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Kids will sacrifice to teach wrongdoers a lesson – Futurity: Research News

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Many children are willing to make personal sacrifices to punish wrongdoersand even more so if they believe punishment will teach the transgressor a lesson, according to a new study.

Philosophers and psychologists have long argued whether the main reason people punish others for bad behavior is to enact retribution or to impart a moral lesson. In adults, most studies show the answer is that people have both motives.

Retribution is a driving force in young childrens moral judgment.

But what about children, who are less steeped in societal values?

Children are less exposed to social ideas about how to behave in certain ways, says first author Julia Marshall, who conducted the research in the lab of Molly Crockett, assistant professor of psychology at Yale University and senior author of the paper. We wanted to know if children are interested in punishing others because they want wrongdoers to pay, because they want to teach bad actors a lesson, or a combination of both.

For the study, Marshall, Crockett, and Yale postdoctoral fellow Daniel Yudkin monitored the responses of 251 children between the ages of 4 and 7 who watched a video of a child tearing up another youngsters art work.

The children first had to decide whether to punish the art destroyer by taking away their iPad. However, if the children decided to punish the transgressor, they would have to make a personal sacrificetheir own iPad would be locked away.

The researchers divided the children into two groups. The first group was told that if they chose retributive punishment, the wrongdoer would lose use of their iPad but would not be told why. The second group was told if they punished the wrongdoer he or she would be told it was for ripping up the drawing, what researchers called the communicative condition.

About one-quarter of children (26%) in the first group decided to punish the transgressor even after being told they would lose use of their own iPad.

Retribution is a driving force in young childrens moral judgment, says Marshall.

However, children in the second group, who knew that the wrongdoer would be told why he or she was being disciplined, were 24% more likely to punish than the first group.

The opportunity to teach a wrongdoer a lesson motivates children to punish over and above the desire to see them suffer for their actions, Crockett says.

Children seem equipped at an early age with both a desire for punishers to receive their just deserts, and a desire to have them improve their behavior for next time, says Marshall, who is now a postdoctoral researcher at Boston College.

Crockett adds: Despite having a taste for retribution, young children also value the social benefits that punishment can bring. How social learning impacts the balance of retributive and forward-looking motives for punishment is an important avenue for future study.

The research appears in the journal Nature Human Behaviour.

Source: Yale University

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Kids will sacrifice to teach wrongdoers a lesson - Futurity: Research News

Governor Cuomo Announces New Record-High Number of COVID-19 Tests Reported to New York State – ny.gov

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo todayannounced that 205,466 COVID-19 test results were reported to New York State yesterdaya new record high.

"We did 205,000 tests yesterday, a new record. Remember when we first started, we could only do 500 tests a day -- that's how far we have come. Context here is very important because I want New Yorkers to have confidence in the rules that we're setting. And it's not that our rules are that much more onerous than other states' rules, it's that we triggered them earlier. Our triggers are much lower than other states, and hence our performance is much better than other states,"Governor Cuomo said."You decide your own destiny. If you follow the rules, you're fine. And if you're not fine, the rules change on you. The micro-cluster approach doesn't put restrictions on places that are following the rules. It's that targeted. If you and your neighbor are acting responsibly, you have a collective, vested interest in your local community. I am concerned about Thanksgiving, and I believe it could have a large impact if people are reckless. It is the socialization that's a problem, and socialization is human behavior. So we are on guard, but it depends on what we do."

The Governor noted that the positive testing rate in all focus areas under the state's Micro-Cluster strategy is4.55percent, and outside the focus zone areas is2.15percent. Within the focus areas,43,790test results were reported yesterday, yielding1,994positives. In the remainder of the state, not counting these focus areas,161,676test results were reported, yielding3,474positives. Full results for tests reported yesterday, the day prior, the current 7-day rolling average, and last two weeks is below:

STATEWIDE

11/1-11/7 % Positive

11/8-11/14 % Positive

Current 7-day rolling average

Day Prioir (11/18) % Positivity

Yesterday (11/19) % Positivity

All focus area statewide % positive

3.44%

4.89%

4.66%

4.23%

4.55%

Statewide % positivewithall focus areas included

1.95%

2.86%

2.91%

2.72%

2.66%

Statewide % positivewithoutallfocus areas included

1.81%

2.47%

2.44%

2.38%

2.15%

Micro-cluster zone 7-day average positivity ratesfor today, yesterday, the day before, last week, and the week prior is below:

