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REVIEW: ‘Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst,’ by Robert M. Sapolsky – Minneapolis Star Tribune

Robert M. Sapolsky is that rara avis whos both eminent scientist and elegant prose stylist. Three decades ago, at the ripe old age of 28, he won a MacArthur genius grant before settling into a storied career as neurobiologist and primatologist at Stanford University, conducting field work among baboons in Kenya and publishing books with such whimsical titles as Why Zebras Dont Get Ulcers and The Trouble With Testosterone.

His new book is his magnum opus, but is also strikingly different from his earlier work, veering sharply toward hard science as it looms myriad strands of his ruminations on human behavior. The familiar, enchanting Sapolsky tropes are here his warm, witty voice, a sleight of hand that unfolds the mysteries of cognition but Behave keeps the bar high.

The book opens with a conceit: Consider a simple, everyday tic chewing gum, say, or bickering with a spouse and then pivot backward in time. In the instant before the action, Sapolsky charts the intricate web of neurons as they fire up, the seemingly infinite synapses that spark across the organs widespread regions. In the hours leading up to the behavior, hormones play a critical role; here Sapolsky offers a tutorial on the waves of hormones that wash over us. Wind the clock back to childhood, and there are environmental factors at work, from affluence to poverty, safe neighborhoods versus violent ones. Wind the clock back to conception, and he plumbs how our DNA, as well as epigenetic components, shape us from day to day, year to year. He dials back even further, probing the dice theory of evolution, lizard brains beneath our mammalian gray matter.

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REVIEW: 'Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst,' by Robert M. Sapolsky - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Training the cyber Sherlocks – Greensburg Daily News

With cyber attacks on the rise, so too is the need for experts to protect companies, government agencies and individuals from those attacks and the damage they can cause.

That need has prompted Ivy Tech Community College student Dave Houchin to pursue a degree in cyber security/information assurance at the colleges Terre Haute campus.

It is an exponentially growing career choice, said the 34-year-old, who will earn his degree later this year. Demand for services, such as securing and maintaining networks, will only increase, as will job opportunities, he said.

Many cyber crimes go unreported, he said, often because businesses are worried news of such crimes could hurt their reputation.

The internet as we know it is still a wide-open frontier filled with lawlessness much as was seen in the early days of pioneers and cattle drives of the wild west, he said, and cyber criminals are taking advantage of the security lapses.

While one of his goals is career advancement, he also believes being educated in cyber security is important to protect our economy from theft, our citizens from harm and our nation from discord, he wrote in an email. His I.T. internship is with ThyssenKrupp Presta, where he has worked production for several years.

Ivy Tech has offered a two-year degree in cyber security/information assurance since 2013 and it offers a number of related certificate programs.

Purdue and Indiana universities have several well-established programs and research initiatives, and now, Indiana State University is working on a cybersecurity program that focuses on the human missteps that can lead to security breaches.

Indiana State faculty member Bill Mackey has a cybersecurity firm that employs ISU interns.

A growing need

According to the National Security Agency, The newest threats we face, and perhaps the fastest growing, are those in cyberspace. Cyber threats to U.S. national and economic security increase each year in frequency, scope and severity of impact. Cyber criminals, hackers and foreign adversaries are becoming more sophisticated and capable every day in their ability to use the internet for nefarious purposes.

The issue came to the forefront with Russias hacking of Democratic National Committee emails, an act intended to influence the U.S. presidential election.

The FBI websites describes the collective impact of cybercrime as staggering. Billions of dollars are lost every year repairing systems hit by such attacks. Some take down vital systems, disrupting and sometimes disabling the work of hospitals, banks, and 9-1-1 services around the country.

Who is behind such attacks? It runs the gamut from computer geeks looking for bragging rightsto businesses trying to gain an upper hand in the marketplace by hacking competitor websites, from rings of criminals wanting to steal your personal information and sell it on black marketsto spies and terrorists looking to rob our nation of vital information or launch cyber strikes, according to fbi.gov.

Earlier this month, the NSA and the Department of Homeland Security designated Ivy Tech as a National Center of Academic Excellence in its cyber defense education program. According to NSA, its goal is to reduce vulnerability in the countrys information infrastructure by promoting higher education and research in cyber defense.

The recognition is kind of a big deal, said Charles Peebles, department chair, School of Computing and Informatics at Ivy Techs Wabash Valley Region.

The two-year program is pretty thorough, he said. It covers all major areas you need to know to prevent a hack.

Students must know networks, software and server administration. They have to know a little of everything to be a good cyber agent, he said.

