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CSU-Pueblo to offer cannabis degree program beginning this fall – FOX 31 Denver

(CNN) Students on Colorado State Universitys Pueblo campus will have the option to study cannabis beginning this fall.

State officials on Friday approved a bachelors of science degree program in Cannabis Biology and Chemistry,according to the Colorado Department of Higher Education, which said it was one of the first such programs in the country.

The new major is a pro-active response to a rapidly changing national scene regarding the cannabis plant, a proposal for the program by CSU-Pueblo officials says, citing shifting attitudes toward cannabis and its legalization for recreational use in numerous states, including Colorado.

The program will be part of CSU-Pueblos department of chemistry and consist mainly of chemistry and biology coursework with some classes in math and physics, the proposal says.

Students could choose one of two tracks either a natural products track focused on biology, or an analytical track that focuses on chemistry.

Graduates could begin careers either in the cannabis and hemp industries or in the government.But they could also be competitive in a wide variety of businesses outside of the cannabis industry, it said, such as agriculture, food science, biochemistry and environmental sciences.

Educating students who are capable of understanding cannabis science is required for the industry in all its aspects to be effective and safe for the consumer, it said.

Between 2014 and June 2019, marijuana sales in Colorado exceeded $6.56 billion, according to the states Department of Revenue. With taxes, license and fee revenue, the states revenue reached more than $1 billion.

CSU-Pueblo anticipates a strong demand for the program, its proposal said, and believe as many 60 students could be enrolled in the major after four years.

The Colorado Department of Higher Education believes it could be the first of several cannabis-focused degrees that pop up at Colorado colleges in the near future.

CSU-Pueblos program will not be the first of its kind. Its proposal cited Northern Michigan Universitys bachelor program in medicinal plant chemistry that it said was primarily tailored to those wanting to enter the cannabis field.

CNN has reached out to CSU-Pueblo for comment.

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CSU-Pueblo to offer cannabis degree program beginning this fall - FOX 31 Denver

New study sheds ‘far-red’ light on the mysteries of photosynthesis – Arizona State University

February 5, 2020

Some 3 billion years ago, tiny organisms known as cyanobacteria helped create an oxygen-rich atmosphere on Earth. Their activities, which continue to the present day, provide an essential ingredient for all advanced life. Such organisms convert radiant sunlight into useable energy through photosynthesis, yet scientists are still sketchy on the details of this vital process.

In a new study, Penn State joins colleagues from Arizona State Universitys Biodesign Institute. Their investigations of photosynthesis demonstrate that certain types of cyanobacteria are able to acclimate to faint, long-wavelength light (known as far-red light) not normally captured by plants and other species of cyanobacteria. This remarkable ability gives these living forms an adaptive edge in environments where direct sunlight is limited. Some species of cyanobacteria can perform a surprising feat. When deprived of direct sunlight, they are able to use long-wavelength light to carry out photosynthesis. Such organisms acclimate to the far-red light by switching from their normal form of chlorophyl known as chlorophyll a to an alternate form, chlorophyll f. This allows absorption of light with wavelengths above 680nm. The behavior highlights the plasticity of processes in nature and may one day be harnessed to engineer plants and other photosynthesizers that can be grown under shaded conditions. Graphic by Shireen Dooling for the Biodesign Institute at ASU Download Full Image

Many species of cyanobacteria are common in both aquatic and terrestrial environments. When they find themselves obscured by other organisms, for example, beneath a pond surface or on a forest floor, some are able to acclimate, harvesting the weaker sunlight filtering down to them and using it to drive photosynthesis.

The talent of cyanobacteria for modifying their own architecture and gathering far red light from their environment highlights the remarkable adaptive and acclimation mechanisms present throughout nature. This newly discovered ability in some microorganisms could one day be harnessed to engineer crops that thrive under shaded conditions and may inspire innovations in sustainable energy.

The groups findings appear in the current issue of the journal Science Advances.

Cyanobacteria are a diverse group of photosynthetic bacteria, flourishing in moist soils and aquatic environments, living freely or in symbiotic relationships with other life forms. Chris Gisriel, formerly a researcher at ASUs Biodesign Center for Applied Structural Discovery and currently a postdoctoral associate at Yale, is the lead author of the new study. He emphasizes the critical importance of these microbes for humans and all other life.

Cyanobacteria make a huge contribution to the total amount of photosynthesis that's occuring on Earth, which means, the oxygen that we breathe, Gisriel said.

It also produces the primary biomaterials upon which all life on Earth depends.

Indeed, cyanobacteria represent about 50% of all earthly photosynthetic activity or primary production supplying an oxygen-rich atmosphere conducive to life and a rich food supply for aquatic life. Cyanobacteria are so plentiful and ubiquitous across the earth that they reign above all existing plant life in terms of generating oxygen, making them the most important primary producers on the planet. Their ability to thrive in virtually any environmental niche and their simple growth requirements allow them to flourish in astonishing abundance.

