetics Corporation have traded between a range of $25.17 and $9.23, and its 50-day SMA is currently $17.33 and 200-day SMA is $13.09.

For a complete fundamental analysis of NewLink Genetics Corporation, check out Equities.coms Stock Valuation Analysis report for NLNK.

Want to invest with the experts? Subscribe to Equities Premium newsletters today! Visit http://www.equitiespremium.com/ to learn more about Guild Investments Market Commentary and Adam Sarhans Find Leading Stocks today.

NewLink Genetics Corp is a biopharmaceutical company. The Company is focused on discovering, developing and commercializing immunotherapeutic products to improve treatment options for patients with cancer.

NewLink Genetics Corporation is based out of Ames, IA and has some 122 employees. Its CEO is Charles J. Link.

NewLink Genetics Corporation is a component of the Russell 2000. The Russell 2000 is one of the leading indices tracking small-cap companies in the United States. It's maintained by Russell Investments, an industry leader in creating and maintaining indices, and consists of the smallest 2000 stocks from the broader Russell 3000 index.

Russell's indices differ from traditional indices like the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) or S&P 500, whose members are selected by committee, because they base membership entirely on an objective, rules based methodology. The 3,000 largest companies by market cap make up the Russell 3000, with the 2,000 smaller companies making up the Russell 2000. It's a simple approach that gives a broad, unbiased look at the small-cap market as a whole.

To get more information on NewLink Genetics Corporation and to follow the companys latest updates, you can visit the companys profile page here: NLNKs Profile. For more news on the financial markets and emerging growth companies, be sure to visit Equities.coms Newsdesk. Also, dont forget to sign-up for our daily email newsletter to ensure you dont miss out on any of our best stories.

All data provided by QuoteMedia and was accurate as of 4:30PM ET.

DISCLOSURE: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors, and do not represent the views of equities.com. Readers should not consider statements made by the author as formal recommendations and should consult their financial advisor before making any investment decisions. To read our full disclosure, please go to: http://www.equities.com/disclaimer

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NewLink Genetics Corporation (NLNK) Plunges 14% on April 05 - Equities.com