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The secret science of your office space: How architects are using neuroscience to make workers healthier and more … – GeekWire

Greg Smiths Urban Visions is planning S, an office campus in Seattle that takes into account how office design affects the brain. (NBBJ Rendering)

The ceiling height of an officecan influence whether a team is better at figuring out big picture problems or hashing out complex details. Your focus, stressand energy levels are affected by the presence of green and blue in the office.

These are just a few of the ways that designers are taking into account how the human brain works when designing buildings. NBBJ, which designed Amazons new downtown campus and is doing another Seattle campus project called S, has been workingwith Dr. John Medina, a developmental molecular biologist and professor at the University of Washington. Together, they have delved into the work of numerous neuroscientists to learn how the human brain interacts with the environments people experience all the time, specifically their offices.

Medina, who spoke at CoreNet Global event in Seattle Wednesday still counts himself as a skeptic of the effects of neuroscience and designbecause we still know very little about the human brain.

Our understanding of how (the brain) works is childlike, particularly in relationship to the kinds of questions we are asking about designing buildings, Medina said.

But there are some themes that emerge when looking at the work of prominent neuroscientists, and lessons that designers can take from them.

For the majority of our existence, humanity has existed outside. So its a bit unnatural for us to spend large chunks of our days cooped up inside an office building. To counteract that, designers have done their best to mimic the outdoor environment, with plenty of open space, access to natural light, greenery within the building and fresh air.

But all you open office fans hold on for a second. Medina cites HarvardsEdward O. Wilson, who posited that humans have a constant attraction to open space. Butas soon as things get difficult, whether its a foreboding creature in the wild, or a conference call that is way too loud, people look to retreat and collect themselves. Anyone building out a big open office better make sure to have some quiet places where people can focus.

The bit about ceilings goes back to a concept created by Joan Meyers-Levy of the University of Minnesota called the Cathedral Effect. It states that the height of the ceiling has a bearing on the types of problems people and teams can solve.

Subjects focus on the gist aspects of information, have the least attention to details and solve gist problems best when the ceiling is soaring, Medina said. And they suck at the details. If you want to get them to do the details, lower the ceiling.

No one knows why this Cathedral Effect exists, Medina said, just that it does.

Colors also affect your mood. The color blue is known to send the message to parts of the brain to be alert, according to research from Mariana Figueiro of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in New York cited by Medina. Bluesuppresses melatonin, the chemical that helps us fall asleep. And why is that?

In our evolutionary history, the only time we ever saw blue was when we saw the sky, and the only time you can see sky is in the daytime So your brain thinks its the freakin day time.

Green correlates to plants, and we are attracted those, Medina said, because they are nourished by water. It goes to our survival instincts. When we see green, we are more focused and at ease.

So how do these concepts translate to office buildings? NBBJ is designing the big S campus for Seattle developer Greg Smiths Urban Visions. The project is near CenturyLink and Safeco fields and includes six buildings totaling 1.2 million square feet. It is in the permitting process and has just begun looking for tenants.

Smith said the project was designed with a priority of people first, building second. That means the team is trying to build a campus that is healthy and inviting to workers and visitors alike. When it comes to development, the priority has always beenbuilding first, people second.

I think we have just accepted what our spaces do for us, Smith said. We need to demand that our spaces make us happier, more creative and healthier.

The spacing of teams is important and something the S team has been paying attention to. Ryan Mullenix, a partner at NBBJ, said the limit people typically want to walk to go to someone elses desk. Sixty-five feet is email range, and if someone is 100 feet away, he or she might as well be in an entirely different building.

In addition to knowing how the brain reacts to various elements of a building, designers also want to stimulate peoples brains to get them thinking creatively. One way to do that is variety. By making no two common spaces, landscaped areas or offices alike, the mind is awakened by new experiences.

We want to create a bunch of different moments that are unlike any other moment in the project, Mullenix said.

But the best way to keep workers engaged, creative and open to new ideas, according to Medina? Make them learn a brand new language. Hows that for team building?

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The secret science of your office space: How architects are using neuroscience to make workers healthier and more ... - GeekWire

Sandia Labs uses neuroscience to develop cyber security device – KRQE News 13

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) When a computer works more like a human brain than a machine, it fights off cyber threats better. Sandia National Labs made the discovery while collaborating with Lewis Rhodes Labs of West Concord, M.A.

During some of their human brain research, Lewis Rhodes Labs developed a processor that mimics some of the brains reasoning power. Sandia scientists applied it to cyber security and created the Nueromorphic Cyber Microscope.

Sinceit recognizes suspicious cyber-activity faster, the tiny device replaces whole racks of computer hardware.Its 100-times faster than typical cyber security systems and consumes 1,000 times less energy.

The teams have a video about their work and are now exploring other applications.

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Sandia Labs uses neuroscience to develop cyber security device - KRQE News 13

Viterbo announces new nursing dean – The Courier Life News

Viterbo University was able to snag a new nursing dean from just up the river.

Martha Scheckel, chair of the nursing department at Winona State University, has been appointed Viterbo's new dean of the College of Nursing, Health and Human Behavior. She will begin July 1.

