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Jamia students foiled plans of gunman Gopal and his masters – National Herald

It is frustrating when peaceful protesters remain peaceful even in the face of a bullet. Such Gandhian restraint upsets many plans and possibilities.

The moment Rambhakt Gopal fired a pistol at them on Thursday afternoon the student marchers of Jamia Millia Islamia ought to have panicked and erupted in retaliatory anger. The hot-headed amongst them ought to have picked up roadside rubble and hurled rocks and stones at the police. The rest should have immediately run helter-skelter.

It would have provided the media with visual evidence of violence. The men in uniform, in turn, would have got the opportunity they were waiting for to retaliate - a lathi charge to start with, followed by tear-gas shells, water cannons and even a Dyer-like fusillade if need be.

The faint-hearted among the protesters should have shrieked and screamed in fear. There should have been a stampede, with everyone pushing, shoving and trampling on each other in a desperate bid to get away from the scene as fast as possible. It would have added to the chaos and confusion.

Instead, what did they do?

They kept their cool and remained peaceful. Some even started holding hands to give solace and strength to each other and formed a human chain. Others rushed to the aid of the young student with a bullet injury on his hand, helped him get over the yellow barricades and escorted him to the nearest hospital.

This is not the way it should have panned out. When someone fires a gun at you, the reflex reaction is to either run away or fight back. Not to do either of these two things is contrary to all theories of human behavior under sudden stress or unforeseen provocation.

When a gun is fired at you, when one of you actually stops a bullet, the reaction is supposed to be predictable and reflexive fear or rage. Thats what the Pavlov Theory is all about - a sudden stimulus invariably triggers a conditioned response.

It is irritating when young people disregard such proven principles of human behavior. It is all the more annoying in the present instance because the atmosphere was so right, the air is so thick with hatred, the setting was so carefully choreographed, the time would have been so perfect.

After all, what better day could there have been for violence to erupt on the streets of Delhi than on the anniversary of Mahatma Gandhis assassination?

The police would have been deemed to be entirely justified in cracking down immediately. The entire blame could have shifted squarely to the desh-drohis and tukde-tukde gang.

Dozens of TV camera crews were present right there on the spot to click videos of the mayhem happening right in front of them. The visuals would have gone viral.

The video evidence would have been there for the world to see especially in Brussels where Members of the European Parliament would hopefully refrain from trying to pass strongly-worded resolutions denouncing the Indian government for divisive laws and brutal suppression of human rights.

Should the police stand idly by when thousands of protesters indulge in violence (as the videos would have shown)? Should the men in uniform be sitting ducks when lethal rocks are hurled at them?

Alas, none of this happened. The Jamia students did not throw stones. They did not lose their heads. There was no stampede. It is all so anti-climatic and disappointing.

Television screens are only showing Rambhakt Gopal firing at the students, again and again and again.

They are also needlessly showing police officers standing in the background, doing nothing to accost the black-jacketed fanatic throughout the time he was moving freely, leveling a pistol at the students in classic gun-fighter stance and shouting Yeh Lo Azadi, Jai Shri Ram slogans.

They are irresponsibly showing clips of one or two senior officers standing with arms crossed across their chests in classic do-nothing posture. They are unfairly commenting on the gentle, arm-over-shoulders manner in which the gunman was belatedly taken into custody - after he had pulled the trigger and hit one of the students.

Apart from being terribly unpatriotic television showing the police in bad light and depicting the students as models of Gandhian non-violence it also puts paid to many other possibilities.

What an opportunity lost!

A convincing crackdown and few broken Jamia bones would surely have had a chilling effect on other anti-CAA-NRC protests that have become such a headache for the government.

In particular it would have punctured the confidence of the amazing ladies of Shaheen Bagh who began their sit-in 46 days ago on December 15 and have become the stuff of legends.

Alas, Gunman Gopals Facebook boast of Shaheen Bagh Game Over! remains unfulfilled.

Another possibility that remains unrequited is that if the Jamia peace march had erupted in violence, it could have paved the way for cancelling the ongoing Assembly polls on grounds of collapse of law and order. So important to prevent yet another embarrassing election defeat in yet another state.

But, alas, the day of the Mahatmas death anniversary passed off infuriatingly peacefully.

Now, in all probability, voting will take place on February 8 as scheduled unless some other Rambhakt suddenly surfaces in the next few days and is able to fan the fire of violence more efficiently and with greater success than Gunman Gopal.

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Jamia students foiled plans of gunman Gopal and his masters - National Herald

Speed date for a mentor with the Women of Toledo organization – WTOL

TOLEDO, Ohio Life is full of endless possibilities, but one thing is for certain; change is inevitable.

And while there are some people who have mastered to embrace change, others may need help grasping it.

That's why the Women of Toledo organization kicked off their monthly Mentors of (M.O.M.) event, where the two types of people can meet and learn from each other.

"We try to make safe spaces and platforms for women through all walks of life to have the ability to meet somebody that maybe they can find as a mentor," said Sierra Ortiz, with the Women of Toledo."And maybe you don't know exactly what you're looking for, you just know you're up for a change, you're up for empowerment, you're up for educating. This is safe place to do all of that."

