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Thursday’s TV highlights: ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ on ABC – Los Angeles Times

SERIES

The Big Bang Theory Leonard, Penny and Raj (Johnny Galecki, Kaley Cuoco and Kunal Nayyar) settle into their new living arrangement while Sheldon (Jim Parsons) suddenly shows an interest in Amys (Mayim Bialik) work in this new episode. 8 p.m. CBS

Supernatural Sam and Dean (Jared Padalecki, Jensen Ackles) join others in a hunt for a werewolf, which bites Claire Novak (recurring guest star Kathryn Love Newton), and the Winchester siblings have to try to save her. Adam Fergus also guest stars. 8 p.m. KTLA

Greys Anatomy When Maggies (Kelly McCreary) mother (guest star LaTanya Richardson Jackson) takes a turn for the worse, the doctors dont agree on the best course of treatment in this new episode, directed by series star Ellen Pompeo. James Pickens Jr. and Chandra Wilson also star. 8 p.m. ABC

MasterChef: Junior Edition The young cooks prepare chicken dinners for judges Richard Blais, Gordon Ramsay and Christina Tosi. 8 p.m. Fox

The Great Indoors Jack (Joel McHale) is having a hard time concentrating at work due to the millennials distracting antics. Maggie Lawson (Psych) continues her guest role as Rachel. Stephen Fry, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Chris Williams and Christine Ko also star. 8:30 p.m. CBS

Chicago Med Dr. Halsted (Nick Gehlfuss) treats one of his former teachers (guest star Jean Moran) for a potentially fatal illness. 9 p.m. NBC

Riverdale Fred (Luke Perry) is without a construction team, just as a big project is about to get underway, so Archie (KJ Apa) and his pals step in to help, but when one of them is assaulted, it becomes clear somebody doesnt want the job to get done. Cole Sprouse also stars. 9 p.m. KTLA

Life in Pieces Matt and Colleen (Thomas Sadoski, Angelique Cabral) become sleepwalkers after taking a drug that was supposed to help them sleep. James Brolin, Dianne Wiest and Betsy Brandt also star. 9:30 p.m. CBS

The Amazing Race The unscripted series returns for its 29th season with host Phil Keoghan. This time around, the partners didnt know each other until they met at the starting line. 10 p.m. CBS

The Blacklist: Redemption When a wealthy businessman is kidnapped, along with his wife and son, Scottie (Famke Janssen), Tom (Ryan Eggold) and their team try to get the family back safely. Terry OQuinn, Edi Gathegi and Tawny Cypress also star. 10 p.m. NBC

Sun Records Sam and Marion (Chad Michael Murray, Margaret Anne Florence) take Elvis (Drake Milligan) on the road to promote Blue Moon in this new episode. 10 p.m. CMT

Review Forrest (Andy Daly), a critic of lifes experiences, attempts to cryogenically freeze himself and gets struck by lightning in the series finale. 10 p.m. Comedy Central

Colony Will and Katie (Josh Holloway, Sarah Wayne Callies) team up with Broussard (Tory Kittles) to square off against the Red Hand in this new episode. 10 p.m. USA

CBS This Morning Speaker of the House Paul Ryan (R-Wis.); Dan Ackerman; climbers Cory Richards and Adrian Ballinger. (N) 7 a.m. KCBS

Today Catherine Zeta-Jones; Carson Daly; Bill Telepan. (N) 7 a.m. KNBC

KTLA Morning News (N) 7 a.m. KTLA

Good Morning America Alec Baldwin and Lisa Kudrow; Matthew Perry; Katey Sagal. (N) 7 a.m. KABC

Good Day L.A. Ross Mathews; Lynda Carter (Wonder Woman); Deni Yang; Katie Holmes and Matthew Perry; Debbie Allen (Greys Anatomy). (N) 7 a.m. KTTV

Live With Kelly Matthew McConaughey; Idina Menzel; Rachel Bloom; A Great Big World performs; Christian Slater. (N) 9 a.m. KABC

The View (N) 10 a.m. KABC

Rachael Ray Ann-Margret; Andrew McCarthy. (N) 10 a.m. KCAL

The Talk Jessica Chastain; Yael Braun; Dan & Shay perform. (N) 1 p.m. KCBS

The Dr. Oz Show An investigation reveals whats really inside sausage; Tamar Braxton and Vinces announcements. (N) 1 p.m. KTTV

Steve Harvey Val Warner (Windy City Live). (N) 2 p.m. KNBC

Harry Cooking with Aaron Big Daddy McCargo Jr.; Harry answers viewers questions; hamster balls. (N) 2 p.m. KTTV

To the Contrary With Bonnie Erb The debate over H-1B visas. (N) 5:30 p.m. KOCE

Tavis Smiley Annie Jacobsen; Elizabeth Marvel. (N) 11 p.m. KOCE

The Daily Show With Trevor Noah Chris Hayes. (N) 11 p.m. Comedy Central

Conan Wanda Sykes; Mr. T; Dead Man Winter performs. (N) 11 p.m. TBS

Charlie Rose (N) 11:30 p.m. KOCE, KVCR; 1 a.m. KLCS

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Louis CK; Regina King; Tinashe performs. (N) 11:34 p.m. KNBC

The Late Show With Stephen Colbert Marisa Tomei; Hugh Dancy; Broken Social Scene performs. (N) 11:35 p.m. KCBS

The Late Late Show With James Corden Adam Scott; Michael Pea; Bea Miller performs. (N) 12:37 a.m. KCBS

Late Night With Seth Meyers Christine Baranski; Kristen Schaal; Big Thief performs. (N) 12:37 a.m. KNBC

Nightline (N) 12:37 a.m. KABC

Last Call With Carson Daly Brooklyn Decker; the Menzingers perform; Gina Torres. (N) 1:38 a.m. KNBC

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Thursday's TV highlights: 'Grey's Anatomy' on ABC - Los Angeles Times

Society award for contribution to adolescent cognitive neuroscience – The British Psychological Society

Dr Anne-Lise Goddings studied for her doctorate at the UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and UCL Institute of Child Health. She used a wide variety of methods to test the widely held theory that pubertal maturation influences the timing and trajectory.