Scheckel began her teaching career as an adjunct in Viterbos bachelor's nursing completion program and became an assistant professor in 2005. She has been involved with nursing education for more than 13 years, including experience leading undergraduate nursing programs at WSU and Michigan State University and her scholarship has focused on trends and issues in nursing education.

I am elated about joining the Viterbo University community and being part of such a respected university with a strong and steadfast mission and core values, Scheckel said. I am especially excited about collaborating with its members at a time when the nursing, health, and human behavior fields are in need of highly qualified individuals to serve societys complex and dynamic health and human service needs."

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Viterbo announces new nursing dean - The Courier Life News

‘Cherishing The Exceptions’: KC Scientist Scott Hawley On The Beauty Of Genetics – KCUR

Listen to the conversation on KCUR's Central Standard.

Geneticist Scott Hawley has a way with words especially when it comes to explaining science to non-scientists.

For example, he remembers the connections he made the first time he saw "Star Wars"when he was in graduate school.

Heres this Imperial Death Star that can stay in space forever, and heres Luke Skywalker in this little X-wing fighter, he told host Gina Kaufmann on KCURs Central Standard.

Luke comes down on the surface of the Death Star, he recalled, and goes in a little canal and loops around. Then, he fires a photon torpedo, which goes into the Death Star and theres a huge explosion of energy.

And I turn to the girl I was with and I go, thats fertilization!

And shed never go out with me again, he added. Which is why you dont date science nerds.

Hawley runs a lab at the Stowers Institute, where hes also the Dean of the Graduate School. He studies the process of meiosis in fruit flies. Meiosis is how the body manages, every time it makes a sperm or an egg, to get the right number of chromosomes into that egg.

He describes chromosomes as gigantic moving vans that carry your genes and enables cells to move genes around in a convenient fashion.

Each of us has 46 chromosomes, he said. But when we build a sperm or egg, we have to get 23 of those 46 those chromosomes in there. Not only do we have to get 23; it has to be the right 23.

As for how two chromosomes pairs, thats part of the mystery.

I mean, I have to tell you, at the moment, pretty much the best mechanism we have for how pairing works is: and then a miracle happens.

What drives his research is how this affects people.

One night, about 20 years ago, a chromosome segregation had gone wrong in a normal fruit fly. Hawley couldnt find a reason for it, he said, and that really bugged him.

One of his post-doctorate fellows said, You really do think meiosis is perfect, dont you? Cant you just let it make a mistake every now and then?

Well, it does makes mistakes every now and then, Hawley said. And the problem is, in human beings, when mistakes are made the consequences are either a zygote that cant flourish in other words, a zygote thats not going to be able to make it to term or, in certain cases, individuals who are going to have to cope with a complex set of effects resulting from having the wrong number of chromosomes.

And these are people and theyre trying to deal with very difficult disorders. And these are people, many of whom I know and I hear their stories, and its something that really matters to me. I want to understand how this process works.

Hawleys interest and drive started in a high school P.E. class.

When he was about 12 or 13, he had a series of three epileptic seizures. That bothered the state of California, where he lived at the time, so he couldnt be in a regular P.E. class; he was placed in a modified" P.E. class.

For the next four years, for an hour a day, five days a week, he was in a class with kids who had severe disabilities mostly disabilities they had been born with, he said.

And I saw how the world treated them, Hawley recalled.

One day after class, he was walking down the hall with a kid from this P.E. class when one of the high school superstars deliberately tripped him.

He fell forward and his face hit the floor. According to Hawley, there was blood, the boy was crying and everyone was laughing.

When he got up, it just didnt bother him that hed fallen. It didnt bother him that he was bleeding, Hawley said. He couldnt understand why people were laughing at him. He couldnt figure out why this was funny. And I couldnt explain it.

It just kept making me angrier and angrier.

This was the late 1960s, when Hawley said advocacy was booming. He decided to become a lawyer to do something for these kids.

But when he got to college, he was randomly assigned an advisor: CrellinPauling, a geneticist and the son of Linus Pauling (who won the Nobel Prize for his research of the chemical bond).

After listening to Hawley rant, Pauling said, I dont know if youre nave or just stupid."

Look at what people will discriminate against minor things. You think youre going to get them to not discriminate against serious developmental defects? You want to do something to help these kids? Why dont you try and fix it or prevent it?

Hawley had never taken a genetics class. Pauling let Hawley into his class, where Hawley said he did badly. But he realized that maybe someday, they could do something about these issues. And, on a selfish level, he said, he fell in love with the intellectual beauty of genetics as a science.

Genetics is kind of the algebra of biology. Its a way of thinking, he said. Its the ability to go into a genome that has 26,000 genes, or 14,000 like fruit flies, and be able to identify the small number of genes that specifically control the process youre interested in, understand what those genes do, how they function, and then begin to understand what happens when they dont do their job when theyre not right.

Genetics is about cherishing the exceptions, he said.

Hawley also writes poetry. He paraphrases a quote: How am I supposed to know what I feel until I know what Ive written?

Words mean a lot to me, he said. Poetry is a powerful way for him to communicate with people who matter in his life, especially when words fail him.

And poetry allows him to fail, he said. He usually writes and re-writes a poem multiple times. In that process, he learns what does and doesnt work.

He writes about anything, he said, including science. The beauty of an image inspires him. He has a framed picture on his desk of when his lab first visualized this structure inside the meiotic cell.

