Veep? WTF?!

They (meaning: CNN) say it’s Biden. Yuck! The old-school hawk whose only ‘supposed strength’ is foreign policy which he proceeded to show he is ignorant of every night on TV during the 1990s spouting nonsense about the Balkans.

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 7 new articles in PLoS ONE today. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:

Continue reading

Looking for the mouse…

Watch what Clay Shirky said at Web 2.0 Expo SF 2008 (transcript here):

The quote that everyone likes, for a good reason, is the following:

I was having dinner with a group of friends about a month ago, and one of them was talking about sitting with his four-year-old daughter watching a DVD. And in the middle of the movie, apropos nothing, she jumps up off the couch and runs around behind the screen. That seems like a cute moment. Maybe she’s going back there to see if Dora is really back there or whatever. But that wasn’t what she was doing. She started rooting around in the cables. And her dad said, “What you doing?” And she stuck her head out from behind the screen and said, “Looking for the mouse.”
Here’s something four-year-olds know: A screen that ships without a mouse ships broken. Here’s something four-year-olds know: Media that’s targeted at you but doesn’t include you may not be worth sitting still for.
—————–
It’s also become my motto, when people ask me what we’re doing– from now on, that’s what I’m going to tell them: We’re looking for the mouse.

Kevin Kelly likes it. Bjoern Brembs says:

Most scientists have not made the transition of this four-year-old, yet.

The thing is….it’s not just screens. I keep looking for the mouse and the “post comment” button whenever I read a book!

Aggregator of RSS feeds about Gynecology

Vedran keeps cranking these at an incredible rate (the first numbers indicate these aggregators are quite comprehensive and the feedback is that they are useful) – here is the latest one: Aggregator of RSS feeds about Gynecology

Open Source Science – Science and Sharing

Michael Nielsen’s talk at SciFoo’08:

Comments

This blog is slowly approaching a nice round number – 10,000 comments. I know this is not Pharyngula where this would take an hour or two to fill, but still, we can get the remaining 200+ comments in over the next few days, can’t we?
The person who posts the 10,000th non-spam comment will get a prize – something (your choice exactly what) from the A Blog Around The Clock store.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Face Recognition: Nurture Not Nature:

Researchers have discovered that our society can influence the way we recognise other people’s faces. Because face recognition is effortlessly achieved by people from all different cultures it was considered to be a basic mechanism universal among humans. However, by using analyses inspired by novel brain imaging technology, researchers at the University of Glasgow have discovered that cultural differences cause us to look at faces differently.

Manes, Trains And Antlers Explained: How Showy Male Traits Evolved:

For Charles Darwin, the problem of the peacock’s tail, in light of his theory of natural selection, was vexing in the extreme. Indeed, in 1860, writing to Asa Gray, his most ardent American champion, Darwin confessed: “The sight of a feather in a peacock’s tail, whenever I gaze at it, makes me sick!” In his struggle to explain why such extravagant and seemingly burdensome features existed, the great English naturalist struck upon the idea of sexual selection — that showy traits such as the Peacock’s ornamentation were an advantage in the mating game that outweighed other disadvantages.

Shipwrecks On Coral Reefs Harbor Unwanted Species:

Shipwrecks on coral reefs may increase invasion of unwanted species, according to a recent U.S. Geological Survey study. These unwanted species can completely overtake the reef and eliminate all the native coral, dramatically decreasing the diversity of marine organisms on the reef. This study documents for the first time that a rapid change in the dominant biota on a coral reef is unambiguously associated with man-made structures.

Genetics Reveals Big Fish That Almost Got Away:

Researchers from the University of Hawaii, the Wildlife Conservation Society, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, National Marine Fisheries Service and Projecto Meros do Brazil discovered a new species of fish–a grouper that reaches more than six feet in length and can weigh nearly 1,000 pounds. This newly discovered species can be found roaming the tropical reefs of the Eastern Pacific Ocean.

Kids With Pets Grow Up To Be Snorers:

A predisposition to adult snoring can be established very early in life. New research describes possible childhood risk factors, including exposure to animals, early respiratory or ear infections and growing up in a large family.

Research Shows Pollsters How The Undecided Will Vote:

As the American Presidential election approaches, pollsters are scrambling to predict who will win. A study by a team of researchers at The University of Western Ontario, Canada, and the University of Padova, Italy, may give pollsters a new way to determine how the undecided will vote, even before the voters know themselves.

Trees Kill Odors And Other Emissions From Poultry Farms:

Planting just three rows of trees around poultry farms can cut nuisance emissions of dust, ammonia, and odors from poultry houses and aid in reducing neighbor complaints, according to scientists from the University of Delaware.

Dietary Supplements For Horses, Dogs And Cats Need Better Regulation, New Report Says:

The growing use of animal dietary supplements has raised several concerns, including the safety of specific supplements and the approaches taken to determine their safeness.

The 21st Century Workplace is wherever you and your laptop happen to be

12 New Rules of Working You Should Embrace Today. As you know, point #4 is one of my pet peeves:

4. People don’t have to be in an office. This is the one I wish most businesses would get, right now, right away. It’s so obvious once you get away from the traditional mindset. Traditionally, people worked in offices (and of course most still do). They go into the office, do their work, go to meeting, process paperwork, chat around the watercooler, clock out and go home.
These days, more and more, that’s not necessary. With mobile computing, the cloud, online apps and collaborative processes, work can be done from anywhere, and often is. More people are telecommuting. More people are working as freelancers or consultants. More businesses are allowing people to work from anywhere — not just telecommuting from home, but literally anywhere in the world. People are forming small businesses who have never met, who live on different continents. People have meetings through Skype or Basecamp group chat. They collaborate through wikis and Google apps.
If you are stuck in the traditional mindset, think hard about what things really need to be done in an office. Sometimes there are legitimate reasons for working in an office, but often those barriers have other solutions you just haven’t explored yet.
The advantages of a decentralized workplace are many. Workers who have more freedom are happier, and often more passionate about their work. They enjoy collaborating with others who are smart and talented, and work is no longer drudgery. Flexible schedules work well for many people’s lifestyles. Mobile computing is actually good for many types of businesses where people need to be on the go. And what really matters isn’t that the worker is present, but that the work is being done.

Today’s carnivals

Edition #82 of I and the Bird is up on Sycamore Canyon
Friday Ark #205 is up on Modulator

Science Olympics!

My favourite discipline is citation gymnastics! What is yours? Can you invent a new sport?

Blogrolling for Today

The Edger


Pondering blather


SynchroniciTwi


Scientist Carrie


Effortless Incitement

Boston Globe on Open Science

Boston Globe has an interesting article about Open Science, citing the routine list of worries that usually get associated with this idea, e.g., :

But in the world of science – where promotions, tenure, and fortune rest on publishing papers in prestigious journals, securing competitive grants, and patenting discoveries – it’s a brazen, potentially self-destructive move. To many scientists, leaving unfinished work and ideas in the open seems as reckless as leaving your debit card and password at a busy ATM machine.

But, as John Hawks says:

I think that’s a pretty simplistic rendering of how scientific credit is assigned. It ignores all the factors that depend not on your results but on networking. Who you know may be vastly more important than what you do.
I think that if more researchers were independent (not tied to someone else’s lab) and if they spent less time grant-writing, we’d see more open collaborations. Right now the biggest barrier to openness is centralization.

Light-Responsive genes in rice

Friendly blogger Pamela Roland, the author of Tomorrow’s Table: Organic Farming, Genetics, and the Future of Food which I am reading right now (and which was recently reviewed in PLoS Biology), has just had a paper published in PLoS Genetics:
Identification and Functional Analysis of Light-Responsive Unique Genes and Gene Family Members in Rice

Rice, a model monocot, is the first crop plant to have its entire genome sequenced. Although genome-wide transcriptome analysis tools and genome-wide, gene-indexed mutant collections have been generated for rice, the functions of only a handful of rice genes have been revealed thus far. Functional genomics approaches to studying crop plants like rice are much more labor-intensive and difficult in terms of maintaining the plants than when studying Arabidopsis, a model dicot. Here, we describe an efficient method for dissecting gene function in rice and other crop plants. We identified light response-related phenotypes for ten genes, the functions for which were previously unknown in rice. We also carried out co-expression analysis of 72 genes involved in specific biochemical pathways connected in lines carrying mutations in these ten genes. This analysis led to the identification of a novel set of genes likely involved in these pathways. The rapid progress of functional genomics in crops will significantly contribute to overcoming a food crisis in the near future.

ClockQuotes

I was born not knowing and have only had a little time to change that here and there.
– Richard Feynman

Tribute to Marbles and OJ


by Coturnietta…

Another Kevin’s photo-essay from China

Kevin has just posted another photo-rich report from his herpetology survey in China. Lots of pictures of Chinese landscape, Chinese people, Chinese food, and yes – cool Chinese animals.

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 10 new articles in PLoS ONE today. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:
A Dominant X-Linked QTL Regulating Pubertal Timing in Mice Found by Whole Genome Scanning and Modified Interval-Specific Congenic Strain Analysis:

Pubertal timing in mammals is triggered by reactivation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis and modulated by both genetic and environmental factors. Strain-dependent differences in vaginal opening among inbred mouse strains suggest that genetic background contribute significantly to the puberty timing, although the exact mechanism remains unknown. We performed a genome-wide scanning for linkage in reciprocal crosses between two strains, C3H/HeJ (C3H) and C57BL6/J (B6), which differed significantly in the pubertal timing. Vaginal opening (VO) was used to characterize pubertal timing in female mice, and the age at VO of all female mice (two parental strains, F1 and F2 progeny) was recorded. A genome-wide search was performed in 260 phenotypically extreme F2 mice out of 464 female progeny of the F1 intercrosses to identify quantitative trait loci (QTLs) controlling this trait. A QTL significantly associated was mapped to the DXMit166 marker (15.5 cM, LOD = 3.86, p<0.01) in the reciprocal cross population (C3HB6F2). This QTL contributed 2.1 days to the timing of VO, which accounted for 32.31% of the difference between the original strains. Further study showed that the QTL was B6-dominant and explained 10.5% of variation to this trait with a power of 99.4% at an alpha level of 0.05.The location of the significant ChrX QTL found by genome scanning was then fine-mapped to a region of ~2.5 cM between marker DXMit68 and rs29053133 by generating and phenotyping a panel of 10 modified interval-specific congenic strains (mISCSs). Such findings in our study lay a foundation for positional cloning of genes regulating the timing of puberty, and also reveal the fact that chromosome X (the sex chromosome) does carry gene(s) which take part in the regulative pathway of the pubertal timing in mice.

