Insights from the Behavioral Science Guy: What to say to a flirtatious co-worker

If you are astute in reporting what is already happening and insightful about the effects it has on things your co-worker cares about, he or she is likely to listen.

KatarzynaBialasiewicz, Getty Images/iStockphoto

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Dear Joseph,

I have a surgeon colleague who is flirting with a staff member. He is very obviously taken with her and cannot seem to help himself. She is now reciprocating the attention. Both are married to other people and the staff are becoming uncomfortable. I need some advice on how to have the conversation with the surgeon so we can maintain a professional working relationship.

Signed,

Flirting with Disaster

Dear Flirting,

Yikes. Thats about as sensitive a subject as you could take on. And I absolutely agree that you must. People under the spell of intoxicating hormones often delude themselves into thinking that their behavior is either invisible or acceptable to everyone else in the world. Or they become so self-absorbed that they stop caring what others think. This is a tough veil to penetrate.

But theres a good chance you can.

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Insights from the Behavioral Science Guy: What to say to a flirtatious co-worker

Insights from the Behavioral Science Guy: The Behavioral Science Guy: What to say to a flirtatious co-worker

If you are astute in reporting what is already happening and insightful about the effects it has on things your co-worker cares about, he or she is likely to listen.

KatarzynaBialasiewicz, Getty Images/iStockphoto

Enlarge photo

Dear Joseph,

I have a surgeon colleague who is flirting with a staff member. He is very obviously taken with her and cannot seem to help himself. She is now reciprocating the attention. Both are married to other people and the staff are becoming uncomfortable. I need some advice on how to have the conversation with the surgeon so we can maintain a professional working relationship.

Signed,

Flirting with Disaster

Dear Flirting,

Yikes. Thats about as sensitive a subject as you could take on. And I absolutely agree that you must. People under the spell of intoxicating hormones often delude themselves into thinking that their behavior is either invisible or acceptable to everyone else in the world. Or they become so self-absorbed that they stop caring what others think. This is a tough veil to penetrate.

But theres a good chance you can.

More here:
Insights from the Behavioral Science Guy: The Behavioral Science Guy: What to say to a flirtatious co-worker

New fund focuses on 'behavioral science' research

Photo by: John Dixon/The News-Gazette

Greg Cozad, left, president and CEO of The Cozad Small Cap Value Fund, left, and David Wetherell, portfolio manager, stand in the lobby of the Cozad Asset Management office in Champaign on Thursday August 28, 2014.

Firm says effort is only publicly traded mutual fund managed in county

CHAMPAIGN Cozad Asset Management has launched what it believes is the only publicly traded mutual fund managed in Champaign County.

The fund, known as the Cozad Small Cap Value Fund, began trading July 1 under the ticker symbol COZIX.

Its investment strategy is heavily based on "behavioral finance" research done by former University of Illinois finance Professor David Ikenberry.

The fund resulted from a relationship formed several years ago by Ikenberry and Greg Cozad, the CEO of Cozad Asset Management.

The Cozad fund invests in about 100 "small-cap" companies those with market capitalizations of less than $3 billion that are considered good values. Typically, those are businesses with low price-to-earnings ratios.

Portfolio manager David Wetherell helped launch the strategy in July 2007, and three years later, the company opened it to accredited investors generally, people whose net worth, excluding primary residence, exceeds $1 million or whose annual income exceeds $200,000.

Now that the mutual fund is publicly traded, it's open to all investors.

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New fund focuses on 'behavioral science' research

Profiles International Chief Science Officer Embarks on World Tour

WACO, TX. (PRWEB) August 30, 2014

Global talent management solutions provider, Profiles International, has announced Dr. Scott Hamilton, chief science officer, will address thousands of global business leaders and organizations, during several events, on such topics as leadership, coaching, and employee assessments.

Dr. Hamilton will begin his tour attending the 2nd Annual International Talent Assessment and Development Conference in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. During the two-day event, Dr. Hamilton will present a keynote speech titled, "A Psychologist Looks at Leadership Styles in Business." He will also be hosting certification training, where attendees will have the opportunity to learn the science behind effectively utilizing talent management solutions offered by Profiles International.

