What neuroscience can tell us about the Google diversity memo – Yahoo News

Everybody seems to have an opinion about Googles recent sacking of its malware software engineer James Damore for circulating a memo arguing that women and men are suitable for different roles because they are intrinsically different. The debate so far has centred mainly on the pros and cons of diversity programmes, which partly sparked Damore to construct his document, and whether Google was right to fire Damore.

While there have been some less vocal comments about the biological differences Damore referred to ranging from finding them spot on to wrong his assertions havent been challenged much on the actual neuroscience behind his basic assumptions. Is there any truth to the idea that we are all destined by our biology? To understand this, lets take a look at the most recent advances in the field.

The memo, titled Googles Ideological Echo Chamber, was sent to an internal company network and criticised the companys diversity initiatives. It quoted psychological studies, Wikipedia entries and media reports to argue its case.

It claimed women are underrepresented in the tech industry because of biological differences, arguing that women have a stronger interest in people rather than things, and that they are prone to neuroticism and anxiety. Men, on the other hand, have a higher drive for status, according to the document. While the memo stopped short of actually spelling it out, it certainly implied that these differences are innate, fixed and unchangeable.

But this kind of thinking is changing at every level. Psychologys go-to list of cognitive differences between males and females has been dismantled, with overwhelming evidence that women and men are more similar than they are different. Many alleged sex differences in skills, aptitudes and personality including science-based interests have been shown not to fall into two neat categories,but rather exist on a spectrum.

At the level of the brain, the concept of a male or a female brain has been challenged supported by evidence indicating that brains are a mosaic of both male and female characteristics.

One breakthrough in our 21st-century understanding of the brain is that the brain is plastic, which means that it can change depending on the experiences it is exposed to. This was clearly demonstrated in the well-known taxi-driver studies which showed that acquiring expertise is associated with significant brain changes and many others. If brain characteristics can be altered by experience, then it certainly seems wrong to argue that sex differences are innate.

Take, for instance, the gender gap in STEM subjects (science, technology, engineering and maths), which is presumably something Google is looking to address. It is often argued that this is associated with men having better spatial cognition it isnt. There is actually clear evidence that spatial cognition training can change the brain, boosting its performance. Whats more, the gender gap in spatial skills has been shown to be diminishing over time, even disappearing. In certain cultures, the situation is actually reversed.

Are men better at reading maps?

The brain is also porous or permeable and will respond to and change as a function of attitudes and expectations, both external and internal. Stereotype threat is a well-known process in which people feel anxiety connected with particular skills perceived to be associated with members of another group. This can affect their performance and their brain activity. For example, girls may feel this way about maths thinking its a boy thing. Sadly, this mechanism has been shown to be real for example affecting girls performance on maths tasks.

It also changes brain activity. One study showed that people who perceived themselves as being of lower status than others had different volumes of grey matter in brain regions involved in experiencing emotions and reacting to stress than those who did not. We have also shown this to be true in our lab when it comes to taking a negative, self-critical view of events in your life.

So if you are in an environment where there are stereotypical views that, as a member of a particular group, youre unlikely to succeed, this may indeed make you anxious and self-critical. And that will actually affect the way your brain works, meaning it is not necessarily something you were born with. And of course, this holds true for mens brains as well.

Damore strongly opposed certain social engineering activities to make the tech industry more welcoming to women. But actually, research shows that empowerment techniques can alter brain activity and overcome the negative effects on performance of stereotype threat and performance anxiety. Importantly, altering a self-critical mindset will actually make the brain process information differently.

So even if biology could be blamed for the problems Damore identified they could also arise from the very environment he appears to be channelling with stereotypical, deterministic thinking about aptitudes and abilities. I dont know the details of the diversity training he was so clearly uncomfortable with, but if it involves changing this environment and offering forms of training and empowerment to their employees, then they are doing exactly the right thing to alter what Damore wrongly assumed to be fixed and unchangeable.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Gina Rippon has received funding from the Wellcome Foundation, MRC, EPSRC, Lord Hadwen Trust

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What neuroscience can tell us about the Google diversity memo - Yahoo News

Anatomy of yet another Dodgers comeback – True Blue LA

The Dodgers came through again on Wednesday night, erasing a two-run deficit to deliver their MLB-best 10th walk-off victory of the season, a 5-4 win over the hapless White Sox. Lets take a moment to relive the Dodgers 38th comeback win of 2017.

