1.31.2009

Author Pratchett Won't Stop Fighting
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When best-selling fantasy writer Sir Terry Pratchett was diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease in December, 2007 at age 59 - he resolved to "not go down without a fight."

Pratchett invited the BBC to document the ups and downs of day to day life with the Disease, and the result is being aired in the U.K. next week.

The story is covered by Telegraph Media's Editor Anita Singh.

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1.30.2009

2009: A Great Time for Tech Innovation
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For a moment, let's take a detour from the theoretical and the cognitively focused and also away from the political realm and the continual hand-wringing over the Economy.

Let's look at some basic technology changes that have been a decade in coming, but are finally here.

What I'm referring to first of all, is the final collapse of the price barrier in mobile computing, with laptops and other highly portable computing devices reaching price points between $180 and $300.

This means that full-productive work capability has been completely untethered from the office setting and can go anywhere, with more power and utility than the typical smartphone.

It's a new time of excitement in hardware, with capable linux-installed computers available to the mass market for the first time.

This change was foreshadowed by all the talk of 'smart devices' and the network computer or NC, the slimmed-down device, over ten years ago. But now, the size differential is substantial, and WiFi has become ubiquitous, which it certainly was not in 1999 or 2000.

What's Coming?

Nothing less than a work revolution. People are going to realize that all of the consumer and business changes from the Internet's first decade-plus were a warm-up to what's ahead.

In this economy, one must be cognizant of the strategm of the false retreat.

An ancient battlefield tactic, one combatant makes a public display of the fact that they are withdrawing the field of battle, hoping to draw their numerous competitors in headlong flight to the exits with them. Suddenly, the fleeing horde wheels around and unleashes a deadly flight of arrows, the famed Parthian shot, skewering their incautious foe, who is then routed in a charge across the flanks. This tactic was used successfully by the Parthians to obliterate the legions of Crassus during the roman republic, later by the Huns, the Hsiung-nu on the borders of China, the Mongols, and possibly even by venture capitalists in Silicon Valley.

Who knows? It's conceivable that social hubs could one day supplement or even replace government. That's a revolutionary thought. But consider this: the growth of social networks such as myspace and facebook - going from scratch to more than 100 million users in each case in just a few years is totally unprecedented from the perspective of human socio-political organization. The founding fathers would have started one if they could code, but alas, they couldn't. America and Australia, two start-up countries populated initially by losers and castoffs, - were the two fastest growing de novo countries, e.g., from scratch due to immigration.

It took the U.S. over 100 years to achieve a population of 100 million. Myspace and facebook achieved this number 33X-35X faster.

Also, imagine the potential efficiencies for government right-sizing. Today's government has enormously inflated bureaucracy at every level - Federal, state, county, and city - the structure of which originated before telephone and telegraph service was available and didn't change with this invention.

Even more mind-blowing is the fact that early America had MUCH SLOWER communications than the post system of the Roman Empire 1800 years earlier.

Since then, the U.S. absorbed radical telecom and Internet innovations, witnessed the ascent and decline of the railroads; changing business markedly - all except for the case of government, which simply grows unabated.

Some of the blubber needs to be flenced off. Social networks with their large memberships could become an efficient revenue management system. Rather than going to IRS.gov to print out hundreds of specialized forms and/or the library to pick up instruction booklets, you could simply wait to be "poked" by Uncle Sam on April 14th, prompting one to transfer funds.

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blade runner(2) test
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The Blade Runner 2 picture test is here.

The Images are slightly pixellated and likely will be swapped out shortly for higher-res.

See if you can get 100% correct - that is determine if you saw something before, or not. If you can't recall during the test then you need to practice.

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1.29.2009

Serotonin Makes Locust Swarm
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A boost in the levels of serotonin, a neurotransmitter which influences anger, depression, body temperature, sexuality, sleep, and mood in human and mammal brains, has been linked to the swarming behavior of desert locusts. Scientists have found that the levels of this chemical increase 2x-3x and this causes the normally individualistic and even, anti-social insect to become hyper-social and gregarious. Accompanying the rise in serotonin is a physical color change: from brown to pink, green, and multicolored hues.

Up to 25% of the earth's surface is subject to their activity, including Africa, the Mediterranean, Western Asia, and parts of the Americas including the Southwestern U.S.



