Summer Shows

Sherry WoodardOne of my all-time favorite movies is Grease. The classic love story between Danny Zuko and Sandy Olsson still resonates with me. So when I started writing a blog about all the great summer plans The Planet has lined up, the song “Summer Nights” began to run through my head. So naturally, I started improvising a few conference-related verses to the song. Because I can’t deprive you of the organic masterpiece that resulted, this blog features the song written just for you about our crazy summer plans to the tune of “Summer Nights.” If you aren’t familiar with the classic duet from Sandy and Danny, click the link to play the video in the background as you sing along:

Summer sellin’ having a blast
Summer sellin’, it’s happening fast
We traveled to Web Expo in May
The show was great, as you’ve heard us say

Summer days driftin’ away to uh-oh those summer shows

Tell me more. Tell me more. Was it like a bazaar?
Tell me more. Tell me more. Like, did we raise the bar?

It was great, we stayed out late
Structure’s in June, and we might all just swoon
We’ve got a new look, and we’re SF bound
Carl’s talking about Cloud, making us proud

Summer sun, something’s begun, but uh-oh those summer shows

Tell me more. Tell me more. Well, it’s all on our site.
Tell me more. Tell me more. Can I get an invite?

Takin’ it all to the Lone Star State
HostingCon is next on the slate
Try it out, Server Challenge
I bet there’ll be times to avenge

Summer heat won’t slow us down, but uh-oh those summer shows

Tell me more. Tell me more. Will there be a big bout?
Tell me more. Tell me more. The winner will shout!

We’ll hit New York, just as we planned
Affiliate Summit will be quite grand
There are partners to meet, new friends to greet
We smiled all we could, you know what I mean

Summer heat, updates to Tweet, but uh-oh those summer shows

Tell me more. Tell me more. How much swag did we send?
Tell me more. Tell me more. We’ll be sad when it ends.

It turns colder, but that’s not the end
There are still fall shows to attend
Now I know you’re wondering how …
We got you to sing this out loud

Summer days: dreams and extremes,
But oh …
Those summer shows

Please forgive me for this foray into show tunes on our blog. I simply couldn’t resist!

In case you didn’t catch it all in my musical format, we hope to see you at some of our summer events below!

Web 2.0 ExpoMay 3-6San Francisco, CA
StructureJune 23-24San Francisco, CA
HostingConJuly 19-21Austin, TX
Affliate Summit EastAugust 15-19New York, NY

-Sherry

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Demonstration of the Digital Coast Coastal Inundation Toolkit by Steph Beard, Jodie Sprayberry and Billy Brooks of NOAA Coastal Services Center

Date: 
Thursday, September 23, 2010

Demonstration of the Digital Coast Coastal Inundation Toolkit  by Steph Beard, Jodie Sprayberry and Billy Brooks of NOAA Coastal Services Center (September 23, 1 pm US EDT/10 am US PDT).  The Coastal Inundation Toolkit walks communities through an approach for understanding and addressing coastal inundation issues.  The Toolkit covers understanding basic information about coastal inundation, identifying exposure and potential impacts, mapping potential inundation and impacts, assessing community risks and vulnerability, and communicating risk strategies to initiate change.  The Toolkit also provides case studies of how other communities are addressing this issue.  This webinar will provide a brief overview of the Digital Coast, followed by a tour of the Toolkit, ending with a more in depth demonstration of two specific components within the Toolkit: Coastal County Snapshots and the Inundation Mapping Guidebook.  Coastal County Snapshots provide communities with a map and reports on a county’s demographics, infrastructure, and environment within the flood zone.  The Inundation Mapping Guidebook covers ways to obtain and prepare elevation data and water levels, and map and visualize inundation.  Learn more about the Coastal Inundation Toolkit at http://www.csc.noaa.gov/digitalcoast/inundation.  Register for this webinar at https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/621728121.

Where Will It All End: An Interview

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Lahore, Pakistan
Lahore, Pakistan

In August, 2008, Dave of The Longest Way Home, was interviewed about his search for that (proverbial) place we all like to call… Well… Home. The place where we set up a permanent camp, decorate the walls, kick off our boots at night, put books on the shelves, have home-cooked meals, and maybe don’t have to close the door when in the bathroom. Okay – a bit graphic but isn’t that part of what “home” really means? A place of comfort, security and belonging?

It’s now 2010. Has Dave found a home or is he still on the hunt? We took time to check back in with him to find out. Some things have changed. Some have not. But no matter what, in traveling that elusive road for these additional two years – life is no longer the same.

In your last interview, you were asked if you thought you were coming close to finding your new home. You replied, “Good question. Yes. I could name places, but in truth it’s a long answer. I am literally out there trying to find a place to call home, I have no alternative.” Are you any closer 2+ years later?

It’s still a good question! And, the answer is yes. However, one must take into account I am not taking this journey’s goal lightly. It is my life.

Living in a different culture for good, is very different to both traveling, and temporarily living overseas.

Over the past two years I have tried living in different environments with social integration a top priority. Living in a different culture for good, is very different to both traveling, and temporarily living overseas. It’s something I have to try, and it’s vitally important for the end game. I’ve also focused more on trying to improve my finances when traveling. This has come through my website, photography, writing and … shall we say “opportune skills” when on the road.

Lastly, and most recently, I’ve also been returning to bureaucracy/politics when trying to find a place to live. Not an easy topic in any part of the world these days. But again, I have to overcome this one way or another.