When he first saw it, he said, it took him a minute or two to step back and say, OK, what are we actually looking at? What does this tell us? What questions does this answer and what questions do we need to ask? How do we make sure this is the right thing?

The usual sort of self-questioning things that are science, he said. But for the first minute or two, I was just struck by this image is so beautiful.

Jen Chen is associate producer forKCUR'sCentral Standard. Reach out to her atjen@kcur.org.

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'Cherishing The Exceptions': KC Scientist Scott Hawley On The Beauty Of Genetics - KCUR

Introduction to genetics – Wikipedia

This article is a non-technical introduction to the subject. For the main encyclopedia article, see Genetics.

A long molecule that looks like a twisted ladder. It is made of four types of simple units and the sequence of these units carries information, just as the sequence of letters carries information on a page.

They form the rungs of the DNA ladder and are the repeating units in DNA. There are four types of nucleotides (A, T, G and C) and it is the sequence of these nucleotides that carries information.

A package for carrying DNA in the cells. They contain a single long piece of DNA that is wound up and bunched together into a compact structure. Different species of plants and animals have different numbers and sizes of chromosomes.

A segment of DNA. Genes are like sentences made of the "letters" of the nucleotide alphabet, between them genes direct the physical development and behavior of an organism. Genes are like a recipe or instruction book, providing information that an organism needs so it can build or do something - like making an eye or a leg, or repairing a wound.

The different forms of a given gene that an organism may possess. For example, in humans, one allele of the eye-color gene produces green eyes and another allele of the eye-color gene produces brown eyes.

The complete set of genes in a particular organism.

When people change an organism by adding new genes, or deleting genes from its genome.

An event that changes the sequence of the DNA in a gene.

Genetics is the study of geneswhat they are, what they do, and how they work. Genes inside the nucleus of a cell are strung together in such a way that the sequence carries information: that information determines how living organisms inherit various features (phenotypic traits). For example, offspring produced by sexual reproduction usually look similar to each of their parents because they have inherited some of each of their parents' genes. Genetics identifies which features are inherited, and explains how these features pass from generation to generation. In addition to inheritance, genetics studies how genes are turned on and off to control what substances are made in a cellgene expression; and how a cell dividesmitosis or meiosis.

Some phenotypic traits can be seen, such as eye color while others can only be detected, such as blood type or intelligence. Traits determined by genes can be modified by the animal's surroundings (environment): for example, the general design of a tiger's stripes is inherited, but the specific stripe pattern is determined by the tiger's surroundings. Another example is a person's height: it is determined by both genetics and nutrition.

Chromosomes are tiny packages which contain one DNA molecule and its associated proteins. Humans have 46 chromosomes (23 pairs). This number varies between speciesfor example, many primates have 24 pairs. Meiosis creates special cells, sperm in males and eggs in females, which only have 23 chromosomes. These two cells merge into one during the fertilization stage of sexual reproduction, creating a zygote. In a zygote, a nucleic acid double helix divides, with each single helix occupying one of the daughter cells, resulting in half the normal number of genes. By the time the zygote divides again, genetic recombination has created a new embryo with 23 pairs of chromosomes, half from each parent. Mating and resultant mate choice result in sexual selection. In normal cell division (mitosis) is possible when the double helix separates, and a complement of each separated half is made, resulting in two identical double helices in one cell, with each occupying one of the two new daughter cells created when the cell divides.

Chromosomes all contain DNA made up of four nucleotides, abbreviated C (cytosine), G (guanine), A (adenine), or T (thymine), which line up in a particular sequence and make a long string. There are two strings of nucleotides coiled around one another in each chromosome: a double helix. C on one string is always opposite from G on the other string; A is always opposite T. There are about 3.2 billion nucleotide pairs on all the human chromosomes: this is the human genome. The order of the nucleotides carries genetic information, whose rules are defined by the genetic code, similar to how the order of letters on a page of text carries information. Three nucleotides in a rowa tripletcarry one unit of information: a codon.

The genetic code not only controls inheritance: it also controls gene expression, which occurs when a portion of the double helix is uncoiled, exposing a series of the nucleotides, which are within the interior of the DNA. This series of exposed triplets (codons) carries the information to allow machinery in the cell to "read" the codons on the exposed DNA, which results in the making of RNA molecules. RNA in turn makes either amino acids or microRNA, which are responsible for all of the structure and function of a living organism; i.e. they determine all the features of the cell and thus the entire individual. Closing the uncoiled segment turns off the gene.

Heritability means the information in a given gene is not always exactly the same in every individual in that species, so the same gene in different individuals does not give exactly the same instructions. Each unique form of a single gene is called an allele; different forms are collectively called polymorphisms. As an example, one allele for the gene for hair color and skin cell pigmentation could instruct the body to produce black pigment, producing black hair and pigmented skin; while a different allele of the same gene in a different individual could give garbled instructions that would result in a failure to produce any pigment, giving white hair and no pigmented skin: albinism. Mutations are random changes in genes creating new alleles, which in turn produce new traits, which could help, harm, or have no new effect on the individual's likelihood of survival; thus, mutations are the basis for evolution.

