Can genetics refute white supremacist theories? – BioEdge

This weeks headlines were filled with news from Charlottesville, Virginia, after a white supremacist drove his car into a crowd of people opposing a march of supremacists and noe-Nazis, killing one woman and injuring many others. Which leads one to ask: how white are American white supremacists?

For most of them, the most convincing way to prove their whiteness is DNA tests from companies like 23andMe.com and Ancestry.com. To their consternation, the results are often not what they expected. White supremacist Craig Cobb was outed on daytime TV in 2013 as 86 percent European, and 14 percent Sub-Saharan African.

Whats interesting is how the white supremacists respond to these disconcerting test results. Aaron Panofsky and Joan Donovan, sociologists at UCLA, studied online discussions of genetic ancestry test results on the white nationalist website Stormfront. They found that the participants used fairly sophisticated reasoning to challenge the results and regain their whiteness.

Cobb, for instance, denounced his test as statistical noise and described it as a Jewish conspiracy to spread junk science whose intent is to defame, confuse and deracinate young whites on a mass levelespecially males. Using a test from another company he was able to claim that he was European, apart from a 3% Iberian thing.

Panofsky and Donovan conclude that genetics cannot refute racist views. Even though mankind probably came from Africa and even though the notion of racial purity is absurd, racists can manipulate and interpret data for their own purposes. They conclude:

clear communication, simple forms of education, and collective denunciations of scientific misuses, scientists preferred forms of anti-racist action, are insufficient for the task. Challenging racists public understanding of science is not simply a matter of more education or nuance, but may require scientists to rethink their research paradigms and reflexively interrogate their own knowledge production.

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Can genetics refute white supremacist theories? - BioEdge

Increased Confidence Earns Myriad Genetics An Upgrade – Benzinga

Deutsche Bank upgraded Myriad Genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ: MYGN), as it believes the risk/reward is now balanced following the company below-consensus sales and earnings per share guidance for 2018.

The firm upgraded the rating from Sell to Hold, with the price target at $28.

At time of writing, shares of Myriad Genetics were rallying 3.19 percent to $28.75.

Analyst Dan Leonard said he was earlier concerned that the Street numbers were too high and didn't sufficiently reflect downside in the company's Hereditary Cancer Testing, or HTC, business, which accounts for 74 percent of the total sales. The company's sales guidance for 2018 was 4 percent below the Street estimates at the midpoint, the analyst noted.

See also: August PDUFA Dates: Biotech Investors Stay Tuned To A Month Of Plenty

Deutsche Bank believes the price erosion in the core hereditary cancer testing business is likely to be metered post 2019, given that cost of HCT isn't a large portion of spend at any given payer.

Additionally, the firm noted that payers have historically used prior authorization as the primary lever to limit genetic testing spend, rather than price. The firm said payers may not prefer discriminating between providers, given the challenge posed by getting acquainted with the evolving medical practice, the firm said.

Meanwhile, Deutsche Bank also indicated Myriad Genetics is able to convince payers that the other HCT options aren't perfect substitutes for its tests due to its variant database and the FDA approved status of its BRCAnalysis test.

The firm also sees opportunity for volume gains to continue.

Deutsche Bank believes the Street estimates through 2020 now appear more appropriate, while opining that its estimates are largely in line save some timing differences.

"We would be more constructive on greater conviction in MYGN's efforts outside of hereditary cancer testing and/or greater volume growth in hereditary cancer testing," the firm concluded.

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Posted-In: Deutsche Bank - Dan LeonardAnalyst Color Upgrades Analyst Ratings Best of Benzinga

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Increased Confidence Earns Myriad Genetics An Upgrade - Benzinga

East Yorkshire company to supply beef genetics to a French co-operative – Darlington and Stockton Times

AN EAST Yorkshire company has agreed an initial five-year contract to supply beef genetics to a French co-operative.

