Archive for November, 2010

10 Commonly Believed Myths about the Human Body

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“We have learned much about our bodies through old wives’ tales handed down from our moms and grandmothers and even in school, but not all of it is correct. Here we look at 10 misconceptions that might surprise you.

10. Sleepwalkers should never be woken
Sleepwalkers are often confused and/or disoriented when awakened but this is far better than the danger of injuries that are common from tripping over things, walking into dangerous areas and more. Thus, wake them gently and help them get back to bed.

9. You will catch a cold if you go out in wet, freezing weather
There is no evidence to support this misconception at all. Viruses are more common in the low humidity time of winter and of course, people are gathered indoors more, so they spread easily but the only thing that going out in the cold does is perhaps lower your resistance to an infection you already have, starting some temporary sneezing and coughing.

8. Fingernails and hair continue to grow after death
Neither continue to to grow. What does happen is that the cuticles and skin shrink after death, making it appear as if the nails and hair were lengthening.”

Read the rest at Environmental Graffiti (Thanks Christopher C)

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Implanted chip ‘allows blind people to detect objects’

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“A man with an inherited form of blindness has been able to identify letters and a clock face using a pioneering implant, researchers say. Miikka Terho, 46, from Finland, was fitted with an experimental chip behind his retina in Germany. Success was also reported in other patients. The chip allows a patient to detect objects with their eyes, unlike a rival approach that uses an external camera. Details of the work are in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Professor Eberhart Zrenner, of Germany’s University of Tuebingen, and colleagues at private company Retina Implant AG initially tested their sub-retinal chip on 11 people. Some noticed no improvement as their condition was too advanced to benefit from the implant, but a majority were able to pick out bright objects, Prof Zrenner told the BBC. However, it was only when the chip was placed further behind the retina, in the central macular area in three people, that they achieved the best results.”

Read more at BBC News (Thanks @XxLadyClaireXx)

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TV tonight

On BBC4 tonight at 9 there is a programme about self-portraits. Featured in it is my dear friend Patrick Hughes, who creates astounding reverse-perspective paintings/sculptures that appear to move with you as you walk around the room. I have a few of his pieces at home and it is delightful watching visitors unable to fathom what they are experiencing. He has recently cast my little head for a ‘reverspective’ portrait, and has also done one of himself, which will appear in the BBC4 show. Mine, I hear, is ready too, and I’m picking it up from him tomorrow. We’ve in fact done a portrait swap: I am painting him in return for his portrait of me. I’ll feature both on this blog – including the pictures of me getting my head cast – when I have everything ready to show you. He is the most richly wonderful man, and a unique artist, so do catch the show tonight if you can to get a heads-up (pun intended) on this guy.

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Snake gives ‘virgin birth’ to extraordinary babies

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“A female boa constrictor snake has given birth to two litters of extraordinary offspring. Evidence suggests the mother snake has had multiple virgin births, producing 22 baby snakes that have no father. More than that, the genetic make-up of the baby snakes is unlike any previously recorded among vertebrates, the group which includes almost all animals with a backbone. Details are published in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters.

Virgin births do occur among animals. Many invertebrates, such as insects, can produce offspring asexually, without ever having mated. They usually do this by cloning themselves, producing genetically identical offspring. But among vertebrate animals, it remains a novelty, having been documented among less than 0.1% of vertebrate species. In 2006, scientists discovered that two komodo dragons (Varanus komodoensis), the world’s largest lizard species, had produced eggs that developed without being fertilised by sperm – a process called parthenogenesis. Then in 2007, other scientists found that captive female hammerhead sharks (Sphyrna tiburo) could also reproduce without having sex. But vertebrates generally reproduce sexually. Not including genetic material from the father – essentially having just a single biological parent – reduces genetic diversity and makes it more difficult for organisms to adapt to, for example, changed environmental conditions or the emergence of a new disease.