The White Sox are in full rebuild mode, and have lost 27 of their last 35 games, including 14 of their last 16 road games. Chicago had a chance to leave Los Angeles with a win, up 4-2 entering the ninth, but were left with a unique situation.

None of their relievers have recorded a save this season, the result of midseason deals to continue the rebuild. David Robertson (13 saves this season for Chicago), Tyler Clippard (two saves) and Anthony Swarzak (one save) were all traded in the last month.

Gregory Infante, who was a non-roster invitee in spring training with the Dodgers in 2013, started the ninth for the White Sox, and retired Justin Turner for the first out. At that point, per the FanGraphs game log the Dodgers had a 3.8-percent win expectancy.

The Baseball-Reference game log showed a five-percent win expectancy at the same point. The takeaway: the odds were still long for the Dodgers.

With a Cody Bellinger pinch hitting, manager Rick Renteria turned to left-hander Aaron Bummer, who like Infante has no career saves. Bellinger, who was out of the starting lineup for just the fourth time in his 99-game career, delivered a single up the middle.

The left-handed rookie is hitting .270/.323/.533 against southpaw pitchers this season.

Then came another pitching change. Jake Petricka, who forced home the go-ahead run with a hit by pitch then allowed a pair of two-run singles in the eighth inning on Tuesday night, was called upon to finish things off for the White Sox. Petricka doesnt have a save this season, but did save 16 games in 2014-15 for Chicago.

Logan Forsythe greeted him with a double down the left field line to score Bellinger, pulling the Dodgers within one. Austin Barnes, who hit a two-run single against Petricka on Tuesday, singled again on Wednesday, but his knock to center field was hit too hard to score Forsythe from second base.

Petricka during the two-game series faced nine batters. He allowed six hits and hit a batter, allowing four runs of his own and all four of his inherited runners.

The Dodgers swept their 16th series of the season best in MLB. Even if you remove the sweeps this season (a 46-0 game record), the Dodgers would be 39-34 (.534), a winning percentage good enough to lead the National League Central and behind only Washington, Colorado and Arizona in the entire NL.

Yasiel Puig, who recorded his 50th walk of the season earlier in the game, and who walked twice to load the bases to spark rallies on Tuesday night as well, ran the count to 3-2 against Petricka, but nearly struck out, barely fouling off a ball at the plate.

Then, Puig grabbed the ball and did this:

Mary Hart didnt know what to think. It didnt go unnoticed.

I wonder if they kept that ball, with the bite mark on it, said analyst Nomar Garciaparra on the SportsNet LA broadcast.

Two pitches later on the eighth pitch of the at-bat Puig hit the ball into the gap in left center field. He hit it into no-mans land, and with Barnes flying from first base, it was obvious the winning run would score with ease. Look where Barnes is before any White Sox outfielder was anywhere close to the ball.

Barnes scored from first easily without a throw.

Joe Davis didnt get to call any home games in his first year calling the Dodgers, but now as the full-time announcer he has crammed in two years worth of memorable calls into one. Davis was up to the task in calling the Dodgers 10th walk-off win of the season.

Can Yasiel Puig deliver? You bet he can! Into the gap in left center. Not a question of if. The question is who, and when. Tonight, its Puig in the ninth!

Davis rises to the occasion at the right moments, and last night delivered in his own right, even invoking a much more exciting game of Clue to describe the game-winner.

To Davis point, the question of who is real, of the 10 Dodgers walk-off wins this season, nine different players have delivered the winning RBI.

The Dodgers are 8-27 (.229) when trailing after eight innings in 2017. The rest of MLB in those situations is 141-1,426 (.090).

Even with the excitement of the call, Davis let the moment breathe as well, going silent for 51 seconds afterward, letting the celebration do the talking before adding, How do you like that, folks? Yasiel Puig, the hero.

