Neuroscience: New nerves for old : Nature : Nature Research – Nature.com

Greg Iger/Keck Medicine of USC

Kristopher Boesen, who broke his neck in a car accident, regained the ability to move his arms and hands after his spinal cord was injected with stem cells.

Two years after having a stroke at 31, Sonia Olea Coontz remained partially paralysed on her right side. She could barely move her arm, had slurred speech and needed a wheelchair to get around. In 2013, Coontz enrolled in a small clinical trial. The day after a doctor injected stem cells around the site of her stroke, she was able to lift her arm up over her head and speak clearly. Now she no longer uses a wheelchair and, at 36, is pregnant with her first child.

Coontz is one of stem-cell therapy's miracle patients, says Gary Steinberg, chair of neurosurgery at Stanford School of Medicine in California, and Coontz's doctor. Conventional wisdom said that her response was impossible: the neural circuits damaged by the stroke were dead. Most neuroscientists believed that the window for functional recovery extends to only six months after the injury.

Stem-cell therapies have shown great promise in the repair of brain and spinal injuries in animals. But animal models often behave differently from humans nervous-system injuries in rats, for example, heal more readily than they do in people. Clinical trial results have been mixed. Interesting signals from small trials have faded away in larger ones. There are plenty of unknowns: which stem cells are the right ones to use, what the cells are doing when they work and how soon after an injury they can be used.

The field is still young. Stem cells are poorly understood, and so is what happens after a spinal-cord injury or stroke. Yet, there are success stories, such as Coontz's, which seem to show that therapy using the right sort of stem cell can lead to functional improvements when tried in the right patients and at the right time following an injury. Researchers are fired up to determine whether stem-cell therapies can help people who are paralysed to regain some speech and motor control and if so, what exactly is going on.

Neurologists seeking functional restoration are up against the limited ability of the human central nervous system to heal. The biology of the brain and spinal cord seems to work against neuroregeneration, possibly because overgrowth of nerves could lead to faulty connections in the finely patterned architecture of the brain and spine, says Mark Tuszynski, a neurologist at the University of California, San Diego. Local chemical signals in the central nervous system tamp down growth. Over time, scarring develops, which prevents the injury from spreading, but also keeps cells from entering the site.

It's really hard to fix the biology, says Charles Yu Liu, a neurosurgeon and director of the University of Southern California Neurorestoration Center in Los Angeles. Stem cells seem to promise a workaround.

So far, neural regeneration cell therapy has had only anecdotal success, leaving investors and patients disappointed. In people with Parkinson's disease, for example, neurosurgeons replaced dead and dying dopamine-producing neurons with fetal neurons. Although initial results were promising, in larger studies, patients reported involuntary movements. Another effort tried treating people who'd had a stroke with cells derived from tumours; the results were mixed, and researchers were uneasy about the cells' cancerous source.

In recent years, researchers have had success with stem cells coaxed to develop into particular cell types, such as neural support cells. Tuszynski has showed how well stem cells can work at least, in animal models1. His group implanted neural stem cells derived from human fetal tissue into rats with severe spinal-cord injuries. Seven weeks later, the cells had bridged the gap where the spinal cord had been cut and the animals were able to walk again. The cells used in the study were manufactured by Neuralstem of Rockville, Maryland. The group has shown that other kinds of stem cell, including those derived from adult tissue, also work. Tuszynski has seen similar results in a rat spinal-cord-injury model, using neural stem cells made from the tissues of a healthy 86-year-old volunteer2.

Mark Tuszynski/Ken Kadoya/Ref. 3

Regeneration of axons (red) beyond implanted neural progenitor cells (green) in a rat with a spinal injury.

But animal studies are also making it clear that simply regrowing the connective wiring of the nervous system to bridge damaged areas is not enough, says Zhigang He, who studies neural repair at the Harvard Stem Cell Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts. No matter what the animal model is, he says, the axons don't always grow into the right places. It's not enough to have a nerve, that nerve must become part of a functional circuit.

There is growing evidence that besides becoming replacement nerves, stem cells perform other functions they also seem to generate a supportive milieu that may encourage the natural recovery process or prevent further damage after an injury. Many types of neural stem cell secrete a mix of molecules that unlock suppressed growth pathways in nerves. Earlier this year, Tuszynski reported that any sort of spinal-cord stem cell, whether derived from adult tissues or embryos, from humans, rats or mice, could trigger native neural regeneration in rats3. But his success in rats has not yet translated into clinical trials. More work is needed, Tuszynski says, to determine which type of cell will work best for which particular injury.

For people who have had a stroke or spinal-cord injury, physical therapy is currently the best hope for recovery in the weeks and months after the injury. The brain is plastic and can co-opt other circuits and pathways to compensate for damage and to restore function. Once the inflammation ebbs and the brain adjusts, people can start to regain function. But the window of opportunity is short. Most people don't make functional gains after six months.

That timeline is why the remarkable recovery enjoyed by Coontz and other patients with chronic stroke in the same clinical trial is so surprising, says Steinberg. This changes our whole notion of recovery, he says. There were 18 people in the trial Coontz took part in, and all were treated using stem cells manufactured by SanBio of Mountain View, California. The company's cells are bone-marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells. The cells are treated with a DNA fragment that is transiently expressed in them, and causes changes in their protein-expression patterns. In animal studies, these cells promote the migration and growth of native neural stem cells, among other effects.