Ifugao Rice Terrace Worker - Sagada, The Philippines
Ifugao Rice Terrace Worker – Sagada, The Philippines

In the same reply, you stated: “I seriously don’t want to end up a homeless old nomad roaming around on the road.” Do you still feel the same or has the additional time on the road and two more years (proverbially) “under your belt” changed your outlook?

Yes, more so than ever. I will fully admit to feeling tired these days. Traveling without a home base or family over this duration takes its toll. I don’t return to anywhere, I don’t have anywhere or anyone to welcome me home. No battery recharges, no support. That said, I didn’t have much of that growing up either. So the emotional side of things are pretty much fine. It’s the battery recharge I could do with. A place to kick off these travel boots, not worry about putting my passport out on a table, and eating a home cooked meal.

During those middle-of-the-night hours when the mind tends to wander, do you ever think: If I actually choose a place to call home then my travels are over? If so, does that frighten you?

No not at all. The sooner the better. Once there I’ll write about what it is like to finally find it. And, how it’s all working out! Not only that, but I might be able to wear non-travel clothes, print photographs, and write another book. But, most importantly, I can finally say I have a place called home.

I know you admire Wade Shepard and his family (VagbondJourney.com) for being on the road for 10 years. Who else inspires you?

Slight correction if I may. I admire Wade & family for how they are chasing their dreams rather than for being on the road for ten years. Moreover, Wade’s approach to travel writing is honest, practical, and real. There are far too many travel sites out there rehashing the same old stuff over and over again.

When I think back to what I’ve been through, and how far I’ve come, I get a warm feeling. This is a good thing.

Other people who inspire me? Karl Bushby. Another traveler who had nothing, and went for it with everything he had. Show me someone who’s had it rough in life, and or is truly giving it their all to succeed; and they will have my respect.

Finally, in a non-egotistical way, I have in the past few years begun to find myself inspiring. When I think back to what I’ve been through, and how far I’ve come, I get a warm feeling. This is a good thing.

Have your own philosophies (religious or otherwise) changed as you have traveled from country to country?

Okay, this question has me stumped. In truth I’d like to be paid a lot of money to answer this. Why? Because if I told the blunt truth of what I have found, I don’t think many people would like to hear it. Maybe I’ll write an article about it on TravelBlogs soon! (*Editor’s note: Write the article!)

Stilt House Girl - The Philippines
Stilt House Girl – The Philippines

That said, what I have discovered is that although people from every country are basically the same. The facts are, many people with power are getting away with bad things, and those without are loosing everything. This I find is a reflection on society today. Maybe it’s the new hunter/scavenger instinct for the modern age.

Humans are selfish by nature, we know this. But we have intellect too. Sadly, it’s not evolved enough yet to help each other out. There are most certainly good people out there, a lot. But, their voices are being drowned out by something much heavier.

I think history will dictate that we are living in interesting times. Social networks, an interconnected world and information surround us. Yet with this we have shorter attention spans and a lack of motivation to go out of our way to be different.

Have you ever reached that point where you felt your endeavor has become a futile one? (A simple “no” will not suffice.)

Recently the politics in The Philippines and in the U.K. has made me feel this way. I wrote on my site that I think the only way I can get over this is to turn a blind eye. It’s society that makes politics change, not politics. When every country you look to as a potential home is swathed in allegations of corruption it doesn’t motivate you.

It seems with every answer I find, a new question pops up. But those answers are leading me to something few people find.

Currently, you are in the Philippines. Do you have your next destination mapped out or do we have to “stay tuned” for a while longer?

Yes, I do, several. What one I choose, is a different story. I asked my readers about Australia or New Zealand a few months back. I will be answering that very soon. I also think it’s time to return to a few places. This will be the first time I’ve done so on my journey so far. I’m looking forward to it. And, it’s most certainly a big step.

For the curious, there are only one or two places in South East Asia that I think are potentials for home. Malaysia is one place I want to experience that I think has options. Then there’s Cambodia for development work, but I think that’s a road I don’t want to go down again.

Being “a man of mystery”, are you really The Invisible Man, Sherlock Holmes, Austin Powers, James Bond, Irving R. Levine or some other behind-the-scenes-international-suave-and-slightly-rakish aristocrat? Please be specific in case we run into you in a dark alley somewhere – maybe in Morocco…

Ha ha! This reminds me that I really must publish my Morocco page soon! Let me clear the air a little. It’s on my about page, but I’ll be more specific here.

Street Child - Nepal
Street Child – Nepal

I am documenting my travels in search of something many people in the world wish to have. There are millions of people from all walks of life scraping and crawling their way to find a better place to live. I am no different. I am, however putting it all online in the form of my journals. Some people get it, others pass by as if it’s just a travel adventure. So long as you take something good, useful or enjoyable from it, then you’re in the right place.

I am, however putting it all online in the form of my journals. Some people get it, others pass by as if it’s just a travel adventure. So long as you take something good, useful or enjoyable from it, then you’re in the right place.

At the end of the day, if I choose to live in a country that is home, I will not leave, period. Bureaucracy, it seems, dictates that I’m of little use to any country. I don’t have a degree, and am over 30. So, no working visas. Does anyone really think that will stop me?