FOCUS ZONE

11/1- 11/7 % Positive

11/8- 11/14 % Positive

Day-Prior 7-day Rolling Average

Yesterday 7-Day Rolling Average

Current 7-day rolling average

Erie orange-zone focus area % positive

4.53%

7.22%

7.46%

7.21%

7.40%

Erie Yellow-zone focus area % positive

4.64%

5.34%

6.22%

6.08%

6.57%

Niagara Yellow -zone focus area % positive

4.29%

5.10%

5.04%

3.74%

4.40%

Monroe Yellow-zone focus area % positive

4.06%

5.54%

4.74%

4.39%

4.12%

Onondaga Yellow-zone focus area % positive

4.68%

6.58%

6.02%

5.67%

6.01%

Queens Kew Garden Hills/Forest Hills/Astoria yellow-zone focus area % positive

2.11%

3.40%

3.47%

3.41%

3.39%

Bronx East Yellow-zone focus area % positive

2.70%

3.81%

3.60%

3.62%

3.41%

Bronx West Yellow -zone focus area % positive

2.79%

3.80%

4.66%

4.50%

4.68%

Brooklyn Yellow-zone focus area % positive

3.33%

3.92%

3.56%

3.59%

3.55%

Rockland Yellow-zone focus area % positive

3.46%

3.55%

3.79%

3.69%

3.41%

Chemung Orange-zone focus area % positive

6.45%

4.59%

Continued here:
Governor Cuomo Announces New Record-High Number of COVID-19 Tests Reported to New York State - ny.gov

Commissioners have questions, few answers in wake of ‘pause’ – Polkio.com

Itemizer-Observer

DALLAS While the Polk County Commissioners understand much of the reasoning that went into Gov. Kate Browns order for a two-week pause amidst growing COVID-19 cases, they wish she had consulted them and others in small counties before making her decision.

Craig Pope participated in a joint call with other neighboring commissioners Nov. 17, seeking clarification on Browns declaration closing down businesses again to reduce the spread of the coronavirus.

So many entities are upset and frustrated (the state) decided they better listen to us, Pope said after the Polk County Commissioners weekly meeting Nov. 18, Im working with Marion and Linn county commissioners trying to take the metrics that are still in raw form and trying to help them revamp what those metrics might look like so that we can do the best we can to keep businesses open.

Pope said Brown was open to his suggestions, wanting such input to help her teach people and to help them understand the spread of the disease is happening in social gatherings.

Its a human behavior challenge. I support that. But punishing small businesses that have no data, weve all said it to her and said it to her team, Pope added. If you dont have data that demonstrates that the disease is spreading through these venues, then why are we closing them? Put restrictions on them, but do it with some sense of science.

For example, Pope said rather than a blanket limit of 25 people per restaurant, consider restricting restaurants by the percentage of their licensed capacity.

Pope said the data for Polk County shows that 26% of the cases over the last two weeks are from social gatherings, according to contact tracing.

So people are saying they went to a social gathering event and they got sick. The balance of that is showing in certain types of businesses and long-term care facilities are the highest for Polk County, just like it is for Marion County, Pope said. There is data we can track and there are ways we can target behavioral challenges in certain categories. But gyms, fitness centers and pools, theyre not in there.

Browns closure order limits restaurants to takeout only and closes gyms, pools, and fitness centers.

In her COVID-19 update to the commissioners Nov. 17, Public Health Manager Jacqui Umstead said coronavirus outbreaks in Polk County were taking place primarily in care providing facilities. She said Windsong Long Term Health Facility had seven, Capital Manor two, Heron Point seven and Marquis Spa Corporation, a business, had 11 confirmed cases.

Commissioner Mike Ainsworth was at his first meeting since returning from quarantine after he and three others were exposed to a county staff member diagnosed with COVID-19. Ainsworth said he had ample time to have several questions about the coronavirus percolate in his head while in isolation.

Chief among his concerns was with contact tracers inability to contact him directly. Although he was asymtomatic and never had to test for COVID-19, Ainsworth said when he tried to return the contract tracers call, their voicemail was full.

I was quarantined. But my wife didnt have to be, he said after the meeting. Whats to say I would have gotten it a week later and my wife could have spread it around? Thats why I brought it up, because I wanted other people to hear firsthand what I went through. Because I think a lot of people want to know the process is and how you get contaminated. We were never tested and were allowed to come back in without a test, as long as we didnt exhibit any symptoms.