She has been described as an exceptional and dedicated researcher who has made a highly significant contribution to adolescent cognitive neuroscience through her PhD work.

That work has already led to seven papers in high-impact journals and a book chapter, and she has presented her work at several international meetings.

Among those papers are ones inDevelopmental ScienceandNeuroimagethat were submitted in support of her nomination for this award.

Dr Goddings said:

It is a real honour to receive this prestigious award. I am extremely grateful to both my PhD supervisors, Professor Sarah-Jayne Blakemore and Professor Russell Viner, for their inspirational support and training, and to all my collaborators and fellow researchers.

I look forward to continuing my research in my new NIHR Clinical Lecturer role at the UCL Institute of Child Health, investigating how chronic disease impacts on the developing adolescent brain.

Professor Peter Kinderman, President of the Society, said:

How we develop as human beings - how our brains develop during puberty - is an endlessly fascinating subject. Dr Goddings research into the ways in which both age and hormones affect the brain during adolescence is an important part of our continuous struggle to piece together the mysteries of the human brain. Her success, as a doctoral student, is impressive, and suggests that Dr Goddings, her future employers and colleagues, have a bright future ahead of them."

This award is made each year to recognise outstanding contributions to psychological knowledge made by postgraduate research students while carrying out research for their doctoral degrees in psychology.

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Society award for contribution to adolescent cognitive neuroscience - The British Psychological Society

New England Allergy, Asthma & Immunology PC Hosts 23-Nation Delegation of Top Healthcare Officials – Yahoo Finance

NORTH ANDOVER, Mass., March 28, 2017 /PRNewswire/ --New England Allergy, Asthma & Immunology P.C. is New England's largest and most prominent private practice specializing in allergy, asthma, and immunology - http://www.newenglandallergy.com. In partnership with local and governmental organizations, hosted an international delegation of health experts and government officials as part of a Global Health Initiative to promote international cooperation on the common challenges facing the global community in the prevention, treatment, and management of multi-disciplinary health problems affecting general populations, including allergy, asthma, immune illnesses, infectious diseases, cancer, stroke, heart disease and diabetes.

The event was held at the Atkinson Resort & Country Club in Atkinson, NH.

The delegation was comprised of Secretaries and Assistant Secretaries of Health, Program Directors, CEOs, Program Officers, Medical Officers, and many professors and researchers from:

"We are honored and equally humbled to host a delegation of this caliber at our home institution," said Dr. Thomas F. Johnson, Founder, Owner, and Chief Medical Officer of New England Allergy. "This speaks volumes to our commitment to promote the best health standards and to our full endorsement of a borderless world where every nation serves as a building block in global health initiatives to help prevent and combat disease."

"New England Allergy, Asthma & Immunology is pioneering a global system of collaboration across geographies and across medical disciplines to facilitate knowledge transfer, preventative screening, treatment, and efficient healthcare delivery systems," said George Kassas, CEO of Bireme Systems LLC, the Business Managing firm of New England Allergy. "This distinguished delegation's visit reaffirms New England Allergy's mission to welcome patients from all over the world to receive the very best care from many different medical subspecialties centered from our growing, premier facility."

New England Allergy, Asthma & Immunology P.C. http://www.newenglandallergy.com is located in North Andover, M.A. with offices in Lowell, M.A., Newburyport, M.A., Salem, N.H., Hampstead, N.H., and Hooksett, N.H. To learn more about the services offered by the practice, please visit http://www.newenglandallergy.com.

Media Contact:George Kassas+1508-523-4432George.kassas@newenglandallergy.com

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/new-england-allergy-asthma--immunology-pc-hosts-23-nation-delegation-of-top-healthcare-officials-300429806.html

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New England Allergy, Asthma & Immunology PC Hosts 23-Nation Delegation of Top Healthcare Officials - Yahoo Finance

Evidence Indicates That Universal Basic Income Improves Human Health – Futurism

In BriefThe immediate need for basic income in recognition of theeffects of chronic stress and the importance of improvingenvironments. Eliminating huge stressors like worrying about beingable to afford food and shelter can do wonders for the potential ofhumanity. Biological Case for UBI

At the end of 2015, after a year-long journey, I achieved the realization of an idea with the help of about 140 people that has already forever changed the way I look at the very foundations or lack thereof upon which all of society is based. I now firmly believe we have the potential through its universal adoption to systemically transform society for the better, even more so than many of those most familiar with the idea have long postulatedbecause, for me, the idea is no longer just an idea. Its not theory. It is part of my life. Its real. And the effects are undeniable for someone actually living with it.

The idea of which I speak goes by the name of basic income but is best understood not by name, but by function, and that function is simply to provide a monthly universal starting point located above the poverty line as a new secure foundation for existence. Its an irrevocable stipend for life. In the U.S. it would be something like $1,000 for every citizen every month. All other income would then be earned as additional income on top of it so that employment would always pay more than unemployment.

This may sound overly expensive, but it would save far more than it costs. It would also really only require an additional net transfer of around $900 billion, and thats without subtracting the existing welfare programs it could replace, and also without simplifying the tax code through the replacement of all the many credits, deductions, and subsidies it could also replace. Basically, were already handing out money to everyone, rich and poor alike, but in hundreds of different ways through thousands of government middlemen who only serve to disincentivize employment by removing government supports as a reward for working.

Odds are this idea is new to you, but its not a new idea. Its been considered for hundreds of years from as long ago in the U.S. by founding father Thomas Paine in the 18th century, to Richard Nixon, Martin Luther King, Jr., and free market-loving Milton Friedman in the 20th century, to a quickly growing list of new names here in the 21st century. Its advocates know no ideological lines. Supporters include Nobel prize-winning economists, libertarians, progressives, conservatives, climate change activists, tax reformers, feminists, anarchists, doctors, human rights defenders, racial justice leaders, and the list goes on.

For such an old idea thats been endorsed by so many for so long and yet has obviously never yet come to be, you may be thinking, Why now? The answer to such a question has economic reasoning rooted in the globalization of labor and the exponential advancement of technologies capable of entirely replacing labor, but as important as this particular discussion is to have, its centered more around the idea of a future problem and less a present one.