During the euphoria, Puig found his man, hitting coach Turner Ward. Before the game, they were both wearing new t-shirts.

Then, life imitated art:

What a game.

It was so good, it was worth overlooking this cringe-worthy sponsored celebration pun:

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Anatomy of yet another Dodgers comeback - True Blue LA

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Star Jesse Williams Accused Of Violent Rages By Ex – Daily Beast

Greys Anatomy star Jesse Williams has been labelled a rage-fueled individual with poor parenting skills who maintains a revolving door of women and exposed his children to a terrifying road rage incident in which he threatened to kill a neighbor.

The allegations are contained in explosive court documents obtained by dailymail.com.

The allegations against Williams, 36, come from his ex-wife, Aryn Drake-Lee, 34, who divorced him in April.

The allegations are the latest salvo in a bitter custody battle over their children, aged 3 and 1.

Drake-Lee also claims the actor has cynically started posting photographs of his children on social media to bolster his brand.

Drake-Lee claimed the road rage incident happened on July 18. Drake-Lee claims that following argument with a neighbor, Williams aggressively pursued him in his car with their two children inside and allegedly threatened to kill him.

I was so alarmed that Jesse exposed our children to danger, Drake-Lee says in the filing, in which she is seeking sole custody of the children after their 14-year relationship broke down.

Drake-Lee claims Williams has had a revolving door of intimate partners since the divorce and has made no effort to keep knowledge of his multiple girlfriends from their children.

In previously filed court documents Williams set out to prove he was a doting dad by listing his kids nicknames and favorite foods.

Drake-Lee is also unhappy that Williams now regularly posts photos of their children on social media to promote an image of himself: Jesse, a story teller by profession, appears to be trying to create some sort of fairytale parenting scenario that does not tell the complete story, the real story of parenting, she says in the filing, according to dailymail.com.

Drake-Lee is asking the court for a full-day mediation session to determine a path forward between her and Williams.

When the former couples divorce first hit the headlines, it was reported that Williams cheated on Drake-Lee with multiple women while they were married and hes been linked with his one-time co-worker, actress Minka Kelly.

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Williams has denied the cheating claims saying he always loved Drake-Lee during their marriage.

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'Grey's Anatomy' Star Jesse Williams Accused Of Violent Rages By Ex - Daily Beast

Tattoo Hitches a Ride to RICK AND MORTY’s Anatomy Park – Nerdist

Dont worry. This trip to Anatomy Park doesnt involve going inside any humans. You only have to gaze at an artfully designed and applied tattoo by Mike Day. He recently received the request for this Rick and Morty ink and was beyond happy to do so its his favorite cartoon. He has a studio that he says is an homage to pop culture, so this kind of tattoo is right up his alley.

Anatomy Park (Rick and Morty)

Mike told Nerdist hes been a tattooist for eight years; he opened his own place, Soulfire Studios, in Brisbane five years ago. His Instagram portfolio is filled with tattoos inspired by games, TV, and film including this beautiful Studio Ghibli sleeve.

Studio Ghibli sleeve

Check out the gallerybelow to see more of Mikes designs. He has a particular talent for portraits. Youll find Rick from The Walking Dead, Walter White from Breaking Bad, and more.

If you have nerdy ink on your skin or youre a tattoo artist that applies pop culture, STEM, music, or other geek-inspired tatts (tl;dr: I want to see basically all of the tattoos not only Star Wars ones) on a regular basis, then please hit me up because Id like to highlight you in a future Inked Wednesday gallery. Im especially interested if you have a sleeve or other large tattoo. You can get in touch with me via email at [emailprotected] Send me photos of the tattoos youd like me to feature (the higher resolution, the better) and dont forget to let me know the name of your tattoo artist if you have it, as well the name of the shop he or she works out of. If you are the tattoo artist, give me links to your portfolios and/or Instagram accounts so I can share them with our readers.

