All posts by medical

Lab test – Rising Kashmir

While clarifying on the matter whether professionals other than MBBS doctors (who are registered with Medical Council of India MCI or State Medical Council) can sign medical test reports, Deputy Secretary MCI Dr Parul Goel maintained that only the registered doctors can and not professionals that have been awarded any other degree. The other degrees include MSc, PhD, degrees in fields like Biochemistry, Microbiology, etc. The order has been justified as preventing any malpractice by what have been described as quacks in the field. The order not only fails on its face value but its place value as well, because the problem apparently is not who signs or attests the medical reports but how much professionally sound they are regarding knowledge, information and judgment. The order certainly puts highly qualified professionals other than MBBS doctors like those in the field of Biochemistry and Microbiology at a disadvantage, and it is ridiculous. How are PhDs or those with degrees in specialized fields in medical science quacks and MBBS doctors qualified? It makes some sense in the case of lab technicians as there has been mushrooming of technicians who are trained in institutes having little to no credibility. But in the case of fields like Biochemistry the council may be forgetting that these professionals at times teach the MBBS doctors while they graduate. Besides certain fields impart greater knowledge and know how about certain medical tests and analyses than a mere MBBS degree. Further, if the decision is compared to that of granting permissions to pharmaceutical units to manufacture medicines and to those in the trade of selling these drugs, there is clearly a disparity. In fact quacks and unscrupulous elements have been manufacturing substandard medicine and even selling substandard medicine being aware of the fact, which goes mostly unchecked and unheeded. The governments or medical authorities should have applied pressure on the government to cease the licenses of these elements and to be careful while issuing new ones. But the practice is that anyone with the pharma background, no matter the institution or its credibility, is given the permission to sell medicine which has a direct impact on the health of the people, and as has been seen a negative impact in the case of those freely selling substandard medicine. When there is no check put in place to curb sale of low quality substandard medicine, how can signing of medical reports be of any significance. The problem in both the cases is the credibility of those who are given the permission to practice freely. Lastly, there are MBBS doctors, like other professionals, who for profit allow their seals/signs to be used and who do not even have any idea about the actual reports.

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Lab test - Rising Kashmir

Global Biochemistry Analyzer Market to Grow at a CAGR of 6 … – Business Wire (press release)

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Global Biochemistry Analyzer Market 2017-2021" report to their offering.

The global Biochemistry Analyzer market to grow at a CAGR of 6.02% during the period 2017-2021.

The report, Global Biochemistry Analyzer Market 2017-2021, has been prepared based on an in-depth market analysis with inputs from industry experts. The report covers the market landscape and its growth prospects over the coming years. The report also includes a discussion of the key vendors operating in this market.

The latest trend gaining momentum in the market is modular design of biochemistry analyzer. The fully automatic biochemistry analyzer is used to analyze many biochemical parameters of blood sample like blood glucose, urea, protein, etc., to detect various diseases like kidney, liver, and other metabolic disorders. Therefore, by analyzing these parameters, the biochemistry analyzer helps in diagnosing various health disorders. It is a high performance-based micro-controller inbuilt with the photometric technology.

According to the report, one of the major drivers for this market is growing aging population. The increase in median age due to the reduction in fertility rate and the increase in life expectancy result in the growing aging population. These two demographic effects reflect the change in a country's population with a rising aging and a declining child population.

Key vendors

Other prominent vendors

Key Topics Covered:

PART 01: Executive summary

PART 02: Scope of the report

PART 03: Research Methodology

PART 04: Introduction

PART 05: Market landscape

PART 06: Market segmentation by end-user

PART 07: Geographical segmentation

PART 08: Decision framework

PART 09: Drivers and challenges

PART 10: Market trends

PART 11: Vendor landscape

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/v5qf2j/global

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Global Biochemistry Analyzer Market to Grow at a CAGR of 6 ... - Business Wire (press release)

Tucson Tech: University of Arizona scientists invent new sulfur-based plastics – Arizona Daily Star

In the not-too-distant future, a new type of plastic invented at the University of Arizona might help your car drive itself and, when you arrive at the supermarket, help you pick out a ripe tomato.