However, our problems are very much in the present and to see why, we need to go deeper, much deeper, beyond technology and economics, and into human biology itself. To do that, well first need to look at what we as humans have learned from some animals in the lab and in the wild, because I think doing so pulls back the curtain on our entire social system.

As is true with many scientific discoveries, they tend to be accidental, and the story of Martin Seligman and some dogs back in 1965 is no different. Seligman wanted to know if dogs could be classically conditioned to react to bells in the same way as if theyd just been shocked, so he put them in a crate with a floor that could be electrified, and shocked them each time he rang a bell. The dogs soon began to react to the bell as if theyd just been shocked. Next however, he put them in a special crate where they could leap to safety to avoid the shock, and this is where the surprise happened.

The dogs wouldnt leap to safety. It turns out theyd learned from the prior part of the experiment that it didnt matter what they did. The shock would come anyway. They had learned helplessness. Seligman then tried the experiment with dogs who had not been shocked and they leaped to safety just as expected. But the dogs who had learned helplessness, they just sadly laid down and whimpered.

Fast forward to 1971 where a scientist named Jay Weiss explored this further with rats in cages. He put three rats into three different cages with electrodes attached to their tails and a wheel for each to turn. One rat was the lucky rat. No shocks were involved. Another would get shocks that could be stopped by turning its wheel. The third was the unlucky one. It would get shocked at the same time as the second rat, but it could do nothing about it. The third rat would only stop getting shocked when the second rat turned its wheel. Can you guess what happened?

Even though the two rats that were shocked got shocked at the same time and for the same duration of time, their outcomes were very different. The rat who had the power to stop the pain was just a bit worse off than the rat who experienced no pain at all. However, the rat who had no control whatsoever, stuck with a lever that did nothing, became heavily ulcerated. Like the dog, it too had learned helplessness. The cost of this lesson was its health.

Of course, humans are not dogs or rats. Theres a bit more complexity when it comes to us and our physiological responses. For us, perception is a key factor. This is where something called attribution comes into play, of which there are three important kinds that lead to humans learning helplessness: internal, stable, and global.

Think back to when you first started school and try to remember your first math test. What if after taking that first test you did poorly on it, and instead of all the other possible reasons for why that could happen, you decided it was because you sucked at math? Thats an internal attribution. Now imagine you applied that attribution to all math tests. Thats a stable attribution. Its not a one-time thing. Now imagine you applied it beyond math to all classes. Thats a global attribution. Consider the results of such perceptions.

Maybe that first math test was simply too hard for everyone in the class. Maybe it wasnt just you. Maybe your poor grade was due to not studying hard enough, or because you were too hungry or too tired. But instead, because you decided it was your fault and it meant you were stupid, your entire life went down a different path. Even though at any point along the way, you could have escaped that path, just like Seligmans dogs could have escaped the shocks, what if you had learned helplessness from that first math test?

We can learn to be helpless in an environment that actually offers us control, and the feeling itself of control can be the difference between a life full of unending stress, and a relatively stress-free life.

Its even been shown that we only need to be told theres nothing we can do in order for us to feel theres no point in trying. Its like a self-fulfilling prophecy. Tell everyone theres no point in voting, and fewer people will vote.

What all of this shows is two-fold and extremely important to remember. We can learn to be helpless in an environment that actually offers us control, and the feeling itself of control can be the difference between a life full of unending stress, and a relatively stress-free life.

Stress is more than a feeling. Stress is a physiological response, and it has important evolutionary reasons for being. Back in the day, many thousands of years ago, our ancestors who could shift into a kind of emergency gear where long-term higher-order creative thinking shut down, and the body was enabled to think faster, react quicker, be stronger, move faster, run longer, and think only about survival those were the humans who survived.

We call this now the fight-or-flight response, and where this once incredibly important response was evolutionarily adaptive, it is now maladaptive. We dont live in that same world anymore where it made so much sense. We arent being chased down by lions or being eaten by wolves while sitting in front of our computers in our air-conditioned offices, and yet our fight-or-flight responses are still being activated. In fact, for far too many, daily existence is nothing but fight-or-flight. Long-term stress is a real problem, and I would argue, its not just a health problem. Its a problem for human civilization.

One of the most knowledgeable scientists in the world in this area is Robert Sapolsky, a pioneering neuroendocrinologist and professor at Stanford University who has spent more than thirty years studying the effects of stress on health, of which there are many. Over the years, Sapolsky has found that long-term stress increases ones risk of diabetes, cardiac problems, and gastrointestinal disorders. Stress suppresses the immune system. It causes reproductive dysfunction in men and women. It suppresses growth in kids. In affects developing fetuses. Newer evidence even shows it causes faster aging of DNA. But potentially worst of all is what it does to the human mind.

Prolonging fight-or-flight into a chronic condition means that neurons in the brain related to things like learning, memory, and judgment all suffer the consequences thanks to the wide-ranging effects of our double-edged sword stress hormones called glucocorticoids. Recent research has even shown this response made chronic is a self-perpetuating cycle. A constantly stressed out brain appears to lead to a kind of hardening of neural pathways. Essentially, feeling chronic stress makes it harder to not perceive stress, creating a vicious cycle of unending stress.

On top of this, and related back to Weisss rats and human attribution theory, is the coping responses of those who are stressed out. Think of the off-lever in the second rats cage. There are many such levers around us and although they can be effective in reducing our stress levels, many of them are arguably pretty bad off-switches. These responses include acting out against others, otherwise known as displacement aggression or bullying.

Yes, bullying is an effective coping mechanism. As the saying goes, shit rolls downhill, and theres actually a scientific reason for that other than gravity. In a hierarchy, it is healthier after a loss to start another fight with someone you can beat, than to mope about the loss. The former is the abdication of control, a form of learned helplessness, and the latter is the creation of control, a kind of learned aggressiveness.

A society full of unhealthy people getting sick more than they otherwise would be, saddled with difficulties learning and remembering, suffering from weakened judgment and short-term survival thinking, and violently turning on each other as a means of coping is not a recipe for success. Its a recipe for disaster.

