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Producers seek top genetics at Iowa sale event – Iowa Farmer Today

DES MOINES Rob Long believes spending money on good genetics should not stop because of a lower fed cattle market.

Long, who farms near Creston, sold the top-selling bull at this years. His Simmental bull brought $15,000 to top the breed sale.

With the economy the way it is, its not the time to keep the status quo, Long says. I think we need to focus on the best attributes and buy those bulls that are going to bring value to your operation.

The Southwest Iowa producer says there was a good deal of interest in the bull ahead of the expo.

There was some uniqueness in his pedigree, and that attracted some people, Long says. It showed us that people were still willing to spend money on quality genetics. I think were seeing that this year with this bull.

Commercial producers know spending money on quality genetics will pay off over the long haul, says Kevin Mohrfeld. The West Point producer had the top-selling Angus bull at the expo, bringing $12,000.

Most of our customers are commercial produces, and they are really interested in performance, he says. With prices down, they really want those good genetics.

He says his bull attracted a fair amount of interest from potential buyers ahead of the sale.

They really liked his performance, his overall balance and how his EPDs (expected progeny differences) looked, Mohrfeld says. Weve had the second highest selling bull a couple of times. It was nice to be at the top of the sale this year.

Listed here are complete sale results from this years expo Feb. 12-19.

Angus

The top-selling bull, consigned by Kevin Mohrfeld of West Point, sold for $12,000 to David Deal of Danvers, Ill.

The top-selling female, consigned by Ron Buch of Luzerne, sold for $7,500 to Lyle Olson of Red Oak.

A total of 61 bulls sold for an average price of $4,273. A total of 35 females sold for an average price of $3,325. One embryo lot sold for $3,000.

Charolais

The top-selling bulls, consigned by North Grove Charolais of Grove City, Minn., and Shepherd Charolais of Stuart, sold for $5,500 to Kurt Neff of Blackfoot, Idaho, and Brad Kresak of Milligan, Neb., respectively.

The top-selling female, consigned by North Grove Charolais of Grove City, Minn., sold for $7,500 to Lance Van Roekel of Larchwood.

A total of 43 bulls sold for an average price of $2,990. A total of 36 females sold for an average price of $2,797. Nine embryo lots sold for an average price of $492.

Gelbvieh

The top-selling bull, consigned by Blackhawk Cattle Co./Lazy JV Ranch of Oregon, Ill., sold for $8,400 to Bar Arrow Cattle Co. of Phillipsburg, Kan.

The top-selling female, consigned by Kirkwood Community College of Cedar Rapids, sold for $4,500 to Adelyn Sienknecht of Gladbrook.

A total of 13 bulls sold for an average price of $3,762. A total of 26 females sold for an average price of $2,602.

Hereford

The top-selling bull, consigned by Lorenzen Farms of Chrisman, Ill., sold for $10,200 to Donn Jibben of Fort Worth, Texas.

The top-selling female, consigned by Wiese & Sons of Manning, sold for $7,000 to Express Ranches of Yukon, Okla.

A total of 41 bulls sold for an average price of $3,655. A total of 31 females sold for an average price of $3,347.

Limousin

The top-selling bull, consigned by Deb Vorthmann of Silver City, sold for $5,600 to Vorthmann Limousin of Treynor.

The top-selling female, consigned by Boesch Farms of Indianola, sold for $2,950 to Shelby Skinner of Bolivar, Mo.

A total of 24 bulls sold for an average price of $3,396. A total of nine females sold for an average price of $2,289.

Lowline

The top-selling bull, sold by Swanquist Spring Brook Farm of Lagro, Ind., sold for $1,300 to Randy Larson of Sumner.

The top-selling female, consigned by Reinken Cattle Co. of Boone, sold for $4,400 to Ray Gaskill of Boone.

A total of 16 females sold for an average price of $2,266. One steer sold for a price of $850. Nine semen lots sold for an average price of $228.

Maine-Anjou

The top-selling bull, consigned by Braun Show Cattle of Northwood, sold for $4,100 to Mark Roges of Douds.

The top-selling female, consigned by Jordan Crall of Albia, sold for $4,900 to Jodi Opperman of Manning.

A total of nine bulls sold for an average price of $2,256. A total of 16 females sold for an average price of $1,928.

Miniature Hereford

The top-selling bull, consigned by Smith Mini Herefords of Fairfield, sold for $3,000 to Karly Biddle of Walcott.

The top-selling female, consigned by Allison Gooden of Bloomfield, sold for $5,000 to C & B Farms LLC of Mineral Point, Wis.

A total of four bulls sold for an average price of $2,350. A total of eight females sold for an average price of $4,100. A total of five steers sold for an average price of $830. One flush lot sold for $2,800. Three semen lots sold for an average price of $380.

Red Angus

The top-selling bull, consigned by Ulrich Red Angus of Good Thunder, Minn., sold for $5,800 to Dave Runner of Gilman.

The top-selling female, consigned by Finch Cattle of Kelley, sold for $4,300 to Alex Wilson of Ogden.

A total of 22 bulls sold for an average price of $3,282. A total of 25 females sold for an average price of $2,862.

Three embryo lots sold for an average price of $2,234.

One flush lot sold for $5,000.

Salers

The top-selling bull, consigned by T-Bone Cattle Co. of Osceola, sold for $4,200 to Bill Edwards of Wayland.

The top-selling female, consigned by Barnes Farms of Lamoni, sold for $5,500 to McIvers Happy Acres Farm of Farwell, Minn.

A total of 10 bulls sold for an average price of $2,770. A total of nine females sold for an average price of $2,766.

Shorthorn

The top-selling bull, consigned by Nate Studer Family of Creston, sold for $10,000 to Glenrothes Farm George D. Brown of Beaverton, Ontario.

The top-selling female, consigned by Ryan & Steve Laughlin of Imogene, sold for $5,500 to Kaden Wilson of Creston.

A total of 14 bulls sold for an average price of $4,429. A total of 32 females sold for an average price of $2,527. Five embryo lots sold for an average price of $518. Four semen lots sold for an average price of $201.

Simmental

The top-selling bull, consigned by Rob Long of Creston, sold for $15,000 to Loonan Stock Farm of Corning.

The top-selling female, consigned by GSJG Matt Greiman Family of Goodell, sold for $8,500 to Brittain Cattle of Earlham.

A total of 83 bulls sold for an average price of $3,553. A total of 47 females sold for an average price of $2,878. Fifteen embryo lots sold for an average price of $405. One pregnancy lot sold for $4,200.

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Producers seek top genetics at Iowa sale event - Iowa Farmer Today

How genetics can uncover links in chronic pain and other conditions – The Conversation UK

Chronic pain can be disabling.

In the recent Global Burden of Disease study, four of the top ten causes of disability worldwide were chronic pain conditions. Chronic pain is defined as pain that lasts beyond normal healing time usually three months and is one of the most common global causes of incapacity. It rarely occurs by itself, however, and is one of the most common conditions to present itself alongside other chronic conditions, such as diabetes and COPD. This increases the overall burden of disability, and the impact of each chronic condition.