Jeffrey Pyun, professor in the UAs Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, led research to develop a new class of inexpensive, sulfur-based polymer, or plastic, with properties that uniquely suit them for use in lenses in infrared devices like heat-sensing cameras.

The invention is the result of a cross-campus collaboration between Pyun, UA optical sciences professor Robert Norwood and UA chemistry and biochem professor Richard Glass.

Pyun, who joined the UA in 2004, discovered the new type of plastic as part of research on sulfur-based materials for advanced batteries he started in 2010.

The new hybrid material is known as CHIPs, which stands for Chalcogenide Hybrid Inorganic/organic Polymers.

Besides semiconductor properties useful for batteries, Pyun found that the new polymer had exciting optical properties in the non-visible infrared wavelengths the part of the electromagnetic spectrum detected by heat-sensing thermal cameras and used by devices such as remote controls and automobile sensors.

In 2010, Pyun and his colleagues were focused on using waste sulfur from petroleum refining industry as low-cost feedstock for a new kind of plastic.

Our thought back then was, how do we take this and directly, or in a single or convenient step, make it into a useful plastic? Pyun said.

Besides its potential use as a semiconductor in batteries, Pyuns group found that the new material had a very high refractive index essentially a measure of how light bends as it passes through a material.

High refractive index materials allow opticians to make thinner eyeglass lenses and also helps lenses on infrared devices see more infrared radiation.

Typically, lens materials for infrared imaging are made of germanium or chalcogenide glass, which contains elements that create a high refractive index but can be complex and costly to produce.

On the other hand, sulfur is cheap and abundant as a refining byproduct and is very simple to turn into plastics.

Sulfur you can get for the same magnitude of cost as coal, so its literally dirt cheap, Pyun said.

There could be a big market for the new plastic in lenses used for industrial infrared applications ranging from missile target seekers, night-vision equipment and infrared detectors used in self-driving vehicles.

The material could someday be used with smartphones to create heat-sensing apps, such as an app that could detect the higher heat signature of a ripe fruit versus an unripe one.

We have basically opened up an enormous new world for plastics in this already-established area, Pyun said. We are the first, and thats why its so exciting.

With the help of Tech Launch Arizona and Paul Eynott, TLA licensing manager for the College of Science, Pyun and his colleagues are starting to court industrial partners that could license the technology and start incorporating it into products.

Pyun has also set up a startup company, Innovative Energetics, to further develop commercial technologies.

Though the sulfur-based polymers could be used for a myriad of plastics applications, infrared optics is the main focus now, Pyun said.

The UA has filed more than 40 separate provisional patents surrounding the technology and has two issue patents, Pyun said.

Its a UA product. Ive been here my entire academic career, and we made it happen really through grassroots efforts, support from the university, our extensive collaborations and international collaborations, he said.

Beyond the UA, Pyuns group has collaborated on the research with scientists at South Koreas Seoul National University, including chemistry professor Kookheon Char.

Tech Launch Arizona has launched a series of podcasts about promising UA technologies, starting with an interview with Pyun.

Contact senior reporter David Wichner at dwichner@tucson.com or 573-4181. On Twitter: @dwichner

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Tucson Tech: University of Arizona scientists invent new sulfur-based plastics - Arizona Daily Star

Sansum Allergy/Immunology Department Moving – Noozhawk

Posted on June 30, 2017 | 9:00 a.m.

On Monday, July 17, the Sansum Clinic Allergy & Immunology Department will move to 51 Hitchcock Way in Santa Barbara. The new location is adjacent to Sansum's Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine Department.

The Allergy & Immunology Department offers comprehensive care for children and adults with allergic and immunologic disorders, including the following:

Immunotherapy (allergy shots); pediatric and adult pulmonary testing; allergy blood and skin testing; patch skin testing; oral challenge testing; drug testing; lab and x-ray services.

The entrance to the new department is on Hitchcock Way, across the street from the YMCA and accessible from Highway 101 or State Street. The practice will be on the first floor.