Life in the 21st century is full of both. On the learned helplessness side, there have been an estimated 45,000 suicides per year since 2000, with a sharp rise since 2007, that can all be attributed to the stresses surrounding the economic insecurities of unemployment and underemployment. The U.S. is even confounding the world, with a mysterious and dramatic rise in mortality rates among middle-aged white men and women, who all appear to be drinking and overdosing themselves to death.

On the displacement aggression side, we see bullying of traditionally marginalized groups and a global and marked increase of anti-immigrant sentiment which has already led directly to the election of Donald Trump and as a result, cries for border walls and travel bans. We are seeing a rise in authoritarianism, which is fundamentally a cry for more control and predictability.

A society full of unhealthy people getting sick more than they otherwise would be, saddled with difficulties learning and remembering, suffering from weakened judgment and short-term survival thinking, and violently turning on each other as a means of coping is not a recipe for success. Its a recipe for disaster, especially faced with species-endangering challenges like climate change that demand long-term thinking. But there is hope, and that hope springs from the same well as our problems.

There is an animal out there, one of our cousins actually in the primate family, who lead somewhat similar lives to us. They are high enough in the food chain to generally not be bothered and smart enough to be the primary cause of each others problems. Or as Sapolsky has described it: Theyre just like us: Theyre not getting done in by predators and famines, theyre getting done in by each other. That animal is the baboon and its the animal Sapolsky has been studying for decades. In doing so, hes found three primary factors in predicting stress levels.

The first predictor is the social hierarchy itself. Those at the top tend to live the most stress-free lives thanks to having more control, and those at the bottom tend to live the most stressful lives, thanks to having less control. There is however an important caveat to this. The stability of the social hierarchy matters. If the top baboon faces what is effectively a baboon revolution, that can be pretty stressful. In other words, more unequal societies lead to more stress, for everyone.

The second primary factor is personality. Just as primates are smart enough to be stressed where other animals wouldnt, theyre also able to not be stressed where others would. A baboon who worries for his life every time another baboon walks by is going to be far more full of stress hormones than a laid-back baboon. Personality is therefore a factor that can override ones position in the hierarchy for better or worse. It can even strongly predict ones rank.

The third primary factor actually trumps all. It turns out that stress-related diseases are powerfully grounded in social connectedness. At the bottom of the social hierarchy and prone to stressing out based on your personality? That can still be okay for your health and well-being as long as you have strong social supports friends, family, and community to override it all. Sometimes all we really need is to know we are not alone.

This social trump card even helps explain the prevalence of religion in human societies. Its the creation of a perceived control lever that reduces stress across all factors including the all important social support factor. The result is that attending religious services regularly is actually surprisingly good for human health.

All of this goes a long way toward explaining a great deal of human behavior. The construction of a social hierarchy is a naturally emergent phenomenon of our biology. Being above someone else in rank offers a level of control and predictability. Our personalities help determine our ranks and also how we cope with a lack of control and predictability. Our social relationships help put our lives and the world around us into perspective. However, this is no meritocracy and much depends on the circumstances of birth.

Because our personalities are greatly determined by our environments, especially as kids, a positive feedback loop can emerge where those born and raised in high stress environments full of impoverishment and inequality are unable to escape those environments. This can then become self-perpetuating through each successive generation that follows. We see this happening right now. For all those born into the bottom fifth of American society, about half remain there as adults. The same is true for the top fifth. Meanwhile, the middle 60% are twice as mobile as either one. If we care about the American Dream, we should consider the implications.

Whats the result of such generational stratification of little social mobility? One need look no further than our coping mechanisms the levers of control we create to understand why so many things we dont want, emerge from highly unequal societies. Remember displacement aggression? A 1990 study of 50 countries concluded economic inequality is so significantly related to rates of homicide despite an extensive list of conceptually relevant controls, that a decrease in income inequality of 0.01 Gini (a measure of inequality) leads to 12.7 fewer homicides per 100,000 individuals. Simply put, and this is a robust finding, growing inequality leads to growing violence. A meta-analysis of 34 separate studies even found 97% of the correlations reported between social inequality and violent crime to be positive, meaning as one got bigger or smaller, the other got bigger or smaller.

Addictions are another result. Drug use is a lever of control that is also an escape. We may not be able to control anything around us, but we can control an entirely personal decision that is as simple as drinking that vodka or smoking that cigarette. It can function as the middle finger to everything and everyone around us as a way of saying, I may be stuck in this cage, but you cant stop me from using this to feel like Ive escaped, if only temporarily, and if even only an illusion. This is me controlling the one thing I can control myself. Consider again the mysteriously growing mortality rates of middle-aged white people due to overdoses and liver disease.

As economic inequality increases, other scientifically correlated effects include: reduced trust and civic engagement, eroded social cohesion, higher infant mortality rates, lower overall life expectancy, more mental illness, reduced educational outcomes, higher rates of imprisonment, increased teen pregnancy rates, greater rates of obesity, and the list continues to grow as inequality-related research grows.

Additionally, if you look closely at such a list of effects, it shows the erosion of social supports. If you are less likely to trust your neighbor, if you arent as involved in your community, if you or those you interact with are more aggressive, if you are depressed and just want to be alone, that means the all important trump card for handling stress social connectedness vanishes. This too is its own feedback loop. Less social connection means more stress which means less social connection. Its an unending cycle for human misery.

Its also exactly what weve been observing in the United States for decades. Robert Putnam wrote an entire book about it back in 2000 titled Bowling Alone. The title originated from the statistic that although more people are bowling, less people are doing it in leagues. As observed by Putnam:

Community and equality are mutually reinforcing Social capital and economic inequality moved in tandem through most of the twentieth century. In terms of the distribution of wealth and income, America in the 1950s and 1960s was more egalitarian than it had been in more than a century Those same decades were also the high point of social connectedness and civic engagement. Record highs in equality and social capital coincided. Conversely, the last third of the twentieth century was a time of growing inequality and eroding social capital The timing of the two trends is striking: somewhere around 196570 America reversed course and started becoming both less just economically and less well connected socially and politically.