The program is a popular one, especially with all the breaches weve had that are getting publicized and with all the Ransomware, where people are clicking on links that end up taking control of their network and they have to pay someone money to get access back to their files and information, Peebles said.

Everybody should be concerned, with todays criminals out there, he said. Everybody should have some kind of protection on their computer.

Those who earn the degree, can do just about anything, he said. They work as a network or server administrator, he said. The average mean salary for cyber information analysis in Indiana is about $37.50 per hour, which translates into about $78,000 annually, he said.

On average, there are 629 annual job openings in cyber security in Indiana, according to the 2014-2024 Department of Workforce Development/Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Demand Report.

New offering at ISU

At Indiana State, a new cybersecurity studies program is in the works that focuses on the human missteps that can lead to security breaches; it will be offered through the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice.

Faculty member Bill Mackey said the new program will be human behavior focused.

We already have a lot of people that know how to work with computers and code and create and analyze viruses and malware, he said. But reports from recent years show us that human exploits are 90 percent plus of the actual cybercrime intrusion.

Rather than trying to infiltrate a companys expensive computer technology systems, hackers find its easier to just get the administrative assistants name and password ... Then they dont need to hack into the system, he said.

Students in the future ISU program will learn to analyze employee behavior, determine who is vulnerable and look at training programs to change the behavior so those employees are not the weak leak that ends up creating a security breach. Were teaching them how to be a human anti-virus, he said.

For example, if some employees are vulnerable to phishing emails, How do we train employees to not click on things? Mackey said.

Four ISU students have interned at his cyber security business, called Alloy Cybersecurity.

Everyone in every workplace needs to be concerned about cyber security because it takes just one person to not care and its all gone, Mackey said. This is not slowing down. This is not going to stop. Its getting worse every year.

The average person should be concerned, but not paranoid, he said. He suggests people can do a lot to protect themselves by taking five seconds before responding to an email if they are not sure who it came from, and taking 10 minutes once a year to learn about new frauds and scams out there.

Madison Meyer, an ISU senior and criminology major, has been working with Mackey for about six months on cybercrime research and with Alloy.

Prior to that, she had no experience with cybersecurity. What shes learned has been eye-opening, she said.

At Alloy, students created phishing emails to assess a businesss employee vulnerabilities. We were more successful than we expected, she said. Students monitored what happened but never actually hacked the system.

The Sellersburg native said her career interests include law enforcement and the FBI.

Sue Loughlin writes for the Tribune-Star in Terre Haute and can be reached at sue.loughlin@tribstar.com Follow Sue on Twitter @TribStarSue.

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Training the cyber Sherlocks - Greensburg Daily News

How proteins bring together membrane blebs – Phys.Org

July 3, 2017

Researchers have gained new insights into the mechanisms with which certain proteins help the immune defence mechanism in the human body. Pathogens such as viruses or bacteria are wrapped in membrane blebs and rendered harmless there. What are known as guanylate-binding proteins are crucial in this. How they contribute to the process that was investigated by researchers from Ruhr-Universitt Bochum, the Paul-Ehrlich-Institut and the University of Cologne, together with other partners from Erlangen and Geneva.

The team led by Prof Dr Christian Herrmann and Dr Sergii Shydlovskyi from the Bochum cluster of excellence Resolv and Dr Gerrit Praefcke, formerly of the University of Cologne, now at the Paul-Ehrlich-Institut in Langen, reports on the study in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Precursor of vesicle fusion

With a combination of cell biology and biochemical experiments, the researchers explored the function of human guanylate-binding protein 1 (hGBP1). In cells, it interacts with the energy storage molecule GTP, from which it can split off one or two phosphate groups, in order to release energy.

In the current study, the researchers discovered that hGBP1 uses energy released during splitting to change its structure: it unveils a lipid anchor. Using this anchor, it can form larger ring-shaped polymers with other hGBP1 proteins. With the aid of artificial vesicles, the team also found that hGBP1 uses the anchor to bind to the vesicle membrane. In this way, it brings together many such membrane blebs, which the researchers assume could be a precursor to vesicle fusion.

Demonstrated in cells

This kind of fusion is crucial for the immune defence mechanism: pathogens are trapped in the human body in vesicles, which merge with certain cell organelles, lysosomes. The latter contain enzymes that degrade pathogens. In the current study, the team also demonstrated that the protein hGBP1 in living cells is actually involved in the signal path, which leads via the lysosomes to the degradation of viruses and bacteria.