With that answer in mind, I do not particularity want my details splashed all over the likes of Facebook for the good people at immigration to misinterpret and conclude on. It happened in Tibet and Nepal already. I’ve spent a huge amount of time in Mindanao in The Philippines where more journalists have been killed than anywhere else on earth. I stand out a little here as a foreigner. So no thanks, I don’t like the idea of handing my head on a platter to the wrong people here either.

I’ve turned down big opportunities to go public, but the biggest opportunity has not been offered up yet. A place called home. Find me that, and you’ll have my Orwellian credentials. In the meantime, sit back and follow me on my journey. It’s never been done like this before. It’s my life’s work in progress. Whether it ends in tragedy or fulfillment, I am in it until the end.

You can follow the search at The Longest Way Home.

*Editor’s notes: All photographs courtesy of The Longest Way Home.


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Summer Fitness and Nutrition: Get that Beach Body!

As the weather gets warmer and summer gets nearer, I fall into a state of mixed emotions. I get super excited for weekend trips to the beach, but also utterly anxious about wearing a swimsuit in public. I get the feeling I’m not the only one who has started eating better and working out more in anticipation of the beach season.

Fitness

I turned to Cecilia Tobler, certified personal trainer and author of The Traveler’s Fitness Companion: Your Workout Formula to Go!, for her suggestions on how to kick start a workout towards attaining a beach body. The smartest and most effective way to lose weight is to follow the most basic rule: increase exercise and limit what you eat. Cecilia recommends combining cardio and strength training to achieve the best, and fastest, results. It’ll take a little discipline to get going, but once you begin to lose weight and become more active, you can progressively add calories back into your diet.  Not so bad, right?

Nutrition

Fill up with cooling foods during warm summer months. Juicy foods with lots of water content will help you to stay hydrated. Foods that are naturally blue, green, or purple are typically more cooling than similar foods that are red, orange or yellow.

These examples of cooling foods and spices are high in fiber, meaning they’ll keep you full for longer, and low in calories.

  • Vegetables: summer squash, celery, radishes, cucumber, corn, green beans, peas tomatoes, sea vegetables, and leafy vegetables such as spinach, arugula, Swiss chard and lettuce
  • Fruit: berries, melons, peaches, nectarines, grapes, oranges and apples
  • Spices: fresh ginger, cilantro, and peppermint
  • Grains: couscous, wheatberry, amaranth, and barley

Les Phillip Republican & Tea Partier for Congress – They can’t call him a Racist

Proud Navy Vet, Patriot & Fierce Obama critic

Republican candidate for Congress, Alabama CD-1.

Note - he is running in the GOP primary against incumbent Democrat-turned-Republican Rep. Parker Griffith.

Editor's comment - this is a tough one. Phillip is fantastic. Just imagine Phillip and a newly-elected African-American Republican Rep. Allen West of Florida side-by-side fighting the Obama agenda in Congress. On the other hand a Phillip win might discourage conservative Democrats in the future from switching to the GOP?

Does Sarah Palin have the Midas Touch?

The Midas touch, or the gift of profiting from whatever one undertakes, is named for a legendary king of Phrygia. Midas was granted the power to transmute whatever he touched into gold. -- MythWeb.com

From Eric Dondero:

Every Republican primary candidate she endorses turns to Gold.

Consider:

Five weeks ago, she broke with the GOP leadership, and backed libertarian Republican Rand Paul in his primary against establishment-backed candidate Trey Grayson.

Result - Paul wins by 24%

Three weeks ago, Palin traveled to South Carolina to campaign with underdog Nikki Haley who had been languishing in a distant 4th place. Days after, a poll was released showing State Rep. Haley jolting to a comfortable 10 point lead of the entire pack including both the State's AG, and the Lt. Governor.

In Minnesota she enthusiastically endorsed "Hockey Dad" Tom Emmer who had consistently been polling in 2nd place. He soon after won the support of GOP delegates in convention, and he is now virtually assured to be the nominee. What's more he's comfortably ahead of all potential Democrats in recent polls for the Fall.

And now this... Palin took some serious heat from hard-line social conservatives for her endorsement of pro-business/fiscal conservative Carly Fiorina in California's red hot Senate primary.

From the Daily Caller:

two weeks ago former Congressman Tom Campbell held a 11 percentage point lead over Carly Fiorina in the GOP governor’s primary. That lead has now incredibly evaporated into a 23 point deficit...

In the Republican primary for US Senator, support for former Hewlett Packard CEO Carly Fiorina is up sharply in the past 2 weeks, from 24% on 05/10/10 to 46% today 05/24/10. Fiorina’s support has more than doubled among women, seniors, Hispanics, the less educated, and in the Inland Empire. During these 2 weeks, Former Congressman Tom Campbell’s support dropped 12 points, from 35% on 05/10/10 to 23% today 05/24/10.

Overlooked, Fiorina, Paul, Emmer, and Halley all share a common bond: fiscal conservatism and staunch support for limited government policies with a de-emphasis of social issues. Indeed Paul and Emmer are explicitly libertarian Republicans. And Paul, Emmer and Halley all have strong Tea Party ties.

Palin's long held free market economics over divisive social issues libertarianism is finally triumphing much to the chagrin of her vitriolic critics on the Left, but even among her doubters - mostly establishment conservatives - on the Right.