The Stabiliser Cattle Company (SCC) of Givendale, near Pocklington, York, has signed an agreement for Bovinext to be the exclusive provider of Stabiliser genetics to French breeders.

Stabilisers continue to be the fastest growing breed of cattle in the UK, and their moderate, easy calving frame with high fertility and efficient feed conversion traits opened the gates to the new international export market.

Laurent Rouyer, president of Bovinext, said French farmers are increasingly aware of their native breeds becoming too big for the market and not delivering consistent, high-marbled meat quality for which there is growing consumer demand.

He said these factors, and the desire to increase farm margins had generated a lot of excitement on the French market with 50 breeders already making plans to use Stabiliser semen and embryos.

The initial five year contract is set to deliver genetics through extensive semen sales and embryo transfers, with an initial target of 1,000 Stabiliser breeding females in France.

Live cattle exports will also be a crucial component of meeting the target and the first set of breeding heifers will arrive in France in November according to SCC technical manager Dr Duncan Pullar.

French born Stabiliser calves will be included in the UK EBV evaluation programme to ensure continued genetic progress and on-going links with Stabilisers in the UK.

Dr Pullar said: Including the performance data generated in France in our UK evaluation is going to make a good project even stronger because French breeders will be able to compare their cattle with those in the UK and make good breeding decisions based on the same EBVs.

AHDBs French export manager Rmi Fourrier, who facilitated the agreement, said it was a win-win situation in that it supports UK farmers while showcasing quality beef and genetics the UK has to offer.

Richard Fuller, SCC business development director, predicted the agreement would increase future demand for UK beef genetics.

He said: The potential in France is enormous for UK beef genetics by working with Bovinexts million-cow network.

French breeds swept into the UK in the 1960s and 1970s because they outperformed the native breeds on growth and yield.

How exciting now that we can export Stabiliser beef cattle genetics that excel in growth, yield and eating quality to the French! We fully expect more demand for our genetics.

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East Yorkshire company to supply beef genetics to a French co-operative - Darlington and Stockton Times

Fluidigm (FLDM) Licenses CFTR Assay From Baylor Genetics … – Nasdaq

South San Francisco, CA-based Fluidigm Corporation FLDM , a leading player in the analysis of single cells and industrial application of genomics, recently announced that it has entered into a licensing agreement with Baylor Genetics.

Per the agreement, Fluidigm licensed the rights to commercialize the CFTR (cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator) library prep assay developed by Baylor Genetics for research purposes. This would be used with its proprietary Juno automated microfluidic system. The targeted library prep assay enables accurate identification of variants from each of the 27 exons in the CFTR gene and selected intronic regions. When combined with Fluidigm microfluidics, this solution has the potential to significantly simplify complex labor-intensive laboratory workflows and improve the efficiency of CFTR sequencing. This would invariably improve the efficiency of its Juno automated microfluidic system and help the company to capture a considerable market share.

Next-generation sequencing offers a more comprehensive approach to CFTR genetic analysis by allowing a complete view of the sequence. Targeted sequencing library prep workflows, however, can be very labor-intensive. With the application of Fluidigm automated microfluidics technology, library preparation can be streamlined to provide significant efficiencies.

Over the past one month, Fluidigm has underperformed the broader industry . The stock has shed 7.1%, compared with the industry's decline of 3.1%.

Fluidigm develops, manufactures and markets life science analytical and preparatory systems for markets such as mass cytometry, high-throughput genomics, and single cell genomics. The company caters to leading academic institutions, clinical research laboratories and pharmaceuticals, biotechnology and agricultural biotechnology companies worldwide.

Zacks Rank & Key Picks

Currently, Fluidigm has a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold). A few better-ranked medical stocks are Edwards Lifesciences Corp. EW , Lantheus Holdings, Inc. LNTH and Align Technology, Inc. ALGN . Edwards Lifesciences and Align Technology sport a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy), while Lantheus Holdings carries a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy). You can see the complete list of today's Zacks #1 Rank stocks here .