As a postdoctoral researcher in the 1970s, I studied a similar type of acclimation of a different part of the photosynthetic apparatus in cyanobacteria, a process known as complementary chromatic acclimation, which affects light-harvesting proteins that do not contain chlorophyll, said Don Bryant, Ernest C. Pollard Professor at Penn State. Forty years later, one of my students serendipitiously discovers a chlorophyll-based version of a similar phenomenon, and I am back to the future studying something I had worked on with a much more limited biochemical toolkit than my lab has now. What comes around goes around even in science sometimes.

The current study focuses on Fischerella thermalis, a terrestrial cyanobacterium that has been used in the past as a model organism for the study of photosynthesis. When such cyanobacteria are deprived of the white light most conducive to their growth and photosynthetic activities, they shift gears in order to process far-red light.

The secret to their success, as Gisriel explains, is in their light-harvesting apparatus, specifically, proteins containing chlorophyll.

Chlorophyll is what makes plants green. Its also what does the light harvesting its the antenna, Gisriel said. When chlorophylls in a cyanobacteriums protein structure absorb light, they convert it into the metabolic driving source powering the cell.

The complex machinery of photosynthesis is carried out in two primary reaction centers, known as photosystem I and photosystem II, (PSI and PSII). The current study focuses on PSI, teasing out the alterations in F. thermalis that permit it to access and use far red-light for photosynthesis.

Understanding how photosynthesis has evolved in different flavors and in different environments is what we're really interested in, Gisriel said. The ability to absorb far-red light is what this paper is about. Like all species of cyanobacteria, F. thermlis is rich in chlorophyll.

But not all molecules of chlorophyll are created equal. In the case of F. thermalis, its usual complement of chlorophyll, known as chlorophyll a, is partially replaced under far-red light conditions with a closely related yet chemically distinct form of the molecule, known as chlorophyll f. It is this alternate form of chlorophyll that enables F. thermalis to harvest and use far-red light to continue photosynthetic activities. By synthesizing and incorporating around 8% chlorophyll f into their photosystem I (PSI) complexes, F. thermalis is able to carry out photosynthesis using far-red light of up to nearly 800 nm.

If you put these organisms in white light, they only use chlorophyll a and they're just like all the other cyanobacteria, Gisriel said. But if you move them to the shade, where they have more of this lower energy, far-red light, they actually switch out some of the chlorophyll a's for chlorophyll f, and that allows them to absorb far-red light. Thats a testament to the plasticity of photosynthesis it can adapt to many environments, which I think is a pretty incredible mechanism. This process is controlled by a protein that senses the incident light wavelength, and activates the production of the modified photosynthetic apparatus only when far-red light is predominant over visible light.

Research suggests that perhaps 25% of all cyanobacteria can access and use far-red light for photosynthesis. This would imply that a significant portion of net primary production on Earth is a direct result of this unusual adaptation.

Examining the structural makeup of protein complexes like PSI requires researchers to peer into natural phenomena occurring at the nanometer scale (i.e., billionths of a meter). One of two methods are usually used. The first, known as X-ray crystallography, produces detailed structural information by striking crystalized samples with high intensity X-ray light, producing a series of diffraction patterns that can be computer-assembled into high resolution images.

The second method and the one applied in the current study, is a powerful new microscopy technique, known as Cryo-EM (for cryogenic electron microscopy). Here, instead of crystallizing samples for study, they are cooled to very low temperatures and embedded in ice. The method allows for structural determination without the need for crystallization and can determine biomolecular structures with near-atomic scale resolution. The technique has proven so powerful, its invention was honored with the2017 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

Cryo-EM involves gathering thousands of images of sample particles in various orientations and using computer algorithms to re-assemble the images into a detailed, three-dimensional composite, known as a density map. Using the method, the researchers were able to solve the structure of PSI, revealing the locations of chlorophyll f molecules present in F. thermalis responsible for far-red light acclimation. Cryo-EM is a particularly powerful technology for solving the structure of large, complex proteins and complexes like PSI, which have been challenging targets for X-ray crystallography.

Petra Fromme, director of the Biodesign Center for Applied Structural Discovery and co-author of the new study elaborates: Isolating PSI a huge million-atom complex and keeping it stable until you can determine its structure is very challenging. It took us over a decade to solve the first ever PSI structure using powerful X-rays two decades ago. With Chriss leadership, we were able to solve the structure of PSI from a completely new organism in just one year using ASUs state-of-the-art Cryo-EM, which is quite remarkable.

Scientists would like to know more about the evolutionary underpinnings of far-red light exploitation by photosynthetic organisms. Presumably, when population numbers caused cyanobacteria to be in fierce competition for the visible light component of direct sunlight, strong selective pressure caused some to find an alternate means of carrying out photosynthetic operations essential to their survival. For this reason, it is believed that such organisms first developed chlorophyll a and that chlorophyll f likely evolved later, though no one is sure.