From the Abstract:

Desert locusts, Schistocerca gregaria, show extreme phenotypic plasticity, transforming between a little-seen solitarious phase and the notorious swarming gregarious phase depending on population density. An essential tipping point in the process of swarm formation is the initial switch from strong mutual aversion in solitarious locusts to coherent group formation and greater activity in gregarious locusts. We show here that serotonin, an evolutionarily conserved mediator of neuronal plasticity, is responsible for this behavioral transformation, being both necessary if behavioral gregarization is to occur and sufficient to induce it. Our data demonstrate a neurochemical mechanism linking interactions between individuals to large-scale changes in population structure and the onset of mass migration.

1 Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford, OX1 3PS, UK.
2 Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge, CB2 3EJ, UK.
3 School of Biological Science, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.

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Gattaca, remix of rocket science and genetics
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Gattaca...via hulu here or just watch below...

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1.27.2009

A Circular Time Spectrum
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Time reconsidered. I recently trimmed some geraniums and, with hands extended at eye level and reaching for them, the rays of the waning sun drifted through the green stems of the plant and illuminated the red and orange petals.

Then I had that familiar sense of deja vue, here was a scene altogether familiar; I had experienced in entirety either exactly the same way before, accessed it in the realm of dreams sometime in the past but only just now recollected, or read in a book, with actions carried on by a protagonist.

Suddenly while contemplating this the bands of color, varied like a rainbow or spectrum paraded in front of my eyes.

The thought wavelengths! popped in my head. It's obvious. The answer is staring us right in the face, almost too close for us to see it.

Physicists are now hinting at the 'pixellation' of the cosmos and I had the ill-mannered thought (probably not unique, but here it is) that time itself may be structured along two fundamental dimensions. Physicists from Einstein onward have written about the plastic nature of time and indeed, it's well established that time is relative to the position of the observer .




Here's an example sometimes used since the 1960's (and regrettably no closer today than in old books from the 1970's). During a supposed trip to Alpha Centauri at a reasonable fraction of the speed of light, say 40-50% as speculated from the hypothesized attainable velocity of the interstellar ramjet, time passes much faster for the crew than for people back on earth.

This effect is even seen at slower speeds within our own solar system at the millisecond level when communicating with probes.

Physics also does not rule out time's essential malleability, e.g.,past and future are human concepts that are observed from our perspective, seeming to be constant laws like gravitation but in fact are not.

Yes, time can be measured linearly as in the variable t but directionality (e.g., past, present, future, is not axiomatic). We also believe that around the edges of black holes the linear nature of time is disruptible.

Why is that? It's almost imponderable.

However, let's look at the nature of light.

On the one hand, light has wavelengths - very long spans measured from the peak of one wave to the next, like the spikes on a lemon meringue pie - to the hundreds of meters and kilometers in the low-end optical (red) and below, including infrared and radio. On the other hand, light has very short wavelengths in blue, violet, ultraviolet, up through gamma rays, etc.




We already know that the amazing spectrum gives us a look at chemical composition of ignited gas and materials, but what if time also had a dual or tripartite nature?

That is, it can be measured (linear) but also has a wavelength-based spectrum, such that events in the past are shifted one way and events in the future are shifted in another direction. Let's assume that the human concept of "past" time with short wavelengths exists simultaneously with the long wavelength "future" time which appears not to have happened yet because of the slowed down intervals.

Going from the past to the future is simply a matter of moving along this continuuum from longer and slower wavelengths (the future) on the one hand and shorter and faster wavelengths in the past. The meeting point or defined gap between these two asymptotes constitutes our very limited observed perspective of the "present" state of time.

The dimension of linear time from a human perspective is simple one "play" setting on the cosmic time player, while the media itself, a ripped, mixed, and burned file of all time can be accessed either at the point of shorter wavelengths (the past) or longer wavelengths (the future). In this conception time is not a "river," which is solely dependent upon human perspective, but more like a circle with no beginning an end. Everything that exists (past, present, future) can be plotted somewhere along the circle.

Of course, we would need to work out the calculus that will connect this wavelength observation to modern physics.

If you think about it, this theory in a cursory sort of way might point to an answer to some of those stumbling problems of time plasticity which standard physics cannot rule out and in fact acknowledges. We also would need to amend natural philosophy.

