Category Archives: Neuroscience

Fulbright grants awarded to 21 from Johns Hopkins – The Hub at Johns Hopkins

ByHub staff report

Fulbright grants have been awarded to 21 students and alumni of Johns Hopkins University.

Named for U.S. Sen. J. William Fulbright, who sponsored legislation creating the prestigious scholarship, the Fulbright U.S. Student Program is the country's largest educational exchange program, offering opportunities for students and young professionals to meet, work, live with, and learn from the people of the host country. The program awards approximately 2,000 grants annually and operates in more than 140 countries worldwide.

More information about the Fulbright application process can be found on the website of the National Fellowships Program.

Winners of the Fulbright Open Study/Research Award design their own research or academic course of study in a specific country. The program aims to facilitate cultural exchange and promote mutual understanding by supporting study or research abroad.

This year's winners from Johns Hopkins are:

Karissa Avignon, a 2019 graduate in public health. Avignon was awarded a grant to complete a master's degree in health policy and equity at York University in Toronto, Canada. She is especially interested in the potential of trauma-informed care to improve outcomes for immigrant women in Canada and the United States. She plans to devote her free time to assisting women in poverty with career preparation through Dress for Success; volunteering with the new Toronto chapter of her service sorority, Delta Sigma Theta; and volunteering at a local nursing home.

Kristin Brig. A PhD student in the history of medicine, Brig won a grant to travel to South Africa for her dissertation research. She plans to work in local archives in Durban and East London to investigate colonial infrastructure and policies for water management in the 19th century, when these two South African port cities were hubs for immigration. When not carrying out her dissertation research, she intends to start a medical humanities club at her host university, the University of KwaZulu-Natal, and volunteer with Duzi-Umngeni, a conservation organization.

Kiana Boroumand. A December 2019 graduate in sociology and English with a minor in Latin American studies, Boroumand received a grant to earn a master's degree in socio-legal studies at the University of Bristol in England. She plans to focus on housing and gender. Outside her studies, she looks forward to volunteering with the campus chapter of Lawyers Without Borders, helping tenants at the Bristol Law Center, and engaging the local arts scene through the Trinity Arts Community.

Emily Friedman, a PhD student in art history. Friedman won a grant to travel to France to carry out dissertation research on how the interactions of artists with scientists in the French town Lyon during the Renaissance prompted those artists to develop a distinctive and pragmatic theory of art-making. Her plans for community engagement in Lyon include volunteering at a museum, taking cooking classes, and joining a running club.

Eillen Martinez, a 2020 graduate in medicine, science, and the humanities. Martinez was awarded an arts grant to produce short stories in Spanish and English about immigrants from Venezuela arriving in Pamplona, a Colombian border town, and the mostly welcoming responses they have received from Colombians. Beyond her writing project, her plans to build relationships in Pamplona include helping run a writing workshop at her host university, the University of Pamplona; volunteering with the local Red Cross; and teaching swimming.

Mackenzie Mills, a 2020 graduate in Earth and planetary sciences. Mills received a grant to study the surface regeneration of icy satellites in the outer solar system as an affiliate of the Institute of Planetary Research of the German Aerospace Center in Berlin. Her intentions for her free time include language study and geology coursework at Freie Universitt Berlin and adding traditional German styles to her dance repertoire.

Kenneth Valles, an MPH candidate at the Bloomberg School of Public Health and an MD/PhD student at the Mayo Clinic. Valles won a grant to mine uniquely valuable health and migrant registry data in Sweden to explore the increased prevalence of viral hepatitis in Europe and the United States with changing immigration patterns. While living in rebro, Sweden, he looks forward to teaching English to migrants, joining the Swedish Alpine Club, and taking classes in Swedish language and culture.

Ronald Wang, a 2020 graduate in neuroscience. Wang received a grant to work at the Jagiellonian University in Krakw, Poland, on developing a cell model of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, an inherited neuromuscular disorder. He is excited to participate in Fulbright-sponsored seminars and plans to devote his free time to volunteering at the Children Friend's Society and, at the university, joining the Slowianski Song and Dance Ensemble and participating in the neuroscience forum.

Anna Weerasinghe, a PhD candidate in the history of medicine. Weerasinghe won a grant to pursue research in diverse, underutilized archives in Goa, India on the healing labor of Indian and mestia women in the early modern Portuguese colonial era, as part of her dissertation on how these women served as cultural intermediaries and medical knowledge-brokers. During her year in the Indian city of Panaji, she looks forward to participating in interdisciplinary seminars at the University of Goa, getting to know fellow distance runners in the Sossegado Runners club, and learning more Marathi and Konkani.

Courtney Whilden, a 2020 graduate in neuroscience. Whilden received a grant to study what genes individual neurons express in the development of the vestibulospinal system, which governs balance, at the University of Oslo in Norway. Her plans for making the most of her time in Oslo include joining the university's running club and "Coffeereads" book club, and learning more about the progressivism for which Norway is renowned by volunteering with Queer Youth Oslo.

The Fulbright-Fogarty Awards in Public Health promote the expansion of public health and clinical research in resource-limited settings. Offered through a partnership between the Fulbright Program and the Fogarty International Center of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, the award carries the same benefits as the traditional Fulbright Study/Research grants and is designed for candidates who are currently enrolled in medical school or in a graduate-level program and who are interested in global health.

The Fulbright-Fogarty Award winner from Johns Hopkins is Holly Nishimura, a PhD student at the Bloomberg School of Public Health. Nishimura will carry out research in Rakai District, Uganda, examining men's roles in transactional sex partnerships and the association with higher rates of HIV transmission, thereby contributing to HIV prevention efforts. She will work in partnership with the Rakai Health Sciences Program, an affiliate of the Bloomberg School and the NIH. She looks forward to bonding with community members through attending church services in Kalisizo and organizing language exchanges to help those who wish to refine their English speaking skills.

The English Teaching Assistantship Awards program places Fulbright winners in classrooms around the world to provide assistance to the local English teachers and to serve as cultural ambassadors for the United States.

The winners of English Teaching Assistantship Awards from Johns Hopkins are:

Julia Dickson. After receiving her BA in international studies, Dickson will travel to Kyrgyzstan with the hopes of leading outreach through dance and outdoor activities alongside of teaching.

Jinzhao (Grace) Jiang. After completing her MEd in secondary education at the JHU School of Education, Georgetown alum Jiang will teach in the Netherlands, where she also hopes to share her passion for yoga and continue to pursue her love of the outdoors.

Emily Lee. A 2019 graduate with a BA in public health studies, Lee will bring her nursing love of healthcare and cooking with her to Malaysia, where she hopes to host potlucks and shadow the nurse at the school where she will be working as an English Teaching Assistant.