The work offers only tentative steps in the direction of understanding far-red light photosynthesis. Nevertheless, the findings suggest exciting possibilities for future applications. Crops could potentially be tweaked to control their light absorption properties depending on ambient light conditions. Perhaps two crops could be grown in conjunction, with shorter crops like alfalfa extracting far-red light from their shaded location beneath a taller crop like corn. Such an arrangement would allow double the crop yield per unit area. The process is also not limited to crops but could theoretically be applied to any useful photosynthetic organisms.

Further afield, a better understanding of far-red light acclimation in cyanobacteria could also inform a new generation of synthetic light-harvesting technologies like photovoltaics, potentially increasing their versatility under varying sunlight conditions.

The ASU team included faculty working at the Biodesign Center for Applied Structural Discovery and the School of Molecular Sciences including Center Director Petra Fromme. The researchers include first author Chris Gisriel, with support from Shangji Zhang and Dewight Williams. Gisriel conducted these experiments while a postdoctoral associate in the Biodesign Center for Applied Structural Discovery at ASU and since has joined the group of Gary Brudvig at Yale University as a postdoctoral associate.

Other authors on the paper include Gaozhong Shen, associate research professor in biochemistry and molecular biology; Vasily Kurashov, assistant research professor in biochemistry and molecular biology; and John Golbeck, professor of biochemistry and biophysics and of chemistry, all at Penn State. Author Ming-Yang Ho was a graduate student in biochemistry and molecular biology at Penn State when he participated in the research and is now an assistant professor of life science at National Taiwan University.

This work was supported by the National Science Foundation and the Biodesign Center for Applied Structural Discovery at Arizona State University. Some of this research was also conducted under the auspices of the Photosynthetic Antenna Research Center, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the Department of Energy. The work made use of the FEI Titan Krios (NSF 1531991) at Arizona State University.

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New study sheds 'far-red' light on the mysteries of photosynthesis - Arizona State University

Human Behavior, My Brain Made Me do It? – Dealing with …

Allan Schwartz, LCSW, Ph.D. was in private practice for more than thirty years. He is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker in the states...Read More

Science has made huge strides in understanding the human brain and how it functions. For example, we know that the frontal lobes are the center of rational thinking and of self control. It is also understood that neurotransmitters, or brain chemicals, are responsible for our moods and of the general state that we are in. It is also known that severe mental illnesses, such as Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder, are diseases of the brain. Lesions or damage to the frontal lobes and to other parts of the brain can and affect impulses and impulsive behaviors. All of this knowledge raises disturbing questions. Does any of this mean that we are not responsible for our behavior? Does it mean that we have no free will because my brain made me do it? It its true that my brain made me do it then, as a result, anything I do is a result of the way my brain works. In other words, I didnt choose to steal that item, my brain did?

In criminal trials something called the insanity defense is used when the defendant claims they are not responsible for their actions because of mental health problems. Another defense is called diminished capacity. The diminished capacity plea differs in important ways from not guilty by reason of insanity. In a successful plea of insanity the result is a verdict of not guilty. In this case the judge sends the defendant to a mental institution until it is determined that they are sane. At such time they are discharged from the hospital. Remember, they have been found not guilty. On the other hand, a successful plea of diminished capacity results in the defendant being convicted of a lesser offense and a lesser prison sentence than if they were guilty with full capacity.

So, does this mean that people who commit crimes do so because of the way their brain works? In fact, cant it be said that, even with full capacity, a person should not be held responsible for their crimes because their brain made them do it?

Of course, there is the argument that behavior results from environmental influences. In this case, if some was physically, emotionally and verbally abused during childhood, it explains and forgives their decisions as adults. From time to time I have heard this said about some of the rudest people I have met. For example, rudeness is excused because someone had a tough childhood. In another example, a surly and nasty department store clerk is forgiven because they have a boring job. In these cases it is not their brain that made them do it. Instead, their environment made them do it>

In reality, human behavior and psychology are complicated. It is most likely that our behaviors result from a complex interplay between each of our genetic make-up, brain chemistry and functioning and the economic, social and psychological environments in which we grew up and live.

The basic question remains: Are we responsible for our decisions and behaviors?

I will provide my opinion but I would like to hear from my readers about this issue.

In my opinion, we are responsible for our behaviors. If may boss yelled at me, my wife did not make dinner for me for when I got home from work and I kicked the cat and yelled at the kids, I am responsible for my bad behavior. Simply stated, there is no excuse for kicking the cat and yelling at the kids. In a similar way, this latest mass murderer in Colorado is responsible for his decisions and actions.

What is your opinion?

Allan N. Schwartz, PhD.