Elusive Origins of the Extra Genes in Aspergillus oryzae:

The genome sequence of Aspergillus oryzae revealed unexpectedly that this species has approximately 20% more genes than its congeneric species A. nidulans and A. fumigatus. Where did these extra genes come from? Here, we evaluate several possible causes of the elevated gene number. Many gene families are expanded in A. oryzae relative to A. nidulans and A. fumigatus, but we find no evidence of ancient whole-genome duplication or other segmental duplications, either in A. oryzae or in the common ancestor of the genus Aspergillus. We show that the presence of divergent pairs of paralogs is a feature peculiar to A. oryzae and is not shared with A. nidulans or A. fumigatus. In phylogenetic trees that include paralog pairs from A. oryzae, we frequently find that one of the genes in a pair from A. oryzae has the expected orthologous relationship with A. nidulans, A. fumigatus and other species in the subphylum Eurotiomycetes, whereas the other A. oryzae gene falls outside this clade but still within the Ascomycota. We identified 456 such gene pairs in A. oryzae. Further phylogenetic analysis did not however indicate a single consistent evolutionary origin for the divergent members of these pairs. Approximately one-third of them showed phylogenies that are suggestive of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) from Sordariomycete species, and these genes are closer together in the A. oryzae genome than expected by chance, but no unique Sordariomycete donor species was identifiable. The postulated HGTs from Sordariomycetes still leave the majority of extra A. oryzae genes unaccounted for. One possible explanation for our observations is that A. oryzae might have been the recipient of many separate HGT events from diverse donors.

Progesterone from the Cumulus Cells Is the Sperm Chemoattractant Secreted by the Rabbit Oocyte Cumulus Complex:

Sperm chemotaxis in mammals have been identified towards several female sources as follicular fluid (FF), oviduct fluid, and conditioned medium from the cumulus oophorus (CU) and the oocyte (O). Though several substances were confirmed as sperm chemoattractant, Progesterone (P) seems to be the best chemoattractant candidate, because: 1) spermatozoa express a cell surface P receptor, 2) capacitated spermatozoa are chemotactically attracted in vitro by gradients of low quantities of P; 3) the CU cells produce and secrete P after ovulation; 4) a gradient of P may be kept stable along the CU; and 5) the most probable site for sperm chemotaxis in vivo could be near and/or inside the CU. The aim of this study was to verify whether P is the sperm chemoattractant secreted by the rabbit oocyte-cumulus complex (OCC) in the rabbit, as a mammalian animal model. By means of videomicroscopy and computer image analysis we observed that only the CU are a stable source of sperm attractants. The CU produce and secrete P since the hormone was localized inside these cells by immunocytochemistry and in the conditioned medium by enzyme immunoassay. In addition, rabbit spermatozoa express a cell surface P receptor detected by western blot and localized over the acrosomal region by immunocytochemistry. To confirm that P is the sperm chemoattractant secreted by the CU, the sperm chemotactic response towards the OCC conditioned medium was inhibited by three different approaches: P from the OCC conditioned medium was removed with an anti-P antibody, the attractant gradient of the OCC conditioned medium was disrupted by a P counter gradient, and the sperm P receptor was blocked with a specific antibody. We concluded that only the CU but not the oocyte secretes P, and the latter chemoattract spermatozoa by means of a cell surface receptor. Our findings may be of interest in assisted reproduction procedures in humans, animals of economic importance and endangered species.

Reverse and Conventional Chemical Ecology Approaches for the Development of Oviposition Attractants for Culex Mosquitoes:

Synthetic mosquito oviposition attractants are sorely needed for surveillance and control programs for Culex species, which are major vectors of pathogens causing various human diseases, including filariasis, encephalitis, and West Nile encephalomyelitis. We employed novel and conventional chemical ecology approaches to identify potential attractants, which were demonstrated in field tests to be effective for monitoring populations of Cx. p. quinquefasciatus in human dwellings. Immunohistochemistry studies showed that an odorant-binding protein from this species, CquiOBP1, is expressed in trichoid sensilla on the antennae, including short, sharp-tipped trichoid sensilla type, which house an olfactory receptor neuron sensitive to a previously identified mosquito oviposition pheromone (MOP), 6-acetoxy-5-hexadecanolide. CquiOBP1 exists in monomeric and dimeric forms. Monomeric CquiOBP1 bound MOP in a pH-dependent manner, with a change in secondary structure apparently related to the loss of binding at low pH. The pheromone antipode showed higher affinity than the natural stereoisomer. By using both CquiOBP1 as a molecular target in binding assays and gas chromatography-electroantennographic detection (GC-EAD), we identified nonanal, trimethylamine (TMA), and skatole as test compounds. Extensive field evaluations in Recife, Brazil, a region with high populations of Cx. p. quinquefasciatus, showed that a combination of TMA (0.9 µg/l) and nonanal (0.15 ng/µl) is equivalent in attraction to the currently used infusion-based lure, and superior in that the offensive smell of infusions was eliminated in the newly developed synthetic mixture.

Prefrontal Norepinephrine Determines Attribution of “High” Motivational Salience:

Intense motivational salience attribution is considered to have a major role in the development of different psychopathologies. Numerous brain areas are involved in “normal” motivational salience attribution processes; however, it is not clear whether common or different neural mechanisms also underlie intense motivational salience attribution. To elucidate this a brain area and a neural system had to be envisaged that were involved only in motivational salience attribution to highly salient stimuli. Using intracerebral microdialysis, we found that natural stimuli induced an increase in norepinephrine release in the medial prefrontal cortex of mice proportional to their salience, and that selective prefrontal norepinephrine depletion abolished the increase of norepinephrine release in the medial prefrontal cortex induced by exposure to appetitive (palatable food) or aversive (light) stimuli independently of salience. However, selective norepinephrine depletion in the medial prefrontal cortex impaired the place conditioning induced exclusively by highly salient stimuli, thus indicating that prefrontal noradrenergic transmission determines approach or avoidance responses to both reward- and aversion-related natural stimuli only when the salience of the unconditioned natural stimulus is high enough to induce sustained norepinephrine outflow. This affirms that prefrontal noradrenergic transmission determines motivational salience attribution selectively when intense motivational salience is processed, as in conditions that characterize psychopathological outcomes.

Young Scientist Challenge finalists announced

Working to empower students nationwide to experiment with science and technology, Discovery Education and 3M are hosting the 10th annual Young Scientist Challenge (YSC). Moving closer to recognizing “America’s Top Young Scientist of the Year” and “America’s Top Science Teacher of the Year,” Discovery Education and 3M announce this year’s finalists.

See them here.

Science Idol Cartoon Contest Winner

The Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) announced the winner of its 2008 “Science Idol: Scientific Integrity Editorial Cartoon Contest,” which draws attention to the growing problem of political interference in federal government science.
Justin Bilicki, of Brooklyn, New York has earned the title of America’s “Science Idol” with his winning cartoon. It depicts a scientist presenting his research findings that conclude: “We are destroying the Earth.” Two government officials look on. The official holding a briefcase with money spilling out of it, says, “Could you kindly rephrase that in equivocal, inaccurate, vague, self-serving, and roundabout terms that we can all understand?”
See the winning cartoon at www.ucsusa.org/scienceidol. The original watercolor print has been put up for auction by the artist on the contest Web page, with all proceeds going to UCS.

cartoon%20winner.jpg

‘The Scientist’ is Magazine of the Year

The Scientist just won the Azbee Award for Magazine of the Year, awarded by American Society of Business Publications Editors. Congratulations!

I’ll be there in about an hour – will you?

Sure, we’ve done the high-brow lectures and geek-out tours, but what really gets the old SCONC juices flowing is mingling, meeting new faces and trading some business cards.
Please join us to hob-nob (and maybe find a job) with science writers, museum people, educators and webbies who share an interest in connecting North Carolina’s science with the general public and the wider world.
Science Communicators of North Carolina
August mixer
5:30 p.m.
Thursday, August 21
Tyler’s Tap Room, American Tobacco Campus, Durham

Squishables

Remember when I wrote about Squishables?
They have arrived! Left to right: puppy, panda, penguin and hedgehog (guess what is whose):
Squishables.jpg

Max Planck Society to support publication charges for PLoS journals.

This is big! A new agreement was signed between Max Planck Society and Public Library of Science in which the MPS will pay publication fees for its researchers. Mark Patterson explains:

The MPS is one of the world’s leading research organizations whose researchers have an international reputation for scientific excellence. We are delighted to be collaborating with the MPS in this way so that more MPS researchers will be encouraged to publish their work in PLoS journals, and to promote open access to research literature more broadly. For papers accepted in PLoS journals after July 1st, 2008, MPS will pay the publication fee directly to PLoS for all articles where the corresponding author is affiliated with a Max Planck Institute.
In 2003 MPS was the co-initiator of the Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities and ever since then, MPS has demonstrated consistent and strong leadership in the promotion of open access to research results.
With the ever-expanding range of open access options available to authors, we encourage other research funders to set up funds to cover publication fees in open access journals or to include such expenses within their grants and research awards.