The trial, which was designed to look at safety as well as efficacy, recruited patients after an ischaemic stroke. During this kind of stroke, a clot cuts off the blood supply to part of the brain, causing significant damage. Patients in the trial had all had ischaemic strokes deep in the brain 736 months earlier past the 6-month window for significant recovery. Each patient was injected with either 2.5 million, 5 million or 10 million of SanBio's cells4. Steinberg has followed participants for 24 months; an interim study at 12 months reported that most patients showed functional improvements. Some, like Coontz, achieved almost complete recovery.

What is not clear, however, is what the stem-cell injections do in the brain. In animal studies, the SanBio cells do not turn into neurons, but seem to send supporting signals to native cells in the brain. Indeed, preclinical research shows that the cells do not integrate into the brain most die after 12 months. Instead, the cells seem to secrete growth factors that encourage the formation of new neurons and blood vessels, and foster connections called synapses between neurons. And in rats, the nerve-cell connections that extended from one side of the brain to the other, as well as into the spinal cord, lasted, even though the injected cells did not4.

But these mechanisms are not sufficient to explain Coontz's overnight restoration of function, says Steinberg. He is entertaining several hypotheses, including that the needle used to deliver the cells may have had some effect. One week after treatment, we saw abnormalities in the premotor cortex that went away after one month, he says. The size of these microlesions was strongly correlated with recovery at 12 months. A similar effect can happen when electrodes are implanted in the brains of people with Parkinson's, although this deep-brain stimulation quietens tremors for only a short time. The people who'd had a stroke had a lasting recovery, suggesting that both the needle and the stem cells may have played a part.

The SanBio trial was small, and did not have a placebo control; the company is now recruiting for a larger phase II trial. Of the 156 participants that will be recruited, two-thirds will have cells injected the others will have a sham surgery. Even the trial surgeons, including Steinberg, will not know who is getting which treatment. The main outcome measure will be whether patients' motor-skill scores improve on a test called the Fugl-Meyer Motor scale six months after treatment. Participants will be monitored for at least 12 months, and will also be evaluated with tests that look for changes in gait and dexterity. Meanwhile, Steinberg plans to study microlesions in animal models of stroke to determine whether they do have a role in recovery.

An ongoing clinical trial evaluating escalating doses of neural stem cells in patients with acute spinal-cord injuries is also looking promising. Asterias Biotherapeutics of Fremont, California, coaxes the cells to develop into progenitors of oligodendrocytes, a type of support cell that's found in the brain and spinal cord and that creates a protective insulation for neuronal axons.

The trial tests the safety and efficacy of administering these cells to people with recent cervical, or neck-level, spinal-cord injury. Interim results for patients who had received the two lower doses were presented at the International Spinal Cord Society meeting in September. After 90 days, 4 patients who received 10 million cells showed improved motor function; a fifth patient had not reached the 90-day mark yet. At one year, the three patients receiving a lower dose of two million cells showed measurable improvement in motor skills.

These cells were initially developed by Geron, a biotechnology company that has since moved away from regenerative medicine. Before spinning out Asterias in 2013, Geron had run a safety trial of the cells in people with a chronic lower-back injury. No issues were identified, and the US Food and Drug Administration agreed to let the company test the cells in patients who'd been recently injured. Asterias focused the current trial on patients with cervical injuries because these are closer to the brain, so new nerve cells have a shorter distance to grow to gain functional improvements. People with severe cervical spine injuries are typically paralysed below the level of the damage. The company's hope is to restore arm and hand function for people with such injuries, potentially making a tremendous difference to a person's independence and quality of life.

Asterias seems to have realized this hope in at least one patient who received one of the higher doses. Kristopher Boesen, who is 21, has had a dramatic recovery. In March, Boesen's car fishtailed in a rainstorm; he hit a telephone pole and broke his neck. About a month later, Boesen was still paralysed below the injury, and his neurological improvements seemed to have plateaued. His doctors at a trauma centre in Bakersfield, California, were in touch with Liu, who is an investigator in the Asterias trial. As soon as he was stable, Boesen travelled to Los Angeles to join the trial.

Liu injected Boesen's spinal cord with Asterias's cells in April. Two days later, Boesen started to move his hands, and in the summer, he regained the ability to move the toes on one foot.

Asterias Biotherapeutics

A surgeon prepares to inject stem cells to treat a spinal injury as part of Asterias's clinical trial.

Liu is excited about Boesen's response. He was looking at being quadriplegic, and now he's able to write, lift some weights with his hands, and use his phone, says Liu. For somebody to improve like this is highly unusual I want to be jumping out of my shoes. But Liu cautions that this is still a small trial, and that Boesen's response is just one anecdotal report. Until the results are borne out in a large, placebo-controlled clinical trial, Liu will remain earthbound.

The trial is currently recruiting between 5 and 8 patients for another cohort that will receive a doubled dose of 20 million cells. As the trial goes on, Asterias hopes to find clues about the underlying mechanism. We're looking at changes in the anatomy of the injury, says the company's chief scientific officer, Jane Lebkowski. She says that there is some evidence that axons have traversed the injury site in patients who have recovered function. Preclinical work suggests that the cells might be sending growth-encouraging chemical signals to the native tissue. And, as support cells, the astrocytes may also be preventing more neurons from dying in the aftermath of the acute spinal injury.