New Treatment Effective in Killing Head Lice – benzyl alcohol lotion 5% (Ulesfia)

From WebMD:

A new prescription lotion (Ulesfia) with benzyl alcohol treats head lice and is effective and safe for children as young as 6 months. The study shows it works by suffocating lice, a method that has long been tried with limited success using messy substances like petroleum jelly, olive oil, and even mayonnaise.

Overnight "home remedies" such as mayonnaise merely appear to kill lice, but don't because the bugs are able to close their spiracles long enough to survive. This is called the "resurrection effect" because, after rinsing, the lice thought to be dead are able to open their breathing spiracles and start biting again.

Existing over-the-counter head lice treatments contain neurotoxic pesticides as active ingredients, resulting in potential toxicity and other problems, including lengthy applications, odor and ineffectiveness.

References:

Image source: Benzyl alcohol, Wikipedia, public domain.

Posted at Clinical Cases and Images. Stay updated and subscribe, follow us on Twitter and connect on Facebook.


Room-temperature plasma gases may replace hand disinfectants

From the NYTimes:

Instead of scrubbing, the workers would put their hands into a small box that bathes them with plasma — the same sort of luminous gas found in neon signs, fluorescent tubes and TV displays.

This plasma, though, is at room temperature and pressure, and is engineered to kills bacteria, including the drug-resistant supergerm MRSA.

References:
Hospital-Clean Hands, Without All the Scrubbing

Image source: Neon sign. Wikipedia, Rolf Süssbrich, Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 License.

Posted at Clinical Cases and Images. Stay updated and subscribe, follow us on Twitter and connect on Facebook.


Mucha’s Anatomy

Kristen Holbrook Mucha's anatomy

Kristen Holbrook detail

Kristen Holbrook created this out-of-this-world triptych for a digital painting assignment as an art student in Brooklyn.  She based it off of Mucha’s elegant female figures and combined it with anatomy from the Atlas of Human Anatomy and Surgery.

Holbrook says of her piece, “I wanted to put together two things I loved, which was how beautiful the insides of a human could be combined with the outside. From left to right in the triptych the skin is coming off.”

A great mash-up of elegance and grotesqueness.

For those of you unfamiliar with Mucha’s females, here’s a reference photo that Kristen used for her piece.

Mucha Music the Arts series 1898

Cellulose crystallinity index: measurement techniques and their impact on interpreting cellulase performance

Although measurements of crystallinity index (CI) have a long history, it has been found that CI varies significantly depending on the choice of measurement method. In this study, four different techniques incorporating X-ray diffraction and solid-state 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) were compared using eight different cellulose preparations. We found that the simplest method, which is also the most widely used, and which involves measurement of just two heights in the X-ray diffractogram, produced significantly higher crystallinity values than did the other methods. Data in the literature for the cellulose preparation used (Avicel PH-101) support this observation. We believe that the alternative X-ray diffraction (XRD) and NMR methods presented here, which consider the contributions from amorphous and crystalline cellulose to the entire XRD and NMR spectra, provide a more accurate measure of the crystallinity of cellulose. Although celluloses having a high amorphous content are usually more easily digested by enzymes, it is unclear, based on studies published in the literature, whether CI actually provides a clear indication of the digestibility of a cellulose sample. Cellulose accessibility should be affected by crystallinity, but is also likely to be affected by several other parameters, such as lignin/hemicellulose contents and distribution, porosity, and particle size. Given the methodological dependency of cellulose CI values and the complex nature of cellulase interactions with amorphous and crystalline celluloses, we caution against trying to correlate relatively small changes in CI with changes in cellulose digestibility. In addition, the prediction of cellulase performance based on low levels of cellulose conversion may not include sufficient digestion of the crystalline component to be meaningful.

Longevity Meme Newsletter, May 24 2010

LONGEVITY MEME NEWSLETTER
May 24 2010

The Longevity Meme Newsletter is a weekly email containing news, opinions, and happenings for people interested in aging science and engineered longevity: making use of diet, lifestyle choices, technology, and proven medical advances to live healthy, longer lives. This newsletter is published under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license. In short, this means that you are encouraged to republish and rewrite it in any way you see fit, the only requirements being that you provide attribution and a link to the Longevity Meme.

To subscribe or unsubscribe from the Longevity Meme Newsletter, please visit http://www.longevitymeme.org/newsletter/

______________________________

CONTENTS

- Is Aging a Disease?
- Applying Reliability Theory to Aging
- Sarcopenia Caused by Blood Vessel Aging?
- Discussion
- Latest Healthy Life Extension Headlines

IS AGING A DISEASE?

This is an often debated question amongst researchers and advocates, but it isn’t really about words and definitions – this has far more to do with research fundraising and the consequences of regulation:

http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2010/05/talking-point-is-aging-a-disease.php

“At the moment, drug companies and scientists keen to develop their research on aging into tangible results are hampered by regulators in the United States and Europe who will license medicines only for specific diseases, not for something as general as aging. … Because aging is not viewed as a disease, the whole process of bringing drugs to market can’t be applied to drugs that treat aging. This creates a disincentive to pharmaceutical companies to develop drugs to treat it. … Unelected officials of organizations like the FDA in the United States cause untold harm to progress in medical science by (a) placing huge and unnecessary burdens upon research and development, and (b) forbidding outright commercial application for any purpose or disease that is not in their list. It can take a decade – and millions of dollars in the formalized bribery known as lobbying – for a new discovery, new classification, or new form of therapy to be recognized by regulators. Or even longer, as is the case for aging.”