M.O.M. happens every fourth Thursday of the month and is designed like a speed dating event with tables set for two. But instead of seeking romance, women are seeking mentor-mentee relationships.

"A mentee-mentor relationship is critical to any type of success life," said Angela Lucas, an executive life coach and mentor.

In just 90 minutes, over 120 connections are made at these M.O.M. events. There's always at least 12 different mentors and 10 mentees networking for five minutes each. The ultimate goal is for mentees to connect with as many mentors as they can, and then hopefully grow a relationship that goes beyond the M.O.M. event.

"This process helps expedites how you can create mentors throughout your professional and personal growth," said Nina Corder, the managing director for Women of Toledo. "It's really like dating, you got to 'date' for awhile and then build that relationship. We are human beings and it's natural for human behavior to build that connection, that relationship. "

Those who attend the event will find women of all ages filling in both roles as mentor and mentees.

"We are very inter-generational. We don't just believe mentors, up and down, we also do down and up. Some of our baby boomer mentees enjoy meeting a mentor who is a millennial because you got to learn about the new generations and technology. And of course we respect our legacy group. They have knowledge and wisdom they can offer to a lot of our mentees," said Corder.

Anyone planning to attend a M.O.M. event, must register herefirst and create a mentee profile and are encouraged to bring business cards, ideas and course an open mind.

"Be ready to find something you weren't looking for. Be ready to meet someone that you wouldn't expect to have such an influence on you but were here to help provide," said Ortiz.

You can get an idea of the mentors you may be able to meet by viewing the full list here.

Pamala, a recent graduate, attended the event as a mentee, but is already offering advice to women still not sure about going:

"Take a chance. Everything is very comfortable. You don't feel like anyone is judging you. You know that they're going to give you the information you need, that you're seeking because there's such a variety."

Below is a list of the remaining M.O.M. events of the year:

Locations are yet to be determined.

RELATED: Toledo activist group calls for change on Dr. Martin Luther King Day

RELATED: 'We help boys become men' - Annual 'Tie Event' is more than just learning how to tie a tie

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Speed date for a mentor with the Women of Toledo organization - WTOL

Could Statistical Analysis Predict Who Will Win the Next ‘CT Event? – Surfer Magazine

Each year since 2003, thousands of Fantasy Surfer players attempt to predict the success of World Tour competitors at each WCT event. Those with the best strategies (or perhaps a really lucky Magic 8 ball) accumulate enough points by seasons end to be crowned Fantasy Surfer Champion. Past FS victors have been software gurus (Kevin Priester), ex racecar drivers (Luca Fioravanti), former top-tier professional surfers (Shea Lopez), and several industry insiders.

Dan Waltersthis years winner who outsmarted 13,600 other Fantasy Surfer playersused analytics, statistics and a keen eye for whos surfing well and whos not to climb his way to the top of the 2019 rankings. Walters, who works as a professor in behavioral sciences, used predictive data to choose winning teams and accumulate the most points by year-end. We recently caught up with Walters for a quick back-and-forth regarding his Fantasy Surfer success.

How long have you been playing Fantasy Surfer?Ive been playing Fantasy Surfer for 7 years. My strategy centers around weighing the factors that are most predictive of surfer success at each venue.

What do you do for a living?Something that might tend towards analytics?Im a professor of behavioral sciences so I spend a lot of my time trying to predict human behavior using modeling and statistical analysis. I attempted to bring the same level of rigor to my Fantasy Surfer predictions. In 2014, I downloaded all of the data on competitors performances from the World Surf League and archived ASPs websites. From this data, I constructed a predictive model that incorporated a long list of variables, including surf conditions, current ranking, fixed effects for individual competitors, current cost on Fantasy Surfer and a number of other elements. Modeling these variables with all of the past data helped to determine which were the most important at which locations and for which surfers. I wont give away all of my secrets, but you might be surprised that some variables where very predictive while others were not.

So what would be a good example of what youve used this data to predict?For instance, results in the past two contests are very good predictors of future performance, even after controlling for current rank and performance in past years. This model served me well and I consistently performed at the top of my league. However, in the last year, I made a change in how I utilized the model that may have allowed me to clinch the big win.=

What did you do differently?Rather than following the model religiously, I also incorporated my own competitive strategy. For instance, I would take the top recommendations of the model and then think about how other Fantasy Surfer players might choose. If the model recommended two surfers, one that I felt would be chosen by most FS players, and one that would be a low-percentage choice, then I would be more likely to choose the low-percentage surfer. Thus, my team choice was data-driven, but also incorporated a strategy of contrarian decision making.

Thats some heavy planning for Fantasy Surfer!These strategies helped me be successful, but of course, I was also very lucky. Losing one more heat would have cost me the championship. Also, truth be told, I forgot to set my team for Pipe (I spent about 5 minutes setting a preliminary team) but still did very well in the contest.

You incorporate a lot of history and data regarding results, do you also follow all the surfers on Twitter and Instagram to stay on top of their injuries, travels, etc.?