Viewed through Sapolskys decades of scientific investigation into the physiology of stress, and backed by everything weve observed since theGreat Decoupling in 1973 where national productivity has continued to grow but wage growth has been non-existent, it becomes disappointingly clear that all of this is actually of our own making. Through the policy decisions weve made to increase inequality in the blind pursuit of unlimited growth through the cutting of taxes and subsidizing of multi-national corporate interests, and through the pursuit of globalization without regard for its effects on the middle classes of developed nations such that 70% of households in 25 advanced economies saw their earnings drop in the past decade, weve created a societal feedback loop for chronic stress. And were paying the price.

But it doesnt have to be this way. Just as we know more about why things are the way they are because of some rats in cages and some baboons in East Africa, those same animals point the way forward.

In what was a sad day for Sapolsky but a remarkable day for science, he discovered back in the mid-1980s that the very first baboon troop hed ever studied had experienced a die-off. Half of the troops males had died of tuberculosis from eating tainted garbage. Because those at the top did not allow weaker males and any of the females to eat their prize trash, all of them died. The result was a truly transformed society of baboons.

A greater sense of egalitarianism became the new rule of the jungle, so to speak. Bullying of females and lower males became a rarity, replaced with aggression limited to those of close social rank. Aggressive behaviors like biting were reduced while affectionate behaviors like mutual grooming were increased. The baboons got closer, literally. They sat closer to each other. Stress plummeted, even among those at the very bottom of the new hierarchy. Even more amazingly, this happier more peaceful society of baboons has lasted over the decades, despite members leaving and joining.

In what appears to be a transmission of societal values, new baboons are taught that in this particular society, bullying is not tolerated and tolerance is more the general rule, not the exception. Essentially, a new feedback loop was created, where the sudden reduction in inequality led to less stress and greater community, which led to a new normal of less stress and greater community. As Dr. Frans B. M. de Waal, the director of the Living Links Center at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center of Emory University put it in a 2004 interview with the New York Times about the baboon findings, The good news for humans is that it looks like peaceful conditions, once established, can be maintained.

As much as the story of these baboons have to reveal about the importance and the hope of a less stressed-out, more peaceful society, there is another animal story that in my opinion shows the most potential for mankind of all.

In what has become a very well-known and discussed kind of study, rats were put into cages and given the opportunity to press a lever to self-administer drugs like cocaine. They medicated themselves to death and thus went down in history as the kind of experiment to point to that reveals the helplessly addictive dangers of drugs and how we must be protected from their usage for our own good. This is the ammunition for the War on Drugs in a nutshell.

Meanwhile, in what has become a far too little known variation of this study, but I consider to be one of the most important ever devised, a new kind of experiment was run in an entirely different environment called Rat Park.

Hypothesizing that perhaps having nothing to do but just exist alone in a cage may have something to do with drug usage, a psychologist namedBruce Alexander decided to create a kind of rat heaven before offering rats drugs. Instead of a cage, rats were given a huge space to roam between tree-painted walls and a forest-like floor, full of toys and other rats to play and mate with, food to eat, obstacles to climb, tunnels to traverse, etc.

Within this paradise for rats, morphine-laced water was introduced. The rats could drink as much of it as they wanted. Incredibly, the rats didnt care for it, opting for plain water instead. The morphine-water was then made sweeter and sweeter until eventually the rats finally drank it, but only because it apparently tasted so good, not for the narcotic effects. This was even confirmed by adding a drug to the water, Naltrexone, that nullified the effects of the morphine, which resulted in the rats drinking more of the water. All of this was in strong contrast to solitary rats in cages given the same choices, who took to the morphine-water immediately and strongly.

In fact, its even been found that solitary existence within a cage actively prevents neurogenesis the growth of new neurons within the brain. It turns out neuroscientists for decades thought it impossible for adults to grow new neurons because they were studying solitary animals in cages the whole time. Its therefore only recently that weve learned that impoverished environments actively limit brain development.

Building a paradise for humans is up to us, where because everyone has enough, and inequality is low enough, we wont reach for those levers of control that end up being against our better interests.

What this all reveals is more than the great lie of the Drug War. It reveals the vast importance and great differences of living alone in a cage, and living in a world of abundance and social bonds. Viewed in the context of everything else discussed, it shows the importance of constructing an environment for the purpose of bringing out the best in us, instead of the worst in us. Building a paradise for humans is up to us, where because everyone has enough, and inequality is low enough, we wont reach for those levers of control that end up being against our better interests. So how do we build Human Park?

It is only in my studies of the idea of basic income that Ive seen glimpses into this idea of a Human Park. Like a bunch of puzzle pieces that can be collected to form into a picture, the evidence behind simply giving people money without strings forms a profound image of a better world that can exist right now, if we so choose. Remember the three primary factors that determine our levels of stress?

Creating a less unequal society is step one. There exists in the world today, and has since 1982, something as close to a fully universal basic income as anything yet devised. Its the annual Alaska dividend where thanks to every resident receiving a check for on average around $1,000 per year for nothing but residing in Alaska, inequality is consistently among the lowest of all states. Not only that, but we see what wed expect to see in lower stress populations, where Alaska is also consistently among the happiest states.

In Gallups 2015 ranking of states by well-being, Alaska was second only to Hawaii. This annual ranking is a combined measure of five separate rankings: purpose (liking what you do each day and being motivated to achieve your goals), social (having supportive relationships and love in your life), financial (managing your economic life to reduce stress and increase security), community (liking where you live, feeling safe and having pride in your community), and physical (having good health and enough energy to get things done daily). Alaska scored 5th, 5th, 1st, 7th, and 6th respectively in each of these measures.

In other words, in the only state in the U.S. to provide a minimum amount of income to all residents every year, such that no one ever need worry about having nothing, they feel the greatest amount of basic economic security and the least amount of stress than any other state. As a result theyre also among the most motivated, the healthiest, and have strong family, friend, and community social supports. Alaska is essentially a glimpse at Human Park, but only a glimpse because even the $2,100 they all received in 2015 is not enough to cover a years worth of basic human needs.