Edwards Lifesciences has a long-term expected earnings growth rate of 15.2%. The stock has gained around 3.2% over the last three months.

Lantheus Holdings has a long-term expected earnings growth rate of 12.5%. The stock has gained 66.1% over the last six months.

Align Technology has a long-term expected earnings growth rate of 26.6%. The stock has rallied roughly 29.6% over the last three months.

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Hendrix Genetics opens new hatchery in Grand Island | Agriculture … – Grand Island Independent

Gov. Pete Ricketts was on hand Tuesday to help celebrate the opening of Hendrix Genetics new hatchery in Grand Island.

The $18.5 million facility at 2325 W. Schimmer Drive covers 20 acres in the northeast section of Grand Islands Platte Valley Industrial Park-East.

Along with Ricketts, representatives of Hendrix Genetics from Europe and North America were in attendance. The new hatchery operation will serve 10 percent of the U.S. market demand.

It is a fantastic state-of-the-art facility for this hatchery, said Ricketts, who toured the facility with Nebraska Department of Agriculture Director Greg Ibach.

The governor called the plant a great example of value-added agriculture and how we are going to grow Nebraska.

It is not only a $20 million investment here that will create between 40 to 50 jobs, but it is going to allow area farmers to put up these barns for the eggs that will supply this hatchery and a diversified revenue stream for those farmers who are participating, Ricketts said.

The farmers who are putting up the barns to raise the eggs for Hendrix Genetics will be feeding their layers feed thats coming from out state, he said.

It is an example of how we take a commodity and add value to them in order to grow our state and grow our economy, Ricketts said.

By continuing to focus on value-added agriculture, like with the Hendrix Genetics facility, he said, jobs will be created that will allow the next generation of Nebraskans to remain in the state.

Attending the ceremony was Antoon van den Berg, chief executive officer of Hendrix Genetics.

This is a showcase for the company, van den Berg said.

He said having the facility in Nebraska is important.

It is a big important and high-value market, van den Berg said.

Currently, Hendrix Genetics has 25 percent of the U.S. market.

We needed the facility here to grow markets, van den Berg said.

After searching throughout the U.S. for a location for a new hatchery, he said, the company found that the Grand Island location fitted its goal to expand its market share because of the communitys central location in the U.S. and the fact that it isnt located in a densely populated area for biosecurity.

I think Nebraska has done an excellent job to motivate us to build here, van den Berg said.

Dave Taylor, president of the Grand Island Area Economic Development Corp., said the Hendrix Genetics plant will add 43 jobs and represents a more than $40 million infusion to the area economy.

Taylor said the facility will not only have an economic impact on Grand Island, but Central Nebraska as a whole.

In addition to the main hatchery in Grand Island, 11 outlying barns to support the facility are planned for development within 100 miles of the facility, with eight already in progress or complete.

The barns are located in Buffalo, Fillmore, Franklin, Nuckolls, Merrick, York, Clay and Gosper counties.

It is a very exciting time for us and for our ag economy with the addition of poultry, Taylor said.

The Grand Island Area Economic Development Corp. played a large role in recruiting Hendrix Genetics to Grand Island.

Just being able to hire 43 new people to the area is really exciting, Taylor said.

Serv Hermans, Hendricks Genetics managing director for layers, said the company is pleased to be opening our state-of-the-art layer hatchery in Grand Island.

The city and state offered a number of benefits for our operations, including proximity to our customers and feed sources, strong partnership with local representatives and community incentives, Hermans said. The opening is just the next step in building a long and positive relationship with the Grand Island people and establishing our production hub here in Nebraska to serve the U.S. market with high-quality products.

Hermans said the Grand Island plant will produce enough chickens to produce 10 billion eggs or about 25 eggs per person in the U.S. In 2016, the U.S. consumption was estimated at 268.4 eggs per person.

Hendrix has two other hatcheries in the U.S.

We feel extremely proud here today in this new building so we can contribute to feeding the world, Hermans said.