I dont tend to follow surfers on social media. I find that its mostly noise and hard to gather any useful information.If a surfer is injured I might check social media to gauge their recovery progress. I might also look through clips of rookies to assess how they could perform at a given location or in specific conditions.

Thanks for your time, Dan!

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Could Statistical Analysis Predict Who Will Win the Next 'CT Event? - Surfer Magazine

‘Heartbreaking and compelling’: North Dakota man digs deep in podcast based on gruesome, small-town crime – The Dickinson Press

Its not a now-and-then pursuit, but one thats woven into the fabric of his life.

In the case of a 1976 North Dakota kidnapping, bank heist and double-homicide, it wasnt that the crime was unsolved or that the perpetrators weren't punished.

What bothered Wolner was that stories of the victims lives seemed mostly untold.

I think I saw that as an injustice, and it just went from there. Like, OK... Ill do it then, he said.

The crime that rocked the tiny south-central North Dakota town of Zeeland is the most recent case Wolner researched on his own and turned into a true-crime podcast.

I start going down a path thats kind of like an itch and I scratch it a little bit, he said.

Wolner, 55, creator of Dakota Spotlight Podcast, recently released the seven-episode podcast documentary, produced at his home in Hebron.

The California native learned of the horrific crime by reading an old newspaper article.

A husband and wife in their 60s were shot dead in their pajamas after being forced to get money from a nearby bank.

Wade and Ellen Zick were kidnapped and murdered in Zeeland, N.D. in 1976.

Wolner said if In Cold Blood author Truman Capote had read the article about the Zeeland crime instead of one about a quadruple murder in rural Kansas on which the book is based, Capote might have written about it.

Hes not comparing himself to the famed writer, but rather, seeing parallels between the crimes.

This story itself is as heartbreaking and compelling, Wolner said, his voice stifled by emotion.

James Wolner, true crime podcast creator from Hebron, N.D. Special to The Forum

Wolner was raised in the city of Healdsburg, located in Sonoma County in the heart of Californias wine country.

He remembers feeling deep curiosity and empathy at a young age, qualities that would serve him well later.

Two weeks after graduating college with a degree in English Literature, Wolner moved to Sweden with an exchange student from there, whom hed met while vacationing in Yosemite National Park.

That relationship didnt pan out, but he stayed in Sweden for more than 20 years, during which time he married, had two daughters and divorced.

He moved back to the U.S. in 2013, to Boulder, Colo., where he found himself drawn less to the mountains and more to the flats.

Previously, Wolners only connection to the Midwest was that his parents had grown up in a small farming community in eastern South Dakota.

He considered moving there, but instead took a web developer position in Hebron.

Its where he still lives, despite having since taken a computer programmer job an hours drive away in Mandan.

During virtually all of his free time, he pores over the podcast work in a small home office, sometimes spending a half hour perfecting a 30-second segment.

No woman in the world would put up with this. Thats why Im single, Wolner said, with a laugh.

The podcast documentary delves into the pre-dawn crime that occurred in Zeeland on July 11, 1976.

Wade Zick, 66, and his wife Ellen, 65, were taken from their home by armed men who forced them to go to a bank in Zeeland, where Zick was the manager.

After getting money from the bank, the couple were driven to a gravel pit a few miles out of town and shot dead.

Three young men, all with ties to the community, were later arrested, convicted and sentenced.

More than 40 years later, Wolner began looking into the details of the crime and those involved even the most obscure ones that help add context and character to the podcast.

For example, he researched the weather on a particular date in Prosser, Wash., because two of the perpetrators parents got married there that day.

Thats not normal to be that detailed. But its like I want to be there myself, he said.

James Wolner, true crime podcast creator from Hebron, N.D. Special to The Forum

Wolner has since interviewed and come to know many of the victims family members. Early on, they must have wondered about the approach, he said. But after meeting with them, they were on board.

Its been an honor, he said, pausing to collect his emotions.

Most of his listeners have come from this region and the snowbird areas of Arizona and Florida, he said,

Hes already planning another possible podcast about the 1993 disappearance of two people from Wishek, N.D.

Its satisfying, he said, to be involved in something that has meaning.

Its my way of making an attempt to understand, I guess, human behavior, and to connect the dots between things, Wolner said.

Learn more about this podcast, and Wolner, on the Dakota Spotlight website.

Episode 7 - Crossing the Street

Episode 6 - Flip a Coin

Episode 5 - Caramel Rolls

Episode 4 - 'Pink Slip'

Episode 3 - 'Z is for Zick'

Episode 2 - No Banker Tomorrow

Episode 1 - A Deed Without a Name

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'Heartbreaking and compelling': North Dakota man digs deep in podcast based on gruesome, small-town crime - The Dickinson Press

IAHSS to Hold 2020 Annual Conference in Arizona – Campus Safety Magazine

IAHSS annual event will take place May 4-6 in Phoenix, Arizona.

The IAHSS 52nd Annual Conference and Exhibition will take place this year in Phoenix, Arizona, May 4-6 at the Sheraton Grand at Wild Horse Pass.

The International Association for Healthcare Security and Safety (IAHSS) announces that its 52nd Annual Conference and Exhibition will take place this year in Phoenix, Arizona, May 4-6.