Dr. Hamilton will then travel to Budapest, Hungary, for the Europe ATP 2014. He will be one of three key speakers on a panel discussion named, "Optimizing the Scientific-Business Interface for Success with a Mobile Workforce in European Markets." He will be joined by John Jones, General Dynamics Information Technology, and Reid Klion, Performance Assessment Network, Inc.

Profiles International Norway will then host Dr. Hamilton as he offers Norwegian clients insights, best practices, and training, "Building Advanced Performance Models," and "Certification in the Effective Use of Employee Assessments."

The final stop on Dr. Hamilton's tour will be Brasov, Romania for the 11th Annual Profiles International Romania Conference where he will present "Coaching Managers to Facilitate their Development of Managerial Skills."

For more information about these events, contact pr(at)profilesinternational(dot)com or visit http://www.profilesinternational.com

ABOUT DR. SCOTT HAMILTON For more than thirty-five years, Dr. Hamilton has served as a consultant to businesses in human resources, personnel evaluation and selection, strategic planning, information systems, cost accounting, and management development. He has also held positions as a staff psychologist for the State Department of Mental Health, a corporate comptroller, and a psychotherapist in a private practice. Dr. Hamilton is a published author in his field, and has directed research for both national and international audiences. He is a renowned public speaker, and has conducted effective business workshops in North America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.

ABOUT PROFILES INTERNATIONAL Profiles International is the best source for talent management solutions, with over 20 years' experience and more than 40,000 clients in over 120 countries. Profiles knows how people work and what motivates them. Their data-driven talent management solutions--built on complex behavioral science, yet simple to administer and read--help organizations find the right people, shape them into a winning team, and lead them to their full potential. http://www.profilesinternational.com

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Profiles International Chief Science Officer Embarks on World Tour

Two-thirds of US teens with mental health problems get counseling

Published August 28, 2014

About 70 percent of U.S. teens who have serious emotional or behavioral difficulties receive mental health services that don't involve taking medications, such as counseling, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The researchers looked at U.S. teens with mental health problems and at those individuals' use of services that don't involve drugs (nonmedication services), between 2010 and 2012. These services include any treatment or counseling provided in the school, childcare center, clinic, home or other places. Such treatment also includes attending a school or special school program for students with emotional or behavioral difficulties.

About 4 percent of all adolescents ages 12 to 17 had a serious mental health problem and had received nonmedication services in the previous six months, according to the report, which was released today (Aug. 27). It is estimated that about 6 percent of teenagers in the United States have mental health problems, according to previous reports, which asked parents whether their children had severe difficulties in concentration, behavior, emotions or getting along with other people. [10 Facts Every Parent Should Know About Their Teen's Brain]

"There are many nonmedication mental health services that have evidence that they are effective for treating mental health disorders, so it is important to know whether teens are receiving services," said Dr. David Axelson, chief of psychiatry at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, who wasn't involved with the new report.

The findings show that "the majority of kids do receive some kind of service, which is positive," Axelson told Live Science. "However, it would be best if all youth with significant mental or behavioral health problems received nonmedication treatment appropriate for their condition."

Depending on the severity of the mental health problem, sometimes nonmedication treatments may have to be combined with medications to help the patient. "However, I think all mental or behavior health problems should have some form of counseling or nonmedication approach, even if medication is the primary treatment," Axelson said.

Previous studies from the CDC have found that about 7.5 percent of U.S. children and teenagers report taking prescription drugs for mental health problems, and that medication use is higher among boys than girls.

The new report shows that boys are more likely than girls to get counseling, too. About 75 percent of boys with mental health problems received counseling, compared with 65 percent of girls.

The results also showed that about half of teenagers who received counseling did so at school. About 40 percent of teens were counseled at a clinic, and 12 percent received the treatment at home.

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Two-thirds of US teens with mental health problems get counseling

Nudging Can Save Europe Billions of Euros on Energy Bills

European nations can cut billions of euros from citizens power bills using psychology to nudge them into consuming less, says energy-management business Opower Inc. (OPWR)

Using data and behavioral-science insights, popularized in the book Nudge by Richard H. Thaler and Cass R. Sunstein, utilities can cut consumption as much as 3 percent, Opower said.