Genes are pieces of DNA that contain information for synthesis of ribonucleic acids (RNAs) or polypeptides. Genes are inherited as units, with two parents dividing out copies of their genes to their offspring. This process can be compared with mixing two hands of cards, shuffling them, and then dealing them out again. Humans have two copies of each of their genes, and make copies that are found in eggs or spermbut they only include one copy of each type of gene. An egg and sperm join to form a complete set of genes. The eventually resulting offspring has the same number of genes as their parents, but for any gene one of their two copies comes from their father, and one from their mother.[1]

The effects of this mixing depend on the types (the alleles) of the gene. If the father has two copies of an allele for red hair, and the mother has two copies for brown hair, all their children get the two alleles that give different instructions, one for red hair and one for brown. The hair color of these children depends on how these alleles work together. If one allele dominates the instructions from another, it is called the dominant allele, and the allele that is overridden is called the recessive allele. In the case of a daughter with alleles for both red and brown hair, brown is dominant and she ends up with brown hair.[2]

Although the red color allele is still there in this brown-haired girl, it doesn't show. This is a difference between what you see on the surface (the traits of an organism, called its phenotype) and the genes within the organism (its genotype). In this example you can call the allele for brown "B" and the allele for red "b". (It is normal to write dominant alleles with capital letters and recessive ones with lower-case letters.) The brown hair daughter has the "brown hair phenotype" but her genotype is Bb, with one copy of the B allele, and one of the b allele.

Now imagine that this woman grows up and has children with a brown-haired man who also has a Bb genotype. Her eggs will be a mixture of two types, one sort containing the B allele, and one sort the b allele. Similarly, her partner will produce a mix of two types of sperm containing one or the other of these two alleles. When the transmitted genes are joined up in their offspring, these children have a chance of getting either brown or red hair, since they could get a genotype of BB = brown hair, Bb = brown hair or bb = red hair. In this generation, there is therefore a chance of the recessive allele showing itself in the phenotype of the childrensome of them may have red hair like their grandfather.[2]

Many traits are inherited in a more complicated way than the example above. This can happen when there are several genes involved, each contributing a small part to the end result. Tall people tend to have tall children because their children get a package of many alleles that each contribute a bit to how much they grow. However, there are not clear groups of "short people" and "tall people", like there are groups of people with brown or red hair. This is because of the large number of genes involved; this makes the trait very variable and people are of many different heights.[3] Despite a common misconception, the green/blue eye traits are also inherited in this complex inheritance model.[4] Inheritance can also be complicated when the trait depends on interaction between genetics and environment. For example, malnutrition does not change traits like eye color, but can stunt growth.[5]

Some diseases are hereditary and run in families; others, such as infectious diseases, are caused by the environment. Other diseases come from a combination of genes and the environment.[6]Genetic disorders are diseases that are caused by a single allele of a gene and are inherited in families. These include Huntington's disease, Cystic fibrosis or Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Cystic fibrosis, for example, is caused by mutations in a single gene called CFTR and is inherited as a recessive trait.[7]

Other diseases are influenced by genetics, but the genes a person gets from their parents only change their risk of getting a disease. Most of these diseases are inherited in a complex way, with either multiple genes involved, or coming from both genes and the environment. As an example, the risk of breast cancer is 50 times higher in the families most at risk, compared to the families least at risk. This variation is probably due to a large number of alleles, each changing the risk a little bit.[8] Several of the genes have been identified, such as BRCA1 and BRCA2, but not all of them. However, although some of the risk is genetic, the risk of this cancer is also increased by being overweight, drinking a lot of alcohol and not exercising.[9] A woman's risk of breast cancer therefore comes from a large number of alleles interacting with her environment, so it is very hard to predict.

The function of genes is to provide the information needed to make molecules called proteins in cells.[1] Cells are the smallest independent parts of organisms: the human body contains about 100 trillion cells, while very small organisms like bacteria are just one single cell. A cell is like a miniature and very complex factory that can make all the parts needed to produce a copy of itself, which happens when cells divide. There is a simple division of labor in cellsgenes give instructions and proteins carry out these instructions, tasks like building a new copy of a cell, or repairing damage.[10] Each type of protein is a specialist that only does one job, so if a cell needs to do something new, it must make a new protein to do this job. Similarly, if a cell needs to do something faster or slower than before, it makes more or less of the protein responsible. Genes tell cells what to do by telling them which proteins to make and in what amounts.

Proteins are made of a chain of 20 different types of amino acid molecules. This chain folds up into a compact shape, rather like an untidy ball of string. The shape of the protein is determined by the sequence of amino acids along its chain and it is this shape that, in turn, determines what the protein does.[10] For example, some proteins have parts of their surface that perfectly match the shape of another molecule, allowing the protein to bind to this molecule very tightly. Other proteins are enzymes, which are like tiny machines that alter other molecules.[11]

The information in DNA is held in the sequence of the repeating units along the DNA chain.[12] These units are four types of nucleotides (A,T,G and C) and the sequence of nucleotides stores information in an alphabet called the genetic code. When a gene is read by a cell the DNA sequence is copied into a very similar molecule called RNA (this process is called transcription). Transcription is controlled by other DNA sequences (such as promoters), which show a cell where genes are, and control how often they are copied. The RNA copy made from a gene is then fed through a structure called a ribosome, which translates the sequence of nucleotides in the RNA into the correct sequence of amino acids and joins these amino acids together to make a complete protein chain. The new protein then folds up into its active form. The process of moving information from the language of RNA into the language of amino acids is called translation.[13]