Umstead said she appreciated Ainsworths input and promised changes in the contact system. She added his experience was likely due to the dozen or so overworked contract tracers contracted out from Western Oregon University interns who were actively tracking nearly 250 people at the time.

The county has three or four case investigators working on gathering information on positive cases in the county. They are now working seven days a week on the task, Umstead said. Were stretched really thin right now by the sheer volume of cases.

According to Polk Countys COVID-19 tracer page (www.co.polk.or.us/ph/covid-19-polk-county), as of Nov. 23 there were 1,097 positive COVID-19 cases, four hospitalizations and 16 deaths.

With numbers on the rise from record daily counts, Commissioner Lyle Mordhorst said targeting restaurants with another shutdown was unfair when theyve been the ones going out of their way to abide by new health standards.

You look at what investment the Washington Street Steakhouse did in the first shutdown, Mordhorts explained. They remodeled that whole place, put in Plexiglass, separators, at the bar and the tables. They followed the rules and guidelines with face masks all the way through. Yet they cannot serve another meal there? That makes absolutely no sense whatsoever. Thats a huge investment to meet the needs of the guidelines she gave us and theyve been doing it and theyve had no outbreaks.

Pope and his colleagues thought his meeting with the governor was productive. However, they realize theyre not going to be able to change the course of the pause now that its in place.

Were not going to change the pause. The pause is set, Pope said. What Im hoping to do is be able to develop some criteria that gets us out of the pause or starts moving us forward in a way thats measurable, that makes sense, as much as possible for the people and the business owners. Because what theyre using now is tougher than the first shutdown. They dont have any real sensibility to them.

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Commissioners have questions, few answers in wake of 'pause' - Polkio.com

401k Advisors Working Overtime to Guide Existing Clients Through Pandemic – The 401(k) Specialist

Sometimes its hard to think about generating new business when youre focused on servicing existing clients.

As new RFP activity remains largely on hold, defined contribution plan specialists with over $50 million in DC AUM are working overtime to guide their existing clients through the pandemic, according to Retirement Plan Advisor Trends, a just-released annual Cogent Syndicated study from human behavior and analytics firm Escalent.

Nearly six in 10 DC advisors (58%) agree that the COVID-19 pandemic is thwarting the growth of their retirement plan business, according to the study.

In stark contrast to their peers, DC specialists are increasing the assistance theyre offering to plan participants in assessing rollover and distribution options, long-term financial planning, one-on-one investment advice and retirement income strategies, said Sonia Davis, senior product director at Escalent. Moreover, they cite a sizable uptick in providing plan sponsors with regulatory updates and consulting with clients on plan design, services and features.

Stemming from the heightened focus on client service and support, the latest findings reveal DC advisor expectations of providers are also evolving. This underscores the value of firms developing effective DC advisor outreach and engagement strategies.

These are extraordinarily complex times for anyone to navigate financially, including the most seasoned DC advisors, said Linda York, senior vice president at Escalent. Firms must remain fixated on providing superior participant education, regulatory guidance and plan design options, as the support rendered throughout the pandemic will undoubtedly fuel future client recommendations for years to come.

According to the study, a handful of DC plan providers have differentiated themselves, earning strong, positive recall among DC specialists for their COVID-19-related information and content.

Top 10 firms for COVID-19 communication recall

1. American Funds

2. Vanguard

3. Fidelity Investments

4. Merrill/Merrill Edge

5. Alliance Benefit Group

6. ADP Retirement Services

7. Empower Retirement

8. Capital Group

9. Principal Financial Group

10. T. Rowe Price

Base: DC Specialists (plan advisors with $50M+ in DC AUM)

Source: Escalent/Cogent Syndicated Retirement Plan Advisor Trends, Sept. 2020

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401k Advisors Working Overtime to Guide Existing Clients Through Pandemic - The 401(k) Specialist

Technology And Its Role In Supplements – STL.News

(STL.News) Take with food. Take on an empty stomach. Nearly everyone has heard these instructions at one time or another when taking medications. Fortunately, when those instructions are followed when taking any medication, you will be doing yourself a greater favor than avoiding gastrointestinal distress. Those instructions will also make the medicines more effective. This is due to a phenomenon known as bioavailability and the technology that makes it possible. This is true to one extent or another with many supplements too. For more information, check out details from i49.