Emily Luo. After receiving her BA in cognitive science, Luo will travel to Taiwan, where, in addition to teaching, she hopes to engage with her community through calligraphy and music clubs.

Frances (Frannie) Rooney. A 2018 grad with a BA from the Writing Seminars, Rooney plans to share her love of film with her university students outside of the classroom in Spain, as well foster exchange between her communities in Spain and the United States.

Sumeet Sidhu. Upon completion of his MEd in educational studies and secondary education at the JHU School of Education, Sidhu will spend a year teaching and researching EMS systems in Poland, where he also hopes to connect with his host community through golf and cross country.

Shawn Singh. Upon certification from the JHU School of Education, Singh plans to create a musical exchange program with his students in Uzbekistan during his Fulbright year.

Julia Wargo. With both an MA and BA from Hopkins in hand, Wargo will teach secondary school in South Korea with the desire to connect with her host community through violin lessons and jewelry-making workshops.

Nathan Wertheimer. After receiving his BA in philosophy and earth and planetary sciences, Wertheimer will bring his outdoor teaching experience to Malaysia, where he hopes to lead educational hikes and coach sports teams outside of the classroom.

Bethany York, a 2019 alum with a BA in neuroscience. York will travel to Lithuania with the hopes of participating in a book club alongside of teaching, as well as shadowing physicians as part of a research project on Lithuanian health care.

Five additional students from Johns Hopkins were named alternates for Fulbright grants this year: senior Cole Cooper, a public health studies major; Sarah Jaklitsch, a 2019 MA graduate of the School of Education; Jacob Jameson, who is completing his teaching certification from the School of Education; Sonal Sharda, who possesses both an MA from the School of Public Health from 2019 and a BA in neuroscience from 2017 from Hopkins; and senior Katherine Wick, an international studies and history major.

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Fulbright grants awarded to 21 from Johns Hopkins - The Hub at Johns Hopkins

Healthcare Sales & Marketing Executive BJ Jones Joins LUNGevity Foundation’s Board of Directors – P&T Community

WASHINGTON, May 26, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --LUNGevity Foundation, the nation's leading lung cancer-focused nonprofit organization, announced today that William "BJ" Jones, Chief Commercial Officer, Migraine and Common Disease at Biohaven Pharmaceuticals, has joined LUNGevity's Board of Directors. His extensive commercial leadership experience at pioneering companies in the healthcare industry will provide strategic insight and guidance to the Foundation in its work of changing outcomes for people with lung cancer.

BJ brings a global healthcare perspective with his experience in mass market product launches. His work successfully building and leading diverse teams across various therapeutic areas, including neuroscience, cardio-metabolic, respiratory, GI, and infectious disease, will assist LUNGevity in continuing to identify and address unmet patient needs in the lung cancer community.

"We are thrilled to have BJ join our Board," said Andrea Ferris, President and CEO of LUNGevity Foundation. "He is an innovative leader in the pharmaceutical industry with important patient insights and expansive marketing and sales management experience. We are excited to have his unique perspective and expertise to help achieve LUNGevity's mission."

BJ is a seasoned pharmaceutical executive with two decades of commercial and neuroscience expertise in large pharmaceutical companies and small biotech firms. BJ has held leadership roles of increasing responsibility at Takeda Pharmaceuticals, AstraZeneca, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Boehringer Ingelheim, and NitroMed.

Prior to joining the pharmaceutical industry, BJ served in the U.S. Air Force and earned the rank of Major. He provided threat assessments to NATO leadership as an Engineering Analyst in the Foreign Technology division and led cutting-edge research in the Artificial Intelligence in Training program as a Function Chief in the AF Human Systems Division.

He holds a BS in Human Factors Engineering from the U.S. Air Force Academy, an MS in Industrial Engineering from Texas A&M University, and an MBA from Stanford Graduate School of Business.

LUNGevity looks forward to working with BJ to help improve outcomes for people affected by lung cancer.

About LUNGevity Foundation

LUNGevity is the nation's leading lung cancer organization investing in lifesaving, translational research and providing support services and education for patients and caregivers. LUNGevity's goals are three-fold: (1) accelerate research to patients, (2) empower patients to be active participants in their treatment decisions, and (3) remove barriers that patients face in accessing the right treatments.

LUNGevity Foundation is firmly committed to making an immediate impact on increasing quality of life and survivorship of people with lung cancer by accelerating research into early detection and more effective treatments, as well as by providing community, support, and education for all those affected by the disease.LUNGevity's comprehensive resources include a medically vetted website, a toll-free HELPLine in partnership with CancerCare, a unique Lung Cancer Navigator app, peer-to-peer mentoring for patients and caregivers (LUNGevity LifeLine), and survivorship conferences. LUNGevity also helps patients find and navigate clinical trials through our Clinical Trial Finder tool, a Clinical Trial Ambassador program, and participation with EmergingMed.

Our vision is a world where no one dies of lung cancer. For more information about LUNGevity Foundation, a four-star Charity Navigator organization, please visitwww.LUNGevity.org.

About Lung Cancer in the U.S.

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Healthcare Sales & Marketing Executive BJ Jones Joins LUNGevity Foundation's Board of Directors - P&T Community

Photo gallery The winners: Cool Science Images 2020 – University of Wisconsin-Madison

Eyeball-licking geckos, wiggling brain cells and a whole planets worth of weather are among the winners in the University of WisconsinMadisons 10th Cool Science Image Contest.

The quality of the images and videos produced on campus by scientists and people passionate about science is always so impressive, says Terry Devitt, a judge and one of the founders of the contest. It is always a very hard job, but a very enjoyable one, to choose the best among them.

A panel of nine experienced artists, scientists and science communicators judged the scientific content and aesthetic and creative qualities of the 101 images and videos entered in the 2020 version of the contest, which began as part of The Why Files, one of the first popular science news websites.

Cameron Batchelor and Ethan Parrish, graduate students, Geoscience, for a look at the climate-describing bands of color in a slice of stalagmite.

Natalie Betz, associate director, UWMadison Master of Science in Biotechnology, and Anya Wolterman, Macalester College undergraduate geology student, for their section of rock from a rift in the Earths crust in the Lake Superior region.

Caitlin Carlson, graduate student, Department of Bacteriology, for a view of a pair of leaf cutter ants sniffing out each others pheromone thumbprint.

Collin Roland, graduate student, and Lucas Zoet, assistant professor, Department of Geoscience, for a birds-eye view of bluff erosion on the Lake Michigan shore.