The reduction, across an entire population, has a greater impact than programs like those that spur use of double glazing or insulation and are only taken up by a fraction of people.

Theres growing momentum for energy efficiency obligations in Europe, John Webster, head of marketing in the region, said in an interview in London. An Italian incentive to use behavioral science has been a huge market opener for the company, while Denmark and Ireland also encourage measures.

Opower uses data from utilities to analyze customer habits and tailor recommendations on how to cut use. The company, with clients including EON SE and Electricite de France SA, can send households reports comparing usage with neighbors. It can also offer early warning if theyre using more energy than normal and alert customers to rewards for curbing demand at peak times.

When users have smart meters that offer more detailed information, Opower can provide reports with such more details such as which appliances use the most energy. Reducing demand by customers helps utilities by curtailing the need to bring expensive plants reserved for peak demand on line.

European energy consumers could save 2.4 billion euros ($3.2 billion) a year through behavioural-efficiency programs, Opower said in a report on June 12. The company is calling on European Union governments to reward utilities for using the technology and analysis it produces, and spur energy savings.

Germany could gain annual savings of more than 500 million euros, France more than 325 million euros and the U.K. almost 300 million euros, according to Opower.

The cost of achieving the savings would be 3 euro cents to 7 euro cents per kilowatt-hour saved, according to Emily Hallet, associate director at Opower. That compares with German retail power prices of about 30 cents per kilowatt-hour consumed and prices elsewhere in Europe of 20 cents to 25 cents, she said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Alex Morales in London at amorales2@bloomberg.net

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Nudging Can Save Europe Billions of Euros on Energy Bills

Addiction Experts from Elements Behavioral Health Headline Three-Part Workshop on Addiction and the Brain

Houston, TX (PRWEB) August 26, 2014

Elements Behavioral Health presents a unique, three-part workshop on Addiction and the Brain: Common Neurochemistry of Trauma, Pain and Addiction, in Houston on September 12, 2014.

This workshop explores recent brain research in the areas of chronic pain, trauma and food chemistry and answers the following critical questions, among others:

Following registration and introductions, Christopher La Tourette La Riche, MD, will present The Child is Father of the Man: Neurobiological Crossroads of Trauma, Addiction and Mood Disorders, from 8:15 to 9:15 a.m. Dr. La Riche will discuss the three basic elements of the neuroendocrine system that, when altered in early life, can affect mood, anxiety and addiction.

While everyone has experienced difficult life events, when trauma occurs in early childhood, it can seriously impact an individuals life later, in some cases leading to mood and addictive disorders, said Dr. La Riche.

Dr. La Riche will name and briefly explain a number of early life events that have directly correlated with disruptions in mood and the appearance of addictive disorders later.

From 9:15 to 10:15 a.m., Michael Baron, MD, MPH, FASAM, will present a second workshop addressing The Added Complexity of Chronic Pain.

Chronic pain is an integral part of vicious cycles, said Dr. Baron. Pain aggravates addiction and addiction aggravates pain. Not only does this compromise effective treatment, but theres little hope of combating chronic pain or addiction without treating both. The same can be said about pain and depression.

Understanding the anatomy, pathology and physiology of chronic pain and addiction will help workshop participants gain a greater perspective on the interaction between them.

From 10:30 to 11:30 a.m., Pamela Peeke, MD, MPH, FACP, will present the days third topic, Food and Addiction: The Relationship Between Food, Recovery and Relapse.

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Addiction Experts from Elements Behavioral Health Headline Three-Part Workshop on Addiction and the Brain

Platform for Advanced Behavioral Threat Detection Using Big Data Is Subject of ISSA Journal Paper by Interset CTO …

Ottawa, ON (PRWEB) August 26, 2014

The author of a new paper in the August 2014 issue of the Information Systems Security Association (ISSA) Journal says big data is providing greater context than ever before and helping to feed new security software platforms which are more effective at monitoring users and machines to detect behavioral anomalies that are the precursors of insider and targeted outside attacks. Stephan Jou, CTO of Interset, has authored "Towards a Big Data Behavioral Analytics Platform," https://www.interset.com/media/Big-Data-Behavioral-Analytics_ISSA0814-1.pdf, exploring how the application of data science and increasingly powerful analytics on a growing volume of big data are able to correlate, quantify and corroborate behavioral events to effectively detect threats and attacks, while removing white noise and false positives.