The exact reason why some people suffer from several chronic diseases and others dont, is not well understood. However, we have discovered that genetics could partially explain this.

Two of the most common disorders which occur alongside chronic pain are depression and angina. There is already evidence of shared socio-demographic risk factors for all of these conditions, particularly older age and social deprivation, as well as lifestyle factors. However these do not explain all of the shared risk.

In order to investigate a risk within families and a genetic explanation for chronic disease, we examined two major groups, for the co-occurrence of chronic pain, depression and heart disease in individuals and their siblings.

Data from Generation Scotland included 24,000 individuals, recruited in family groups, with data on multiple chronic illnesses, socio-demographic and psychological factors, and blood from which DNA was genetically analysed. When the data was collected, 18% of participants reported chronic pain, 13% had a history of major depressive disorder and 10% had angina.

We looked at the existence of two or three of these conditions in individuals and we found that people with depression were two and a half times more likely to experience chronic pain; while people with both depression and heart disease were nine times more likely to experience chronic pain. It is clear that the existence of one condition increases the chance of an individual having another, or both of the other conditions.

A familial risk was confirmed when we looked at siblings of people affected by these conditions. A sibling of someone with heart disease was twice as likely to have chronic pain, and siblings of those with depression were twice as likely to suffer from heart disease. This suggests that genetics plays a part in these chronic diseases, in addition to known social and demographic factors.

The magnitude of a shared genetic explanation for these chronic conditions was examined by looking at sets of twins. TwinsUK has data on 12,000 identical and non-identical twins from across the UK, of 16-98 years of age. In a sample of 2,902 of these, 20% suffered with chronic pain, 22% had depression and 35% reported a cardiovascular disease.

We compared the rates of occurrence of a condition, and of co-occurrence with another, between identical and non-identical twins. In identical twins, it was consistently more likely that both individuals would be affected, by any of the conditions, than non-identical twins, which further confirms that there is significant genetic contribution. When we examined the co-occurrence of chronic widespread pain and heart disease in our twins we found that the model that best explained the co-occurrence was a combination of both genetic and non-shared environmental factors.

Although there are numerous causes of chronic pain, there are similarities in the socio-demographic factors explaining their development. Recent research shows that there are also similar biological factors present in the development of different types of chronic pain.

For the sufferer, it is the pain itself, rather than the cause, that produces the most distress and disability most chronic pain sufferers had it for more than five years at more than one site. The most common chronic pain, back pain, accounted for 146m years lived with disability in 2013, three times the level of depression.

Overall, 19% of adults in Europe, and 6% in the UK, were found to have significant chronic pain that was intense, severely disabling and limiting. This is similar to the prevalence of conditions such as cancer, heart disease and diabetes.

As well as the issue that chronic pain represents for individuals, its management places an important burden on healthcare services and it impacts on families, society and the economy. Therefore, the finding that a genetic mechanism could help to explain the co-occurence of these conditions is significant to allow further research. The exact genes involved in the occurence and co-occurrence of chronic pain need to be identified, so that we may switch them off at an early stage and try to develop new treatments.

Of course, it will always be important to understand and address the socio-demographic causes of disability and co-occurrence of conditions especially with regards to factors we could change, such as deprivation. However, our research also suggests a new model of chronic disease, based on genetics and biological factors.

Genes are important in determining the risk, both of chronic disease itself, and of co-occurrence of other disabilities. Only a deeper understanding of these factors will allow the development of new preventive and targeted treatments.

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How genetics can uncover links in chronic pain and other conditions - The Conversation UK

In a lab pushing the boundaries of biology, an embedded ethicist keeps scientists in check – STAT

T

he young scientists had a question. They were working with mouse embryos from which all living cells had been chemically dissolved away.

So far, so good, thought the bioethicist, as she listened to the presentation at a Harvard Medical School lab meeting.

The scientists were seeding the mouse scaffolds with human stem cells. Those cells were expected to turn into human liver cells and perhaps a mini human liver; and human kidney cells and perhaps mini human kidneys; andhumanheart and brain cells and

Wait.

Jeantine Lunshof insists she is not the ethics police. It says so on the door to her closet-sized office at Harvard. She doesnt find reasons to reflexively shut down experiments. She doesnt snoop around for deviations from ethical guidelines. But when scientists discuss their research in the twice-weekly lab meetings she attends, I will say, hmm, that raises some good questions, Lunshof said.

There is no shortage of good questions for Lunshof, who for the last three years has been embedded in the synthetic biology lab of George Church, the visionary whose projects include trying to resurrect the wooly mammoth and to write a human genome from scratch. Church is also famous for arguing that it is ethically acceptable to edit the genomes of human embryos if doing so will safely alleviate suffering, and for encouraging people to make their full genome sequence public, privacy be damned.

In the Church lab, Lunshof told STAT, you have incredibly interesting conversations.

George Church has a wild idea to upend evolution. Heres your guide

Rapid advances in genomics and stem cell biology are forcing researchers to regularly confront ethical quandaries that seem straight out of science fiction. The power to create organisms with cells, tissue, and even organs from different species,called a chimera, raises thornyquestions: What is the moral status of a primordial human brain nourished with a rudimentary heart and circulatory system, all inside a mouse scaffold? Can it feel pain? Should it not be created in the first place? Genome-editing presents otherchallenges: Where does therapy end and enhancement begin? Could genome-editing to prevent dwarfism, for example, go a little further and create a future NBA star? How should society balance competing values such as autonomy, like the freedom of parents to do everything they can for their children, and justice, as in not creating classes of genetic haves and have nots?

George is far ahead of everyone else in the kinds of experiments he undertakes, said John Aach, a senior scientist in Churchs lab who works closely with Lunshof. She performs a service in making them slow down to where the rest of the world is. Otherwise George might stumble. It doesnt take much to stumble and make a mess of things. Jeantine keeps things moving on the bioethics side as the science is moving ahead.

Lunshofs role is unusual if not unique. Genetics researchers will tap a bioethicist to join a grant or consult on a project, but it is rarely if ever the case that a genetics lab has a full-time bioethicist, said Brendan Parent, a bioethicist at New York University. He and others are unaware of any other such embeds. Instead, bioethicists and biologists tend to interact when they serve on committees convened by universities, scientific organizations, or government.

In contrast, Lunshof not only coauthors papers with Church and his colleagues, but also helps draft protocols for some of the cutting-edge science the lab conducts. By being present at the creation, she is able to flag ethical minefields before the lab finds itself bumbling acrossone.

She provides me with a comfort zone, Church said. I think much more about societal concerns that the labs research might raise. Shes here while were just starting to think about experiments, he added, and because of her we talk about [bioethics] earlier than most groups do. Jeantine is fearless in what she tackles.

The benefits of this collaboration extend beyond Church and his lab. Watching new biology emerge in real time has enabled Lunshof to develop much-needed new ways of thinking aboutbioethics, giving her field and the world outside the lab a fighting chance to keep up.