Guilherme Gainett, graduate student, and Prashant P. Sharma, assistant professor, Department of Integrative Biology, for an electron micrograph of the spiny leg of a new species of spider.

Ran Zhang, scientist, and Dalton Griner, graduate student, Department of Medical Physics, for an X-ray of flowers used to test and improve mammograms.

Nisha Iyer, postdoctoral fellow, Wisconsin Institute for Discovery, for a picture of a crested gecko licking its own eyeball.

Robert Morgan, graduate student, and Keith Bechtol, assistant professor, Department of Physics, for a snapshot of thousands of distant galaxies made while hunting for the source of a single subatomic particle.

Michael Petersen, Edward Williams and Ray Collier, all staff of the Wisconsin Crop Innovation Center; and Frank McFarland, graduate student, Department of Agronomy, for their image of the first transgenic hemp plants.

Miranda R. Sun, research specialist, Department of Comparative Biosciences, for a brightly colored section of a developing mouse embryo.

Rick Kohrs, instrument technologist, Space Science and Engineering Center, whose animation of 90,000 satellite images shows a full year of Earths weather.

Chris Morrow and Tiaira Porter, graduate students, Department of Neuroscience, for a video capturing the movement of neural stem cells switching from dormancy to activity.

STORY CONTINUES AFTER GALLERY

1 This slice of stalagmite at 250,000 years old, the oldest dated stalagmite in the Midwest is being used to study the climate of ancient mid-continental North America. The colored layers reflect changes in soil above the cave in which the stalagmite formed, with rich soil (and thicker vegetation) revealed in deeper orange bands and less organic matter (and fewer plants) in light green.

Cameron Batchelor, and Ethan Parrish, graduate students, GeoscienceDigital camera

2 This thin section of troctolite, an igneous rock composed of feldspar and olivine, was collected near Duluth, Minnesota, from the Proterozoic Midcontinent Rift. The rift is a tear in the Earths crust caused by continental plates colliding in the Lake Superior region. Polarized light accentuates vivid colors.

Natalie Betz, associate director, UWMadison Master of Science in Biotechnology; Anya Wolterman, Macalester College undergraduate geology studentPetrographic microscope

3 Each colony of leaf cutter ants has a unique chemical thumbprint, a combination of pheromones that members of the colony can recognize as their own. These two Acromyrmex echinatior ants from different colonies are inspecting each others pheromone signatures.

Caitlin Carlson, graduate student, BacteriologyDigital camera with macro lens

4 Storm-driven Lake Michigan waves cut away bluffs in Warnimont Park in Cudahy, Wisconsin, while the freeze and thaw of seeping groundwater wear at the crest. Researchers study the intertwined effects of waves and groundwater on erosion with three-dimensional models of coastal bluffs based on overhead images captured by drone flights.

Collin Roland, graduate student, and Lucas Zoet, assistant professor, GeoscienceDJI Phantom 4 Advanced unmanned aerial vehicle

5 The spines armoring the leg of a tiny, newly described species of huntsman spider, Zalmoxis adze, are a remarkable work of sexual dimorphism theyre completely absent in females. While leg details were an important way to differentiate this spider as a new species, little is known about how the heavy spikes serve males in the leaf litter on the forest floor of Papua New Guinea. But it may be very showy or very violent.

Guilherme Gainett, graduate student, and Prashant P. Sharma, assistant professor, Integrative BiologyField emission scanning electron microscope

6 Flowers stand in for healthy breast tissue in this mammography image, while added calcifications Can you spot them all? represent the sort features doctors look for in X-ray images in an effort to catch breast cancer in early, treatable stages. UWMadison researchers are working to improve detection of patterns of tiny calcifications for faster, safer, more effective diagnosis.

Ran Zhang, scientist, and Dalton Griner, graduate student, Medical PhysicsSelenia Dimensions Mammography System

7 Crested geckos have clear, immovable eyelids, and a swipe of the tongue is the best way to keep them clean and moist. With veritable superpowers like the ability to see in the dark and climb vertical surfaces, geckos often serve as models for bio-inspired engineering.

Nisha Iyer, postdoctoral fellow, Wisconsin Institute for DiscoveryDigital camera

8 This snapshot of the sky contains thousands of distant galaxies, each containing billions of stars. The UWMadison physicists who made it were looking for the flash of the explosion of a single star, the potential source of a sub-atomic particle called a neutrino, spotted zipping through the Earth by the IceCube Neutrino Observatory at the South Pole. The distant galaxies, swirling billions of light years away, are all the harder to see because of nearby objects, like the pictured Helix Nebula.

Robert Morgan, graduate student, and Keith Bechtol, assistant professor, PhysicsDark Energy Camera and Victor M. Blanco Telescope

9 Thanks to a gene similar to one that makes some fish glow, leaves of the first transgenic that is, augmented with genes from another species hemp plants appear red when seen through a special filter, while leaves of an unaltered plant are a familiar green. Successfully engineering changes in hemp opens the door to alterations that could affect disease resistance, crop yield, fiber quality and cannabinoid compounds. It offers potential benefits for farmers, consumers and medical applications.

Michael Petersen, Edward Williams and Ray Collier, all staff of the Wisconsin Crop Innovation Center; and Frank McFarland, graduate student, AgronomySmartphone with specialized filter

10 This section of the head of an 11-day-old mouse embryo was expertly prepared to highlight blood vessels marked by the green and red of endothelial cells and laminin protein, respectively in the developing brain (the heart-shaped structure at the center). The vessels are particularly dense at the lower end of the two black slits that will become nostrils, where tissue is fusing together to form the upper lip. If the tissue fails to fuse, the mouse will be left with a birth defect studied by the researchers in the lab that produced the image: a cleft lip.

Miranda R. Sun, research specialist, Comparative Biosciences, School of Veterinary MedicineEpifluorescence microscope

Combining more than 90,000 individual images taken by five satellites two American, one Japanese and two from the European Space Agency perched 22,000 miles above the Earth makes for an animated view of global weather patterns. Strong storms span many days, and seasonal shifts come and go as the sunlight over the poles waxes and wanes and the planet spins from March 2019 to March 2020.

Rick Kohrs, instrument technologist, Space Science and Engineering CenterGeostationary satellites

Neural stem cells switch from a dormant to an active very active, in many cases state in this video from the lab of Neuroscience Professor Darcie Moore. The vigorous wigglers are starting a protein-maintenance program critical for efficient activation and differentiation into health brain cells.