To learn more about Sansum Clinic, visit http://www.sansumclinic.org.

Elizabeth Baker for Sansum Clinic.

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Sansum Allergy/Immunology Department Moving - Noozhawk

How neuroscience is reinventing music therapy – Economic Times

By Aparna M Sridhar

When astrophysicist and accomplished classical vocalist Priyamvada Natarajan of Yale University listens to music as she tackles some of the most complex problems in cosmology, it is not to get into a mood. It is beyond that it is to get into a mode of thinking.

Bengaluru-based triathlete Anu Vaidyanathan, who finished sixth in the punishing Ultraman Canada Triathlon in 2013, has learnt Carnatic vocal and violin. She says music taught her to negate performance-inhibiting feelings like fear and fatigue, and create discipline in the way we frame our day and our problems.

For many who may think music therapy as something to do with how this raga is good for this and that raga is good for that, the cognitive or neuroscientific vocabulary in which the above feelings are expressed should come as a revelation.

Carnatic musician and neuroscientist Dr Deepti Navaratna, executive director (southern region) of the Indira Gandhi National Council for the Arts (IGNCA), and a former Harvard University professor, says that in the Indian tradition a considerable amount of empirical musicology has gone into studying the cognitive impact of swara (notes), sruti (pitch) and laya (rhythm), in their different forms and variations.

Its another matter that now there is hardly any neuroscientific exploration of music therapy in India, capitalising on the inherent strengths of classical music.

There is very little empirical experiment in Indian classical music these days. Starting from texts dealing with Sankhya philosophy to the Natyashastra to the more recent lakshanagranthas in music like Swaramelakalanidhi (written by Ramamatya of the Vijayanagar empire in 1550), the psychological impact of musical concepts has been clearly worked out, says Navaratna.

Healing Process That the mind is as powerful as the body in the healing process is universally accepted. To the best of my knowledge, while research data on active clinical use of Indian classical music in the past is limited, there are a lot of references to Raaga Chikitsa and the usage of certain ragas as adjuvants to ayurvedic therapy. Music as alternate/adjuvant therapy to aid clinical intervention is identifiable in our music practices, she says.

Taking rasa (emotion) as the main point, the dominant take on music therapy in India has been to use ragas to heal. There is a large body of literature dealing with Raaga Chikitsa, which looks at certain intervals and modes being able to produce certain outcomes.

Navaratna says that by the time Natyashastra was formalised circa 200 BCE (Natyashastra reflected contemporary thinking on this matter, in its era), the psychological impact of certain melodic structures/rhythmic patterns was worked out to the level of being able to prescribe one-jati (raga precursor) to one rasa.

In a recent electroencephalography (EEG) study on the impact of Indian classical music, especially of Hindustani ragas on individuals, Dr Shantala Hegde, assistant professor, neuropsychology unit, National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences (NIMHANS), Bengaluru, says that after listening to Hindustani ragas, 20 musically untrained subjects showed increased overall positive brain wave frequency power, higher even than that in highly relaxed meditative states.

Listening to certain ragas, for example Desi-Todi, for 30 minutes every day for 20 days, has been shown to produce a significant decrease in systolic and diastolic blood pressure, to reduce stress, anxiety and depression, and to enhance feelings of life satisfaction, experience of hope and optimism, says Hegde.

She notes, however, that music therapy is now moving from a social-science model focusing on overall health and well-being towards a neuroscience model focusing on specific elements of music and its effect on sensorimotor, language and cognitive functions.

The handful of evidence-based music therapy studies on psychiatric conditions have shown promising results. Traditional music, such as Indian classical music, has only recently been evaluated in evidencebased research into music therapy, says Hegde.

Navaratna says the key difference between studying music cognition in a brain imaging laboratory and studying it in a social sciences lab is that in the former you are looking at music not as the process but as the final outcome and most of the orientations to music therapy follow that ontological direction. In a social sciences lab, you would look at music as a product of a culture. There is a very inextricably bound relationship in the music and the cultural values that it harbours, and those are equally important for someone studying cognition.