The Max Planck Society issued a press release about this as well:

In accordance with its commitment to ensure public availability of its research output, the Max Planck Society (MPS) has reached an agreement with the Public Library of Science (PLoS) for the central funding of publication fees of MPS scientists without burdening the budget of single Max Planck Institutes.
Like many Open Access journals, PLoS journals charge a fee for publication. For papers accepted in PLoS journals after July 1st, 2008, MPS will pay the publication fee directly to PLoS from central funds for all articles where the corresponding author is affiliated with a Max Planck Institute.
“PLoS is a top quality Open Access publisher. We are pleased to support a seminal publication model with this collaboration and thus facilitate publishing for our scientists in this interesting spectrum of titles”, said Ralf Schimmer, head of the Department of Scientific Information Provision of the Max Planck Digital Library.
PLoS is a nonprofit organization of scientists and physicians committed to making the world’s scientific and medical literature a freely available public resource. PLoS applies the Creative Commons Attribution License (CCAL) to all published articles. Under the CCAL, authors retain ownership of the copyright for their article, but allow anyone to download, reuse, reprint, modify, distribute, and/or copy articles in PLoS journals, so long as the original authors and source are cited. No permission is required from the authors or the publishers. Thus, the contents of the seven Open Access journals of PLoS are freely accessible for the reader worldwide via internet.
Collaboration for promoting Open Access
“The Max Planck Society is one of the world’s leading research organizations whose researchers have an international reputation for scientific excellence. We are delighted to be working with MPS so that more MPS researchers will be able to publish their work in PLoS journals, and for the broader promotion of Open Access to research literature”, said Mark Patterson, Director of Publishing at PLoS.
The research institutes of the Max Planck Society perform basic research in the interest of the general public in the natural sciences, life sciences, social sciences, and the humanities. As co-initiator of the Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities (2003) MPS has actively supported change in scientific publishing in accordance with Open Access principles. MPS is advocating the position that research funding should include allocations for making research results freely available.”

Carrboro Creative Coworking is a Go!

Carrboro Creative Coworking, a brilliant local project spearheaded by Brian Russell, is now a reality. The lease has been signed!

Carrboro Creative Coworking now has a lease for office space at 205 Lloyd Street, Suite 101 in downtown Carrboro! It’s 3,049 square feet and has nine small offices, two conference rooms, a kitchen, and public work space. The TARGET opening date for CCC is Wednesday, October 1, 2008. Stay tuned for exact dates and grand opening party info. 🙂
To launch this business I need your help now. Its essential that I pre-sell as many services as I can. This will fulfill a requirement for receiving my loan from the Town of Carrboro. Plus it’ll give us a personal boost. My wife and I are taking a LARGE financial risk. I believe its worth it.
Early next week I’ll have a pre-sell agreement for you with a list of services and their costs. We’ll have the Coworker (day/seat), the Full Time Coworker (desk/month), and the Office Coworker (office/year). Once the space actually opens we’ll fill out a more formal sales agreement contract. This pre-sale agreement will primarily act as evidence for the Town of Carrboro that you want to work at the space. MOST IMPORTANTLY it will help me to get my loan!
So if you believe in Carrboro Creative Coworking PLEASE get ready to commit. Look for the pre-sale agreement here. Contact me if you have questions.

You can read (and if you are local forward to your friends and media) the official press release (pdf):

August 21, 2008 – Carrboro, NC – Carrboro Creative Coworking signed the lease
and is ready for business. And it’s not any ordinary business – Carrboro Creative
Coworking (CCC) is a professional shared workspace with a cafe-like
atmosphere. Designed with a welcoming environment for micro-business owners
such as freelance professionals, home-office workers, entrepreneurs, start-up
business owners and more, CCC offers a place to set up shop quickly and
conveniently. Small offices, full time desks, and seats are available for presale
now.
” For years I’ve dreamed of creating a place for people that need reliable office
space, a cool community with interaction and flexibility,” says CCC founder Brian
Russell. “Carrboro is the ideal spot for folks that telecommute from everywhere to
the Triangle to DC to San Francisco to New Delhi. We have an amazing group of
people right here looking for a place to convene professionally. They may not
want to work at home alone for long stretches. They may not want to work in a
vast commercial office. This affords social interaction as well as professional
opportunities. In the end, CCC can actually be less expensive than other office
space and you get great coffee!”
Russell is preparing to launch CCC sometime in early October. It will be located
at 205 Lloyd Street, Suite 101 in Carrboro, NC. Please keep a look out for
information about the grand opening party and office tours.

See what Brian says:

My picks from ScienceDaily

Tailor-made Functional Garments For Olympic Horses:

When the horses and competitors go through their paces at the Summer Olympics in Hong Kong in 2008, it will be very hot and very humid – just as it is every summer there. Three special blankets will offer the Swiss teams’ tournament horses some respite from the elements.

Tracing Origins Of Critical Step In Animal Evolution — The Development Of Nerves:

University of Queensland researchers have traced the origins of one of the most important steps in animal evolution – the development of nerves.

Future Impact Of Global Warming Is Worse When Grazing Animals Are Considered, Scientists Suggest:

The impact of global warming in the Arctic may differ from the predictions of computer models of the region, according to a pair of Penn State biologists. The team — which includes Eric Post, a Penn State associate professor of biology, and Christian Pederson, a Penn State graduate student — has shown that grazing animals will play a key role in reducing the anticipated expansion of shrub growth in the region, thus limiting their predicted and beneficial carbon-absorbing effect.

One Sleepless Night Increases Dopamine In The Human Brain:

ust one night without sleep can increase the amount of the chemical dopamine in the human brain, according to new imaging research in the August 20 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience. Because drugs that increase dopamine, like amphetamines, promote wakefulness, the findings offer a potential mechanism explaining how the brain helps people stay awake despite the urge to sleep.

Today’s carnivals

Change of Shift Vol 3, Number Four is up on Emergiblog
The 138th Carnival of Homeschooling is up on Janice Campbell’s blog
There is a new carnival of African skeptics – Carnival of the Africans. Check it out.

ClockQuotes

Don’t say you don’t have enough time. You have exactly the same number of hours per day that were given to Helen Keller, Pasteur, Michaelangelo, Mother Teresa, Leonardo da Vinci, Thomas Jefferson, and Albert Einstein.
– H. Jackson Brown

Eat this!

