College of Education and Behavioral Science Selects Top Grads – ASU News

04/14/2017

JONESBORO -- The College of Education and Behavioral Science at Arkansas State University recognized 18outstanding graduating students for 2016-17 during a Convocation of Scholars awards ceremony, according to Dr. Mary Jane Bradley, dean of the college.

The Chancellors Scholar award for highest overall grade point in the college was presented to Jennifer Hacker of Jonesboro and Michaela Supple of Albuquerque, N.M.

Kathryn Collier of Harrison, Carissa Rogers of Harrison and Kristen Scarlett of Bryant received the 4.0 Graduate Award for completing their degree programs with a perfect grade point average.

The departmental awards are presented during Convocation of Scholars to the graduate in each degree program who has most excelled in scholarship, leadership and service to the department.

Those receiving awards and their respective degree programs, by department:

Department of Educational Leadership, Curriculum and Special Education:

Julie Roark of Jonesboro, Specialist in Education (Ed.S.), educational leadership; Garrett Andrews of Jonesboro, Bachelor of Science in Education (BSE), special education.

Department of Health, Physical Education and Sport Sciences:

Michaela Supple of Albuquerque, Bachelor of Science (BS), exercise science; Rachel Lovell of Springdale, BS, health promotion; Mitchell Weber of Rector, BSE, physical education; Christyal Holloway of Maumelle, BS, sport management; and Dalton Smith of Shirley, BS, athletic training.

Department of Psychology and Counseling:

Madison Leigh Brooks of Benton, BS, psychology; Andrew J. Pearson of Maynard, Master of Rehabilitation Counseling; Karen M. Herrell of Marion, MSE, school counseling; Christopher R. Williams of Brookland, Ed.S., school psychology; Joylyn G. Bartlett of Jonesboro, Ed.S., clinical mental health counseling.

Department of Teacher Education and Leadership:

Kristen Scarlett of Bryant, BSE, elementary education; Brooke Sheppard of Harviell, Mo., BSE, middle level education; and Dereque Falls of Jonesboro, Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT).

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College of Education and Behavioral Science Selects Top Grads - ASU News

Behavioral Insights: A New Tool for Performance Management – Route Fifty

Performance management and innovation teams across the country, at all levels of government, are helping to deliver higher-quality services using fewer resources. As part of these efforts, these teams are beginning to incorporate behavioral insights and randomized controlled trials (RCTs) as essential components of their performance management frameworks.

Process improvement techniques, like Lean, have been used increasingly over the past several years to drive innovation in the public sector. Lean offers government workers structured ways of scoping and solving problems. It pushes them to ask questions like: What service to do I provide? Who is my customer? Where does waste exist in my process of delivering that service, and how can I work with my team to eliminate it?

At workshops such as Kaizen Events, civil servants learn frameworks to map out processes, quantify resources, and hone in on concrete ways to be more efficient or effective in delivering government services, while using fewer resources like time, money, or steps to get things done. Theyre saving taxpayer dollars, spurring innovation, and bringing a renewed focus on the citizen as a valued customer.

Now, through What Works Cities, an initiative launched by Bloomberg Philanthropies to help mid-sized cities use data and evidence to improve decision-making and results, innovators in municipal governments are taking the next step in process improvement, integrating behavioral science into their toolkits and rigorously testing these insights to understand what works.

These efforts center on helping improve service delivery by taking the science of human decision-making into account. While we know intuitively that people are not always entirely rational actors, too often policy is designed as if we were.

Behavioral science teaches us that our environment and context influences the choices we make and sometimes causes us to act in ways that go against our best interests or intentions: a business owner may accrue a code violation because the rules are buried at the bottom of a difficult to access document; a homeowner might forgo a tax credit because the process of claiming it is poorly advertised or appears too complicated; a family has their water shut off, not because they cant afford the bills, but because they lost track of the letter in a stack of mail.

Knowledge of the situational factors that may push people to make adverse choices has helped cities uncover new approaches to tackle longstanding challenges.

For example, building on research that suggests making people feel unique can prompt action, the city of New Orleans, sent out behaviorally-informed SMS messages that increased the number of low-income individuals agreeing to schedule a doctors appointment by 40 percent.

In Denver, the city increased the rate of businesses filing taxes onlinea major savings compared to filing by mailby 67 percent, simply by reframing a letter to highlight a pervasive social norm: that the majority of their peers already have an online account.

Brian Elms, the director of the Denver Peak Academy, is helping institutionalize these practices within the Citys acclaimed performance management training program. The Peak Academy teaches every Denver Black Belt about behavioral economics in our classes, says Elms. We believe choice architecture and process improvement complement each other incredibly well.

Elsewhere, the city of South Bend, Indiana, is currently working on a variety of projects that employ behaviorally-informed messaging strategies. Theyre making it easy for business owners to address fire code violations, low income homeowners to qualify for tax credits, and utility customers to pay their bills earlier so their water isnt shut off.

We tended to think that systems and processes can be changed but that human interaction was fixed, says South Bend Chief Innovation Officer Santi Garces. But with behavioral insights, weve seen that human interventions can be measured and form a lever that we can pull as well.

Behavioral science teaches us that context can play an outsized role in determining how decisions are made. Thats why cities like New Orleans, Denver and South Bend have been so careful to test how these innovations work locally by using the gold standard of evidence-based policymaking: the randomized controlled trial (RCT).

Random assignment of individuals to either a treatment group, which receives the new intervention, or a control group, which receives services-as-usual, helps ensure that there are no systematic differences between the two groups with the exception of what is being tested. Cities can then be confident that any difference they observe in outcomes between the two groups is due to the intervention itself and not to other incidental factors.

With training provided by the Behavioral Insights Team through the WWC program, Elms has helped build out Denvers capacity to run multiple RCTs. These techniques, he says, push us to be on the cutting edge for government service delivery and innovation.

Performance management in government is evolving fast. More and more, city managers know that serving the people means building municipal services upon a nuanced understanding of how people actually behave, rather than how we might think people should behave. And, more and more, city managers have data at their disposal to test what works.

What service to do I provide? Who is my customer? Civil servants have grown comfortable asking these questions. But now theyre also asking, how does my customer perceive the service I provide? and how can I test my idea for improving it?

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Behavioral Insights: A New Tool for Performance Management - Route Fifty

Gene Findings Advance Precision Medicine for Intellectual Disability – Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News

Scientists at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) and Queen's University have identified 26 new genes linked to intellectual disability. Currently most patients with intellectual disability receive no molecular diagnosis, significantly affecting their health and shortening their lifespan, according to the researchers.