Keep Reading By Author Allan Schwartz, LCSW, Ph.D.

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Human Behavior, My Brain Made Me do It? - Dealing with ...

What Jobs Can I Get With a PhD in Human Behavior? | Career …

Doctorates in human behavior are usually granted by university psychology and education departments to students working in a specialty known as applied behavior analysis. This specialty looks at how negative behaviors can be weakened and replaced with positive behaviors. Charts are created to monitor behaviors to determine which interventions are working. Behavior analysis doctoral programs frequently offer two possible tracks: One track prepares students to become college professors and the other trains students who want to become licensed behavior analysts.

Applied behavior analysis began as a specialization within psychology called "behavior modification," by B. F. Skinner, a research psychologist, in 1938. Skinner's first experiments trained rats to press levers for food pellets and to switch off unpleasant electric currents. Skinner's research on positive and negative reinforcements was later applied to human behaviors and is now known as applied behavior analysis. As of 2013, the two wings of the profession -- the psychologists devoted to research and the licensed behavior analysts -- have split into two separate professional groups, the Association for Behavior Analysis International for researchers and the Association of Professional Behavior Analysts for therapists.

Doctoral students entering the teaching and research track take classes in applied behavior analysis and research study design. Students are expected to carry out their own behavior analysis research projects and write a dissertation. While the academic job market is crowded, a 2011 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) report forecast that jobs for psychology professors are expected to grow by 10 to 19 percent between 2010 and 2020, an average rate of job growth. Applied behavior faculty positions also exist in university schools of education. Master's degree and doctoral-level psychology professors earned an average annual salary of $68,020 in 2011, according to the BLS.

Doctoral programs currently offer future behavior analysts training leading to independent practices or work with clients in organizations. A newly graduated Ph.D. takes a national examination to become a board certified behavior analyst. As of 2011, more than 9,000 behavior analysts holding bachelor's, master's or doctoral degrees passed behavior analyst certification exams. In 2013 an estimated 35 states required future behavior analysts to comply with licensing or certification requirements.

Licensed behavior analysts work in a variety of settings. Behavior analysts treating autistic children teach them communication and socializing skills. A behavior analyst who specializes in school psychology may design and oversee behavior support treatment plans for children coping with emotional problems. Some behavior analysts form their own businesses and consult on behavior changes for families, schools and clinics. A 2009 survey by the Association of Professional Behavior Analysts showed that the majority of behavior analysts with master's and doctoral degrees earned between $40,000 and $80,000 per year. The survey indicated that most behavior analysts were treating children with autism or other developmental disabilities. Continuing growth in autism diagnoses will likely fuel ongoing increases in employment for licensed behavior analysts.

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What Jobs Can I Get With a PhD in Human Behavior? | Career ...

20 Interesting Facts You Didnt Know about Human Behavior …

1. People with high levels of testosterone get pleasure from the anger of others.2. People with low self-esteem tend to humiliate others. Subjects who were told that the results of their IQ test were poor expressed more national and religious prejudices, than those who reported higher results.3. People sincerely believe that their negative opinions about others are truthful and have no connection with them and their self-confidence. In fact, the humiliation of others helps them restore their own self-esteem.

4. The behavior of people is affected by bodily sensations. For example, there is a strong association between heaviness and such features as importance and seriousness. A person is assessed as more serious and sustained, if his CV was applied in a heavy folder, and vice versa.

5. Similarly, the feeling of rigidity and hardness makes people inflexible. People sitting on hard chairs were more uncompromising in the negotiations. Feeling a rough surface causes in people a sense of the complexity of human relations, and cold is tightly connected with the feeling of loneliness.

6. People tend to commit immoral acts or do not fulfill someones request for help, if no effort is needed and they do not have to refuse a person directly.

7. However, more people behave as expected if they have to take a moral decision in front of someone.

8. Lying requires a lot of mental effort. A person who is lying has to keep in mind at the same time the lie that it to say, and the truth in order to hide it. As a result, he uses simple sentences and finds it more difficult to cope with mental tasks.

9. When people are being watched, they behave better. And the illusion of being watched works, too. It was enough to hang a picture of human eyes in a self-service cafeteria, so that more people began to collect their dishes.

10. Behavior affects morality. People who lied, betrayed someone or committed other immoral act begin to perceive what is good or bad in another way.

11. Attractive and honest appearance can easily be misleading. People tend to trust appearance more than sincerity.

12. Appearance plays an important role even when voting during elections. Maturity and physical attractiveness of politicians were mostly important for voters choice (unconsciously, of course).

13. More successful and rich people are considered to be more intelligent and wise, and vice versa. Often, people tend to think that those who are successful or those who suffer deserve it.

14. Happier is not the one who has a lot of money, but the one who has more than his neighbor does. People constantly compare themselves with others and feel satisfied if they are superior in some respect.