Big data in the context of security refers to the increasing velocity, volume and variety of data from sources that may include network, email, endpoints and log data from a wide range of repositories that contain intellectual property as well as non-traditional data sources, such as social media, HR performance and financial credit ratings. The August ISSA Journal, "Big Data: Use and Security Ramifications," covers the challenges and solutions for securing big data projects and is available at: https://www.issa.org/?page=ISSAJournal.

Interset, the new name for FileTrek Inc., delivers behavioral-centric security, specializing in helping organizations in industries such as manufacturing, life sciences, and government to protect sensitive data. This includes intellectual property, trade secrets and classified files which may be at risk from insider or targeted outside attack. Interset's highly intelligent and accurate enterprise threat detection solution enables companies of all sizes to use the power of big data, behavioral analytics and machine learning to protect their sensitive data.

"The Information Security segment is ripe for, and in a very real sense, demands, big data analytics," says Interset's Jou. "But amassing a comprehensive and large data plane is only half the battle. We also need to apply principled mathematics to help us turn the data into actionable insights. By building probabilistic models that quantify how bad, suspicious or abnormal an event is, we can keep all events and their associated scores for correlation," he says. "This allows us to more accurately assess the overall risk posture of any entity inside our system, and even detects 'low and slow' threats by no longer ignoring low probability events that, with a threshold-based approach, would otherwise be discarded."

The ISSA is a not-for-profit, international professional organization of information security professionals and practitioners. It provides educational forums, publications and peer interaction opportunities that enhance the knowledge, skill and professional growth of its members.

About Interset Interset (formerly FileTrek) provides a highly intelligent and accurate insider and targeted outsider threat detection solution that unlocks the power of behavioral analytics, machine learning and big data to provide the fastest, most flexible and affordable way for IT teams of all sizes to operationalize a data protection program. Utilizing agentless data collectors, lightweight endpoint sensors, advanced behavioral analytics and an intuitive user interface, Interset provides unparalleled visibility over sensitive data, enabling early attack detection and actionable forensic intelligence without false positives or white noise. Interset solutions are deployed to protect critical data across the manufacturing, life sciences, hi-tech, finance, government, aerospace & defense and securities brokerage industries. For more information, visit https://www.interset.com or follow us on twitter @intersetca.

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Science | Define Science at Dictionary.com

c.1300, "knowledge (of something) acquired by study," also "a particular branch of knowledge," from O.Fr. science, from L. scientia "knowledge," from sciens (gen. scientis), prp. of scire "to know," probably originally "to separate one thing from another, to distinguish," related to scindere "to cut, divide," from PIE base *skei- (cf. Gk. skhizein "to split, rend, cleave," Goth. skaidan, O.E. sceadan "to divide, separate;" see shed (v.)). Modern sense of "non-arts studies" is attested from 1678. The distinction is commonly understood as between theoretical truth (Gk. episteme) and methods for effecting practical results (tekhne), but science sometimes is used for practical applications and art for applications of skill. Main modern (restricted) sense of "body of regular or methodical observations or propositions ... concerning any subject or speculation" is attested from 1725; in 17c.-18c. this concept commonly was called philosophy. To blind (someone) with science "confuse by the use of big words or complex explanations" is attested from 1937, originally noted as a phrase from Australia and New Zealand.

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ScienceBlogs – Where the world turns to talk about science.

Failing to get the time to acclimate to a hot work environment can be deadly. Thats the message I took away from an item in last weeks Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR). Heat illness and deaths among workers U.S. 2012-2013 reports on 13 occupational heat-related fatalities investigated by federal OSHA. Nine of the

Today, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released new data on heat deaths among U.S. workers, underscoring the often-tragic consequences that result when employers fail to take relatively simple and low-cost preventive actions.