If so, how do we explain the so called "time paradox problem," that is time travelers going back in time and influencing events which will make the present as we know it, impossible. This is a literary convention from Wells through the travails of Andrew Harlan in The End of Eternity (Asimov) and again in the Terminator series, to name a few.

The answer is, if a theoretical time traveler has the apparatus or perceptive ability to surf along the continuum as defined here, like bouncing from node to node on the Internet, there is nothing we (meaning contemporary humans so cognitively equipped existing at the asymptotal point of convergence) can do about it.

Rather, one could assume that intervention from 'travelers', agents (like agent smith) or something else yet unimagined is the norm and has been throughout time.

Reality, instead is turned on its head and it's actually a reverse paradox.

It would indeed be unexpected if time-travelers, controllers, or a computer program that had the ability, and even the mandate, to influence events instead willingly opted-out of this exercise of controlling power. One could assume that the responsibility for managing the universe would not be given away lightly. By the simple fact of its existence such an external agency impacts reality.

This theory of time (considered purely for entertainment's sake) might work within the recently contemplated cosmic hologram concept but also within normal physics, i.e., the universe just exists, either as steady-state or cyclically via the big bang, and with the potentially helping hand of quantum mechanics.

The question is whether this notion of time conflicts with observations and already derived fundamental laws and furthermore, how do you make a time-player allowing you to access different areas on the disk/points on the circle? That might be a problem for the future.

But, its fun to think about it and keeps your brain buzzing like running and yoga even without red bull.

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1.26.2009

Preview: Blush Response
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conference room at the Human Genetics firm Tyrell Corporation

A psychological test makes up one of the early scenes in Blade Runner. This is a preview of a new Blade Runner game - there will be another to follow for a total of three games building on the popular one introduced two years ago.

Listen to the sound here (will launch in Winamp, Quicktime, or Windows MP.)


Here's an approximation of the scene

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1.25.2009

We Shall Take Your Castle by Force
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[Humorous] Speaking of elderberries the other day, here's the reference from whence that quote came. Also, sales of Monty Python material have 'exploded' due to the distribution of the authorized high-quality clips on youtube by the python organization, which started midway through 2008. Free is not always a bad thing.



article

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Bubble Popping Classic Makes an Appearance
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There's a new game on our site, that may remind you of the pastime of squeezing packing bubbles until they pop, which some people find highly addictive.

Play here >

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1.23.2009

Berries: Good for the Brain, Potent Against Cancer
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New research points to even greater anti-oxidant powers for flavenol-containing dark-skinned berries such as blue and red blackberries, raspberries, elderberries, and blueberries, with the latter possibly slightly less potent than the former varieties.

The NY Times blog has a round-up.

health berry links as a resource:

raspberries
blueberries
elderberries as in 'your mother was a hamster, and your father smelt of..."
chokeberries - the berry with the greatest concentration of antioxidants
black currants
marionberries
gooseberries
blackberries

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1.21.2009

Coglabs Exceeds 10 Million Visitors, 40 Million Page Views
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As we announced earlier, we were closing in on 10 million visitors but recently passed that milestone and today passed 40 million page views.

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1.20.2009

Yes, We are in the Matrix
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See, you are a hologram, body and all

As you're reading this you exist in 2D, like a crystalline character in one register of a comic book. Simultaneously the body called you is being projected halfway across the universe into its present position, relative to the sun, the nearby arm of the spiral Milky Way galaxy, and the Local Group of galaxies (let's say the spine and cover of this month's issue of said comic book).

What? This is all possible if you subscribe to one physicist's new theory.

Craig Hogan, a scientist at the high-energy particle physics' Fermilab | official site in Batavia, Illinois thinks he might have stumbledupon the limit of space time through his participation in the GEO 600 experiment designed to measure subtle gravitational waves, ripples in space-time and remnants of cataclysmic cosmic events tied to black holes and neutron stars. While the GEO600, an array of underground detectors in Germany that extends for some 600 meters, has not detected signs of gravitational waves, it's regular staff had been puzzled by the detection of a subtle, ambient background noise.


representation of spacetime curvature

No one had an explanation.

Into the void stepped Hogan, who has hypothesized that where the 'smooth' continuum of space-time ends a granular pixellation of space-time begins, representing microscopic quantum scale irruptions in the fabric of space and time itself. These convulsions theoretically are the source of the detectable emissions.