Thus many promising lines of technology are developed very slowly, or not at all. Those that do gain traction are sidelined into commercial development as treatments for specific late-stage diseases of aging – typically far from their most optimal usage. As is true of everything touched by bureaucrats, this situation is a debacle and a vast waste.

APPLYING RELIABILITY THEORY TO AGING

Reliability theory is a way of making predictions on failure modes and mean time to failure for complex systems consisting of many redundant parts. It has seen extensive use in the electronics industry, for example, though its roots are far older than that. There is a growing interest in applying reliability theory to considering aging and longevity:

http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2010/05/applying-reliability-theory-to-aging.php

“Biological organisms can be considered as reliability-engineered, robust systems and applying reliability theory to their basic non-aging components, proteins, could provide insight into the aging mechanism. Reliability theory suggests that aging is an obligatory trade-off in a fault-tolerant system such as the cell which is constructed based on redundancy design. Aging is the inevitable redundancy loss of functional system components, that is proteins, over time. In our study we investigated mouse brain development, adulthood and aging from embryonic day 10 to 100 weeks. We determined redundancy loss of different protein categories with age using reliability theory. We observed a near-linear decrease of protein redundancy during aging.”

If you visit the SENS Foundation science pages, you’ll see that many of the root causes of aging involve accumulating damage to the protein building blocks used by our cells and by the machinery within our cells:

http://www.sens.org/sens-research/research-themes

SARCOPENIA CAUSED BY BLOOD VESSEL AGING?

Sarcopenia is the characteristic loss of muscle mass and strength with advancing age, and there is a healthy debate in the gerontology community over its root causes. Here, researchers put forward a fairly convincing demonstration in support of their theory that sarcopenia results from age-related declines in blood vessel function:

http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2010/05/sarcopenia-as-a-consequence-of-failing-blood-vessel-function.php

“Normally, [the tiny blood vessels in muscle] are closed, but when a young person eats a meal and insulin is released into the bloodstream, they open wide to allow nutrients to reach muscle cells. In elderly people, however, insulin has no such ‘vasodilating’ effect. … We found that by blocking vasodilation, we reproduced in young people the entire response that we see in older persons – a blunting of muscle protein response and a lack of net muscle growth. In other words, from a muscle standpoint, we made young people look 50 years older.”

Blood vessels are an important form of biological infrastructure in our bodies: not just tubes, but in fact complex reactive machinery. They become progressively more damaged by age, unable to adjust as they should, and this causes harm to many of our bodily systems.

DISCUSSION

The highlights and headlines from the past week follow below. If you have comments for us, please do send e-mail to newsletter@longevitymeme.org

Remember – if you like this newsletter, the chances are that your friends will find it useful too. Forward it on, or post a copy to your favorite online communities. Encourage the people you know to pitch in and make a difference to the future of health and longevity!

Reason
reason@longevitymeme.org

______________________________

LATEST HEALTHY LIFE EXTENSION HEADLINES

AFFIBODIES AND AGGREGATES (May 21 2010)
http://www.longevitymeme.org/news/vnl.cfm?id=4735
From the SENS Foundation: “Aggregates of beta-amyloid (Abeta) and other malformed proteins accumulate in brain aging and neurodegenerative disease, leading progressively to neuronal dysfunction and/or loss. The regenerative engineering solution to these insults is therapeutic clearance of aggregates, extracellular (such as Abeta plaques) and intracellular (such as soluble, oligomeric Abeta). Immunotherapeutic Abeta clearance from the brain is a very active field of Alzheimer’s research, with at least seven passive, and several second-generation active, Abeta vaccines currently in human clinical trials … One challenge to optimal vaccine design is matching the specificity of antibodies the range of Abeta aggregates that form in vivo … agents that sequester one Abeta species may leave other species intact, and in some cases a shift in assembly dynamics can actually promote the formation of one species while clearing or reducing the formation of others … Although in very early in vivo testing, a new approach has emerged that may offer that promise. This is the use of an Abeta-targeting affibody, i.e., a novel non-immunoglobulin binding protein generated through combinatorial protein engineering.”

ANOTHER STUDY LINKING FAT AND DEMENTIA RISK (May 21 2010)
http://www.longevitymeme.org/news/vnl.cfm?id=4734
Via EurekAlert!: “excess abdominal fat places otherwise healthy, middle-aged people at risk for dementia later in life. … [The study] included 733 community participants who had a mean age of 60 years with roughly 70% of the study group comprised of women. Researchers examined the association between Body Mass Index (BMI), waist circumference, waist to hip ratio, CT-based measures of abdominal fat, with MRI measures of total brain volume (TCBV), temporal horn volume (THV), white matter hyperintensity volume (WMHV) and brain infarcts in the middle-aged participants. … Our results confirm the inverse association of increasing BMI with lower brain volumes in older adults and with younger, middle-aged adults and extends the findings to a much larger study sample. … Prior studies were conducted in cohorts with less than 300 participants and the current study includes over 700 individuals. … More importantly our data suggests a stronger connection between central obesity, particularly the visceral fat component of abdominal obesity, and risk of dementia and Alzheimer’s disease … the association between VAT and TCBV was most robust and was also independent of BMI and insulin resistance. Researchers did not observe a statistically significant correlation between CT-based abdominal fat measures and THV, WMHV or BI.”