Explore further: Research describes missing step in how cells move their cargo

More information: Sergii Shydlovskyi et al. Nucleotide-dependent farnesyl switch orchestrates polymerization and membrane binding of human guanylate-binding protein 1, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2017). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1620959114

Every time a hormone is released from a cell, every time a neurotransmitter leaps across a synapse to relay a message from one neuron to another, the cell must undergo exocytosis. This is the process responsible for transporting ...

In order for cells to function properly, cargo needs to be constantly transported from one point to another within the cell, like on a goods station. This cargo is located in or on intracellular membranes, called vesicles. ...

Movement of secretory molecules, such as hormones and digestive enzymes, out of the cell is known as exocytosis. This process is guided by SNARE proteins, which help the fusion of secretory vesicles with the plasma membrane. ...

The protein that helps the sperm and egg fuse together in sexual reproduction can also fuse regular cells together. Recent findings by a team of biomedical researchers from the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Argentina, ...

Small "bubbles" frequently form on membranes of cells and are taken up into their interior. The process involves EHD proteins - a focus of research by Prof. Oliver Daumke of the MDC. He and his team have now shed light on ...

The many factors that contribute to how cells communicate and function at the most basic level are still not fully understood, but researchers at Baylor College of Medicine have uncovered a mechanism that helps explain how ...

The mass extinction that obliterated three-fourths of life on Earth, including non-avian dinosaurs, set the stage for the swift rise of frogs, a new study shows.

The conventional way of placing protein samples under an electron microscope during cryo-EM experiments may fall flat when it comes to getting the best picture of a protein's structure. In some cases, tilting a sheet of frozen ...

The town of Escalante in southern Utah is no small potatoes when it comes to scientific discovery; a new archaeological finding within its borders may rewrite the story of tuber domestication.

New research into the way that honeybees see colour could pave the way for more accurate cameras in phones, drones and robots.

Researchers have long assumed that habitat fragmentation contributes to extinction risk for animals, but until now, they have not been able to measure it for a major group of animals on a global scale. In a first-of-its-kind ...

Researchers at Dartmouth College have identified how a well-known plant hormone targets genes to regulate plant growth and development. The finding could allow scientists to establish organ-growing stem cells for grains like ...

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How proteins bring together membrane blebs - Phys.Org

Single-cell sequencing made simple – Nature.com

illustration by the project twins

Single-cell biology is a hot topic these days. And at the cutting edge of the field is single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq).

Conventional bulk methods of RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) process hundreds of thousands of cells at a time and average out the differences. But no two cells are exactly alike, and scRNA-seq can reveal the subtle changes that make each one unique. It can even reveal entirely new cell types.

For instance, after using scRNA-seq to probe some 2,400 immune-system cells, Aviv Regev of the Broad Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and her colleagues came across some dendritic cells that had potent T-cell-stimulating activity (A.-C. Villani et al. Science 356, eaah4573; 2017). Regev says that a vaccine to stimulate these cells could potentially boost the immune system and protect against cancer.

But such discoveries are hard-won. Its much more difficult to manipulate individual cells than large populations, and because each cell yields only a tiny amount of RNA, theres no room for error. Another problem is analysing the enormous amounts of data that result not least because the tools used can be unintuitive.

Typically, RNA-seq data is analysed by laboriously typing commands into a Unix operating system. Data files are passed from one software package to the next, with each tool tackling one step in the process: genome alignment, quality control, variant calling and so on.

The process is complicated. But for bulk RNA-seq, at least, a consensus has emerged as to which algorithms work best for each step and how they should be run. As a result, pipelines now exist that are, if not exactly plug-and-play, at least tractable for non-experts. To analyse differences in gene expression, says Aaron Lun, a computational biologist at Cancer Research UK in Cambridge, bulk RNA-seq is pretty much a solved problem.

The same cannot be said for scRNA-seq: researchers are still working out what they can do with the data sets and which algorithms are the most useful.

But a range of online resources and tools are beginning to ease the process of scRNA-seq data analysis. One page at GitHub, called Awesome Single Cell (go.nature.com/2rmb1hp), catalogues more than 70 tools and resources, covering every step of the analysis process. The field has spawned a cottage industry of computational-biology tools, says Cole Trapnell, a biologist at the University of Washington in Seattle.

Lana Garmire, a bioinformatician at the University of Hawaii in Honolulu, laid out the basic steps of scRNA-seq data analysis (and some 48 tools to perform them) in a review published last year (O. B. Poirion et al. Front. Genet. 7, 163; 2016). Although each experiment is unique, she says, most analysis pipelines follow the same steps to clean up and filter the sequencing data, work out which transcripts are expressed and correct for differences in amplification efficiency. Researchers then run one or more secondary analyses to detect subpopulations and other functions.