If the sequence of the nucleotides in a gene changes, the sequence of the amino acids in the protein it produces may also changeif part of a gene is deleted, the protein produced is shorter and may not work any more.[10] This is the reason why different alleles of a gene can have different effects in an organism. As an example, hair color depends on how much of a dark substance called melanin is put into the hair as it grows. If a person has a normal set of the genes involved in making melanin, they make all the proteins needed and they grow dark hair. However, if the alleles for a particular protein have different sequences and produce proteins that can't do their jobs, no melanin is produced and the person has white skin and hair (albinism).[14]

Genes are copied each time a cell divides into two new cells. The process that copies DNA is called DNA replication.[12] It is through a similar process that a child inherits genes from its parents, when a copy from the mother is mixed with a copy from the father.

DNA can be copied very easily and accurately because each piece of DNA can direct the creation of a new copy of its information. This is because DNA is made of two strands that pair together like the two sides of a zipper. The nucleotides are in the center, like the teeth in the zipper, and pair up to hold the two strands together. Importantly, the four different sorts of nucleotides are different shapes, so for the strands to close up properly, an A nucleotide must go opposite a T nucleotide, and a G opposite a C. This exact pairing is called base pairing.[12]

When DNA is copied, the two strands of the old DNA are pulled apart by enzymes; then they pair up with new nucleotides and then close. This produces two new pieces of DNA, each containing one strand from the old DNA and one newly made strand. This process is not predictably perfect as proteins attach to a nucleotide while they are building and cause a change in the sequence of that gene. These changes in DNA sequence are called mutations.[15] Mutations produce new alleles of genes. Sometimes these changes stop the functioning of that gene or make it serve another advantageous function, such as the melanin genes discussed above. These mutations and their effects on the traits of organisms are one of the causes of evolution.[16]

A population of organisms evolves when an inherited trait becomes more common or less common over time.[16] For instance, all the mice living on an island would be a single population of mice: some with white fur, some gray. If over generations, white mice became more frequent and gray mice less frequent, then the color of the fur in this population of mice would be evolving. In terms of genetics, this is called an increase in allele frequency.

Alleles become more or less common either by chance in a process called genetic drift, or by natural selection.[17] In natural selection, if an allele makes it more likely for an organism to survive and reproduce, then over time this allele becomes more common. But if an allele is harmful, natural selection makes it less common. In the above example, if the island were getting colder each year and snow became present for much of the time, then the allele for white fur would favor survival, since predators would be less likely to see them against the snow, and more likely to see the gray mice. Over time white mice would become more and more frequent, while gray mice less and less.

Mutations create new alleles. These alleles have new DNA sequences and can produce proteins with new properties.[18] So if an island was populated entirely by black mice, mutations could happen creating alleles for white fur. The combination of mutations creating new alleles at random, and natural selection picking out those that are useful, causes adaptation. This is when organisms change in ways that help them to survive and reproduce. Many such changes, studied in evolutionary developmental biology, affect the way the embryo develops into an adult body.

Since traits come from the genes in a cell, putting a new piece of DNA into a cell can produce a new trait. This is how genetic engineering works. For example, rice can be given genes from a maize and a soil bacteria so the rice produces beta-carotene, which the body converts to Vitamin A.[19] This can help children suffering from Vitamin A deficiency. Another gene being put into some crops comes from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis; the gene makes a protein that is an insecticide. The insecticide kills insects that eat the plants, but is harmless to people.[20] In these plants, the new genes are put into the plant before it is grown, so the genes are in every part of the plant, including its seeds.[21] The plant's offspring inherit the new genes, which has led to concern about the spread of new traits into wild plants.[22]

The kind of technology used in genetic engineering is also being developed to treat people with genetic disorders in an experimental medical technique called gene therapy.[23] However, here the new gene is put in after the person has grown up and become ill, so any new gene is not inherited by their children. Gene therapy works by trying to replace the allele that causes the disease with an allele that works properly.

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Introduction to genetics - Wikipedia

Penn State University to study Jekyll bobcats’ genetics – The News (subscription)

The Jekyll Island Authority Historic Preservation and Conservation Committee is hoping to find out if the recently discovered bobcats living on Jekyll Island are from the same genealogy as the bobcats on Cumberland Island.

According to Ben Carswell, director of conservation for the authority, the first bobcat genetic samples have been sent off to Penn State University for analysis.

A recently confirmed sighting of the mate and two kittens of a bobcat known to live on the island was announced last month.

Motion-triggered cameras placed throughout the island captured pictures of the bobcat family.

Bobcat sightings have been reported throughout the years on Jekyll Island, however, Sept. 1, 2014, was the first documented sighting.

Its been suggested that the male, in his search to establish territory, may have wondered over to Jekyll Island from the mainland.

The DNA analysis from Penn State could provide some insight into the origins of these particular cats.

Bobcats have been sighted on the Downing Musgrove Causeway in the past. Reportedly, its possible for them to either cross the bridge or swim Jekyll Creek to get to the island.