Not all clinical trials have performed so well. The SanBio and Asterias results are positive signals in a sea of negative or mixed trials. For example, StemCells of Newark, California, terminated its phase II trial of stem cells for the treatment of spinal-cord injury in May, and shortly afterwards announced that it will restructure its business. The company declined to comment for this article.

Physicians such as Liu and Steinberg temper their public enthusiasm about stem-cell therapies, so as not to give false hope to desperate patients. People with paralysing injuries or those who have a neurodegenerative disease are easy marks for unscrupulous stem-cell clinics, whose therapies are not only unproven, but also come with risks.

Patients say, 'Go ahead, doc, you can't make me any worse,' says Keith Tansey, a neurologist and researcher at the Methodist Rehabilitation Center in Jackson, Mississippi, and president-elect of the American Spinal Injury Association. Unfortunately, that is not the case. Cell therapies given at a clinic, outside the context of a clinical trial, can lead to chronic pain, take away what little function a patient has left and render a patient ineligible for future studies, says Tansey. He has seen the consequences in his clinical practice. I treated a kid who had two different tumours in his spinal cord from two different individuals' cells, he says.

Many unanswered questions remain about whether stem cells can heal the central nervous system in people, and how they might do it. Researchers also don't know what cells are the best to use. Is it enough for them to grow into supportive cells that send friendly growth signals, or is it better that they grow into replacement neurons? The answer is likely to differ depending on the site and nature of the disease or injury. If the stem cells are producing supportive factors that encourage growth and repair, it might be possible, says He, to discern what these are and give them directly to patients. But biologists are not yet close to deciphering the recipe for such a cocktail.

Every time we get an experiment done we realize it's more complex than we thought it would be.

Tansey agrees that there are many unknowns and these seem to be multiplying. Every time we get an experiment done we realize it's more complex than we thought it would be, he says. Tansey thinks that the best way to resolve such uncertainties is with carefully regulated clinical trials. Rat models will only tell us so much the human nervous system is much larger and is wired differently. If stem cells help patients such as Coontz and Boesen to regain their speech and give them greater independence without adverse effects, then it makes sense to continue, he says, even without knowing all the details of how they work.

Until these positive, but small, results are replicated in larger, controlled clinical trials, neurologists are containing their optimism. I'd like to hear of any clinical trial that has more than an anecdotal benefit, says Tansey. And Liu is anticipating the day when he won't need to control his elation. In a few years, perhaps there will be a genuine opportunity to jump for joy.

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Neuroscience: New nerves for old : Nature : Nature Research - Nature.com

AMSBIO publishes new catalogue that details cutting edge tools for neuroscience research – News-Medical.net

February 9, 2017 at 1:57 AM

AMSBIO has published a new 25-page Neuroscience catalogue that details its extensive range of specific tools and reagents to enable researchers stay at the forefront of their field.

Cellular models are key tools that open the door to numerous neuroscience applications including neurodegeneration, neurogensis and developmental diseases. With the discovery that neural stem cells exist in the adult brain many researchers are now seeking to use these cells in in vitro studies. To restore normal function in numerous disorders, including Parkinson's Disease and Alzheimers Disease, neural stem cell transplantation is an important emerging strategy. Furthermore, the recent advent of iPSC and genome editing technology including CRISPR has transformed the scope of neuroscience research allowing the generation of isogenic models and the ability to obtain large numbers of neural stem cells, which had been traditionally difficult to obtain. As many researchers acknowledge the importance of studying the behaviour of neurons, glial cells and neural stem cells with a physiologically relevant context the importance of 3D cell culture has grown.

Beautifully illustrated the new catalogue provides detailed information on the latest neural stem cells, cell culture media / supplements, matrices, scaffolds, cryopreservation media and neural transfection products available from AMSBIO.

AMSBIO is a leading transatlantic based source for neural cells, media and supplements including iPSC-derived cells. The company's large range of substrates and matrices including natural extracellular matrices and artificial scaffolds give you numerous options to develop your in vitro system. AMSBIO also offer proteins, specialised antibodies, ELISA kits, cryopreservation media and an extensive biorepository with neural tissue from numerous species. AMSBIO has an active program of cooperation with leading labs around the world enabling it to continually add new resources to its cutting edge neuroscience range.

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Posted in: Device / Technology News | Medical Science News | Medical Research News

Tags: 3D Cell Culture, Antibodies, Brain, Cell, Cell Culture, CRISPR, in vitro, Neurodegeneration, Neuroscience, Parkinson's Disease, Stem Cell

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Best Treatment For Warts? Candida Antigen Immunology Injection Works Better And Faster Than Freezing – Medical Daily

Warts are a common butannoying health problem affliciting countless peopleworldwide. Cryotherapy traditionally has been regarded as the most effect wart removal treatment, but new research from the Mashhad University of Medical Sciences in Iransuggests that aninjection of candida antigen, a type of immunotherapy,may be able to get rid of warts faster and keep them away.

The study, now published online in International Journal of Dermatology,found that 76.7 percent of patients with either a verruca vulgaris wart (found anywhere on the body) or a plantar wart (found on the bottom of feet) were cured with immunotherapy, compared to only 56.7 percent of wart patients treated with cryotherapy. In addition, patients who recieved immunotherapy were cured with fewer sessions than those whose warts were frozen off.