Bioavailability is the level of a chemicals potency that interacts with a persons body to deliver that drug or supplements benefit. When the bioavailability is high, it will cause a more robust and immediate physical response to that chemical. On the other hand, when bioavailability is low, it will take a larger dose to affect a response.

The technology used to create some medications and supplements prohibit human behavior from impacting a doses efficacy. This is also true of other products, such as CBD, that are made with these intended limitations. CBD and certain medications are created to have suboptimal levels to prevent misuse of the chemicals and prevent accidentally taking an unprescribed dose. However, the dose is enough to deliver relief of symptoms.

Another benefit to technology in using drugs and supplements is delivery systems embedded into or used along with the products. With CBD, for example, recommended dose levels are given to those who use them. Further, several recommended methods of receiving CBD include straws that can be used with any beverage, tablets, hydrogels, and even suppositories.

For example, some people have trouble swallowing certain drugs and supplements. There are makers of technology who have created magnesium additives that make drugs and supplements easier to digest, absorb, or otherwise consumed by the human body for these folks.

Even a product that is as easy to use as CBD needs some degree of solubility to be taken and react appropriately. This is an issue that is separate from the other active ingredients. Once it is taken, it is absorbed into the bloodstream and metabolized by other parts of the body.

Fortunately, high solubility is usually not a problem for CBD, resulting in a much higher chance that the products active ingredients will have their desired effects instead of diminished and passed along to other parts of the body. It is also important that the correct solubility level is maintained, since drugs and supplements that are fat-soluble move quicker between cells than more water-soluble ones.

As important as technology is in creating new drugs and supplements and new ways to use them, one of the most existing parts of these developments is the promise they add to drug development in the future. Not only do new medicines and supplements appear to be on the horizon, but there are also therapeutic breakthroughs that will enhance medication effectiveness.

It stands to reason that as the potential of drugs and supplements increases, technology will be there to make them better and easier to take in the future. There can be little doubt that just as has been the case in the past, both drug makers and developers of technology will work together for the better.

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VirTra Announces Winners of the Force Science Scholarship Award – GlobeNewswire

TEMPE, Ariz., Nov. 24, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- VirTra, Inc. (NASDAQ:VTSI), a global provider of training simulators for the law enforcement, military, educational, and commercial markets, today announced the recipients of the VirTra and Force Science Scholarship Award. This award, which was created from a partnership between VirTra and the Force Science Institute, allows twelve outstanding peace officers around the country to earn a scholarship to a five-day Force Science Analyst Certification Course in 2021.

The peace officers chosen were from:

VirTra and the Force Science Institute are furthering research-based and science-backed training that is crucial to better educating law enforcement officers and better preparing them to handle the individual needs of their communities. The course is taught by world-renowned instructors and is designed to provide officers with the necessary tools to help improve their knowledge base and grow their careers.

This announcement arrives at the perfect time to wish all of our first responders both law enforcement and military a wonderful Thanksgiving, said Jason Mulcahy, general manager of VirTra. Every day, we are thankful to those who put their lives on the line to keep our communities and our country safe, and it is our hope that the recipients of this scholarship will be able to do so more effectively.

The courses will be taught in 12 different cities across the country. The winners listed above, whose $1,650 course fee will be paid in full by VirTra, may choose from any course at the date and location most convenient for them. Attendees will also have an opportunity to earn a Force Science Analyst Certification, which demonstrates their ability to recognize the factors that impact human behavior in use-of-force encounters.

About VirTraVirTra (NASDAQ: VTSI) is a global provider of judgmental use of force training simulators, firearms training simulators and driving simulators for the law enforcement, military, educational and commercial markets. The companys patented technologies, software, and scenarios provide intense training for de-escalation, judgmental use-of-force, marksmanship and related training that mimics real-world situations. VirTras mission is to save and improve lives worldwide through practical and highly effective virtual reality and simulator technology. Learn more about the company atwww.VirTra.com.

About the Force Science InstituteThe Force Science Institute is dedicated to promoting the value of knowledge through empirical research in behavioral science and human dynamics. Force Science develops and disseminates high quality scientifically grounded education, training, and consultation to support fact-based investigations, inform decision processes, enhance public safety, and improve peace officer performance in critical situations. Learn more at http://www.forcescience.org.