THE COST OF EXCESS FAT TISSUE (May 20 2010)
http://www.longevitymeme.org/news/vnl.cfm?id=4733
Another paper looks at some of the consequences of becoming obese. In a more fair and productive world, medical costs would be an individual responsibility rather than being socialized as they are at present: “The prevalence of adult obesity has increased in recent decades. It is important to predict the long-term effect of body weight, and changes in body weight, in middle age on longevity and Medicare costs in older ages. … We predicted longevity and lifetime Medicare costs via simulation for 45-year-old persons by body weight in 1973 and changes in body weight between 1973 and 1983. … Obese 45-year-olds had a smaller chance of surviving to age 65 and, if they did, incurred significantly higher average lifetime Medicare costs than normal-weight 45-year-olds ($163,000 compared with $117,000). Those who remained obese between ages 45 and 55 in 1973 to 1983 incurred significantly higher lifetime Medicare costs than those who maintained normal weight. … Chronic obesity in middle age increases lifetime Medicare costs relative to those who remained normal weight. As the survival of obese persons improves, it is possible that Medicare costs may rise substantially in the future to meet the health care needs of today’s obese middle-aged population.”

TRANSFORMING BRAIN CELLS (May 20 2010)
http://www.longevitymeme.org/news/vnl.cfm?id=4732
From the Technology Review: “Support cells in the brain called astroglia can be turned into functioning neurons. … Researchers found that they could transform the cells into two different classes of neurons, and that the neurons could form connections with one another in a dish. Although the research is at an early stage, the finding suggests that scientists could someday recruit existing cells in the brain to repair the brain and spinal cord after a stroke, injury, or neurodegenerative disease. … The addition of one specific gene generated excitatory neurons, which promote activity in other cells. By adding a different gene, they generated inhibitory neurons, which dampen cell activity. In principle, [you] could generate other types of neurons if you choose the appropriate factors … The study adds to growing evidence that certain cell types can be transformed directly into other cell types without first being converted into stem cells. … one of the next challenges is to determine whether these reprogrammed neurons can survive and function in a living brain. Fortunately, the brain seems to have a ready source of astroglia. When the brain is injured, these cells proliferate, similar to the way the skin repairs itself after a wound. The researchers found they could also derive neurons from injury-induced astroglia taken from the brains of adult mice.”

H+ MAGAZINE ON SWITCHING MEMORY BACK ON (May 19 2010)
http://www.longevitymeme.org/news/vnl.cfm?id=4731
From h+ Magazine: “A new study [sheds] some light on how ‘memory disturbances’ in an aging mouse brain are associated with altered ‘hippocampal chromatin plasticity’ – the combination of DNA, histones, and other proteins that make up the chromosomes associated with the hippocampus. Specifically, the study describes an acetyl genetic switch that produces memory impairment in aging 16-month-old mice. Because the acetyl wasn’t present in young 3-month-old mice, the study concludes that it acts as a switch for a cluster of learning and memory genes. … when young mice are learning, an acetyl group binds to a particular point on the histone protein. The cluster of learning and memory genes on the surrounding DNA ends up close to the acetyl group. This acetyl group was missing in the older mice that had been given the same tasks. By injecting an enzyme known to encourage acetyl groups to bind to any kind of histone molecule, [researchers] flipped the acetyl genetic switch to the ‘on’ position in the older mice and their learning and memory performance became similar to that of 3-month-old mice. … [Researchers hope] that the study of hippocampal chromatin plasticity and gene regulation in mice will help them to identify therapeutic strategies to encourage neuroplasticity (the formation of new neural networks in the brain), to improve learning behavior, and to recover seemingly lost long-term memories in human patients.”

MEMORY AND LONGEVITY TREATMENTS (May 19 2010)
http://www.longevitymeme.org/news/vnl.cfm?id=4730
Via EurekAlert!: “Two methods of extending life span have very different effects on memory performance and decline with age. … While the nematode C. elegans is already well known for its utility in longevity research, previously it was not known how the memory of C. elegans compares with that of other animals, or whether longevity treatments could improve learning and memory. To answer these questions, [researchers] designed new tests of learning and memory in C. elegans, then used these tests to identify the necessary components of learning, short-term memory, and long-term memory. They found that the molecules required for learning and memory appear to be conserved from C. elegans to mammals, suggesting that the basic mechanisms underlying learning and memory are ancient. The authors also determined how each of the behaviors declines with age, and tested the effects of two known regulators of longevity – dietary restriction and reduced Insulin/IGF-1 signaling – on these declines. Surprisingly, very different effects on memory were achieved with the two longevity treatments: dietary restriction impaired memory in early adulthood but maintained memory with age, while reduced Insulin/IGF-1 signaling improved early adult memory performance but failed to preserve it with age. These results suggest not only that longevity treatments could help preserve cognitive function with age, but also that different longevity treatments might have very different effects on such declines.”