15. Anger increases the desire of possession in people. People make more efforts to obtain the object that is associated with angry faces.

16. The more complex the decision to be taken is, the more people tend to leave things as they are. If the store has too much choice and people cannot immediately find out which of the products is better, most probably they will leave without buying.

17. When people feel they have no control over what is happening, they tend to see non-existent patterns in unrelated pictures and believe in conspiracy theories.

18. People regret quick decisions, even if the results are satisfying. Not the actual time allotted for the decision matters, but the feeling that the time was enough.

19. Not all risks are the same. The same person can fearlessly jump with a parachute, but be afraid of his boss. Or to train tigers, but feel embarrassed when talking to a pretty woman.

20. Boredom has a bright side. Bored people are often looking for ways to do good things as the entertainment bores them and does not bring meaning to their lives.

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Sexual Development and Human Behavior – Explorable.com

Sexual Development

The activity of the sex-determining gene situated at the Y chromosomes short arm influences the sexual development of a zygote (fertilized egg), into becoming a male or a female. Embryonic sexual development begins at 6 weeks, when primordial reproductive structures are formed. Two different systems are involved in the early development of sexual reproductive structures. Male reproductive structures are formed through the Wollfian system, whereas female reproductive structures originate from the Mullerian system. The sex-determining gene in males produces the testis-determining factor (TDF). As TDF is absent in female embryos, their gonads become ovaries, followed by the maturation of the Mullerian system. In males, the undifferentiated gonads develop into testes, which release testosterone that leads to the development of male external organs and also produce a substance that inhibits the Mullerian system.

Males and females have several differences when it comes to sexual response. In males, arousal comes during the excitement phase. In the plateau phase, sexual arousal becomes intensified. Afterwards, male orgasm follows, which includes two phases (1) contraction of the vas deferens, seminal vesicles and prostate gland, and (2) rhythmical contraction of the urethra and penis). Then, the resolution phase occurs, when the male goes back to his non-aroused state with period/s of non-response. Females also experience excitement and plateau phase. During orgasm, there is rhythmic contraction of female genital organs. While most males experience a maximum of four orgasms per sexual activity, females may have multiple orgasms. When a female experiences the resolution phase, she does not experience any refractory period. Succeeding orgasms in females tend to be stronger than the initial orgasm, and thus the sexual activity becomes more pleasurable for them even after the male becomes non-responsive due to his refractory period.

Human sexual behaviors across the lifespan are comprehensively explained by the famous theorist Sigmund Freud in his Psychosexual Development Theory.

In males, sexual behavior starts with the state of arousal, which is produced by increased levels of the hormone testosterone. When a male is castrated, testosterone is lost, leaving him with an inability to have sexual arousal. In females, sexual arousal and behavior are significantly influenced by estrogen levels. Studies show that the increase in female sexual activity occurs between the end of a menstrual cycle and period of ovulation, as well as before menstruation begins.

The hypothalamus indirectly stimulates the production and secretion of the male hormone testosterone. In addition, medial preoptic area elicits male sexual behavior. Directly connected to this area is the medial amydaloid nucleus, which receives information from the olfactory bulbs tasked to detect the pheromones secreted by a receptive female. In response, the cerebral cortex sends signals to initiate motor responses during sexual activity.

In females, the ventromedial part of the hypothalamus stimulates the release of estrogen. Female-typical sexual behavior is associated to the medial preoptic area similar to but smaller than that of the males.

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Sexual Development and Human Behavior - Explorable.com

Learn How to Become a Therapist – The Good Men Project

If youre interested in the world of mental health, you may be intrigued about becoming a therapist. When you want to help people, being a mental health professional a great profession. Theres a difference between a therapist, psychologist, and psychiatrist, all of which are essential players in the world of mental health care. A therapist is someone who works with people or groups and helps them maintain stable mental health. Its not as easy as being a good listener or having an empathetic nature; becoming a therapist is hard work. There are steps involved in being a therapist that allows them to help others as a mental health professional.

You might be wondering how to become a therapist? First, you need to get training in the mental health field. Therapists attend college and study psychology and human behavior. Its not just about reading books; its about the want to learn about how human beings tick. You can have all the education you want, but you have to be passionate about helping others. Before going into university, youll have to complete high school or receive a GED and look into undergraduate psychology programs at universities that youd like to attend. After completing your undergraduate education, youll probably go into graduate school. When youre in undergraduate courses, you must choose which specialty youd like to go into so that you can prepare yourself for your graduate program and supervised training.

Maybe, you want to work with children, or perhaps youre interested in adult psychiatry. Some would like to become marriage and family counselors. When youre studying for your undergraduate degree, its good to think about the population youd like to help. You might take a variety of psychology courses to see what resonates the most with you to help you figure out who you want to work with in the future and what kind of psychology interests you the most. You might not know precisely what kind of therapist you want to be or what type of therapy you want to practice, but undergraduate is a great time to explore and start thinking about what you want to do.

