Sales Incentives and Machine Learning: Intelligently Motivate Revenue-Driving Behaviors – Customer Think

Imagine you are trying to get children to do household chores for the summer. You decide to offer them an incentive of $5 per completed chore. At the beginning of summer, this works great; work is getting done and the kids enjoy the reward. However, after a few weeks, the system has fallen apart. The children only do the chores they enjoy, they neglect other jobs, and the quality of their work has decreased. Should you change the reward amount? Should different chores have different incentives? Should each child receive different rewards? Did this system work better last year? What do your neighbors do to get their kids to do chores?

In this simple example of human behavior, there is a broken incentive system and a lack of data to help determine how things should change. This scenario is not a far comparison to many organizations sales compensation systems. Every year, new compensation plans roll out to the sales teams who go out and sell based on how they believe they will be compensated. As of 2017, 90 percent of U.S. companies change their compensation plans on an annual basis. But are these adjustments optimal are they going to lead to desired business outcomes? Is there a better way to identify which changes need to be made, and when to make them?

Traditionally, sales compensation changes are based more on intuition than data, but often there is some level of analysis that goes into designing and adjusting incentives. However, most reports today are all hindsight and adjustments are made well after there is any potential to change behavior before the end of the quarter or end of the year. What if optimal changes could be identified mid-period and put in place well before it is too late? Better yet, what if the incentive compensation solution itself could identify, recommend and implement plan changes? The most practical way to do this is with machine learning.

The concept of machine learning is not exactly new in the world of technology. It has been around in a variety of forms for decades, but its application to enterprise software is relatively new, particularly with sales incentive management, and its popularity is growing. There are many factors making machine learning realistically applicable in the business world changes in the economics of cloud computing (cheaper than ever before), cloud storage, proliferation of sensors driving Internet of Things (IoT), pervasive use of mobile devices that consume gigabytes of data in minutes, and freely available algorithms are all major contributors to accelerating machine learning adoption. Add to these the complex problems companies face including managing sales compensation, and the perfect environment is in place for machine learning to dramatically proliferate.

Machine learning is all about applying learned data to prescribe more economically efficient business decisions. Sales incentives apply the disciplines of psychology and behavioral economics to prompt people to make desired decisions. When you combine principles of behavioral economics with the data science of machine learning, you create the potential to optimize your sales incentives and drive powerful business outcomes.

Machine learning allows us to assess large sets of data and surface patterns, identifying when past performance is indicative of future results. For instance, machine learning can accurately forecast what products are most likely to be sold and which customers are most likely to buy. But what if you not only want to understand potential outcomes, what if you want to completely change outcomes?

What is going to motivate your sales team to do what you need them to? The difference between expectations and reality is often referred to as the behavioral gap (see chart below). When the behavioral gap is significant, an inflection point is needed to close that gap. The right incentive (an added bonus, Presidents Club eligibility, a promotion, etc.) can initiate an inflection point and influence a change in behavior.

The behavior gap depicted above represents the difference between raised expectations (management increasing quota) and the trajectory of current sales performance.

In the US, studies from Harvard Business Review and other industry publications estimate that companies spend over one trillion dollars annually on incentives. That number is four times the money spent on advertising in the US annually. What that means is that, as a nation, we are deeply invested in motivating our employees, partners and customers. Incentives are most effective when they are intelligent, or data driven. Deloitte University Press published a report stating that when it comes to the relationship between data science and behavioral science, it is reasonable to anticipate better results when the two approaches are treated as complementary and applied in tandem. Behavioral science principles should be part of the data scientists toolkit, and vice versa.

With Machine learning and behavior mechanics, sales teams can plot out the path from one goal to the next and analyze and implement proper incentives. As an example, lets say your company is a furniture manufacturer that uses a CPQ tool to manage its complex quoting and pricing processes. One of the major reasons your company invested in the CPQ solution was to curb chronic, costly discounting by the sales team. You are a new sales rep using CPQ to build a quote. What if, mid-quote, your system alerts you that the discount you entered, while within the approved range, may not be ideal. Machine learning ran in the background and identified a different discount used by the top 10% of reps that has had more success. Additionally, you learn that if you choose the prescribed discount, you will earn 40% more commission! Talk about a relevant incentive, based on powerful data.

When applied together, machine learning and sales incentives provide powerful business results by collecting relevant, timely insight and defining incentives that align human behaviors with organizational goals.

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Sales Incentives and Machine Learning: Intelligently Motivate Revenue-Driving Behaviors - Customer Think

Notes: Villa Park hopes to keep chemistry grade high after transfers – OCRegister

Coach Dusan Ancich said his Villa Park football program returned from its team-bonding trip to Hawaii closer than ever before. But that chemistry will be tested after three talented transfers recently arrived from Corona High.

The Spartans have added USC cornerback commit Marcus Johnson (5-10, 175), linebacker/running back Zechariah Holifield (6-0, 220) and rising quarterback Shane Illingworth, a 6-foot-6, 225-pound sophomore, in recent days.

Johnson and Holifield are seniors who are moving into the Villa Park area so they could be eligible soon, Ancich said. Illingworth will observe the CIF-Southern Sections sit-out period, so look for junior Paul Piferi (6-5, 198) to remain the starter until at least until Oct. 6.

One of the lesser-publicized effects of transfers is the displacement of established players, which in turn could challenge team chemistry.

Ancich said the best 11 players will play for the Spartans (1-0), who take on host Redondo (0-1) on Friday.

We have two Division I quarterbacks, Ancich said. If everybody gets cleared, does things right, above board (and) we keep our team bonding and philosophy, it should be fun. Its a great surprise for us.

The Illingworth family is familiar with Ancichs coaching philosophy. Shanes cousin, Devon, played defensive end for the Spartans. His father played for Ancichs father, Marijon, at Tustin.

Everybody is treated the same, Dusan Ancich said. We give a depth chart every week. Its always the best 11 (who start). Thats just a black-and-white deal.

THOUGHTS ON HOUSTON

All of the high schools in the Houston area have canceled their Week 1 games because of the damage from Hurricane Harvey.

If displaced families arrive in the Southern Section, students could receive a hardship waiver to gain eligibility, section spokesman Thom Simmons said Monday.

Former El Dorado quarterback Kane Wilson was displaced by Hurricane Katrina in 2005 before arriving at the O.C. school as a freshman.

NOTES

La Habra and Yorba Linda are among the area teams that have moved practices Tuesday and Wednesday to the evening because of the expected heat wave.

Sonora finished 0-10 last season but opened with a 19-8 win against visiting Whittier.

Raiders coach Daniel Morales praised several players, including running back/linebacker Chandler Thompson and quarterback Ryan Martinez. Our defense played really tough, Morales said. I was so happy how they were challenged in our own territory quite a few times but didnt break.

Cal commit Chigozie Anusiem had four receptions for 87 yards and a touchdown and also played defense and special teams.

La Habra (0-1) is looking to bounce back from a 35-7 loss at Upland that Highlanders coach Frank Mazzotta called humbling. We have to get a lot better in a hurry, said Mazzotta, whose team plays host to Tesoro on Friday.

Tesoro coach Matt Poston said sophomore Kyle Schaefers helped the Titans as they nearly upset Edison before losing 48-47. He had 90-yard kickoff return for a touchdown and played well at cornerback.

Mission Viejo plays host to the Brothers in Arms Classic on Thursday through Saturday. Servite plays American Fork of Utah on Friday at 5 p.m. while the Diablos take on former CIF-SS rival Vista Murrieta at 8 p.m. American Fork is nicknamed the Cavemen.

Reigning CIF Division 1 champion St. John Bosco (0-1) plays Garces of Bakersfield on Saturday at 8 p.m. at Mission Viejo.

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Notes: Villa Park hopes to keep chemistry grade high after transfers - OCRegister

Greg McElroy on Jalen Hurts: Chemistry with Brian Daboll better … – SECcountry.com

Alabama QB Jalen Hurts earned SEC Offensive Player of the Year under Lane Kiffin. Duplicating that kind of performance with a new offensive coordinator wont be easy, but not if you ask a former Tide QB.

Hurts dazzled with his arm and his legs as a true freshman, responsible for a single-season school record 36 TDs, while guiding Alabama to an SEC championship and a berth in the national championship game.

SEC Network analyst Greg McElroy, who played quarterback in Tuscaloosa from 2007-10, thinks Hurts could be poised for an even bigger year under new OC Brian Daboll.

McElroy talked about the major strides in the pocket made by Hurts in the offseason during a special segment with ESPNs Marty Smith inside Alabamas indoor practice facility.

Hes created a great relationship with Jalen and Jalen trusts him, McElroy said. In the short period of time, theyve developed a chemistry that I dont think Jalen had with Lane Kiffin at any point last season. Jalen was trying to learn the offense, but now hes got a good grasp of the offense.

Were going to see more pro-style passing concepts. Slow, deliberate, long-progressing routes downfield.

Last season, the 6-foot-2, 209-pound Hurts rushed for nearly 1,000 yards, going for 954, anAlabama single-season record by a QB.

However, McElroy believes Hurts will be showing off some newfound confidence as a passer, building on a season that saw him throw for2,780 yards with 23 TDs and 9 INTs.

Were going to see Jalen Hurts a little bit more under center this year, McElroy said. Now, Bo Scarbrough, 245 pounds, hes able to come straight downhill, and thats a full head of steam hitting A gap to A gap on either side of center. Thatll help with play-action.