In many cases, says Christina Kendziorski, a biostatistician at the University of WisconsinMadison, the tools used in bulk RNA-seq can be applied to scRNA-seq. But fundamental differences in the data mean that this is not always possible. For one thing, single-cell data are noisier, says Lun. With so little RNA to work with, small changes in amplification and capture efficiencies can produce large differences from cell to cell and day to day that have nothing to do with biology. Researchers must therefore be vigilant for batch effects, in which seemingly identical cells prepared on different days differ for purely technical reasons, and for dropouts genes that are expressed in the cell but not picked up in the sequence data.

Another challenge is the scale, says Joshua Ho, a bioinformatician at the Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute in Sydney, Australia. A typical bulk RNA-seq experiment involves a handful of samples, but scRNA-seq studies can involve thousands. Tools that can handle a dozen samples often slow to a crawl when confronted with ten or a hundred times as many. (Hos Falco software taps on-demand cloud-computing resources to address that problem.)

Even the seemingly simple question of what constitutes a good cell preparation is complicated in the world of scRNA-seq. Luns workflow assumes that most of the cells have approximately equivalent RNA abundances. But that assumption isnt necessarily true, he says. For instance, he says, naive T cells, which have never been activated by an antigen and are relatively quiescent, tend to have less messenger RNA than other immune cells and could end up being removed during analysis because a program thinks there is insufficient RNA for processing.

Perhaps most significantly, researchers performing scRNA-seq tend to ask different questions from those analysing bulk RNA. Bulk analyses typically investigate how gene expression differs between two or more treatment conditions. But researchers working with single cells are often aiming to identify new cell types or states or reconstruct developmental cellular pathways. Because the aims are different, that necessarily requires a different set of tools to analyse the data, says Lun.

One common type of single-cell analysis, for instance, is dimensionality reduction. This process simplifies data sets to facilitate the identification of similar cells. According to Martin Hemberg, a computational biologist at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Cambridge, UK, scRNA-seq data represent each cell as a list of 20,000 gene-expression values. Dimensionality-reduction algorithms such as principal component analysis (PCA) and t-distributed stochastic neighbour embedding (t-SNE) effectively project those shapes into two or three dimensions, making clusters of similar cells apparent. Another popular application is pseudo-time analysis. Trapnell developed the first such tool, called Monocle, in 2014. The software uses machine learning to infer from an scRNA-seq experiment the sequence of gene-expression changes that accompany cellular differentiation, much like inferring the path of a foot race by photographing the runners from the air, Trapnell says.

Other tools address subpopulation detection (for instance, Pagoda, from Peter Kharchenko at Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts) and spatial positioning, which uses data on the distribution of gene expression in tissues to determine where in a tissue each transcriptome arose. Rahul Satija of the New York Genome Center in New York City, who developed one such tool, Seurat, as a postdoc with Regev, says that the software uses these data to position cells as points in 3D space. Thats why we named the package Seurat, he explains, because the dots reminded us of points on a pointillist painting.

Although targeted to specific tasks, these tools often address multiple functions. Seurat, for instance, powered the cell-subpopulation analysis Regevs team performed to identify new classes of immune cells.

Most scRNA-seq tools exist as Unix programs or packages in the programming language R. But relatively few biologists are comfortable working in those environments, says Gene Yeo, a bioinformatician at the University of California, San Diego. Even if they are, they may lack the time required to download and configure everything to make such tools work.

Some ready-to-use pipelines have been developed. And there are end-to-end graphical tools too, including the commercial GenSeq package from FlowJo, as well as a pair of open-source web tools: Granatum from Garmires group, and ASAP (the Automated Single-cell Analysis Pipeline) from the lab of Bart Deplancke, a bioengineer at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne.

ASAP and Granatum use a web browser to provide relatively simple, interactive workflows that allow researchers to explore their data graphically. Users upload their data and the software walks them through the steps one by one. For ASAP, that means taking data through preprocessing, visualization, clustering and differential gene-expression analysis; Granatum allows pseudo-time analyses and the integration of protein-interaction data as well.

According to both Garmire and Deplancke, ASAP and Granatum were designed to allow researchers and computational biologists to work together. Researchers used to think of [bioinformaticians] as magical creatures who just get the data and magically generate the result, says Xun Zhu, a PhD student at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, and lead developer on Granatum. Now they can participate a little bit in terms of tuning the parameters. And thats a good thing.