You have to study music as culture and not as a synthetically separated thing. Empirical studies on the brains of people learning Indian classical music are very few, since the focus is on healing and treatment efficacy. Says Navaratna: There are very few studies on brains that function very well. What is happening in the brains of the people who are using their brains extraordinarily well? If you study that, then you may actually be in a better place to come up with therapeutic practices for brains that might not be up to speed.

There are many aspects of Carnatic music from an alapana (form of melodic improvisation that introduces and develops a raga) to a neraval (when the artiste takes a line from a composition and sings this line over and over, with a new variation each time) that reveal the potential for research in the Carnatic idiom. An alapana is the result of a lot of what we call embodied knowledge.

We have to look at different processes of the mind implicit memory, executive control and so on. The questions that I would formulate would be what are the kinds of memory involved in the Carnatic performance, how much of the material that people use in their alapana is actually novel and how much of that is learnt from compositions? asks Navaratna.

Sound of Music Any cognitive study of the classical music mind has to study the source of that creativity. How does a Carnatic or Hindustani musician create novel phrases? If one were to ask a musician how they do a swarakalpana (raga improvisation within a particular tala), they will probably say that its the product of years of saadhana, and that it does not involve thinking actively on stage. There is a certain muscle memory that kicks in from having sung swarakalpanas some 40,000 times. The moment you are doing it, creativity happens in a very different way. It happens from many unconscious processes of the mind, says Navaratna.

Similarly when one is doing a neraval, one has to deal with several structures and constraints, keeping the tala and the laya, and using the prosodic structure well. You cannot break phrases in the wrong places, the emotion has to be kept alive and you have to orbit that line of the krithi to higher and higher levels of emotional charge, while you are also doing a lot of mathematical manipulations that involve daunting mental processes. If we know how the brain works in such complex situations, then you may be able to apply that in learning disabilities, adds Navaratna.

Dr Geetha R Bhat, a child mental health practitioner and veena player, engages with what she calls music intelligence in her work with both normal and special children. She says due to its multi-sensory demands, classical music contributes to helping children learn how to both process and react to sensory stimulation.

The coordination of rhythm (tala and laya) along with the melodies (raga) is a combined complex activity which engages both hemispheres of the brain. Sanak Kumar Athreya and his wife Dr Sowmya Sanak have started the Svarakshema Foundation, an initiative focused on reviving Indian music therapy. Athreya believes that Indian classical music has innumerable components of music, each standardised, structured and easily adaptable to a therapeutic module. However, the components for therapy are different from those that are useful in a stage performance. Performing something complex on stage is attractive, but in therapy one has to break the music down into components that are useful, and therefore not many musicians are drawn to it.

Athreya is an advocate of using the ancient art form of Konnakkol for therapy. Konnakkol is the art of performing percussion syllables vocally in Carnatic music. The fast movement of syllables in rhythmic cycles creates interest among children. When we are treating children with special needs, especially autism, we observe that more than any other constituent of music, fast recitation of Konnakkol instantly attracts their attention, and creates an ambience for therapy. The practice of this art form in its authentic tradition is as good as alternative speech therapy.

For instance if a child has a problem saying th reciting tha ka | tha ki da | tha ka thi mi motivates the child to learn the sound. Konnakkol helps in enhancing memory and developing cognition among children.

Konnakkol is an effective tool in behaviour management too. Many children with special needs are prone to mood-swings, anxiety and meltdowns. Irrespective of the childs interest in music or ability to perform pieces, selective compositions of Konnakkol act as an earthing point, quickly defusing the situation, says Athreya.

It is not about teaching Konnakkol to children, but about using the practices in Konnakkol to initiate learning in other spheres, stresses Athreya. The creative aspect of Indian music where one is producing new patterns all the time helps in opening up new neural pathways, and in some cases of Alzheimers and dementia, it can be more beneficial than learning a new language, he notes.

It is clearly important to move beyond the simplistic stimulus-response model, which reduces music therapy to just mood improvement or marginal cognitive impetus. Music is capable of a much more creative and transformative partnership with the brain.