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Greg McElroy on Jalen Hurts: Chemistry with Brian Daboll better ... - SECcountry.com

‘Chemistry is magic’ – The Daily Evergreen

Close

Qiang Zhang demonstrates how a glove box works Thursday in Troy Hall on Thursday.

OLIVER MCKENNA | The Daily Evergreen

OLIVER MCKENNA | The Daily Evergreen

Qiang Zhang demonstrates how a glove box works Thursday in Troy Hall on Thursday.

NINA WILLIS, Evergreen reporterAugust 28, 2017

Exploding gummy bears and elephant toothpaste represent seemingly magical concepts of chemistry in a youth summer program.

Through Pullman Parks and Recreation, youth ranging from ages six through 15 could register for Outdoor Sciences: Campus Adventures over the past summer.

This program consisted of several five day sessions touring around the science facilities of WSU and engaging in related activities, such as helping feed the bears at the bear facility, watching chemistry demonstrations and eating Ferdinands ice cream.

Jamie Gaber, science instructor of the program and WSU research neuroscientist, created her own science classes through Pullman Parks and Recreation after realizing how fast her own kids were growing and wanting to spend more time with them.

During the campus adventure program, Gaber meets up with the kids at Reaney Park and they all walk to a different WSU lab each day, she said.

Gaber set up the trips and demos by starting with people she knew from the neuroscience department, she said. Then she reached out to other departments she wanted to take her own kids, such as entomology.

Or she happened to get these opportunities by chance, such as in the case of Kara Whitman, who offered her lab after overhearing information about the class at the grocery store, Gaber said. In the case of Professor Qiang Zhang, his son enrolled in the first session and asked to volunteer afterward.

Regular people are in these labs, Gaber said. Its not people that are way out there or only old people. You can make it so much more familiar. Our brain works on expectations so much.

During the chemistry presentation, Zhang gave the group a tour of a new chemistry lab in the renovated Troy Hall, followed by an hour-long demonstration of chemical reactions.

When a lot of kids hear about science, they think oh, its so difficult when they get to college, Zhang said. So a lot of kids chose law school or business.Upon entering the lab, each student was given a set of goggles and shown some of the main equipment. Unlike the previous summer camp session, this tour featured the brand-new labs in Troy while the previous session toured Fulmer Hall.

OLIVER MCKENNA | The Daily EvergreenQiang Zhang gives a tour of the new chemistry lab to a a group of children Troy Hall on Thursday.

Starting in the instrument lab, Zhang said all the analysis takes place there. Zhang also showed them the main equipment inside the lab, and students were allowed to practice using select things, such as depressurizing the glove box by stepping on the pedals.

Its not only about getting people to study more science. Getting people to know science is more important, Zhang said. In your kitchen, for example, you put baking soda in vinegar and you get bubbles. Those things are very common and kids should know why.

For the demos, teaching assistants (TA) took turns conducting each experiment. First, the TA showed them a flask with a liquid that turned blue upon shaking it.A series of reactions that produced beverage-looking liquids, like milk or beer came next. In another flask, glucose and two clear liquids formed a thin coating of silver on the glass upon shaking.

The next TA dipped a dollar bill into a solution named magic water, which consisted of a mixture of rubbing alcohol and water. The dollar bill caught fire, but stayed intact due to the water.

Then two pieces of paper, one with Megatron from transformers and the other with Twilight Sparkle from My Little Pony. As the control test, the Megatron picture did not get dipped in the magic solution, and quickly turned to ash.

Twilight Sparkle received a coating of the solution and reacted the same way as the dollar bill, although many of the students requested destroying the picture of Twilight Sparkle as well.

A reaction named elephant toothpaste, used soap, food coloring, a clear solution and magic crystals to initiate the reaction. After adding the crystals, the solution quickly foamed and expanded out of its container, much like a volcano, a few students said.

Each student received a balloon to blow up, while Zhang pulled several balloons out of a small container of liquid nitrogen. While in the liquid nitrogen, the air inside the balloon solidified, shrinking the balloon in size. Once removed from the nitrogen, the balloon quickly returned to its original size.

The death of a gummy bear featured potassium chlorate, heated in a test tube, and combusted with the sugar in the gummy bear. Then another gummy bear turned hard and brittle after a liquid nitrogen bath. Under the fume hood, a mercury compound created a reaction resembling growing tentacles once ignited.I call it chemistry is magic, Zhang said. A lot of times in the old days, a lot of whats called magic had science in them. Theres always a scientific explanation about things. Thats what we try to deliver to the kids.

Gaber also stated that she hopes to lead the campus adventures program every summer in the future. Registration for the event will be found on the Pullman Parks and Recreation website.

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'Chemistry is magic' - The Daily Evergreen

Buchanan: What things still unite us? – Danville Commercial News

Decades ago, a debate over what kind of nation America is roiled the conservative movement.

Neocons claimed America was an ideological nation a creedal nation, dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Expropriating the biblical mandate, Go forth and teach all nations! they divinized democracy and made the conversion of mankind to the democratic faith their mission here on earth.

With his global crusade for democracy, George W. Bush bought into all this. Result: Ashes in our mouths and a series of foreign policy disasters, beginning with Afghanistan and Iraq.

Behind the Trumpian slogan America First lay a conviction that, with the Cold War over and the real ideological nation, the USSR, shattered into pieces along ethnic lines, it was time for America to come home.

Contra the neocons, traditionalists argued that, while America was uniquely great, the nation was united by faith, culture, language, history, heroes, holidays, mores, manners, customs and traditions. A common feature of Americans, black and white, was pride in belonging to a people that had achieved so much.

The insight attributed to Alexis de Tocqueville America is great because she is good, and if America ceases to be good, she will cease to be great was a belief shared by almost all.

What makes our future appear problematic is that what once united us now divides us. While Presidents Wilson and Truman declared us to be a Christian nation, Christianity has been purged from our public life and sheds believers every decade. Atheism and agnosticism are growing rapidly, especially among the young.

Traditional morality, grounded in Christianity, is being discarded. Half of all marriages end in divorce. Four-in-10 children are born out of wedlock. Unrestricted abortion and same-sex marriage once regarded as marks of decadence and decline are now seen as human rights and the hallmarks of social progress.

Tens of millions of us do not speak English. Where most of our music used to be classic, popular, country and western, and jazz, much of it now contains rutting lyrics that used to be unprintable. Where we used to have three national networks, we have three 24-hour cable news channels and a thousand websites that reinforce our clashing beliefs on morality, culture, politics and race.

Consider but a few events post-Charlottesville.

Murderer was painted on the San Fernando statue of Fr. Junipero Serra, the Franciscan who founded the missions that became San Diego, San Francisco, San Juan Capistrano and Santa Clara.

In New Orleans, Tear It Down was spray-painted on a statue of Joan of Arc, a gift from France in 1972. Besides being a canonized saint in the Catholic Church and a legendary heroine of France, what did the Maid of Orleans do to deserve this?

Taken together, we are seeing the discoverers, explorers and missionaries of North America demonized as genocidal racists all. The Founding Fathers are either slave owners or sanctioners of slavery.

Our nation-builders either collaborated in or condoned the ethnic cleansing of Native Americans. Almost to the present, ours was a land where segregationists were honored leaders.

Bottom line for the left: Americans should be sickened and ashamed of the history that made us the worlds greatest nation. And we should acknowledge our ancestors guilt by tearing down any and all monuments and statues that memorialize them.

This rising segment of America, full of self-righteous rage, is determined to blacken the memory of those who have gone before us.

To another slice of America, much of the celebrated social and moral progress of recent decades induces a sense of nausea, summarized in the lament, This isnt the country we grew up in.

Hillary Clinton famously described this segment of America as a basket of deplorables ... racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic ... bigots, and altogether irredeemable.

So, what still unites us? What holds us together into the indefinite future? What makes us one nation and one people? What do we offer mankind, as nations seem to recoil from what we are becoming, and are instead eager to build their futures on the basis of ethnonationalism and fundamentalist faith?

If advanced democracy has produced the disintegration of a nation that we see around us, what is the compelling case for it?

A sixth of the way through the 21st century, what is there to make us believe this will be the Second American Century?

For more about Patrick Buchanan, visit http://www.creators.com.

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Buchanan: What things still unite us? - Danville Commercial News

What Still Unites Us? – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

What Still Unites Us?Patrick J .Buchanan

USA -(Ammoland.com)-Decades ago, a debate over what kind of nation America is roiled the conservative movement.

Neocons claimed America was an ideological nation a creedal nation, dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.

Expropriating the biblical mandate, Go forth and teach all nations! they divinized democracy and made the conversion of mankind to the democratic faith their mission here on earth.

With his global crusade for democracy, George W. Bush bought into all this. Result: Ashes in our mouths and a series of foreign policy disasters, beginning with Afghanistan and Iraq.

Behind the Trumpian slogan America First lay a conviction that, with the Cold War over and the real ideological nation, the USSR, shattered into pieces along ethnic lines, it was time for America to come home.

Contra the neocons, traditionalists argued that, while America was uniquely great, the nation was united by faith, culture, language, history, heroes, holidays, mores, manners, customs and traditions. A common feature of Americans, black and white, was pride in belonging to a people that had achieved so much.

The insight attributed to Alexis de Tocqueville America is great because she is good, and if America ceases to be good, she will cease to be great was a belief shared by almost all.

What makes our future appear problematic is that what once united us now divides us. While Presidents Wilson and Truman declared us to be a Christian nation, Christianity has been purged from our public life and sheds believers every decade. Atheism and agnosticism are growing rapidly, especially among the young.