The study ("Mapping Autosomal Recessive Intellectual Disability: Combined Microarray and Exome Sequencing Identifies 26 Novel Candidate Genes in 192 Consanguineous Families"),published inMolecular Psychiatry, has implications for the diagnosis and clinical care of those affected, and also adds to the growing knowledge of brain development and functioning. It may eventually lead to personalized treatments for affected individuals. Interestingly, some of the genes identified are thought to be connected with autism spectrum disorders, notes John Vincent, Ph.D.,team leader and senior scientist who heads the MiND (Molecular Neuropsychiatry and Development) Laboratory in theCampbell Family Mental Health Research Instituteat CAMH.

"This is the largest study of its kind on intellectual disability to come out of North America," he adds.

More than one in 100 children worldwide are affected by intellectual disability, which is characterized by significant limitations in learning that also affect their day-to-day lives. Frequently, intellectual disability also accompanies symptoms of autism spectrum disorders, and many genes have been found to be shared by the two illnesses.

The study involved 192 families from Pakistan and Iran with more than one affected family member. Intellectual disability is frequently caused by recessive genes, meaning that an affected child gets a defective copy of the gene from each parent.

The families in the study all had a history of marriage among relatives, which occurs quite commonly in communities in South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. Studying families with this background, and multiple affected individuals, can enable researchers to identify disease genes that would otherwise remain hidden.

The Canadian research team pinpointed mutations related to intellectual disability in half of these 192 families, in 72 different genes. The identification of 26 new genes adds to 11 new genes that the team had previously linked to intellectual disability.

One immediate implication of the study is to prevent future cases of intellectual disability, the researchers say. Unaffected family members and relatives could be genetically screened to see if they carry these mutations and provided with counselling on the risks of "within-family" marriages.

A broader goal is to develop diagnostic screening tools that are also relevant to populations in which "within-family" marriages are rare, such as Canada, U.S., Japan, China, and Europe. Ultimately, this information would be used to plan more personalized treatment.

While 26 genes may seem a substantial number, there are likely hundreds of genes that, when defective, may lead to intellectual disability. "The strategy we have used speeds up the process of identifying disease genes and of enabling diagnostic labs to deliver more accurate information for clinicians and families," explains Dr. Vincent.

This strategy involves various genetic techniques, including microarray genotyping and whole-exome sequencing, and studying families with a history of marriage among relatives.

"There's an opportunity now to further explore the functioning and biological pathways of these genes, and to help complete the picture of how the central nervous system works," continued Dr. Vincent. "Knowing the genes involved is a big step forward, but understanding how they function is also crucial before we can start planning treatments or even cures."

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Gene Findings Advance Precision Medicine for Intellectual Disability - Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ and ‘Chicago Med’ adjust up, ‘Scandal’ adjusts … – TVbytheNumbers

Final broadcast primetime live + same-day ratings for Thursday, April 13, 2017

There were only a few notable adjustments in the final ratings from the early ratings this morning, beginning with The Big Bang Theory, which adjusted up from a 2.4 to a 2.5 in adults 18-49. ABCs Greys Anatomy also adjusted up from its 1.7 this morning to a 1.8, while Chicago Med rose one-tenth to a 1.1.

Meanwhile, with its 100th episode, Scandal adjusted down once again to a 1.3 today, just one-tenth higher than its 1.2 final rating last week. The Amazing Race also adjusted down from a 0.9 to a 0.8 on CBS. Everything else remained the same.

Upward adjustments in adults 18-49 are in blue; downward adjustments are in red.

Network averages:

Definitions: Rating: Estimated percentage of the universe of TV households (or other specified group) tuned to a program in the average minute. Ratings are expressed as a percent. Fast Affiliate Ratings: These first national ratings are available at approximately 11 a.m. ETthe day after telecast. The figures may include stations that did not air the entire network feed, as well as local news breaks or cutaways for local coverage or other programming. Fast Affiliate ratings are not as useful for live programs and are likely to differ significantly from the final results, because the data reflect normal broadcast feed patterns. Share (of Audience):The percent of households (or persons) using television who are tuned to a specific program, station or network in a specific area at a specific time. Time Shifted Viewing:Program ratings for national sources are produced in three streams of data Live, Live +Same-Day and Live +7 Day. Time-shifted figures account for incremental viewing that takes place with DVRs. Live+SD includes viewing during the same broadcast day as the original telecast, with a cut-off of 3 a.m. local time when meters transmit daily viewing to Nielsen for processing. Live +7 ratings include viewing that takes place during the 7 days following a telecast.

Source: The Nielsen Company.

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'Grey's Anatomy' and 'Chicago Med' adjust up, 'Scandal' adjusts ... - TVbytheNumbers

PREVIEW: Department of Chemistry to host Arudengo Chemistry lecture – The University of Alabama Crimson White

By Isabella Garrison | 04/13/2017 9:46pm Jake Stevens / Alabama Crimson White

A reception will follow the annualArudengo Lecturein the Shelby Hall rotunda.

This weekend, the annual tradition of the Arudengo Lecture on element chemistry or physical organic chemistry continues with a speech from a renowned specialist from the University of California, Berkeley. The lecture will discuss the role that certain oxidized metal species will play in the future of producing solar fuels.

WHO: The event is hosted by the University's Department of Chemistry and it is free and open to the public.

WHAT: Professor T. Don Tilley from the University of California, Berkeley will give the annual Arduengo Lecture. Professor Tilleys lecture is entitled, The Role of Highly Oxidized Metal Species in Water Splitting and Solar Fuels Production.

A reception will follow the lecture in the Shelby Hall rotunda.

WHEN: Friday, April 14, from 3:30-4:30 p.m.

WHERE: 1093 Shelby Hall

WHY: According to the University's website, the Arduengo Lectureship was established to honor the contributions of Professor Anthony J. Arduengo III. The annual lecture is given by a world-renowned researcher in the area of main group element chemistry or physical organic chemistry. Lecturers are chosen by a faculty committee in recognition of their contributions to their field. Professor Tilley will give both a technical and a general audience talk.

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PREVIEW: Department of Chemistry to host Arudengo Chemistry lecture - The University of Alabama Crimson White

12th Annual Wisconsin Stem Cell Symposium to focus on bioengineering – University of Wisconsin-Madison

Over the past several years, gene editing has become a powerful tool for creating cellular models of human diseases, particularly with the emergence of technologies like CRISPR-Cas9.