Its at the lab meetings every Monday and Thursday afternoon that Lunshof typically learns what might next land on her to-do list. The 50 or so scientists in attendance update Church on their research and others offer comments. The rows of chairs are generally all filled. Lunshof, in typically casual lab attire, rarely asks questions, instead taking notes and keeping track of who she needs to follow up with.

This week, researchers discussed plans to do cognitive testing on participants in a project centered on having their genomes sequenced. Lunshofs ears pricked up.

The combination of genetics and intelligence has long been a danger zone, largely because measurements of intelligence are imprecise and shaped by the dominant culture, as decades of debate about IQ tests have shown. The tests do not measure cognition, let alone intelligence, Lunshof said during the meeting, arguing for staying away from linking the genome to cognition or IQ. She urged the scientists to be more precise in describing what the tests measured: memory and mental processing speed. Correcting things later by saying, No, we are not measuring IQ, really were not, is very difficult, she said.

When I feel that something is a problem, I feel completely free to say, Dont go down that road, Lunshofsaid in an interview. She is not paid by Harvard. Born and raised in the Netherlands, sheis an assistant professor there, at University Medical Center Groningen, and she was awarded a Marie Curie fellowship to move to Boston and support her work in Churchs lab.

Audacious project plans to create human genomes from scratch

No one in the lab ever puts pressure on me to legitimize anything or to agree with what theyre doing, she said. I am always on the alert for things that could get into delicate areas.

Lunshofs collaboration with Church began in 2006. Itwas the start of the Personal Genome Project, an effort to sequence peoples full genomes and mine the data to link genetics to health. Church was causing consternation by proposing that people make their genome and their health history publicly available.

My first reaction was, this is totally crazy, Lunshof recalled. Anonymity and confidentiality were central to everything we do in biomedical ethics.

But then she thought, what if Church is right? He had argued that its impossible to guarantee that a DNA sample would remain anonymous. (Hewould beproved right in 2013.) So why not do away with that charade at the outset, and instead of making empty promises of anonymity, tell volunteers from the get-go that anyone could know who they were?

Lunshof had studied philosophy and Tibetan language and culture as an undergraduate, then had written a doctoral thesis on ethical issues in genomics. She also had earned a nursing degree, and worked at the Netherlands Cancer Institute in Amsterdam. In 2006, she stumbled on the PGP website and sent an email expressing her interest in it. Church replied within hours and their partnership was born.

Together, they developed a new form of patient consent for the Personal Genome Project. Called open consent, it was founded on principles new to the bioethics of genetic research. It tells participants they wont have privacy and confidentiality. Instead, consent is based on values such as reciprocity (scientists and volunteers interact as equals) and veracity. Lunshof is also a big believer in the ethical concept of citizenry, including allowing ones genetic data to be accessed by all qualified scientists tohelp advance medical progress and alleviate human suffering.

Because of advances in genetics and genomics, it made sense to abandon the traditional idea of medical confidentiality, Lunshof said, or at least not make it central.

That was a minority opinion. The National Institutes of Health, a main funder of Churchs lab, wasnt ready to embrace the idea of genetic privacy being violable, said Aach. It and the genetics community went in the other direction, saying we have to take steps to protect privacy, a huge and costly undertaking.

With the development of open consent, the Personal Genome Project took off, and now has more than 5,000 participants in the United States alone.

When I feel that something is a problem, I feel completely free to say, Dont go down that road.

Bioethicist Jeantine Lunshof

The ethics debate around genomics intensified with publication of a breakthrough 2012 paperon CRISPR, the revolutionary new genome-editing technology. After Church and his team got CRISPR to edit the genomes of human cells, later that year, they and others quickly faced two quandaries: Should CRISPR ever be used to enhance peoples genetic inheritance? Should it be used to edit the genomes of human eggs, sperm, or early embryos, producing changes that could be inherited by offspring and, maybe, generations of designer babies?

For many scientists and ethicists, the line-in-the-sand position on such germline editing and genetic enhancement has long been no. Lunshof had other ideas.

From the bioethics standpoint, she told STAT one afternoon at a Harvard Medical School cafe, it is not clear why altering genes [for enhancement] is by definition unethical. Some philosophers have consistently argued that there is a duty to at least consider genetic enhancement.

The CRISPR patent decision: Your six takeaways

In the real world, Prospective parents decide to use or not to use reproductive technologies, Lunshof argued, and that could one day include germline genome editing.

That reflects the balancing act she brings to the ethical puzzles she tries to unravel. Sometimes two core values are in conflict. In the case of germline editing and enhancement, parental autonomy (to make reproductive choices) might clash with the idea that all children are entitled to an equal start in the world. But the latter is honored in the breach more than the observance, Lunshof says, and so should not be allowed to trump parental autonomy.

Last week, a report from the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Medicine opened the door to germline editing. It opposed enhancement, but called the line between enhancement and therapy blurry. Lunshof beat them to it: The criteria for what is therapy and what is enhancement are fluid, she wrote two years ago.

For all the passions that germline editing incites, its effects would be small: It requires in vitro fertilization, so few parents would use it (unless reproductive sex goes the way of flip phones). Other applications of CRISPR could be more consequential. One could alter ecosystems. Calledgene drive, it is a technology for editing the genomes of an organism in a way that causes the change to be inherited by every offspring, contrary to usual inheritance patterns.

As scientists in Churchs lab and elsewhereinvolved the public in conversations about testing gene drives in wild populations of mice or mosquitoes, Lunshof recently raised a novel bioethics question: If a bioneer community says yes to gene drive, it sets a precedent and could lead people in other places to allow it, too, she said. How much would this community be held morally accountable for genetic interventions elsewhere that go wrong?

The ethical minefield created by the possibility of seeding mouse embryo scaffolds with human stem cells, and possibly growing a functional, if mini, human brain, has been trickier to navigate. Youd grow human organs, Lunshof said. My question was, what if this worked?

There didnt seem to be any government or other rules against it. Scientists using stem cells from embryos are supposed to clear experiments with an Embryonic Stem Cell Research Oversight (ESCRO) Committee, which many research universities have established. But Churchs lab proposed to use stem cells produced by reverting adult cells back to an embryo-like state. And although there are rules against creating human chimeras, it wasnt clear whether this thing would be a chimera: It wouldnt be a single living entity, though it might have living human cells or even organs.It seemed there was no bureaucracy to stop the experiment.

Lunshof spent hours with the two scientists who were planning the experiment. She primes the lab to be sensitive to ethical issues even when they dont know what to be sensitive about, Aach said. She proposed asking the ESCRO committee. Church agreed. It decided that the experiment did not violate any known guideline but asked him to keep the committee informed as the experiments progressed.

As it happens, the experiments didnt work and the lab moved on smack into another ethical conundrum.

First human-pig chimeras created, sparking hopes for transplantable organs and debate

This time, postdoctoral fellow Eswar Iyer was using a process called micropatterning to create special surfaces on glass slides. Placed on them, human stem cells formed a precisely shaped little colonythat differentiated into one or another organ.