The show will feature a wide range of educational sessions, speakers and networking events.

Kicking off the first day will be Craig Valentine, the Toastmasters World Champion of Public Speaking. He will cover the top tools you need to keep your audiences on the edge of their seats and influence them to take action. Whether communicating with an audience of one or 1,000, you will pick up tools to motivate, inspire and confidently deliver your message in a memorable way.

Valentine is the co-author of the Amazon.com No. 1 Bestseller, World Class Speaking in Action. He is also the former three-time Salesperson of the Year for Glencoe/McGraw-Hills Mid-Atlantic Division after reaching up to 233% of his goal. Hes the former Executive Director of an Employment Academy for homeless men in Baltimore City, which had a 100% job placement rate under his tenure.

On the second day, Dr. William J. Lewinski, Ph.D. will deliver the keynote covering strategies and techniques to improve your ability to work with persons in distress by establishing control, enhancing skills to establish contact build rapport and gain influence to achieve a successful outcome. In addition, this session addresses the rhetoric prevalent in todays emotionally charged atmosphere and unbiasedly focuses on the proven scientific realities surrounding human behavior as they apply to efforts to de-escalate situations.

Dr. Lewinski is a leading behavioral scientist whose work has focused on the intensive study of human dynamics involved in high stress, life-threatening encounters. He has a Ph.D. in police psychology and is a professor emeritus of law enforcement at Minnesota State University, Mankato, where he taught for more than 28 years, was a law enforcement program director and also chair of the department of government. Dr. Lewinskis research has impacted law enforcement officers and agencies worldwide and has revolutionized the way force investigations and training are conducted.

Other speakers at the IAHSS Annual Conference and Exhibition will include:

Other topics that will be covered include workplace violence in healthcare, security training programs, behavioral health patients, retaining top performers, service animals, CPTED, body-worn cameras, contract and proprietary security, and more.

Additionally, the shows exhibit hall will feature the latest hospital security products and services, and the IAHSS Foundation Recognition Banquet will honor healthcare protection pros who have demonstrated exemplary service.

The conference will take place at the Sheraton Grand at Wild Horse Pass.

For additional information and to register, visit IAHSS.org.

See you in Phoenix!

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IAHSS to Hold 2020 Annual Conference in Arizona - Campus Safety Magazine

Super Bowl 2020: Football concussions: The link between head injuries and CTE, explained – Vox.com

Football isnt just a contact sport its a dangerous game of massive bodies colliding into one another. And while it may seem obvious that this sport can do extraordinary damage to brains and bodies, its taken far too long for the NFL, the medical community, and football fans to fully reckon with this.

Doctors have learned a tremendous amount about concussions and chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, a degenerative brain condition believed to be caused by repeated hits to the head, since the first former NFL player was diagnosed with CTE in the early 2000s. Concern around the issue has only grown now that more than 100 former NFL players have received a postmortem diagnosis of CTE, and new research is finding that youth football may be a risk factor for CTE down the line.

Football is still an immensely popular sport in the United States, and this weekend, millions will watch and enjoy the Super Bowl. But all the evidence we now have about the very serious risk of brain injuries casts a dim light on the future of the sport. Heres what you need to know.

The human brain the most complicated and powerful organ on planet Earth is squishy. And when a person hits their head hard, the brain can bounce around and twist in the skull. Its this rapid motion of the brain inside the skull that creates the traumatic brain injury known as a concussion.

During impact, individual neurons can be stretched and damaged. Brain chemistry gets out of whack. Concussions make people see stars, become disoriented, lose consciousness, become sensitive to light and sound, get headaches, and have sluggish or confused thoughts for weeks and even months.

Heads and bodies get smashed and shuddered every week during the football season. And despite changing the rules to allow for more severe penalties and fines for flagrant helmet-to-helmet hits, the NFL has not succeeded so far in preventing concussions.

The number of concussions sustained during practice and gameplay in 2018 fell somewhat, from a total of 281 in 2017 to a total of 214 in 2018, according to the NFLs injury data. And then increased again to a total of 224 in 2019.

This data doesnt cover the countless additional blows to the head that dont reach the level of concussion but still may pose a risk for the brain.

CTE is not about single concussions. Its the result of repeated concussions and even head impacts that are not quite as severe which can result in lasting structural changes in the brain. The pain you feel [after a hit] is not necessarily an indicator of the damage that does to your head, Philip Bayly, an engineering professor at Washington University in Saint Louis, who has been studying the mechanics of brain movement inside the head, said in a 2019 interview.

Specifically, brains with CTE accumulate a protein called tau (which is believed to be dislodged from brain fibers during an injury). Tau clumps together in the tissues of the brain, interrupting critical information flow.

The mechanisms of how this all happens still arent well understood. The challenge is nobody sees what happens to the brain when someone gets a concussion, Bayly said. One hypothesis is that the sulci the grooves on the surface of the brain experience high mechanical stress during an injury and burst open pockets of tau. (In autopsies, these clumps of tau are often found near the blood vessels at the bottom of sulci.)

