Boston locals Dropkick MurphysĀ raised $65,000Ā in just 15 hours for those affected by the Boston Marathon bombings by selling a new t-shirt on their website.
Awesome.
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Andulka

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art blog(derogatory)

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Stranger Things
KIROKAZE

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oozey mess

romaā

izzy's playlists!
Jules of Nature
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@intp-will
Boston locals Dropkick MurphysĀ raised $65,000Ā in just 15 hours for those affected by the Boston Marathon bombings by selling a new t-shirt on their website.
Awesome.
Scientists reverse memory loss in animal brain cells
Neuroscientists at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) have taken a major step in their efforts to help people with memory loss tied to brain disorders such as Alzheimerās disease.
Using sea snail nerve cells, the scientists reversed memory loss by determining when the cells were primed for learning. The scientists were able to help the cells compensate for memory loss by retraining them through the use of optimized training schedules. Findings of this proof-of-principle study appear in the April 17 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience.
āAlthough much works remains to be done, we have demonstrated the feasibility of our new strategy to help overcome memory deficits,ā said John āJackā Byrne, Ph.D., the studyās senior author, as well as director of the W.M. Keck Center for the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory and chairman of the Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy at the UTHealth Medical School.
This latest study builds on Byrneās 2012 investigation that pioneered this memory enhancement strategy. The 2012 study showed a significant increase in long-term memory in healthy sea snails called Aplysia californica, an animal that has a simple nervous system, but with cells having properties similar to other more advanced species including humans.
Yili Zhang, Ph.D., the studyās co-lead author and a research scientist at the UTHealth Medical School, has developed a sophisticated mathematical model that can predict when the biochemical processes in the snailās brain are primed for learning.
Her model is based on five training sessions scheduled at different time intervals ranging from 5 to 50 minutes. It can generate 10,000 different schedules and identify the schedule most attuned to optimum learning.
āThe logical follow-up question was whether you could use the same strategy to overcome a deficit in memory,ā Byrne said. āMemory is due to a change in the strength of the connections among neurons. In many diseases associated with memory deficits, the change is blocked.ā
To test whether their strategy would help with memory loss, Rong-Yu Liu, Ph.D., co-lead author and senior research scientist at the UTHealth Medical School, simulated a brain disorder in a cell culture by taking sensory cells from the sea snails and blocking the activity of a gene that produces a memory protein. This resulted in a significant impairment in the strength of the neuronsā connections, which is responsible for long-term memory.
To mimic training sessions, cells were administered a chemical at intervals prescribed by the mathematical model. After five training sessions, which like the earlier study were at irregular intervals, the strength of the connections returned to near normal in the impaired cells.
āThis methodology may apply to humans if we can identify the same biochemical processes in humans. Our results suggest a new strategy for treatments of cognitive impairment.Ā Mathematical models might help design therapies that optimize the combination of training protocols with traditional drug treatments,ā Byrne said.
He added, āCombining these two could enhance the effectiveness of the latter while compensating at least in part for any limitations or undesirable side effects of drugs. These two approaches are likely to be more effective together than separately and may have broad generalities in treating individuals with learning and memory deficits.ā
(Image courtesy: UC Berkeley)
You know what's awesome? This band.
She was made for me? Lolol. Okay, I'm done. Seriously love this stuff, though.
I'm going to marry Zooey Deschanel...
So It Goes...
I don't really know how to do the whole blogging thing. Ā I guess I just say stuff that I think. Ā I couldn't go to sleep at all last night; I suppose that the cause for my restlessness (aside from the anxiety caused by the fact that I can't get my W2's in order to file my taxes) was the feeling that no one in the world could possibly feel the way I feel about pain and happiness. That is to say, I am rather comfortable with anguish. I've been able to live in quite agony for most of my life, give or take a few outbursts when I simply couldn't bare it any longer. I, for the most part, am good at keeping the true pain I feel 'bottled up' so that others don't really get a sense of the real me. I wear somewhat of a proverbial mask that allows me to hide from even my closest friends and relatives. Don't get me wrong, I like being happy, I enjoy it very much; however, happiness is sort of an odd feeling for me as elation often alludes me. It was when I was thinking this that I started searching for old Amy Lee (of Evanescence) interviews and came across one in which she described exactly that kind of queer comfort of being sorrowful and almost loving emotional pain. This blew my mind; I'd never thought anyone else would have that kind of feeling; though, it's a little impractical being as there are over six billion people in the world. At any rate, she had stated that her song "Lithium" is about just this feeling, hence my username. I just thought I'd share this with someone. I suppose I end the post now...
"So it goes..."
āMy head isnāt into being at home, my headās ⦠into music. Iām a freak for music, I canāt get away from the music ⦠canāt get away from the stage.ā - Al Green
Happy 67th birthday Al Green!
I tell you, I freakin' love Al Green.
Scientists create phantom sensations in non-amputees
The sensation of having a physical body is not as self-evident as one might think. Almost everyone who has had an arm or leg amputated experiences a phantom limb: a vivid sensation that the missing limb is still present. A new study by neuroscientists at the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden shows that it is possible to evoke the illusion of having a phantom hand in non-amputated individuals.
In an article in the scientific periodical Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, the researchers describe a perceptual illusion in which healthy volunteers experience having an invisible hand. The experiment involves the participant sitting at a table with their right arm hidden from their view behind a screen. To evoke the illusion, the scientist touches the right hand of the participant with a small paintbrush while imitating the exact movements with another paintbrush in mid-air within full view of the participant.
āWe discovered that most participants, within less than a minute, transfer the sensation of touch to the region of empty space where they see the paintbrush move, and experience an invisible hand in that positionā, says Arvid Guterstam, lead author of the study. āPrevious research has shown that non-bodily objects, such as a block of wood, cannot be experienced as ones own hand, so we were extremely surprised to find that the brain can accept an invisible hand as part of the body.ā
The study comprises eleven experiments that explore in detail the illusory experience and include 234 volunteers. To demonstrate that the illusion actually worked, the researchers would make a stabbing motion with a knife towards the empty space āoccupiedā by the invisible hand and measure the participantās sweat response to the perceived threat. They found that the participants stress responses were elevated while experiencing the illusion but absent when the illusion was broken.
In another experiment, the volunteers were asked to close their eyes and quickly point with their left hand to their right hand (or to where they perceived it to be). After having experienced the illusion for a while, they would point to the location of the invisible hand rather than to their real hand.
The researchers also measured the brain activity of the participants using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Perceiving the invisible hand illusion led to increased activity in the same parts of the brain that are normally active when individuals see their real hand being touched or when participants experience a prosthetic hand as their own.
āTaken together, our results show that the sight of a physical hand is remarkably unimportant to the brain for creating the experience of oneās physical self,ā says Arvid Guterstam.
The researchers hope that the results of their study will offer insight into future research on phantom pain in amputees.
āThis illusion suggests that the experience of phantom limbs is not unique to amputated individuals, but can easily be created in non-amputees,ā says the principal investigator, Dr Henrik Ehrsson, Docent at the Department of Neuroscience. āThese results add to our understanding of how phantom sensations are produced by the brain, which can contribute to future research on alleviating phantom pain in amputees.ā
Pale Blue Dot.
If you havenāt seen this, I highly recommend it.
It's amazing.
My band, RedHed.
I am excited for this one. Ā This is one of my favorite books of all time and it's being adapted to movie form and I couldn't pick a better actor for the role of Clay.
"The only power any government has is the power to crack down on criminals. Well, when there aren't enough criminals, one makes them. One declares so many things to be a crime that it becomes impossible for men to live without breaking laws."
Ayn Rand
This is a small playlist of my childhood.