Investor Relations Contact:Matt Glover or Charlie Schumacher VTSI@gatewayir.com 949-574-3860

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VirTra Announces Winners of the Force Science Scholarship Award - GlobeNewswire

How viruses use bats’ bodies as an evolutionary training ground – Salon

Imagine that you are a Shamel's horseshoe bat (Rhinolophus shameli). With a complex nose shaped like a horseshoe, you use echolocation to find insects that you can eat, since as an invertivore your diet depends on consuming invertebrates. You live in southeast Asian countries like Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. Not that you have a concept of the nation-state, as a bat; rather, your range is defined by tropical forests, and that is how you think of geography.Indeed, you do not think far beyond these tropical forests; how could anything outside of their range concern you?

It certainly wouldsurprise you to learn that a mostly hairless primate species are suddenly tremendously interested in you, stricken, as millions of them are, with a deadly virus that may have become more lethal by and throughyour being.Some of these upright-walking primates even think that your anatomy contains clues as to how this disease movedthrough their population.

Indeed, because of theirunique immune system, there has been asudden flurry ofinterest in Shamel's horseshoe bats, a species few humans know about.As reported inNature, researchers told the scholarly journal that two Shamel's horseshoe bats, which had been stored in a freezer in Cambodia since 2010, contained in their bodies a coronavirus closely related toSARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for the disease COVID-19. If that coronavirus is found to share more than 97% of its genome with SARS-CoV-2, it could help explain how a pandemic that originated in bats was able to be passed along to humans, according tovirologists at the Pasteur Institute in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.

Around the same time, researchers in Japan claimed that they found a viruscalled Rc-o319, which has also been found in bat droppings, inside aJapanese horseshoe bat(Rhinolophus cornutus). Because Rc-o319 only shares 81% of its genome with SARS-CoV-2, it will not be able to directly help scientists learn more about the pandemic's origins. Still, that discovery still confirms viruses closely related toSARS-CoV-2 are relatively common in horseshoe bats, including species outside of China.

The next question, then, is why are bats so prone to gettingcoronaviruses?

The answer is that it's not just various breeds of coronaviruses that bats are ridden with it's all viruses.Science Daily reportedin February that deadly disease outbreaks like MERS, Ebola, Marburg and the original SARS originated in bats. A study from the University of California, Berkeley published in the journaleLife found that some bat specieshave unusually aggressive immune systems that respond to viruses in a way that causes them to replicate more quickly.

While the bats' bodies are able to keep the viruses out of their cells, however, the viruses adapt andreproduce more quickly in order to try to get around their defenses. Those viruses then take those same traits and apply them when infecting animals that do not have the same unusually aggressive immune system such as human beings.

"The bottom line is that bats are potentially special when it comes to hosting viruses," Mike Boots, a disease ecologist and UC Berkeley professor of integrative biology, told Science Daily. "It is not random that a lot of these viruses are coming from bats. Bats are not even that closely related to us, so we would not expect them to host many human viruses. But this work demonstrates how bat immune systems could drive the virulence that overcomes this."

Another study seemed to reinforce this conclusion. As Infectious Disease Special Edition reported in May, a research team at the University of Saskatchewan found that cells from a brown bat could be persistently infected with MERS (or Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome, which is also caused by a coronavirus) because of adaptations made by both the bats' cells and the virus. To adapt to changes made by the bats' cells to protect itself, the MERS virus will quickly mutate one specific gene so that it can continue to survive inside the bat.

In other words, while bats do not seem to suffer greatly from the same diseases they pass on to people, the very traits that allow them to endure those illnesses make those viruses particularly dangerous when they reach the human population.

Still, if you're a poor bat flitting through the dry tropical forests of southeast Asia, don't fret. Killing bats is not key to stopping future pandemics.

"Culling bats will not end the COVID-19 pandemic or any future emerging infectious disease outbreaks, in fact this may well increase the dangers since stressed animals may become more disease prone," writes the Bat Conservation Trust. "It is human activity that led to the current pandemic and it will be changing human behavior in relation to wildlife that may prevent future pandemics. To prevent future outbreaks we need to stop uncontrolled habitat destruction and control the trade in wild animals."

The group notes that bats and humans have coexisted, and even become accustomed toeach other."There are over 1,400 bat species around the world . . . Many have adapted to living alongside us in both urban and rural environments, in our gardens, parks and even roosting around our homes, without posing a threat to their human neighbors."