Chris Morrow and Tiaira Porter, graduate students, NeuroscienceConfocal microscope

CONTINUED FROM ABOVE

There was enthusiastic support right out of the gate, and that enthusiasm has grown year after year, says Devitt, once editor of The Why Files and the recently retired director of research communications at UWMadison. Sharing science through imagery is another way to show how science works, and what you can learn from getting a close-up view of nature. And we all love to see something new and amazing.

The contest winners along with a slideshow of all entries are typically displayed each fall in the McPherson Eye Research Institutes Mandelbaum & Albert Family Vision Gallery on the ninth floor of the Wisconsin Institutes for Medical Research, 1111 Highland Ave. An exhibit will be scheduled and announced as activity on campus allows.

The 2020 winners show off the breadth of research and technical and scientific expertise at UWMadison. The images were captured by experts in their scientific fields, trainees, students and curious amateurs, using flying drones, smartphones, cutting-edge electron microscopes and Earth-facing satellites orbiting tens of thousands of miles away.

Their subjects are both everyday and ephemeral, large enough to encompass billions of stars, and more minuscule than an ant.

The Cool Science Image Contest helps recognize the technical and creative skills required to capture images or video that document science or nature, and benefits from sponsorship by Madisons Promega Corp., with additional support from DoIT Digital Publishing and Printing Services and the UWMadison Division of the Arts.

Winning entries are shared widely on UWMadison websites and in public exhibitions, and all entries are showcased in a slide show at the Wisconsin Science Festival.

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Photo gallery The winners: Cool Science Images 2020 - University of Wisconsin-Madison

Lewontin’s Confession and Mamet’s Principle – Discovery Institute

Jerry Coyne and his Darwinist/materialist/atheist brethren make public assertions that are nonsense on their face: they claim to be mindless meat machines, they deny the indisputable evidence for intelligent design in biology and for teleology in all of nature, they deny the obvious evidence for the supernatural in cosmological singularities such as black holes and the singularity at the origin of the Big Bang, and they deny the manifest corruption of modern science by materialism and arrogance and egotism. Materialists tout determinism and deny free will, despite the fact that determinism in physics has been quite decisively refuted and the fact that free will is well supported by neuroscience and that denial of free will negates the ability to make a truth claim of any sort (if a materialists opinion is forced by chemical reactions, theres no reason to think it corresponds to truth. Chemistry is not a propositional and can be neither true nor false). Atheists deny the existence of God because of evil in nature, without realizing that the recognition of evil presupposes an objective moral standard that can only be grounded in a Mind outside of man.

Darwinism/materialism/atheism (the three are nearly always found together) is beset with self-refuting non-sequiturs. This triad is not even a genuine ideological perspective as much as it is an incoherent mistake. Yet, ironically, many who tout it are quite intelligent people.

Playwright David Mamet noted a characteristic in politics that applies broadly to flawed belief systems. It struck me as a key to understanding the philosophical perspective of those who deny free will, design in nature, Gods existence, and the like. Mamet originally applied it to a particular political philosophy, but I apply Mamets principle to Darwinists et al:

in order for [Darwinists, atheists, materialists, etc.] to continue their illogical belief systems they have to pretend not to know a lot of things.

The pretense not to know things is at the root of Darwinist/atheist/materialist ideology. It was stated with astonishing candor by Harvard biologist Richard Lewontin, one of the past centurys leading Darwinists:

Our willingness to accept scientific claims that are against common sense is the key to an understanding of the real struggle between science and the supernatural. We take the side of science in spite of the patent absurdity of some of its constructs, in spite of its failure to fulfill many of its extravagant promises of health and life, in spite of the tolerance of the scientific community for unsubstantiated just-so stories, because we have a prior commitment, a commitment to materialism.

It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated.

Moreover, that materialism is absolute, for we cannot allow a Divine Foot in the door

Lewontins confession is a remarkable invocation of Mamets principle: in order to maintain the Darwinist/materialist ideology, atheists have to pretend not to know a lot of things.

The fundamental reason that Darwinists have vented such fury at the intelligent design movement even to the point that a prominent scientific journal openly advocates government censorship of ID is that ID has forced Darwinists and other atheist and materialist ideologues to publicly explain themselves, and that has made their pretense that there is no design in nature so much harder to pull off.

Photo: David Mamet, by David Shankbone / CC BY-SA (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/).

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Lewontin's Confession and Mamet's Principle - Discovery Institute

Neuroscience Antibodies & Assays Market 2020 Global Overview, Growth, Size, Opportunities, Trends, Leading Company Analysis and Forecast to 2026 -…

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All of the product type and application segments of the Neuroscience Antibodies & Assays market included in the report are deeply analyzed based on CAGR, market size, and other crucial factors. The segmentation study provided by the report authors could help players and investors to make the right decisions when looking to invest in certain market segments.

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Table of Content

1 Introduction of Neuroscience Antibodies & Assays Market

1.1 Overview of the Market1.2 Scope of Report1.3 Assumptions

2 Executive Summary

3 Research Methodology

3.1 Data Mining3.2 Validation3.3 Primary Interviews3.4 List of Data Sources

4 Neuroscience Antibodies & Assays Market Outlook

4.1 Overview4.2 Market Dynamics4.2.1 Drivers4.2.2 Restraints4.2.3 Opportunities4.3 Porters Five Force Model4.4 Value Chain Analysis

5 Neuroscience Antibodies & Assays Market, By Deployment Model

5.1 Overview

6 Neuroscience Antibodies & Assays Market, By Solution

6.1 Overview

7 Neuroscience Antibodies & Assays Market, By Vertical

7.1 Overview

8 Neuroscience Antibodies & Assays Market, By Geography

8.1 Overview8.2 North America8.2.1 U.S.8.2.2 Canada8.2.3 Mexico8.3 Europe8.3.1 Germany8.3.2 U.K.8.3.3 France8.3.4 Rest of Europe8.4 Asia Pacific8.4.1 China8.4.2 Japan8.4.3 India8.4.4 Rest of Asia Pacific8.5 Rest of the World8.5.1 Latin America8.5.2 Middle East

9 Neuroscience Antibodies & Assays Market Competitive Landscape

9.1 Overview9.2 Company Market Ranking9.3 Key Development Strategies

10 Company Profiles

10.1.1 Overview10.1.2 Financial Performance10.1.3 Product Outlook10.1.4 Key Developments

11 Appendix

11.1 Related Research

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Why do opposites attract, and can we change our political leanings as we grow older? Neuroscience has the answers – The Canberra Times