Images: Mike Day

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Tattoo Hitches a Ride to RICK AND MORTY's Anatomy Park - Nerdist

Netflix signs Grey’s Anatomy creator Shonda Rhimes to multi-year deal – The Verge

Acclaimed television writer and producer Shonda Rhimes has signed a multi-year deal with Netflix, where shell produce new series and work on other projects for the streaming company. The deal means Rhimes, known for her work as the creator and show runner of Greys Anatomy and Scandal, will depart ABC after 15 years with the broadcaster. She will be reportedly paid around $10 million a year at Netflix, and will be accompanied in the move by longtime collaborator Betsy Beers.

Shonda Rhimes is one of the greatest storytellers in the history of television, said Ted Sarandos, chief content officer at Netflix, in a press statement. Her work is gripping, inventive, pulse-pounding, heart-stopping, taboo-breaking television at its best. Shows from ShondaLand Rhimes production company including Greys Anatomy, Scandal, and How to Get Away with Murder will continue to air on ABC. These shows are also available to stream on Netflix (depending on your region.)

The move to Netflix means Rhimes will be able to work in a wider range of genres and formats, according to Variety. "ShondaLands move to Netflix is the result of a shared plan Ted Sarandos and I built based on my vision for myself as a storyteller and for the evolution of my company, said Rhimes. Ted provides a clear, fearless space for creators at Netflix. He understood what I was looking for the opportunity to build a vibrant new storytelling home for writers with the unique creative freedom and instantaneous global reach.

This deal marks another step in a content arms race where companies like Netflix and Amazon are carving up exclusive deals that would usually only be available to TV networks at least back in their heyday. Just last week, Amazon pinched The Walking Dead creator Robert Kirkman from AMC. While a single show might be valuable, having a creator on board where all their new shows will be exclusive to one platform is especially lucrative. Netflix currently has 104 million subscribers in over 190 countries, so the appetite for high-quality, original content remains huge.

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Netflix signs Grey's Anatomy creator Shonda Rhimes to multi-year deal - The Verge

Anatomy Lab Live comes to Manchester with dinner, drinks – and a live post-mortem – Manchester Evening News

An interactive autopsy show which dissects a semi-synthetic human cadaver is coming to Manchester.

Anatomy Lab Live is a touring hands-on post-mortem suite, which serves a sumptuous two-course dinner to guests before the gory procedure begins.

After its UK tour last year the show returns bigger and better in 2018, with a string of dates including a show in the Village Hotel Ashton on January 27.

Those attending will be given mortuary wear including protective surgical hats, masks and aprons as well as scalpels, scissors, forceps and bone saws.

A team of human anatomists, medics and physiologists will accompany host and science teacher Samuel Piri as they carry out a real post-mortem.

The cadaver - known as VIVIT - is the next best thing to a real human cadaver and houses real internal organs from pigs, chosen for their anatomical similarity to humans.

Visitors will also be given a set of case notes to look over before then starting procedures for themselves, which could include a real head and brain sample, the pulmonary system, the gastrointestinal tract, or the heart and greater blood vessels.

There will also be Q&A time as the floor opens for questions from the audience.

According to organisers, this event is a high-level interactive experience for level 4 and above, and the content is aimed at those studying towards graduate professions. However, the wider public is welcome to attend and the event will allocate some anatomy pods especially for those with a general interest.

Tickets for the dinner and dissection are 79 general admission, with discounts available for students. Book online via eventbrite.co.uk .

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Anatomy Lab Live comes to Manchester with dinner, drinks - and a live post-mortem - Manchester Evening News

What is Immunology?

Immunology is the branch of biomedical science that deals with the response of an organism to antigenic challenge and its recognition of what is self and what is not. It deals with the defence mechanisms including all physical, chemical and biological properties of the organism that help it to combat its susceptibility to foreign organisms, material, etc.

The immune system is divided into those which are static, or innate to the organism, and those which are responsive, or adaptive to a potential pathogen or foreign substance.

The innate system of immunity is on evolutionary terms, the older system that forms the first line of defence. It is non-specific and the resistance is static (it does not improve with repeated exposure and there is no memory on subsequent exposures). This includes physical defences such as skin & epithelial surfaces, cilia, commensual flora, acidic gastric contents, fever etc. Others are biochemical defences such as soluble - lysosyme, acute phase reactants and complement, fibronectin, interferons. Cellular components include natural killer cells, RES phagocytes.