Traditional morality, grounded in Christianity, is being discarded. Half of all marriages end in divorce. Four-in-10 children are born out of wedlock. Unrestricted abortion and same-sex marriage once regarded as marks of decadence and decline are now seen as human rights and the hallmarks of social progress.

Tens of millions of us do not speak English. Where most of our music used to be classic, popular, country and western, and jazz, much of it now contains rutting lyrics that used to be unprintable.

Where we used to have three national networks, we have three 24-hour cable news channels and a thousand websites that reinforce our clashing beliefs on morality, culture, politics and race.

Murderer was painted on the San Fernando statue of Fr. Junipero Serra, the Franciscan who founded the missions that became San Diego, San Francisco, San Juan Capistrano and Santa Clara.

America's oldest monument honoring Columbus, in Baltimore, was vandalized. Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia called for Robert E. Lee's statue to be removed from Capitol and replaced by Pocahontas.

According to legend, this daughter of Chief Powhatan saved Captain John Smith from being beheaded by throwing herself across his neck. The Chief was a person of interest in the disappearance of the Lost Colony of Roanoke Island, among whose missing was Virginia Dare, the first European baby born in British America.

Why did Kaine not call for John Smith himself, leader of the Jamestown Colony that fought off Indian attacks, to be so honored?

In New Orleans, Tear It Down was spray-painted on a statue of Joan of Arc, a gift from France in 1972. Besides being a canonized saint in the Catholic Church and a legendary heroine of France, what did the Maid of Orleans do to deserve this?

Taken together, we are seeing the discoverers, explorers and missionaries of North America demonized as genocidal racists all. The Founding Fathers are either slave owners or sanctioners of slavery.

Our nation-builders either collaborated in or condoned the ethnic cleansing of Native Americans. Almost to the present, ours was a land where segregationists were honored leaders.

Bottom line for the left: Americans should be sickened and ashamed of the history that made us the world's greatest nation. And we should acknowledge our ancestors' guilt by tearing down any and all monuments and statues that memorialize them.

This rising segment of America, full of self-righteous rage, is determined to blacken the memory of those who have gone before us.

To another slice of America, much of the celebrated social and moral progress of recent decades induces a sense of nausea, summarized in the lament, This isn't the country we grew up in.

Hillary Clinton famously described this segment of America as a basket of deplorables racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic bigots, and altogether irredeemable.

What holds us together into the indefinite future? What makes us one nation and one people? What do we offer mankind, as nations seem to recoil from what we are becoming, and are instead eager to build their futures on the basis of ethnonationalism and fundamentalist faith?

If advanced democracy has produced the disintegration of a nation that we see around us, what is the compelling case for it?

A sixth of the way through the 21st century, what is there to make us believe this will be the Second American Century?

Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of the new book The Greatest Comeback: How Richard Nixon Rose From Defeat to Create the New Majority.

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What Still Unites Us? - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

Eun Ji Chung Receives 2017 AIChE 35 Under 35 Award – USC Viterbi School of Engineering (press release) (blog)

The goal-setting Assistant Professor rounds out a successful 2017 with an early career honor from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers

Eun Ji Chung is a Gabilan Assistant Professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering and recipient of a 2017 AIChE 35 Under 35 Award. Photo credit/Michelle Henry

To describe Eun Ji Chung as goal-oriented might be the understatement of the year.

Chung, a Gabilan Assistant Professor in the USC ViterbiDepartment of Biomedical Engineering, has racked up an impressive number of achievements in 2017 alone. In addition to receiving a 2017 USC Stem Cell Eli and Edythe Broad Innovation Award, she was selected for the 2017 Emerging Investigator Issue of the journal Biomaterials Science and a 2017 Biomedical Engineering Society (BMES) Career Development Award.

This summer, Chung found out that she was being honored with a 2017 American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) 35 Under 35 Award for her exceptional work in bioengineering.

Bright-Eyed Youth

People like Chung tend to be driven at a young age, perhaps ever since birth.

As an undergraduate at Scripps College, she pursued a degree in molecular biology and conducted biology research in unicellular organisms. While there, her interests became more patient-focused.

While I had a strong foundation in biology, I wanted to pursue a field that could help human health and patients, Chung said. This led me to pursue biomedical engineering as a graduate student (at Northwestern University) and choose a lab that focused on biomaterials research.

During her post-doctoral training at the University of Chicago, Chung achieved a goal she ranks as her proudest professional achievement: an NIH K99/R00 Pathway to Independence Award for her proposal to develop a nanoparticle that could be delivered intravenously and detect atherosclerosis, a potentially fatal build-up of plaque in the arteries. The nanodevice could also deliver therapeutics and signal whether the treatment was successful.

The first time she applied for the award, her application was streamlined and rejected, but she was determined to succeed.

Despite the statistics and critics confirming the high likelihood of being streamlined again in the resubmission, I persisted, addressed all of the reviewer comments diligently, and received a top score the second time around, Chung said.

The Bioengineer

In her lab, Chung and her research group investigate molecular design, nanomedicine and tissue engineering to generate biomaterial strategies for clinical applications. She is emphatic about working with her students (both undergraduate and graduate) and postdoctoral trainees toward their own individual aspirations.

While it takes continuous dialogue, planning and learning together, every small milestone that we achieve towards the larger goals makes me feel proud and gives me a sense of pride in my work and role, Chung said.

In the future, Chungs research goals include providing cost-efficient nanodiagnostics and therapeutics for patients that are not well-understood or overlooked. She believes that to achieve this goal requires an interdisciplinary team of scientists, clinicians and trainees. This belief makes Chung an excellent fit as one of the faculty members joining the new USC Michelson Center for Convergent Bioscience when it opens this November.

In order to train the next generation of the STEM workforce, I hope to inspire students and convey biomedical engineering and biomaterials research as both tangible and compelling, Chung said.

The Juggling Act

Chung describes her pursuit of both an ambitious academic career and family life as a juggling act that requires frequent fine-tuning.

She has even developed her own system of goal attainment that all starts with putting a pencil to paper.

Every December, I write out my career and family goals for the upcoming year, as well as any additional personal goals that I might have, and categorize them into a timeline of seasons, Chung said. In addition, I have longer, five-year goals. This way, I can approach ambition in a holistic manner.

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Eun Ji Chung Receives 2017 AIChE 35 Under 35 Award - USC Viterbi School of Engineering (press release) (blog)

Beijing Leadman Biochemistry Co Ltd (300289) Decline -5.1% on Aug 29 – NormanObserver.com

August 29, 2017 - By Vivian Park

Shares of Beijing Leadman Biochemistry Co Ltd (SHE:300289) last traded at 12.1, representing a move of -5.1%, or -0.65 per share, on volume of 24.10 million shares. After opening the trading day at 12, shares of Beijing Leadman Biochemistry Co Ltd traded in a close range. Beijing Leadman Biochemistry Co Ltd currently has a total float of shares and on average sees shares exchange hands each day. The stock now has a 52-week low of 10.31 and high of 17.53.

Amid numerous setbacks in the past, China has still proven itself to have one of the most important economies not just in Asia but in the whole world. Trade and commerce is richly flourishing in the nation and the Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) is one of the reasons it does. It is also the best place to show full potential for Beijing Leadman Biochemistry Co Ltd and its colleagues.

The SSE, one of Chinas primary stock exchanges aside from the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, is a non-profit organization that is administered by the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC). As of February, the SSE boasts with a market capitalization of $3.50 trillion, making it the fifth largest stock exchange in the world. In Asia, it is the second biggest stock exchange. The second biggest market in the world increased the chances of Beijing Leadman Biochemistry Co Ltd to catch attention of investors.

The SSE was established in 1866 but it had to close on December 5, 1941 when Japan invaded Shanghai. Operations did not resume until December 19, 1990.

Shortly after the relaunch of the SSE, the SSE Composite Index began operating on July 15, 1991 as the primary index measuring all stocks on the SSE based on market capitalization. It tracks companies using the Paasche weighted composite price index formula. Measuring more than 1,000 companies listed on the SSE means that the SSE Composite Index is a broad indicator of the Chinese economy. As a result, it had to have three sub-indices: 1) the SSE 380, which monitors the 380 most active companies; 2) the SSE 180, which monitors the 180 most active companies; and 3) the SSE 50, which monitors the 50 most active companies. Of course, in order to be included in the SSE 50, a company needs to first be included in the SSE 180 and the SSE 380. Similarly, in order for it to be included in the SSE 180, it first needs to be included in the SSE 380. The smaller the index, the clearer of a representation it is of the Chinese economy.

The SSE Composite Index has last seen its all-time high of 6,092.06 in October 2007, shortly before the 2008 Global Financial Crisis broke out; and its all-time low of 99.98 in December 1990 during the relaunch period of the SSE.

Companies listed on the SSE are classified into two types: 1) A shares, which are traded in yuan; and 2) B shares, which are traded in US dollar (USD). In the past, only domestic traders had been allowed to trade A shares. Foreign investors had been limited to B shares. However, the restriction was lifted in 2002, giving the Chinese economy more opportunities to grow immensely with greater foreign investments. It means more possibilities for Beijing Leadman Biochemistry Co Ltd.

The regular trading session on the SSE starts at 9:30 and ends at 11:30 in the morning and starts at 1:30 and ends at 3:00 in the afternoon. There is also a pre-market trading session that starts at 9:15 a.m. and lasts for 10 minutes.

China is Asias largest economy, which is why there is no better way to bet on the Asian trade and commerce environment than to invest on SSE stocks. Traders look on the liquidity of Beijing Leadman Biochemistry Co Ltd.