After youve graduated from undergraduate and graduate school, you need to apply for licensing in the state youd like to practice in. You need to complete a number of supervised hours under the eye of someone who is seasoned in the field and has extensive clinical experience. Depending on the state that youre pursuing a license to practice in, the number of hours of supervised training that you have to complete will differ. Its essential to have a supervisor watching you and to take advantage of the time you take to pursue your license because they can provide insight into ways that you can improve your skills.

Do not underestimate the process of networking when you become a therapist. You want to talk to other professionals, make connections within the field, and get the invaluable insight that other mental health professionals have to offer. You can learn all you want by reading books about psychology, but talking to people who have been in the thick of it is extremely important.

Its crucial to practice self-care when youre a therapist. You need to take care of yourself first, like the old saying, put on your oxygen mask before you take care of others. When youre not treating others, its vital to take time to do things that you enjoy. Spend time with friends, go to the movies, go outside, or anything else that brings you joy and clears your mind. You dont have to be a therapist for everyone that comes into your life. Theyre not paying you, and you dont have to maintain the mental health of anyone but yourself and your clients. Your clients are your clients, and your friends are your friends. Part of becoming a therapist is learning firm boundaries, and knowing that you cant be your loved ones therapist, you can be there to support them. If they need mental health treatment, they must seek it from another mental health professional who is an unbiased party.

Therapists deserve to maintain mental stability, like anyone else. Part of being a good therapist is being able to receive therapy yourself when you need it. You need someone to express your thoughts and feelings, and one way to do that is to enter online therapy. Online therapy is an excellent place to express your thoughts and feelings and gain the support that you need.

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Learn How to Become a Therapist - The Good Men Project

The BernieBro myth persists because pundits don’t understand how the internet works – Salon

The nature of punditry makes it hard to tell which myths media personalities earnestly believe in, and which they perpetuate in bad faith. Consider the "welfare queen," a villainous trope popularized by Ronald Reagan in stump speeches in the 1970s, and which never actually existed. Despite being a clear fiction, the idea wastantalizingboth to politicians and pundits, and hence the welfare queen became embedded in culture. Pundits and politicians today still invoke the racist caricature, often through dog-whistles.

Why do some myths persist, or remain uncorrected by the media, while others dissipate? The short answer seems to be that when they serve a media narrative, or play on existing stereotypes, they grow to possessa power that goes beyond fact or truth.To this list of indefatigable myths, one mightadd the pernicious "BernieBro" so ubiquitousa conceptthat it has its own Wikipedia article. The self-explanatory neologism was coined by Robinson Meyer in an Atlantic article in 2015 before being distorted by the Twittersphere and the punditry something that Meyer later came to regret, as he felt the term he reified suffered from "semantic drift."

But that was fiveyears ago, before we had as much data on Sanders' support base which, as it turns out, should be sufficient to debunk the stereotypethat Sanders' support base consists entirely ofa mythic tribe of entitled, pushy young millennial men.To wit:young women make up more of Sanders' base than men. He polls especially high with Hispanic voters, far more so than with white voters;Hispanic voters also donated more money to him than any other Democratic candidate. Polls consistently show that nonwhite voters prefer him over the other candidates. Notably, the demographic group that likes Sanders the least is white men.

Moreover, of all the candidates, Sanders has taken in the most money from women. Many of Sanders' female supporters bemoan how they are ignored by the mainstream press."The 'Bernie Bro' narrative is endlessly galling because it erases the women who make up his base," writer Caitlin PenzeyMoog opined on Twitter. "To paint this picture of sexism is to paint over the millions of women who support Sanders. Do you see how f**ked up that is?"

And yet. Even with all this demographic data on Bernie Sanders' support base, manyintelligent pundits and politicians persist with the myth. How do they justify it? They just know, apparently. But specifically, they feel it on Twitter.

Just one week ago, New York Times op-ed columnist Bret Stephens published a column with the headline "Bernie's Angry Bros." The column did not contain a shred of the aforementioned demographic data about Sanders' support base, but rather was driven by a series of anecdotes supposedly proving his point about the irascible fans of the Vermont senator. Stephens' main evidence, aside fromsocial media anecdotes, was a story aboutSanders supporters getting angry during or after the 2016 Nevada caucuses, believing they hadbeenrigged against their candidate. (The idea that people might grow angry at being disenfranchised is horrifying to Stephens, probably because he is a well-insulatedupper-middle class pundit for whom political decisions have no real material impact on his life unlike the people in Nevada he disparages.)

The Daily Dot has a long featurelistingpundits whohave helped perpetuate the BernieBro narrative long after demographics showed his support base to be a multiracial, working-class coalition. Hillary Clinton apparentlystill believes that Sanders is tailed by a horde of "online Bernie Bros" who issue "relentless attacks on lots of his competitors, particularly the women," as she said in a Hollywood Reporter interviewjust last month.