"If the GEO600 result is what I suspect it is, then we are all living in a giant cosmic hologram," Hogan shockingly declared.

The conception that humans (and everything in our world) are inside a hologram that's "out there [youtube]" probably sounds impossible, however, the possibility can be derived from our present understanding of black holes, which is something with a pretty firm theoretical footing.

Taking it further, the implication is that 'reality' is actually a projection originating in a 2D substrate on the edge of the universe - that is a flat dimension, not unlike what is known about holograms etched onto the surface of credit cards and smart cards. In the 1990's Susskind and Hooft (a Nobel prize winner in Physics) pioneered the concept. (Palo Alto-based Susskind, a one-time apprentice plumber, also was the first physicist to prepare an entire course on quantum mechanics for distribution via iTunes) One of the key constructs is the earlier work of researchers which has shown theoretically that the entropy (that is, the winding down of energy from a present state to absolute nonexistence) of a black hole is proportional to the surface area of its event horizon. Got that?

(The event horizon (Nasa) is the point of 'no escape' for light or other matter from the maw of the hole).


Pic from the film Event Horizon (c) Paramount Pictures

What Hogan is attempting to do is define the point of demarcation or smoothing between Einstein's cosmology and slightly more esoteric visions such as string theory, which has both advocates (like Michio Kaku here's his myspace page) and detractors.

It may in the future be possible to test the theory by measuring the degree of 'blurriness' seen in the universe at or above the scale of the Planck length, or 10-35 meters.

Here's the notation, if you care to see:



For more background, read the whole article in New Scientist. The notation is not in the New Scientist, but is here thanks to Mr. Wales.



We need to find and ask the guy who was the product director of The Matrix about these features and see if we can do a usability study or focus group. (By the way, he's an acquaintance and colleague-John Billington, and a Facebook friend)

"So, how do you feel about being 2-dimensional? What if we made you a little taller, more colorful, more robust in the 3-D world? We can do all these things simply by tweaking our projector a little bit. Easy."

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Sagittarian Exoplanet may be Earth-like
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Artist conception of planet orbiting a red dwarf star

According to New Scientist, an exoplanet announced earlier (discovered in 2007 with analysis appearing in 2008) located in the direction of the constellation Sagittarius may be Earth-sized.
Earlier, astronomers had estimated it as 2x-3x earth-size and of a composition like Neptune, perhaps. Now, evidence seems to show more of a 'terran' character.

Note this is different than the exoplanet optically observed around the star Fomalhaut.

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1.19.2009

The Face: What it Means
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Men are red, women are green, the nose may be key to "reading" a face, and ordinary eyebrows may be what makes a face recognizable, rather than, say, provocatively bee-stung lips or baby blues. (Interestingly, in aspective Egyptian art, the convention is to show men as reddish in tone like the skin of a Spanish peanut, while women were shown in a yellowish tone, and the dead like Osiris, were green)

Those insights into how we "see" faces are part of the growing field of facial recognition, one of the hottest realms in psychology and neural science.

"It's very controversial: How do we see a face?" said Pawan Sinha, professor of vision and computational neuroscience at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Among the fiercely debated topics, he said, "is whether we learn to recognize faces or whether we come prewired with dedicated brainware for recognizing faces. The disagreement is deep - and rather sharp."

The focus on faces at universities and other research centers is far from purely academic. In the age of terrorism, police and intelligence agencies are clamoring for new technologies that can scan and accurately identify faces - winnow a "wanted" individual from the anonymous airport crowd, or a terrorist scoping out public buildings.

"Understanding how the brain works is the greatest mystery facing us in this century," said Garrison W. Cottrell, professor of computer science at the University of California in San Diego's Jacobs School of Engineering. "And facial recognition is among the greatest challenges to understanding the brain."

In pursuit of answers, psychologists and brain scientists have come up with some unexpected data.

Michael J. Tarr, codirector of Brown University's Center for Vision Research, recently published research in the journal Psychological Science that showed males have more reddish skin while women's skin has a greenish cast.

"The coloration is subtle, but actual - not just a trick of the mind or matter of perception. Men are redder, on average; women greener," Tarr said. "Color information is very robust."