Some more of the best evidence we have in the world for what happens in the long-term when people are provided something that looks even more like a basic income than is found in Alaska, can again be found in the U.S., in North Carolina.

In 1992, the Great Smoky Mountains Study of Youth began with the goal of studying the youth in North Carolina to determine the possible risk factors of developing emotional and behavioral disorders. Because Native Americans tend to be underrepresented in mental health research, researchers made the point of including 349 child members of the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Nation. About halfway into the ten-year study, something that is the dream of practically any researcher happened as a matter of pure serendipity. All tribal members began receiving a share of casino profits. By 2001 those dividends had grown to $6,000 per year. By 2006, they were $9,000 per year. The results were nothing short of incredible.

The number of Cherokee living in poverty declined by 50%. Behavioral problems declined by 40%. Crime rates decreased. High school graduation rates increased. Grades improved. Home environments were transformed. Drug and alcohol use declined. Additionally, the lower the age the children were freed of poverty, the greater the effects as they grew up, to the point the youngest ended up being a third less likely to develop substance abuse or psychiatric problems as teens.Randall Akee, an economist, later even calculated that the savings generated through all the societal improvements actually exceeded the amounts of the dividends themselves.

However, the most powerful finding of all was in personality effects. These changes were observed as a result of better home environments that involved less stress and better parental relationships. Incredibly, the children of families who began receiving what we can call something very close to a basic income, saw long-term enhancements in two key personality traits: conscientiousness and agreeableness. That is, they grew up to be more honest, more observant, more comfortable around other people, and more willing to work together with others. And because personalities tend to permanently set as adults, these are most likely lifelong changes.

If we remember how important personality is to the perception of stress and ones location within social hierarchies, these children will end up far better off, and as a result, their own children likely will as well. This is another glimpse into a basic income-enabled Human Park.

Although whats been happening for years in both Alaska and North Carolina are close to universal basic income in practice, they are not actually UBI. UBI requires regularly giving everyone in an entire community an amount of money sufficient to cover their basic needs. This has been done in three places so far: the city of Dauphin in Canada, the Otjivero-Omitara area of Namibia, and the Madhya Pradesh area of India.

Its in these areas that humanity has achieved whats closest to creating Human Parks. As a direct result of guaranteeing everyone a basic income in Dauphin, hospitalization rates decreased 8.5% and high school graduation rates surpassed 100% as dropouts actually returned to school to finish. In Namibia, overall crime rates were cut almost in half and self-employment rates tripled. In India, housing and nutrition improved, markets and businesses blossomed, and overall health and well-being reached new heights. But if its one thing I find most interesting across all experiments, its the improved social cohesion a proliferation of new and strengthened social supports.

In Namibia, a stronger community spirit developed. Apparently, the need to ask each other for money was a barrier to normal human interaction. Once basic income made it so that no one needed to beg anymore, everyone felt more able to make friendly visits to each other, and speak more freely without being seen as wanting something in return. In India, where castes can still create artificial social divisions, those in villages given basic income actually began to gather across caste lines for mutual decision-making. And in Canada, the basic income guarantee had a notable impact on caring, with parents choosing to spend more time with their kids, and kids spending more time with each other in schools instead of jobs.

Remember, social supports are the trump card of societies with less stress, and it appears that providing people with UBI strengthens existing social supports and creates new ones. Freed from a focus on mere survival, humans reach out to each other. This is also something that makes us different from every other animal on Earth our ability to reach each other in ways unimaginable even to ourselves until only recently. We as humans are entirely unique in our ability to belong to multiple hierarchies, and through the internet create connections across vast distances and even time itself through recorded knowledge.

Our place in a hierarchy matters, but we can decide which hierarchies matter more. Is it our position in the socioeconomic ladder? Is it our position in our place of employment? Or is it our position in our churches, our schools, our sports leagues, our online communities, or even our virtual communities within games like World of Warcraft and Second Life?

No other policy has the transformative potential of reducing anywhere near as much stress in society than the lifelong guaranteeing of basic economic security with a fully unconditional basicincome.

We as humans have incredible potential to create and form communities, and realize world-changing feats of imagination, and this mostly untapped potential mostly just requires less stress and more time. If all were doing is just trying to get by, and our lives are becoming increasingly stressful, it becomes increasingly difficult to think and to connect with each other. Its the taxation of the human mind and social bonds. Studies even show the burden of poverty on the mind depletes the amount of mental bandwidth available for everything else to the tune of about 14 IQ points, or the loss of an entire nights sleep. Basically, scarcity begets scarcity.

On the other hand, if we free ourselves to focus on everything else other than survival, if we remove the limitations of highly unequal and impoverished environments, then were increasingly able to connect with each other, and we minimize learned helplessness. As a result, our health improves. Crime is reduced. Self-motivation goes up. Teamwork overtakes dog-eat-dog, and long-term planning overtakes short-term thinking. Presumably, many an IQ jumps the equivalent of 14 points. A greater sense of security has even been shown to reduce bias against out groups, from immigrants to the obese. And if we take into account the importance of security in people deciding to invest their time and resources in bold new ventures, innovation also has the chance of skyrocketing in a society where everyone always has enough to feel comfortable in taking risks without fear of failure. Basically, abundance begets abundance.

If what we seek is a better environment for the thriving of humans a Human Park full of greater health and happiness then what we seek should be the implementation of basic income, in nation after nation, all over the world. There is no real feeling of control without the ability to say no. Because UBI is unconditional, it provides that lever to everyone for the first time in history. No other policy has the transformative potential of reducing anywhere near as much stress in society than the lifelong guaranteeing of basic economic security with a fully unconditional basic income. Plus, with that guarantee achieved, the fear of technological unemployment becomes the goal of technological unemployment. Why stress about automation, when we could embrace it?

No more fight-or-flight.

Its time for live long and prosper.

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Evidence Indicates That Universal Basic Income Improves Human Health - Futurism

Biology explains why men kill big game like Cecil the lion and how that behavior might be stopped – Los Angeles Times

Why do some humans engage in expensive ventures to hunt lions, elephants and other big-game species that often are endangered or otherwise threatened?