Hendrix Genetics is a privately held, international multi-species breeding company with activities in layer, turkey, swine, traditional poultry and aquaculture breeding. The layer business unit of Hendrix Genetics breeds pure line layers in seven R&D centers, located in Canada, France and the Netherlands, and produces parent stock of day-old chicks in five main production centers, located in Canada, Brazil, Netherlands, France and Indonesia. Hendrix Genetics is headquartered in Boxmeer, the Netherlands.

The company has more than 2,800 employees and leads the world in turkey, layer and trout breeding. It also has a growing share in swine, salmon and guinea fowl breeding worldwide.

Also attending the ceremony was Doug Metzler, general manager for layers for Hendrix, and Peter Mumm, Hendrix director of business development.

This is a huge development for us, said Metzler. It is a wonderful opportunity. It signals a growing business that is exciting and a great opportunity to be involved in distribution in a new area of the country for us.

He said the Grand Island facility will produce layer hens that will be sold to Hendrix customers to produce table eggs and eggs for the food product industry.

The fertile eggs will come from the 11 area farmers that Hendrix has contracted with as soon as they are hatched. Hendrix provides the producers with the breeding stock.

Once the freshly laid eggs come to the plant, theyre incubated for 21 days in the facility. When the baby chicks are hatched, they are distributed to Hendrix customers for their own operations to produce eggs for the industry.

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Hendrix Genetics opens new hatchery in Grand Island | Agriculture ... - Grand Island Independent

New Neuroscience Major Immerses Students in Research – Bethel University News

August 18, 2017 | 10:30 a.m.

One of the best ways to describe Bethels new B.S. in Neuroscience degree is this: research focused. The breadth of research available to students sets Bethels program apart and ensures students are well prepared for medical and graduate school and their future careers.

Students need to leave their undergraduate experience with published papers and extensive research experience, says Melissa Cordes, assistant professor of biological sciences and a neuroscience faculty member. Getting into graduate school isnt just about grades any more, she explains. Thats why Bethels neuroscience major includes an independent research project. Additionally, neuroscience professors will work actively to make sure that each student has access to hands-on research opportunities both on and off Bethels campus.

Offered by the biology and psychology departments, the neuroscience major is a response to growth in the field and the interests of new and current students. In a proposal submitted as part of the approval process for the major, Bethel estimated that 30 to 40 students would participate in the program in its first four years.

Adam Johnson, professor of psychology, holds a Ph.D. in neuroscience and already works with students interested in the field. He recently toldBethel Magazineabout one unique research opportunity. With funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Johnson and a group of four Bethel students worked on research during the past academic year, then went to Boston University to continue. They were able to collaborate with post-doctoral researchers, graduate students, and Howard Eichenbaum, director of Boston Universitys Center for Memory and Brain. While the NIH does not have a history of funding undergraduate training programs, our program provides a truly innovative model for launching undergraduate students into the neurosciences, Johnson writes about the grant.

Students who major in neuroscience will gain extensive laboratory experience. For instance, one course immerses students in lab twice a week for four hours eacheight hours of lab a week. Neurosciences blending of biology and psychology means students will learn animal and human research techniques. Furthermore, theyll gain a solid scientific foundation, taking courses in microbiology and abnormal psychology, as well as organic chemistry and physics.

In addition to Cordes and Johnson, the neuroscience faculty will include William McVaugh, associate professor of biological sciences, and new psychology faculty member Sherryse Corrow. The neuroscience major continues Bethels tradition of academic excellence. To learn more about the program or to apply, visit the B.S. in Neuroscience webpage through thebiologyorpsychology departments.