More notable recent Beijing Leadman Biochemistry Co Ltd (SHE:300289) news were published by: Businesswire.com which released: Enigma Diagnostics Signs Joint Venture Agreement with Beijing Leadman on October 22, 2014, also Businesswire.com with their article: Research and Markets: Diagnostic Reagent Industry in China 2015 published on June 09, 2015, Prnewswire.com published: China In-vitro Diagnostic Reagent Industry Report 2017-2021 Research and Markets on April 21, 2017. More interesting news about Beijing Leadman Biochemistry Co Ltd (SHE:300289) were released by: Businesswire.com and their article: IVD Market in China 2015-2024 Research and Markets published on February 15, 2016 as well as Prweb.coms news article titled: China Diagnostic Reagent Industry (biochemical, molecular & immunodiagnostic with publication date: July 30, 2014.

Beijing Leadman Biochemistry Co., Ltd is a China firm principally engaged in the research, development, production and sales of in-vitro diagnostic reagents. The company has market cap of $. The Companys diagnostic reagents include chemiluminescence diagnostic reagents and biochemical diagnostic agents, such as hepatitis B virus attributes and tumor markers. It currently has negative earnings. The Firm also produces diagnostic instruments and biochemical raw materials.

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Beijing Leadman Biochemistry Co Ltd (300289) Decline -5.1% on Aug 29 - NormanObserver.com

What still unites us? – The Adirondack Daily Enterprise

Decades ago, a debate over what kind of nation America is roiled the conservative movement.

Neocons claimed America was an ideological nation a creedal nation, dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.

Expropriating the biblical mandate, Go forth and teach all nations! they divinized democracy and made the conversion of mankind to the democratic faith their mission here on earth.

With his global crusade for democracy, George W. Bush bought into all this. Result: Ashes in our mouths and a series of foreign policy disasters, beginning with Afghanistan and Iraq.

Behind the Trumpian slogan America First lay a conviction that, with the Cold War over and the real ideological nation, the USSR, shattered into pieces along ethnic lines, it was time for America to come home.

Contra the neocons, traditionalists argued that, while America was uniquely great, the nation was united by faith, culture, language, history, heroes, holidays, mores, manners, customs and traditions. A common feature of Americans, black and white, was pride in belonging to a people that had achieved so much.

The insight attributed to Alexis de Tocqueville America is great because she is good, and if America ceases to be good, she will cease to be great was a belief shared by almost all.

What makes our future appear problematic is that what once united us now divides us. While Presidents Wilson and Truman declared us to be a Christian nation, Christianity has been purged from our public life and sheds believers every decade. Atheism and agnosticism are growing rapidly, especially among the young.

Traditional morality, grounded in Christianity, is being discarded. Half of all marriages end in divorce. Four-in-10 children are born out of wedlock. Unrestricted abortion and same-sex marriage once regarded as marks of decadence and decline are now seen as human rights and the hallmarks of social progress.

Tens of millions of us do not speak English. Where most of our music used to be classic, popular, country and western, and jazz, much of it now contains rutting lyrics that used to be unprintable.

Where we used to have three national networks, we have three 24-hour cable news channels and a thousand websites that reinforce our clashing beliefs on morality, culture, politics and race.

Consider but a few events post-Charlottesville.

Murderer was painted on the San Fernando statue of Fr. Junipero Serra, the Franciscan who founded the missions that became San Diego, San Francisco, San Juan Capistrano and Santa Clara.

Americas oldest monument honoring Columbus, in Baltimore, was vandalized. Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia called for Robert E. Lees statue to be removed from Capitol and replaced by Pocahontas.

According to legend, this daughter of Chief Powhatan saved Captain John Smith from being beheaded by throwing herself across his neck. The Chief was a person of interest in the disappearance of the Lost Colony of Roanoke Island, among whose missing was Virginia Dare, the first European baby born in British America.

Why did Kaine not call for John Smith himself, leader of the Jamestown Colony that fought off Indian attacks, to be so honored?

In New Orleans, Tear It Down was spray-painted on a statue of Joan of Arc, a gift from France in 1972. Besides being a canonized saint in the Catholic Church and a legendary heroine of France, what did the Maid of Orleans do to deserve this?

Taken together, we are seeing the discoverers, explorers and missionaries of North America demonized as genocidal racists all. The Founding Fathers are either slave owners or sanctioners of slavery.

Our nation-builders either collaborated in or condoned the ethnic cleansing of Native Americans. Almost to the present, ours was a land where segregationists were honored leaders.

Bottom line for the left: Americans should be sickened and ashamed of the history that made us the worlds greatest nation. And we should acknowledge our ancestors guilt by tearing down any and all monuments and statues that memorialize them.

This rising segment of America, full of self-righteous rage, is determined to blacken the memory of those who have gone before us.

To another slice of America, much of the celebrated social and moral progress of recent decades induces a sense of nausea, summarized in the lament, This isnt the country we grew up in.

Hillary Clinton famously described this segment of America as a basket of deplorables racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic bigots, and altogether irredeemable.

So, what still unites us? What holds us together into the indefinite future? What makes us one nation and one people? What do we offer mankind, as nations seem to recoil from what we are becoming, and are instead eager to build their futures on the basis of ethnonationalism and fundamentalist faith?

If advanced democracy has produced the disintegration of a nation that we see around us, what is the compelling case for it?

A sixth of the way through the 21st century, what is there to make us believe this will be the Second American Century?

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What still unites us? - The Adirondack Daily Enterprise

Impact of Existing and Emerging Europe Nanomedicine Market – MilTech

The global Nanomedicine Market size was estimated at USD XX billion in 2017. Technological advancements coupled with relevant applications in early disease diagnosis, preventive intervention, and prophylaxis of chronic as well as acute disorders is expected to bolster growth in this market.

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Nanotechnology involves the miniaturization of larger structures and chemicals at nanometric scale which has significantly revolutionized drug administration, thus influencing adoption of the technology through to 2022.

Expected developments in nanorobotics owing to the rise in funding from the government organizations is expected to induce potential to the market. Nanorobotics engineering projects that are attempting to target the cancer cells without affecting the surrounding tissues is anticipated to drive progress through to 2022.

Ability of the nanotechnology to serve in diagnostics as well as the therapeutic sector at the same time as a consequence of its characteristic principle to is anticipated to augment research in this sector. Furthermore, utilization of DNA origami for healthcare applications is attributive for the projected growth.

The global nanomedicine market is segmented based on modality, application, indication, and region. Based on application, it is classified into drug delivery, diagnostic imaging, vaccines, regenerative medicine, implants, and others.

On the basis of indication, it is categorized into oncological diseases, neurological diseases, urological diseases, infectious diseases, ophthalmological diseases, orthopedic disorders, immunological diseases, cardiovascular diseases, and others. Based on modality, it is bifurcated into treatments and diagnostics.

The global market is driven by emerging technologies for drug delivery, increase in adoption of nanomedicine across varied applications, rise in government support & funding, growth in need for therapies with fewer side effects, and cost-effectiveness of therapies. However, long approval process and risks associated with nanomedicine (environmental impacts) restrain the market growth.

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Impact of Existing and Emerging Europe Nanomedicine Market - MilTech

Expert Radiologist and Clinician Scientist, Michelle S. Bradbury, MD, PhD, is to be Recognized as a 2017 Top Doctor … – PR NewsChannel (press…

Michelle Bradbury MD, PhD, who is a Professor of Radiology, Director of Intraoperative Imaging, and Co-Director of an National Cancer Institute awarded Nanomedicine Center (MSK-Cornell Center for Translation of Cancer Nanomedicines), has been named a 2017 Top Doctor in New York City, New York. Top Doctor Awards is dedicated to selecting and honoring those healthcare practitioners who have demonstrated clinical excellence while delivering the highest standards of patient care.

Dr. Michelle S. Bradbury is a highly experienced physician who has been in practice for over two decades. Her career in medicine started in 1997, when she graduated from the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences in Washington, D.C. An internship, residency and then fellowship followed, all completed at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Dr. Bradbury also holds a Doctor of Philosophy Degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Dr. Bradbury is certified by the American Board of Radiology in both Diagnostic Radiology and Neuroradiology. She is particularly renowned, however, as a leading expert in nanomedicine and in neuroradiology, using CT and MRI imaging of the brain, neck and spine to diagnose conditions of the nervous system. Alongside her work in this field she has been at the forefront of nanomedicine research and clinical trials.

Dr. Bradbury keeps up to date with the latest advances in her field through her active membership of professional organizations including the American College of Radiology, the World Molecular Imaging Congress, and the American Society of Nanomedicine. Her expertise and dedication makes Dr. Michelle S. Bradbury a very deserving winner of a 2017 Top Doctor Award.

About Top Doctor Awards

Top Doctor Awards specializes in recognizing and commemorating the achievements of todays most influential and respected doctors in medicine. Our selection process considers education, research contributions, patient reviews, and other quality measures to identify top doctors

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Expert Radiologist and Clinician Scientist, Michelle S. Bradbury, MD, PhD, is to be Recognized as a 2017 Top Doctor ... - PR NewsChannel (press...

World Badminton Championships 2017 final: Lin Dan on the cusp of immortality as record sixth title beckons – Firstpost

"There are a few chinks in his armour, so I'll believe I can win tomorrow, British shuttler Rajiv Ouseph told Badminton England after setting up a quarter-final clash with China's Lin Dan in the 2017 BWF World Badminton Championships in Glasgow.