But one concern with gene editing tools like CRISPR which allows scientists to cut and paste genetic sequences into a genome to correct errors or introduce changes is precision, says Krishanu Saha, a bioengineering professor at the University of WisconsinMadison. That is, editing genes sometimes introduces errors that could have unintended consequences.

Saha is using CRISPR to reprogram human pluripotent stem cells and immune cells to study diseases like Fragile X syndrome, to discover new drugs and develop cell therapies, and to ask fundamental questions about human biology. On Wednesday, April 19, he will present the strategies his lab has developed to make gene editing more precise at the 12th Annual Wisconsin Stem Cell Symposium.

My talk is focused on genome-level engineering of human cells, Saha says. I will cover ongoing work in my lab that engineers human pluripotent stem cells and T cells from cancer patients.

The strategies Saha and his research team have developed help correct pathogenic point mutations and introduce transgenes with precision, reducing and in some cases eliminating undesirable genomic effects.

Another UWMadison scientist, Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering Eric Shusta, is using stem cells to explore the biology of the blood-brain barrier. This work will be the subject of his talk at the symposium, which is hosted by the UWMadison Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine Center (SCRMC) and the BioPharmaceutical Technology Center Institute (BTCI).

The blood-brain barrier is an impermeable network of endothelial cells that protects the brain from toxins and other potentially harmful agents that may be circulating in the blood. A healthy blood-brain barrier is essential for well-being, but issues with this security system for the brain can lead to developmental or other types of disease.

Using stem cells, Shusta and his colleagues have been able to reconstruct the blood-brain barrier in the laboratory dish, providing scientists with a potent model for drug discovery and to explore neurological disorders that may be associated with a compromised barrier. The advent of patient-sourced induced pluripotent stem cells means it may be possible to mimic diseases or conditions and possibly devise treatments for disorders that are now untreatable.

The symposium will also gather a handful of national and international speakers, like Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Centers Michel Sadelain (New York) and Leiden University Medical Centers Christine Mummery (The Netherlands), focused around the theme: Engineering Cells and Tissues for Discovery and Therapy.

We sought to bring bioengineers together with biologists and clinicians this year, says Saha, who is also a co-organizer of the event with UWMadison Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering Sean Palecek. Because bioengineers are working at many levels the genome, cell and tissue we have invited scientists across these scales.

Talks will focus on emerging strategies to control stem cell behavior in the lab and in the body and include genome and cell engineering; stem cells as models of cell and developmental biology; in vitro maturation of stem-cell derived tissues; tissue engineering and organoid development; biomanufacturing; and treatments utilizing engineered human cell products.

We see great synergy in bringing together techniques of controlling behavior across these scales to generate new research tools and therapeutics, Saha says.

Moderators of the symposium include Timothy Kamp, professor of medicine and co-director of SCRMC ; William Murphy, professor of biomedical engineering, orthopedics and rehabilitation, and co-director of SCRMC; Saha and Palecek. It takes place from 8:30 a.m. until 6 p.m. at the BioPharmaceutical Technology Center, 5445 E. Cheryl Parkway, Fitchburg, Wisconsin 53711.

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12th Annual Wisconsin Stem Cell Symposium to focus on bioengineering - University of Wisconsin-Madison

Grey’s Anatomy Recap: Experiencing Some Turbulence – Vulture

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Pilates store, medical center team for grand opening in Surprise – YourWestValley.com

The individualized attention you receive from our small classes is a breath of fresh air when you are used to cookie cutter classes with dozens of participants.

Reflexion Medical Rejuvenation offers IV nutrition, anti-aging, injury management, medical weight loss and detox treatments, dry infrared sauna, hyperbaric oxygen, platelet rich plasma, bio-hormone optimization, massage therapy and much more.

After years in the medical field as an ER doctor, I found that I wanted to offer something different to my patients. Instead of prescribing multiple pharmaceuticals to fix their ailments, I needed to find a better solution. I now offer them natural ways for their bodies to heal themselves, and without all those dangerous side effects, said Clifford Ball, M.D., owner of Reflexion Medical Rejuvenation. I want my clients to leave my treatment rooms feeling refreshed, energized and more youthful thanthey ever thought possible.

Ms. Hibbs, is a BASI certifi ed pilates instructor and has a business management degree. Pure Physique PilateZ is open from 8 a.m.

to 8 p.m. Monday through Thursday and from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday and Saturday Childcare is also available by appointment. For information, visit http://www.PurePhysiquePilateZ.com.

Mr. Ball, received his medical degree from the American University of the Caribbean in 2007, has been a member of the American Family Board of Medicine since 2012 and has a fellowship in functional and metabolic medicine with the Metabolic Medicine Institute.

Reflexion Medical Rejuvenation is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m on Tuesday and Thursday. For information on the medical center,www.MyRefleXionMedical.com

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Pilates store, medical center team for grand opening in Surprise - YourWestValley.com

Tipper Gore to headline mental health symposium – Greenville News

Tipper Gore(Photo: Courtesy Greenville Health System)Buy Photo

TipperGore will be the featured speaker at this year's Southeastern Symposium on Mental Health in Greenville.

Hosted by Greenville Health System's Department of Psychiatry &Behavioral Medicine, the second annual symposiumis held to raise awareness about and reduce the stigma associated with mental illness as well asimprove access to services.

Gore, as a mental health policy adviser to President Bill Clinton during her husbands tenure as vice president, chaired the first White House National Conference on Mental Health, whichinvolved tens of thousands of Americans in more than 1,000 cities nationwide. An advocatefor eliminatingthe stigma of mentalillness, she alsosupports quality, affordable mental health care.

Mental illness is a major public health issue for the Upstate and our nation, with one in five adults experiencing mental illness in a given year, said Dr. Karen Lommel, a GHS physician who specializes in emergency medicine and psychiatry.

Mental illness is a community issue that requires a community-wide solution," she said, "and its important that we have these discussions in a public forum so that we can not only reduce the stigma associated with mental illness but develop solutions to meet the needs of our community.

Otherspeakers at the symposium includeDan Westbrook,a partner with the law firm Nelson, Mullins, Riley & Scarborough, LLP;Frederick Frese,coordinator of the Summit County (Ohio) Recovery Project; Dr.Vladimir Maletic,a clinical professor of neuropsychiatry and behavioral scienceat the University Of South Carolina School Of Medicine in Columbia;Rich Jones,executive director of Faces And Voices Of Recovery (FAVOR) Greenville; and Dr.Desmond Kelly,vice chair of academics and community affairs for the GHS Department of Pediatrics.