The adaptive system is the second line of defence and is activated once the innate system has been overwhelmed. It is specific to the infective agent and can store the information about the invader as memory to show an enhanced response to subsequent challenge.

Immunology deals with physiological functioning of the immune system in states of both health and disease as well as malfunctions of the immune system in immunological disorders like allergies, hypersensitivities, immune deficiency, transplant rejection and autoimmune disorders.

Immunology deals with physical, chemical and physiological characteristics of the components of the immune system in vitro, in situ, and in vivo. Immunology has a vast array of uses in several disciplines of science and medical science.

The word immunity was derived from the Lain word immunis meaning exempt.

The key primary lymphoid organs of the immune system are thymus andbone marrow, and secondary lymphatic tissues such as spleen, tonsils, lymph vessels,lymph nodes, adenoids, and skin.

In good health thymus, spleen, portions of bone marrow, lymph nodes and secondary lymphatic tissues can be surgically removed without much harm to humans.

The actual components of the immune system are cellular in nature and not associated with any specific organ. They are widely present in circulation throughout the body.

Reviewed by April Cashin-Garbutt, BA Hons (Cantab)

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What is Immunology?

Biomedical Conference Begins In Burlington – WAMC

A biomedical conference that is held once a decade in Vermont began this afternoon in Burlington.

The Northeast Regional IDeA Conference is bringing more than 300 biomedical researchers to Vermonts largest city to review research, gain collaborative opportunities and meet with National Institutes of Health officials.

The Institutional Development Awards from the NIH target smaller rural states, according to Vermont Genetics Network and UVM Biology professor Judith Van Houten, a conference co-coordinator. This is a coming together of all the funded faculty and students in what NIH calls the Northeast IDeA region. And that means Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, Rhode Island and Delaware. Not every state is an IDeA state. There are some themes that come out of this. You can always find neuroscience or immunology, bioinformatics but there isnt one grand theme.

While there are sessions on scientific research in areas such as genetics, cancer, and infectious diseases, meetings also touch on careers, writing, patents and grant applications. Van Houten says one of the aims of IDeA is to help scientists in the region become more competitive. Theres a big emphasis on careers and mentoring and getting people into the funding stream. So well have a grant specialist from NIH working with us and well have staff from NIH. So a lot of what we do is mentoring.

The NIH Northeast Regional conference brings together researchers from designated Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence from Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Delaware and Vermont. Conference co-coordinator Dr. Ralph Budd, the director of the Vermont Center for Immunology and Infectious Diseases, says the agenda reflects the biomedical research occurring in each state. Each of those may have a theme very different from the one we have here in infectious disease and immunology. Theres one with cancer, ones in cardiovascular disease and so on. And so thats why youre seeing a broad array of biomedical research because each of those centers has its own theme. And its a chance to do many things. Its a chance to obviously exchange scientific ideas and to form collaborations. Truth be known you know when you get someone from immunology talking with someone from infectious disease talking with someone from cancer biology over a cup of coffee theyre going to find common ground. And thats what this is about.

The regional conference rotates biennially in each state. During the off years, national meetings are held in Washington, D.C.

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Biomedical Conference Begins In Burlington - WAMC

Will The Solar Eclipse Cause Strange Changes In Animal, Human Behavior? – International Business Times

A Chow pup ran frightened under a shed and could not be coaxed out, reads an observation recordedduring a total solar eclipse in 1932. The observation is one of hundreds collected during the eclipse that year on the behavior of animals during the rare event. When day suddenly turns to night during the total solar eclipse on Aug. 21, most animalsaside from humans wont have any idea what is transpiring. Some animals, primarily those that reside outside, will notice the change but pets that live indoors likely wont even notice the eclipse.

Once the moon moves between the sun and Earth and briefly blocks the suns light from reaching anything in the path of totality those animals and people in the path will experience night-like conditions. Animals that live outdoors might exhibit slightly different behavior than usual during the eclipse, but its hard to know what to expect.