The disease isnt exactly new. A form of it was originally discovered among boxers in the 1920 (who, like football players, sustain regular hits to the head). Then, it was called dementia pugilistica, or punch-drunk syndrome. Currently the only way to definitively diagnose CTE is through an autopsy. In 2005, researchers published the first confirmed case of CTE in an NFL player. The results of that report contained ominous statistics to suggest CTE might be frighteningly prevalent among players:

There are approximately 0.41 concussions per NFL game of American football: 67.7% of concussions involve impact by another players helmet, 20.9% involve impact by other body regions (e.g., a knee), and 11.4% involve impact on the ground (29, 31, 32, 40). It has been reported that 9.3% of the concussions involved loss of consciousness and 2.4% of the concussions resulted in hospitalization. Most (92%) of the players who sustain a concussion return to practice in less than 7 days; fewer (69%) of the players who experience loss of consciousness return to practice in less than 7 days.

And since then, evidence has only mounted that the repeated head blows in the NFL contribute to the disease.

In 2017, Aaron Hernandez, a former player for the New England Patriots, hanged himself in prison while serving time for a violent murder. Upon an autopsy, doctors diagnosed him with CTE. It was the most severe case ever seen in a person his age (27 years old).

The symptoms of CTE creep slowly, taking 8 to 10 years to manifest after initial repeated brain traumas, and can grow worse over decades. Heres a diagram of whats happening inside the brain as CTE grows more and more severe.

These images are from a 2013 study in the journal Brain, which assessed 85 brains donated from former athletes, veterans, and people with a history of brain injury. The brown stains represent the dangerous tau proteins. What starts off as areas of the brain pockmarked with tau spreads to surround whole brain structures.

In stage I, symptoms are subtle: headaches, short-term memory loss, and loss of attention. By stage IV, most subjects also showed profound loss of attention and concentration, executive dysfunction, language difficulties, explosively, aggressive tendencies, paranoia, depression, gait and visuospatial difficulties, the paper explains.

CTE can only be conclusively diagnosed in autopsy (though progress is being made in diagnosing via MRI). So its hard to say how many current and former football players have the condition. What we do know is that there are dozens of cases of confirmed CTE enough to be alarming.

In 2017, JAMA published a major and disturbing finding. Researchers had collected the autopsied brains of 202 former football players who had donated their brains to science, or had them donated via their next of kin. The players included those who had played in the NFL, but also those who only played through college, and a few who had only played in high school.

Of the 202 brains, 177, or nearly 90 percent, were diagnosed with CTE. And there was a pattern: Those who had played football longer were more likely to have worse brain damage. Among the former NFL players in the sample, 99 percent had CTE. This suggests the effects of brain trauma on CTE are cumulative. The more trauma over a longer period, the worse the symptoms.

This is not to say that 99 percent of NFL players will develop CTE (the brains were donated and are not a representative sample). But it does show that football players are, indeed, at risk.

As Ann McKee, the Boston University neuropathologist who is the leading expert in CTE, told PBS Frontline in 2013, People think that were blowing this out of proportion, that this is a very rare disease and that were sensationalizing it. My response is that where I sit, this is a very real disease. We have had no problem identifying it in hundreds of players.

And to note: Football is not the only sport that poses the risk of head injury. Theres growing concern about CTE in hockey players, as well as abroad; players of Australian rules football have also complained about cognitive problems after retirement.

One of the biggest consequences of the concussion research is that fewer young people are participating in the sport. In a 2018 documentary, retired star quarterback Brett Favre said hed prefer that his grandsons play golf over football. Celebrities like former President Barack Obama have said they wouldnt let their sons play football.

National trends reflect the unease. The number of high school students playing football dropped by 30,829 between the 2017-2018 and the 2018-2019 school years, continuing a downward trend. In 2008, 1.11 million high school students played football. Now, its 1.006 million the lowest number since the 1999-2000 school year, the National Federation of High Schools reports. That said, football is still the most popular sport for high school males.

(Theres some data to suggest that drop in participation is led by white students. Black kids in lower-income communities without a lot of other sports available are still flocking to football, the Atlantics Alana Semuels reports.)

Parents have reason to be concerned about young kids playing the sport.

A 2015 study found that former NFL players who began football before age 12 fared worse on cognitive assessments than those who started later in their teens. And this held true even controlling for number of years played.

It suggests (though not conclusively) that playing football at ages younger than 12 is more dangerous for long-term cognitive decline than starting at an older age. The results of this study suggest that sustaining repeated head injuries during critical periods of brain maturation could alter neurodevelopmental trajectories, leading to later-life cognitive impairment, the study concluded.

More recently, a study on the brains of deceased football players also found a link between early play and CTE. Athletes who began playing tackle football before age 12 developed the cognitive and behavior symptoms of CTE 13 years earlier on average than those who started playing later in their teenage years.

Every one year younger that participants began to play football resulted in earlier reported onset of cognitive and behavioral [and] mood symptoms by approximately 2.5 years, the study concluded. However, the study did not find an increased amount of physical abnormalities in the brains of athletes who began playing earlier than age 12. Scientists are still working to figure out the exact relationship between physical brain damage and the start of symptoms and are recognizing that behavior symptoms can occur without detectable physical changes.