There is this food meme going around everywhere, so I checked out what Chad, Archy, Mark CC and Rev. BigDumbChimp picked. I have to admit I had to use Google for a lot of these, often realizing that I have, indeed, tasted some of these but under a different name. Different people do it differently, i.e., adding comments, or bolding those they tried, perhaps also italicizing those that they tried and spit in disgust. Here is my list with comments:
1. Venison (deer and elk). Yes. Very tasty.
2. Nettle tea. Yes. Not very tasty, but OK.
3. Huevos rancheros. No. Mexican food is too new and unusual for me.
4. Steak tartare. Yes. Excellent.
5. Crocodile. No. But alligator tasted just like chicken.
6. Black pudding. Yes. Under the name “krvavica”. Never liked it too much, though.
7. Cheese fondue. Yes.
8. Carp. Yes, many times, many species.
9. Borscht. Yes. Did not like it.
10. Baba ghanoush. Yes. It’s OK.
11. Calamari. Yes, many times with several different recipes.
12. Pho. Yes, or at least something very similar.
13. PB&J sandwich. No. Probably the biggest surprise to my readers. In my mind, peanuts are salty nuts. Cannot be sweet goo. Thus, never tried peanut butter in my life. Have not even seen it until I was in my late teens.
14. Aloo gobi. No. But I had caulfilower in various other recipes.
15. Hot dog from a street cart. Sure.
16. Epoisses. No.
17. Black truffle. No. I guess I would remember if I did.
18. Fruit wine made from something other than grapes. Yes. Real blackbery wine.
19. Steamed pork buns. Yes.
20. Pistachio ice cream. Yes.
21. Heirloom tomatoes. Yes.
22. Fresh wild berries. Yes. Many kinds – raspberries, straweberries, blackberries, blueberries, all found in the wild.
23. Foie gras. No. Duck and goose livers – yes. Duck and goose pate – yes.
24. Rice and beans. Yes.
25. Brawn, or head cheese. Yes. Love it.
26. Raw Scotch Bonnet pepper. No, but many other kinds of very hot peppers.
27. Dulce de leche. No.
28. Oysters. Yes. Do not like them.
29. Baklava. You know wher I am from! Of course!
30. Bagna cauda. No.
31. Wasabi peas. Wasabi in a kind of paste, yes, but in a shape of peas, no.
32. Clam chowder in a sourdough bowl. Not as a combo. I’ve had them separately. Do not like clam chowder, love other soups in a sourdough bowl.
33. Salted lassi. No.
34. Sauerkraut. Of course – remember sarma? We had that stuff in various recipes all the time.
35. Root beer float. No.
36. Cognac with a fat cigar. Not at the same time. But yes.
37. Clotted cream tea. Nooooo!
38. Vodka jelly/Jell-O. No.
39. Gumbo. Yes.
40. Oxtail. Yes, many times, love it. The best part of cow for tender beef.
41. Curried goat. Yes.
42. Whole insects. No.
43. Phaal. No. Would like to try.
44. Goat’s milk. Yes.
45. Malt whisky from a bottle worth £60/$120 or more. I did not care about the price at the time….
46. Fugu. No.
47. Chicken tikka masala. Yes.
48. Eel. No.
49. Krispy Kreme original glazed doughnut. Yes.
50. Sea urchin. No.
51. Prickly pear. Yes.
52. Umeboshi. No.
53. Abalone. No.
54. Paneer. I doubt it. Possible.
55. McDonald’s Big Mac Meal. Yes.
56. Spaetzle. Something similar under a different name, yes.
57. Dirty gin martini. No.
58. Beer above 8% ABV. Yes, of course, many times. Scroll down to the last picture for one.
59. Poutine. No.
60. Carob chips. Yes, it’s not chocolate.
61. S’mores. No.
62. Sweetbreads. No.
63. Kaolin. No.
64. Currywurst. No.
65. Durian. No.
66. Frogs’ legs. No.
67. Beignets, churros, elephant ears or funnel cake. Yes, yes, yes, yes.
68. Haggis. Yes, under different names: svargla, kishka, drob.
69. Fried plantain. No.
70. Chitterlings, or andouillette. Actually no. One of the dishes that was a delicacy my Mom fixed for guests, but I had a sandwich instead.
71. Gazpacho. Yes, do not like it.
72. Caviar and blini. Yes, but not at the same time.
73. Louche absinthe. No.
74. Gjetost, or brunost. Yes, the Swedish version.
75. Roadkill. No.
76. Baijiu. No.
77. Hostess Fruit Pie. No.
78. Snail. No.
79. Lapsang souchong. Yes.
80. Bellini. No.
81. Tom yum. No.
82. Eggs Benedict. Yes.
83. Pocky. No.
84. Tasting menu at a three-Michelin-star restaurant. No idea. Probably not.
85. Kobe beef. Yes – oxtail Kobe beef! (see #40 above)
86. Hare. Yes. Also rabbit.
87. Goulash. Haha! This is a family of goulash-fixing competitions!
88. Flowers. Yes. I had no idea they were just decorations on my plate! On the other hand, cauliflower is a flower. And rose preserve is from a flower. And so is elderberry juice.
89. Horse. Yes, not just testes of horses I knew, but also grilled horse steaks and horse sausages.
90. Criollo chocolate. No.
91. Spam. Yes, many times.
92. Soft shell crab. No.
93. Rose harissa. No.
94. Catfish. Yes, both the American and European species (very different).
95. Mole poblano. No.
96. Bagel and lox. Yes.
97. Lobster Thermidor. No. Just steamed lobster.
98. Polenta. Yes, almost every Sunday morning when I was a kid.
99. Jamaican Blue Mountain coffee. No.
100. Snake. No.
Others have added some more – Archy:
101. Moose. No.
102. Bear. Yes.
103. Caribou. No.
104. Retsina. Yes.
105. Cevapcici. Yes, of course.
106. Postum. No.
107. Fried halibut cheeks. No.
108. Cracklings. Yes, from several species (pig, goose, duck…)
109. Injera. Yes.
110. Home brewed wine or mead. Yes, often.
Rev. BigDumbChimp:
101. Elk. No.
102. Ostrich. A burger once – did not like it.
103. Moose. No.
104. whole hog BBQ. Yes.
105. wine that costs more than $400.00 a bottle. Probably not.
106. Home made bacon and sausage. Yes.
107. chocolate and chiles. No.
108. chittlins – see above.
109. moonshine (of many different varieties). Yes.
110. quail eggs. Yes. And grilled bobwhite quail and Japanese quail.
Mark CC:
1. Monkfish liver: No.
2. Live scallop: No.
3. Fried chicken giblets. Yes.
4. Duck cracklings. Yes (see 108 from Archy above).
5. Grappa: Yes.
How about a few more by me:
1. Rocky Mountain oysters. Yes, including from stallions (well, at that point they were geldings) I used to ride.
2. Sarma (see above)
3. Slivovitz. Of course.
4. Pig-on-a-spit. Often.
5. Moussaka. Yes, a couple of different recipes – love it!
6. Djuvech. Of course.
7. Boiled knees, hooves (sometimes in pihtije/brawn)
8. Halvah (white, brown or mixed)
9. Flambeed walnut crepes.
10. Tulumbe
11. Ajvar
12. Burek
13. Kitnikes
14. Tufahije
15. Floating Islands

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 12 new articles in PLoS ONE today. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:
Seeing without Seeing? Degraded Conscious Vision in a Blindsight Patient:

Blindsight patients, whose primary visual cortex is lesioned, exhibit preserved ability to discriminate visual stimuli presented in their “blind” field, yet report no visual awareness hereof. Blindsight is generally studied in experimental investigations of single patients, as very few patients have been given this “diagnosis”. In our single case study of patient GR, we ask whether blindsight is best described as unconscious vision, or rather as conscious, yet severely degraded vision. In experiment 1 and 2, we successfully replicate the typical findings of previous studies on blindsight. The third experiment, however, suggests that GR’s ability to discriminate amongst visual stimuli does not reflect unconscious vision, but rather degraded, yet conscious vision. As our finding results from using a method for obtaining subjective reports that has not previously used in blindsight studies (but validated in studies of healthy subjects and other patients with brain injury), our results call for a reconsideration of blindsight, and, arguably also of many previous studies of unconscious perception in healthy subjects.

The Early ANTP Gene Repertoire: Insights from the Placozoan Genome:

The evolution of ANTP genes in the Metazoa has been the subject of conflicting hypotheses derived from full or partial gene sequences and genomic organization in higher animals. Whole genome sequences have recently filled in some crucial gaps for the basal metazoan phyla Cnidaria and Porifera. Here we analyze the complete genome of Trichoplax adhaerens, representing the basal metazoan phylum Placozoa, for its set of ANTP class genes. The Trichoplax genome encodes representatives of Hox/ParaHox-like, NKL, and extended Hox genes. This repertoire possibly mirrors the condition of a hypothetical cnidarian-bilaterian ancestor. The evolution of the cnidarian and bilaterian ANTP gene repertoires can be deduced by a limited number of cis-duplications of NKL and “extended Hox” genes and the presence of a single ancestral “ProtoHox” gene.

Clinical Characteristics of 26 Human Cases of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza A (H5N1) Virus Infection in China:

While human cases of highly pathogenic avian influenza A (H5N1) virus infection continue to increase globally, available clinical data on H5N1 cases are limited. We conducted a retrospective study of 26 confirmed human H5N1 cases identified through surveillance in China from October 2005 through April 2008. Data were collected from hospital medical records of H5N1 cases and analyzed. The median age was 29 years (range 6-62) and 58% were female. Many H5N1 cases reported fever (92%) and cough (58%) at illness onset, and had lower respiratory findings of tachypnea and dyspnea at admission. All cases progressed rapidly to bilateral pneumonia. Clinical complications included acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS, 81%), cardiac failure (50%), elevated aminotransaminases (43%), and renal dysfunction (17%). Fatal cases had a lower median nadir platelet count (64.5×109 cells/L vs 93.0×109 cells/L, p = 0.02), higher median peak lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) level (1982.5 U/L vs 1230.0 U/L, p = 0.001), higher percentage of ARDS (94% [n = 16] vs 56% [n = 5], p = 0.034) and more frequent cardiac failure (71% [n = 12] vs 11% [n = 1], p = 0.011) than nonfatal cases. A higher proportion of patients who received antiviral drugs survived compared to untreated (67% [8/12] vs 7% [1/14], p = 0.003). The clinical course of Chinese H5N1 cases is characterized by fever and cough initially, with rapid progression to lower respiratory disease. Decreased platelet count, elevated LDH level, ARDS and cardiac failure were associated with fatal outcomes. Clinical management of H5N1 cases should be standardized in China to include early antiviral treatment for suspected H5N1 cases.

To Equine Things There is a Season (guest post by Barn Owl)