I think its gonna vary between I would say animal to animal, organism to organism, with the larger animals or larger organisms, except for humans, not really being that affected, Sergio Arispe, an animal biologist and assistant professor at the Oregon State University extension service in eastern Oregon, told International Business Times.

Large grazing animals like cows will likely act normally during the eclipse. Photo: Nicolas Vigier/Flickr

The eclipse will cross14 states in the continental United States, first in Oregon cutting right across the country to South Carolina before it heads out into the Atlantic. The states it will be crossing are full of open space and farmland where livestock and wild animals are staples, but Arispe doesnt think the eclipse will impact them much. When it comes to larger animals, cattle, horses, livestock, sheep, deer Some of these animals are dependent on the sun from a reproductive standpoint, Arispe said, But thats not gonna be detrimental or effected in two minutes. Its gonna be so acute, so miniscule in the life of that animal that its not gonna affect those processes.

But smaller animals might present some out of the ordinary behaviors. In 1932, the United States saw a total solar eclipse just like the one expected next week. But the 1932 eclipse covered parts of the Northeast like Maine, New Hampshire and Massachusetts. During that eclipse the public, game wardens and naturalists all recorded observations about animals and their surroundings and submitted them for a journal article, said Arispe. This journal articlewas published in 1935 entitled Observations on the Behavior of Animals during the Total Solar Eclipse of August 31, 1932, and it can still be accessed online.

The moon eclipses the sun shortly before sunset. Photo: NASA/Bill Ingalls Multiple observations recorded during the eclipse note cricket activity, several observers even said the cricket noises were all they could hear during the eclipse, according to thearticle. Other observers including some beekeepers who noted that as the darkness increased and totality came closer their bees returned to their hives in larger groups and more and more rapidly than usual as if preparing for night time.

Household dogs were reported to exhibit all sorts of different behavior, one person reported that the dog seemed quieter than usual while another observer said their dog acted as it does when its time to turn in at night. The behavior of the dogs was so variable that it doesnt point to one specific behavior. House cats didnt exhibit any odd behavior either, In general no very obvious reaction appears that seems directly attributable to the eclipse, says thearticle.

While the observations are interesting to read through, theyre not exactly any indication of how animals will act this time around, These were individual observations and definitely not science, said Arispe. But if they were observed once, theres a chance they could occur again. I would say these are a few observations but they were observed. So theres a chance they could happen again... Arispe explained, I wouldnt dismiss what has been reported in the past.

But overall theres no particular behavior Arispe is on the lookout for. Honestly, theres no expectation that theres gonna be any behavior that could be measured, Arispe said.

The behaviors of some animals are unpredictable, but there is one species sure to alter its behavior drastically during the eclipse, that species being humans. Its the people thats gonna be effected, this is gonna be unprecedented in the number of people who will be observing and recording, he told IBT.

Safety glasses or a filter should be used to view the solar eclipse directly. Photo: National Parks Service/Flickr

Millions of people are expected to flock to the states where the eclipse will be visible in its totality, some are even spending hundreds or thousands of dollar on flights. That alone is an out-of-the-ordinary behavior. But some of those people also have certain activities planned for during the event. A group of people who believe in a connection between Christianity and marijuana are planning to burn oil in the countrys largest Roman Catholic Church in Washington, D.C., during the eclipse, reported U.S News and World Report. The oil will have THC, or the compound responsible for the high marijuana offers, in it.

Other religious groups like one in South Carolina will hold day-long rituals to relieve themselves of burdens from the past and bless the future. Using the eclipse as a way to sort of cleanse oneself. And guides for eclipse meditation or cleansing have been popping up online in preparation.

Some states in the path of totality have issuedwarnings that smoking marijuana is still illegal during the eclipse. The Wyoming Association of Sheriffs and Chiefs of Police posted a press release online warning that Wyomings laws around marijuana would be strongly enforced during the eclipse. Meanwhile smoke shops in Oregon, where the drug is legal, are gearing up for a spike in marijuana sales, according to Oregon Public Broadcasting.