The writer is the editor of Saamagaana: The First Melody, a magazine on classical music.

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How neuroscience is reinventing music therapy - Economic Times

Editorial: Traffic engineering rules still apply – Boulder Daily Camera

Street signs at Nine Mile Corner near the intersection of Arapahoe Road and U.S. Highway 287. Boulder County officials are looking at ways to relieve congestion on the crowded Arapahoe corridor. (Jeremy Papasso / Staff Photographer)

We were gratified, if a little perplexed, to learn that local and state transportation planners apparently awoke from a deep sleep to discover congestion on Arapahoe Avenue east of the city and a bottleneck on U.S. 36 could be improved by gasp adding lanes to accommodate the traffic volume.

It is an article of ideological dogma in the governments of Boulder and Boulder County that building new roads or lanes doesn't relieve congestion a concept known as "induced demand." In the minds of some officials, this conviction appears to have morphed into the notion that no infrastructure improvements for auto travel are ever appropriate. But a basic rule of traffic engineering still applies: Capacity must be sufficient for the smooth flow of existing demand (unless, of course, you are trying purposefully to inconvenience motorists for other political purposes).

A review of existing demand on Arapahoe between Lafayette and Boulder reveals too many cars to move efficiently on a two-lane road. With population growth and housing development certain to continue in the east county, basic traffic engineering requires the infrastructure to keep up.

This goes against the ideological position of many local officials, who continue to believe that starving motorists of space will convince them to switch to bikes or buses. Unfortunately, actual human behavior indicates this is not true. Despite all sorts of well-meaning public pressure to do just that, the percentage of commuters that drive into Boulder roughly four out of five - hasn't changed in 25 years.

As we have observed before, this is not because motorists want to confound the ideological objectives of Boulder progressives. This is because cycling is not practical for many commuters and mass transit in these parts still presents enormous first-mile, last-mile problems that extend commute times dramatically.

Having finally acknowledged the problem, some local officials remain determined to steer commuters into the behaviors those officials prefer. Hence the enthusiasm to revamp Arapahoe not to accommodate the cars already there but to create dedicated lanes for a bus rapid transit system that does not yet exist.

Boulder City Councilman Aaron Brockett had the temerity some months ago to ask how often such buses would run. Nobody knows, of course. In part, that's because it would be up to the Regional Transportation District. In part, it's because nobody knows what the market demand might be. But it would not be surprising if ideologically-driven county officials devoted large portions of the roadway to a mode few people use at the expense of the mode most people use in yet another attempt at forced behavior modification.

Officials will respond that they are fighting climate change by trying to reduce auto emissions, a laudable goal. But it is far more likely that goal will be achieved by improvements in transportation technology electrification of the automobile fleet, for example than coercion. Political progressives have every right to try to persuade their constituents to behave differently, but purposefully making them miserable to force them to come around goes against the basic concept of public service.

The ramp from Foothills Parkway onto eastbound U.S. 36 was an even more egregious example, if that's possible. When U.S. 36 was rebuilt to add an express lane in each direction, the eastbound express lane made its initial appearance tantalizingly close to the Foothills ramp, but not close enough. That left two lanes of eastbound U.S. 36 and two lanes of Foothills Parkway to merge into . . . two lanes. Naturally, it became a bottleneck, with two lanes of cars backing up on each roadway and producing more emissions, not less.

The state Department of Transportation patted itself on the back for its innovative solution last week restriping the merge area to make room for three lanes which could have been the original configuration if the express lane had started a little earlier.

"This shows how, by thinking a little differently, we can improve operations despite constrained resources and constrained funding," CDOT Executive Director Shailen Bhatt said. "This relatively low-cost project will save 200 to 700 vehicle hours per day, according to our study."

We don't want to seem ungrateful, but anyone who works in transportation for a living and was surprised that the original configuration produced a daily traffic jam might be better off choosing another line of work.

The suspicion of many commuters whose views don't seem to matter much to Boulder transportation planners is that these apparent signs of incompetence are actually intentional coercive measures intended to change commuter behavior.