The color difference, he theorized, may be because women need a certain skin pigmentation to better absorb ultraviolet light to synthesize vitamin B for lactation and bone development.

Meanwhile, research at the University of California in San Diego suggests people use the nose as a sort of main navigational point for charting a face.

Scientists found we focus first on the nose - looking just to the left of it, and then to the center - before deciding in a split-instant whether we recognize the person.

Other research suggests eyebrows may be as important as eyes when it comes to recognition. "Put on glasses with thick lenses or strange frames, and people will still recognize you," said MIT's Sinha, whose lab explores how the mind recognizes objects and scenes. "But shaving eyebrows is acutely disruptive to recognition."

Scientists aren't sure why, but one possibility is that eyebrows - like noses or mouths - are important because we recognize other features in relationship to them.
A very few people can be recognized by one salient feature - Jay Leno for his chin, for example. But most faces require fast mental computation," said Marlene Behrmann, professor of psychology at Pittsburgh's Carnegie Mellon University. "We are quickly measuring distances from nose to eyes, nose to mouth, eyebrows to cheek, before we recognize the face. It is these subtle relationships [of distance plus shape] that give most of us our individuality, not just our pretty nose or exquisite lips; those tend to be more similar to everyone else's than we'd care to admit."

No other object is as important for humans to recognize and interpret as faces, say scientists in the field.

"Unless you're an ornithologist, it's not important to know a robin from a sparrow; it's enough to recognize them as birds," Behrmann said. "But . . . to function in society, people have to recognize faces at a highly individualized level."

Nancy Kanwisher, a neuroscientist at MIT, is prominent among scientists whose research suggests a specific "sweet spot" in the brain - called the fusiform face area - has evolved to recognize faces. The ability is seen as coming as naturally as breathing or burping.

"Face perception may be a special domain of cognition, one with its own independent cognitive and neural machinery," she wrote recently.

But other scientists disagree, saying research points more to facial recognition as an acquired skill.

Clues to facial recognition can be found in conditions that hamper it.

Stroke victims and individuals suffering from autism have a tough time recognizing faces, as do people with a puzzling affliction called "prosopagnosia," or face blindness.

Researchers at Carnegie Mellon determined that individuals with prosopagnosia had disruptions in nerves connecting parts of the brain associated with recognizing faces.

"Most of us see the face as a whole, an assemblage. That's why you have no trouble recognizing your wife, but may not even notice her new hair style or lipstick," said Behrmann, a co-author of the study published last month in Nature Neuroscience. "People with the condition, however, can only see the parts, not the larger pattern."

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Barack Obama Taking over as President of U.S.
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With the inauguration, this means a new addition to the Presidents Brain Gym.
Barack Obama is the first president to be born in the 1960's.



Here's a shortcut to the test.

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1.17.2009

The Myth of the Singing Fish
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by Nobel prize winner Haldor Laxness

There is truth to the myth that some creatures of the sea can sing, such as fish, so there is more to the meme than the fantabulous vocalist mermaids of Greek myth, the sirens. Two researchers, Roderick Suthers and Tobias Riede believe that singing originated in fish and gradually was adopted - and perfected - by birds.

"Babies go through several phases of learning before they fully speak such as babbling, one word, two words, etc. -- and so do songbirds," Riede told Discovery News.

Riede, a researcher at the National Center for Voice and Speech, explained that young songbirds also "babble," producing sub-songs, before they create more varied "plastic" songs and then graduate to bird crooning perfection with their adult songs.

read the article

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1.16.2009

Coffee Consumption and Reduced Alzheimer's Risk
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Howard Schultz must be having kittens.

Another paper appeared today documenting reduced risk of cognitive impairment in middle-aged people who drank between 3 and 5 cups of coffee per day.

"Middle-aged people who drank between three and five cups of coffee a day lowered their risk of developing dementia and Alzheimer's disease by between 60 and 65 per cent later in life," said Miia Kivipelto, a professor at the University of Kuopio in Finland and at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm.

Other research (University of North Dakota) has shown that in rabbits, the blood brain barrier was kept intact when the rabbits were given the caffeine equivalent of one cup of coffee per day even when their diet was high in cholesterol. The scientists surmised that caffeine has a blocking effect on the absorption of potentially toxic material through the blood brain barrier.