The tools arent perfect for every situation, of course. A pipeline that excels at identifying cell types, for instance, might stumble with pseudo-time analysis. Plus, appropriate methods are very data-set dependent, says Sandrine Dudoit, a biostatistician at the University of California, Berkeley. The methods and tuning parameters may need to be adjusted to account for variables such as sequencing length. But Marioni says its important not to put complete faith in the pipeline. Just because the satellite navigation tells you to drive into the river, you dont drive into the river, he says.

For beginners, caution is warranted. Bioinformatics tools can almost always yield an answer; the question is, does that answer mean anything? Dudoits advice is do some exploratory analysis, and verify that the assumptions underlying your chosen algorithms make sense.

Some analytical tasks still remain challenging, says Satija, including comparing data sets across experimental conditions or organisms and integrating data from different omics. (A planned update to Seurat should address the former issue, he notes.)

But enough tools exist to keep most researchers occupied. Kendziorski suggests that people who are interested just dive in. Each new tool can unveil another facet of biology; just keep your eyes on the science, and be judicious in your choice.

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Single-cell sequencing made simple - Nature.com

Applying neuroscience to Cannes-winning work: Coca-Cola Pool Boy – AdNews

AdNews has partnered with Neuro-Insight to bring an analysis of some of this year's winning Cannes work to understand what it is that made them successful through a neuroscience lens.

Sex sells, but are consumers still buying the narrative? Following Coca-Colas Pool Boy ad winning at Cannes, the analysts and Neuro-Insight wanted to find out. So what can the brain tell us about brand effectiveness? And what is our subconscious response to the ad?

Coca-Cola Pool Boy

Coca-Colas Pool Boy ad by Santo, received a Bronze Lion award in the creative category this year at Cannes. Launched in Australia early may, as part of the Taste the Feeling global campaign, the ad narrates a brother and sister racing to offer a Pool boy a bottle of Coca-Cola to ultimately find that their mother beat them to it. The combination of creative style, diversity, humour and story telling aid in the overall entertainment of the ad, but what does this mean in terms of brand effectiveness? As a part of Neuro-Insights partnership with AdNews for the sixth year running; NIs Cannes on the Brain series, unlocks via neuroscience, the subconscious response to this lovable ad.

How we did it

Neuro-Insight measured brain activity to see how 50 females and 50 males responded to the ad. The specific technology used by Neuro-Insight is founded in work originally developed for academic and neuroscience research, and has been used to analyse the effectiveness of Cannes award winners for over four years. The technology allows us to simultaneously record viewers second-by-second changes in approach (like)/withdraw (dislike), emotional intensity, engagement and memory whilst watching advertisements. The measure Neuro-Insight predominantly focusses on is Long-term Memory Encoding, based on its strong and highly researched link to actual consumer behaviour. This measure reveals, second by second, what the brain is storing (or encoding) into conscious and unconscious long-term memory and is plotted in the form of a time series graph. The higher the lines on the graph, the more strongly that moment in the ad is stored in memory and the more likely it is to influence consumer behaviour.

Time Series

Below is Neuro-Insights video timeseries showing how viewers brains respond to the Pool Boy ad. Immediately, you can see multiple strong peaks in long term memory encoding (NIs key indicator for ad effectiveness). This suggests that information processed at these moments, has been effectively encoded into memory. We also see a fairly even balance in the way viewers process the information of the ad, as indicated by the red and blue trace. The red trace corresponds with memory encoding from the left hemisphere, which is primarily responsible for the encoding of the detail in experiences, such as text, dialogue or micro features. In contrast the right hemisphere, which is represented by the blue line, is responsible with the storing of global elements, such as soundtracks, scenery and broad themes, as well as the emotional underpinnings of a particular experience.

Long term memory encoding for all viewers

Early in the ad we see two powerfully encoded scenes (see highlighted sections below), at this point in the ad viewers are introduced to the admiring sister as she as looks longingly out the window to the pool boy. Cleverly integrated, in both of these scenes, lies the iconic Coca-Cola bottle. Whilst the different creative elements have ensued an effective memory encoding response, the branding has successfully linked itself to the narrative and stored into viewers memory. As well as memory encoding, NI also evaluate viewers engagement ( a measure associated with personal relevance and relatability) and emotional intensity (relating to the strength of emotion being experienced). As indicated by the peak in engagement, it appears viewers respond to the sister daydreaming out of her window with high relatability and relevance this highlights the effective way in which Coca-Cola have engaged viewers in an everyday kind of moment. This response reflects objectives mentioned by Lisa Winn, Coca-Cola South Pacific marketing director, whom has stated As a brand we are constantly looking for ways to keep our work fresh, exciting and engaging to our consumers. We do this by tapping into everyday moments and telling universal stories that connect with our consumers around the world.