But they didn't. Traveling by car remains the fastest way for most commuters to get where they're going, even accounting for increasing congestion and some poor traffic engineering along the way. Until that changes, all the lectures in the world from well-meaning officials won't change the basic calculus for people trying to get to and from work as quickly as they can.

Given that fact of human behavior, it's probably best to go back to basic traffic engineering rules and make the system operate as efficiently as possible. That reduces emissions, too.

Dave Krieger, for the editorial board. Email: kriegerd@dailycamera.com. Twitter: @DaveKrieger

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Editorial: Traffic engineering rules still apply - Boulder Daily Camera

CEOs recall when teens like them actually worked summer jobs – Fairfield Daily Republic

Even CEOs have to start somewhere.

Some of Americas top executives made humbling debuts as teenagers in the workplace. They scrubbed toilets, cut tobacco, worked at McDonalds.

Such work is becoming less common . Todays youths are more likely to enroll in summer school, do volunteer work or pursue extracurricular activities, especially to improve their prospects for college admission.

At the same time, teens who do want summer work find that adults increasingly occupy the low-skill jobs that once went to younger workers. Overall, the percentage of Americans ages 16-19 who work in July has fallen from 57 percent in 1986 to 36 percent last year.

At a time when a smaller proportion of teens are working summer jobs, some of todays corporate chief executives reminisced to The Associated Press about what they did and what they learned in their earliest jobs.

___

Campbell Soup CEO Denise Morrison worked three summers as a phone operator. At first, her competitive instincts led her to try to field as many calls as possible.

I learned an important lesson about human behavior and the importance of customer service, she says.

Although I wanted to move quickly, there were some callers who required more of my time, and I had to slow down my approach in order to resolve their questions.

The job could be physically exhausting: She had to reroute calls by plugging a cord into a switchboard, a task that eventually was taken over by automation.

It was also the first time I had earned my own money, she says. So I learned the value of a dollar.

___

Sonic CEO Cliff Hudson said he delivered newspapers from ages 11 to 13 but stopped after being hit by a car. He then worked on a construction site for his fathers company.

Tasked with cleaning bathrooms, Hudson was unenthusiastic. His superintendent decided to motivate him by changing how he was compensated. Instead of being paid hourly, he would receive a set amount each time he cleaned something a urinal or a sink.

Quite suddenly, I could see the connection between my output and my compensation, and it really got me going, Hudson says.

Hudson concedes that if his father hadnt owned the company, he probably wouldnt have gotten the job in the first place or, if he had, he would have lost it after his lackluster start.

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Trump Hotels CEO Eric Danziger worked in McDonalds for a few summers. Before that, in the late 1960s, he sold Black Cat firecrackers until the police shut him down. He also spent a summer hawking sunglasses from fold-up tables outside his home in San Jose, California.

He sold hundreds of pairs and made good money $1,000, he estimates, which translated into about $7,000 today after adjusting for inflation. The sunglasses were discards from a manufacturer where his mother worked as an office manager.

They couldnt sell them at the stores because they had blemishes in them, says Danziger, 63. It was zero cost, and 100 percent (profit) margin.

Danziger started working year-round at 17, skipping college for a job as a bellman at a San Francisco hotel.

He put both his children to work at 16. Not having a summer job, he says, leaves a hole in a teenagers education.

Its learning the value of money, but its also learning the responsibility of people you are working with, says Danziger, who took over the oversight of hotels for President Donald Trumps company in 2015. You have a schedule; people count on you.

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Panera Bread CEO Ron Shaich says he started his own bagel-and-lox delivery service at 16, using his bicycle to make deliveries.

Shaich learned that business is harder than he had thought. He loved the actual selling, but getting up early to make deliveries took time to adjust to. Hes kept a copy of the advertisement he placed in the local newspaper for the service.

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Krogers CEO Rodney McMullen got started working on the family farm in Williamstown, Kentucky.

Every summer in my youth consisted of performing different tasks on the farm, he says.