Some people are planning activities a bit more eccentric than smoking while viewing the eclipse. Last week, an ad on Craigslist appeared in the Activity Partners section of the site posted by a self-identifying 40-year-old man. He was seeking a woman to conceive with during the eclipse but the ad has since been removed from the site.

All of these acts are far more out of the ordinary than a dog barking or hiding, crickets chirping or bees rushing to their hives. When it comes to animal behavior during the eclipse, humans are actually most likely to to go the extra mile, sometimes literally, and act different than usual.

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Will The Solar Eclipse Cause Strange Changes In Animal, Human Behavior? - International Business Times

Studying the Obvious – TheHorse.com

Photo: Photos.com

Q. Im fascinated to see studies (such as Horses Ask Humans for Help With Unsolvable Tasks,) on horses possibly trying to communicate with humansits rather like scientists trying to tell us the world is flat when we can see perfectly well it isnt!

Most of the problem equine behaviors result from blinkered or ignorant humans not understanding what horses are desperately trying to tell them. For instance, Im bucking because the saddle pinches, Im kicking because you havent noticed Im saying youre hurting me, Im chewing my stable because Im sick to death of being cooped up, etc. My very hairy Minis push their heads at me only when they need their eyes cleaned; they and my horse vocally communicate using the same intonations as humans do; they complain if I dont feed them at the usual time. And my horse understands pointing directions to a fair extent.

My last horse got put in a different stable for a day, where the water basin was filled with rotting months-old crud. When I found him and opened the door, he grabbed the shoulder of my jacket and dragged me over to the corner in front of the basin to show me and indicate he was disgusted, very annoyed, and desperately thirsty. He drank nearly two buckets of fresh water when I offered it. How can any sensible person suggest that horses might be trying to tell us things?

All creatures who evolved to live in social groups must have the ability to communicate and often, if not always, between species. Prey animals know when predators are not interested in hunting them, they learn other species predatory calls, and many species will adopt and raise different species young and manage to communicate well enough. The more I see of this kind of scientific research, the less respect I have for the researchers, who must not be very observant or animal-orientated to doubt the obvious.

Gill Evans, via e-mail

A. I certainly can relate to your exasperation with researchers investigating a question that, to you, seems so obviously already known to anyone paying attention. Over my long career in horse research, I very often have been similarly frustrated when asked, wheres the scientific evidence? on topics in horse management and behavior that seemed to be obvious facts requiring no peer-reviewed scientific research to back them up. And there have been times it led to research that demonstrated the exact opposite of what I thought was the no-brainer interpretation.

The way scientific knowledge advances is to actually start with what seems like the most basic questions, formulate and then test hypotheses such as this, and report the results for further scientific scrutiny and refinement. In the case of interpreting animal behavior in terms of communication and the underlying cognitive processes, I can guarantee you that, as you say, not everyone sees the same thing, and the interpretations that seem just as obvious to individual observers vary widely. And without scientific knowledge, there is no way to know which interpretation among the many is correct. These different interpretations in scientific terms are essentially untested conflicting hypotheses.

I personally have come to realize that it is becoming more and more important to better understand equine cognition, particularly as it relates to horse-horse and horse-human behavioral interactions. Its not just trivial information, since our interpretation of a horses behavior and complexity of cognition and motivation often has welfare/safety implications both for the animal and for us. So these basic studies on equine cognition and communication, as silly as they may seem to you, really do need to be done. And the results need to be carefully scrutinized and scientifically refined for decades to come. I am looking forward to reading the full scientific report from the study you mentioned when it comes out. No doubt it will generate a lot of discussion among behavioral scientists, with most likely disagreement concerning the adequacy of the methods, the interpretation of results, and the validity of the conclusion. This is especially the case for a very new science such as this. That discussion/disagreement will hopefully stimulate further research.

Sue M. McDonnell, PhD, is a certified applied animal behaviorist and the founding head of the equine behavior program at the University of Pennsylvania's School of Veterinary Medicine. She is also the author of numerous books and articles about horse behavior and management.

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Studying the Obvious - TheHorse.com