Regardless, brain changes are a concern for younger football players. Yet another study found evidence to suggest that college football experience can lead to a decrease in the volume of the hippocampus a critical region for memory compared to people who never played college football.

There are many uncertainties left in the research. Another study recently found that participation in tackle football before 12 years of age did not result in any cognitive deficits while in college. So its not the case that playing football early will necessarily lead to impairments in early adulthood. And a study of 3,000-plus Wisconsin men who had played high school football in the 1950s found no elevated rates of cognitive impairment. This shows not everyone who plays football as a teen suffers consequences, and researchers still need to better understand how much exposure to football tackles is too much.

The NFL didnt acknowledge the concussion problem until 2009; for years, the NFL had downplayed and denied the links between concussions and cognitive decline. (Frontline has a fantastic documentary about how the league turned a blind eye to the problem for years.) And these days, the league is donating millions to concussion-related research.

But there has been significant friction with the scientific community over the issue. In July 2018, the NFL and the National Institutes of Health ended a $30 million partnership with half the money left unspent. According to ESPN, the NFL backed out of a major study that had been awarded to a researcher who had been critical of the league, which precipitated the ending of the partnership.

The league has also made some steps to make the game a bit safer. (Read SB Nation for a full explainer on the NFLs concussion protocols.) Players are immediately removed from the field when theres a potential concussion. If diagnosed, they can only return to play after completing a five-step protocol, which includes an unspecified period of rest, followed up by supervised exercise, and then examinations not just with the team doctor but also with an independent neurological consultant. Critics, however, have charged that these protocols have been enforced unevenly across teams and players.

Furthermore, the NFL has banned helmet-to-helmet hits, made kickoff plays slightly safer, and limited the amount of contact allowed in practices. Its also looking into artificial playing surfaces to soften the blow of impacts.

Theres still a lot of research to be done. Scientists are trying to better model what happens inside the brain when the skull is hit. Just providing good data is a research priority, Bayly says. So people can build better simulations, and if people can build better simulations, they can design better helmets.

But even with better helmets, football might not ever be a perfectly safe sport for brain health. As long as football is a sport where human-to-human collisions are fundamental to play, its going to be a dangerous game.

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Super Bowl 2020: Football concussions: The link between head injuries and CTE, explained - Vox.com

Weekend eating linked to higher BMI – Medical News Today

A new study adds to the evidence that maintaining a regular eating schedule is key for preventing obesity.

For many, the end of the workweek brings a welcome respite from the rigid scheduling of workdays.

It offers a taste of freedom: a few days of a more fluid schedule or no schedule at all.

A new study, however, finds that a more improvised weekend eating schedule may link to an increase in body mass index (BMI).

The studys authors refer to peoples weekend diversions from their regular eating schedule as eating jet lag, which they suggest may be as physiologically disruptive as the body confusion that can occur when traversing time zones.

The cross-sectional study is part of the doctoral thesis of first author Mara Fernanda Zern Rugerio of the University of Barcelona (UB) in Spain.

The paper, which other UB researchers co-authored, appears in the journal Nutrients.

The authors analyzed data from 1,106 undergraduate and postgraduate students between the ages of 18 and 25 years who reported their weekend eating schedules during the school year.

The study ran from 2017 to 2019. Each participant also self-reported their height and weight the two measurements that make up BMI.

The studys authors believe that this is the first study to focus on the effect on obesity of changes in meal timing between weekdays and weekends.

From the students responses, researchers were able to determine the cohorts average meal duration during the week and on the weekends, as well as the eating midpoint halfway between the first and last meal of the day for both weekdays and weekends.

To calculate an individuals overall eating jet lag value, they used a simple formula: eating midpoint on weekends minus eating midpoint on weekdays.

From there, the researchers accounted for other influences that could affect BMI, including diet quality, sleep duration, gender, and chronotype.

The authors found that those with an overall eating jet lag of 3.5 hours or more had higher BMI values.

They used the same formula to calculate the separate eating jet lags for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

Not surprisingly, given the opportunity to sleep in at the weekend, the meal that exhibited the greatest amount of jet lag was breakfast.

The study showed that 64% of participants experienced more than an hour of breakfast-eating jet lag each weekend, with this duration exceeding 2 hours for 22% of these individuals.

The researchers did not detect any correlation between the eating jet lag for a particular meal and a higher BMI.

Eating jet lag may stem from the same sort of conflict between a bodys circadian rhythm and unusual activity as other forms of jet lag the sleep disruption that travelers experience and social jet lag resulting from unusual weekend sleeping schedules.

As the study authors put it, The circadian system is comprised by a master clock and a network of peripheral clocks, all of which are organized in a hierarchical manner.

One of the study authors, Trinitat Cambras of UBs Department of Biochemistry and Physiology, explains further: Our biological clock is like a machine and is ready to unchain the same physiological and metabolic response at the same time of the day, every day of the week.

Fixed eating and sleep schedules help the body to be organized and promote energy homeostasis.