In another study we covered earlier, caffeine was shown to accelerate the speed of transfer between neurotransmitters, increasing cognitive effectiveness and inter-neural reaction.

Gene expression was also improved simply through sniffing the aroma of coffee.

Too much caffeine though, and you might become like Timothy Leary and start hallucinating. So, like in all things, proper proportionality is required. The happy wo/man has some pleasure from her/his cup of java, but not too much, as too much violates Nature (in the Stoic sense).

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Lounge Chair Made of Skate Boards: Relax the Back
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If you can score some old skateboards, they can be fabricated easily into a comfy lounge chair with fabulous lumbar support.

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1.14.2009

So You Want to Hack Your Brain? Here's How
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Simple tricks and tips from the Boston Globe to arrive at that oh-so-desired altered state. Don't worry, we haven't tried any of them yet.

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The Brain Mechanisms of Social Conformity
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or, how one Learns to Build a Social Network without really Trying

From Eureka Alert:

New research (by Dr. Vasily Klucharev) reveals the brain activity that underlies our tendency to "follow the crowd." The study, published by Cell Press in the January 15th issue of the journal Neuron, provides intriguing insight into how human behavior can be guided by the perceived behavior of other individuals.

Many studies have demonstrated the profound effect of group opinion on individual judgments, and there is no doubt that we look to the behavior and judgment of others for information about what will be considered expected and acceptable behavior.

"We often change our decisions and judgments to conform with normative group behavior," says lead study author Dr. Vasily Klucharev from the F.C. Donders Center for Cognitive Neuroimaging in The Netherlands. "However, the neural mechanisms of social conformity remain unclear."

Dr. Klucharev and colleagues hypothesized that social conformity might be based on reinforcement learning and that a conflict with group opinion could trigger a "prediction error" signal. A prediction error, first identified in reinforcement learning models, is a difference between expected and obtained outcomes that is thought to signal the need for a behavioral adjustment.

Read all

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51,000 visitors
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de young museum...

On Monday and Tuesday we had 25,000 and 26,000 visitors, back-to back. We were in SF on Tuesday for the whole day with intermittent web access and still had 26,000 visits more or less on autopilot. :-)

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Slow Reaction Time plagues SF
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Why is that? Need more brain-training, I imagine. The sf examiner has an interesting flash-based CMS that provides a digital version just like the newspaper.

A few years back (in web 1.0) we looked at an early CMS asset management system that was being shepherded (and demo'd) by George Hearst, then the editor of the Albany, NY Times-Union newspaper - which at the time (2000-2001) was a Hearst paper.

It's amazing how far CMS has come, from vignette to Flash.

They did a lot for archaeology by backing George Reisner (in addition to building much of the UC Berkeley campus).

Albany has a number of monuments to Union soldiers and sailors, like many upper midwestern and eastern towns.

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1.11.2009

New labs info, the black wall
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Some new information and a video is on the labs page.

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Study: 10% Improvement in Cognitive Scores from Exercise
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Another study has found links between fitness and mental capacity, in addition to the two reports that surfaced at the end of December.

Researchers at the University of Calgary find older women who are more physically fit have better cognitive function.

The study, published in the international journal Neurobiology of Aging, finds that physical fitness helps the brain function at the top of its game because physical activity benefits blood flow in the brain and, as a result, aids cognitive abilities.

"Being sedentary is now considered a risk factor for stroke and dementia," Poulin says in a statement. "This study proves for the first time that people who are fit have better blood flow to their brain. Our findings also show that better blood flow translates into improved cognition."

read more at upi.com

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1.08.2009

Stonehenge: the Ideal place for a Rave
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It is, according to accoustic scientists in a Discovery piece by Rosella Lorenzi. Admittedly, that's much better than a heavy metal riff with a tiny miniature of the Druidic wonder as in This is Spinal Tap.

Apparently, it was designed so that a fast rhythym of up to 160 beats per minute could be sustained and amplified by drum players combined with the repetitive echoes from the slabs of stone, approximating the redline speed of the human heart under vigorous exercise. Research is now showing that megaliths perfectly reflect ambient sound. Keep that in mind for your landscape architecture plans. As such, it may have played a role in shamanic tradition.

The researchers' work strongly suggests that the monument's builders knew how to direct the movement of sound. Indeed, the stones at Stonehenge amplify higher-frequency sounds, such as the human voice, while lower-frequency sounds such as drums pass around the stones and can be heard for some distance.