Read: 'Tree Man' Finally Gets Surgery To Remove Warts Caused By Rare Genetic Disease Epidermodysplasia Verruciformis

"Intralesional immunotherapy is an effective treatment of warts," the authors wrote, according to a post on Medical Xpress. "This method has a better therapeutic response, needs fewer sessions, and is capable of treating distant warts."

Plantar warts, or warts found on the bottoms of feet, are common, especially among children. Photo Courtesy of Pixabay

For the study, 60 patients with either a body or footwart were divided into two groups. The first group recieved an immunotherapy treatment consistingof an injection of candida antigen into their warts every three weeks until complete improvement or a maximum of three sessions. The second group recieved cryotherapy consisting of liquid nitrogen for a maximum of 10 weeks of until the wart had completely cleared.

Warts occur when your skin comes in contact with one of the many viruses classifed as human papillomavirus. In most cases, warts are harmless causing little more than slight discomfort and embarrassment. According to WebMD, they are very contagious, and can spread not only from person to person but also from one part of the body to another.

While some warts can go away on their own, for the most part they need to be treated. Cryotherapy is the standard treatment for warts and involves freezing a wart using a very cold substance, usually liquid nitrogen. The treatment is often painful and may need several tries before the wart is completely removed. This treatment also comes with the risk of possible scarring.

Candida antigen injections are a relatively new treatment option for wart removal, and this is not the first time its success in wart thereapy has been documented. However, as reported by Dermotology News, this treatment also comes with its own set of possible side effects and may cause discomfort, redness, and swelling.

Source: Khozeimeh F, Jabbari F, Mahboubi Oskouei Y, et al. Intralesional immunotherapy compared to cryotherapy in the treatment of warts. International Journal of Dermatology. 2017

See Also:

Warts More Likely Contracted From Home, Not Public Hotspots

After HPV Vaccinations Rates of Genital Warts Decline Significantly in Women, but Not Men

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Best Treatment For Warts? Candida Antigen Immunology Injection Works Better And Faster Than Freezing - Medical Daily

Google’s DeepMind: What can these battling AIs tell us about human behavior? – ZDNet

In this game two agents, a red and a blue dot, have to gather green-dot apples.

Image: Google DeepMind/YouTube

Scientists at Google-owned DeepMind have found its AIs behave almost the way humans do when faced with scarce resources.

In a new study, DeepMind scientists plugged its AI agents, trained with deep reinforcement learning, into two multi-agent 2D games to model how conflict or cooperation emerges between selfish participants in a theoretical economy.

As DeepMind explains, they trained their AI agents to behave the way some economists model human decision making. That is, selfish and always rational.

"The research may enable us to better understand and control the behaviour of complex multi-agent systems such as the economy, traffic, and environmental challenges," DeepMind's researchers explain in a blog.

In one game two agents, a red and a blue dot, are faced with the task of gathering apples represented by green dots. The agents can simply collect apples together, suggesting cooperation, or they can 'tag' the other to prevent them collecting apples.

After several thousand rounds, they found that when there's an abundance of apples the agents collect as many as possible and leave each other alone. However, when DeepMind restricted the supply, the agents became more aggressive, figuring out that it may be optimal to block their rival to boost their chances of taking what's available.

"The Gathering game predicts that conflict may emerge from competition for scarce resources, but is less likely to emerge when resources are plentiful," they write in a new paper.

"These results show that agents learn aggressive policies in environments that combine a scarcity of resources with the possibility of costly action. Less aggressive policies emerge from learning in relatively abundant environments with less possibility for costly action," they note.

DeepMind also found that smarter agents with a larger network, enabling them to devise more complex strategies, tried to block their fellow gatherer more frequently, regardless of how much scarcity was introduced.

However, a second game called Wolfpack produced different behaviors when they were equipped to devise more complex strategies.

In this game, two wolves represented by red dots work together to capture the blue dot prey and face the risk of losing the carcass to scavengers.

If the wolves cooperate, they can get a higher reward since two wolves are better at protecting the catch than one. In this case, DeepMind found that a greater capacity to implement complex strategies resulted in more cooperation.

DeepMind found that in Wolfpack, cooperation behavior is more complex and requires a larger network size because agents need to coordinate hunting to collect team rewards.

Image: Google DeepMind/YouTube

They also found the wolves developed two different strategies for killing the prey and protecting the carcass.

"On the one hand, the wolves could cooperate by first finding one another and then moving together to hunt the prey, while on the other hand, a wolf could first find the prey and then wait for the other wolf to arrive before capturing it," they note in the paper.

DeepMind offers this explanation for why network size made the agents more competitive in the gathering game, yet more cooperative in the hunting game.

"In Gathering, defection behavior is more complex and requires a larger network size to learn than cooperative behavior. This is the case because defection requires the difficult task of targeting the opposing agent with the beam whereas peacefully collecting apples is almost independent of the opposing agent's behavior," they write.

"In Wolfpack, cooperation behavior is more complex and requires a larger network size because the agents need to coordinate their hunting behaviors to collect the team reward, whereas the lone-wolf behavior does not require coordination with the other agent and hence requires less network capacity," they write.

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Five books about human behavior that will change the way you see … – Quartz

Most of us read the wrong things. As Haruki Murakami put it, reading what everyone else reads means youre probably going to think what everyone else thinks. All those books from high-school? Everyone else has read them too. The best-sellers? Same.