Rather incredibly, the strongest elicited response occurs as the brother and sister meet at the fridge with the Coca-Cola bottles clearly presented in the foreground. The Coca-Cola iconography is yet again, effectively stored in viewers long-term memory encoding. Shortly after this powerful moment, we see a drop in viewers responses, indicative of a phenomenon called Conceptual Closure. Conceptual Closure occurs when the brain perceives an event boundary (i.e a narrative sequence has come to an end), the brain then takes a brief period to process and store the previous experience (i.e the brain takes a break). In this case, it appears that viewers process the notion that both the brother and sister seek-out the Coca-Cola bottle as the solution to gaining the attention of the pool boy. The Conceptual Closure occurrence is not viewed as bad thing, as the dynamic and humorous story telling recaptures viewers high levels of processing.

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As viewers follow the entertaining battle to the pool boy, with the brother and sister grasping their Coca-Cola bottles, wee see high levels of memory encoding, engagement and emotional intensity (see below). As the brother and sister ultimately discover their mother has beat them to it and delivered the Coca-Cola bottle, we see a drop in processing again suggesting Conceptual Closure. Viewers are met with the humorous twist and end to the story. The ad concludes with the emerging Coca-Cola branding logo, successfully retriggering viewers memory encoding for the final time. NIs analysis is able to objectively showcase the effectiveness of creativity and branding, and how an entertaining and dynamic narrative has effectively and emotively communicated the Coca-Cola brand.

Have something to say on this? Share your views in the comments section below. Or if you have a news story or tip-off, drop us a line at adnews@yaffa.com.au

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Applying neuroscience to Cannes-winning work: Coca-Cola Pool Boy - AdNews

Cancer-surviving women a third less likely to become pregnant … – The Guardian

A proton beam irradiating a brain tumour (circled in white) many anti-cancer therapies destroy fertility either chemically or through radiation. Photograph: Alamy Stock Photo

Women who survived cancer in the past 30 years were a third less likely to become pregnant than women in the general population, according to study into the impact of the disease and its treatment on patients.

The research provides the first broad assessment of how cancer, the fertility-harming therapies that patients receive, and the decisions women make on leaving hospital, can affect their plans for a family.

This really allows us to quantify the effects of cancer and its treatment, in the broadest sense, on women and girls having a pregnancy afterwards, said Richard Anderson, professor of clinical reproductive science, who led the work at Edinburgh University.

The scientists analysed medical records for more than 23,000 women in Scotland who survived cancer after being diagnosed between 1981 and 2012. The cancer survivors had only 6,627 pregnancies, far fewer than the 11,000 or so expected for an age-matched group of women in the general population.

A 30-year-old who has chemotherapy will have the reproductive potential of a 40-year-old

The impact of the disease was most striking for women who had not carried a baby before their diagnosis. The records showed that these women were about half as likely to conceive as similar but healthy women, with pregnancy rates of 21% versus 39%.

Many anti-cancer therapies are known to destroy fertility either chemically or through radiation, but many other factors will affect whether or not cancer survivors go on to have children. As well as the treatment damaging their fertility, its also women choosing not to complete their family, said Anderson. Some women may not want to bring another child into the world when they are not sure about their own health.

While the findings highlight the serious impact that cancer can have on female fertility and the choices women make around having children, the records point to a stark improvement in recent years, with some types of cancer now taking far less of a toll. In the 1980s, women who survived cancer were half as likely to conceive as others, but since 2005 pregnancy rates have risen to 75% of that seen in the healthy population.

Speaking from the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology in Geneva, Anderson said that doctors had seen clear improvements in pregnancy rates among survivors of some cancers but not others. For example, girls diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma today have far less radiotherapy than 30 years ago, causing less damage to their fertility. Similar improvements have not been seen in other cancers such as leukaemia, however.

The work highlights the need for more widespread access to new procedures that aim to preserve the fertility of girls and women who face cancer therapy. One approach is to remove ovarian tissue from the patient and freeze it until the patient has the all-clear and the tissue can be re-implanted. Last year, Anderson announced the first British birth using frozen ovarian tissue, to a 33-year-old woman who had part of an ovary removed 11 years earlier. Anderson said the latest findings should help doctors to counsel women who are diagnosed with cancer and direct services, such as ovarian tissue preservation, to where it is needed most.