File photo of Lin Dan. AFP

One wonders if the quote was relevant given the 34-year-old's dip in form and below average performances in big events this calendar year. To add weight to Ouseph's bold statement, Lin lost the opening game 14-21 on the next day and was on the back foot in the second, but the Briton was soon forced to swallow his words. Lin floored Ouseph after the interval in the second gameand held his nerve to enter the semi-final of the men's singles.

The result showed how onerous the task to stop the 33-year-old Chinese is. He never runs out of steam and is a player with complete control of the shuttle and the game.

In the next game, he was pitted against World No 1 Son Wan Ho of South Korea the man who reached the top of the rankings purely on the basis of points he gathered by entering the last four of Superseries tournaments. Having been stretchedto three games in his previous two matches, the onus was on Lin to stay steady against an in-form and a very defensive Son, who was coming on the back of an impressive straight-game win over the high-flying Kidambi Srikanth.

Despite a slow start, Lin raced into the lead and clinched the first game 21-17. Son, who was hesitant to play net shots, let the Chinese surge ahead in the second game and eventually gifted him a handful of points through net errors to lose the match in straight games. The only weapon Son had was to play long rallies, which Lin had a grip on throughout the match. And again, the Chinese ace proved he is not to be taken lightly at the world event.

The two results are, in fact, a reflection of Lin's vast experience in major tournaments. He has been under the toughest of situations and that's why he is considered an immortal figure in a sport where there are no favourites as such. It's the consistency that has left the world in awe of the man who became the first and the only player to complete the 'Super Grand Slam', having won all nine major titles in badminton: Olympics, World Championships, World Cup, Thomas Cup, Sudirman Cup, Super Series Masters Finals, All England Open, Asian Games and Asian Championships, all by the age of 28.

Lin, who had previously won the world title in 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011 and 2013, will have to beat 2016 Rio Olympics bronze medallist Viktor Axelsen in the final of the World Championships on Sunday. Nicknamed 'Super Dan' by his fans, the 33-year-old will play his seventh final in the World Championships. He lost only once in 2005. Incidentally, it was the Dane who sent Lin packing in the Olympics last year in the bronze medal match. Moreover, the scores are tied at 3-3 in the overall head-to-head meetings between the duo. Axelsen, the current World No 3, has barely put a foot wrong in the tournament with impressive victories over Ng Ka Long Angus, Chou Tien Chen and Chen Long en route to the final. However, Lin is just beyond comparison when it comes to finals.

With such unrivalled record at World Championships and a knack for creating history every now and then, the Chinese ace will be looking to surpass South Korean legend Park Joo-bong and Zhao Yunlei of China, who have five world titles each, to become the shuttler with themost number of gold medals at World Championships. In other words, to become immortal!

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World Badminton Championships 2017 final: Lin Dan on the cusp of immortality as record sixth title beckons - Firstpost

What still unites us? – The Hutchinson News

By Pat Buchanan

Decades ago, a debate over what kind of nation America is roiled the conservative movement.

Neocons claimed America was an "ideological nation" a "creedal nation," dedicated to the proposition that "all men are created equal."

Expropriating the biblical mandate, "Go forth and teach all nations!" they divinized democracy and made the conversion of mankind to the democratic faith their mission here on earth.

With his global crusade for democracy, George W. Bush bought into all this. Result: Ashes in our mouths and a series of foreign policy disasters, beginning with Afghanistan and Iraq.

Behind the Trumpian slogan "America First" lay a conviction that, with the Cold War over and the real ideological nation, the USSR, shattered into pieces along ethnic lines, it was time for America to come home.

Contra the neocons, traditionalists argued that, while America was uniquely great, the nation was united by faith, culture, language, history, heroes, holidays, mores, manners, customs and traditions. A common feature of Americans, black and white, was pride in belonging to a people that had achieved so much.

The insight attributed to Alexis de Tocqueville -- "America is great because she is good, and if America ceases to be good, she will cease to be great" -- was a belief shared by almost all.

What makes our future appear problematic is that what once united us now divides us. While Presidents Wilson and Truman declared us to be a "Christian nation," Christianity has been purged from our public life and sheds believers every decade. Atheism and agnosticism are growing rapidly, especially among the young.

Traditional morality, grounded in Christianity, is being discarded. Half of all marriages end in divorce. Four-in-10 children are born out of wedlock. Unrestricted abortion and same-sex marriage -- once regarded as marks of decadence and decline -- are now seen as human rights and the hallmarks of social progress.

Tens of millions of us do not speak English. Where most of our music used to be classic, popular, country and western, and jazz, much of it now contains rutting lyrics that used to be unprintable.

Where we used to have three national networks, we have three 24-hour cable news channels and a thousand websites that reinforce our clashing beliefs on morality, culture, politics and race.

Consider but a few events post-Charlottesville.

"Murderer" was painted on the San Fernando statue of Fr. Junipero Serra, the Franciscan who founded the missions that became San Diego, San Francisco, San Juan Capistrano and Santa Clara.

America's oldest monument honoring Columbus, in Baltimore, was vandalized. Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia called for Robert E. Lee's statue to be removed from Capitol and replaced by -- Pocahontas.

According to legend, this daughter of Chief Powhatan saved Captain John Smith from being beheaded by throwing herself across his neck. The Chief was a "person of interest" in the disappearance of the "Lost Colony" of Roanoke Island, among whose missing was Virginia Dare, the first European baby born in British America.

Why did Kaine not call for John Smith himself, leader of the Jamestown Colony that fought off Indian attacks, to be so honored?

In New Orleans, "Tear It Down" was spray-painted on a statue of Joan of Arc, a gift from France in 1972. Besides being a canonized saint in the Catholic Church and a legendary heroine of France, what did the Maid of Orleans do to deserve this?

Taken together, we are seeing the discoverers, explorers and missionaries of North America demonized as genocidal racists all. The Founding Fathers are either slave owners or sanctioners of slavery.

Our nation-builders either collaborated in or condoned the ethnic cleansing of Native Americans. Almost to the present, ours was a land where segregationists were honored leaders.

Bottom line for the left: Americans should be sickened and ashamed of the history that made us the world's greatest nation. And we should acknowledge our ancestors' guilt by tearing down any and all monuments and statues that memorialize them.

This rising segment of America, full of self-righteous rage, is determined to blacken the memory of those who have gone before us.

To another slice of America, much of the celebrated social and moral "progress" of recent decades induces a sense of nausea, summarized in the lament, "This isn't the country we grew up in."

Hillary Clinton famously described this segment of America as a "basket of deplorables ... racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic ... bigots," and altogether "irredeemable."

So, what still unites us? What holds us together into the indefinite future? What makes us one nation and one people? What do we offer mankind, as nations seem to recoil from what we are becoming, and are instead eager to build their futures on the basis of ethnonationalism and fundamentalist faith?

If advanced democracy has produced the disintegration of a nation that we see around us, what is the compelling case for it?

A sixth of the way through the 21st century, what is there to make us believe this will be the Second American Century?

Patrick J. Buchanan is a columnist for Creators Content.

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What still unites us? - The Hutchinson News

Catholicism in the Modern World – First Things

Rev. Thomas Joseph White, O.P., is associate professor of systematic theology and director of the Thomistic Institute at the Dominican House of Studies in Washington, D.C., where he writes and teaches on Thomistic metaphysics and Christology. He recently spoke with First Things assistant editor Connor Grubaugh about three modern presentations of the Catholic faith.

The first book youve chosen is John Henry Newmans very personalApologia pro Vita Sua.

In 1864, Newman was publicly accused by Charles Kingsley of converting to the Catholic religion for insincere reasons. Kingsley argued that Newman could not be both intellectually honest and Catholic simultaneously. In response, Newman composed a masterful intellectual autobiography, theApologia pro Vita Sua, which he calls a history of my religious opinions.

The book is distinctively modern in that it narrates the development of the protagonists consciousness and worldview rather than presenting a series of propositions for disputation. It seeks rather slyly to establish not that the authors views are true,so much as that they aresincere.Yet from within this typically modern and literary medium of expression, Newman does in fact offer the modern person a profound introduction to classical doctrinal questions. He does not condescend to the reader, but instead leads him on an insightful tour of doctrinal disputes between Anglican and Catholic theologians of the nineteenthcentury, and relates these to ancient disputes in the Catholic Church.

The summit of the book is Newmans defense of Catholicism in response to modern agnosticism. He offers a vivid critique of the doctrines of secular liberalism, explaining why for him it constitutes an implausible intellectual alternative to classical Catholic Christianity. Newmans book is a vehicle for transmitting the tradition of the Catholic Church in a novel form. He shows how a tenacious search for the truth can emerge from within the sincerity of a modern individual seeker.

St. Augustines Confessions similarly intertwines prolonged philosophical argument with reflection on the authors own subjectivity. Why do you think this hybrid genre has proven so useful and attractive to Christian thinkers over the centuries?

Newman is clearly seeking to transpose Augustines ancient example into a modern key. The genre is evocative because it details the development of the person, from the inside, and therefore creates a powerful sense of the subjective motives for belief. Augustine in the garden, Newman at Littlemore. Both of them make their inner intellectual and spiritual dilemma vivid for us and invite us to accompany them observationally in their decision of conversion. This in turn suggests that we might follow a similar path, though not an identical oneconversion, not by way of slavish imitation but through our own personal discernment of the truth. Its a powerful motif in the western Christian literary tradition, and one that Newman channeled poignantly.

Your second book isReality: A Synthesis of Thomistic Thought, by Rginald Garrigou-Lagrange, O.P.