Thats not to say these books arent valuable. They are. Theyre just not going to help you get unique insights, see problems in a different way than others, or even help you solve more problems. They will, however, make you sound like youre smart because you can talk about the things everyone else is talking about. That said, there is the old adage: When you do what everyone else is doing, you shouldnt be surprised to get the same results everyone else gets.

While thinking the thoughts that other people have is enough to get a seat at the table, its not enough to win the game.

To win you need to see things that other people cant see. You need to connect things that other people cant connect.

Reading can help you develop insights, connections, and understanding that baffles others. To do this, you cant, however, follow in the same footsteps as everyone else because that leads you down the same path.

With that in mind, here are five books that youve probably never heard of (and one you have) that will change your life and enable you to see the world in a new light.

La Rochefoucaulds critical and pithy analysis of human behavior wont soon be forgotten. A list of people influenced by his maxims include Nietzsche, Voltaire, Proust, de Gaulle, and Conan Doyle. The readers best policy, Rochefoucauld suggests, is to assume that none of these maxims is directed at him, and that he is the sole exception. . After that, I guarantee that he will be the first to subscribe to them.

Ive never read this book in a cover-to-cover sense but Ive read each of the laws. More than that, Ive broken each of the laws. Ill give you an example. The first law is Never outshine the master. Once, I worked directly for a CEO. I worked as hard as I ever have to show off my talents and skills and at every turn it backfired over and over again. The lessonmake your masters appear more brilliant than they are and you will attain the heights of power. I wish I read this book earlier in my career, it certainly would have been helpful.

This book sat on my shelf for a year before I picked it up recently. This is the biography of Cyrus the Great, also known as Cyrus the Elder, who made the oldest known declaration of human rights. The book is full of leadership lessons. Heres an example.

Brevity is the soul of command. Too much talking suggests desperation on the part of the leader. Speak shortly, decisively, and to the pointand couch your desires in such natural logic that no one can raise objections. Then move on.

This no-nonsense collection of 20 letters from a self-made man to his son are nothing short of brilliant as far as Im concerned. This is a great example of timeless wisdom. The broad theme is how to raise your children in a world where they have plentybut the lessons apply to parents and non-parents alike. Check out a sample.

An autobiography of Nobel laureate Herbert A. Simon, a remarkable polymath who more people should know about. In an age of increasing specializing, hes a rare generalistapplying what he learned as a scientist to other aspects of his life. Crossing disciplines, he was at the intersection of information sciences. He won the Nobel for his theory of bounded rationality, and is perhaps best known for his insightful quote, A wealth of information creates a poverty of attention.

And heres one more just for good luck, even if youve probably heard of it:

OK, this is a bonus pick as I figured many of you might have read this already. However, the translation matters. Get this one. The best way to sum up this book is: A simple and powerful guide to life. This book was never intended for publicationit was for himself. How many people write a book of epigrams to themselves during a war? Get it. Read it. Live it.

This post originally appeared on Medium.

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Five books about human behavior that will change the way you see ... - Quartz

The Skeptical Consumer – How Behavioral Economics Can Influence the Adoption of Self-Driving Cars – Fox Business

As part of their series on mobility, Deloitte explored how human behavior can cause delays in the adoption of new technology in the article Framing the future of mobility: Using behavioral economics to accelerate consumer adoption. Deloitte has predicted a shift in the automotive industry from personally owned, driver-driven cars to shared and self-driving vehicles. Despite the number of advantages generated from such a transformation, it could be met with skepticism because of limitations in our own human cognition.

Deloitte argues that the speed with which this future vision arrives likely hinges...on how quickly consumer expectations and behavior shift. The same research that revealed these change-prohibitive biases shed light on ways to overcome them and encourage consumers to welcome the future of mobility.

If/when the automotive shift that Deloitte anticipates comes to fruition, its not just the auto industry that will be majorly affected, but insurance, financing, technology, and energy industries as well. This isnt simply a change in how people use transportation, but one affecting government regulations and producing major infrastructure changes.

As ridesharing and self-driving transportation options become more prevalent, consumers of all ages could potentially benefit. The previously immobile generations who can not yet drive or are now unable to would no longer find themselves stranded, and families wouldnt have to worry about transporting them. Other societal benefits could result, like a decrease in traffic congestion and an increase in vehicle efficiency; resulting in reduced emissions and improved air quality.

Most importantly, autonomous vehicles would likely eliminate the element of human error, helping reduce the 30,000 deaths that occur each year during traffic accidents. A safer and more productive commutean average of 46 minutes per daycould reduce stress and be more affordable; Deloitte analysis shows that the cost of traveling per mile might decrease as much as two-thirds.

The positive results of an autonomous driving world could likely be abundant, but Deloitte cautions that just because a new technology offers benefits on paper does not mean customers will ultimately embrace it.

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Studies in behavioral economics and social psychology have demonstrated that we as humans have a set of biases that affect the choices we make. Figure 1 in the article shows a list of these biases and their impact on how the future of mobility would be adoptedor, more specifically, why these biases could likely hinder the adoption of autonomous vehicles.

A loss aversion bias causes humans to overrate what we would lose compared to what we would gain from something new. This goes along with the endowment effect, where we overvalue things we already possess, and a status quo bias: a reluctance to change because we overvalue the current state.