The cost, according to a trio of scientists, is exactly the point: These pricey big-game hunts are meant to show off mens high social status to competitors and potential mates.

The findings, published in Biology Letters, offer an evolutionary hypothesis for why humans kill animals they dont need for sustenance and hint at a possible tactic for discouraging that behavior.

The death in 2015 of Cecil the lion in Zimbabwe by an American recreational hunter triggered waves of international outrage. Trophy hunting is not new; in fact, many countries have tried to tie it economically to their conservation efforts. But the rise of the Internet and social media where hunters often share photos of themselves smiling next to their kills has brought the practice to the forefront, particularly at a time when large predators are suffering precipitous population declines.

The killing of Cecil the lion (Panthera leo) ignited enduring and increasingly global discussion about trophy hunting, the study authors wrote. Yet, policy debate about its benefits and costs focuses only on the hunted species and biodiversity, not the unique behaviour of hunters.

And much of human hunting behavior is indeed unique. Lead author Chris Darimont, Hakai-Raincoast professor at the University of Victoria in British Columbia, and his colleagues have described humans as superpredators who dont follow the typical rules of other carnivores in the animal kingdom which can have devastating consequences for wildlife populations.

The average lion, hyena or wolf typically picks prey that are newly born (the juveniles) or nearly dead (the sick and weak animals, the substandard animals in populations) and they eat them, the conservation scientist said. And this really bizarre, unique predator, [the] human being, kind of does the opposite. We target the large; we target animals for characteristics that have nothing to do with their nutritional value; we target animals with big horns or antlers.

These also are more dangerous animals, which means a human hunter is raising his risk to life and limb. Attacking a large animal with big horns doesnt seem to make a lot of sense. But puzzling behaviors often have an evolutionary driver, so the scientists set out to see whether they could find a logical explanation for this human practice.

The researchers began by considering the subsistence hunting habits of traditional hunter-gatherers modern-day populations whose lifestyles more closely mirror those of ancient humans.

Darimont pointed to the indigenous Meriam population of Australia as an example. Men and women both hunt for green turtles but employ different methods. Women nab the turtles when they come ashore to lay eggs an efficient, low-cost way to get a meal. But men take boats to sea and dive into dangerous waters to pursue the same turtles. The hunt is both costlier and riskier than the ostensibly far more effective method used by the women. In addition, men who return home with a big animal end up having to share it with their community rather than feeding it only to their families.

And yet the men continue to hunt in that manner because there is another advantage: Hunting turtles at sea falls into what scientists call costly signaling behavior. Men show they have the resources to take on such a costly task and if they have the resources to do that, the thinking goes, then they must have plenty to devote to offspring, making them more attractive to potential mates. In fact, those male Meriam turtle hunters gain social status in their communities, get married earlier to higher quality mates and have more surviving children (which, in many ways, may be the ultimate measure of reproductive success).

For such behavior to be maintained, even the attempted hunt must signal that the hunter can sustain the handicap of high-cost, low-consumption activity, providing honest evidence of underlying phenotypic quality, the study authors wrote.

So these behaviors arent about bringing home the bacon. Theyre about bragging rights and the social stature that comes with them.

While this seems to be a particularly human trait, it may not be unique. Chimpanzees also spend more time and effort hunting without commensurate food consumption gains.

Similarly, some seabirds like the pigeon guillemot (Cepphus columba) show off display fish, sometimes for hours, the authors wrote. Often discarding them, the behaviour is likewise thought to be social, related to site-ownership display.

With big guns and professional guides often helping them find targets from a safe distance, big-game recreational hunters arent spending a lot of physical effort hunting their quarry, compared with our ancestors, and they arent risking life and limb in the same way either. But they are spending lots of money to kill these animals, theyre choosing species typically not eaten and they engage in display behavior having photos taken next to their fallen prey.

The overall effect emanates a costly signaling behavior: Look at me! I can spend this much on an expensive activity I dont really need to do to survive. I would make a good mate, ladies and you other males stay away from my turf, if you know whats good for you.

Social media has amplified these hunters ability to signal their perceived social status. Such networking also could explain why some women hunt big game, even though it isnt a traditional evolutionary driver for them.

We speculate that such behaviour, counter to expected gender norms (and their evolution), might allow for increased attention in an increasingly competitive social media and marketing world, the study authors wrote.

But social media is a double-edged sword. Just as it might fuel enthusiasm for big-game hunting, it also opens hunters up to shaming by critics (as Cecils hunter, Walter Palmer, discovered). Such public outcry, Darimont and his colleagues point out, may be a key tactic among those who want to reduce the killing of such targets.

If these hunters are hunting for status essentially, theres nothing like shame to erode status, Darimont said. So where the internet might fuel this kill-and-tell generation, it might also provide a vehicle for those opposed to trophy hunting to emerge with a powerful strategy.

amina.khan@latimes.com

Follow @aminawrite on Twitter for more science news and "like" Los Angeles Times Science & Health on Facebook.

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Biology explains why men kill big game like Cecil the lion and how that behavior might be stopped - Los Angeles Times

Genetics of Oil Drilling – GenomeWeb

A few US shale oil producers are using DNA sequencing to identify promising wells, Reuters reports. It adds that it's part of companies' efforts to cut costs and keep pace with global oil producers.

The companies are testing DNA extracted from microorganisms found in rock samples to compare to DNA found in oil samples. Similarities and differences in their genetic profiles are then used to find locations that are more likely to have oil.

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Genetics of Oil Drilling - GenomeWeb

Should the 14-day limit on embryo research be extended? – Prospect (blog)

Strict regulation can helpnot hinderscientific progress by Philip Ball / December 12, 2016 / Leave a comment

Human embryonic stem cells, in cell culture

In 1984, a committee appointed by the British government to draw up guidelines for in vitro fertilisation (IVF) in the wake of the birth of Louise Brown, the first test-tube baby, recommended that scientific research on human embryos should be permitted up to a maximum of 14 days after conception.