Pete Earley(Photo: Courtesy Greenville Health System)

Also speaking will bePete Earley, the author of four New York Times bestsellers including Crazy: A Fathers Search through Americas Mental Health Madness, and Deborah Blalock, the executive director of the Charleston Dorchester Mental Health Center. She provided trauma counseling afterthe 2015shooting at Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston.

Topics include responding to signs of mental illness and substance abuse, depression in the workplace and ways to improve workerproductivity,

The event will beheld May 12 and 13 at the Hyatt Regency Greenville.Those interested in attendingcan register at sesmh.org.

In addition tothe GHS Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Medicine, the event is sponsored by theGHS Health Sciences Center, which includes Clemson University, Furman University and the University of South Carolina,BlueCross BlueShield of South Carolina, the Carolina Center for Behavioral Health, FAVOR Greenville, Lundbeck, NAMI Greenville, NAMI North Carolina, Nelson Mullins and S.C. Department of Mental Health.

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Tipper Gore to headline mental health symposium - Greenville News

UK Researcher Establishes Link Between Threats and Abuse in Cases of Domestic Partner Violence – UKNow (press release)

LEXINGTON, Ky. (April 14, 2017) A University of Kentucky behavioral scientist has found threats arent empty in intimate partner relationships. For many women victimized by intimate partners, explicit threats of harm co-occur with physical and sexual violence.

A professor of behavioral science in the UK College of Medicine,TK Loganstudies domestic partner violence, stalking behaviors and female substance abuse. She discovered frequent threats to victims of domestic partner violence correlated with increased abuse, violence, distress and fear.

Her study, titled If I Cant Have You Nobody One Will: Explicit Threats in the Context of Coercive Control, appeared in the journal Violence and Victims. Logan found victims of abuse commonly experienced threats of harm and death, threats about friends and family, and threats of harm to friends and family prior to obtaining a protective order against their partners. She also learned that women who experienced a high rate of explicit threats of harm also reported concurrent abuse, violence, distress and fear, all of which are aspects of coercive control in a relationship. Coercive Control is defined as a deliberate and systematic pattern of behavior designed to limit a persons freedom and ability to act on their own needs, values, and desires and to create a threat of harm to compel compliance.

Logan conducted interviews with 210 women who filed a protective order against an ex-partner in 2006-2007 in Kentucky. Women in the high-threat frequency group, or experiencing an average of 99 days of threats in the six months before the protective order was issued, were 10 times more likely to experience severe violence and five times more likely tobe raped than women who experienced fewer threats on average. Logan also concluded that third-party threats, or threats against family members, friends, or children, also play a significant role in coercive control.

There are two important findings from this study, Logan said. First, the protective order was helpful in reducing threats and abuse in this study. Second, high levels of threats represent increased danger, yet sometimes instead of honing in on those threats, we tune them out.

Logan said future work must focus on the scope and nature of threats in coercive control and violence is important. The study was recently cited in a Wall Street Journal column.

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UK Researcher Establishes Link Between Threats and Abuse in Cases of Domestic Partner Violence - UKNow (press release)

Uber Shows How Not to Apply Behavioral Economics – Harvard Business Review

Executive Summary

ANew York Timesarticleon how Uber is using insights from behavioral economics to push, or nudge, its drivers to pick up more fares sometimes with little benefit to them has generated quite a bit of criticism of Uber. It raises a question that executives often ask about how their own organizations might apply behavioral economics: Isnt there a danger it will be used with ill intent? Behavioral economics takes the view that people have fallible judgment and malleable preferences and behaviors, can make mistakes calculating risks, can be impulsive or myopic, and are driven by social desires.Organizations that embrace behavioral economics design processes to use these tendencies to nudge people to do something. The determining factor between when nudges should be deemed good and when they should be deemed bad is: Are they being used to benefit both parties involved in the interaction or do they create benefits for one side and costs for the other?

A recent New York Times article on how Uber is using various insights from behavioral economics to push, or nudge, its drivers to pick up more fares sometimes with little benefit to them has generated quite a bit of criticism of Uber. Its just one of several stories of late that have cast the company in a poor light.

When I read the piece, it reminded me of a question executives often ask me when I talk to them about the benefits of behavioral economics or give them examples of how they could use it in their own organizations: Arent you afraid itwill be used with ill intent?

I always respond that, like many tools, it can be used in good and bad ways. Before I delve into the differences between the two, I should first make sure you are familiar with the somewhat new field of behavioral economics.

According to the traditional view in economics, we are rational agents, well informed with stable preferences, self-controlled, self-interested, and optimizing. The behavioral perspective takes issue with this view and suggests that we are characterized by fallible judgment and malleable preferences and behaviors, can make mistakes calculating risks, can be impulsive or myopic, and are driven by social desires (e.g., looking good in the eyes of others). In other words, we are simply human.

Behavioral economics starts with this latter assumption. It is a discipline that combines insights from the fields of psychology, economics, judgment, and decision making, and neuroscience to understand, predict, and ultimately change human behavior in ways that are more powerful than any one of those fields could provide on its own. Over the last few years, organizations in both the private and public sectors have applied some of the insights from behavioral economics to address a wide range of problems from reducing cheating on taxes, work stress, and turnover to encouraging healthy habits, increasing savings for retirement as well as turning up to vote (as I wrote previously).

Uber has been using similar insights to influence drivers behavior. As Noam Scheiber writes in the Times article, Employing hundreds of social scientists and data scientists, Uber has experimented with video game techniques, graphics and noncash rewards of little value that can prod drivers into working longer and harder and sometimes at hours and locations that are less lucrative for them.

One such approach, according to Scheiber, compels drivers toward collecting more fares based on the insight from behavioral sciences that people are highly influenced by goals. According to the article, Uber alerts drivers that they are very close to hitting a precious target when they try to log off. And it also sends drivers their next fare opportunity before their current ride is over.

Now lets return to the question of when are nudges good and when are they bad. In discussing this topic with executives, I first provide a couple of examples. One of my favorites is the use of checklists in surgery to reduce patient complications. Checklists describe several standard critical processes of care that many operating rooms typically implement from memory. In a paper published in 2009, Alex Haynes and colleagues examined the use and effectiveness of checklists in eight hospitals in eight cities in the Unites States. They found the rate of death for patients undergoing surgery fell from 1.6% to 0.8% following the introduction of checklists. Inpatient complications also fell from 11% to 7%.