He recalls being paid 6 cents for each stick of tobacco he cut. He started at Kroger at 17 while attending the University of Kentucky.

I worked nights and picked up as many shifts as I could to earn extra money to help pay my way through college, he says.

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When he was 15, Taco Bell CEO Brian Niccol got his first summer job as a bag boy and range attendant at a Texas golf course. He carried golf bags, cleaned clubs and drove a caged cart that picked up balls on the driving range.

It combined something I was passionate about golf, and a fun environment with great people criteria I think are important at any point in your career.

Early on, Niccol recognized something: He was in the people business, not the golf business.

Those relationships with the golfers, management and the staff showed me that regardless of what youre doing or what your role is, theres a fundamental quality in everything that will prepare you for your next step.

___

Jeffrey Mezger, CEO of Los Angeles-based builder KB Home, worked three summers as a laborer for a masonry contractor, mixing and shoveling mortar, loading bricks, pushing a wheelbarrow.

It was all his fathers idea.

He thought hard manual labor would keep me in shape for football and would keep me out of trouble, Mezger says. There was no question in his mind whether I would be working every summer while in high school and college.

He earned $6.50 an hour, about twice the minimum wage at the time.

Still, I learned that I did not want to do something like that the rest of my life, he says. The older guys working there were worn out.

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CEOs recall when teens like them actually worked summer jobs - Fairfield Daily Republic

UCLA NSIDP – Neuroscience

UCLA Celebrates Brain Awareness Week

UCLA hosts an annual Brain Awareness Week in recognition of the global campaign to increase public awareness of neuroscience and the progress of brain research. The event is organized by a current NSIDP graduate student, who coordinates Project Brainstorm, an outreach group within the Brain Research Institute that makes weekly visits to low-income, low-opportunity K-12 schools all over Los Angeles to teach students about neuroscience.

This year for Brain Awareness Week, 250 5th to 12th graders visited UCLA, where they enjoyed interactive activities hosted by UCLA neuroscience undergraduate and graduate students! Participants explored fundamental neuroscience concepts, such as the different lobes of the brain, synaptic transmission and brain injury, observed sheep brain dissections to learn about parts of the brain as well as brain evolution, and learned popular neuroscience topics, such as the phantom limb syndrome, reflexes versus reaction times, the stroop effect and more! Students also visited different UCLA neuroscience laboratories, interacted with current scientists, and learned about the research process and the principles of various areas of ongoing research.

Brain Awareness Week 2016 could not have been possible without the efforts of previous coordinators, graduate students from neuroscience and other departments, undergraduates from Project Brainstorm, and members from Psych in Action, Interaxon and Project Synapse. The event has received much positive feedback from both the evaluations students filled out at the end of each day as well as verbal comments. Schools have even begun inquiring about participating in next years Brain Awareness Week!

For more information: http://neuroscience.ucla.edu/outreach

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UCLA NSIDP - Neuroscience

Neuroscience | Department of Psychology

Neuroscience investigates the human brain, from the functional organization of large scale cerebral systems to microscopic neurochemical processes. Topics include the neural substrates of perception, attention, memory, language, learning, neurological disorders, affect, stress and motivation. A variety of experimental techniques are used, including functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), electro/magneto-encephalogry (EEG/MEG), and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS).

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Neuroscience | Department of Psychology

Neuroscience and security: your thoughts are safe (for now) – We Live Security (blog)

Could an attacker guess your PIN number or your email password by reading your brain?

A Canadian researcher called Melanie Segado explained to us the extent to which your brain activity could be used for malicious purposes, to find out, for example, what youre thinking or to guess your PIN.

Melanie, who is finishing her doctorate in neuroscience in Montreal and is co-founder of the NeurotechX community, differentiated the techniques that are used for measuring brain activity, which allows for the interpretation of the signals that emitted due to stimuli.

She and other researchers in the field are trying to determine the capabilities and limitations of this technology in the context of security.

Firstly, there is theelectrocorticography(ECoG) technique, in which electrodes are placed on the exposed surface of the brain to record the electrical activity of the cerebral cortex. However, because this requires a surgical incision in the skull, it is an invasive procedure.