As I announced this morning, there will be several guest posts here over the next several weeks. The first one, by Barn Owl of the lovely Guadalupe Storm-Petrel blog, is likely to appeal to a lot of my readers as it combines several of my own interests:
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ResearchBlogging.orgfriendlyfoal.jpgIn this guest-post for A Blog Around the Clock, I’ll combine three things that Coturnix especially likes: horses, circadian biology, and an Open Access research paper. For the equestrian, there are two main seasonal issues, controlled primarily by photoperiod, or day length, which must be considered, especially if one shows the horse or competes in various events and games. Perhaps the most obvious seasonal changes are in the horse’s coat, with shedding cycles in the spring and in the fall. In the Northern Hemisphere, the fall shedding cycle is relatively inconsequential for equestrian activities (though it is important, as always, to groom your horse frequently to remove the shed hair), but the spring shedding cycle can be a nightmare, so to speak. The horse hair permeates your saddle blankets, your riding clothes, the interior of your car, and your respiratory tract. Birds gather around eagerly when you groom your horse, to fly away with tufts of hair for their nests. One of my friends used to mark “the lying down of the grey horse” each year, i.e. the spring day on which her big flea-bitten grey gelding rolled and rubbed off much of his shed winter coat, in the form of a large “hair angel”.
Although humans have selected for horse coat colors and patterns that they find attractive and interesting, the horse’s coat evolved to complement the thermoregulatory functions of the other skin components. The long outer, or “guard”, hairs of a horse’s coat are equipped with piloerector muscles, allowing a layer of insulating air to be trapped between the raised shafts. Our winters here in South Texas are relatively mild, so we rarely need to blanket our horses for more than a day or two at a time. A light blanket is sufficient, and is a good thing to take along to early-season polocrosse tournaments, when nighttime temperatures can dip below freezing, and the horses cannot move about sufficiently in their small temporary pens to warm themselves. Even in colder climates, horses are capable of staying warm during rough weather, as long as they have plenty of fodder, some shelter from wind, rain, and ice, and can move around to generate heat. In fact, a heavy winter coat can cause a performance or show horse to sweat excessively, and so some equestrians “body clip” their equine athletes, and blanket them when they are not exercising or performing.
nursingfoal.jpgSeasonal hair growth and pigmentation cycles have been studied extensively in sheep, goats, mink, arctic fox, and mice, and it is clear that they are responsive to photoperiod and melatonin levels. As Coturnix has described previously in his blog, melatonin is a multifunctional lipophilic molecule, primarily produced by the pineal gland in response to noradrenergic stimulation from sympathetic neurons. Numerous brain areas have high levels of melatonin receptors, but cells in other organs, including the skin, are also responsive to melatonin. The transcription levels of genes encoding melatonin receptors appear to be correlated with the hair cycle phases of telogen (resting) and anagen (growth). Hair follicle activity and hair shaft elongation are very responsive to melatonin, with both “overcoat” and “undercoat” fur affected; these effects of melatonin on hair growth have been demonstrated in sheep, goats, mink, ferrets, dogs, and red deer (Fischer et al., 2008). The autumn and spring molt, or shedding, phases in the horse are likely to reflect changing melatonin levels, and could perhaps be modified by dietary melatonin supplements, as has been achieved in cashmere goats and merino sheep. However, another important melatonin target organ is the hypothalamus, which in turn regulates secretion of hormones by the anterior pituitary.
Of course the involvement of the anterior pituitary indicates that a second major seasonal cycle for horses is reproduction. Melatonin inhibits production of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), which causes secretion of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) by the anterior pituitary. During the breeding season, a mare will cycle from ovulation to ovulation approximately every 21 days, and the changing levels of FSH and LH will in turn alter levels of estrogen and progesterone. A fertile mare “in season” (in estrus) will show distinctive behavior that is recognizable to every other horse, and to every horse owner as well. She will raise her tail and hold it to one side, she will squat and urinate small amounts frequently, and she will lean or rub against other horses, fences, trailers, and humans. She will be friendly and flirtatious to geldings that she normally disdains, and needless to say, this can be a very frustrating time for the geldings. I had a Thoroughbred mare who once sneaked out of a gate that was open for a split second, to make a beeline for a Quarter Horse stallion on a farm half a mile away; I caught her prancing and “showing” and trying desperately to figure out how to get into his paddock. And I currently have a Thoroughbred gelding who loves flirtatious mares of any breed, and will crawl under electobraid, or swim across stock ponds, to pay a gentlemanly visit to the ladies.
suspiciousfoal.jpgIn the winter, when day length is short, most mares will enter a non-cycling phase, with an inactive reproductive tract. Lower levels of GnRH mean less FSH to induce the maturation of oocyte-containing follicles, and insufficient LH to induce ovulation. There is a transitional phase between the non-cycling (anestrus) and cycling (estrus) phases, during which the ovarian follicles will mature, but not undergo ovulation, and it is this phase that some horse breeders will attempt to manipulate with prolonged light exposure. In the US, all Thoroughbred foals, regardless of which month they are born, will have their first birthday on their first January 1. On average, gestation in the horse is 340 days, so ideally, the mare should be bred in late winter or early spring, such that her foal is delivered in January, February, or early March of the following year. This is important in the racing industry, to produce a bigger colt at a given racing age, but of course there are other reasons to alter a mare’s breeding cycle, particularly if she is a show or performance horse.
The desire to manipulate equine breeding and the timing of foal delivery has led to a substantial amount of physiological research on fluctuating hormone and melatonin levels, and on light cycle responses, in horse reproduction. For a nice comparison of circadian melatonin levels, temperature, locomotor activity, and blood chemistry in the Thoroughbred mare and the Comisana ewe, see a recent paper by Piccione and colleagues; in the horse, melatonin levels peak after midnight (middle of dark phase), whereas locomotor activity peaks in the middle of the light phase. Since the late 1940s, it has been recognized that the photoperiod is the major signal (zeitgeber) that controls the timing of estrus in mares. By the 1980s, it was generally accepted that the reproductive cycle for most long-lived mammals was optimally synchronized with seasonal changes, through an interaction of the environmental photoperiod and endogenous melatonin levels. However, subsequent measurements of fluctuations in melatonin levels, in horses and in other seasonal breeders, made it clear that the model of suppression of the reproductive cycle by increased melatonin levels was overly simplistic (though the simplistic model still persists on equine information websites).
piccionefig4.jpg
In a 1995 paper, Guerin and colleagues reported plasma melatonin levels in mixed breed mares, under conditions of natural photoperiod, and though there was a clear circadian pattern to melatonin secretion, the peak values and duration of elevated levels of this molecule did not differ significantly between seasons. The observation that about 15-20% of mares continue to cycle throughout the nonbreeding period, i.e. fail to enter the anestrus phase during the shorter day-lengths of winter, led to the identification of other signals that influence the hypothalamus-pituitary control of the breeding cycle. Fitzgerald and McManus (2000) found that this continuous reproductive activity, throughout the winter months, is much more common in mature mares, than in young mares. Continuous treatment with melatonin, through an implant under the skin, did not suppress the estrus cycle in these mature mares. Instead, energy availability, as measured by weight, percent body fat, and circulating leptin levels, seems to alter the occurrence of anestrus in mares. Moreover, mature mares that failed to undergo anestrus had similar winter month levels of melatonin, as did mares that ceased reproductive activity in response to shorter day length.
Finally, a little discussion of an Open Access paper, on a chronobiology issue that is relevant to the performance of elite equine athletes in the Olympics, and at other international venues. Of course the horse and rider must both travel to the competition site, and both are potentially subject to the fatigue, malaise, loss of appetite, and impaired concentration, characteristic of jet lag. To determine how horses might be affected by jet lag, Murphy and colleagues (2007) housed six healthy mares (mixed light horse breed), entrained to a 12 hour light/12 hour dark natural photoperiod, in a light-proofed barn. The researchers then advanced the light/dark cycle by ending the dark period six hours early, and measured both body temperature and serum melatonin levels over the next 11 days. In contrast to the melatonin rhythm in humans and other animals, the equine melatonin phase advance occurred within the first day after the light/dark cycle shift. Re-entrainment of the body temperature rhythm occurred more slowly, and was not complete until 3 days after the shift. Nevertheless, by the criteria of both melatonin and body temperature rhythms, horses appear to adapt much more quickly to abrupt shifts in the light-dark cycle, than do most other animals. This same group of researchers has also examined regulation of clock genes in different tissues of the horse, a paper which might make an interesting subject for another post.

References:

Bastian, T. (2005) The Foal is the Goal: Managing Your Mare and Handling a Stallion. Trafalgar Square Publishing: North Pomfret, VT
Fischer, T.W., Slominski, A., Tobin, D.J., and Paus, R. (2008) Melatonin and the hair follicle. J. Pineal Res. 44, 1-15.
Fitzgerald, B.P., and McManus, C.J. (2000) Photoperiodic versus metabolic signals as determinants of seasonal anestrus in the mare. Biol. Reprod. 63, 335-340.
Guerin, M.V., Deed, J.R., Kennaway, D.J., and Matthews, C.D. (1995) Plasma melatonin in the horse: Measurements in natural photoperiod and in acutely extended darkness throughout the year. J. Pineal Res. 19, 7-15.
Murphy, B.A., Elliott, J.A., Sessions, D.R., Vick, M.M., Kennedy, E.L., Fitzgerald, B.P. (2007). Rapid phase adjustment of melatonin and core body temperature rhythms following a 6-h advance of the light/dark cycle in the horse. Journal of Circadian Rhythms, 5(1), 5. DOI: 10.1186/1740-3391-5-5
PICCIONE, G., CAOLA, G., REFINETTI, R. (2005). Temporal relationships of 21 physiological variables in horse and sheep. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology – Part A: Molecular & Integrative Physiology, 142(4), 389-396. DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpa.2005.07.019

How to get scientists to adopt web 2.0 technologies – Obligatory Reading of the Day

Eva Amsen: How to get scientists to adopt web 2.0 technologies:

Many, if not most, scientists are not in the habit of putting things online. The ones that are might be tempted by the concept of sharing the papers they read, letting everyone look at their lab notebook, joining a forum or writing a blog. If you’re reading this in your RSS feed or clicked through from FriendFeed, you’re probably one of those people. But think about your friends and colleagues who only turn on their computer for work and e-mail. They’re not going to tag their favourite papers or discuss the process of research with total strangers on the internet. It’s an extra thing to do that’s not already part of their lives, and no matter how appealing they might find the concept of open data or sharing information, they won’t join these sites or movements because it’s not something they are already doing.
So what are they already doing?

See also discussions on FriendFeed about this insightful article.
What do you think?

How to moderate a conference panel

Jeremiah Owyang: How to Successfully Moderate a Conference Panel, A Comprehensive Guide
Not all of it is applicable to an unconference like ScienceOnline’09, but lots of nuggets of wisdom in there.

Geeks for Government!

Jessica reminds us that several scientists and geeks (i.e., Web designers and programmers) are running for various political offices this year. Some of them even got together on an ActBlue Geek Page.
Of them all, I particularly like the savvy campaign ways of Sean Tavis who is running for Kansas State House, trying to displace a Creationist, anti-woman Neanderthal from that seat. Both Kevin Z and Ed Cone noted his online savvy and ability to raise funds online by using the Web well. Listen to this NPR story about this and read his XKCD-style stick-figure cartoons.
And if you want to donate to any of these guys, go for it. We need more people in government who actually understand how the world works.