The effect would have been a "dynamic multisensory experience."

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1.07.2009

Tetris May Qwell Flashbacks, PTSD
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Tetris
may improve conditions for people with post-traumatic stress disorder. In a study of 40 healthy volunteers who were exposed to stressful images and ads for drunk driving, those who played tetris for 10.5 minutes immediately after seeing the images had fewer flashbacks than those who saw the images but didn't play the game.



Oxford scientist Dr. Emily Holmes believes the game may disrupt the memories that are retained of the sights and sounds witnessed at the time, and which are later re-experienced through involuntary, distressing flashbacks of that moment.

More material is added to the growing body of evidence pointing to health benefits of game intervention to impact a wide variety of cognitive conditions.

PDF | article

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1.06.2009

Mice Rave Offers Clues to Disease Spread
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Scientists wanting to find out how diseases are spread, in this case, the hanta immunovirus carried by the Western Deer mouse, applied psychedelic, fluorescent colors to captured and released deer mice at 12 sites in the western Utah desert during the spring and fall of 2005. The researchers collected blood samples and tagged some mice with radio transmitters while dusting others with the fluorescent powders.

For two nights during the spring and fall, toothbrushes were used to apply colored powders to five mice at each of the 12 sites, resulting in each site having five different colored mice: pink, blue, green, yellow and orange.

The next day, the researchers viewed mice captured in animal traps under an ultraviolet light (black light), looking for fluorescent powder on each mouse's head, ears, mouth, feet and tail....(read more)

What's a rave?:

Here's a sample Paul Oakenfold/Shifty Shellshock tune (diet Coke flavored for Pete Sealey)



and here's the Oakenfold rave video:



So now you know.

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2008 Final Analysis
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We're still analyzing the numbers, but there was an increase in unique visitors of 220% between the year 2007 and the year 2008 for Cognitive Labs. At the end of the day, it's all about reach and audience. The television people have known this for years, and it is the same on the Internet-though attitudes bounce between higher and lower intervals of interest depending on external factors. But the fundamentals don't change.

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1.05.2009

Milky Way: a Galactic Two-fer
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It's like getting a King-sized Milky way bar for the price of the standard bar, as scientists have found that the Milky Way galaxy is 50% more massive than previously thought and so measures up well with the Andromeda Galaxy - 2.3 million light years away. Astronomers always thought if the local group of galaxies was a basketball team, then the Andromeda Galaxy was the center. But now, it seems like its case of "Twin Towers" taking up all the space inside the paint. According to the VLBA (Very Large Baseline Array)

Researcher: Mark Reid of the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

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Cafe Scientifique at SRI: Gladstone Institute
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Wes says this looks like an interesting evening. I agree. I'll have a doppio espresso, twist of lime



Details

Please note: the January Café will take place on THURSDAY!

Come to SRI for a conversation with our next Café Scientifique speaker:

Lennart Mucke, MD

Director, Gladstone Institute of Neurological Disease
Professor of Neurology & Neuroscience, UCSF

will discuss:

What Will it Take to Defeat Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders
Thursday, January 22, 2009 from 6:00 - 7:30 p.m.

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1.04.2009

Your Real Age, and Your Presidential Age
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A PR coo for the Real Age guys...(Hearst)

Go to the presidential brain gym and see the Ad that's been running there for some time.

Regardless, George Bush showed reasonable reaction time in avoiding the flying shoe.

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1.03.2009

Sneak Preview: new Game
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It'll be on the boards(game_list) tomorrow.

It's by two marvelous guys from Spain.

and the normal game rss feed by some-time AM as well.

But you get it now...

Ran out of red bull, and whole foods is closed...time to sign off.

Rumor: Captain Kirk is launching a social network...is it true?

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1.02.2009

Ever Wonder What the Seven Years War was Like?
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Me Neither.

But only a philosopher could understand the cause. In the Americas, it was called the French & Indian war. Stanley Kubrick adroitly captured it in one of his films...

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Vocal Trance Brain
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Experiment: A pic from the video game Final Fantasy trains your brain....combined with vocal trance. Neuropsych meets Trance? This is a twist on the super-popular game-rip vids that are all over the social networks...

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