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We all know at least one couple who just make no sense, a perplexing pairing that irks and boggles us. One of them might be vivacious, gregarious, classically attractive and yet the other is a little freeze ray of misery and seems to despise socialising. So why, oh why, are they together? Neuroscience, according to Dr Hannah Critchlow, may have the answer to this eternal question, and plenty more - why we get more opinionated and closed minded as we age, how our political leanings are formed, why some couples don't even seem to like each other much. Critchlow, a British researcher, writer and broadcaster who has been described as "the female Brian Cox", lays out in her brain-bending book - The Science of Fate - just some of the recent research into determinism and the theory that we don't so much make our own decisions as inherit them. The fast-moving field of modern neuroscience will, she believes, "one day be considered as profound as Darwin's Theory of Evolution". So, what can the brain tell us about the laws of opposite attraction? Well, there's a lot more to love than what meets our eyes, and it may well involve senses we didn't know we were even using. "Scientists used to believe we only had five senses, but we're finding more and more we didn't know we had, through experiments, all the time," explains Critchlow, who found herself "happily stuck" in Noosa by the coronavirus lockdown while on an Australian book tour. One fascinating trial, carried out at the Zoological Institute at Bern University and later replicated in the US, showed that women may actually be turning the smell of potential male partners into complex information. Researchers asked men to wear the same T-shirt for a few days without washing, deodorising or eating smelly foods. A group of women were then given the appetising task of sniffing the shirts and rating them for attractiveness. The results clearly showed that women would choose the odour of men whose immune systems were highly differentiated from their own. Finding a mate with different gene variations from your own produces the strongest possible offspring; a child with the greatest resistance to a wide range of infections, and thus the best chance of survival. Just how women were able to detect their biological ideal man using optimum genetics via the smell of a stinky armpit is "quite mysterious", as Critchlow understates it. "But we are, at some level, just animals, driven by the single desire to interact in a way that will pass on our genetic material," she says. "Love, it seems, is largely a by-product of the brain circuitry that prioritises reproduction and the survival of the species." Interestingly, the sniff test does not work with men, but boys are not without their own mysteries. A study of thousands of lap dances in the US found that strippers would make almost twice as much in tips on the few days when they were at the most fertile point of their menstrual cycle. Somehow, the men just found them more attractive on those days, without having any idea why. "When it comes to sex, it seems that a choice that may feel highly personal and deeply intimate is, to a large extent, the behavioural result of our brains' coding to seek maximum opportunities for our genes to be passed on," Critchlow says. Like many of her colleagues, she has come to accept that many of the choices we make are hugely influenced by the genes given to us by our parents, and our grandparents' parents. Even the foods we like are choices driven by what our ancestors were eating, and enjoying. "Basically, we are designed to eat food when we can get it, because there might not be any around tomorrow, but now we live in a world where many of us can have whatever we want, whenever we want it, which obviously leads to obesity," she says. "Genetic mutations to encourage eating less weren't passed on because food was scarce and there was no advantage in that. Mutations that made us eat as much as possible in case there was no more are a problem now that we live in abundance. "Evolution has not caught up with Uber Eats." The reassuring sense we have that we are making our own choices is "just our brains messing with us", in much the same way that we like to perceive the sun as "rising" and "setting", when we know, scientifically, that it is just the world turning. "There is always scope for changing your mind, this is the basis for consciousness, but it's not as big as we perceive it - that scope to change is limited based on the genetics we've been given," Critchlow says. "Remember that our brains use 20 per cent of our daily energy quota to fuel this enormous circuit board, and to save energy your brain filters a lot of information, and makes assumptions, based on past experience. "Judging people in the first few minutes that we meet them is all about saving energy. "With friendship groups, or clans, people look for individuals with a similar outlook and who have similar genetics as well (unlike the way they look for sexual partners). "You are drawn to people, friends, who are genetically similar to you, so you are more likely to see the world in the same way and have the same biases. "You're saving energy because you don't have to explain things." Speaking of biases, just think how reassuring it would be to discover that people who hold political views that strike you as unjustifiable were just born that way. As Critchlow puts it, understanding that people believe in certain things, like religion or politics, because their brains were built that way, "might have massive consequences for reducing conflict at every level - as we discover more about the neurobiology of belief formation and prejudice, we might be able to boost our openness to new ideas". She quotes the work of Jonas Kaplan, Professor of Psychology at USC's Brain and Creativity Institute, who has found that activity in the amygdala, and the size of people's anterior cingulate cortex, can be used to predict whether they are liberal or conservative. His researchers were able to use brain scans to predict the political leanings of American test subjects - whether they voted Republican or Democrat - "with high sensitivity and accuracy". "It's quite incredible and it does help me to understand people a little bit more, because those who are more liberal have a less-sensitive amygdala are more able to think about collaborations and partnerships for the future, rather than being scared in the moment," Critchlow says. "Conservative types have a more reactive amygdala, and that gives them a heightened reactivity to fear. They assess risks and react conservatively. "But the fact is, both types of people are really important for our survival as a species. If we were all one type it would be a disaster, we wouldn't have moved forward as a species." This, of course, raises the interesting quote most often wrongly attributed to Winston Churchill: "if you're not a liberal when you're 25, you have no heart , if you're not a conservative by the time you're 35, you have no brain." Why would people's leanings change as they age? "There's been some research at Oxford into that, following people from the 1960s to see whether they got more conservative as they got older, and it showed a 20-point increase in conservatism by the time they were 80 years old," Critchlow says. "As you get older, you rely on more tried and tested routes within your mind, there is slightly less potential for plasticity, so you might become more risk averse. "You also start to weigh how you process information differently; you place less weight on signals from the outside world, and more weight on the internal capacity of your mind - the information you have stored there. "In a way, older people are not really listening to new ideas, because they take too much energy. They're relying on their own, refined information. Or what we think of as wisdom." Kaplan, from USC, provides the quote in The Science of Fate that most neatly sums up the way most neuroscientists now see the world, which sounds radical to most people but is, Critchlow says, very much the accepted wisdom in her academic milieu. "I don't believe in free will. The universe is deterministic,'' Kaplan says. "We aren't the authors of our own actions, because everything is caused by something prior." He is aware, however, that unlike scientists, many people would find this idea hard to live with, and adds: "Decisions are partially controlled by our emotional state, and most people find it depressing to believe that they have little or no free will, so there is a lot of value in believing in it." Critchlow says abandoning the idea of free will can actually be quite relaxing. She says she frets less about the way she parents her young son, because she's not sure there's much point worrying about it. "I tend to forget that most people don't think this way and I was chatting with my agent recently and she said 'So hang on, you really think we're really just like machines?' And I was like, 'oh yeah, that's what all of the people in my little bubble of neuroscientists think'," she says. "But I think it's an idea that will become more accepted, and it's starting to happen. "Don't forget that Darwin's theories were pretty radical there for a while."

https://nnimgt-a.akamaihd.net/transform/v1/crop/frm/9gmjQxX8MpSQh6J68NHMnY/97fc079b-a059-4a2f-a1e9-c7ff49cbd985.jpg/r74_0_5021_2795_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg

We all know at least one couple who just make no sense, a perplexing pairing that irks and boggles us. One of them might be vivacious, gregarious, classically attractive and yet the other is a little freeze ray of misery and seems to despise socialising. So why, oh why, are they together?