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How viruses use bats' bodies as an evolutionary training ground - Salon

Global Automated Biochemistry Analyzers Market Growth, Top Major Manufacture, and Overview Forecast 2020-2025 – The Courier

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Global Automated Biochemistry Analyzers Market Growth, Top Major Manufacture, and Overview Forecast 2020-2025 - The Courier

Difficult Decisions 101: Balancing hands-on learning and safety – University of Michigan News

While new University of Michigan COVID guidelines are requiring most undergraduates to study from their homes for the winter semester, some classesclasses that are nearly impossible to conduct onlinewill continue to be taught in person.

Biochemistry 352 is one such class. Theres something essential about being in a lab to learn this kind of science, says U-M researcher Neil Marsh.

Srijoni Majhi.

Its the difference between driving a car and reading a book about driving a car. We think of lab experience as being mission-critical to teaching the undergraduates, said Marsh, professor of chemistry in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts and professor of biological chemistry at Michigan Medicine. We did run remote labs but its a very, very poor substitution for a real lab.

Chemistry, he says, more than other types of science, relies on hands-on learning in the lab. Students in his Biochemistry 352 class learn basic biochemical techniques critical to performing experiments in chemistry. Seemingly straightforward skills such as using pipettes can be more complex when students use the instruments in person.

Of course, the ability to teach students these techniques was upended as the university attempted to deal with the coronavirus pandemic. During the fall semester, just 20% of class credit hours were offered in person.

The chemistry department revamped classes to ensure they met safety protocols. Marshs course includes about 100 students and typically involves a lecture and four sections of labs. Now, Marsh records 15-20 minute videos on certain topics that the students then watch before they attend their lab.

Typically, each of the four lab sections would meet once a week, with 16 students and one graduate student instructor leading the section. Now, only six people are allowed in a labfive students and a graduate instructorat a time. For all of the 100 students in the class to attend lab, extra sections had to be added and students attended lab every other week.

Balancing the desire to offer students hands-on experience and the safety of both graduate instructors and students has been a delicate process. The chemistry department offered students and graduate instructors the choice to attend or teach in person. Students uncomfortable with attending class in person could choose classes that were entirely virtual, and their ability to graduate was not compromised if they did not choose to take an otherwise required lab. The department likewise honored graduate instructors wishes to teach in person or virtually.

A survey was given to graduate student instructors to get their preferences as to whether or not they were willing to teach in person, and the only people that saw the results were the departments associate chair and one staff member, said Robert Kennedy, chair of the Department of Chemistry. The bigger point is that nobody was, or will be in winter, assigned to an in-person section if they do not want to teach an in-person section.

If no instructor wants to teach an in-person lab during the winter, Kennedy says, the department will hold no in-person labs.

In September, the Graduate Employees Organization called a strike to address health and safety concerns for GEO members working on campus. The group called for increased COVID testing, among other considerations. The organization ended its strike Sept. 16, accepting a stronger process to address these concerns. Now, for the winter semester, U-M will pare down the number of students on campus, reducing density in undergraduate residence halls and including increases in asymptomatic testing to detect virus infection.

Srijoni Majhi is one of the graduate students who volunteered to teach a lab section during the fall semester. She says she initially felt hesitant because she didnt want to spread the virus to her labmates and roommates.

Its not me alone. I have a roommate, and then I have my other labmates, Majhi said. If Im exposed, then its certain that the other people will be suffering because of me. But I talked to my labmates and they were very supportive.

Ironically, students may be safest in the biochemistry lab, says Marsh. Lab coats, glovesand goggles have long been required wear, and students, as everywhere on campus, are required to wear masks. Graduate student instructors also disinfect the labs after every class.

Theres also very good ventilation in the lab, Marsh said. In some ways, theyre actually much safer doing our lab course than they are pretty much anywhere else on campus, in terms of risk of exposure to the virus.

Its the ability to teach experiments that Majhi found most necessary in having an in-person labespecially this course, which is a new class. Students are familiar with general chemistry, and some students have already worked in research biology or biochemistry labs in other parts of the university. But for other students, this class is their introduction to the subject.

This is a 300-level course, so the students come very prepared to lab, but there are still students who we still have to help, she said. We have to keep in mind this is a very new biochemistry lab, so many of them are not aware of how to use pipettes or work with enzymes, or other simple techniques.

Jack Toor is an undergraduate who opted to take the in-person lab. A biochemistry major, Toor has done research in the U-M School of Dentistry. The first hands-on experience to surprise him? Pipetting.

We did this experiment in the beginning of our lab which seemed on the surface very lame. It was just learning how to use pipettes, said Toor, who plans to apply to medical school. I have been using those in my dental lab for a very long time, but I had never thought about how accurate they are, even after calibration.