In the late 1980s, bobcats were successfully reintroduced on neighboring Cumberland Island. As native predators to Coastal Georgia, they are part of the areas biological diversity.

With a yellowish, gray, or reddish-brown, leopard print coat and short, stubby tail, bobcats are about twice the size of an average house cat. Adult males weigh between 18 to 25 pounds and adult females weigh 15 to 20 pounds.

Though the bobcats are predators, Carswell said previously they pose no threat to humans, but cautioned residents to keep a close eye on their pets, something he said should be done anyway.

According to Carswell, the bobcats are feeding on deer on Jekyll Island, a natural and important occurrence for the ecosystems balance and health.

The authoritys conservation team continues to monitor the cats to track, analyze and understand the population.

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Penn State University to study Jekyll bobcats' genetics - The News (subscription)

Free embryology Books Download | Ebooks Online Textbooks

This section contains free e-books and guides on embryology, some of the resources in this section can be viewed online and some of them can be downloaded. Embryogenesis Ken-ichi Sato Online | 652 Pages | English The book is a compilation of cutting edge views of current trends in modern developmental biology, focusing on gametogenesis, fertilization, early and/or late embryogenesis in animals, plants, and some other small organisms.

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Nuclear-test films, smoking declines and five new particles – Nature.com

Facilities | Events | Policy | Funding | Awards | Research |Pharmaceuticals | Trend watch | Coming up

Integrity office On 15 March, Taiwans ministry of science and technology established an office tasked with tracking cases of scientific fraud. Modelled after the US Office of Research Integrity, Taiwans office will collect details of such cases in Taiwan and elsewhere and compile them into a database. This will include information about how cases were handled and will serve as a reference tool for future fraud investigations. The announcement comes in the midst of a high-profile misconduct case that has so far led to the firing of two scientists from the prestigious National Taiwan University, although the new office will not be involved in the investigation.

US puts nuclear-test films on YouTube Dozens of declassified films of US nuclear tests have been digitized and made available on YouTube, the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California announced on 14March. The videos show footage taken by high-speed cameras of some 210atmospheric explosions of both atomic and thermonuclear bombs conducted between 1945 and 1962 (pictured, a still frame of a 1962 nuclear test over Christmas Island). Of an estimated 10,000 films in existence, about 6,500 have been catalogued, 4,200 have been digitized and 750 declassified, the lab said. The purpose of the project is to preserve the videos and provide data for nuclear-weapons experts, as well as making the public aware of the weapons destructiveness.

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

A still frame from a declassified video of 'Bighorn', a 1962 US nuclear test part of Operation Dominic, over Christmas Island.

Fertility step The United Kingdom moved a step closer to allowing the creation of a baby by means of controversial invitro fertilization techniques that use the DNA of three people. The methods prevent the inheritance of genetic disorders caused by mutations in mitochondrial DNA. On 16March, the countrys regulator of fertility treatment, the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, granted the Newcastle Fertility Centre at Life a permit to conduct mitochondrial replacement therapy. People wishing to undergo treatment must still be approved individually by the regulator.

Weedkiller ruling The European Chemicals Agency concluded on 15March that the widely used but controversial weedkiller glyphosate is not a carcinogen. The chemical has been subject to a long-running dispute about its safety: critics fear that the chemical causes cancer, but many experts say that it is safe. The ruling paves the way for a resolution of a heated debate in the European Union over whether use glyphosate should be reauthorized. Last July, the European Commission issued a temporary 18-month extension for glyphosates use after member states could not agree on whether to issue a long-term authorization.

Ecological site The US National Science Foundation announced on 15March that it had set aside US$5.6 million to fund another Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) site in Alaska. The project will focus on coastal ecosystems in the Beaufort Sea, where lagoons support extensive fisheries and migratory bird populations. Researchers will collaborate with the Iupiat communities that rely on the ecosystems for subsistence hunting, and will create research opportunities for young members of the Iupiat community. There are three other LTERs in Alaska, and 28 in total in the United States.

US budget plan US President Donald Trump proposed sweeping cuts to several science agencies in his first budget request, published on 16March. Hardest hit would be the Environmental Protection Agency; the plan proposes slashing its US$8.2billion allocation by 31%. The National Institutes of Healths funding would be cut by 18%, to $25.9billion. By contrast, the proposal suggested trimming NASAs budget by just under 1%. But the White House seems poised to shift the agencys priorities to deep-space exploration rather than Earth-centric research. The document omitted detail about some agencies, including the National Science Foundation, but the president is expected to release a fuller budget request in May. It is not clear how much of the plan will survive negotiations in Congress.

B. Eymann/Academie des sciences

Yves Meyer

Maths prize Mathematician Yves Meyer of the cole Normale Suprieure ParisSaclay has won the 2017 Abel Prize, the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters announced on 21March. The academy cited Meyers pivotal role in the 1980s in establishing the theory of wavelets tools used for signal processing, file compression and data analysis. Wavelets were crucial to the 2015 discovery of gravitational waves. The prize of 6million Norwegian kroner (US$710,000) is one of the most prestigious in mathematics.