Neuroscience, according to Dr Hannah Critchlow, may have the answer to this eternal question, and plenty more - why we get more opinionated and closed minded as we age, how our political leanings are formed, why some couples don't even seem to like each other much.

Critchlow, a British researcher, writer and broadcaster who has been described as "the female Brian Cox", lays out in her brain-bending book - The Science of Fate - just some of the recent research into determinism and the theory that we don't so much make our own decisions as inherit them. The fast-moving field of modern neuroscience will, she believes, "one day be considered as profound as Darwin's Theory of Evolution".

So, what can the brain tell us about the laws of opposite attraction? Well, there's a lot more to love than what meets our eyes, and it may well involve senses we didn't know we were even using.

"Scientists used to believe we only had five senses, but we're finding more and more we didn't know we had, through experiments, all the time," explains Critchlow, who found herself "happily stuck" in Noosa by the coronavirus lockdown while on an Australian book tour.

One fascinating trial, carried out at the Zoological Institute at Bern University and later replicated in the US, showed that women may actually be turning the smell of potential male partners into complex information.

Researchers asked men to wear the same T-shirt for a few days without washing, deodorising or eating smelly foods. A group of women were then given the appetising task of sniffing the shirts and rating them for attractiveness.

The results clearly showed that women would choose the odour of men whose immune systems were highly differentiated from their own. Finding a mate with different gene variations from your own produces the strongest possible offspring; a child with the greatest resistance to a wide range of infections, and thus the best chance of survival.

Dr Hannah Critchlow, author of The Science of Fate. Picture: Simon Weller

Just how women were able to detect their biological ideal man using optimum genetics via the smell of a stinky armpit is "quite mysterious", as Critchlow understates it.

"But we are, at some level, just animals, driven by the single desire to interact in a way that will pass on our genetic material," she says.

We are, at some level, just animals, driven by the single desire to interact in a way that will pass on our genetic material.

"Love, it seems, is largely a by-product of the brain circuitry that prioritises reproduction and the survival of the species."

Interestingly, the sniff test does not work with men, but boys are not without their own mysteries. A study of thousands of lap dances in the US found that strippers would make almost twice as much in tips on the few days when they were at the most fertile point of their menstrual cycle. Somehow, the men just found them more attractive on those days, without having any idea why.

"When it comes to sex, it seems that a choice that may feel highly personal and deeply intimate is, to a large extent, the behavioural result of our brains' coding to seek maximum opportunities for our genes to be passed on," Critchlow says.

Like many of her colleagues, she has come to accept that many of the choices we make are hugely influenced by the genes given to us by our parents, and our grandparents' parents. Even the foods we like are choices driven by what our ancestors were eating, and enjoying.

"Basically, we are designed to eat food when we can get it, because there might not be any around tomorrow, but now we live in a world where many of us can have whatever we want, whenever we want it, which obviously leads to obesity," she says.

"Genetic mutations to encourage eating less weren't passed on because food was scarce and there was no advantage in that. Mutations that made us eat as much as possible in case there was no more are a problem now that we live in abundance.

"Evolution has not caught up with Uber Eats."

The reassuring sense we have that we are making our own choices is "just our brains messing with us", in much the same way that we like to perceive the sun as "rising" and "setting", when we know, scientifically, that it is just the world turning.

"There is always scope for changing your mind, this is the basis for consciousness, but it's not as big as we perceive it - that scope to change is limited based on the genetics we've been given," Critchlow says.

"Remember that our brains use 20 per cent of our daily energy quota to fuel this enormous circuit board, and to save energy your brain filters a lot of information, and makes assumptions, based on past experience.

"Judging people in the first few minutes that we meet them is all about saving energy.

Abandoning the idea of free will, and leaving everything to fate, can actually be quite relaxing. Picture: Shutterstock

"With friendship groups, or clans, people look for individuals with a similar outlook and who have similar genetics as well (unlike the way they look for sexual partners).

"You are drawn to people, friends, who are genetically similar to you, so you are more likely to see the world in the same way and have the same biases.

"You're saving energy because you don't have to explain things."

Speaking of biases, just think how reassuring it would be to discover that people who hold political views that strike you as unjustifiable were just born that way.

As Critchlow puts it, understanding that people believe in certain things, like religion or politics, because their brains were built that way, "might have massive consequences for reducing conflict at every level - as we discover more about the neurobiology of belief formation and prejudice, we might be able to boost our openness to new ideas".

She quotes the work of Jonas Kaplan, Professor of Psychology at USC's Brain and Creativity Institute, who has found that activity in the amygdala, and the size of people's anterior cingulate cortex, can be used to predict whether they are liberal or conservative.

His researchers were able to use brain scans to predict the political leanings of American test subjects - whether they voted Republican or Democrat - "with high sensitivity and accuracy".

"It's quite incredible and it does help me to understand people a little bit more, because those who are more liberal have a less-sensitive amygdala are more able to think about collaborations and partnerships for the future, rather than being scared in the moment," Critchlow says.

"Conservative types have a more reactive amygdala, and that gives them a heightened reactivity to fear. They assess risks and react conservatively.

"But the fact is, both types of people are really important for our survival as a species. If we were all one type it would be a disaster, we wouldn't have moved forward as a species."

This, of course, raises the interesting quote most often wrongly attributed to Winston Churchill: "if you're not a liberal when you're 25, you have no heart , if you're not a conservative by the time you're 35, you have no brain." Why would people's leanings change as they age?

"There's been some research at Oxford into that, following people from the 1960s to see whether they got more conservative as they got older, and it showed a 20-point increase in conservatism by the time they were 80 years old," Critchlow says.

"As you get older, you rely on more tried and tested routes within your mind, there is slightly less potential for plasticity, so you might become more risk averse.

"You also start to weigh how you process information differently; you place less weight on signals from the outside world, and more weight on the internal capacity of your mind - the information you have stored there.

"In a way, older people are not really listening to new ideas, because they take too much energy. They're relying on their own, refined information. Or what we think of as wisdom."