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New Neuroscience Major Immerses Students in Research - Bethel University News

Neuroscience developments have greatly improved district intervention strategies – Education Dive

Dive Brief:

A number of adjustments have made providing effective intervention and support for struggling students much easier for educators, and there's more to it than just technology. A rethinking of discipline has factored heavily into these efforts, as well. Greater awareness of the negative impacts of "zero-tolerance" policies that favor suspension, expulsion and referrals to the juvenile justice system for minor infractions has brought a rise in the use of restorative justice programs and other tactics focused on addressing what's causing students' behavioral issues, including socioeconomic factors and their home environment.

In a February interview, Sylacauga City Schools (AL) Director of Instruction and Intervention Carol Martin shared her district's best practices on RTI, noting the importance of data in intervention efforts and how to get parental buy-in. The latter has been a particularly sensitive topic for some, with parents naturally concerned about what data is being gathered on their children and how it is ultimately used by both the school/district and any third party.

"We have data workshops for parents, and assessment workshops, where we put all the data on the table for their child," Martin said."I think you have to make it personal. I believe we get uncomfortable when we dont have our own data in our hands. If parents can see a report telling exactly where their child grew, on what skills and what the percentages are what parent doesnt wanna know that?"

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Neuroscience developments have greatly improved district intervention strategies - Education Dive

Industrial-scale high-resolution brain mapping for neuroscience – Next Big Future

Neuroscientists who painstakingly map the twists and turns of neural circuitry through the brain are about to see their field expand to an industrial scale. A huge facility set to open in Suzhou, China, next month should transform high-resolution brain mapping, its developers say.

Where typical laboratories might use one or two brain-imaging systems, the new facility boasts 50 automated machines that can rapidly slice up a mouse brain, snap high-definition pictures of each slice and reconstruct those into a 3D picture. This factory-like scale will dramatically accelerate progress, says Hongkui Zeng, a molecular biologist at the Allen Institute for Brain Science in Seattle, Washington, which is partnering with the centre. Large-scale, standardized data generation in an industrial manner will change the way neuroscience is done, she says.

The institute, which will also image human brains, aims to be an international hub that will help researchers to map neural connectivity for everything from studies of Alzheimers disease to brain-inspired artificial-intelligence projects, says Qingming Luo, a researcher in biomedical imaging at the Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST) in Wuhan, China. Luo leads the new facility, called the HUST-Suzhou Institute for Brainsmatics, which has a 5-year budget of 450 million yuan (US$67 million) and will employ some 120 scientists and technicians. Luo, who calls himself a brainsmatician, also built the institutes high-speed brain-imaging systems.

Old maps often require months or years of effort. The process involves shaving centimetre-long mouse brains into 15,000 ultrathin slices with a diamond blade, staining each layer with chemicals or fluorescent tags to pick out particular features, imaging each layer with a microscope and then reconstructing the images into a 3D map.

High-speed mapping

Thats where Luos institute can help. Its vast number of machines have impressive speed and resolution, collaborators say. According to Zeng, the devices can gather the same amount of detail on a mouse brain in two weeks as would require months using other technologies, such as super-resolution confocal imaging.

The Suzhou institute will generate a huge amount of data: each mouse brain map alone will be 8 terabytes, Luo says. But the volume of a human brain is nearly 1,500 times that of a mouse brain; it would take a single machine around 20 years to digitally reconstruct one at the institutes current rate. Luo aims to increase the speed of his machines and to use multiple devices in parallel.

Luo is keen for worldwide collaboration; along with the Allen Institute and Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Stanford University in California is forming a partnership with the centre. But Luo says that interest is so high that he wont be able to accommodate everyone. We are already turning people down.

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Industrial-scale high-resolution brain mapping for neuroscience - Next Big Future

Your Brain on Hate: Charlottesville, Trump and the Physiology of Loathing – Newsweek

The white supremacist and neo-Nazi protesters in Charlottesville, Virginia, hold vile and abhorrent views, and they should be condemned in the strongest terms by all political, business, and civic leaders. That these poisonous views spilled over into the killing of Heather Heyer shows how odious ideas can metastasize through a crowd. But before hatred manifests into violence, it must first be conceived, processed and perceived in the brain. Understanding the physiological and evolutionary underpinnings of hate within this organ might offer clues as to what drove the protesters in Charlottesville to act in such a repulsive manner.