In a related paper published in 2013, Alexander Arriaga and colleagues had 17 operating-room teams participate in 106 simulated surgical-crisis scenarios. Each team was randomly assigned to work with or without a checklist and instructed to implement the critical processes of care.

The results were striking: Checklists reduced missed steps in the processes of care from 23% to 6%. Every team performed better when checklists were available. Remarkably, 97% of those who participated in the study reported that if one of these crises occurred while they were undergoing an operation, they would want the checklist used.

Another example I often give concerns the use of fuel- and carbon-efficient flight practices in the airline industry. In a recent paper, using data from more than 40,000 unique flights, John List and colleagues found significant savings in carbon emissions and monetary costs when airline captains received tailored monthly information on fuel efficiency, along with targets and individualized feedback. In the field study, captains were randomly assigned to one of four groups, including one business as usual control group and three intervention groups, and were provided with monthly letters from February 2014 through September 2014. The letters included one or more of the following: personalized feedback on the previous months fuel-efficiency practices; targets and feedback on fuel efficiency in the upcoming month; and a 10 donation to a charity of the captains choosing for each of three behavior targets met.

The result? All four groups increased their implementation of fuel-efficient behaviors. Thus, informing captains of their involvement in a study significantly changed their actions. (Its a well-documented social-science finding called the Hawthorne effect.) Tailored information with targets and feedback was the most cost-effective intervention, improving fueling precision, in-flight efficiency measures, and efficient taxiing practices by 9% to 20%. The intervention, it appears, encourages a new habit, as fuel efficiency measures remained in use after the study ended. The implication? An estimated cost savings of $5.37 million in fuel costs for the airline and reduced emissions of more than 21,500 metric tons of CO2 over the eight-month period of the study.

Both in the case of surgeons using checklists or captains receiving feedback about fuel efficiency, one of the main goals of the intervention was to motivate the participants to act in a certain way. So, in a sense, the researchers were trying to encourage a change in behavior the same way managers at Uber were trying to bring about a change in their drivers behavior.

But there is an important difference across these three examples. Are the nudges used to benefit both parties involved in the interaction or do they create benefits for one side and costs for the other? If the former, then (as Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein argue in their influential book Nudge) we are nudging for good. Thaler and Sunstein identify three guiding principles that should be on top of mind when designing nudges: Nudges shou
ld be transparent and never misleading, easily opted out of, and driven by the strong belief that the behavior being encouraged will improve the welfare of those being nudged.

Thats where the line between encouraging certain behaviors and manipulating people lies. And thats also where I see little difference between applying behavioral economics or any other strategies or frameworks for leadership, talent management, and negotiations that I teach in my classes. We always have the opportunity to use them for either good or bad.

If the interests of a company and its employees differ, the organization can exploit its own members as Uber appears to have done. But there are plenty of situations where the interests are, in fact, aligned the company certainly benefits from higher levels of performance and motivation, but the workers do, too, because they feel more satisfied with their work.

And that is where I see great potential in applying behavioral economics in organizations: to create real win-wins.

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Uber Shows How Not to Apply Behavioral Economics - Harvard Business Review

How to solve social problems with science: Part One – Stanford Social Innovation Review (subscription)

This webinar will cover how we can advance methods of innovation using insights from science:

In Part One of this webinar series, Piyush Tantia, co-executive director of ideas42, a social enterprise that uses insights from behavioral economics to invent fresh solutions to tough social problems, will share surprising examples from behavioral science research demonstrating why we must go beyond simply relying on stakeholders answers to questions if we want to understand them better. The rise of behavioral science and techniques for randomized evaluations enables us to ground innovation in science. We can now follow a systematic and reliable process modelled after engineering, rather than relying solely on intuition and judgment. This webinar will be useful to anyone engaged in, or funding, innovation in the social, government, or private sector, including program designers, policy makers, funders, impact investors, grant makers, product managers, UX and design practitioners, as well as organizational leaders. Along with a foray into science, the presenter will further discuss the role of creativity by using recent case studies from ideas42s work. Part Two of this two-part webinar series, led by Ted Robertson and Will Tucker-Ray, will discuss cases from ideas42s behavioral design work with governments, including the White House Social and Behavioral Sciences Team and the mayoral offices of Chicago and New York. A guest speaker from one of the government entities will join Ted and Will.

Register and you can view a recording on-demand three hours after each live event ends and anytime over the next twelve months.

Co-Executive Director, ideas42

Moderator

Senior Editor, Stanford Social Innovation Review

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How to solve social problems with science: Part One - Stanford Social Innovation Review (subscription)

Pilates store, medical center team for grand opening in Surprise – YourWestValley.com

The individualized attention you receive from our small classes is a breath of fresh air when you are used to cookie cutter classes with dozens of participants.

Reflexion Medical Rejuvenation offers IV nutrition, anti-aging, injury management, medical weight loss and detox treatments, dry infrared sauna, hyperbaric oxygen, platelet rich plasma, bio-hormone optimization, massage therapy and much more.

After years in the medical field as an ER doctor, I found that I wanted to offer something different to my patients. Instead of prescribing multiple pharmaceuticals to fix their ailments, I needed to find a better solution. I now offer them natural ways for their bodies to heal themselves, and without all those dangerous side effects, said Clifford Ball, M.D., owner of Reflexion Medical Rejuvenation. I want my clients to leave my treatment rooms feeling refreshed, energized and more youthful thanthey ever thought possible.

Ms. Hibbs, is a BASI certifi ed pilates instructor and has a business management degree. Pure Physique PilateZ is open from 8 a.m.

to 8 p.m. Monday through Thursday and from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday and Saturday Childcare is also available by appointment. For information, visit http://www.PurePhysiquePilateZ.com.

Mr. Ball, received his medical degree from the American University of the Caribbean in 2007, has been a member of the American Family Board of Medicine since 2012 and has a fellowship in functional and metabolic medicine with the Metabolic Medicine Institute.

Reflexion Medical Rejuvenation is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m on Tuesday and Thursday. For information on the medical center,www.MyRefleXionMedical.com

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Pilates store, medical center team for grand opening in Surprise - YourWestValley.com

Global Awareness for Lutronic Continues to Build Momentum with Packed Symposiums at International Shows AMWC … – PR Web (press release)

Dr. Matteo Clementoni Speaks to a full room during AMWC Symposium

GYEONGGI-DO, KOREA (PRWEB) April 14, 2017

Lutronic, a leading innovator of aesthetic laser and energy-based technology, announced today the successful events during two major international shows featuring the latest emerging Lutronic aesthetic technology in the booth and symposiums at Aesthetic & Anti-aging Medicine World Congress (AMWC) annual, Monaco, and at the American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery (ASLMS), United States. As we achieve our 20th year in business we are very excited about the turn out for our multi-venue events, said Haelyung Hwang, CEO Lutronic, These educational symposiums are the cornerstone for presenting our new technology, and the high attendance is a direct symbol of our continued expansion in the US and European regions.