On July 5, James Baldasarre, a 45-year old a Medford, Massachusetts US Postal Service employee who had worked for USPS for 24 years, died from excessive heat. According to news reports, shortly before collapsing in the 95-degree heat, Baldasarre texted his wife to say, Im going to die out here today. Its so hot. On

A hot work environment killed at least 13 people in 2012 and 2013 (not counting cases from nineteen states, including California, that operate their own OSHA programs). On The Pump Handle, Celeste Monforton writes "the report shows the diversity of jobs and situations in which workers are at risk of suffering a heat-related illness or death." Kim Krisberg says "most of the people worked outdoors, though seven of the cases happened indoors in work settings with a powerful heat source." Nine of the thirteen died in their first three days of being on the job, showing that the human body needs time to acclimate to a hot new schedule. Krisberg continues "heat illness prevention programs were either incomplete or entirely absent from the workplaces in question." Considering that workplaces in the study were as hot as 106 Fahrenheit, and that heat stroke can damage the brain and organs as well as kill you, simple interventions like providing water, shade, and rest should be a top priority for any employer.

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ScienceBlogs - Where the world turns to talk about science.

Evolution – Main Page – Conservapedia

From Conservapedia

The theory of evolution is a naturalistic theory of the history of life on earth (this refers to the theory of evolution which employs methodological naturalism and is taught in schools and universities). Merriam-Webster's dictionary gives the following definition of evolution: "a theory that the various types of animals and plants have their origin in other preexisting types and that the distinguishable differences are due to modifications in successive generations..."[2] Currently, there are several theories of evolution.

Since World War II a majority of the most prominent and vocal defenders of the evolutionary position which employs methodological naturalism have been atheists and agnostics (see also: Causes of evolutionary belief)[3] In 2007, "Discovery Institute's Center for Science and Culture...announced that over 700 scientists from around the world have now signed a statement expressing their skepticism about the contemporary theory of Darwinian evolution."[4]

In 2011, the results of a study was published indicating that most United States high school biology teachers are reluctant to endorse the theory of evolution in class. [5] In addition, in 2011, eight anti-evolution bills were introduced into state legislatures within the United States encouraging students to employ critical thinking skills when examining the evolutionary paradigm. In 2009, there were seven states which required critical analysis skills be employed when examining evolutionary material within schools.[6]

A 2005 poll by the Louis Finkelstein Institute for Social and Religious Research found that 60% of American medical doctors reject Darwinism, stating that they do not believe man evolved through natural processes alone.[7] Thirty-eight percent of the American medical doctors polled agreed with the statement that "Humans evolved naturally with no supernatural involvement." [8] The study also reported that 1/3 of all medical doctors favor the theory of intelligent design over evolution.[9] In 2010, the Gallup organization reported that 40% of Americans believe in young earth creationism.[10] In January 2006, the BBC reported concerning Britain:

Furthermore, more than 40% of those questioned believe that creationism or intelligent design (ID) should be taught in school science lessons.[11]

The theory of evolution posits a process of transformation from simple life forms to more complex life forms, which has never been observed or duplicated in a laboratory.[12][13] Although not a creation scientist, Swedish geneticist Dr. Nils Heribert-Nilsson, Professor of Botany at the University of Lund in Sweden and a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, stated: "My attempts to demonstrate Evolution by an experiment carried on for more than 40 years have completely failed. At least, I should hardly be accused of having started from a preconceived antievolutionary standpoint."[14][15]

The fossil record is often used as evidence in the creation versus evolution controversy. The fossil record does not support the theory of evolution and is one of the flaws in the theory of evolution.[16] In 1981, there were at least a hundred million fossils that were catalogued and identified in the world's museums.[17] Despite the large number of fossils available to scientists in 1981, evolutionist Mark Ridley, who currently serves as a professor of zoology at Oxford University, was forced to confess: "In any case, no real evolutionist, whether gradualist or punctuationist, uses the fossil record as evidence in favour of the theory of evolution as opposed to special creation."[18]