Kaplan, from USC, provides the quote in The Science of Fate that most neatly sums up the way most neuroscientists now see the world, which sounds radical to most people but is, Critchlow says, very much the accepted wisdom in her academic milieu.

"I don't believe in free will. The universe is deterministic,'' Kaplan says.

"We aren't the authors of our own actions, because everything is caused by something prior."

He is aware, however, that unlike scientists, many people would find this idea hard to live with, and adds: "Decisions are partially controlled by our emotional state, and most people find it depressing to believe that they have little or no free will, so there is a lot of value in believing in it."

Critchlow says abandoning the idea of free will can actually be quite relaxing. She says she frets less about the way she parents her young son, because she's not sure there's much point worrying about it.

"I tend to forget that most people don't think this way and I was chatting with my agent recently and she said 'So hang on, you really think we're really just like machines?' And I was like, 'oh yeah, that's what all of the people in my little bubble of neuroscientists think'," she says.

"But I think it's an idea that will become more accepted, and it's starting to happen.

"Don't forget that Darwin's theories were pretty radical there for a while."

See the original post:
Why do opposites attract, and can we change our political leanings as we grow older? Neuroscience has the answers - The Canberra Times

Harpurs Ferry members continue their work at home – Binghamton University

By Sophia Cavalluzzi

May 18, 2020

A volunteer, student-run ambulance service, Harpurs Ferry has been a crucial asset to Binghamton University since the 1970s. Since the transition to virtual learning, many of its members have gone back to their hometowns but they didnt leave their volunteer work in Binghamton.

Members of Harpurs Ferry are serving as EMS staff in their respective hometowns, responding to COVID-19 patients. Sophomore integrative neuroscience major Kristen Coletti went home to Long Island, but has been working in New York City, the epicenter of the pandemic.

Im currently working at a hotel in Times Square that houses homeless COVID-19 positive patients, Coletti said. Its been a very humbling experience that has allowed me to reflect on my own life and things I take for granted each day.

Jared Frick left his home in Albany to provide aid in Rockland County. Image Credit: Provided.

The struggles I face working here are nothing compared to what the community is facing, Frick said. The situation is leaving certain populations, like the elderly, with an incredibly difficult decision to make that, for many, is ending up in a death sentence.

While healing patients and worrying about their own personal health, members of Harpurs Ferry are also managing to stay on top of their schoolwork during the final weeks of the semester.

Im taking 22 credits at Binghamton this semester, so my course load was already a bit heavy, but not overwhelming, Frick said. The faculty here have been incredibly understanding of my situation, and I cant express my appreciation for them enough.

Lexis Rosenberg has been working in Rockland County, her hometown area. Image Credit: Provided.

When we were transporting a patient from the hospital to a rehab center after fighting COVID-19, the hospital played Fight Song as we were leaving and a bunch of nurses and doctors lined up and were cheering for the patient, she said. I know for the patient and me that it felt amazing; that there is hope.

Logan Strobing is working in Merrick, Long Island, feeling lucky to be getting through all of this with amazing coworkers.

Experiencing this with them has definitely made us closer, said Strobing. Additionally, its extremely rewarding when you know you made a positive impact on someones day. First responders have been getting so much love from everyone right now, and it definitely makes a difference.

Coletti is also realizing her part in the bigger picture.

The biggest reward is realizing that Im part of something bigger than myself, she said. When I commute into Manhattan and I see all of the other essential workers heading to their jobs, I find myself thinking about the millions of people that are putting themselves at risk every day for the health of our country.

Harpurs Ferry students, risking their own health to help their communities, are doing it all, and doing it well.

If youre worried or feeling stressed during this time, take it from Strobing: There is a light at the end of the tunnel; we just have to endure this together!

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Harpurs Ferry members continue their work at home - Binghamton University

UA scientists discover new role for protein involved in neurodegeneration – Arizona Daily Wildcat

Researchers in the lab of Martha Bhattacharya, an assistant professor of neuroscience at the University of Arizona, have linked a gene involved in axon degeneration to the itch sensation in mice, attracting interest from the agribusiness industry.

A recent faculty transfer from Washington University in St. Louis, Ill., Bhattacharya heads a lab that studies the communication between neurons, the cells responsible for sending electrical signals throughout our bodies, and non-neuronal cells during the progression of neurodegenerative diseases in fruit flies and mice. Her research is supported by the National Institutes of Health.

The majority of our lab is still focused on the TMEM184B gene, Bhattacharya said. Now, we are using fruit flies to look at this gene's effect on synapses and signaling too.

Bhattacharyas most recent publication, now available on bioRxiv, linked TMEM184B to the initiation of developmental signals critical to the specification of pruriceptive, or itch sensing, neurons in mice.

In future studies, Bhattacharya hopes to characterize the role of this gene in the maintenance of these itch-sensing pathways and synapses in adults, linking TMEM184B's newly discovered function in itch sensation to its ability to promote apoptosis or neuron degeneration.

Beyond TMEM184B, Bhattacharya is also utilizing fruit flies to identify new genes involved in the communication between neurons and astrocytes, a support cell that regulates neuronal signals, during the progression of various neurodegeneration diseases such as Alzheimers and Parkinsons disease. Once identified, Bhattacharya plans to purse these genes roles in the nervous system as she has done with TMEM184B.

In addition to a hardworking team of graduate students and research technicians, Bhattacharya also places a focus on mentoring undergraduate students on projects in her lab.

I want my undergraduate students to learn how to ask questions that are testable and controllable, Bhattacharya said. From my own personal experience, having a group of people grappling with unknown questions in a lab is a really exciting place to be.

Beyond their individual projects, Bhattacharya hopes she can inspire the next generation of scientists by providing students an environment to see science in action and realize that all of the chapters in their textbooks are still being written; there is still so much to contribute.

Hannah Hart, a neuroscience and cognitive science junior, has worked as an undergraduate researcher in the Bhattacharya lab for the last year.

"Dr. Bhattacharya has been an amazing mentor and friend," Hart said. "She encourages me to step outside of the box, be risky and learn from any mistakes. She always supports any achievements and inspires me continuously to try as hard as I can."

The focus on undergraduate research and mentorship in the Neuroscience and Cognitive Science Department at the UA was a big reason Bhattacharya moved her lab to Tucson.

Outside of her research, Bhattacharya also designed and teaches a course exploring neurodevelopment, or in other terms, what it takes an organism or potentially a scientist to build a brain from scratch.

Teaching an upper-division course, I do not have to worry about whether or not I covered all the necessary topics for my students to take the MCAT, Bhattacharya said. I make sure the topics I cover are interesting not only to me but are linked to health and medicine.