This book was originally published in 1946 as asystematic exposition of the philosophy and theology of Thomas Aquinas. But the book also considers deeper issues related to the perennial truth of Catholicism and its intelligibility in the modern context. Garrigou-Lagrange is often depicted as the ultimate anti-modernist reactionary, but few recall that as a young Dominican priest, he studied philosophy at the Sorbonne with figures like Henri Bergson, mile Durkheim,Lucien Lvy-Bruhl, andAlfred Loisy. In fact, Garrigou-Lagrange from a young age was asking intellectual questions that anticipate postmodernity: Can we know anything about being that is stable and enduring?Is all intellectual knowledge merely a reflection of passing cultural constructions?Realityis a response to such questions in the form of a fully developed philosophical and theological treatise.

Turning to Aquinas for conceptual resources, Garrigou-Lagrange seeks to provide a properly metaphysical account of the fundamental structure of reality that can define and make intelligible our human experience. For this, he appeals to the classical metaphysical notions of substance, causality, knowledge, the human person and the spiritual soul, the virtues, and human flourishing. His treatment of the mysteries of the Catholic religion, meanwhile, seeks to show the inherent intelligibility of these mysteries and their concord with natural human reason, but also their irreducibility to mere truths of philosophy or religious sociology. The synthetic depth of this book is impressive, and it is a prototypically modern defense of the truth of Catholicism.

Many thinkers over the years have sought to break free from what they see as a burdensome and restrictive dependence on Thomistic categories and methods in Catholic theology. What does a committed Thomist like yourself make of their complaint? Is Catholicism in some way essentially Thomistic, or Thomism essentially Catholic?

Catholic theology is based on the principles of divine revelation, not on the principles of human philosophy. However, the Catholic tradition rightly does make use of philosophy in order to articulate theological truths and inevitably must do so. Consequently, some use of philosophy is always necessary, and on this point the Church has repeatedly emphasized that Aquinass thought provides a helpful and well-tested resource. That is very different from saying that other alternatives are to be excluded. The modern magisterium recommends that seminarians study Thomism, for example, not so that they feel obliged to embrace every point, but so that they will have a sufficient philosophical realism, and classical intellectual culture, as they move forward in their ministry as priests.

However, all this is somewhat beside the point given our contemporary climate. Very few Catholics suffer today from an overly rigid dependence on Thomistic metaphysics, and if anything the doctrines that blind us today stem from unreflective political liberalism and postmodernism. In the Church today, we typically encounter a generalized doctrinal amnesia and nescience of our best philosophical traditions. This creates intellectual indetermination and disorientation, which lead many back to fundamental metaphysical questions, and to a revived interest in Thomism. That is a good sign of intellectual health, not something threatening. There is no inherent opposition between the modern historical study of theological sources and the metaphysically informed work of scholastic theology. The revival of theology today requires that we embrace both, but it is really the latter tradition that is most in need of revival in our current climate.

Your last book selection is Joseph Ratzingers renownedIntroduction to Christianity.

Originally published in 1968, this book stems from lectures Ratzinger gave at the University of Tbingen during the tumultuous period just after the Second Vatican Council. The book is presented as a commentary on the Apostles Creed. However, one has the impression that the book is written as much for skeptics and atheists as it is for cradle Catholics. Little is presumed. Ratzinger enters into the problem of Christian belief in the modern world with a thoroughgoing honesty, and seeks to explore the intelligibility and meaningfulness of Catholicism much as if he were discovering it for himself along the way.

Though he is named only half a dozen times in the book, the liberal Lutheran theologian Rudolf Bultmann was undoubtedly one of Ratzingers main interlocutors in this work: How do we know that Christianity is not just an elaborate pre-modern myth, standing in need of demythologization? Ratzinger does not treat historical study of Christianity as a threat, but as an opportunity and advantage. He seeks to introduce the reader, as if for the first time, to the rationality of the Scriptures, the Church Fathers, and medieval Scholastics, so as to show how and why Christianity provides unique and true insight into the human condition of modern persons. The most significant portion of the book is the treatise on Christology, where Ratzinger inverts the Bultmannian logic: It is only when we realize that the mysteries of the life of Christ are real, and not mere symbols, that we acquire a true understanding of their existential significance for modern humanity. Its not an accident that this book has helped many readers grasp the truth of Christianity within the context of our skeptical era.

Is modernity something that these three authors are responding to, or something they too are participating in?

Modernity can be defined in many ways: the rise of capitalist democracies in the eighteenthcentury, the scientific revolution, the divisions of Church and state, the primacy of subjective consciousness (Descartes), skepticism about ultimate metaphysical explanations coupled with an ethics of autonomy that gives rise to liberal secular culture (Kant), the use of historical studies to relativize all absolute truth claims. What makes these three works modern is that they take seriously and engage directly with the modernproblematizationof knowledge of absolutes, whether that problematization is metaphysical, historical, or religious. In an age of globalization, the problem of any possible reference to absolutes (and the question of whether any such knowledge exists, really or artificially) does affect many people across a spectrum of intellectual standpoints, be they classical Marxists, Nietzschean postmodernists, scientific empiricists, agnostic Keynesian liberals, Wahabi Muslims, or South American Catholics. Newman, Garrigou-Lagrange, and Ratzinger all participated in their own way in this prototypically modern form of questioning, and were very sensitive to the existential disorientation it produced, to say nothing of the massive cultural upheavals that arose in the modern era. From within this problematic, however, they each discovered and were able to portray for others something of perennial importance: the human search for the truth. Each of them was able to present in a profound way the truth of the principles of Catholicism from within this modern context.

Older generations of Catholics have made much of the need to minister to modern people and modern societies in a new way, whereas many Catholics of my own generation seem to prefer more traditional forms. How should the Church respond to changing historical circumstances? In apologetics, is it possible to change keys without changing tune?

People under forty in the West have grown up in a largely secular and religiously uncatechized world, so when they turn to religious resources to explain reality, they are typically interested in the discovery of principles, lasting structures, and tested reference-points. This instinct is more sound overall than that of the post-Vatican II generation, which was looking for ways to nuance and expand the intellectual and liturgical life of the Church, against what was perceived as a deadening cultural sclerosis. This latter instinct is of course justified in many respects. The problem, however, is that a fundamental confusion existed in many from the beginning between openness to non-Christian culture and the alteration of the very foundations of faith.

The divinity of Christ is a good test case. It is one thing to consider the resources of modern historical study for placing Jesus of Nazareth within his historical context. It is quite another thing to forsake, in practice if not in theory, the idea that Christ is God, and the universal savior of humanity. You cannot give what you do not have, and so the loss of references to tradition has eventually led in many quarters to a tragic loss of knowledge about Catholic culture, and the end of its transmission.

All that being said, there are many features of modern existence that characterize just about everyone today, many of which are unambiguously positive and some of which are morally neutral. The problems that arise in modern intellectual and moral culture are not met well by ignorance or mere reactionary condemnation. What is needed is serene analysis based on the principles of divine revelation, philosophical realism, coupled with a charitable and merciful response to questions of our time that stems from the best wellsprings of the Catholic tradition, both ancient and modern.

Your newest book,The Light of Christ, falls within this genre of modern Catholic apologetics. What need did you see for another work of this kind? Were you bearing in mind any particular objections to the Catholic faith when writing it?

The Light of Christis a meant to be an introduction to Christianity for all comers: non-Christian seekers, Protestants, or Catholics who want to think more deeply about the claims of Christianity. The book is structured not by apologetic concerns but by a consideration of basic teachings of Christianity: God and the Trinity, creation and the human person, Incarnation and Atonement, the Church and the sacraments, the social doctrine of the Church, and eschatology. There is also a section on prayer. So the book is based on the perennial teachings of the Church, in line with your observation above that millennials are typically more interested in the traditional claims of Christianity.

At the same time, certain questions are now more pressing in the public imagination than they were fifty years ago, when the last of these three works was written: the compatibility of Christianity and modern science, the divinity of Christ and its relation to modern historical studies, the sexual teachings of Church, the difference between human beings and other animals, and whether or not there is a spiritual soul. The book engages with topics like these. The aim was to show, by way of an overview, the deep inner intelligibility and realism of Christian truth claims across a broad spectrum of issues, with regard to God, the historicity of Jesus, the nature of the human person and the reality of grace, the sacramental life, and the Christian eschatological hope. Its meant to be a helpful book for those who want to explain Catholicism to others, and also for those who are interested in thinking seriously about Christianity in a structured way.

Thomas Joseph Whites most recent essay for First Things, Catholicism in an Age of Discontent, appeared in the November 2016 issue. The Light of Christ: An Introduction to Catholicism was released this month by Catholic University of America Press.

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Catholicism in the Modern World - First Things

When it’s time to stand against hate, where are local Republican leaders? – The San Luis Obispo Tribune (blog)

Theres nothing patriotic about Nazis, the KKK, racism, anti-Semitism, violence or hatred. Patriots stand against all that.

Youd think its a no-brainer to condemn evil when its staring you in the face.

Which is why Im puzzled not one prominent local Republican has made any public statement or gesture doing that.

Maybe I missed a Facebook post. Im told by a friend of a friend that former Republican state Sen. Sam Blakeslee might have done so. Its comforting to know my old pal Sam might oppose Nazis.

That other local Republican leaders havent jumped onto the anti-Nazi-KKK train is weird. Charlottesville has started a movement, leaving behind those who dont openly denounce fascism, racism, anti-Semitism and hate.