The recommendations of this report, led by moral philosopher Mary (now Baroness) Warnock, didnt become law until the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act was passed by parliament six years later. Among other things, the act set up the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) to license and regulate all in vitro embryo creation and manipulation, whether for IVF or for scientific research. Violations of the 14-day limit became a criminal offence.

That limit has remained in place ever since. But now some scientists believe it should be extended to 28 days. These proposals were discussed on 7th December at a meeting in London organised by charity the Progress Educational Trust. It marked the beginning of what seems likely to be a broad and extended discussion among scientists, bioethicists, fertility specialists, religious leaders and others who have a stake in the moral, legal and scientific status of the human embryo.

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Should the 14-day limit on embryo research be extended? - Prospect (blog)

A Glimpse Into The Earliest Genetic Mutations Of Human Life – Asian Scientist Magazine

Every time a cell in the early embryo divides, three mutations creep in; a rate much higher than previously thought.

Asian Scientist Newsroom | March 29, 2017 | In the Lab

AsianScientist (Mar. 29, 2017) - From the time a zygote first divides into two cells, very early mutations determine which cell becomes more dominant and leads to a higher proportion of the adult body. These findings have been published in Nature.

The earliest stages of human development have been impossible to study directly until now. In the present study, researchers analyzed the whole genome sequences of blood samples collected from 279 individuals with breast cancer and discovered 163 mutations that occurred very early in the embryonic development of those people.

Once identified, the researchers used mutations from the first, second and third divisions of the fertilized egg to calculate which proportion of adult cells resulted from each of the first two cells in the embryo.

They found that these first two cells contribute differently to the whole body. One cell gives rise to about 70 percent of the adult body tissues, whereas the other cell has a more minor contribution, leading to about 30 percent of the tissues. This skewed contribution continues for some cells in the second and third generation too.

Originally pinpointed in normal blood cells from cancer patients, the researchers then looked for these mutations in cancer samples that had been surgically removed from the patients during treatment. Unlike normal tissues composed of multiple somatic cell clones, a cancer develops from one mutant cell. Therefore, each proposed embryonic mutation should either be present in all of the cancer cells in a tumor, or none of them. This proved to be the case, and by using these cancer samples, the researchers were able to validate that the mutations had originated during early development.

This is the first time that anyone has seen where mutations arise in the very early human development. It is like finding a needle in a haystack. There are just a handful of these mutations, compared with millions of inherited genetic variations, and finding them allowed us to track what happened during embryogenesis, said Dr. Young Seok Ju, first author from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST).

During this study, the researchers were also able to measure the rate of mutation in early human development for the first time, up to three generations of cell division. Previous researchers had estimated one mutation per cell division, but this study measured three mutations for each cell doubling, in every daughter cell.

Mutations during the development of the embryo occur by two processes known as mutational signatures 1 and 5. These mutations are fairly randomly distributed through the genome, and the vast majority of them will not affect the developing embryo. However, a mutation that occurs in an important gene can lead to disease such as developmental disorders.

This is a significant step forward in widening the range of biological insights that can be extracted using genome sequences and mutations, said Sir Mike Stratton, lead author on the paper and Director of the Sanger Institute.

Essentially, the mutations are archaeological traces of embryonic development left in our adult tissues, so if we can find and interpret them, we can understand human embryology better. This is just one early insight into human development, with hopefully many more to come in the future.

The article can be found at: Ju et al. (2017) Somatic Mutations Reveal Asymmetric Cellular Dynamics in the Early Human Embryo.

Source: KAIST; Photo: Shutterstock. Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily reflect the views of AsianScientist or its staff.

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A Glimpse Into The Earliest Genetic Mutations Of Human Life - Asian Scientist Magazine

Grey’s Anatomy Stars Name Their Favorite TV Doctors – Today’s … – TV Guide (blog)

Now Playing The Stars of Grey's Anatomy Reveal Their (Other) Favorite TV Doctors

The staff members at Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital on Grey's Anatomy are part of a long history of fictional doctors on television, from Hawkeye to House. But which of their onscreen predecessors provided "career inspiration" for the stars of Grey's?

We asked the cast, who were on hand at PaleyFest in Los Angeles, to name their favorite TV docs -- and while a few of the usual suspects (ahem, George Clooney's ER pediatrician, Dr. Doug Ross) made the cut, a few of their other choices may surprise you.

And don't be fooled -- while these guys may not be performing actual surgeries, they still have to learn all that real-life medical jargon, which is not an easy task.

Check out the video to see which (fake) MDs Chandra Wilson, Jerrika Hinton, Jason George and more cast members from Grey's Anatomy admire the most -- aside from their own colleagues, of course.

Grey's Anatomy airs Thursdays at 8/7c on ABC.

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Grey's Anatomy Stars Name Their Favorite TV Doctors - Today's ... - TV Guide (blog)

Grey’s Anatomy’s Jessica Capshaw on Arizona/Eliza’s First Big Challenge, Plus: a ‘Great Chance’ of a Callie Return – TVLine

As weird as it sounds, Greys Anatomy docs Arizona and Eliza may soon miss the bygone days when they had to keep their romance on the D.L. Now that their colleagues have begun to find out about the new couple, they have to see what happens when they actually have a relationship the sex and the commitment versus no commitment, Jessica Capshaw, who plays Robbins, told TVLine earlier this month at PaleyFest. The question becomes, What are they now?

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Whats more, theres the little matter of uh, very few Grey Sloan attendings can standArizonas new girlfriend. But shes not a villain, Capshaw is quick to note. Shes just representing a threat to Dr. Webber, who everyone loves. So itll probably become a little more apparent who Eliza is in the scheme of things and what shes about.

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Though Sara Ramirezs recent beef with ABC would seem to suggest that well never get to see how Arizonas ex Callie reacts to her successor, Capshaw hasnt given up hope. I feel like nothing is impossible, she says. Theres a great chance that she would come back for something.

What do you think? Would you like to see what Torres makes of Minnick? Hit the comments. (With reporting by Vlada Gelman)

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Grey's Anatomy's Jessica Capshaw on Arizona/Eliza's First Big Challenge, Plus: a 'Great Chance' of a Callie Return - TVLine