Bhattacharyas interest in neuroscience began with a sensory neuroscience course in college and flourished when she attended graduate school at the University of California, San Francisco researching neurodevelopment and the molecular mechanisms of the sense of touch.

According to Bhattacharya, many of the molecular pathways linked to the neurodegenerative diseases she now studies were first discovered and characterized in the context of neurodevelopment. Adding a neurodevelopment course to the UA's schedule was a must, Bhattacharya said.

For example, Bhattacharya's own lab primarily studies neurodegeneration, but her research on the functions of TMEM184B within the nervous system led her research back to her neurodevelopment roots and the itch sensation of mice.

Throughout her career, Bhattacharya married and started a family. She now has two kids.

When my kids were very young, that was the hardest window of time, Bhattacharya said. Being a faculty member means you are no longer in just the lab, you need a calendar for all your meetings and new work.

Bhattacharya attributes some of her success to maintaining passions outside of science, like biking and running, and a mindset that not everything will go right the first time. She said success is more hard work than perfection.

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UA scientists discover new role for protein involved in neurodegeneration - Arizona Daily Wildcat

Stroke Myths: Find Out the Facts – hellowoodlands.com

May is National Stroke Awareness Month. Did you know? Someone in the U.S. has a stroke every 40 seconds, and dies from stroke every four minutes. You can help combat this killer by arming yourself with the facts.

Memorial Hermann Mischer Neuroscience Associates, and UTHealth Neurosciences physicians affiliated with Memorial Hermann Mischer Neurosciences are setting the record straight on common stroke myths.

Read the answers; following are the myths:

While they share many of the same risk factors, a heart attack affects the heart, while a stroke affects the brain. A stroke occurs when blood flow to the brain is interrupted, depriving brain tissue of oxygen.

There are two major types of stroke; Hemorrhagic stroke occurs when a blood vessel in the brain bursts, resulting in bleeding in the surrounding tissue. Ischemic stroke occurs when a blood clot blocks a vessel carrying blood to the brain, cutting off blood supply to the brain.

While genetic factors can contribute to stroke risk, up to 80 percent of strokes are preventable by managing risk factors. To prevent stroke, maintain healthy blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar levels. Maintain a healthy body weight. Get regular exercise. And also, please dont smoke.

Ischemic stroke can be treated with a clot-busting drug called tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), which must be administered within 3 to 4.5 hours of the onset of stroke. Certain types of ischemic stroke can be treated by prescribing medication, surgically removing the blood clot or repairing the ruptured blood vessel.

A transient ischemic attack (TIA), is a medical emergency that occurs when stroke symptoms last less than 24 hours without treatment. A TIA is a very strong predictor of a stroke; a person who has suffered one or more TIAs is almost 10 times more likely to have a stroke.

Your risk for stroke increase with age, but a stroke can occur at any age. In fact, the rate of stroke among people between the ages of 18 and 65 is on the rise, given increases in obesity, elevated cholesterol, diabetes and high blood pressure among this population.

Strokes run in families, as many of the chronic diseases that put a person at a higher risk for strokeincluding hypertension, diabetes and obesityrun in families. In addition, certain genetic conditions can run in families, which increase the risk of forming blood clots that can lead to stroke.

While most of the healing takes place in the first few months after a stroke, recoverythrough physical therapy and other treatmentscan continue for years.

Aspirin is used to prevent ischemic strokes in people who have either already had a stroke, or who have risk factors for stroke. Aspirin can actually worsen a hemorrhagic stroke. If you experience stroke symptoms, avoid taking aspirin and call 911 immediately.

Both the Joint Commission and Det Norske Veritas (DNV) certify hospitals that meet certain standards for care of acute stroke, designating them as Comprehensive Stroke Centers (CSCs) and Primary Stroke Centers (PSCs). While both are advanced designations, CSCs are the most advanced.

For more information or to schedule an appointment with a neurologist in The Woodlands, visit memorialhermann.org/stroke or call 713.897.5900.

Source: Memorial Hermann Health System

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Stroke Myths: Find Out the Facts - hellowoodlands.com

Plum High School teacher selected to be a part of state science committee – Plum – TribLIVE

Saturday, May 23, 2020 | 9:01 AM

Plum High School teacher Shubhada Bhamre was recently selected to be on a state Department of Education committee to update state science standards.

A Plum High School teacher has been selected to be on a state Department of Education committee examining new state science standards.

Biologist Shubhada Bhamre said shes excited to be on the 10-member panel called PA Academic Standards for Science and Technology, Environment and Ecology Content Committee.

I love biology, (and) my content knowledge is very good, she said. Im very much interested in furthering the education both of students and teachers.

In September 2019, the State Board of Education directed the state Education Department to begin the process of updating Pennsylvanias science standards to align them with current research and best practices, including a review of Next Generation Science Standards.

The committees work starts June 16.

Members will meet in six full-day virtual sessions. Their report is expected to be used in drafting science standards that provide educators across the state a guide for science-specific content needs.

These days the focus is not just on one specific content area, but of a cross-curricular nature, Bhamre said. When I look at the list (of committee members), there are people from universities. There are people from hardcore education backgrounds. Theres a mix of middle and high school teachers. There are general science as well as content area teachers. Its all the sciences.

Bhamre, of Oakmont has been with the district about 17 years.

She studied science in India and earned a doctorate in neuroscience with a sub-speciality in neurochemistry from the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences in Bangalore, India. She also has a masters in developmental biology.

She migrated to the United States in 1994 and had post-doctorate fellowships at the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio , at Hahnemann University Hospital in Philadelphia and at Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh. She earned her teaching certification from the University of Pittsburgh.

This will be Bhamres first time on a state committee, but not the only time her input was used in potentially influencing science education in Pennsylvania.

Bhamre said she had submitted feedback and item analysis in the past to the Education Department and Data Recognition Corp. in regards to the Keystone exams.

Other committee members include:

Rebecca Thomas, assistant professor of park resource management at Slippery Rock University;

Rick Zilla, Greenville Area School District high school technology education teacher;

Sharon Brusic, professor at Millersville University of Pennsylvania;

Steve Kerlin, director of environmental education at Stroud Water Research Center;

Steve Wasiesky, environmental education coordinator at Millcreek Township School District;

Tarrea Potter, state education outreach coordinator at the Chesapeake Bay Foundation;

Timothy Dzurko, middle school technology education and STEM teacher at State College Area School District;

Travis Martin, middle school science teacher at Bellwood-Antis School District;

Tyler Love, assistant professor of education and director of the Capital Area Institute for Math and Science at Penn State Harrisburg.

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Plum High School teacher selected to be a part of state science committee - Plum - TribLIVE