These three biases together could cause individuals to feel like they are giving up more with their personally owned car than they would gain from a new autonomous driving state. To justify a change, the gain must overwhelm what is being giving up, so these biases make it even harder to achieve when you factor in the emotional attachment to a car. Trading a tangible good for a service also doesnt feel like a fair trade, so substituting personally owned vehicles for car/ridesharing may take longer than Deloittes initial time projections.

Three other types of biases related to risk would also predispose humans to resisting the change to a future mobility with autonomous driving. There is a risk miscalculation bias at play, which shows that humans are generally poor at assessing risk and assume the worst when faced with something new or unknown. In the instance of this new technology, there are no known effects as to how driverless vehicles will work, so it is perceived as more risky than it actually is.

The chart in figure 2 shows that the types of risk categorized as new, unknown, uncontrollable, involuntaryall of which would be associated with self-driving carsare viewed as the most risky. Regardless of the testing done by regulators or carmakers, the underlying technology of a self-driving car will likely remain mysterious to the average consumer. [T]he very nature of an autonomous vehicle makes it fundamentally uncontrollable (by the passenger, at least), which means customers are likely to see riding in them as particularly risky.

Likewise, an experience that can be controlled is an old risk, or is a known and observable technology that would automatically be viewed as less risky by the human brain. This is reflected in the optimism bias, where drivers overestimate their own ability and underestimate the probability of a bad event happening to them. Most drivers think they are better than the average driver and safer than they really are, which could reduce the likelihood that consumers will adopt self-driving cars due to safety reasons; they surely believe they are safer than trusting an unknown technology.

Another cognitive bias working against a future mobility system is the tendency to overemphasize a familiar or signature event that sticks out as the norm even though it may be an outlier. If a specific airline has a crash, people may easily associate that airline with crashing planes even though it may be a statistical anomaly and extremely rare. This tendency, known as the availability heuristic, might make a commuter focus on the few occasions when he was inconvenienced by ridesharing (by a long wait for his vehicle, for example) or a story of someone being harassed by a driver rather than the majority of instances when shared mobility was fast, convenient, and inexpensive.

After stepping into the psyche to see why we are predisposed to thinking in a certain way, Deloitte offers steps leaders can take to facilitate an accelerate adoption of autonomous driving technology. By manipulating the way a choice is presented or framed, we can overcome the aforementioned cognitive barriers.

Negative framing Using the loss aversion bias, we know losses are seen with more importance than gains. This method would involve making a consumer feel like they are missing out on something instead of gaining something. So a choice framed as costing time/money/lives instead of saving them would be more effective.

Aggregating When presenting data, expanding timeframes and aggregating costs over the longer period has more impact. Showing the amount of time or money that can be saved in a year seems a lot larger than the minutes or pennies from each day, so by changing the timeframe and forcing the consumer to look at the bigger picture can have a greater influence.

Creating social proofs Deloitte points out that we often look to the behavior of others for clues as to the correct course of action. As juvenile as it may sound, the saying everyone is doing it really does come into play here. By making it seem like our peers are participating, we are more likely to as well; especially in the case of a product that a consumer doesnt feel strongly about one way or another.

Using default options Pre-selected options give the illusion that something is the norm, so by making an option the standard selection, a consumer will be influenced to use it. Making an autonomous vehicle the default option could encourage consumers to use that technology like Uber does with the UberPool feature.

Packaging as an add-on According to Deloitte, research suggests that any new innovation is more readily accepted by consumers when it is packaged as an add-on to an existing, familiar item, rather than as a change to the central form and function of a product. By creating a familiar vehicle that has autonomous driving capabilities as an additional feature, it would mitigate the new-ness of such a technology and make it seem more acceptable.

How quickly the future of mobility takes hold in our society depends on a large number of factors; chief among them is the way it is marketed. By understanding the cognitive biases behind how consumers will perceive autonomous vehicles, decision-makers can alter their approach to make it more appealing and reduce the fear and hesitance that typically comes along with change.

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The Skeptical Consumer - How Behavioral Economics Can Influence the Adoption of Self-Driving Cars - Fox Business

Immunomedics in $2 bln licensing deal with Seattle Genetics – Reuters

Drug developer Immunomedics Inc said on Friday it entered into a development and licensing deal worth up to $2 billion for its experimental cancer drug with Seattle Genetics Inc.

Immunomedics' shares rose as much as 33 percent to a more than 3-year high of $5.72 in early morning trading.

Shares of Seattle Genetics, which forecast full-year revenue below estimates on Thursday, were down 4.2 percent at $60.17.

Immunomedics, which in October engaged Greenhill & Co to assist in licensing out the drug, IMMU-132, will receive $250 million in upfront cash payment.

The drug is currently in an early stage study in advanced breast cancer patients whose disease has progressed despite multiple therapies, and has won the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's "breakthrough status," granting it an expedited path toward approval.

The results of the trial are expected to serve as the basis for a marketing application under the FDA's accelerated approval regulations, Seattle Genetics said.

Seattle Genetics, which already has an approved cancer drug Adcetris, will take charge of the IMMU-132 application and the confirmatory late-stage trial, assuming the drug wins approval.

Seattle Genetics Chief Executive Clay Siegall on a call with analysts declined to provide a timeline for the drug's approval path, but said he would be able to disclose such detail in the "not so distant future", if and when the deal closes.