This public agnosticism by local Republican leaders toward evil seems of a piece: Theyre also silent about President Trumps moral equivalency between Nazis and people who protest against them (both sides are bad) and his conflation of violent antifas with anyone opposed to Nazi / KKK malevolence.

Local Republicans are also mute aboutin some cases even supportTrumps peculiar affinity for Russia, Vlademir Putin and thug dictators around the globe.

Thereve been no letters to The Tribune from fire-breathing conservatives condemning that, no words from the conservative local opinion writer, no contrary pronouncements from local elected Republican leaders. Local online commentary is silent.

Until Trump, we could always count on that sort to proclaim traditional Republican Cold War antipathy to Russians, commies and enemies of America. Lately, nothing.

Local Democrats, on the other hand, have dialed the volume to 11: letters to the editor, online commentary, public demonstrations, donations to the Southern Poverty Law Center, the Anne Frank Center for Mutual Respect and Congregation Beth Israel in Charlottesville, among others.

Most Americans know the difference between right and wrong, good and bad. Evil is evil, and its a great political opponent to have.

Democrats should obviously campaign against evil by opposing Nazis, the Klan, Russian gangsters and dictators, demonstrate patriotism by promoting freedom, democracy, equality and the Constitution.

Doing right by God and country is a simple concept to drape an American flag around. Democrats canand shouldwrap themselves in that mantle. Itll still be fashionable by the 2018 midterms.

Apparently, local Trump supporters havent figured that out yet, arent hip to the national mood shifting underfoot.

Though its possible Trump supporters arent outraged at all about Trumps betrayal of their core values of duty, honor and country. Maybe theyre fine with presidential moral vacuity and the abandonment of their partys historic moorings of principle and decency.

Republicans always seem to behave as if they own the American flag, the Constitution, Jesus, freedom, cops, the military, the Star Spangled Banner, football and all things good and right about the USA! USA! USA!

How SLO County Republicans can claim love of country yet dont openly condemn Nazis and the KKK is inexplicable. Perhaps they dont realize the American flag theyve wrapped themselves in for decades has now fallen to the roadside whilst theyve accommodated Trumps un-American rhetoric and behavior.

Any American with a working moral compass objects to Trumps statement that there were very fine people among the torch-bearing fascists in Charlottesville, who chanted Jews will not replace us! and the Nazi Blood and Soil! slogan. There werent any fine people in that pre-Kristallnacht rally re-enactment straight from Leni Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will Nazi propaganda film.

Standing against evil here is pretty straightforward, as evidenced last week by SLO County Democrats, several SLO City Council members and county Supervisors Adam Hill and Bruce Gibson. Without being asked, all they did was show up in Mission Plaza, along with more than 1,000 fellow patriots at a vigil titled Outshine the Darkness, organized by an assortment of local activists groups.

The vigil featured exhortations of peace from speakers and self-proclaimed commitments from the predominantly white crowdmost of whom have never laid eyes on a real hooded Klansmanto reject Nazis and evil in all its forms and to embrace nonviolence, love and other some such.

Personally, I left somewhat unfulfilled, having witnessed no muscular call to action from the well-intentioned speakers and organizers, merely a tepid go-forth-and-be-nice sendoff after a feel-good group hug.

Republican county supervisors Lynn Compton, Debbie Arnold and John Peschong didnt bother to show, nor did the SLO County Republican Central Committee, Tea Party or COLAB. Maybe they were busy, or didnt like the message.

Showing up to oppose evil is easy and patriotic. Wrap the flag around that.

USA! USA! USA!

Liberal columnist Tom Fulks serves on the San Luis Obispo County Democratic Central Committee. His column runs every other Sunday, in rotation with conservative columnist Andrea Seastrand.

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When it's time to stand against hate, where are local Republican leaders? - The San Luis Obispo Tribune (blog)

A Potential Anti-Aging Pill Promises to Extend Life For 5 Cents a Pop – Wall Street Pit

How to Die Young at an Old Age.

A most inspiring TEDx talk of Dr. Nir Barzilai, (video posted below) co-founder of CohBar, Inc., a biotech company developing mitochondria based therapeutics to treat diseases associated with aging, as well director of the Longevity Genes Project, a genetics study of over 600 families of centenarians and their children.

The accomplished geneticist wants people to know that theres a way to extend their healthspan without breaking the bank.

For Dr. Barzilai, who is also a NY practicing Endocrinologist, anti-aging has been a lifetime pursuit. Growing up in Israel he saw first hand how his grandfather despite his old age, and unlike many other old people, was able to live a very productive life.

This inspired Dr. Barzilai to seek ways to delay aging, specifically to extend ones healthspan.

Theres a big difference between extending a persons lifespan to extending ones healthspan. Life can be prolonged, but shadowed by weakness and disease.

Extending ones healthspan means that a person enjoys a longer period of youth and strength with longer period of immunity to the many illnesses of aging. Alzheimers for instance, is one of the most feared diseases among aging people. It can even afflict the young. According to the Alzheimers Disease International, the problem is very serious with one person getting demented every 3 seconds.

Dr. Barzilai, who also serves as Director of the Institute for Aging Research at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, thinks theres a cheap but effective drug that can help mankind to attain extended healthspan.

And that drug is Metformin. A five-cent pill thats commonly prescribed for patients with type 2 diabetes.

What drew Dr. Barzilais interest and enthusiasm to this drug?

Metformin comes from a plant called,Galega officinalis, which is also known as French lilac and goats rue. Its been used as an herbal remedy for centuries.

According to the writings of 17th century renowned English herbalist John Parkinson, the plants effective for the bitings or stings of any venomous creature, the plague, measells, small pocks, and wormes in children, and other health problems.

In our modern times, Metformin has shown the following remarkable efficacy:

Following Metformins proven benefits, Dr. Barzilai and his colleagues decided that it was time to come up with a clinical trial that would focus on a specific anti-aging drug. After a scientific discussion held in Spain, they decided on a project called Targeting Aging with Metformin(TAME). Its a trial that would test whether Metformin could really extend a persons healthspan while delaying the onset of diseases like cardiovascular ones, cancer, and cognitive impairment.

If TAME succeeds, and chances are it most probably will given that studies have shown that Metformin can delay aging in animals, pointing to the likelihood that the drug may have the ability to influence fundamental aging factors in humans, it will open the door to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of aging as an indicator.., according to the American Federation for Aging Research.

More importantly, though, a possible FDA approval will pave the way for the agency to finally consider aging a modifiable condition and an official indication for which treatments can be developed and approved.

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A Potential Anti-Aging Pill Promises to Extend Life For 5 Cents a Pop - Wall Street Pit

Philly native discusses the 'Allure' of anti-aging to movie star super-heroines – Philly.com

Allure magazine made headlines this past week when they announced that they will no longer use the term anti-aging in their stories.

This issue is the long-awaited, utterly necessary celebration of growing into your own skin wrinkles and all, said the magazine in its latest issue. No one is suggesting giving up retinol. But changing the way we think about aging starts with changing the way we talk about aging.

With that in mind, and starting with this issue, we are making a resolution to stop using the term anti-aging. Whether we know it or not, were subtly reinforcing the message that aging is a condition we need to battle think antianxiety meds, antivirus software or antifungal spray.

The issue for actresses, especially with movies featuring non-aging superheroes staying so popular, is how to stay relevant and in the game.

In the piece,Allure also included quotes from past and present stars like X-Men star Halle Berry, who is quoted as saying, When you see everybody around you doing it, you have those moments when you think, to stay alive in this business, do I need to do the same thing? I wont lie and tell you that those things dont cross my mind, because somebody is always suggesting it to me. You know, if you just did a little bit of this and that, lift this up, then this would be a little bit better. Its almost like crack that people are trying to push on you. Thats what I feel like. I just have kept reminding myself that beauty really is as beauty does, and it is not so much about my physical self. Aging is natural, and thats going to happen to all of us. I just want to always look like myself, even if thats an older version of myself. I think when you do too much of that cosmetic stuff, you become somebody else in a way.

Cate Blanchett (the upcoming Thor: Ragnarok), says in the article, I havent done anything, but who knows. When youve had children, your body changes; theres history to it. I like the evolution of that history; Im fortunate to be with somebody who likes the evolution of that history. I think its important to not eradicate it. I look at someones face and I see the work before I see the person. I personally dont think people look better when they do it; they just look different. Youre certainly not staving off the inevitable. And if youre doing it out of fear, that fears still going to be seen through your eyes. The windows to your soul, they say.

However, Philly native Ronald Klatz, who has been called the guru of anti-aging by Business Week and is the President of The Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine, said that Allure and the celebritieshave a misunderstanding of what anti-aging is.

First of all, let me applaud the 29 celebrities in the Allure magazine online article, for living or having lived a life that seems to be healthy and that adheres to anti-aging principles, said Klatz. These would include healthy eating, proper amount of exercise, likely buying natural foods and being blessed with great genetics.

Unfortunately, being blessed with great genetics alone does not always help someone stay beautiful as they circle the sun more than 40 times, he continued. You have to believe that, although age is inevitable, it is not the only factor that causes your body to deteriorate and grow older.

Look at Cindy Crawford, he added. I doubt very many seniors in high school would refuse to take Cindy to the prom! Even though she is blessed with better genetics than most of us, I am sure she engages in plenty of exercise to keep her body young and healthy and combat the effects of aging.