Hottest year The World Meteorological Organization confirmed on 21March that 2016 was the warmest year on record in all major data sets that track global surface temperature. The mean temperature was 0.06C above the previous record, set in 2015, calculated from data maintained by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NASA and the UK Met Office Hadley Centre. The three data sets extend back to at least 1880, but differ in the areas they cover. Warming in 2016 was most pronounced in data-sparse regions at high northern latitudes. The global mean temperature last year was 0.83C above the 196190 climate reference period and 0.62C above the 19812010 average.

Five new particles Five particles have been discovered by the LHCb experiment at CERN, Europes particle-physics lab near Geneva, Switzerland. Found by spotting their decays into more-familiar entities, the particles are variations on a known particle called Omega-c-zero (c0). Like protons or neutrons, c0 contains three quarks, but it is made up of the exotic strange and charm varieties (R.Aaij et al. Preprint at https://arxiv.org/abs/1703.04639; 2017). The five particles are heavier, high-energy states of c0, each with a different mass, which physicists had anticipated but until now never seen. The discovery should help physicists to understand more about how quarks bind together.

Low polar ice This year, both Arctic and Antarctic sea-ice levels hit record lows for the month of February, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said on 17March. As Arctic sea ice approached its maximum annual extent, its February average measured 7.6% below the 19812010 average for the month. The Antarctic, around the time of the annual maximum melt, saw average ice coverage plummet to 24.4% below the February average. Ice in the south is notoriously variable; it marked a record high maximum just three years ago.

Smoking success The World Health Organizations landmark convention on tobacco control, which came into force in 2005 and committed signatories to introducing anti-smoking policies, seems to have driven down smoking worldwide, according to a study published on 21March (S. Gravely etal. Lancet Pub. Health http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2468-2667(17)30045-2; 2017). Researchers analysed data from 126countries, and showed a strong association between smoking declines in 200515 and the implementation of five key measures: tobacco taxes, smoke-free policies, warning labels, support for quitting, and advertising bans. Every measure implemented was associated with an average decrease in smoking prevalence of 1.57percentage points.

Cholesterol drug A large clinical trial of a cholesterol-lowering drug that targets a protein called PCSK9 has shown that the compound can reduce the risk of heart disease and stroke. The US Food and Drug Administration approved evolocumab (Repatha) in 2015 for lowering the bad cholesterol LDL. The results of a trial with more than 27,500participants, published on 17March, now show that evolocumab which attempts to mimic a beneficial genetic mutation also reduces the risk of death due to heart attack and stroke by about 20% in people taking other cholesterol-controlling drugs called statins (M.S.Sabatine etal. N. Engl. J. Med. http://doi.org/b4j9; 2017). But the reduction in risk is not as high as had been hoped; many researchers had expected PCSK9-targeting drugs to be the next generation of blockbuster treatments.

Global carbon dioxide emissions from energy production remained flat for a third straight year in 2016, despite a growing global economy, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said on 17March. The flattening is mainly a result of rising renewable-energy generation and improved energy efficiency. Growing use of nuclear power also contributed. But the halt in emissions growth is not enough to keep global temperatures from rising by 2C above pre-industrial levels, the IEA notes.

25 March Physicists discuss how to catch a gravitational wave, at the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics in Santa Barbara, California.

15 April The annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research takes place in Washington DC.

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Nuclear-test films, smoking declines and five new particles - Nature.com

Cytosis: A Cell Biology Game makes learning about the human cells fun – Nerd Reactor

Kickstarterhas always been a platform to bring your ideas to life. Over the years weve seen some great ideas and even some terrible ideas but in the end, it comes down to the backers to make it happen.

One thing Ive always enjoyed searching on Kickstarter are the different type of games (board games and video games) people or even companies try to make. Over the years weve had a chance to take a look at a few of these different type of games but one that seems really interesting isCytosis: A Cell Biology Game fromGenius Games. It combines science, in this case learning about the human bodywhere players compete to build enzymes, hormones, and receptors and fend off attacking Viruses.

Players utilize the available organelles within the cell to collect cellular resources such as mRNA from the Nucleus, Lipids from the Smooth E.R., ATP from the Mitochondria, or transport Carbohydrates into the cell via endocytosis through the Plasma Membrane.Players may also utilize the organelles to Translate mRNA into Proteins (either on the Free Ribosome in the Cytoplasm, or in the Rough E.R) or add glucose or lipid tags to their hormonesor hormone receptors in the Golgi Apparatus.Players score health points when they complete any of the Hormone, Receptors or Enzyme cards.

The Kickstarter is looking to raise $14,500 by April 13, 2017. Everyone whole pledges $39 will receivea copy of the game which will retail for $50 MSRP or a premium edition of the game if you pledge $49 which includes aincludes custom wooden shaped and silk screened mRNA, Protein, Lipid, & Carbohydrate resource tokens, an Individually Numbered copy of the game with an upgraded Metallic Ink embossed box.

We are excited to return to Kickstarter to seek funding for our latest board game venture, Cytosis: A Cell Biology Game. People familiar with our other products will find the same level of quality and creativity that theyve come to expect from us, noted John Coveyou, founder and director of Genius Games. Traditionally games are only meant for entertainment and school is where you go to learn. At Genius Games we have always felt that you can make learning fun. That is our mission, to develop games that are not only a blast to play, but that also simultaneously demystify intimidating science concepts. And for a cool behind-the-scenes look into the design, and launch of the game on Kickstarter, check out my new YouTube documentary series, A Kickstarter Launch Story.