In addition to the evolutionary position lacking evidential support and being counterevidential, the great intellectuals in history such as Archimedes, Aristotle, St. Augustine, Francis Bacon, Isaac Newton, and Lord Kelvin did not propose an evolutionary process for a species to transform into a more complex version. Even after the theory of evolution was proposed and promoted heavily in England and Germany, most leading scientists were against the theory of evolution.[19] The theory of evolution was published by naturalist Charles Darwin in his book On The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection or The Preservation of Favored Races in the Struggle for Life, in 1859. In a letter to Asa Gray, Darwin confided: "...I am quite conscious that my speculations run quite beyond the bounds of true science."[20]Prior to publishing the book, Darwin wrote in his private notebooks that he was a materialist, which is a type of atheist.(see: religious views of Charles Darwin) [21] Charles Darwins casual mentioning of a creator in earlier editions of The Origin of Species appears to have been a merely a ploy to downplay the implications of his materialistic theory.[22] The amount of credit Darwin actually deserves for the theory is disputed. [23] Darwin's theory attempted to explain the origin of the various kinds of plants and animals via the process of natural selection or "survival of the fittest".

The basic principle behind natural selection is that in the struggle for life some organisms in a given population will be better suited to their particular environment and thus have a reproductive advantage which increases the representation of their particular traits over time. Many years before Charles Darwin, there were several other individuals who published articles on the topic of natural selection.[24]

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Evolution - Main Page - Conservapedia

Superhero Science: Marvel Comics Gets Inside the Heads of the Avengers

The neuroscience behind the Hulk, Captain America and Iron Man, explained in a Times Square exhibit. Excelsior!

AVENGERS ASSEMBLE! To simulate Iron Mans HUD at the Avengers S.T.A.T.I.O.N. Exhibition, Neuroverse developed a novel electroencephalographic (EEG) braincomputer interface that activates when visitors press their foreheads against the EEG sensor. The sensor detects brain waves and converts these signals into commands that the on-screen HUD simulation follows. Courtesy of Neuroverse, Inc.

The job of creating superheroes has become more complicated in the 50-plus years since Marvel Comics first assembled the Avengers to fight evil. Audiences today still crave fantastical adventures but at the same time demand a greater degree of plausibility. In response Marvel gathered a real-life team of scientists to ensure that its Avengers S.T.A.T.I.O.N. Exhibition currently on display in New York Citys Times Square includes elements of realism as it explores Marvels superhero mythology. Beyond simply being a colossal advertisement for its brand, the exhibit enables Marvel to delve into the neuroscience behind Dr. Bruce Banners metamorphosis into his green alter ego as well as Capt. Steve Rogerss transformation into a supersoldier. Another key exhibit mimics the heads-up display that billionaire industrialist Tony Stark uses in his Iron Man suit. The general public has become more educated about science, so Marvel has had to work harder to come up with explanations that allow the audience suspend disbelief, says neurobiologist Ricardo Gil-da-Costa, a science advisor for Marvels Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. TV program. Gil-da-Costa, whose company Neuroverse consulted on aspects of the exhibition related to neuroscience and helped build Iron Mans heads-up display demonstration, began speaking with the Avengers S.T.A.T.I.O.N. creators two years ago in an effort to craft the right mix of entertainment backed by real science. The Hulk The Hulks legend has grown in the half century since Marvel introduced his character, best known for smashing, grunting and shredding Bruce Banners wardrobe. Much less is known about the neurological transition that the physicists brain undergoes each time he transforms from an articulate 58-kilogram man into the 470-kilogram green brute. Exhibit makers determined that the Hulk in particular provided a unique opportunity to help young visitors understand how the human brain works. The first step was to evaluate the green superheros powers and reverse engineer some of them back to their neurological roots, Gil-da-Costa says. The Hulk demo within the sprawling, 930-square-meter S.T.A.T.I.O.N. exhibit begins with an actual MRI scan of a human brain that represents Banners gray matter. Simulation software portrays the anatomical changes that the doctors brain undergoes as he becomes the Hulk.