In Monaco, to a standing room only crowd, our global panel discussed the latest clinical findings; Eric Sarfati, MD, France, R. Glen Calderhead, Phd., Korea, and Matteo T. Clementoni, MD, Italy. Dr. Sarfati shared his latest clinical findings using the easy to use enCurve* for non-touch circumferential reduction; this non-invasive device allows the user to maximize outcomes for outstanding results. He shared the latest clinical findings that demonstrate impressive reductions to the abdomen and flanks. While Dr. Calderhead discussed how the advanced Picoplus* provides the user power and versatility for advanced treatments and mastery over difficult cases, showing how the combination of pulse, power, and wavelengths are critical for treating larger range of difficult cases. Finally Dr. Clementoni provided updates on Infini, a High Intensity Focused RF device for skin tightening and laxity, discussing his latest cases and results using this industry-leading device.

While half a world away, in San Diego California, USA, another renowned panel from the US which included Gilly Munavalli, MD, Melanie Palm, MD, and Jason Pozner, MD, who discussed their latest clinical experience to another packed room. Dr. Palm discussed Spectras advanced applications including some difficult to treat cases of melasma, PIH and more. Sharing the latest clinical findings using Infini gen 1.2 was Dr. Pozner who discussed some of the pioneer treatments and their results. Lastly, Dr. Munavalli discussed Claritys ease in treating multiple applications and announced LaseMD, the newest edition to the US family, an advanced thulium non-ablative lasers recently submitted for clearance to the US FDA.

Both shows featured booths at their respective events that received a steady stream of visitors interested in learning about these and other Lutronic devices. In addition during AMWC, key opinion leaders shared their candid experience during one-on-one filmed interviews, which will be released next month.

The increased attendance and attention at these two critical global aesthetic events shows Lutronics continued growth in Europe and the US that are two key markets, and is a direct result to their ongoing commitment to the clinical efficacy of all their devices.

About PICOPLUS* The Picoplus platform offers both pico- and nanosecond modes with the performance of four wavelengths (1064, 532, 595 and 660 nm) to provide you with more options than ever before to address everything from standard treatments, to those hard to treat cases resistant to other Nd:YAG approaches. This CE marked device delivers the customized power, pulse-width, wavelength and fluence you need for the outstanding outcomes your patients want, all from one premium platform.

About enCurve* EnCurve utilizes a specialized frequency (27.12 MHz) to selectively target and heat adipocytes in order to cause denaturation of cells, leading to the programmed death of the targeted adipocytes. This CE marked device has smart features such as, Personalized Impedance Synchronization Application (PISA) and Air Mode, enCurve is the easy and comfortable way to reduce adipocytes through apoptosis-inducing radiofrequency.

About LASEMD Lasemd is a winning combination of technology and science to provide fast and safe treatments. This cutting edge, design forward, non-ablative thulium laser combines best in class performance that looks as good as it performs. Pending FDA clearance, this CE marked device is already making waves across Europe and Asia as a top performing system for skin rejuvenation and pigment. Its variety of complimentary and specially developed highly pure ampoules ensure that treatments are maximized.

About INFINI gen 1.2 Infinis proven design delivers improved wrinkle reduction through High Intensity Focused RF which provides 3-dimensional energy delivery to volumize tissue and deliver improved outcomes. Now with greater energy homogenization delivered via insulated gold-coated microneedles Infini creates precise and controllable fractionated coagulation zones within a specific layer of dermis. This FDA cleared and CE marked device has adjustable depth control allows for customized and reproducible treatments of delicate areas and is safe on all skin types.

About CLARITY Clarity is one of the most versatile dual-wavelength platforms on the market, with multiple indications for top aesthetic laser physicians worldwide. This FDA cleared and CE marked device boasts two workhorse wavelengths, 755 nm Alexandrite and long-pulsed 1064 nm Nd:YAG, in one easy-to-use device, physicians may gently remove pigmented lesions, unwanted hair and ameliorate the appearance of vascular lesions.

About LUTRONIC Lutronic, a leading innovator in advanced aesthetic and medical laser and related technology, was established over 20 years ago to bring intuitive, robust, versatile devices that are affordable and efficacious to the worldwide medical community. Committed to improving medicine, Lutronic partners with key opinion leaders to advance science and ensure the efficacy of its systems. All systems are versatile and offer multiple setting and treatment options for customized treatments, which optimize outcomes for a wide variety of conditions and treatments including melasma, tattoo removal, soft tissue incision, vascular lesions, hair removal, wrinkle reduction, rejuvenation, body/face contouring, chronic pain, healing and more.

With a focus on physician needs and patient outcomes, Lutronic dedicates time and funding toward the development of devices that offer features and improvements not found in todays market. Devoting more than 20% of revenues to R&D, Lutronic holds more than 200 current and pending patents worldwide. With more than 270 employees worldwide, Lutronic has offices in the US, Korea, China, and Japan, a world-wide network of distributors, focused R&D centers in Korea, and is ever expanding.

*Picoplus and enCurve do not have FDA clearance and are not available for sale in the United States.

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Global Awareness for Lutronic Continues to Build Momentum with Packed Symposiums at International Shows AMWC ... - PR Web (press release)

Oconomowoc’s Nature Hill Intermediate School students win state chemistry competition – Lake Country Now

Lake Country 10:17 a.m. CT April 13, 2017

Nature Hill Intermediate School students took three of the four top places in a statewide chemistry competition. The winner was Nature Hill eighth-grader Ryan Swanson who will go on to the national competition June 19.(Photo: Scott Ash)

Students from Nature Hill Intermediate School swept three of the four top places in the 2017 Wisconsin You Be The Chemist State Challenge, and one of the studentswill go on to represent Wisconsin in the national chemistry competition.

Eighth-grader Ryan Swanson has won an all-expense paid trip to Washington, D.C., where he willcompete June 19.

The Wisconsin competition, held at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, wassponsored by the Alpha Tau chapter of Sigma Alpha Sororityof Madisonand Brenntag Great LakesLLCof Wauwatosa.