Now, a team of scientists and snake experts based in the US has identified the first case of a boa snake having a virgin birth. “Although parthenogenesis has been documented in a few snake species, our findings are truly novel for a number of reasons,” says Dr Warren Booth of North Carolina State University in Raleigh, US. He led the team that made the latest discovery, and also worked with the researchers who documented a virgin birth in a hammerhead shark. “The female [boa] has had not one virgin birth, but actually two, in spite of being housed with and observed to be courted by multiple males. “All offspring are female. The offspring share only half the mother’s genetic make-up,” he told the BBC. What is more, the female snake in question has produced offspring the like of which have never been seen before.

In the two years following 2007, the captive-born female Boa constrictor produced two litters of live offspring, at the same time as being housed with four male snakes. First impressions suggested there was something special about these babies: all were female and all had a particular, rare caramel colouration. This colour is a rare recessive genetic trait, which is carried by the mother but not by any of the potential fathers. So Dr Booth and colleagues conducted a series of genetic tests on the snakes to solve the enigma. What they found was astonishing. DNA fingerprinting revealed that the offspring had a number of genetic differences from any of their potential fathers, which ruled out all the males as sires of the litter. That confirmed the first instance of a known virgin birth among boa snakes.

All the offspring also had very unusual sex chromosomes. Sex chromosomes are packages of DNA that drive the development of sexual characteristics; they essentially make animals genetically male or genetically female. Humans for example have X or Y sex chromosomes; females have two X chromosomes and males have a combination of an X and a Y chromosome. In place of X and Y, snakes and many other reptiles have Z and W chromosomes. In all snakes, ZZ produces males and ZW produces females. Bizarrely, all the snakes in these litters were WW.”

Read more at BBC News (Thanks @powerofstrange)

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Anger Makes People Want Things More

“Anger is an interesting emotion for psychologists. On the one hand, it’s negative, but then it also has some of the features of positive emotions. For a new study published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, researchers find that associating an object with anger actually makes people want the object—a kind of motivation that’s normally associated with positive emotions.

People usually think of anger as a negative emotion. You’re not supposed to get angry. But anger also has some positive features. For example, it activates an area on the left side of the brain that is associated with many positive emotions. And, like positive emotions, it can motivate people to go after something. “People are motivated to do something or obtain a certain object in the world because it’s rewarding for them. Usually this means that the object is positive and makes you happy,” says Henk Aarts of Utrecht University in the Netherlands, first author of the new study. He and his colleagues wanted to examine whether this also applies to the link between anger as a negative emotion and the desire to get your hands on something.

For the study, each participant watched a computer screen while images of common objects, like a mug or a pen, appeared on the screen. What they didn’t realize was that immediately before each object appeared, the screen flashed either a neutral face, an angry face, or a fearful face. This subliminal image tied an emotion to each object. At the end of the experiment, the participants were asked how much they wanted each object. In a second version of the experiment, they had the person squeeze a handgrip to get the desired object—those who squeezed harder were more likely to win it. ”

Read more at Psychological Science (Thanks Johnny5)

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Scientists Discover New Way to Fight Common Cold Virus

“Cambridge, United Kingdom (AHN) – A research team led by Dr. Leo James from the Medical Research Council (MRC) Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, have discovered that antibodies can battle viruses that cause the common cold, vomiting and gastroenteritis, by entering cells that house them.

Previously, it was believed that antibodies could only attack viruses outside cells or by blocking their entry into cells.

Once antibodies enter cells they quickly trigger a response, led by a protein called TRIM21 that pulls the virus into a disposal system used by the cell to get rid of unwanted material. Release of the TRIM21 protein is so quick that the virus is not given a chance to harm the cell.

It was also found that increasing the amount of TRIM21 protein in cells makes this process even more effective, suggesting new ways of making better antiviral drugs.
The research team however, stressed that it would take years of work and testing to find new therapies, and that their discovery would not work on all viruses.”