Guest Posts on A Blog Around The Clock

You all loved it when my Mom wrote two 5-part series of guest-posts. You remember the exciting reports from herpetology survey by Kevin when he was in China. My friend Heinrich wrote two guest-posts about sleep. And most recently Anne-Marie wrote a guest-post about daily rhythms in bats. As you all appeared to like these posts, I thought I’d ask another 4-5 bloggers to write something and post here. The first one will be posted here in a couple of hours, so stay tuned……

ClockQuotes

I find television very educating. Every time somebody turns on the set I go into the other room and read a book.
– Julius Henry “Groucho” Marx

Today’s carnivals

Grand Rounds 4.48. are up on Six Until Me
Carnival of the Godless #98 is up on Letters from a broad…

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 45 new articles in PLoS ONE this week. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites, including the first one which tests one of Darwin’s own hypotheses:
Resource Competition Triggers the Co-Evolution of Long Tongues and Deep Corolla Tubes:

It is normally thought that deep corolla tubes evolve when a plant’s successful reproduction is contingent on having a corolla tube longer than the tongue of the flower’s pollinators, and that pollinators evolve ever-longer tongues because individuals with longer tongues can obtain more nectar from flowers. A recent model shows that, in the presence of pollinators with long and short tongues that experience resource competition, coexisting plant species can diverge in corolla-tube depth, because this increases the proportion of pollen grains that lands on co-specific flowers. We have extended the model to study whether resource competition can trigger the co-evolution of tongue length and corolla-tube depth. Starting with two plant and two pollinator species, all of them having the same distribution of tongue length or corolla-tube depth, we show that variability in corolla-tube depth leads to divergence in tongue length, provided that increasing tongue length is not equally costly for both species. Once the two pollinator species differ in tongue length, divergence in corolla-tube depth between the two plant species ensues. Co-evolution between tongue length and corolla-tube depth is a robust outcome of the model, obtained for a wide range of parameter values, but it requires that tongue elongation is substantially easier for one pollinator species than for the other, that pollinators follow a near-optimal foraging strategy, that pollinators experience competition for resources and that plants experience pollination limitation.

Owls May Use Faeces and Prey Feathers to Signal Current Reproduction:

Many animals communicate by marking focal elements of their home range with different kinds of materials. Visual signaling has been demonstrated to play a previously unrecognized role in the intraspecific communication of eagle owls (Bubo bubo), in both territorial and parent-offspring contexts. Visual signals may play a role in a variety of circumstances in this crepuscular and nocturnal species. Here, we report that a large amount of extremely visible white faeces and prey feathers appear during the breeding season on posts and plucking sites in proximity to the nest, potentially representing a way for eagle owls to mark their territory. We present descriptive and experimental evidence showing that faeces and prey remains could act as previously unrecognized visual signals in a nocturnal avian predator. This novel signaling behavior could indicate the owls’ current reproductive status to potential intruders, such as other territorial owls or non-breeding floaters. Faeces and prey feather markings may also advertise an owl’s reproductive status or function in mate-mate communication. We speculate that faeces marks and plucking may represent an overlooked but widespread method for communicating current reproduction to conspecifics. Such marking behavior may be common in birds, and we may now be exploring other questions and mechanisms in territoriality.

Phase Shift from a Coral to a Corallimorph-Dominated Reef Associated with a Shipwreck on Palmyra Atoll:

Coral reefs can undergo relatively rapid changes in the dominant biota, a phenomenon referred to as phase shift. Various reasons have been proposed to explain this phenomenon including increased human disturbance, pollution, or changes in coral reef biota that serve a major ecological function such as depletion of grazers. However, pinpointing the actual factors potentially responsible can be problematic. Here we show a phase shift from coral to the corallimorpharian Rhodactis howesii associated with a long line vessel that wrecked in 1991 on an isolated atoll (Palmyra) in the central Pacific Ocean. We documented high densities of R. howesii near the ship that progressively decreased with distance from the ship whereas R. howesii were rare to absent in other parts of the atoll. We also confirmed high densities of R. howesii around several buoys recently installed on the atoll in 2001. This is the first time that a phase shift on a coral reef has been unambiguously associated with man-made structures. This association was made, in part, because of the remoteness of Palmyra and its recent history of minimal human habitation or impact. Phase shifts can have long-term negative ramification for coral reefs, and eradication of organisms responsible for phase shifts in marine ecosystems can be difficult, particularly if such organisms cover a large area. The extensive R. howesii invasion and subsequent loss of coral reef habitat at Palmyra also highlights the importance of rapid removal of shipwrecks on corals reefs to mitigate the potential of reef overgrowth by invasives.

Adaptive Melanin Response of the Soil Fungus Aspergillus niger to UV Radiation Stress at “Evolution Canyon”, Mount Carmel, Israel:

Adaptation is an evolutionary process in which traits in a population are tailored by natural selection to better meet the challenges presented by the local environment. The major discussion relating to natural selection concerns the portraying of the cause and effect relationship between a presumably adaptive trait and selection agents generating it. Therefore, it is necessary to identify trait(s) that evolve in direct response to selection, enhancing the organism’s fitness. “Evolution Canyon” (EC) in Israel mirrors a microcosmic evolutionary system across life and is ideal to study natural selection and local adaptation under sharply, microclimatically divergent environments. The south-facing, tropical, sunny and xeric “African” slope (AS) receives 200%-800% higher solar radiation than the north-facing, temperate, shady and mesic “European” slope (ES), 200 meters apart. Thus, solar ultraviolet radiation (UVR) is a major selection agent in EC influencing the organism-environment interaction. Melanin is a trait postulated to have evolved for UV-screening in microorganisms. Here we investigate the cause and effect relationship between differential UVR on the opposing slopes of EC and the conidial melanin concentration of the filamentous soil fungus Aspergillus niger. We test the working hypothesis that the AS strains exhibit higher melanin content than strains from the ES resulting in higher UV resistance. We measured conidial melanin concentration of 80 strains from the EC using a spectrophotometer. The results indicated that mean conidial melanin concentration of AS strains were threefold higher than ES strains and the former resisted UVA irradiation better than the latter. Comparisons of melanin in the conidia of A. niger strains from sunny and shady microniches on the predominantly sunny AS and predominantly shady ES indicated that shady conditions on the AS have no influence on the selection on melanin; in contrast, the sunny strains from the ES displayed higher melanin concentrations. We conclude that melanin in A. niger is an adaptive trait against UVR generated by natural selection.

The Silkworm (Bombyx mori) microRNAs and Their Expressions in Multiple Developmental Stages:

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) play crucial roles in various physiological processes through post-transcriptional regulation of gene expressions and are involved in development, metabolism, and many other important molecular mechanisms and cellular processes. The Bombyx mori genome sequence provides opportunities for a thorough survey for miRNAs as well as comparative analyses with other sequenced insect species. We identified 114 non-redundant conserved miRNAs and 148 novel putative miRNAs from the B. mori genome with an elaborate computational protocol. We also sequenced 6,720 clones from 14 developmental stage-specific small RNA libraries in which we identified 35 unique miRNAs containing 21 conserved miRNAs (including 17 predicted miRNAs) and 14 novel miRNAs (including 11 predicted novel miRNAs). Among the 114 conserved miRNAs, we found six pairs of clusters evolutionarily conserved cross insect lineages. Our observations on length heterogeneity at 5′ and/or 3′ ends of nine miRNAs between cloned and predicted sequences, and three mature forms deriving from the same arm of putative pre-miRNAs suggest a mechanism by which miRNAs gain new functions. Analyzing development-related miRNAs expression at 14 developmental stages based on clone-sampling and stem-loop RT PCR, we discovered an unusual abundance of 33 sequences representing 12 different miRNAs and sharply fluctuated expression of miRNAs at larva-molting stage. The potential functions of several stage-biased miRNAs were also analyzed in combination with predicted target genes and silkworm’s phenotypic traits; our results indicated that miRNAs may play key regulatory roles in specific developmental stages in the silkworm, such as ecdysis. Taking a combined approach, we identified 118 conserved miRNAs and 151 novel miRNA candidates from the B. mori genome sequence. Our expression analyses by sampling miRNAs and real-time PCR over multiple developmental stages allowed us to pinpoint molting stages as hotspots of miRNA expression both in sorts and quantities. Based on the analysis of target genes, we hypothesized that miRNAs regulate development through a particular emphasis on complex stages rather than general regulatory mechanisms.

Matched Filters, Mate Choice and the Evolution of Sexually Selected Traits:

Fundamental for understanding the evolution of communication systems is both the variation in a signal and how this affects the behavior of receivers, as well as variation in preference functions of receivers, and how this affects the variability of the signal. However, individual differences in female preference functions and their proximate causation have rarely been studied. Calling songs of male field crickets represent secondary sexual characters and are subject to sexual selection by female choice. Following predictions from the “matched filter hypothesis” we studied the tuning of an identified interneuron in a field cricket, known for its function in phonotaxis, and correlated this with the preference of the same females in two-choice trials. Females vary in their neuronal frequency tuning, which strongly predicts the preference in a choice situation between two songs differing in carrier frequency. A second “matched filter” exists in directional hearing, where reliable cues for sound localization occur only in a narrow frequency range. There is a strong correlation between the directional tuning and the behavioural preference in no-choice tests. This second “matched filter” also varies widely in females, and surprisingly, differs on average by 400 Hz from the neuronal frequency tuning. Our findings on the mismatch of the two “matched filters” would suggest that the difference in these two filters appears to be caused by their evolutionary history, and the different trade-offs which exist between sound emission, transmission and detection, as well as directional hearing under specific ecological settings. The mismatched filter situation may ultimately explain the maintenance of considerable variation in the carrier frequency of the male signal despite stabilizing selection.

Evidence of the Importance of Host Habitat Use in Predicting the Dilution Effect of Wild Boar for Deer Exposure to Anaplasma spp:

Foci of tick-borne pathogens occur at fine spatial scales, and depend upon a complex arrangement of factors involving climate, host abundance and landscape composition. It has been proposed that the presence of hosts that support tick feeding but not pathogen multiplication may dilute the transmission of the pathogen. However, models need to consider the spatial component to adequately explain how hosts, ticks and pathogens are distributed into the landscape.
In this study, a novel, lattice-derived, behavior-based, spatially-explicit model was developed to test how changes in the assumed perception of different landscape elements affect the outcome of the connectivity between patches and therefore the dilution effect. The objective of this study was to explain changes in the exposure rate (ER) of red deer to Anaplasma spp. under different configurations of suitable habitat and landscape fragmentation in the presence of variable densities of the potentially diluting host, wild boar. The model showed that the increase in habitat fragmentation had a deep impact on Habitat Sharing Ratio (HSR), a parameter describing the amount of habitat shared by red deer and wild boar, weighted by the probability of the animals to remain together in the same patch (according to movement rules), the density of ticks and the density of animals at a given vegetation patch, and decreased the dilution effect of wild boar on deer Anaplasma ER.
The model was validated with data collected on deer, wild boar and tick densities, climate, landscape composition, host vegetation preferences and deer seropositivity to Anaplasma spp. (as a measure of ER) in 10 study sites in Spain. However, although conditions were appropriate for a dilution effect, empirical results did not show a decrease in deer ER in sites with high wild boar densities. The model showed that the HSR was the most effective parameter to explain the absence of the dilution effect. These results suggest that host habitat usage may weaken the predicted dilution effect for tick-borne pathogens and emphasize the importance of the perceptual capabilities of different hosts in different landscapes and habitat fragmentation conditions for predictions of dilution effects.

