Fox News in St. Louis takes us to task to see if Nawgan really does make you smarter! Check it out!

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@drinknawgan
Fox News in St. Louis takes us to task to see if Nawgan really does make you smarter! Check it out!
Drink a Nawgan before final exams!
Nature’s Path Pumpkin-N-Spice granola bar, raw almonds, fresh pineapple & strawberries, and soy milk.
Makes perfect sense
You are standing near 3 light switches, all of them in the off position. One turns on a light in a different room, the others do nothing. You can toggle the switches as much as you like, but can only make one trip to the room and back. How do you find out which switch controls the bulb?
Motor cortex shown to play active role in learning movement patterns
Skilled motor movements of the sort tennis players employ while serving a tennis ball or pianists use in playing a concerto, require precise interactions between the motor cortex and the rest of the brain. Neuroscientists had long assumed that the motor cortex functioned something like a piano keyboard.
"Every time you wanted to hear a specific note, there was a specific key to press," says Andrew Peters, a neurobiologist at UC San Diego’s Center for Neural Circuits and Behavior. "In other words, every specific movement of a muscle required the activation of specific cells in the motor cortex because the main job of the motor cortex was thought to be to listen to the rest of the cortex and press the keys it’s directed to press."
But in a study published in this week’s advance online publication of the journal Nature, Peters, the first author of the paper, and his colleagues found that the motor cortex itself plays an active role in learning new motor movements. In a series of experiments using mice, the researchers showed in detail how those movements are learned over time.
"Our finding that the relationship between body movements and the activity of the part of the cortex closest to the muscles is profoundly plastic and shaped by learning provides a better picture of this process," says Takaki Komiyama, an assistant professor of biology at UC San Diego who headed the research team. "That’s important, because elucidating brain plasticity during learning could lead to new avenues for treating learning and movement disorders, including Parkinson’s disease."
With Simon Chen, another UC San Diego neurobiologist, the researchers monitored the activity of neurons in the motor cortex over a period of two weeks while mice learned to press a lever in a specific way with their front limbs to receive a reward.
"What we saw was that during learning, different patterns of activity—which cells are active, when they’re active—were evident in the motor cortex," says Peters. "This ends up translating to different patterns of activity even for similar movements. Once the animal has learned the movement, similar movements are then accompanied by consistent activity. This consistent activity moreover is totally new to the animal: it wasn’t used early in learning even with movements that were similar to the later movement."
"Early on," Peters says, "the animals will occasionally make movements that look like the expert movements they make after learning. The patterns of brain activity that accompany those similar early and late movements are actually completely different though. Over the course of learning, the animal generates a whole new set of activity in the motor cortex to make that movement. In the piano keyboard analogy, that’s like using one key to make a note early on, but a different key to make the same note later."
Stay alert! Check your sources and don't get fooled!
You might need to crack open a Nawgan!
Drink #nawgan erryday thanks @halfmagician #100happydays (at Lopata Hall, Washington University in St. Louis)
The Lyrid meteor shower peaks tonight (April 21) and you can watch the shooting star action live online.
Watch some shooting stars tonight! And maybe wish for some Nawgan :P
The first glow-in-the-dark highway was unveiled today in Holland. The 1600-feet stretch of road has been coated with a “photo-luminising” powder that uses sunlight to power-up during daytime and then releases a greenish glow at nighttime. One day’s sunlight can supply up to eight hours of glow. This kind of glow-in-the-dark highway is being touted as the future for all roads and it is claimed it will eventually do away with the need for street lamps. The idea was developed by interactive artist Daan Roosegaarde and Dutch civil engineering group Heijmans, and today the technology was being tried out before being officially launched later this month. The first
I don't know, seems pretty cool to me!
TO INFINITY...
In a cloning first, scientists create stem cells from adults
Scientists have moved a step closer to the goal of creating stem cells perfectly matched to a patient’s DNA in order to treat diseases, they announced on Thursday, creating patient-specific cell lines out of the skin cells of two adult men.
The advance, described online in the journal Cell Stem Cell, is the first time researchers have achieved “therapeutic cloning” of adults. Technically called somatic-cell nuclear transfer, therapeutic cloning means producing embryonic cells genetically identical to a donor, usually for the purpose of using those cells to treat disease.
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When we play blocks, we play BIG. "Stack" pits five Cat machines, including Excavators and Telehandlers, against a mountain of massive wood blocks. The objec...
I bet you weren't expecting to see bulldozers play life-sized Jenga when you woke up today.
I tried to take a selfie while a train passed a "safe" distance behind. I guess I was still too close and got kicked in the head. For licensing/usage please ...
Today on the internet, an idiot gets kicked in the face. Then again, what else is new?
reddit user /u/down2WUB found this at the library... perfect!
If you want to see Monday's total lunar eclipse, but don't know when to watch, let this story be your guide.
Don't miss out! It's going to be an awesome sight!