Gillian Lockwood at Midland Fertility Services said that chemotherapy could add a decade to a womans reproductive age, an issue that must be taken into account in patient counselling. A 30-year-old who has chemotherapy will have the reproductive potential of a 40-year-old, which is not good, she said. Its important for these young women to know that even though their life expectancy thanks to good, modern oncology treatment is near normal, their reproductive life expectancy may not be as good.

Nick Macklon, professor of obstetrics and gynaecology at Southampton University, said the results were positive for many cancer patients. The knowledge that they can have a good chance of having a baby will be very important to women, and the addition of fertility preservation over the past few years has really changed the scene for them. Not so long ago, having a cancer diagnosis was seen as the end of your chances of having a baby, he said.

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Cancer-surviving women a third less likely to become pregnant ... - The Guardian

e-Anatomy, the interactive atlas of human anatomy – IMAIOS

e-Anatomy is an award-winning interactive atlas of human anatomy. It is the most complete reference of human anatomy available on web, iPad, iPhone and android devices. Explore over 5400 anatomic structures and more than 375 000 translated medical labels. Images in: CT, MRI, Radiographs, Anatomic diagrams and nuclear images. Available in 8 languages.

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e-Anatomy, the interactive atlas of human anatomy - IMAIOS

Blood, Sweat and Ice? During the 60th anniversary of the IGY lets … – The Guardian

Evacuation of Dr. Ronald S. Shemenski from the British Antarctic Survey Rothera Research Station, April 26, 2001. The airlift operation was the riskiest rescue effort ever by a small plane to the South Pole, as the weather makes any flights to the South Pole extremely hazardous from late Februray until November. (AP Photo/British Antarctic Survey) Photograph: AP

The International Geophysical Year was a global survey, but it had a particular impact on Antarctica, as it led to the creation and signing of the Antarctic Treaty, reserving the continent for peaceful purposes only and ensuring Freedom of scientific investigation. While most of the work done was as the name suggests in the physical and geographical sciences, one almost unknown part of the research involved an international team of physiologists and doctors who headed out to Antarctica to study the human body in an extreme environment.

INPHEXAN, the INternational PHysiological EXpedition to ANtarctica involved six researchers from three countries: Nello Pace, William Siri and Charles Meyers from the USA; Gerhard Hildebrand, a recent German immigrant to the USA (and ex-First Alpine Battalion member); and James Adams and Lewis Griffith Evans Cresswell Griff Pugh from the UK. Initiated by Pace and Siri, who shared leisure interests in high altitude climbing as well as research interests in stress and physiology, the initial plan was a study of hormonal responses to the stress of the Antarctic environment the cold, dark, and isolation. Charles Meyer, a dentist and bacteriologist at the Naval Biological Laboratory in Berkeley went along to conduct studies of infectious diseases. The UK team had intended to study changes in metabolism, and the possibility that people are able to acclimatise to intense cold, and agreed to join with the Americans to make an international research team.

One metabolic study involved a brand new piece of technology: the IMP, or Integrating Motor Pneumotachograph, invented by Heinz Wolff at the National Institute for Medical Research (before he started his TV career on The Great Egg Race and other shows). A variation on the Douglas Bag, the IMP measures the volume of air used by the human subject, and takes samples of their breath for analysis. The UK team measured the metabolism of several scientists, with the help of Allan Rogers, the Medical Officer on the Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition (TAE) of 1955-8.

Strapped into the IMP for a week, the geologist Geoff Pratt wrote up a report On being IMPed where he complained about feeling suffocated in the mask, that it got in the way when he was trying to work, and that it stopped him communicating effectively with his colleagues. He also blamed the suit, the tight mask, and the difficulty he had sleeping with it on for a string of accidents and mistakes in his lab

in the course of the week I have done a remarkable number of stupid things.

You can see the IMP in action in a short British Pathe Film (the IMP appears at 1.20).

While the team got relatively few publications out of this work it did enable researchers to improve and adapt the equipment to make it easier on human subjects. Pughs work with the copper-wire body suit (in the video above) and other measurements became papers on the effects of solar radiation on temperatures in the Antarctic, and he also published in Nature on the blood of Weddell seals, and on the dangers of Carbon Monoxide poisoning in explorers huts.