STEM CELL INDUCED REGENERATION IN THE LUNG (May 18 2010)
http://www.longevitymeme.org/news/vnl.cfm?id=4729
Researchers here demonstrate that comparatively simple stem cell transplants may be effective in regenerating lung injuries: “Human stem cells administered intravenously can restore alveolar epithelial tissue to a normal function in a novel ex vivo perfused human lung after E. coli endotoxin-induced acute lung injury (ALI) … ALI is a common cause of respiratory failure in the intensive care units, often leading to death. It can be caused by both direct injury such as aspiration and pneumonia, and indirect injury such as sepsis and from trauma. … Yearly, ALI affects approximately 200,000 patients in the US and has a 40 percent mortality rate despite extensive investigations into its causes and pathophysiology. Innovative therapies are desperately needed. … we found that intravenous infusion of [stem cells] preferentially homed to the injured areas of the lung, which means that the cells find their way from the bloodstream to the sites in the lung of injury. … In addition to having restored function of alveolar epithelial cells, lungs treated with [stem cells] showed a reduction in inflammatory [cytokine] levels suggesting a favorable shift away from a proinflammatory environment in the injured alveolus.”

AN INTERVIEW WITH A TISSUE ENGINEER (May 18 2010)
http://www.longevitymeme.org/news/vnl.cfm?id=4728
From the Guardian: “The human body has tremendous capacity to repair itself after disease or injury. Skin will grow over wounds, while cells in our blood supply are constantly being manufactured in our bone marrow. But there is a limit to the body’s ability to replace lost tissue. Cartilage cells are notoriously poor at regrowing after injury, for example. As a result, accidents and illnesses – including cancers – often leave individuals with disfiguring wounds or life-threatening damage to tissue. The aim of Molly Stevens, a nanoscience researcher at Imperial College, London, and founder of the biotech firm Reprogen, is a simple but ambitious one. Working with a team of chemists, cell biologists, surgeons, material scientists and engineers, she is developing techniques that will help the body repair itself when it suffers damage. This is the science of regenerative medicine. … One approach that we have had considerable success with involves taking quite straightforward materials including simple polymers and using them to boost bone growth in a person. We made them into gels that we could inject into bones. The key to this technique lies with the fact that our bones are covered in a layer of stem cells. We inject our material under that layer and that wakes up those stem cells. They start to multiply and produce lots of new bone.”

ANOTHER STEP FORWARD FOR TOOTH REGENERATION (May 17 2010)
http://www.longevitymeme.org/news/vnl.cfm?id=4727
Researchers have regrown teeth in rats by manipulating existing stem cells: “a new technique [can] orchestrate the body’s stem cells to migrate to three-dimensional scaffold that is infused with growth factor. This can yield an anatomically correct tooth in as soon as nine weeks once implanted in the mouth. … These findings represent the first report of regeneration of anatomically shaped tooth-like structures in vivo, and by cell homing without cell delivery. … By homing stem cells to a scaffold made of natural materials and integrated in surrounding tissue, there is no need to use harvested stem cell lines, or create a an environment outside of the body (e.g., a Petri dish) where the tooth is grown and then implanted once it has matured. The tooth instead can be grown ‘orthotopically,’ or in the socket where the tooth will integrate with surrounding tissue in ways that are impossible with hard metals or other materials. … A key consideration in tooth regeneration is finding a cost-effective approach that can translate into therapies for patients who cannot afford or who aren’t good candidates for dental implants. Cell-homing-based tooth regeneration may provide a tangible pathway toward clinical translation.”

MORE DATA TO PONDER ON GENDER LONGEVITY DIFFERENCES (May 17 2010)
http://www.longevitymeme.org/news/vnl.cfm?id=4726
From the Max Planck Institute: “Marriage is more beneficial for men than for women – at least for those who want a long life. Previous studies have shown that men with younger wives live longer. While it had long been assumed that women with younger husbands also live longer, [a new study] has shown that this is not the case. Instead, the greater the age difference from the husband, the lower the wife’s life expectancy. This is the case irrespective of whether the woman is younger or older than her spouse. … The mortality risk of a husband who is seven to nine years older than his wife is reduced by eleven percent compared to couples where both partners are the same age. Conversely, a man dies earlier when he is younger than his spouse. For years, researchers have thought that this data holds true for both sexes. They assumed an effect called ‘health selection’ was in play; those who select younger partners are able to do so because they are healthier and thus already have a higher life expectancy. … These theories now have to be reconsidered. It appears that the reasons for mortality differences due to the age gap of the spouses remain unclear.”

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SRB View of Atlantis Launch

Click here to view the embedded video.

Here is a look at the STS-132 (Atlantis) making it’s last launch.  Note the movement just before the shuttle leaves the ground.  Thrust makes the shuttle assembly bend a little bit and there is a slight delay for it to come back before the clamps open and set it free.  Happens on every launch so it’s not unique or anything, still the power is amazing.  This particular video is from the Left SRB (Solid Rocket Booster).  Here is a video showing the launch from the four SRB cams on the same screen.

Source for featured video.

Speaking of amazing, below is an image of the ISS and Shuttle transiting the Sun shortly before docking.  The image was taken in Spain by Thierry Legault, be sure to click on the image to see more of his outstanding work.  I’ve seen Thierry’s work before and  I’ve tried to do this and it’s not as easy as you might think.  All the preparation is for just a second or two of transit, you’d crack up watching trying to pull it off.  No matter, I’m up for another go at it and I’ll try again if the opportunity presents itself, and as you might expect that doesn’t happen very often.

Atlantis and the ISS transit the Sun before docking. Click for larger. Credit: Thierry Legault (via SpaceRef)

Oh and BE SURE (!!!!!) to try and get a look at the Shuttle/ISS passing overhead.   Atlantis is undocked from the ISS and this is going to be one of your last chances to see a shuttle and the ISS — EVER!  Check Heavens Above for viewing times for you (you have to register, but fear not, it’s free and safe.  Don’t forget to enter your location!