For Seattle Genetics, the deal comes more than a month after the FDA imposed a clinical hold on several early-stage studies testing the company's experimental cancer drug following the deaths of four people in the trials.

IMMU-132 is also being evaluated for a wide range of solid tumor cancers, including those of the lung and pancreas, and the deal allows for the development of the drug in these indications as well.

Even if the deal is not closed, Seattle will retain a 2.8 percent stake in Immunomedics it is buying as part of the agreement, with an option to raise it.

Seattle Genetics and Immunomedics focus on antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), which are designed to harness the targeting ability of monoclonal antibodies and reduce the toxic impact of traditional chemotherapy.

Immunomedics will retain the right to co-promote the drug in the United States and is eligible to receive double-digit tiered royalties on global net sales.

The company can solicit rival offers through Feb. 19, as part of the deal.

(Reporting by Divya Grover in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila)

LA PAZ Bolivia's government on Friday said a Danish tourist had tested positive for yellow fever, its first case in a decade, after he visited a jungle area in the far west of the landlocked Andean country.

ZURICH A European Medicines Agency drug safety panel recommended on Friday that Actelion's Uptravi drug may continue to be used in line with current prescription information amid a probe into five deaths in France among those using the pulmonary arterial hypertension medicine.

(Reuters Health) Kids who dont smoke but are around adults who use electronic cigarettes may start to think regular smoking is okay, a recent study suggests.

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American College of Medical Genetics And Genomics on gene editing: How cautious can we afford to be? – Genetic Literacy Project

There are a lot of voices getting into the mix of thedebate on human genome editing, taking on the unenviable task of playing God. One of these voices is the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics(ACMG.)

The first point that [the ACMG] raise is that the limitations of genome editing technologies will need to be overcome before there is clinical applicationThe second point is thatthe process used to correct a gene mustfix the original genetic mutation so that it no longercausesdisease[and] not causeany other genetic changes.

[T]hese are great places to start the conversation, but, it may simply not be possible to cross all of these Ts and dot all of these Is before therapies becomeuseful.

But, thedebate cannot occur too far into the future as this technology is progressing faster than we are responding to it. The ACMGstatethat genome editing in the human embryo is premature which implies that we are not ready for it to happen. However, gene editing technology is available now. Therefore, the conversations need to be happening now.

[The study can be found here.]

The GLP aggregated and excerpted this blog/article to reflect the diversity of news, opinion, and analysis. Read full, original post:The American College Of Medical Genetics And Genomics Weighs In On Gene Editing

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American College of Medical Genetics And Genomics on gene editing: How cautious can we afford to be? - Genetic Literacy Project

The tragic story of Soviet genetics shows the folly of political meddling in science – Cosmos

A few years ago, one of us (Ian) was lucky enough to be invited to visit the N.I. Vavilov Institute of Plant Industry in St Petersburg, Russia. Every plant breeder or geneticist knows of Nikolai Vavilov and his ceaseless energy in collecting important food crop varieties from all over the globe, and his application of genetics to plant improvement.

Vavilov championed the idea that there were Centres of Origin (or Diversity) for all plant species, and that the greatest variation was to be found in the place where the species evolved: wheat from the Middle East; coffee from Ethiopia; maize from Central America, and so on.

Hence the Centres of Origin (commonly known as the Vavilov Centres) are where you should start looking to find genotypes the set of genes responsible for a particular trait with disease resistance, stress tolerance or any other trait you are looking for. This notion applies to any species, which is why you can find more human genetic variation in some African countries than in the rest of the world combined.

By the late 1920s, as director of the Lenin All-Union Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Vavilov soon amassed the largest seed collection on the planet. He worked hard, he enjoyed himself, and drove other eager young scientists to work just as hard to make more food for the people of the Soviet Union.

However, things did not go well for Vavilov politically. How did this visionary geneticist, who aimed to find the means for food security, end up starving to death in a Soviet gulag in 1943?

Enter the villain, Trofim Lysenko, ironically a protg of Vavilovs. The notorious Vavilov-Lysenko antagonism became one of the saddest textbook examples of a futile effort to resolve scientific debate using a political approach.

Lysenkos name leapt from the pages of history and into the news when Australias Chief Scientist, Alan Finkel, mentioned him during a speech at a meeting of chief scientists in Canberra this week.

Finkel was harking back to Lysenko in response to news that US President Donald Trump had acted in January to censor scientific data regarding climate change from the Environmental Protection Agency. Lysenkos story reminds us of the dangers of political interference in science, said Finkel:

Lysenko believed that successive generations of crops could be improved by exposing them to the right environment, and so too could successive generations of Soviet citizens be improved by exposing them to the right ideology.

So while Western scientists embraced evolution and genetics, Russian scientists who thought the same were sent to the gulag. Western crops flourished. Russian crops failed.

The emerging ideology of Lysenkoism was effectively a jumble of pseudoscience, based predominantly on his rejection of Mendelian genetics and everything else that underpinned Vavilovs science. He was a product of his time and political situation in the young USSR.

In reality, Lysenko was what we might today call a crackpot. Among other things, he denied the existence of DNA and genes, he claimed that plants selected their mates, and argued that they could acquire characteristics during their lifetime and pass them on. He also espoused the theory that some plants choose to sacrifice themselves for the good of the remaining plants another notion that runs against the grain of evolutionary understanding.