Taking second place wasBrendan Mortenson-Chrisman of Nature Hill Intermediate School, third was Elizabeth Scott of Holy Family Homeschoolersand fourth was Mike Krueger of Nature Hill Intermediate School. Each of the top four finalists was awarded a plaque, medaland gift card.

All correctly answered dozens of chemistry and general science questions over multiple rounds of competition.

The challenge was developed by the Chemical Educational Foundation. Students in fifth through eighth grades answered questions for prizes at local and state levels.

Each national competition participant will receive an advanced-level chemistry kit, as well as other prizes and gifts. The first- through fourth-place winners will also receive scholarships totaling $18,500.

Mike Schick, a chemist at one of the sponsors, Brenntag Great Lakes, paid tribute to Nature Hill Intermediate School Chemistry Club teacher Tim Bohlman.

"Tim has done an excellent job teaching fifth- to eighth-grade students to sharpen their chemistry knowledge in preparation for the competition, Schick said in a news release announcing the state winners.

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Donald Trump Shares Chocolate Cake and ‘Great Chemistry’ With China’s Xi – NBCNews.com

Trump emphasized the size of his "beautiful piece of chocolate cake." FOX Business Network

Trump mistakenly said he told Xi that the missiles were headed to Iraq, but quickly corrected himself when prompted by Bartiromo.

"So what happens is I said we've just launched 59 missiles heading to Iraq and I wanted you to know this. And he was eating his cake. And he was silent," said Trump.

Bartiromo piped in, "to Syria?"

"Yes. Heading toward Syria," Trump continued. "In other words, we've just launched 59 missiles heading toward Syria."

Trump said Xi paused and then he asked his interpreter to repeat the information.

"I didn't think that was a good sign," Trump said, but "he said to me, anybody that uses gases you could almost say or anything else but anybody that was so brutal and uses gases to do that young children and babies, it's OK. He was OK."

The dessert diplomacy seems to have sweetened Trump's relationship with Xi.

Earlier in the interview, Trump told Bartiromo: "We had great chemistry."

He said their meetings were supposed to last for just 10 to 15 minutes, but eventually went on for two and three hours. "I mean, we understand each other," Trump said.

Trump said the first topic the two leaders discussed was North Korea, and that he appreciated Xi's deep knowledge.

"The first thing I brought up was North Korea. I said you've got to help us with North Korea, because we can't allow it. And it's not good for you. And you have a tremendous power because of trade," Trump said. "Now, he then explains thousands of years of history with Korea. Not that easy. In other words, not as simple as people would think. They've had tremendous conflict with Korea over the years."

Trump's warmth toward the leader of world's third largest economy is a sea change from his rhetoric during the election campaign when he frequently accused of China of

But on Wednesday Trump told the Wall Street Journal that his administration

Chinese observers said the change of tone was interesting, but one to watch.

"Chemistry is important, but it is not the only thing that matters," Victor Gao, a Chinese international affairs expert who worked as a translator for the Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping, told NBC News in Beijing. "What truly matters is how the two leaders position themselves in terms of their national interests and how they bring their own views and strategic visions about peace and war and economic developments."

However, Professor Jin Canrong, an expert on China-U.S. relations at Renmin University in Beijing, said chemistry was "very important because it can help the two leaders reduce miscalculation."

That could prove useful in dealing with the nuclear-capable North Korea.

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Donald Trump Shares Chocolate Cake and 'Great Chemistry' With China's Xi - NBCNews.com

‘Great chemistry’: Trump abandons China criticism as Russia ties suffer – The Guardian

Less than two months after branding China the grand champion of currency manipulation, Donald Trump has performed a breathtaking pirouette away from those allegations, declaring: Theyre not currency manipulators.

Trumps verdict, delivered in an interview with the Wall Street Journal, was the latest hint that ties between the worlds two largest economies were warming after the billionaires shock election ushered in a period of intense uncertainty that stirred fears of a trade war or even military confrontation.

We have a very good relationship, we have great chemistry together, Trump said of Chinese president, Xi Jinping, adding: I think his wife is terrific.

Trump also backed away from earlier criticism of Beijings alleged inaction over North Korea, describing how after receiving a history lesson on the subject from Xi he had come away convinced that, its not so easy.

Trumps sudden enthusiasm for a country he has previously lampooned as a US enemy came as he proclaimed that relations with Moscow might have hit an all-time low.

Were not getting along with Russia at all, Trump said on Wednesday as last weeks airstrikes on Syria, Moscows key Middle Eastern ally, dominated a peppery encounter between Russian president Vladimir Putin and secretary of state Rex Tillerson.

Steven Weber, an international relations specialist from the University of California, Berkeley, said Trumps volte-face towards China suggested pragmatism was kicking in.

Facing an intractable crisis in North Korea and having been elected vowing to create jobs and improve the economy, Trump appeared to have understood that he had little choice but to build bridges with Beijing.

Hes obviously capable of understanding the numbers of a big real estate deal and so he is obviously capable of understanding projections about the number of jobs that would be lost in a significant trade spat, Weber said.

So Im not surprised by it that much. Its actually consistent with much of what he said; that he wanted to try to use Americas leverage in the relationship to get slightly better deals. He wasnt trying to break the relationship. He wasnt trying to undermine the Chinese economy and he certainly isnt trying to undermine the US economy.

Ultimately the economic relationship with China is multiple, multiple, multiple times more important than anything having to do with Russia, Weber added.

China reacted with jubilance to Trumps decision to withdraw his currency manipulation charges, which experts across the world have long dismissed as outdated.

He will be the best US president for China compared with any previous US president, celebrated Shen Dingli, an international relations expert from Shanghais Fudan University. He is the most friendly US president ever.

Last year, at the height of tensions between China and the incoming US president, Shen called on Beijing to close its US embassy if Trump continued to engage with Taiwanese president Tsai Ing-wen after taking up office.

Following Trumps latest conciliatory comments Shen was singing a different tune, claiming the American billionaire would receive the warmest treatment when he made an anticipated state visit to Beijing later this year.

He cares about business. China cares about business. He is a capitalist. China is a capitalist. Capitalists working with capitalists. It is the art of the deal; a trade of interests. I give you interests. You give me interests. Its business, Shen said, predicting that Beijing would respond to Trumps overtures by offering greater collaboration on North Korea.

Li Yonghui, a China-US relations expert from Beijings Foreign Language University, said Trumps change in tone and abandonment of extreme remarks about China suggested he was adapting to his new role and new environment.

The supposed chemistry between Xi and Trump was quite normal, Li added, pointing to their similar personalities and governing styles.