Iyer described this work at a 2015 lab meeting. Twophrases made Lunshof sit up: embryo-like features and generation of cerebral organoids.

It was the de-cellularized mouse dilemma all over again, but with glass slides instead of mouse scaffolding, and, again, no rules seemed to apply. There are federal prohibitions against allowing an embryo to develop past the point where it forms a structure called a primitive streak, which happens on the 15th day after fertilization. At this point the embryo can no longer split (into twins) and is therefore widely regarded as a morally significant individual. But human cells or tissues developing on the micropatterned surfaces never form a primitive streak; only whole embryos do.

The question, Lunshof said, was, What is the threshold where a synthetic entity is enough of an embryo that the same moral questions must be considered?

That question loomed even larger with those cerebral organoids, primordial mini-brains that are even more realistic and much more embryo-like, Church said.

Cerebral organoids, too, fall through the cracks of the rules on embryo research, Lunshof said, but we know were doing things that involve the same ethical issues that inspired the rules, such as when human life begins, when something has a moral status, and whether since this is brain tissue the thing is sentient.

After the lab meeting, Iyer dropped by her office. The 10-minute visit he expected lasted two-and-a-half hours. Lunshof not only asked him to explain every detail of every slide he had shown. Their conversation also ranged into Western and Eastern philosophy (Iyer is a Hindu), especially views on when life begins. They agreed to keep talking.

Lunshof gave Church a rundown of the discussion, began looking for scholarly papers that might shed light on the ethically-uncharted territory, and figured out what rules are applicable. She also took the helm of a working group on the ethics of embryo-like entities.

One result is a paper to be published in eLife, an online biology journal. In it, Lunshof, Aach, Iyer, and Church propose that research limits for these entities be based as directly as possible on the generation of morally concerning features. (The entities are called SHEEFs: Synthetic Human Entities with Embryo-like Features.) For instance: How human are the cerebral organoids? Do they feel pain? How could youtell?

Just because the thing cannot develop into a baby is not a valid reason to green-light the experiments, Lunshof said. She believes that if human cells are highly organized and display functional interactivity as a blood supply in a cerebral organoid would then one must at least consider the possibility that the SHEEF has moral status.

Lunshof also initiated a discussion of SHEEFs with Harvards stem-cell oversight committee, which led to a meeting last November at Harvard Law School. There, Church explained that it is possible to get blood vessels to infuse cerebral organoids, which allows us to go to larger and larger organoids. So far, he said, we can see beautiful structures very similar to advanced cerebral [tissue]. There is essentially no limit to the technology, so we need to focus on the ethics and the humanity as guides to how far to take the science.

Which means Lunshof is unlikely to run out of good questions.

Sharon Begley can be reached at sharon.begley@statnews.com Follow Sharon on Twitter @sxbegle

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In a lab pushing the boundaries of biology, an embedded ethicist keeps scientists in check - STAT

‘Vagina Monologues’ fights stigma linked to female anatomy – The Ithacan

An older woman hesitantly shares her experiences of sexuality after recovering from cervical cancer. A lawyer-turned-prostitute intimately tells of her passion for other women. A young homeless woman recounts a memory of a traumatizing childhood rape. These are just a few of the many emotional and powerful monologues presented within playwright and activist Eve Enslers award-winning The Vagina Monologues.

The Vagina Monologues discusses the stigma around womens sexuality and spurs dialogue about women, violence against women and the push for equality. Through monologues compiled by Ensler, such as My Revolution Begins in the Body, My Short Skirt and My Vagina Was My Village, the play shares personal accounts of womens experiences and emotions on this topic. All proceeds from the play, presented by IC Players at two show times Feb. 19 in the Emerson Suites, benefited V-day, a global activist movement dedicated to increase awareness of violence against women. The performances drew in about 140 people for both shows, and IC Players raised about $815 for the organization.

After three years of acting in The Vagina Monologues, senior Jessica Braham, a theater arts management major at Ithaca College, directed the play. Braham said the play is especially relevant now because of the current political climate and that she strived to use her power to address these political issues.

I felt like I could bring my vision to life, and I could finally be the one to inspire other women to voice these stories, Braham said. Theres a lot of criticism about the show because people are asking, Why are we still doing this? Women have rights. But I felt like this year was the time. This is when we need it now more than ever.

Braham said a key theme in the play was to stress the importance of women supporting and empowering other women. She said that while directing the play, she especially encouraged the cast members to empower one another.

Women empowering other women is something that is so important and something that we dont really have a lot of, Braham said. This isnt the time to segregate ourselves and separate from the issues. This is when we all need to come together and rally and fight for what is right for our rights and equality.

True to the message of women supporting other women, sophomore Hannah Paquette, assistant director of the play, said she aimed to create a sense of community among the women whose stories they were telling in the play.

These dialogues and conversations and sometimes these thoughts dont even happen unless theres a community of women where those things can come out, Paquette said.

Another important part of the play, Paquette said, is that it changes each year. This year, the spotlight monologue, a piece written by Ensler and selectively added to the performance, was I Call You Body, a monologue demanding safe and violence-free workplaces. The spotlight monologues each year highlight specific issues that are stressed in the yearly campaign for One Billion Rising and Vday.org, two organizations established by Ensler to combat violence against women. The additions help keep The Vagina Monologues relevant, Paquette said, allowing for the play to be a living body of work.

Its a really important point of activism for me being able to do this show, especially in this time period, Paquette said. It [shows] defiance and resistance.

Erin Lockett, a freshman acting major and the narrator of the play, said the show is an important feminist piece because it addresses the stigma face-first, without any shyness.

I think that if not everyone, a lot of people are very uncomfortable talking about vaginas because of the stigma that surrounds it, she said. I think The Vagina Monologues brings up the stigma. It names it, and it addresses it, and it analyzes it.

Lockett said the play commands attention and respect because of its direct style of addressing touchy subjects.

I think thats just a way more powerful way to address [the stigma], she said.

Without powerful, artful statements such as this play, Braham said, none of the universal problems referenced would be resolved. Braham recommends that people who fear the stigma see the performance.

Nothing will ever get solved by shying away and not addressing the situation or the problem at hand, Braham said. So to someone who is not going to come because of the title Why not give it a shot? Have an open mind. Maybe youre uncomfortable, but isnt that the theater that matters and provokes conversation? I want people to leave, go have dialogue and take action about what they just saw.

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'Vagina Monologues' fights stigma linked to female anatomy - The Ithacan

Anatomy Of A Day In The Mavs’ Trade-Deadline Life – Scout

Trade Talk. Cap Gymnastics. A Surprise Phone Call. A Short-Handed Scrimmage. It's All Part Of 'The Anatomy Of A Day In The Mavs' Trade-Deadline Life.'

The first soon-to-be-public domino topples innocuously enough, with Dallas Mavericks rookie center AJ Hammons showing up for work in Frisco, expecting to be a starter for Wednesday nights D-League game between the Mavs affiliate the Texas Legends vs. the LA D-Fenders.

At 3:36, I receive a text.

Hammons is being recalled by the Mavs today.