Lead author Maria Izquierdo Pulido of UBs Institute for Nutrition and Food Safety ties the biological clock to the way in which the body processes food:

As a result, when intake takes place regularly, the circadian clock ensures that the bodys metabolic pathways act to assimilate nutrients. However, when food is taken at an unusual hour, nutrients can act on the molecular machinery of peripheral clocks (outside the brain), altering the schedule and thus, modifying the bodys metabolic functions.

Maria Izquierdo Pulido

There is still a need for more research regarding the link between eating jet lag and BMI.

Still, points out Izquierdo Pulido, it is already known that maintaining a regular schedule has benefits. Scientists may now add combatting eating jet lag to these.

She says, Apart from diet and physical exercise, which are two pillars regarding obesity, another factor to be considered is regular eating schedules, since we proved it has an impact on our body weight.

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Weekend eating linked to higher BMI - Medical News Today

Can’t Sleep or Think Clearly? Maybe the Culprit is Bacteria – UMass News and Media Relations

AMHERST, Mass. With a $1 million grant from the W. M. Keck Foundation, neuroscience researchers at Washington State University and the University of Massachusetts Amherst will explore whether variations in brain levels of bacterial fragments can account for lifes sleep/wake and 24-hour cycles, known as circadian rhythms.

The bacteria residing inside of you outnumber your own cells 10 to one and affect sleep, cognition, mood, brain temperature, appetite and many additional brain functions. Yet we lack an understanding of how they do it, says James Krueger, Regents Professor of Integrative Physiology and Neuroscience at the WSU College of Veterinary Medicine.

The sleep research is led by Krueger, and the circadian rhythm portion of the project is led by co-investigator Ilia Karatsoreos, who recently joined UMass Amherst from WSU as an associate professor of psychological and brain sciences.

At Karatsoreos Lab, researchers will use models of simulated jet lag, a way to disrupt our circadian (daily) rhythms. As anyone who has flown cross-country has likely experienced firsthand, disrupting these rhythms is associated with changes in sleep, cognition and even body temperature.

When jetlagged, many of the normal bodily functions are out of synchrony with each other. This is a consequence of altering circadian rhythms, Karatsoreos says. By looking for changes of bacterial products in the brain, we anticipate we will discover new approaches to treat jet lag, and possibly the desynchrony of physiological functions that occurs with old age.

The new grant builds on nearly 40 years of cutting-edge sleep research. In the early 1980s, Krueger isolated a sleep-promoting molecule from brains of sleep-deprived rabbits and from human urine. Its chemical structure was a muramyl peptide a building block component of bacterial cell walls.

At the time of the discovery, it was difficult to measure small amounts of muramyl peptides. Now, improved measurement technologies and the Keck Foundation funding will enable researchers to determine the brains muramyl peptide levels and whether they correlate with sleep-wake cycles or circadian rhythms.

Further, researchers will determine if sleep loss results in increased levels of muramyl peptides in the brain, a predicted result based on the 1980s investigations.

Another goal of the Keck-funded work will be to determine how brain muramyl peptides elicit sleep. Our minds are an outcome of a bacteria/human symbiosis, Krueger said. Expanding this concept by determination of how such disparate species talk to each other will transform our views of cognition, psychiatric disorders, consciousness including sleep, and our understanding of what it means to be human.

The late W. M. Keck, founder of the Superior Oil Company, established The W. M. Keck Foundation in 1954.The Foundations grant making is focused primarily on pioneering efforts in the areas of medical research, science and engineering, and undergraduate education.

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Can't Sleep or Think Clearly? Maybe the Culprit is Bacteria - UMass News and Media Relations

Global NEUROSCIENCE ANTIBODIES AND ASSAYS Market , Trends, Analysis, Opportunities, Share and Forecast 2019-2025 – Melanian News

The global neuroscience antibodies and assays market can be categorized based on product type, indication, technology, end-user, and region. On the basis of product type, the market can be divided into consumables and instruments. The consumable segment can be sub-divided into reagents (media & sera, stains & dyes, fixatives, buffers, solvents, probes, enzymes, proteins, and peptides), antibodies (primary antibodies, secondary antibodies, and assay. The instruments segment can be further categorized into microplate readers, immunoassay analyzers, and others.

Based on indication, the global neuroscience antibodies and assays market can be segmented into Alzheimers disease, Parkinsons disease, Multiple sclerosis (MS), prion disease, Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and others. According to Alzheimers disease International, 46.5 million people were estimated to be suffering from dementia in 2015The increasing automation of high-throughput screening and the availability of robust data management software tools, which enable researchers to develop systemic and process-oriented approaches toward neuroscience antibodies and assays techniques are some of the factors contributing to the growth of this segment.

Global NEUROSCIENCE ANTIBODIES AND ASSAYS Market valued approximately USD 2.1 billion in 2016 is anticipated to grow with a healthy growth rate of more than 10.3% over the forecast period 2019-2025.