What could compel otherwiseintelligent people to perpetuate a false and harmful narrative that essentializes Sanders supporters and erases their real and diverse identities?

Again, the answer to that is Twitter. Specifically, how Twitter is understood by journalists and pundits, and how it is wielded by angry people online.

The skewed demographics of Twitter

Twitter, unfortunately, informs the worldview of many of the country's most elite pundits, and some of its politicians too. Opinion columnists like David Brooks and Bret Stephens (both of the New York Times) are excellent examples of pundits who, at various times, seem to see the world as refracted through the bluebird's drinking glass.

The problem is, Twitter is very much not a representative sample of the world. It is not a zeitgeist; it is not a cross-section of the population.

It is hard to understand this, even for very smart people, because the corporation that runs Twitter tries very hard to make it seem like Twitter is the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end of every cultural and political conversation.

But it is not true. However, the eponymous corporation behind Twitter profits from this perception of its platform as a zeitgeist. After all, the president is on it! Still, Twitter (the company) promotes this narrative of itself as where the conversation lives. They make money off of the lie that it is a representative cross-section of the world's opinions and thoughts.

But a study of Twitter demographics say otherwise.

Pew Research polls from 2019 found that about 22% of the US population is on Twitter, and 44% of users are in the 18-24 age range. Linger on that for a second: a substantial proportion of the people getting in Bret Stephens' mentions and making him upset may be scarcely older than children. Interestingly, Jonathan Chait of New York Magazine apundit with whom I rarely agree is on the mark here.

"It is hard to exaggerate the degree to which the platform shapes the minds of professional political observers," he wrote in a recent column."Part of Twitter's allure to insiders is that it creates a simulacrum of the real world, complete with candidates, activists, and pundits all responding to events in real time. Because Twitter superficially resembles the outside world's political debate it does, after all, contain the full left-to-right spectrum it is easy to mistake it for the real thing."

Here's another stat from Pew that helps explain why Twitter is non-representative, a fount of professional-managerial class opinions: Thirty-one percentof Twitter users in the U.S. make more than $75,000, though only 23% of the country makes that much money. Likewise, 20% of U.S. Twitter users make less than $30,000, though about 28% of the country makes that much. The social media site is skewed towards wealthier Americans.

It's too badthere aren't as many statistics aboutwho is active on the site. I've often suspected that people with white-collar office jobs and higher incomes (and thus more leisure time or computer time) are more steady tweeters, while those with manual labor jobs are not constantly perusing feeds and inserting themselves into the commentariat.

Angry people and angry brands

But the demographicsof Twitter'suser base only say so much about the site'sdistorted commentariat. There's also the question of how people behave online, and why they behave so differently than they do in real life. There is a psychological reason why even very nice people are more likely to behave like assholes online. It is called the online disinhibition effect, and it is a big source of misery from pundits who do not understand it. The combination of three factors the anonymity and pseudonymity of being online, the lack of accountability, and the indirect nature of online communications make it so that online communication is dehumanizing, and often cruel.

Demographics and "real" users aside, Twitter like most social media sites has a huge number of accounts that aren't even individuals. A great deal of Twitter users are instead are brands, spam accounts or botswho behave likeactual people.

Because of this, getting in arguments with "people" on Twitter or even just seeing Twitter as the so-called public sphere is akin to arguing politics with a clown in a funhouse mirror. It is so heavily distorted by corporate PR and marketing, by the way that people behave differently online, and even by powerful bad actors (whether state or individual) who can wield Twitter armies quickly and easily as to be effectively useless as any sort of gauge of public opinion. It is a terrible place to gauge human behavior, or make broad pronouncements of what humans are like. And it's an even worse place to get a sense of a politician's support base.

I have a modest proposal for my peers in the journalism world: I would like to propose that anyone writing about a Twitter "mob" of any political ilk be required to include the previous paragraph in an asterisk at the bottom of their story. We should all be forced to include a disclaimer to clarify that it is impossible to make any kind of quantitative assessment of human behavior on Twitter because of how deeply skewed it all is by hackers, PR professionals, paid influencers, intentional government or corporate misinformation campaigns, and the way the online disinhibition effect makes people act.

The reactionary mind at work

After reading all this, someonewith a personal story of a (purported) Sanders supporter being cruel to them online might still object. The Bernie Bro is real! This anecdote proves it.

But to say "a single candidate'sfollower was mean, therefore I don't support this candidate's policies regardless of their actual political implications," is a rhetorical fallacy. There are definitely individual assholes out there. Likewise, assholes can believe in good causes, andnice people can support terrible causes. It is a reactionary mistake to oppose a candidate who represents a set of specific political positions poised to help or harm different social classes on the basis of another's individual behavior.