The brain has a circuit that activates when it processes hatred. In neuroscience parlance, this circuit is composed of the right putamen, medial frontal gyrus, premotor cortex and medial insula, according to a University College London study, in which researchers scanned the brains of participants as they looked at images of those they professed to hate. The researchers discovered that these brain regions show significant activity. Parts of this hate circuit are also known to activate during acts of aggression. It isnt remarkable that hatred and hostility share similar neural correlates. But its physiological evidence that the distance between scorn and savagery can be measured not just in the size of crowds but the pathways of neurons. When David Duke explicitly and Donald Trump tacitly stoke hatred, they may be triggering the brains hate circuit which can readily crackle into violent behavior.

The hate circuit may even override empathy. In a study by Stanford neuroscientist David Eagleman, the brains of participants were scanned while they watched as six hands on a screen were randomly swabbed with cotton or stabbed with a needle. When people witnessed the hands that were punctured by the syringe, the regions of their brains associated with pain activated. They felt empathy. The study was then replicated and each hand was displayed with a one-word religious label such as atheist, Christian, Jew or Muslim. When participants saw the hands being stabbed of those who shared their religious affiliations, their brains on average showed more activity in the regions known for empathy. Even atheists were more empathetic towards fellow atheists. As concludes Eagleman in his book The Brain: The Story of You: Its about which team youre on.

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Related: My life as a white supremacist

White supremacists clash with counterprotesters at a rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, on August 12. Joshua Roberts/Reuters

While people have historically formed teams to survive, such tribalism can dull empathy and fuel hatred towards others. The white supremacists and other right wing extremists who mobilized in Charlottesville were demonstrating hate. But they are hateful and angry because theyre afraid. They fear that their team is losing significance in our country. A majority of children in the United States will be non-white by 2020. The overall non-white minority is projected to increase from 38 percent of the total population to 56 percent in 2060. The white supremacists are troubled by the rise of the other teams such as minorities and immigrants and may resort to violence in order to spread fear.

When President Donald Trump doesnt outright reject the white nationalist worldview, he implicitly condones those who have brains full of hate. When he retweets the opinions of white supremacists, he further stokes intolerance. When he castigates immigrants and implements religious-based travel bans, he provokes xenophobia and an us against them mentality. And because we increasingly see ourselves on different teams, its ever more difficult for our brains to register empathy towards each other.

As our leader, President Trump has a moral responsibility to do more to call out and condemn bigotrybefore it creates greater barriers between Americans. Throughout history, hatred has resulted in internecine battles that have splintered countries, the United States included. With a hateful brain, its almost impossible to obtain what we most needan open mind.

Deepak Chopra and Kabir Sehgal created Home: Where Everyone Is Welcome, a book of poems and album of songs inspired by American immigrants.

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Your Brain on Hate: Charlottesville, Trump and the Physiology of Loathing - Newsweek

AAU’s Physiology HOD proposes to his girlfriend during students … – NAIJ.COM

A lecturer at the Ambrose Alli University has given students and fellow lecturers a night to remember after he proposed to his girlfriend at a school dinner.

The lecturer identified as Ernest Nwoke is the Head of Department (HOD) of Physiology in the prestigious school.

NAIJ.com gathered that the lecturer was once married but he lost his wife years ago.

AAU's Physiology HOD proposes to his girlfriend during his students' dinner

He found love again in the young lady who he proposed to on the night of a school dinner for his students.

It was gathered that Nwoke surprised his girlfriends by getting down on one the knee to propose in the midst of other lecturers and students in attendance.

The couple embraced each other after the lady accepted Nwokes romantic proposal.

Meanwhile, NAIJ.com TV went to the street to ask people what men want from women:

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AAU's Physiology HOD proposes to his girlfriend during students ... - NAIJ.COM