Read more at Gantdaily (Thanks Johnny5)

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The State of the Internet

“The infographic movie ‘The State of the Internet’ by creative agency Jess3 conveys exactly what is meant by its title, with a focus on highlighting a lot of numbers and statistics.

Still, it gives you plenty of food for thought…”

Via Sunday Mercury (Thanks @XxLadyClaireXx)

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Scientist examines key to beauty

“Physical attractiveness might be determined by the way people move their faces and alter their voices instead of by the way they look, a researcher has said.

Dr Ed Morrison has been awarded a £94,000 grant to examine whether it is looks alone that makes someone’s face attractive.

The evolutionary psychologist from the University of Portsmouth will look at whether it is determined by fixed aspects, such as symmetry of the face, or whether changing expressions and variation of voice can have an effect.

Dr Morrison, whose study is being funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), said: “The old expression ‘the camera never lies’ might be proved wrong.

“There is a widespread assumption that photographs can capture the entirety of facial attractiveness but I want to challenge this belief by proving that facial movement and vocal variability are also important. There is already evidence to suggest that the same face might not be similarly attractive in a picture and a video.

“Attractiveness is important in areas such as romantic partnerships but also for non-romantic friendships, and in more surprising cases such as hiring, voting and jury decisions. Attractive people are often treated more favourably and are assumed to do better in life.

“Therefore understanding the basis of facial attractiveness judgements is crucial because it influences so many face-to-face interactions.”

Dr Morrison predicted that his study will show people change their facial movement and alter their voice when they interact with a person they are attracted to. He explained that his research will allow him to quantify exactly how much attractiveness can be changed, and how much cannot.”

Read more at Yahoo News (Thanks @XxLadyClaireXx)

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Brain scans show more than buyers bargained for

“Putting on a convincing poker face might not depend on skill alone; it could also be down to the wiring of your brain.

Successful poker players and effective bargainers are good at bluffing: in other words, they can manipulate how other people see them. Until now the brain processes behind this ability have been poorly understood, but a new study has identified patterns of brain activity in talented bluffers.

“One of the most important things we do in life is to build models of other people in our minds that we can act upon,” says Read Montague at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas.

So why can some people put on a winning poker face while others can’t help giving themselves away? To investigate, Montague scanned the brains of 76 volunteers while they acted as buyers in a bargaining game.

The aim of the game was to trick another player into selling a hypothetical item for less than its true value. In each round, the buyers were told the item’s true value, and would suggest a price to the seller, but sellers would decide on the final selling price. The catch was that the sale would only count if the seller unwittingly agreed to a price lower than the real value. Neither buyer nor seller knew during the game whether a sale had counted or not.

The study revealed three types of buyer. Some honest participants just offered the true value, and others hid it, always suggesting a low price. But a third group – dubbed “strategists” – successfully bluffed to trick their opponents.”

Read more at New Scientist (Thanks @XxLadyClaireXx)

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Miniature Human Liver Grown in Lab; Seems to Work Like the Real Thing

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“Researchers have built miniature human livers in the lab, which could lead to better drug discovery and could even point the way toward implantable artificial organs. The mini-livers seem to act like human livers in the lab, but it remains to be seen how well they’ll survive and perform when transplanted into animals or, maybe one day, humans.

“We are excited about the possibilities this research represents, but must stress that we’re at an early stage and many technical hurdles must be overcome before it could benefit patients,” said Shay Soker, Ph.D., professor of regenerative medicine and project director. “Not only must we learn how to grow billions of liver cells at one time in order to engineer livers large enough for patients, but we must determine whether these organs are safe to use in patients.”.

The researchers at Wake Forest’s Institute for Regenerative Medicine created livers that weigh about 0.2 ounces each. That’s not nearly large enough to keep a human alive (it would need to be about 80 times larger for that), but getting the organ made was a feat in itself. The livers were made using the extracellular scaffolding from an animal liver, after all of the animal’s cells had been gently removed from it.”

Read more at Discover

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