Allan Rogers other major investigation was what appeared to be a very simple study of acclimatization to cold: he gave all the members of the TAE cards to fill out, every day, to record their clothing, their sleep patterns, their activities, any illnesses, and any other information they thought relevant. After the 15 month expedition was over, he intended to discover if men who had spent a long time in Antarctica wore fewer clothes in other words, were more acclimatized to cold than new arrivals on the continent, using the data from around a dozen members of the expedition.

Unfortunately the task turned out to be anything but simple: at least three academic statisticians tried and failed to analyse the huge amount of data and correlate it with weather patterns, working patterns, and sickness records. Ten years after the IGY Rogers finally got the money to hire someone who could do the job: recent mathematics graduate Mrs RJ Sutherland, who designed a computer programme to deal with the pile of report cards and all their information. Finally, in 1971, Sutherland and Rogers published their report which showed a negative finding: the men of the TAE felt the cold just as much at the end of their trek as at the beginning.

The vision of women slowly crunching numbers in a computer room in Bristol, or men patiently filling in sleep cards or trying to get on with their jobs while wearing an IMP, might not be particularly exciting or glamorous, this was hard, boring, awkward work that mattered. The IGY provided crucial data that helped us understand how the planet worked and particularly gave us a baseline for understanding climate change and none of that would have been possible without physiologists and other biomedical scientists designing safe rations, comfortable snow goggles, and warm gloves.

A collection of Allan Rogers possessions including clothing, his IMP equipment, and his medical kit are in the collections held by the Scott Polar Research Institute. The Year That Made Antarctica: People, Politics and the International Geophysical Year is on display at the Institutes Polar Museum, University of Cambridge, until 9 September 2017.

The rest is here:
Blood, Sweat and Ice? During the 60th anniversary of the IGY lets ... - The Guardian

Physiology – 9781455708475 | US Elsevier Health Bookshop

1 Cellular Physiology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

2 Autonomic Nervous System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45

3 Neurophysiology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65

4 Cardiovascular Physiology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113

5 Respiratory Physiology. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 185

6 Renal Physiology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 239

7 Acid-Base Physiology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 303

8 Gastrointestinal Physiology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 329

9 Endocrine Physiology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 383

10 Reproductive Physiology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 447

Appendix I Common Abbreviations and Symbols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 469

Appendix II Normal Values and Constants. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .471

Challenge Yourself Answers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 473

Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .477

Continued here:
Physiology - 9781455708475 | US Elsevier Health Bookshop

Students examine anatomy at camp – Rocky Mount Telegram

Several students traveled from far and wide to explore the human body at N.C. Wesleyan Colleges first offering of the Human Body and Disease Camp.

While the camp may be too intense for everyone, the students who attended the camp seemed fascinated with the opportunity to dissect rats, sheep brains and pig hearts. Dr. Dan Stovall, who served as the instructor for the camp, said the students also went to the planetarium at the Imperial Centre to learn more about how space affects human physiology.

While the camp was offered on the campus of N.C. Wesleyan College in Rocky Mount, most of the students came from places outside the Twin Counties.

Rising high school senior Austin Strickland, who lives in Goldsboro, said he came to the camp because he wants to be a surgeon, and this camp offered something new.

I have never seen a camp like this before, Strickland said.

The price of the camp was a $415, a figure that seems pricey compared to many other summer day camps in the area. However, considering the camp earned students a college credit, the price may be considered a bargain.

Stovall teaches a number of classes related to the human body at Wesleyan, including anatomy and physiology, cancer biology and human development. He said the Human Body and Disease Camp offers a taste of all those courses.

This course is sort of a condensed version of the anatomy course will all the fun stuff thrown in, Stovall said.

Meagan Colston, a rising senior at Roanoke Rapids High School, said she has attended several science camps at N.C. Wesleyan College over the years and was excited to see this camp offered.

Elena Miller, another rising senior from Roanoke Rapids, said she especially enjoyed the opportunities for dissection.

I hope to go into some medical field, and so it was really interesting to get to know more about the body systems and how the body works and functions, Miller said.

Nia Farrow, who lives in Greenville, said she has a grandmother who lives in Pinetops and has attended a Wesleyan Science Camp in the past. Farrow, who plans to become a physical therapist, also said she relished the opportunity to carve open a pigs heart.

I really enjoyed the dissection because I have never been able to do one before, said Farrow.It is interesting to learn about the human body and to compare human organs with other animal organs.

Stovall said he thinks camps like this offer a great deal to students.

This camp is really relevant because health sciences is an exploding field right now, Stovall said.

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Students examine anatomy at camp - Rocky Mount Telegram