Not everyone was so taken with what one China expert dubbed the insta-bromance between Trump and Xi.

CNN anchor Anderson Cooper struggled to digest Trumps admission that he had completely changed his views on North Korea following a brief lecture from Xi.

President Trump said ... that after listening to the Chinese president explain the history of China and North Korea for about 10 minutes he, realised its not so easy? Cooper stammered. I mean ... is that... I really am speechless.

Trump swatted away criticism of his reversal using his favourite form of communication. One by one we are keeping our promises, he wrote on Twitter.

Additional reporting by Wang Zhen

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'Great chemistry': Trump abandons China criticism as Russia ties suffer - The Guardian

Biotechnology Education vs Industry Requirements: Where – BSI bureau (press release)

Dr Vinay Rale shares his thoughts with BioSpectrum on current biotech education and the academia-industry gap

Dr Vinay Rale, Director, Symbiosis School of Biomedical Sciences (SSBS)

Brief recapitulation of genesis of Biotechnology in India A quick recapitulation of the genesis of Biotechnology in India will not be out of place to apprise the lay public. We essentially (and blindly) followed the USA in 1985 in initiating Biotechnology programs at Master's level at six select universities across India. In the 1970s, the ability to modify DNA molecules and the realization of the power of genetic engineering led prominent universities in the US to convince their Government to allocate huge funds to start

Biotechnology' - a term newly coined by them. The Indian model, first at Masters level, to cater to the need for trained manpower for the anticipated boom in the Biotechnology industry was supported by the Department of Biotechnology (DBT). Very soon a large number of institutions both in private and public sector followed suit to attract students. The wildfire spread to undergraduate programs equally rapidly. However, this led to two major disadvantages - the relegation of basic courses in Life Sciences such as Microbiology, Biochemistry, Zoology and Botany and severely inadequate infrastructure and untrained faculty. As a matter of fact, the first Masters programs supported by DBT at six prominent institutions in the country were turned to the advantage of the then faculty expertise, e.g., developmental biology turning a blind eye to the basic essentials that the students have to be proficient in.

A rough estimate of the students enrolled in Biotechnology at undergraduate and postgraduate levels suggests a number exceeding 100,000 at any given time. Also, some institutions offer a bouquet of 8 to 9 allied courses in Biotechnology. Naturally the demand-supply ratio is skewed. The curricula in Biotechnology tries to accommodate' as many subsets as possible with little attention to the fundamentals - especially at the undergraduate levels. Moreover, to overcome the infrastructure deficiency, a good number of students (especially at postgraduate level) are encouraged to bank upon either research institutes or industries to undertake dissertations.

Unfortunately, both categories of organizations take little interest in the welfare of such dissertation research; more so due to the unavailability of mentors from either side. Therefore-, little research done at such levels goes unnoticed. As a consequence-, it is estimated that well over 70 percent of Biotechnology students are considered as unemployable by industries. This is the net result of a large number of factors contributing to the creation of unfit student mass. Reliable sources indicate that industries now prefer to hire students trained in conventional Life Sciences like Microbiology and Biochemistry (also Chemistry) to meet their stringent requirements. The general complaint is that the Biotechnology students lack fundamentals. This is also the observation of this author over the decades.

Considering the seriousness of the Government to increase funding for the DBT and the intiative of the Biotechnology Industry Research Assistance Council (BIRAC) coupled with those of SIDBI and MSME to strengthen research in academia and foster strategic alliances between academia and industry, one can only expect better things to happen. However, like Biotechnology, Microbiology and Biochemistry programs too need nourishment.

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Biotechnology Education vs Industry Requirements: Where - BSI bureau (press release)

Pennsylvania Biotechnology Center begins long-awaited expansion … – Bucks County Courier Times

The Pennsylvania Biotechnology Center on Wednesday broke ground on a long-awaited expansion that will add laboratories, office space and at least 100 new jobs to its campus in Buckingham.

"This has become a real state resource," said biotechnology center President Timothy Block. "We can't exist in these two buildings anymore. We need to grow."

Created more than 10 years ago through a partnership between the Hepatitis B Foundation and Delaware Valley University, the Biotechnology Center has grown to become an economic powerhouse in the region, contributing an estimated $1.8 billion to the local economy and supporting more than 700 jobs, half of those within the center itself.

Because of the center's success, it's been a draw for scientists and entrepreneurs throughout the region. Lab space is at a premium, and there's a waiting list for tenants. The new wing is already 40 percent leased, Block said.

The first tenant, contract research organization FlowMetric Inc., credits the center with its growth. The company now has three dozen employees.

"I could have set up my company in New Jersey. But there was no place that was quite like this, and that has continued for us," said CEO Ren Capocasale.

"This center is why I do what I do."

While construction likely won't begin until the summer, biotech center officials chose Wednesday for the ceremonial groundbreaking in part because it also happened to be the 96th birthday of Joshua Feldstein, a longtime supporter for whom a wing of the center is named.

Feldstein was on hand for Wednesday's event, seated among a variety of state and local dignitaries that included state Rep. Marguerite Quinn, R-143, Doylestown, and state Sen. Chuck McIlhinney, R-10, Doylestown both longtime supporters of the center and Congressman Brian Fitzpatrick, R-8, Middletown.

"This is not a Republican or Democrat thing," said Quinn. "We've had support from both sides of the aisle, recognizing what you do here: jobs, cures and research. Well-paying jobs and phenomenal research."

First proposed in 2015, the expansion project stalled during a dispute between the Hepatitis B Foundation and Delaware Valley University. Unhappy with how the foundation was running the center's day-to-day operations, the university refused to sign off on the expansion plans.

The dispute ended in October, when the Hepatitis B Foundation agreed to pay $2 million to buy DelVal's interests in the center.

The final project will cost between $12 million and $13 million, center officials said. That will be offset by a $4.6 million grant from the federal government and a $2 million state grant. The rest will be financed with a conventional loan awarded by Univest Bank.

Officials on Wednesday, however, weren't just celebrating the expansion. They were thinking about the future.

"We need to be thinking about what the next thing we're going to put the shovel in the ground (for) here with what's happening here," said Bucks County Commissioner Rob Loughery.

Block envisions a biotechnology hub within Bucks County one that equals the well-known Kendall Square area of Boston.

"There is a resource in Bucks County as vital and powerful, with as much potential, as the shale under the earth here," Block said. "That's what we're going to tap into."

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Pennsylvania Biotechnology Center begins long-awaited expansion ... - Bucks County Courier Times