There is also theelectroencephalogram technique, in which electrodes are placed on the scalp and send electrical signals to a recorder, which then converts them into wave-like patterns. The person must remain still with their eyes closed because any movement can alter the results.

Secondly, there arefunctional magnetic resonance imaging(fMRI) andfunctional near-infrared spectroscopy(fNIRS) studies, which provide real-time monitoring of tissue oxygenation in the brain while the subject performs a task or receives a stimulus. This allows brain functions such as attention, memory, and problem solving to be analyzed while the individual performs a cognitive task.

Thirdly, there is thepositron emission tomography(PET) technique, which identifies changes at a cellular level to detect the early onset of a disease.

According to Melanie, all of these brain activity measurement techniques can be used to observemovements, senses(is the person seeing, tasting, touching, or hearing?), cognition (memories, intentions), biometric components, language (words), and emotions.

But could they be used maliciously to guess what we are thinking? Well, there are a number of considerations to take into account before assuming this is possible. Some techniques are invasive, others are very expensive; some require physical access to the person who must remain still in a scanner, and others do not provide very high-quality data.

Yes, it is true that some fMRI procedures have produced records that were used to reconstruct what the personwas seeing(a face, a plane), but the cost is very high (about $600 per hour, according to Melanie) and takes an average of between one to three hours to complete.

So, this procedure is unlikely to be used maliciously; and in any case, it only shows what the person is actually seeing in that particular place,not a reconstructionof their most secret thoughts or memories.

Measurements aimed at reading language-related signals, using yes/no response experiments, are extremely useful for communicating with someone who cannot speak for themselves, but are equally useless for malicious purposes. The same is true forlie detection techniques, which operate on the basis of familiarity and the distinctive behavior of the brain when the option presented generates an emotion in the person.

Perhaps the only electroencephalogram method that could be useful for an attacker would be theN400 wave, which is related to semantic processing and is mainly activated due to unexpected words in sentences, such as John smeared the hot bread with a sock.

The magnitude of the signal varies according to how familiar it is to the subject; words, faces, images, or numbers can be used. So if the subject is shown many PIN numbers, they will react differently tothe combination they recognize.

However, it is important not to lose sight of the fact that the signal will intensify due to any significant stimulus, i.e. any combination of numbers that refers to something known to the person, which may not be their PIN or whatever is to be determined at that particular moment. Again, there are more limitations and costs involved than there are possible returns.

It is still extremely difficult for an attacker to exploit these signals, especially those that only show stimuli. If they had enough individual data from someone, they could build a model for generating signals that look like those individuals, butit would take a lot of computational power,which is currently impractical for an attacker, Melanie clarified.

Brain activity is unique for every individual, so you can never be fully anonymous, Melanie warned. So, if your patterns are in a database because you did an MRI scan, for example, you would beeasily identifiable.

And so the real concern should lie in the interpretation and protection of our data. Who has access to it? Is the clinic where you had your CT or MRI scan careful enough with your brain activity records? Or could they be compromised and used to identify you?

Of course, we still do not know what can be predicted with brain activity records, as they can beinterpreted in many waysand can vary over time for many reasons. For example, if you are in a car accident, the reaction you have to a car stimulus will be very different to the one you had before the accident.

Something that Melanie strongly recommends is to not contribute to the confusion of those who believe that our thoughts will soon be monitored, or that we will be able to control technology without physically interacting with it.

In fact, she does not think thatFacebooks projectto control computers with our brains is very feasible. This year, one of the companys divisions announced that it would be creating silent speech software that would allow you to type 100 words per minute by detecting brain waves, without the need for invasive surgery. But again, this is not very likely.

In conclusion, and as Melanie envisaged from the title of her talk, your thoughts remainsafe and private, for now.It is just a matter of taking care of who can access your brain activity data because, after all, it is as personal and sensitive as your DNA.

Author Sabrina Pagnotta, ESET

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Neuroscience and security: your thoughts are safe (for now) - We Live Security (blog)