The angrier Hulk gets Supervillains know, or at least they should by now, to take cover when the Hulk starts his rampagehis strength is directly proportional to his level of rage. Banners conversion from a mild-mannered scientist to his superhero persona results in a 20 percent growth in his amygdala, coupled with a 30 percent reduction of the prefrontal cortex, which decreases his ability to control rational reflection and decision-making. This change is responsible for the Hulks highly emotional behavior, during which he typically reacts with impetuous emotions rather than lucid thought. The amygdala, a small, almond-shaped structure located deep in the lower part of the temporal lobe, is associated with the processing of emotions and contributes to memory formation. The prefrontal cortex, meanwhile, receives information from other brain areas to perform cognitive processes like problem solving, prediction of outcomes, decision-making and behavioral planning. Hulk is going now! Don't try to follow! The Hulk is capable of incredibly long leaps, as far as 1,600 kilometers by some estimates. To cover such distances and land in the right spot, the Hulk needs rapid and increased visual processing while moving at high speeds, Gil-da-Costa says. To do this the visual cortex in Banners brain grows about 15 percent in size when he becomes the Hulk, enabling him to better perceive, discriminate and structure what he sees. Likewise, a 50 percent growth in Banners cerebellumfundamental for motor control, equilibrium, coordination and timinghelps give the Hulk the balance, spatial processing and precision he needs to land on his big, green feet. Hulk smash! (Well, smashes) Hulk has also been known to lay waste to the English language. That probably has to do with the 25 percent reduction in Banners planum temporale, which changes his brains capacity for language and causes the Hulk to lose the ability for fluent speech, according to Gil-da-Costa. The planum temporale is highly asymmetriclarger in the left hemispherea characteristic thought to be part of the human evolution to specialize brain areas for language. A computer simulation at the exhibition shows that Banners brain loses this asymmetry when he gets Hulked up.

Captain America Unlike Hulks repeated transformations Steve Rogerss conversion into Captain America occurred only once and produced mostly positive benefits, including strength and agility, without affecting his capacity for reasoning or language. The supersoldier serum that Professor Abraham Erskine injected into Rogers actually led to increased neural connectivity between brain areas that he frequently activates. In his case, the amygdala,orbitofrontal cortex, prefrontal cortexand visual cortex as well as the motor, pre-motor andsomatosensory regions. Working together this network of brain areas processes aspects of a persons understanding of what others are feeling, in other words aspects of empathy and concern for others, Gil-da-Costa says. Gil-da-Costa and his team posit that Captain Americas superhuman handeye coordination, reflexes, motor speed and muscle response could be side effects of the increased connections between visual cortex and premotor and motor areas. A phenomenon called synesthesiaa neurological condition of increased connectivity between brain areas in which stimulation of one sense automatically activates a second sensewas also part of the inspiration for Captain Americas brain. People with this condition hear colors, for instance. Captain America doesn't have synesthesia per se, but the same underlying phenomena of increased connectivity occur, Gil-da-Costa says. So, it was an inspiration for the designing his brain and structuring it in real science. Iron Man Tony Starks enhanced abilities come from neural prosthetics in his metal suit rather than actual changes to his brain. Stark activates different areas of his suit using, amongst other things, a braincomputer interface that converts his brain signals into instructions that his suits computer uses to control its flight and fire weapons as well as work the heads-up display (HUD), which gives Iron Man precise information about his surroundings. To simulate Iron Mans HUD at the Avengers S.T.A.T.I.O.N. Exhibition, Neuroverse developed a novel electroencephalographic (EEG) braincomputer interface powered by the low-voltage electrical activity that enables brain cells to communicate. This three-electrode EEG is connected to a small display screen. The interface activates when visitors press their foreheads against the EEG sensor, which detects brain waves and converts these signals into commands that the on-screen HUD simulation follows. This technology, integrated with an additional
eye-tracking system from The Eye Tribe, allows visitors to navigate the display to watch video clips, play games and see a graph depicting their neural activity in real-time. The development an accurate EEG-based braincomputer interface that would work for the exhibits large and constantly churning audience proved particularly challenging. Exhibit creators developed specific hardware related to sensing the brain and algorithms to interpret an individuals brain signals. This software requires some degree of recalibration when a new visitor engages the exhibit because each persons brain and thought patternseven in response to the same stimuliare unique. Neuroverses sensor begins to take readings when a forehead is pressed against it. This also serves to keep the persons head fairly still so that the system can more easily read brain waves. Marvels Avengers S.T.A.T.I.O.N. Exhibition is on display through January 4, 2015. Neuroverse is working on a small, multi-use wireless braincomputer interface for use in everyday life. That system is expected to be a low-cost mobile device for monitoring various types of neural activity and sharing that information via a smartphone app.