And right about at this time, Legends coach Bob MacKinnon contacts Hammons.

Youre going downtown, MacKinnon tells the kid.

I ask a Mavs staffer if Hammons hurry-up drive south down the Tollway (a move made official at 3:49) had anything to do with the possibility of a trade-deadline-centered Dallas roster shuffle.

You could surmise that, yes, he tells me.

And then comes a Mavs practice. (It is suggested to me that the workout is largely a scrimmage, and that coach Rick Carlisle will supervise another scrimmage on Thursday as the team comes back from its All-Star Break and preps for a Friday game at Minnesota and a Saturday AAC meeting with Boogie Cousins Pelicans). And it is a Mavs practice that does not feature Andrew Bogut or Deron Williams.

We were just told a trade might happen, J.J. Barea reveals to the media collected downtown. So theyre not here.

Both sit out, protectively bubble-wrapped in order to be safely delivered to their new teams by the 2 p.m. Thursday deadline if the Mavs can procure from suitors just the right future-value bounty.

Says Carlisle: If it turns out they're not here, they're not here and this is what we got. And if there are trades, there's a chance there's going to be some players coming back that could help us. But we'll see. We'll know by 2 o'clock tomorrow, and we'll go from there.

That players coming back part is a significant revelation to those of you whove been following how a D-Will-to-Cleveland trade might have to work. More on that below

Assorted other vignettes, takes and dominos as part ofThe Anatomy Of A Day In The Mavs Trade-Deadline Life:

*Just 24 hours earlier, Dallas discusses with Utah the idea of trading Williams to the Jazz. Its not an unappealing idea to D-Will (who once played in Utah and owns a home there and would seemingly waive his trade-veto rights to return). Im told Utah is not enthralled with the idea of sacrificing whatever first-rounder (the Jazz have a cache of them) Dallas is asking for. But at least the conversations are on and inside the Mavs headquarters on Wednesday morning, the idea remains a topic of discussion.

*The same is true of the concept of a Bogut trade to Boston(details here), though a source continues to tell me that a bigger shoe needs to drop first for the Celtics before they turn to the idea of giving up a 2018-or-later pick for the center.

*Mavs GM Donnie Nelson is the point man on many of the conversations, including the in-house ones in which the staff discusses ideas to pursue the likes of Utahs Derrick Favors and Detroits Andre Drummond. Assistant Michael Finley is a key voice in the room.

*At some point after 10:37 a.m., the D-Will-to-Utah talks are supplemented by D-Will-to-Cleveland talks. This is happy news inside Dallas HQ; the Mavs believe this is the Cavs long-sought-after target. Maybe theyre right but in the early afternoon Im told Cleveland is also willing to ask Mario Chalmers to come off the couch to serve as the off-the-bench playmaker LeBron James desires.

*The ideal Deron trade brings back nothing but picks; theres no desire to let a Channing Frye or a Man Shumpert clog the Mavs summer salary cap. So there are complicated ways to pull that off. A three-way involving another team, and letting the Cavs player go somewhere other than Dallas. A complicated swap with the Cavs that involves not only Deron but Bogut, too. All these are considered by Mark Cuban and staff keeping in mind that because of Utahs cap situation (as compared to Clevelands) a D-Will trade to the Jazz requires no filler, no matching, no cap gymnastics.(See David Lord's incomparable insight into these "deeply involved'' trade talks here.)

*Take this as either a) a sign that Deron and/or Bogut deal(s) are going down or b) that the Mavs are really, really doing their just-in-case preparatory homework. But consider the Mavs roster post-trade. If Carlisles forecast is right and Dallas gets some players coming back, this isnt an issue.

Or

Two players go out and fewer than two players come back. Its so feasible that the Mavs staff decides it had better assemble a list of D-League prospects, a list of guys on the couch, a list of prospects playing in China who will soon be eligible to sign NBA deals.

How real am I being about this concept? Im giving you names. If the Mavs have roster vacancies, they will consider quickly sending out weekend feelers to D-Leaguer Jalen Jones (of Maine and formerly of Texas A&M), to Manny Harris and Pierre Jackson (of the Legends), to Ray McCallum (now on his second 10-day with the Hornets), to Briante Weber (the D-League star now on a 10-day with Golden State), maybe to the aforementioned Chalmers, and eventually, when his China service is done, to J.J. Hickson, the former Wizards big man.

*The organization is still struggling to wrap its collective head around the ideas of being non-competitive, of tanking, of organic tanking. Somebody on the staff mentions out-loud how Boogie and The Brow are almost certain to lead New Orleans to a charge for the No. 8 spot in the West playoffs, leaving Dallas in the lottery dust.

I dont know what Carlisles private reply to that is. I know his public answer.

Were in a dynamic business, he says to the Wednesday afternoon media. Theres plenty going on.

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Anatomy Of A Day In The Mavs' Trade-Deadline Life - Scout

Grey’s Anatomy’s Ellen Pompeo & Justin Chambers Tell Us How They Really Feel About a Possible Meredith-Alex … – E! Online

Ever since Grey's Anatomy made Meredith a widow,a sentiment has begun to grow among the long-running ABC soap's fan base that maybe it's time to test the romantic waters between the good doc and her oldest friend Alex. Over the course of the last two seasons, there have been moments where the show seemed to toying with the idea itself. We've even advocated for the plot development on this very site.

Finally, the stars themselves, Ellen Pompeo and Justin Chambers, are revealing their thoughts on the prospect of their characters getting together. Spoiler alert: They aren't feeling the love.

"Justin is one of my favorite people on the planet," Pompeo told E! News direct from the Grey's Anatomy set. "We're really close, and it does feel weird. To potentially maybe have him as a love interest would be like kissing my brother. I used to say that about Patrick [Dempsey] all the time too because just we'd been together for so long."

From the sound of things, the actress just might beperfectly fine with Meredith not finding romance with anyone else ever again. "The love interest part is not my favorite piece of this, I'll be honest,"she added. "Kissing guys that aren't your husband is, you know, a little weird. I guess it wouldn't be if you didn't like your husband, but I happen to be very, very fond of mine."

Chambers echoed his old friend's thoughts on a possible MerLex union, but admitted that, withShonda Rhimes as his boss, he never rules anything out."I think anything is possible, but personally I find it to be weird," he told us. "I think that they're very much like siblings. They've been through so much together. Personally, I don't see it. But, hey, this is Grey's Anatomy. Anything is possible."

For more from the Grey's Anatomy set, check out the video above.

Do you ready for a MerLex romance or do you think it would be an unholy union? Let us know where you stand in the comments below!

Grey's Anatomy airs Thursdays at 8 p.m. on ABC.

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Grey's Anatomy's Ellen Pompeo & Justin Chambers Tell Us How They Really Feel About a Possible Meredith-Alex ... - E! Online

The Neuroscience Of Music, Behavior, And Staying Sane In The Age … – Fast Company

When it comes to music and the human brain, Daniel Levitin's expertise is hard to top. The musician, professor, and neuroscientist quite literally wrote the book on the topic when he penned the 2006 bestseller This is Your Brain On Music. His most recent book The Organized Mind furthers his exploration into our brains with a focus on how information overload is affecting cognition and what we can do it about it.