Pravda formerly the official newspaper of the Soviet Communist Party celebrated him for finding a way to fertilise crops without applying anything to the field.

None of this could be backed up by solid evidence. His experiments were not repeatable, nor could his theories claim overwhelming consensus among other scientists. But Lysenko had the ear of the one man who counted most in the USSR: Joseph Stalin.

The Lysenko vs Vavilov/Mendel/Darwin argument came to a head in 1936 at the Conference of the Lenin Academy when Lysenko presented his -ism.

In the face of scientific opinion, and the overwhelming majority of his peers, Pravda declared Lysenko the winner of the argument. By 1939, after quite a few scientists had been imprisoned, shot or disappeared, including the director of the Lenin Institute, there was a vacancy to be filled. And the most powerful man in the country filled it with Trofim Lysenko. Lysenko was now Vavilovs boss.

Within a year, Vavilov was captured on one of his collection missions and interrogated for 11 months. He was accused of being a spy, having travelled to England and the United States, and been a regular correspondent with many geneticists outside the Soviet Union.

It did not help his cause that he came from a family of business people, whereas Lysenko was of peasant stock and a Soviet ideologue. Vavilov was sent to a gulag where, tragically, he died in 1943.

Meanwhile, his collection in Leningrad was in the middle of a 900-day siege. It only survived thanks to the sacrifice of his team who formed a militia to prevent the starving population (and rats) from eating the collection of more than 250,000 types of seeds, fruits and roots even growing the potatoes in their stock near the front to ensure the tubers did not die before losing their viability.

In 1948, the Lenin Academy announced that Lysenkoism should be taught as the only correct theory, and that continued until the mid-1960s.

Thankfully, in the post-Stalin era, Lysenko was slowly sidelined along with his theory. Today it is Vavilov who is considered a Soviet hero.

In 1958, the Academy of Science began awarding a medal in his honour. The leading Russian plant science institute is named in his honour, as is the Saratov State Vavilov Agrarian University. In addition, an asteroid, a crater on the Moon and two glaciers bear his name.

Since 1993, Bioversity International has awarded Vavilov Frankel (after Australian scientist Otto Frankel) fellowships to young scientists from developing countries to perform innovative research on plant genetic resources.

Meanwhile, research here in Australia, led by ARC Discovery Early Career Fellow Lee Hickey, we are continuing to find new genetic diversity for disease resistance in the Vavilov wheat collection.

In the post-Soviet era, students of genetics and agriculture in Russia are taught of the terrible outcomes of the applications of Lysenkoism to Soviet life and agricultural productivity.

Lysenkoism is a sad and terrible footnote in agricultural research, more important as a sadly misused -ism in the hands of powerful people who opt for ideology over fact. Its also a timely reminder of the dangers of political meddling in science.

Ian Godwin, Professor in Plant Molecular Genetics, The University of Queensland and Yuri Trusov, Plant molecular biologist, The University of Queensland

This article was originally published on The Conversation and republished here with permission. Read the original article.

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The tragic story of Soviet genetics shows the folly of political meddling in science - Cosmos

The Eighth Amendment – Irish Times

Sir, William Reville (February 8th) argues that personhood is more properly defined by philosophy than by science. I agree with Prof Reville that the appropriate discipline is philosophy.

However, philosophy has to be informed by science. Furthermore, there is no consensus among philosophers about how personhood should be defined.

If we accept Prof Revilles definition in terms of thinking, anticipating, planning, and so on, then the weight of evidence is that human embryos are not persons. The weight of scientific evidence from embryology and neuroscience is not diminished by philosophical terms as functionalism or essentialism.

Functionalism, as understood by Prof Reville, leads to the startling conclusion that the status of both an embryo and a newborn baby are the same in terms of personhood. This radical and highly questionable claim needs to be evaluated with reference to scientific evidence, especially from neuroscience and psychology.

I am not arguing that the non-personhood of the embryo (or of the early-stage foetus), should deprive it of protection in law.

My contention is that it has implications for the Eighth Amendment which imposes a rigid balance of rights between the unborn and the mother. That balance of rights should, I believe, be adjusted in favour of the mother in cases of fatal foetal abnormalities/life-limiting conditions, rape, and elevated risks to long-term health, consistent with recent findings against Ireland by the UN human rights committee and Amnesty International. Yours, etc,

Dr DON OLEARY,

Mallow,

Co Cork.

Sir, No Irish person, who believes in the sanctity of the life of the unborn child and who holds intentional abortion to be profoundly immoral, has any faith whatsoever in the so-called Citizens Assembly and its consideration of the Eighth Amendment.

The Citizens Assembly is a stitch-up. It is a pretended consultation process by the Irish Government, which has already ridden roughshod over the consciences of TDs and party members on the deliberate killing of the unborn.

No one who regards abortion as evil is fooled by this State-sponsored, deeply biased charade. Let no one be fooled or hoodwinked. The Government, with the support of the international abortion industry and its many wealthy and powerful lobby groups, is hellbent upon repealing the Eighth Amendment.

Faithful Catholics, their fellow pro-life Christians, and those of all faiths and none who hold wilful abortion in abhorrence, must be vigilant and alert to the end-game of the deception being plotted. Yours, etc,

Fr PATRICK

McCAFFERTY, PP

Corpus Christi Parish,

Belfast 12.

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The Eighth Amendment - Irish Times