To request a sample copy or view summary of this report, click the link below:

https://www.digitsnmarkets.com/sample/5594-global-neuroscience-antibodies-and-assays-market

The objective of the study is to define market sizes of different segments & countries in recent years and to forecast the values to the coming eight years. The report is designed to incorporate both qualitative and quantitative aspects of the industry within each of the regions and countries involved in the study. Furthermore, the report also caters the detailed information about the crucial aspects such as driving factors & challenges which will define the future growth of the market. Additionally, the report shall also incorporate available opportunities in micro markets for stakeholders to invest along with the detailed analysis of competitive landscape and product offerings of key players. The detailed segments and sub-segment of the market are explained below:

By Product

By Technology

By End User

Some of the key manufacturers involved in the market are. Thermo Fisher Scientific, Abcam, Bio-Rad, Merck KGAA, Cell Signaling Technology, Genscript, Rockland Immunochemicals. Bio Legend, Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Tecan, F. Hoffmann-La Roche, Siemens. Acquisitions and effective mergers are some of the strategies adopted by the key manufacturers. New product launches and continuous technological innovations are the key strategies adopted by the major players.

About Digits N Markets:Digits N Markets has a vast repository of latest market research reports on trending topics, niche company profiles, market size and other relevant data released by renowned publishers. We have access to the database related to niche markets and trending topics in various industries. We also update the data regularly to provide recent statistics to the client. Recent data and reports will be featured on our websites and clients will be able to access the same. Our clients will be able to benefit from qualitative & quantitative insights in the report which will support them in taking concrete business decisions.Contact Us :Digits N Markets 410 E Santa Clara Street, Unit #762San Jose, CA 95113Phone :+1 408-622-0123Email: [emailprotected]Website:- http://www.digitsnmarkets.com

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Global NEUROSCIENCE ANTIBODIES AND ASSAYS Market , Trends, Analysis, Opportunities, Share and Forecast 2019-2025 - Melanian News

New Investigation into Abnormal Neuron Activity in Rett Syndrome – Technology Networks

The brain undergoes dramatic change during the first years of life. Its circuits readily rewire as an infant and then child encounters new sights and sounds, taking in the world and learning to understand it. As the child matures and key developmental periods pass, the brain becomes less malleable--but certain experiences create opportunities for parts of the adult brain to rewire and learn again.

New research by Billy Lau, a postdoctoral researcher working with Assistant Professor Keerthi Krishnan in the Department of Biochemistry and Cellular and Molecular Biology in the University of Tennessee, Knoxville's College of Arts and Sciences, examines the time during which an adult female mouse first learns to recognize and respond to the distress cries of young mouse pups as one such opportunity for rewiring.

The findings were published earlier this month in the Journal of Neuroscience and hint at potential therapeutic strategies for Rett syndrome, a rare neurodevelopmental disorder.

Krishnan's lab researches how mutated genes affect brain plasticity, ultimately leading to neurological diseases, specifically Rett syndrome. In humans, mutations in the gene MECP2 cause Rett syndrome. Children with Rett syndrome appear to develop normally for the first several months of life but later begin to lose language and motor skills.

"Children diagnosed with neurodevelopmental disorders eventually grow up and continue to exhibit symptoms throughout life," Krishnan said. "Though much research is focused on identifying and diagnosing neurodevelopmental disorders, much work needs to be done to help improve or manage symptoms for patients throughout their life. Rett syndrome mainly affects girls and women worldwide; very few studies focus on pathology of the disorder in adult women."

For several years, Lau and Krishnan have been conducting research with a team at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory headed by Stephen Shea and Josh Huang. In their previous work, the team discovered that female mice lacking one functional copy of Mecp2 failed to respond to the distress cries of their young. The scientists honed in on the abnormal behavior of a group of neurons in the auditory cortex called parvalbumin (PV) neurons together with higher protein expression of perineuronal nets (PNNs), structures that improve connections within the brain.

"PVs and PNNs are thought to be inhibitory, acting as a brake in the brain that prevents learning," Lau said. "In the new study, we tested this hypothesis. Our findings reveal a physiological mechanism underlying the progression of Rett syndrome that may extend to other brain regions."

In the new study, Lau and the other members of the team took a closer look at how exposure to the young pups changes signaling within the auditory cortex of female mice. By monitoring the activity of individual cells in this part of the brain, the researchers found that when Mecp2 is intact, the dampening effect of PNNs and PV neurons decreases following exposure to the pups. This allows other neurons in the circuit to become more responsive to the young animals' cries. This change occurred even in mice that had never been pregnant. In female mice whose Mecp2 gene was impaired, however, the dampening signals remained strong.

The findings support previous evidence that the function of PV neurons is particularly vulnerable to the loss of Mecp2, suggesting that these cells or the circuits they are involved in may be appropriate targets for drug development and that patients with Rett syndrome may be most responsive to treatment during certain periods of life in conjunction with their environment and social experience.

"This work has implications in continuing to understand what roles Mecp2 plays in typical brain activity and function, especially in complex social situations, similar to what patients encounter in their daily lives," Krishnan said. "If we understand the mechanisms and roles of this protein in social communication and perception, we will be able to find ways to compensate for lack of this protein through therapeutic or rehabilitative treatments."

This article has been republished from the following materials. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source.

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New Investigation into Abnormal Neuron Activity in Rett Syndrome - Technology Networks