Over the last two years, he's been working with smart speaker maker Sonos on new research into how music affects people's minds and behavior at home. As part of its new marketing campaign centered around what the company regrettably diagnoses as "the silent home"the relative dearth of music being played out loud as families stare into their phones or tune into NetflixSonos enlisted Levitin to help design a new survey of people's listening habits at home. We sat down with Levitin at Sonos's Boston offices last week for a conversation about science, music, the brain, and how to stay sane in the age of Trump and Twitter.

Youve been working on some new research into music and people's lives at home. What are some of the most interesting or unexpected things you've learned about how musicor the lack thereof that affects our lives at home?

Levitin: I think one of the most interesting things is the number of people who really don't have music playing in their homes. Its quite striking across the nine countries we surveyed. Something as simple as entertaining friends and family: 84% of people in Sweden, 83% of people in the U.K., 79% of people in the U.S. don't play music when they have friends over. That just seemed surprising and weird to me. I'm of the Boomer generation, so music was just something that you did and it's the way that you related to other people, and even the generation behind me. These are people from all age brackets. It's not just the digital natives who aren't playing music. Nobody is.

Other activities like cooking dinner, doing the dishes, relaxing in the evening and weekend. In Denmark, 69% of people and in France 82% of people did not listen to music to relax for the evening or the weekend. That was one thing that was surprising. The other is the yearning that people have for more contact, juxtaposed with the amount of time they spend in their own isolated, digital words. 86% want to spend more time doing activities in person with others. It's as though two wheels are in a rut and they can't figure out how to get back on the road that they used to be on. We've got to encourage people to take screen-time breaks and to establish shared spaces in the home where they can enjoy communal activities.

These days, its pretty common to go out to a restaurant and see an entire family staring into their phones. What are some of the effects of this isolation and, based on the research you've done and seen, what might the impact be of changing these habits?

Levitin: The research on this is still in its infancy, of course. It's a somewhat new phenomenon, and so any data that we can get is helpful. I think that related to this, we've learned recently that kids who don't interact regularly with their parents but are instead put in front of educational or instructional television don't learn language properly. Language learning has to be interactive. It can't be just passive, receptive. I think we're also seeing that increasingly digital natives are reporting that they've got shorter attention spans than non-digital natives. Colleagues of mine at other universities who teach these large classes or even seminars say that in the last few years, a whole new breed of students come up to them during their office hours in the first week of class, say, "Professor, I have to read 20 pages tonight? I don't know how I'm going to do that. That's too much." They are accustomed to being constantly distracted and we know from neurochemical studies, people get addicted to that distraction.

Your book, The Organized Mind, deals with this quite a bit: the information overload and how our digital lives might be affecting our brains. What is your advice for people in the workplace? How do you deal with this deluge of information when youre trying to be productive?

Levitin: One piece of advice I have is based on our modern understanding of the different attentional modes of the brain. There's the mind wandering mode, the idea that the brain has this whole separate mode of existing where you're not in control of your thoughts and they're loosely connected from one to the next. Often, I think that when we're at our desks at work or if we're out in the field doing work, after a certain amount of time, we feel our attention flagging. The modern reaction when that happens is to double down. Maybe have another cup of coffee and keep pushing through.

In reality, your brain is telling you that it needs a break. Taking a break and getting yourself into this mind wandering mode by giving into it for 15 minutes at a time every couple of hours or so, you effectively hit the reset button in the brain, restoring some neurochemicals that had been depleted through focused activity. There are a lot of different ways to get into this mind wandering mode. One of them is listening to music. Another is going for a walk in nature. Listening to nature sounds. Looking at art, reading literature. Not reading Facebook posts. Literature has this special quality that it invites you to let your mind wander. I think that's part of the answer. Going off and searching the Web for your 15-minute break is not a break.

Weve grappled with information overload for years now, but in our new political climate, there's a certain intensity and anxiety thats now tied to a lot of the stuff that people are seeing online everyday. How do you think this might be affecting people's mental health? And what should we do about it?

Levitin: My reading of the research is that we really are, as a society working harder than before, but we're not working as efficiently. We feel overloaded by the onslaught of information, and so I think that creates the conditions in which things like fake news and alternative truth can exist because we just throw up our hands and say, "I can't deal. It's somebody else's job to deal with this, not mine." I don't mean to get on a soapbox, but I think that's when we begin to see democracy falter, when people don't want to get involved.

I think that we need to recover some sense of community and engagement with one another and with our towns and our neighbors that only comes from face-to-face interaction, not from retreating into our own digital devices. As President Obama said in his exit speech, democracy is not easy and is not free. You have to work for it. I think that work is putting our minds in a state where we can evaluate claims and information and stories as they come by. Evaluate them for ourselves or in discussion with other people. Start talking to people who disagree with us, which has become unfashionable. I don't mean yelling at people who disagree with you. Just talking.

I've had a couple of interesting conversations just in the last few months with people who I disagreed with strongly about a number of political issues, and the conversations were productive because we saw from each other's point of view how we came to hold those beliefs and discovered that we had really a lot more in common than we had differences. We were able to agree on the facts. As Daniel Patrick Moynihan famously quipped, you're entitled to your own opinions, but you're not entitled to your own facts. We agreed on the facts, but our opinions about how to address the problems, we had different views about what would be effective, but we wanted to end up in the same place where people were happy and prosperous and safe. I think that creating shared spaces in the home and shared moments in the home, if music can be part of that or talk radio or just art, some kind of discussion, I think that that's the antidote to all of this.

It seems like its partially a matter of people reconfiguring that balance between their digital lives and the time they're actually spending face to face. I assume those conversations you refer to werent on Twitter or Facebook.

Levitin: One of them was in person. One of them was on the phone. It was 45 minutes long and we talked about a lot of things. This is somebody who is polar opposite of me politically and is quite in the public eye and his opinions are very well known, but I was astonished that we agreed on far more than we disagreed on. I ended up admiring him for his stance for coming to the conclusions he came to, even though I still don't agree, but I can see how he got there.

This is the conversation that Republicans and Democrats aren't having anymore. I never thought I'd look back nostalgically at the Johnson presidency, but in the Johnson days, the two parties worked things out. They did that pretty much through more or less through the next couple of administrations. The polarization is a problem, and I think that the digital age has only put a hyper focus on polarization because of the echo chamber that you've covered already in your magazine.

You wrote This Is Your Brain On Music in 2006, so it was pre-iPhone, pre-Spotify. It seems like music is more pervasive in peoples lives than ever. How has musicboth as an industry and in terms of our relationship with itchanged in the last decade or so?