That means that the normalization of the BernieBro also diminishes the experience of those who are bullied by other candidates' supporters. A video went around of an ElizabethWarren supporter accosting two Sanders fans at the Iowa caucus; yet it didn't get a lot of play because it didn't reinforce existing stereotypes that we have about Warren's supporters. Plentyof stories aboutonline bullying by other candidates'supporters are ignoredbecause we lack a comparable stereotype to bundle them.

It would be one thing if Bernie Sanders or any popular politician told their supporters to be angry and menacing and threatening online, and then that behavior was reified on Twitter and in real life. But that has not happened withSanders, nor with anyone else amongthe current crop of Democrats. You cannot draw a line from Sanders' rhetoric to any of the stereotypes of BernieBros, because his rhetoric and voting records speaks to him being an egalitarian, a civil rights advocateand a compassionate progressive voice.

Link:
The BernieBro myth persists because pundits don't understand how the internet works - Salon

Our cities are getting too loud and those rising decibel levels are more than just a nuisance – The National

Saturday morning, my favourite cartoons on the TV and a bowl of sugary breakfast cereal on my lap. Life didn't get much sweeter for seven-year-old me. However, this tranquil oasis would shatter with the flick of the vacuum cleaner switch as my mother left no corner of the rug unclean. This was my earliest experience with noise pollution.

A global public health concern, noise pollution is defined as harmful or annoying levels of noise, with a detrimental impact on human or animal activity.

After crunching the numbers, the research team concluded that high levels of noise doubled the risk of depression and anxiety in the general population

While the disruption of my cartoon-watching was justified by the pursuit of clean carpets, there are frequent occasions where the ends do not justify the noise. A TV show disrupted is a minor inconvenience but there are situations where the level of noise pollution disrupts lives and ruins health.

This growing public health concern is linked to a range of problems, from hearing impairment and sleep disturbance to hypertension and heart disease. A report by the European Environmental Agency estimated that around 125 million Europeans, 40 per cent of the population, are regularly exposed to noise levels above 55 decibels. This is the point at which prolonged noise is potentially damaging to health. The EEA goes on to suggest that around 900 thousand cases of high blood pressure, hypertension and 43 thousand hospital admissions a year are because of noise pollution.

Beyond physical health complaints, a German study also found a link between noise pollution, depression and anxiety. The study published in the scientific journal PLOS One in 2016 included data for over 15,000 people and looked at a range of noise sources, from road and air traffic to noisy industry and loud neighbours.

After crunching the numbers, the research team concluded that high levels of noise doubled the risk of depression and anxiety in the general population. The World Health Organisation also acknowledged this link, suggesting that over long periods, noise pollution has a detrimental influence on wellbeing and perceived quality of life.

As the number of cars has increased, along with other noise-producing machines, so our cities, decade on decade, have become louder. This increase in volume can be quantified in decibels and is evident in hearing loss among city residents.

An ongoing study by Mimi Hearing Technologies, a company for digital hearing tests, has resulted in the development of the World Hearing Index. This study of hearing impairment has collected data from over 200,000 participants worldwide, using an app called Mimi that allows people to conduct a medically certified hearing assessment on their smartphones.

The findings suggest that hearing impairment is strongly related to a citys noise. People living in places with more noise pollution tend to experience more significant hearing loss. The residents of Delhi have the highest rates of hearing loss, while the residents of Vienna have the lowest. Zurich, Switzerland has the lowest levels of noise pollution, while Guangzhou, China has the highest.

Social media data is also telling and yet another way to explore how bothered people are by noise. It is clich to say that people frequently "take to Twitter to vent their outrage". This can be outrage about many things, and noise annoyance is no exception.

Our research team at Zayed University recently began looking at a sample of the UAE's Twitter data of 8 million tweets as a way of exploring the global public health concern about noise pollution. Along with our collaborators at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, we developed an algorithm to identify and categorise noise complaints, pinpointing their exact location. We found all the usual categories of noise annoyance complaints being voiced in the Twitter data, from construction and traffic to noisy neighbours. The findings of this preliminary research will be published later this month in Computers in Human Behavior Reports.

Being able to see the time and location of noise annoyance complaints is essential. In future, social media could be used, along with more traditional methods, to help identify noise annoyance hotspots. Accurately identifying such problematic times and places is an excellent first step in addressing the issue.

Noise is a global public health problem that we cant ignore. Electric cars will go some way to reduce traffic noise. Another solution is to plant more greenery. One of the many benefits of trees is their efficacy in absorbing sound. They can reduce noise in their immediate vicinity by between five and 10 decibels.

Given that we have chased silence from our cities, this is one way to invite quiet back in.

Justin Thomas is a psychology professor at Zayed University

Updated: February 9, 2020 06:09 PM

Read the rest here:
Our cities are getting too loud and those rising decibel levels are more than just a nuisance - The National