Stochastic and Regulatory Role of Chromatin Silencing in Genomic Response to Environmental Changes:

Phenotypic diversity and fidelity can be balanced by controlling stochastic molecular mechanisms. Epigenetic silencing is one that has a critical role in stress response. Here we show that in yeast, incomplete silencing increases stochastic noise in gene expression, probably owing to unstable chromatin structure. Telomere position effect is suggested as one mechanism. Expression diversity in a population achieved in this way may render a subset of cells to readily respond to various acute stresses. By contrast, strong silencing tends to suppress noisy expression of genes, in particular those involved in life cycle control. In this regime, chromatin may act as a noise filter for precisely regulated responses to environmental signals that induce huge phenotypic changes such as a cell fate transition. These results propose modulation of chromatin stability as an important determinant of environmental adaptation and cellular differentiation.

Culture Shapes How We Look at Faces:

Face processing, amongst many basic visual skills, is thought to be invariant across all humans. From as early as 1965, studies of eye movements have consistently revealed a systematic triangular sequence of fixations over the eyes and the mouth, suggesting that faces elicit a universal, biologically-determined information extraction pattern. Here we monitored the eye movements of Western Caucasian and East Asian observers while they learned, recognized, and categorized by race Western Caucasian and East Asian faces. Western Caucasian observers reproduced a scattered triangular pattern of fixations for faces of both races and across tasks. Contrary to intuition, East Asian observers focused more on the central region of the face. These results demonstrate that face processing can no longer be considered as arising from a universal series of perceptual events. The strategy employed to extract visual information from faces differs across cultures.

Habitat-Specific Population Growth of a Farmland Bird:

To assess population persistence of species living in heterogeneous landscapes, the effects of habitat on reproduction and survival have to be investigated. We used a matrix population model to estimate habitat-specific population growth rates for a population of northern wheatears Oenanthe oenanthe breeding in farmland consisting of a mosaic of distinct habitat (land use) types. Based on extensive long-term data on reproduction and survival, habitats characterised by tall field layers (spring- and autumn-sown crop fields, ungrazed grasslands) displayed negative stochastic population growth rates (log λs: −0.332, −0.429, −0.168, respectively), that were markedly lower than growth rates of habitats characterised by permanently short field layers (pastures grazed by cattle or horses, and farmyards, log λs: −0.056, +0.081, −0.059). Although habitats differed with respect to reproductive performance, differences in habitat-specific population growth were largely due to differences in adult and first-year survival rates, as shown by a life table response experiment (LTRE). Our results show that estimation of survival rates is important for realistic assessments of habitat quality. Results also indicate that grazed grasslands and farmyards may act as source habitats, whereas crop fields and ungrazed grasslands with tall field layers may act as sink habitats. We suggest that the strong decline of northern wheatears in Swedish farmland may be linked to the corresponding observed loss of high quality breeding habitat, i.e. grazed semi-natural grasslands.

Gene Expression Disruptions of Organism versus Organ in Drosophila Species Hybrids:

Hybrid dysfunctions, such as sterility, may result in part from disruptions in the regulation of gene expression. Studies of hybrids within the Drosophila simulans clade have reported genes expressed above or below the expression observed in their parent species, and such misexpression is associated with male sterility in multigenerational backcross hybrids. However, these studies often examined whole bodies rather than testes or had limited replication using less-sensitive but global techniques. Here, we use a new RNA isolation technique to re-examine hybrid gene expression disruptions in both testes and whole bodies from single Drosophila males by real-time quantitative RT-PCR. We find two early-spermatogenesis transcripts are underexpressed in hybrid whole-bodies but not in assays of testes alone, while two late-spermatogenesis transcripts seem to be underexpressed in both whole-bodies and testes alone. Although the number of transcripts surveyed is limited, these results provide some support for a previous hypothesis that the spermatogenesis pathway in these sterile hybrids may be disrupted sometime after the expression of the early meiotic arrest genes.

Drinking Age?

Yup, I’ve been hearing about this Amethyst Initiative about lowering the drinking age from 21 to 18 and wondered if I should blog about it from my perspective. Then I saw that Jake wrote a good post about it (and also see his older post on the topic and good comments by his readers) and decided to chime in.
I grew up in a country with no drinking age laws at all. When I was very young, perhaps as young as five, one of my regular chores was to go to the corner shop to buy things like bread, milk, yoghurt or whatever else was needed. Sometimes that meant I would get some beer or wine or liquor. And it was fine to sell that to me at that young age (though the bottles were heavy!).
Also, at pretty young age, my brother and I were given bevanda (watered-down wine) or beer in a tiny little glass to sip with the Sunday family lunch. Then we would take a nap. Perhaps a sip of wine at the moment the New Year strikes in.
Later, in high school or so, we experimented a little more, at parties and during summer vacations, with our friends. But it was very, very rare that anyone got really drunk. I have never in my life had so much alcohol that I could not walk home in a pretty straight line, carrying my guitar without breaking it, climbing up seven floors, unlocking the door sufficiently quietly not to wake up the rest of the family, and putting myself to bed normally (i.e., undressing, putting on my pyjamas, etc.).
Then I came to the USA. Once, early on, a bunch of us (including the future Mrs.Coturnix) went to one of those places where people dance the Electric Slide. The age limit to enter was 21. I was 25, everyone there was my age or older. And everyone was binge-drinking some excuse for beer. And behaving in a more infantile way than my friends and I ever did when we were 15. We never visited such a place again. I sometimes go for months without a sip of alcohol. But then I enjoy a glass of really good wine, or beer or liquore every now and then as well.
Now, it is easy to say: America bad, Europe good. But how does one improve the situation in the States? I don’t think lowering the drinking age would do any good on its own. In most European countries there is a culture of drinking, a respect for alcohol, and even a degree of snobishness about kinds of drinks one imbibes (not a bad thing in this case, I say) – none of it existing in the States.
Lowering the drinking age would only change the timing – the binge-drinking parties would happen at the 18th birthday parties instead of 21st. How does one change a culture? From Miller Lite binge-drinking culture to a society of enologists and connoisseurs of local microbrews? I don’t think asking parents to teach the kids would make any difference, as the parents and grandparents are equally missing that component of early childhood education. The drinking problem here is not occuring just among the college crowd, but at all ages.
I would completely eliminate drinking age. But before that, perhaps a year before that, I would:
1) enforce the drunk driving laws better. Once people start getting tickets and losing licences, they would think twice next time.
2) eliminate the laws that prevent people from moving good wines and beers across state lines.
3) elminate lwas that prevent sale of booze on Sundays
4) start a huge educational campaign through all media outlets and all communication channels: TV, radio, newspapers, street posters, roadsigns, pamphlets left in bars, blogs, etc. actually explaining how to teach kids to drink responsibly and to have a healthy respect for alcohol. Having free classes offered. Wine-tastings. A year of such all-out campaigning (similar to the anti-smoking one that was pretty successful) would probably make enough of a difference to make it safer to carefully eliminate the drinking age laws, then monitor the effects and reinstate or alter the laws as needed.
Every country has its alcoholics. But in most countries, most of the people are knowledgeable about drinking. It can be done in the USA as well if a lot of thought and planning is put into it. And money.
Oh wait! The prime candidates for funding such a thing, e.g., the producers of Miller Lite, might not like this scheme after all….because educated public would not drink their crappy product any more.

Animal Behavior

NC Gubernatorial Debate Tonight

Support Beverly Purdue:

Bev and Pat McCrory will face each other tonight in the second televised debate of the general election. The debate will be broadcast live at 8pm on WTVD in the Triangle area and streamed live on ABC11.com. Tune in tonight as Bev continues to prove why she’s the best candidate to move North Carolina forward.
New ad, including Charlotte
Click here to see Bev’s new ad, which is also airing in the Charlotte media market — the first ad by either side to air in Charlotte. It focuses on Bev’s extraordinary record of accomplishment and her plans for North Carolina’s future – a higher minimum wage, property tax relief for seniors, and creating the jobs of the future.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Sweets Make Young Horses Harder To Train, Study Finds:

Young horses may be easier to train if they temporarily lay off the sweets, says a Montana State University study where two-year-olds wore pedometers, wrist watches and Ace bandages. A commercial mixture of corn, oats, barley and molasses — sometimes called “sweet grain” or “sweet feed” — gives horses the glossy coat and lively spirit that makes them attractive to prospective buyers, said Jan Bowman, an animal nutritionist at MSU.

Mirror Self-recognition In Magpie Birds:

Self-recognition, it has been argued, is a hallmark of advanced cognitive abilities in animals. It was previously thought that only the usual suspects of higher cognition–some great apes, dolphins, and elephants–were able to recognize their own bodies in a mirror.

DEET’s Not Sweet To Mosquitoes, Groundbreaking Research Shows:

Spray yourself with a DEET-based insect repellent and the mosquitoes will leave you alone. But why? They flee because of their intense dislike for the smell of the chemical repellent and not because DEET jams their sense of smell, report researchers at the University of California, Davis.