Levitin: I think we're living in a golden age of music, as we're living in a golden age of TV. There's a lot of creative people engaged in it. The barriers to entry are much lower than they used to be. Anybody with a laptop and a $200 mic can make something that sounds as good as most of the Rolling Stones records that were made in professional studios. That's great. The problem, of course, is that we haven't figured out how to monetize it. As Keith Richards said, for a period of time you could make recordings for a living and you could make a good living at it, but those days are gone until we figure something out. We're living in a world now where a lot of artists have to have day jobs. I would like to live in a world where "artist" is a job and a person can earn a living doing that. I don't want Bono to be writing songs in his spare time after a day of heavy labor making sandwiches. I want him to be able to devote himself to it.

I would say there's been a Balkanization of music sources in the way there's been a Balkanization of the media. When I was a kid, and maybe when you were a kid, you ran into the proverbial man in the street, woman, somebody you didn't know at a bus stop and you started talking about the news, you probably got your news from one of the same small handful of sources. You agreed what the news was, and you probably listened to music on one of the same two or three radio stations. Now there are thousands of places to get your news, thousands of places to get music, and so the common ground that we share is much less. Sure, there's still hit songs, but it's different. I see that changing. There's good and there's bad in that. The so-called long tail means that people can really fine tune their musical taste or their taste in books and independent films, find exactly what they love, but at the expense of the shared experience.

I don't think that there's any evidence that music is more pervasive. In fact, we found that 60% of people we surveyed said they listen to less music now than when they were younger. I don't know why that is, because there's more music available and it's free, but people don't make the time for it. It's not a priority the way it once was. I think that's a shame. I'm not thinking people should do nothing but listen to music, but as part of a balanced life that involves exercise and a good diet and nature and movies and ballet and literature and all the finer things.

Tell us a little bit about your own music consumption and how its evolved. How do you listen music now?

Levitin: I always fantasized in my twenties about buying a physical jukebox from a bar and restoring it. I had a nice collection of 45s. Now I have something even better: I have 20,000 songs on my hard disk and I just stick it in random. I got them in my car now and I have them in my backpack and I have them on my computer and at home, and that's most of my listening. I have 20,000 of my favorite songs. It's my own radio station. Anything that comes up, I'm going to like. I may not like it at that particular moment, depending on what I'm doing.

The second source is that friends who are making music send me advances of their stuff. Rodney Crowell, Paul Simon, people that I know who are actively working as songwriters and musicians will send me stuff. A friend of mine who manages Bob Dylan is just sending me the 36 CD boxset. It's supposed to be there when I get home tonight. I burn the CDs to my hard disk and then put them in the mix.

Then the third source is I stream. Once I got Sonos in the home, I found it easier to deal with things like Spotify and streaming radio and Apple Music. For one thing, they weren't playing out of these crappy little speakers in the computer. Typically, my wife and I will put one of the jazz stations when we're in the kitchen cooking and washing dishes and while we're eating. We hear a lot of good music that way.

How do you find the mental space to focus and be productive?

Levitin: I get more work done on airplanes than anywhere else. I wrote my last two books primarily on airplanes touring for the previous book. You've got the white noise of the engine. Somebody bringing you food.

Yeah, it's great. When I really need to focus, I tend to need to get away from the internet too. I turn off Wi-Fi. Sometimes I leave my phone at home to avoid the distractions.

Levitin: I do that once in a while and it's very refreshing. My wife and I hike a lot, because we're in California. So we'll go and we just won't bring the phones. We'll bring them in the car in case we have a breakdown or something, but when we're hiking, no phone and it's lovely.

Speaking of California, I just called an Uber because I have to get myself to the airport.

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The Neuroscience Of Music, Behavior, And Staying Sane In The Age ... - Fast Company

Majoring in defense: UAB’s new Undergraduate Immunology Program – The Mix

It doesnt matter whether you live in Beverly Hills or a Brazilian favela every human being is only a few inches away from disaster. From birth to death, on our arms, legs and everywhere else, each of us carries microbes that would love to get under our skin and reproduce, with potentially fatal results. A paper cut, an insect bite, an untimely rubbing of the eyes it takes very little for bacteria, viruses and other invaders to get inside and start wreaking havoc.

When that happens, the invaders are quickly surrounded by some of the billions of immune cells on constant patrol in our bodies. This finely coordinated attack is more complex than any human military organization. The immune system can be divided into two main categories innate and adaptive but there are LOTS of subdivisions: macrophages, natural killer cells, granulocytes, neutrophils, T and B cells, plasma cells, memory cells, regulatory T cells and so on. The list is long, and growing longer all the time with new discoveries. In recent years, researchers have learned how to target specific immune cells in new treatments for everything from cancer to rheumatoid arthritis. But there is much more to do.

Every year, hundreds of thousands of people die from infection by HIV, tuberculosis and the malaria-causing parasite Plasmodium. Although new checkpoint inhibitors have extended the lives of Jimmy Carter and many others, much more research is needed to help the 7+ million people worldwide who die each year from cancer. And heart disease, the leading cause of death on the planet, has a strong immune component as well.

Essentially all human diseases have an immune component, says Frances Lund, Ph.D., chair of the UAB School of Medicine Department of Microbiology. The future cures or treatments for many of the diseases that are of national and global concern will be dependent on our ability to successfully modulate the immune system.

With UABs new Undergraduate Immunology Program, which launches in fall 2017, students get a front-row seat to the life-and-death struggle going on inside us all and an ideal springboard for careers in medicine, academic research, industry and more. This is a cutting-edge major, says Louis Justement, Ph.D., director of the program, and a professor in the microbiology department. Students will get comprehensive experience in the scientific process, critical thinking, problem solving, scientific methodology and in communicating science. Our goal is to prepare students for the challenges and opportunities of the future and build up a pipeline of young immunologists to tackle the pressing problems of the 21st century.

Louis Justement, Ph.D. (School of Medicine) and Vithal Ghanta, Ph.D. (College of Arts and Sciences) are veteran researchers and educators of young scientists. "This is a cutting-edge major," Justement says. "Our goal is to prepare students for the challenges and opportunities of the future."

The Undergraduate Immunology Program is the only one of its kind in the Southeast, and one of a handful in the country, notes Vithal Ghanta, Ph.D., the programs co-director and a professor in the UAB College of Arts and SciencesDepartment of Biology. It is modeled on UABs Undergraduate Neuroscience Program, which has attracted elite students from across the country over the past eight years. Both programs are interdepartmental majors between the College of Arts and Sciences and School of Medicine.

This represents a true collaboration between the departments of Biology and Microbiology, says Lund. We believe that this unique educational opportunity will not only attract students who are passionate about science and medicine, but will perfectly prepare those students to take on the scientific and clinical challenges of the 21st century here in Alabama and across the world.

There are more than 100 faculty at UAB focusing on basic or clinical immunology, in 15 departments and four schools. Immunology and infectious diseases research at UAB is supported by $182 million in federal funding. Immunology has always been one of the strongest areas of research here, Justement says. Students will be able to choose among research opportunities in dozens of UAB labs, contributing to work that is targeting everything from cancer vaccines to next-generation asthma treatments. Students coming through our program have the ability to be integral members of labs across campus, Ghanta says. They can start as early as the freshman year, depending on their experience and ability to handle other coursework. By their junior year, all students in the major will be required to begin working in a UAB lab.