I certainly dont believe in unnecessary plastic surgery, hormonal therapies that are not supervised, or stem cell therapies at the beauty shop or overzealous and completely false claims by creams and other products that claim to beanti-aging, Klatz said. Anti-aging should not be a buzzword. Instead, I believe that credible non-commercial information should be used as a tool to combat ignorance and protect consumers.

Anti-aging is about living healthy and inner beauty, he added. It isnt about cosmetic surgery, solely enhancing our appearance or trying to live forever. It is about getting older with a better quality of life and slowing down and in some cases defeating disease.

While Klatz is pleased that Allure is acknowledging the issue, he said,Magazines such as Allurehardly focus on or promote inner beauty. They focus on outward appearance, pushing cosmetic goods, promote unbelievably attractive celebrities and models and then have the gall to take shots at botox for helping millions of people try to look and feel a little better.

Unfortunately, magazines like Allure give young women unrealistic expectations on a daily basis, Klatz concluded. They make people feel that they have to look like Halle Berry or Jennifer Aniston to be beautiful and thats simply not true! You just need to live an anti-aging lifestyle!

Published: August 24, 2017 9:17 AM EDT

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Philly native discusses the 'Allure' of anti-aging to movie star super-heroines - Philly.com

Metformin could be the first FDA approved antiaging drug – Next Big Future

For the last two decades, researchers started comparing the health of diabetics on metformin to those taking other diabetes drugs.

Metformin-takers tended to be healthier in all sorts of ways. They lived longer and had fewer cardiovascular events, and in at least some studies they were less likely to suffer from dementia and Alzheimers. Most surprising of all, they seemed to get cancer far less frequentlyas much as 25 to 40 percent less than diabetics taking two other popular medications. When they did get cancer, they tended to outlive diabetics with cancer who were taking other medications.

Lewis Cantley, the director of the Cancer Center at Weill Cornell Medicine, once put it, Metformin may have already saved more people from cancer deaths than any drug in history. Nobel laureate James Watson (of DNA-structure fame), who takes metformin off-label for cancer prevention, once suggested that the drug appeared to be our only real clue into the business of fighting the disease.

Metformin is from an ancient herb and the herb has been prescribed since medieval times. Metformin can cost 5 cents per pill.

Metformin is already prescribed off-label to treat obesity, polycystic ovarian syndrome, infertility, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, and acne.

Nir Barzilai, director of the Institute for Aging Research at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, like most in his field, was aware of the good news about metformin that had been trickling out year after year.

Barzilai is confident that metformin is good enough to be the first treatment approved by the FDA to counter aging. He has maintained this confidence ever since he read a 2014 study that reviewed the fate of 90,400 type 2 diabetics taking either metformin or another medication. The metformin patients in the study not only outlived the diabetics taking the other druga not especially surprising result if metformin is a superior treatmentbut also outlived the nondiabetics studied as a comparison.

The FDA will not make its decision on whether metformin becomes the USs first antiaging drug until the study, dubbed Targeting Aging with Metformin (TAME for short), is complete. That wont happen for at least another five years. But, based on their June 2015 meeting with FDA officials, Barzilai and his colleagues are optimistic that the FDA is onboard. Within five minutes, we were all in complete agreement that this is plausible and a good idea, S. Jay Olshansky says.Thus far, getting the FDA excited about TAME has proven to be less challenging than convincing someone to pay for the study. Because metformin is a generic, there is no pot of gold waiting for investors at the end of the process. The TAME trial, which will enroll approximately 3,000 men and women between the ages of 65 and 79 at 14 centers across the country, is projected to cost $69 million. Barzilai is counting on the National Institutes of Health to cover a significant share of the cost, and he has been directly involved in lobbying the agency to back the study. Robert Hariri, cofounder and president of genetic sequencing pioneer Craig Venters Human Longevity Cellular Therapeutics, noted during the discussion that he takes metformin (he claims that it has improved his eyesight), as do Ray Kurzweil, of Singularity fame, and Ned David, cofounder of Silicon Valley startup Unity Biotechnology, which is developing its own antiaging drugs.

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Metformin could be the first FDA approved antiaging drug - Next Big Future

Basic studies of how our brains work are now clinical trials, NIH says – Science Magazine

Studies of how a normal persons brain processes images could be labeled clinical trials under a new National Institutes of Health policy.

Vassar College/Karl Rabe

By Jocelyn KaiserAug. 25, 2017 , 1:55 PM

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland, has confirmed that the agencys definition of clinical trials now includes imaging studies of normal brain function that do not test new treatments. The change will impose new requirements that many researchers say dont make sense and could stifle cognitive neuroscience.

Although NIH revised its definition of clinical trials in 2014, the agency is only now implementing it as part of a new clinical trials policy. Concerns arose this summer when an NIH official said the definition could apply to many basic behavioral research projects, including brain studiesfor example, having healthy volunteers perform a computer task while wearing an electrode cap or lying in an MRI machine. Scientists say the new requirementssuch as training and registration on clinicaltrials.govare unnecessary, will impose a huge paperwork burden, and will confuse patients seeking to enroll in trials.

NIH told ScienceInsider in July that the agency was still deciding exactly which behavioral studies would be covered by the new definition. On 11 August, the agency released a set of case studies that has confirmed many researchers fears. Case No. 18 states that a study in which a healthy volunteer undergoes MRI brain imaging while performing a working memory test is now a clinical trial because the effect being evaluatedbrain functionis a health-related outcome.

This example suggests that almost all basic science behavioral research and experimental psychopathology research would be viewed misleadingly as a clinical trial, wrote neuroscientist William Iacono of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis in one of more than 30 comments expressing concern on the Open Mike blog of NIH extramural chief Michael Lauer.

Critics also find NIHs reasoning inconsistent. Case No. 22 states that a study of learning in children will not be considered a trial because an evaluation of learning has no clear link to health. It is not clear why a study of memory in adults would be health-related and yet learning in children would not, several researchers argued in comments.

Cognitive psychologist Nora Newcombe of Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, who studies childhood learning, writes that although its nice to be exempted from the regulatory burden, she worries that if her research isnt considered health-related, will there later be criticism of funding from NIH?

The Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) in Washington, D.C., shares concerns about the case studies. They dont provide as much clarity as the research community would need to know which projects must follow the new clinical trial policies, says Heather Pierce, AAMCs senior director for science policy.

NIHs Lauer says the agency is trying to address the concerns. We are continuing to receive feedback on the case studies and anticipate updating them, including Case 18, in the next 2 weeks and as needed on an ongoing basis to eliminate confusion, Lauer said in a statement.

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Basic studies of how our brains work are now clinical trials, NIH says - Science Magazine

MediMap – pharmacogenomic testing for adults and children …

MediMap is a one-time Pharmacogenomics (or "PGx") test that may indicate how a person will respond to specific prescription medications. Your MediMap test results can help guide your healthcare providers to ensure better medication choices and doses based on your genetic makeup... leading to more effective illness management and improved health. The future of medicine is about putting into practice the knowledge that with prescription medicines and dosage amounts, one size does NOT fit all.

The MediMap test is available for all ages; everyone in the family including newborns can benefit from pharmacogenomics testing.

Please note: some studies may overlap; for example, a MediMap multi-drug panel may include the specific drug(s) you were looking to be tested for within a condition-specific panel. A genetic counselor will go over your best options during your consult.

What is pharmacogenomics?+

Pharmacogenomics is the study of how people's genes affect their response to medications.The term pharmacogenomics (also called PGx) is a combination of pharmacology (the study of medications) and genomics (the study of how peoples genetic information can influence their health).PGx may be used to help choose the best medications and doses for you.

What is MediMap?+

MediMap is a pharmacogenomic test that helps guide you and your healthcare providers to better medication choices and doses for you. Until recently, most medicines have been developed and given to patients in a "one size fits all" approach.However, people respond differently to medications due, in part, to their genetic makeup. While some people will find a medication helpful, others may not respond to that medication at all. Some people will need a dose that is higher or lower than what is usually prescribed. Even others may have negative side effects (called adverse drug reactions).MediMap looks at specific genetic changes (called variants) that influence a persons response to many medications.

Does MediMap cover all prescription medications?+

While the number of personalized medicines increases steadily every year, not all medications can yet be connected with genetic changes that influence a persons response to medications.Also, there are other medications (besides those included in our tests) that have been reported to be affected by pharmacogenomic variants. However, at this time, there is not enough evidence available to include them on our reports. To help you better understand differences between evidence levels, we differentiate between "actionable" and "informative" information on our reports."Actionable" means there are expert recommendations to help guide clinical treatment; and "informative" means there is insufficient evidence, at this time, and clinical use of this information is optional.You can see which prescription medications are covered in each MediMap tests on our MediMap test comparison sheet.

Which MediMap test is best for me?+

At your appointment, you will meet with a genetic counselor to discuss available testing options. Factors to consider may include: medications you are currently taking, those you might be prescribed in the future, and a history of medication side effects or ineffectiveness. Our goal is for you to have a good understanding of how pharmacogenomic testing may help you, and allow you and your physician to make the best decisions for you.

Are my results confidential?+

Yes. The results will be entered into the secure Inova electronic medical record, and a copy of the report will be mailed to your home. You are responsible for sharing your test results with your healthcare providers.

What will happen to my DNA sample?+

Your DNA sample will be kept for at least 90 days after the MediMap report has been sent to you. At that time, the sample will be disposed or de-identified (name and other identifiers are removed) depending on your selection at the time you authorize the test. If your sample is de-identified, it may be used for quality control purposes, to develop new tests, or for educational activities. No clinical tests other than MediMap will be performed using your DNA sample.

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MediMap - pharmacogenomic testing for adults and children ...