Key Photosynthesis Step Replicated: Scientists Learn From Nature To Split Water Into Hydrogen And Oxygen:

An international team of researchers led by Monash University has used chemicals found in plants to replicate a key process in photosynthesis paving the way to a new approach that uses sunlight to split water into hydrogen and oxygen.

Trees, Forests And The Eiffel Tower Reveal Theory Of Design In Nature:

What do a tree and the Eiffel Tower have in common? According to a Duke University engineer, both are optimized for flow. In the case of trees, the flow is of water from the ground throughout the trunk, branches and leaves, and into the air. The Eiffel Tower’s flow carries stresses throughout the structure without collapsing under its own weight or being downed by the wind.

PLoS ONE on FriendFeed

Last night I made another room in FriendFeed – PLoS ONE in the Media/Blogs. I made it primarily for my own use, linking to the media and blog coverage of PLoS ONE papers so I can have everything in one place.
But this should not stop you from using it, as well as from adding to it – if you read (or write yourself) a good article or blog post about one of the PLoS ONE papers, old or new, please place the link there and help me in my work. See the ‘Green Sahara’ example for the format I prefer (use the title and link of the paper, then add URLs of posts/articles in comments).

ClockQuotes

Our ignorance of history causes us to slander our own times.
– Gustave Flaubert

When AP makes a funny typo.

Try this search but click on “Sorted by date with duplicates included”:
Lieberman2.JPG
(Click here to see enlarged)
Hat-tip to Anonymoses (also see Kevin Z)

NPR interview with Nancy Olson

I was just on my way to Raleigh this morning, among other errands also heading to Quail Ridge Books to pick up a book there, when I heard Nancy Olson’s interview on NPR’s The State Of Things. Very nice interview with the owner of my favourite bookstore! I drove slowly in order to hear the whole thing:

When Nancy Olson opened a small bookstore back in 1984, she wanted it to be more than just a place to find bestsellers. Today, Quail Ridge Books and Music is a community anchor, an incubator for Raleigh’s creative class and a dream come true. Nancy joins host Frank Stasio to share stories from her many years of selling books and meeting authors.

BIO101 again

When I got a job a year ago, I decided not to quit teaching, but just to “ease up” a little bit. So, I taught the lab (BIO102) my regular 4-5 times per year on Saturday mornings, but took a break in teaching the lectures (BIO101). I have been teaching introductory biology at NC Wesleyan College for eight years now, in adult education on their Triangle campus.
Last week I finished teaching – both lecture and lab again – and turned in the grades this morning. I have to say that it has been nicer and nicer teaching there over the years. I think the students are getting better and better (who knows, perhaps I am getting better as well). I realize that they all have jobs and families, many are parents, some single parents. They need a diploma in order to get a promotion at work. They major in business, etc., and are generally scared of science. But fewer and fewer try to use their Real Life as an excuse to miss class or beg for a higher grade. And, I tend to teach in a way that will make it relevant to them and at least somewhat interesting. This time we really had fun and I turned in the best grades to date. They just did very well. Even their PPT talks were unusually good for this class.
Previously, I used a blog as a repository of my class notes, to save the trees. But this time, I used the class blog in part for homework – they posted links to biology-related articles and videos in the comments and we (when we had time) discussed those in class.
When I started teaching, I tried to do a lot of in-class discussion but that did not work very well, so I switched to a more direct, lecture approach. Now, the students are asking for more discussion and less lecturing. And the way the student body has been improving lately, I will try to do so next time I teach.

What kind of personality predisposes one to start blogging?

That is an interesting question, an answer to which was attempted in this paper:
Who blogs? Personality predictors of blogging:

The Big Five personality inventory measures personality based on five key traits: neuroticism, extraversion, agreeableness, openness to experience, and conscientiousness [Costa, P. T., Jr., & McCrae, R. R. (1992). Normal personality assessment in clinical practice: The NEO Personality Inventory. Psychological Assessment 4, 5-13]. There is a growing body of evidence indicating that individual differences on the Big Five factors are associated with different types of Internet usage [Amichai-Hamburger, Y., & Ben-Artzi, E. (2003). Loneliness and Internet use. Computers in Human Behavior 19, 71-80; Hamburger, Y. A., & Ben-Artzi, E. (2000). Relationship between extraversion and neuroticism and the different uses of the Internet. Computers in Human Behavior 16, 441-449]. Two studies sought to extend this research to a relatively new online format for expression: blogging. Specifically, we examined whether the different Big Five traits predicted blogging. The results of two studies indicate that people who are high in openness to new experience and high in neuroticism are likely to be bloggers. Additionally, the neuroticism relationship was moderated by gender indicating that women who are high in neuroticism are more likely to be bloggers as compared to those low in neuroticism whereas there was no difference for men. These results indicate that personality factors impact the likelihood of being a blogger and have implications for understanding who blogs.

You can also read a brief summary here: Dear World: What kind of a person blogs?

Around 20 per cent of the students blogged, mostly about their personal experiences. Among female students only, those who scored highly on neuroticism (i.e. anxious, insecure characters) were more likely to blog. This is consistent with work on internet usage that also found an association with neurotic personality types, but only among women. The researchers surmised that nervous women may blog to “assuage loneliness or in an attempt to reach out and form social connections with others.”
Among both men and women, those who were more open to experience were also more likely to blog – perhaps unsurprisingly given that blogging is a relatively new phenomenon and given that this personality dimension is associated with creativity.
The researchers cautioned their findings may only be applicable to college students in America and called on future research to look at why people blog. “It is important for social scientists to continue to examine this phenomenon to fully understand its affects on psychological processes that differentiate it from other similar forms of self-expression,” they said.

You can take your own peronality test used in this study here (my results are under the fold).
Of course, as they warn, this is not a representative sample. These are very young people, mainly writing personal journals. If the sample was taken at a typical BloggerCon, where most people are 30 or older writing about technology or politics, they would probably get different results. If they polled academic bloggers, including science bloggers, they would probably find something else again. But it’s a good start with interesting results.

Continue reading

Fairness Doctrine Panic

Fairness Doctrine Panic hits FCC, spreads through blogosphere:

The Fairness Doctrine will come up again and again over the next few years–mostly invoked by Republicans. Barack Obama says he opposes the Fairness Doctrine. But expect everything that he asks of broadcasters and the Internet to get called the Fairness Doctrine anyway. You can also expect conservatives to see the Doctrine in any telecom proposal that sounds too regulatory: requiring a minimum of local radio fare, restrictions on product placement, caps on how much junk food advertisers can hawk to children on digital TV, etc. All these sinister ideas, plus net neutrality, will be boiled in the same rhetorical broth.
In the final analysis, this debate isn’t about an extinct FCC policy. Right now it’s about scoring political points. And, most importantly, it’s about prolonging the fantasy that our nation’s broadcasting/telecommunications infrastructure can effectively serve us without government playing a constructive role.

Will the rich save the planet?

Save the planet? Buy it:

Millionaires are purchasing entire ecosystems around the world and turning them into conservation areas. Their goal? To stop environmental catastrophe.

But will they know how to do it well? Will they inject some of their own incorrect ideas into their projects? Who will they listen to when designing these? Will their kids continue?

My picks from ScienceDaily

Light Receptors In Eye Play Key Role In Setting Biological Clock, Study Shows:

Biologists at the University of Virginia have discovered a switching mechanism in the eye that plays a key role in regulating the sleep/wake cycles in mammals.

A Therapy For Baby Boomers To Sleep On: New Drug For Insomniacs Over 55:

If you’re over 55 and have spent more than a few sleepless nights, you’re not alone — insomnia affects about half of all people over 55 — but you may also be at increased risk for physical and mental ailments.

Why An Exciting Book Is Just As Thrilling As A Hair-raising Movie:

Watching Keanu Reeves walk along the ledge of a skyscraper and lose his footing in The Matrix can make us skip a heartbeat or sweat, as if we were risking our own life. This sharing of other people’s emotions in movies has been shown to depend on the fact that observers the same brain regions are activated in the observers when they feel an emotion and when they see someone else experience a similar emotion.

Parents’ Expectations, Styles Can Harm College Students’ Self-esteem:

Mom and Dad are going to flip out over my 3.3 GPA and failure to land a top internship. Such anxieties, common among college students, can harm self-esteem and make it more difficult to adjust to school. But a new University of Central Florida study has found that students’ anxieties often are based on exaggerated perceptions of what their parents expect.

Study Examines The Psychology Behind Students Who Don’t Cheat:

While many studies have examined cheating among college students, new research looks at the issue from a different perspective – identifying students who are least likely to cheat.

Antidepressants May Impair Driving Ability, New Research Finds:

People taking prescription antidepressants appear to drive worse than people who aren’t taking such drugs, and depressed people on antidepressants have even more trouble concentrating and reacting behind the wheel.

Playing Video Games Offers Learning Across Life Span, Say Studies:

Certain types of video games can have beneficial effects, improving gamers’ dexterity as well as their ability to problem-solve – attributes that have proven useful not only to students but to surgeons, according to research recently discussed at the Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association.

Adults Easily Fooled By Children’s False Denials, Study Finds:

Adults are easily fooled when a child denies that an actual event took place, but do somewhat better at detecting when a child makes up information about something that never happened, according to new research from the University of California, Davis.

Aboriginal Kids Can Count Without Numbers:

Knowing the words for numbers is not necessary to be able to count, according to a new study of aboriginal children by UCL (University College London) and the University of Melbourne. The study of the aboriginal children – from two communities which do not have words or gestures for numbers – found that they were able to copy and perform number-related tasks.

Young Children’s ‘Theory Of Mind’ Linked To Subsequent Metacognitive Development In Adolescence:

Metacognition refers to the awareness of one’s knowledge in different areas. The more comprehensive and accurate this metacognitive knowledge, the better one is able to reflect about his or her own actions and behaviors. “Theory of Mind” (ToM) deals with very young children’s understanding of mental life and the ability to estimate mental states.