The interaction between the College of Arts and Sciences and School of Medicine faculty is critical, Justement says. Vithal and her colleagues know exactly how to work with undergraduates and help them learn. Meanwhile, Justement has years of experience preparing leaders in the lab as associate director of UABs Medical Scientist Training Program. People like me on the graduate side, since we are constantly working with graduate students and medical students, know what it takes to succeed in those arenas, and have insight on how curricula can prepare undergraduates to achieve, he says.

Our goal is to give undergraduate students a very solid foundation, adds Ghanta. They will be exposed to the various sub-fields of immunology in graduate school or medical school; we want to make sure they have a solid foundation to build on. Ghanta has taught a popular undergraduate immunology course in the Department of Biology for years. She says she regularly gets emails from former students who are now in medical school, letting me know that having this undergraduate immunology really helps them."

More than 100 faculty at UAB focus on basic or clinical immunology, in 15 departments and four schools, with $182 million in federal research support.

The first two years of the program are largely focused on overall university requirements and foundational science courses. But in order to let students jump right in, Justement and Ghanta have designed Current Topics in Immunology, a teaser course that shines new light on hot topics in the media. Justement says hell tell the story of a doctor who was cured of Ebola but then almost lost his vision later, because the virus was able to survive within his eyes. The reason is these are immune-privileged sites that need to be protected from the immune response, and it turns out the pathogen is able to take advantage of this, he says.

In their second year, students will take part in a seminar where investigators from across the university will share details on research in their labs. The students will get an idea of whose work sounds neat, who they would want to work with and why its important, Justement says.

In their junior and senior years, students in the program will take in-depth courses that delve into the fundamental cellular and molecular processes that control the immune response. This will provide them with a solid appreciation of how the immune system works as a whole, Ghanta says. Then, she adds, students will build on this knowledge by further exploring the interactions between the immune system and pathogens that try to subvert, or escape, the normal surveillance mechanisms used to detect and destroy them. Finally, students will learn about the dark side of the immune response, Justement says. When things go wrong it leads to numerous life-threatening diseases, including autoimmunity, asthma and chronic inflammation that in turn can cause heart disease, diabetes or cancer.

Essentially all human diseases have an immune component. The future cures or treatments for many of the diseases that are of national and global concern will be dependent on our ability to successfully modulate the immune system. Frances Lund, Ph.D., chair of the UAB Department of Microbiology.

Justement and Ghanta have formed a committee with the directors of the Undergraduate Neuroscience Program and leaders of the recently launched Undergraduate Program in Genetic and Genomic Sciences, and a new major in informatics that is now being developed. Soon, UAB will be able to offer students a suite of biomedical undergraduate programs, Justement says, all well suited to preparing them for professional and graduate school."

There are many opportunities to cross-fertilize among the specialties, Justement adds. There is neuro-immunology, tumor immunology and bioinformatics, just to name a few, he says. Students will be able to tailor their studies to the areas where they have the most interest. Well be able to make an amazing, unique educational experience even better.

The Undergraduate Immunology Program will help retain top students from the Birmingham area, and throughout Alabama, Justement says. But were also looking to expand our national footprint. UAB is creating a unique position in the world of undergraduate education."

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Majoring in defense: UAB's new Undergraduate Immunology Program - The Mix

Remicade: Driving Down Merck’s Immunology Franchise – Market Realist

Merck and Companys Valuation after Its 4Q16 Earnings Release PART 6 OF 10

One of Merck and Co.s (MRK) blockbuster drugs, Remicade is one of the top-selling drugs for the treatment of inflammatory disorders. However, after the loss of exclusivity in the European markets in February 2015, Merck has reported a consistent decline in Remicade revenues. Apart from Merck, Johnson &Johnson (JNJ) also has marketing rights for Remicade in several countries outside Europe.

Remicades revenues fell~32% to $269 million in 4Q16, compared to $396 million in 4Q15. This was mainly due to the entry of generic competitors and biosimilars following the loss of exclusivity in European markets.

Merck expects Remicades revenues to keep declining as a growing number of new patients prefer biosimilars over Remicade.

Apart from Remicade, Simponi is a drug from the Inflammatory franchise. Simponis revenues remained flat at ~$186 million in 4Q16, compared to its 4Q15 revenues of $185 million.

Zetia and Vytorin are the blockbuster drugs from Mercks Cardiovascular franchise. Both drugs are used to lower LDL cholesterol levels in the blood.

The combined revenues for these drugs fell to $874 million in 4Q16. For the US markets, the sales for Zetia declined in 4Q16 while the sales for Vytorin grew. Worldwide sales were affected due to loss of exclusivity of Vytorin in the US, while Zetia sales were nearly constant for 4Q16 compared to 4Q15.

The competitors for Zetia include Niaspan from AbbVie (ABBV) and Lipitor from Pfizer (PFE). Investors can consider the VanEck Vectors Pharmaceutical ETF (PPH), which holds ~5.2% of its total assets in Merck.

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Remicade: Driving Down Merck's Immunology Franchise - Market Realist

Swedroe: Investing Habits Affected By Genetics – ETF.com

Its been well-documented that, on average, retail investors are dumb money. For example, on average, the stocks they buy go on to underperform and the stocks they sell go on to outperform. Investors, sadly, even manage to underperform the very mutual funds in which they invest.

Research from the field of behavioral finance has provided explanations for these poor results. In short, theyre the product of a long list of investment biases exhibited by individual investors. Among these biases are: Investors lack portfolio diversification due to overconfidence and a preference for investing in familiar securities (a home-country bias); they tend to trade too much (overconfidence again); they are reluctant to realize their losses (it is too painful to admit mistakes); they extrapolate recent superior returns into the future (the hot-hands fallacy); and they have a preference for skewness and lottery-type investments (which is explained by prospect theory).

While studies have shown that individual investors, on average, exhibit investment biases, little research has been devoted to uncovering their origins and the differences in them across investors. This, in turn, raises two questions: Are investors genetically endowed with certain predispositions that manifest themselves as investment biases? Or, do investors exhibit biases as a result of parenting or individual-specific experiences or events?

Investment Biases And Genetics

Henrik Cronqvist and Stephan Siegel contribute to the literature on investment biases with their study, The Genetics of Investment Biases, which appeared in the August 2014 issue of the Journal of Financial Economics.

To answer these questions, they used a unique data set, the worlds largest twin registry, the Swedish Twin Registry, and then matched it with detailed data on twins investment behaviors. This enabled them to decompose differences across individuals into genetic versus environmental components.

The decomposition was based on an intuitive insight: Identical twins share 100% of their genes, while the average proportion of shared genes is only 50% for fraternal twins. If identical twins exhibit more similarity with respect to these investment biases than do fraternal twins, then there is evidence that these behaviors are influenced, at least in part, by genetic factors.

The authors database included more than 15,000 sets of twins. Following is a summary of their findings:

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Swedroe: Investing Habits Affected By Genetics - ETF.com