The simple experiment involved asking the students to pipette ever-smaller amounts of waterdown to 20 microliters.

Ive never realized, once you get down to such low volumes, it actually is quite inaccurate, he said.

Another experiment the undergraduates performed was to identify proteins based on their molecular weights. The students put proteins in an acrylamide gel and ran an electric current through the gel. This arranges the proteins in proportion to their mass. Toor said to conduct this experiment himself was more valuable than being given the parameters of the experiment in an online format. After all, experiments shown in a video typically dont contain a blooper reel.

When I took my gel out of its casing, it ripped, and thats something your textbook never talks about, Toor said. I talked to Srijoni about it, who told me after I stained it, I would still be able to piece it back together. Its little things like that that your textbook wouldnt mention.

The changes the chemistry department has had to implement to meet safety requirements do have their silver linings, Marsh says. Although students are in the lab less frequently, the time they spend there might be higher quality. The student-to-teacher ratio is lower, and instead of having to share lab equipment to perform experiments with a partner or group, each student has his or her own equipment.

Now theres a much better teacher-to-student ratio in the lab, and students can really get the attention and help they need. Even though theyre only coming in every other week, we now have enough equipment that every student can do the experiment themselves, Marsh said. Weve also really prioritized the fact that were going to use that whole four-hour period. What weve seen is that the students have come to lab very focused. They really get down and do the work.

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Difficult Decisions 101: Balancing hands-on learning and safety - University of Michigan News

WPI Professor Elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science – WPI News

Suzanne Scarlata, Richard Whitcomb Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI), has been elected a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the world's largest general scientific society.

Election as a fellow, an honor bestowed upon AAAS members by their peers since 1874, recognizes scientifically or socially distinguished efforts to advance science or its applications. Scarlata, along with this year's 488 other new fellows, will be recognized in the AAAS News & Notes section of the Nov. 27 issue of Science. She is being honored for her leadership in the biophysics community and for developing fluorescence methods to probe the dynamics of signaling proteins in vivo and in vitro.

Scarlata, who joined the university faculty in 2016, studies how small molecules in the bloodstream can change the behavior of cells. In particular, she is interested in how certain hormones and neurotransmitters can activate a family of organic molecules known as G proteins (guanine nucleotide-binding proteins), which are involved in transmitting signals from various stimuli from the exterior to the interior of cells.

G proteins help control how cells move, divide, and change structure; the signaling pathways they mediate are integral to a wide array of biological functions, including sensory perception, the regulation of the heart, nervous system, and reproduction, and the development of cancer. "Most current pharmaceuticals work through G proteins," Scarlata said.

Among her current research projects is a study of how G proteins can stimulate phospholipase C, an enzyme that raises the level of calcium in cells. This pathway is one of the main ways that allows cells to respond to many hormones and neurotransmitters to increase cellular calcium levels, which allows cells to move, divide, or die, depending on the specific circumstances, she told an interviewer for the Biophysical Society in 2016, the year she served as the societys president.

Since coming to WPI, Scarlata and her team have found a surprising new mechanism through which G proteins directly change the level and types of specific proteins in cells. This mechanism is very basic to almost all cell types and may underlie processes as diverse as changes in heart muscle with exercise and the formation of neurodegenerative plaques in the brain, she said.

Scarlata has received more than $10 million for her research from the National Institutes of Health, the American Heart Association, the Keck Foundation, the U.S. Department of Education, and other organizations. In addition, she has been the keynote speaker at several national and international meetings.

Before joining WPI, Scarlata was professor of physiology and biophysics at Stony Brook University, where she had taught since 1991. She previously served as assistant professor in the Department of Medicine at Cornell University Medical College and as a member of the technical staff at AT&T Bell Laboratories, where she developed optical testing methods for printed circuit boards. She received a BA in chemistry from Temple University and a PhD in physical chemistry from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

She is associate editor of the Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes and serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Fluorescence and the Journal of Membrane Biology. She has also served on the editorial boards of Analytical Biochemistry, BBA Biomembranes, F1000, Journal of Biological Chemistry and Analytical Biochemistry, and Methods and Application of Fluorescence Spectroscopy. From 2001 to 2004, she was an American Heart Association Established Investigator. She was elected president of the Biophysical Society in 2015 and served during the 2016 calendar year.

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WPI Professor Elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science - WPI News