Actually it’s going to be one of your last chances to see ANY of NASA’s manned missions.  After the two remaining scheduled shuttle missions, it may be quite some time before an astronaut is launched from US soil.  Yes, I’ve seen the press releases with all the private interests lauding the new direction, however that is tempered by the fact they are a long ways from routine human space flight.  Oh they’ll get there, I just hope there is LOTS of information sharing so they can benefit from what we’ve achieved in the field.  They will right?

ABC News Covers the New War on Climate Research (and on Michael Mann) | The Intersection

Here's the report that (I understand) airs tonight:
Climate scientist Michael Mann has received hundreds of them -- threatening e-mails and phone calls calling him a criminal, a communist or worse. "6 feet under, with the roots, is were you should be," one e-mail reads. "How know 1 one has been the livin p*ss out of you yet, i was hopin i would see the news that you commited suicide, Do it." "I've been called just about everything in the book," Mann, who runs of the Earth System Science Center at Penn State University, told ABC News. "It's an attempt to chill the discourse, and I think that's what's most disconcerting." Mann is not the only one. The FBI says it's seeing an uptick in threatening communications to climate scientists. Recently, a white supremacist website posted Mann's picture alongside several of his colleagues with the word "Jew" next to each image. One climate scientist, who did not wish to be identified, told ABC News he's had a dead animal left on his doorstep, and now sometimes travels with bodyguards. "Human-caused climate change is a reality," Mann said. "There are clearly some who find that message inconvenient, and unfortunately they appear willing to turn to just about ...


Do Scientists Want (or Need) Media Training? | The Intersection

Tomorrow at MIT, I'll be giving a four hour "boot camp" on science communication to a group of graduate students and other interested parties. The session begins with an overview of the "theory" of science communication--why we must do it better, what the obstacles are, and how a changing media environment makes it much tougher than it was during the era when the dude at right was so popular (the same era when the dude at *top* right was about to deregulate the media...). Then, the session goes into a media "how to"--rules for interacting with journalists, media do's and don'ts, and an overview of various key communication "technologies," such as framing. Finally, it ends with a role playing in which the scientists get to try out their chops in a Colbert-style interview, and see if they can stay on message while traversing the very rockiest of media seas. I get the sense there is an increasing demand for this kind of training, which is often not provided in the standard science graduate curriculum. The hunger seems especially strong among the younger set of scientists. Why? Well, consider the write up for another all day sci comm boot camp I did at Princeton ...


“Weedy” mice dominate a warming world while other small mammals suffer | Not Exactly Rocket Science

Deer_mouseToday’s mammals are facing the twin threats of a rapidly warming planet and increasingly intrusive human activity. As usual, the big species hog the limelight. The world waits on bated breath to hear about the fates of polar bears, whales and elephants, while smaller and more unobtrusive species are ignored. But smaller mammals are still vital parts of their ecosystems and it’s important to know how they will fare in a warmer world. Now, thanks to Jessica Blois from Stanford University and a hoard of new fossils, we have an idea. As they say, all this has happened before

Around 12,000 years ago, as the Pleistocene epoch drew to a close, the mammals of North America were also dealing with multiple threats. The last Ice Age was giving way to the far warmer Holocene and at the same time, humans arrived on the scene, wiping out species after species. Some of the larger losses are familiar, such as the mammoths and ground sloths, but a new treasure trove of fossils in California’s Samwell Cave has revealed the fate of their smaller kin.

The common wisdom suggests that small mammals are relatively resistant to extinction, because they have large litters, they breed quickly and their populations grow at incredible rates (think mice and rabbits). The Samwell fossils support this idea but they also tell us that communities of small mammals were greatly affected by natural warming nonetheless. Their diversity plummeted, they became less evenly spread, and rare species became ever rarer.

Not everything suffered though – ‘weedy’ species took over this new landscape. The deer mice did particularly well, doubling in abundance between 16,000 and 13,000 years ago. These rodents aren’t fussy about their homes and they’re often the first into a new area. Opportunistic and adaptable, these generalists flourished under changing circumstances that flummoxed others. And their rise to power accounted for much of the fall in overall species evenness during this time. There are signs that deer mice are doing the same today.

To Blois, it’s clear that these changes were mainly driven by climate change. As the temperature rose, so the evenness and richness of the mammal communities fell, and the first signs of falling populations coincided neatly with the very rapid warming of the Bolling-Allerod period. Individual species supported these general trends. The Western pocket gopher and the mountain beaver both went locally extinct and today, they’re found in much cooler parts of California. Blois thinks that these rodents tracked the cooler weather to other more hospitable areas.

Meanwhile, Blois also ruled out other possible explanations. Humans invaded North America during the end of the Pleistocene, but the shifts in small mammal populations predated them by around 1,500 years. The fall of the large beasts could have altered the local vegetation, creating new landscapes for species that scurry, but these new plant communities also appeared after the small mammal communities had already started to shift. Changing climate, it seems, is the best explanation.

Blois says that since today’s climate is changing even more quickly, our current small mammals might face a similar fate to their Pleistocene counterparts. Their communities are likely to shift towards an impoverished and uneven selection of species. In this way, they could act as a colony of furry canaries, as “harbingers of imperilled ecosystems”.

Reference: Nature http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09077

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