It sounds like a fun way to spend a day with friends, or even a fun game to play with your family as you learn more about the human body.

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Cytosis: A Cell Biology Game makes learning about the human cells fun - Nerd Reactor

Anatomy analysis suggests new dinosaur family tree – Science News

The standard dinosaur family tree may soon be just a relic.

After examining more than 400 anatomical traits, scientists have proposed a radical reshuffling of the major dinosaur groups. The rewrite, reported in the March 23 Nature, upsets century-old ideas about dinosaur evolution. It lends support to the accepted idea that the earliest dinosaurs were smallish, two-legged creatures. But contrary to current thinking, the new tree suggests that these early dinosaurs had grasping hands and were omnivores, snapping up meat and plant matter alike.

This is a novel proposal and a really interesting hypothesis, says Randall Irmis, a paleontologist at the Natural History Museum of Utah and the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Irmis, who was not involved with the work, says its a possibility that the new family tree reflects actual dinosaur relationships. But, he says, It goes against our ideas of the general relationships of dinosaurs. Its certainly going to generate a lot of discussion.

The accepted tree of dinosaur relationships has three dominant branches, each containing critters familiar even to the nondinosaur obsessed. One branch leads to the bird-hipped ornithischians, which include the plant-eating duckbills, stegosaurs and Triceratops and its bony-frilled kin. Another branch contains the reptile-hipped saurischians, which are further divided into two groups: the plant-eating sauropods (typically four-legged, like Brontosaurus) and the meat-eating theropods (typically two-legged, like Tyrannosaurus rex and modern birds).

Scientists have long-divided the dinosaurs into two main groups, the bird-hipped and the reptile-hipped (top). A new analysis breaks up the reptile-hipped lineage and suggests the bird-hipped group shares recent ancestors with meat-eating theropods (bottom).Scientists have been unsure where to put the confusing two-legged, meat-eating herrerasaurids (red lines, top). The new analysis suggests they are close relatives of the sauropods (bottom).

This split between the bird-hipped and reptile-hipped dinos was first proposed in 1887 by British paleontologist Harry Seeley, who had noticed the two strikingly different kinds of pelvic anatomy. That hypothesis of dinosaur relationships was formalized and strengthened in the 1980s and has been accepted since then.

The new tree yields four groups atop two main branches. The bird-hipped ornithischians, which used to live on their own lone branch, now share a main branch with the reptile-hipped theropods like T. rex. This placement suggests these once-distant cousins are actually closely related. It also underscores existing questions about the bird-hipped dinos, an oddball group with murky origins; they appear late in the dinosaur fossil record and then are everywhere. Some scientists have suggested that they evolved from an existing group of dinosaurs, perhaps similarly herbivorous sauropods. But by placing the bird-hipped dinos next to the theropods, the tree hints that the late-to-the-party vegetarian weirdos could have evolved from their now close relatives, the meat-eating theropods.

Sauropods (like Brontosaurus) are no longer next to the theropods but now reside on a branch with the meat-eating herrerasaurids. Herrerasaurids are a confusing group of creatures that some scientists think belong near the other meat eaters, the theropods, while others say the herrerasaurids are not quite dinosaurs at all.

The new hypothesis of relationships came about when researchers led by Matthew Baron, a paleontologist at the University of Cambridge and Natural History Museum in London, decided to do a wholesale examination of dinosaur anatomy with fresh eyes. Using a mix of fossils, photographs and descriptions from the scientific literature, Baron and colleagues surveyed the anatomy of more than 70 different dinosaurs and non-dino close relatives, examining 457 anatomical features. The presence, absence and types of features, which include the shape of a hole on the snout, a cheekbone ridge and braincase anatomy, were fed into a computer program, generating a family tree that groups animals that share specialized features.

In this new interpretation of dinosaur anatomy and the resulting tree, many of the earliest dinosaurs have grasping hands and a mix of meat-eating and plant-eating teeth. If the earliest dinos were really omnivores, given the relationships in the new four-pronged tree, the evolution of specialized diets (vegetarians and meat eaters) each happened twice in the dinosaur lineage.

When the researchers saw the resulting tree, We were very surprised and cautious, Baron says. Its a big change that flies in the face of 130 years of thinking.

The arrangement of the new tree stuck even when the researchers fiddled around with their descriptions of various features, Baron says. The close relationship between the bird-hipped, plant-eating ornithischians and the reptile-hipped, meat-eating theropods, for example, isnt based on one or two distinctive traits but on 21 small details.

The lesson is that dinosaur groups arent characterized by radical new inventions, says paleontologist Kevin Padian of the University of California, Berkeley. The relationships are read in the minutiae, not big horns and frills. That said, Padian, whose assessment of the research also appears in Nature, isnt certain that the new tree reflects reality. Such trees are constructed based on how scientists interpret particular anatomical features, decisions that will surely be quibbled with. The devil is in the details, Padian says. These guys have done their homework and now everyones going to have to roll up their sleeves and start checking their work.

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Anatomy analysis suggests new dinosaur family tree - Science News