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Superhero Science: Marvel Comics Gets Inside the Heads of the Avengers

Insights from the Behavioral Science Guy: The fastest way to change your behavior is to change your environment

Something as simple as the size of a plate and spoon can influence how much a person eats, according to Joseph Grenny.

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Next time you procrastinate, overeat, lose your temper, text while driving, chicken out on a tough conversation pick your sin try something new.

Dont blame yourself. Blame your environment.

The central message of the past five decades of social science research is this: We have far less control over our behavior than we think.

Now, lest you think Im about to justify criminals and go soft on personal responsibility, Im not. In fact, Im going to share with you the key to truly taking control of your life. Here it is crochet it onto a sampler, make it your laptop wallpaper, tattoo it on your forehead:

The best way to control your behavior is to take control of the things that control you.

It turns out that those who most appreciate how little control they have over their own behavior are the best equipped to change it.

Today, Ill share one illustration of this empowering idea. In future columns, Ill add others. Keep reading and youll have a complete view of all of the sources of influence that shape our choices and, therefore, a powerful way of taking control of your life.

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Insights from the Behavioral Science Guy: The fastest way to change your behavior is to change your environment

Prioritizing suicide research can help lead to fewer suicide attempts, deaths

Suicide experts recommend research into early behavioral detection, interventions, use of mass media, and other areas, American Journal of Preventive Medicine reports

In a new supplement to the September issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, experts address the state of the science on suicide prevention and provide useful recommendations for research to inform effective suicide prevention. Suicide has been a challenging and perplexing public health issue to study as it has many dimensions and underlying factors. Although much is known about the patterns and potential risk factors of suicide, the national suicide rate does not appear to have dropped over the last 50 years.

This groundbreaking supplement -- titled Expert Recommendations for U.S. Research Priorities in Suicide Prevention -- draws together topic experts across the spectrum of suicide prevention research, who have considered and proposed ways in which research improvements could more effectively reduce suicide. The 24 articles cover a broad range of scientific topics, from basic science regarding the neurobiological underpinnings of suicide to the dissemination and implementation of prevention strategies. They represent a subset of presentations made by suicide prevention experts to inform A Prioritized Research Agenda for Suicide Prevention: An Action Plan to Save Lives (Research Agenda), which was created by the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention's Research Prioritization Task Force (RPTF).

"The articles in this special supplement represent the collective thinking of suicide prevention experts from across the United States and several other countries about where research efforts might best be invested to address the vexing public health problem of suicide," say the supplement's guest editors Morton Silverman, MD, Jane E. Pirkis, PhD, Jane L. Pearson, PhD, and Joel T. Sherrill, PhD. "We are confident the articles will have a major influence on the suicide prevention research community."

The content of the supplement directly addresses research that will inform the following goals:

Proposed strategies include research into early detection of suicidal behavior, particularly among youth and adolescents, intervention, evidence-based follow-up care, and reducing stigma through the use of mass media.

Effective suicide prevention is a team effort, including both public and private partners. Contributors to the supplement stress that progress in the area of suicide prevention research will require interdisciplinary, collaborative science and that translational science and interdisciplinary research collaboration ("team science") will be critical for advancing science and ultimately identifying effective prevention strategies.

The supplement's guest editors conclude, "The papers in this supplement, like the Research Agenda itself, are intended as inspirational resources that highlight the challenges and rewards of engaging in suicide prevention research, and suggest future research directions that have the potential to advance the overall goal of reducing attempts and deaths."

The journal's supplement can be found online at: http://www.ajpmonline.org/issue/S0749-3797%2814%29X0015-2

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Prioritizing suicide research can help lead to fewer suicide attempts, deaths

Prioritizing suicide research can help lead to fewer suicide attempts and deaths

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

18-Aug-2014

Contact: Angela J. Beck ajpmmedia@elsevier.com 734-764-8775 Elsevier Health Sciences

Ann Arbor, MI, August 18, 2014 In a new supplement to the September issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, experts address the state of the science on suicide prevention and provide useful recommendations for research to inform effective suicide prevention. Suicide has been a challenging and perplexing public health issue to study as it has many dimensions and underlying factors. Although much is known about the patterns and potential risk factors of suicide, the national suicide rate does not appear to have dropped over the last 50 years.

This groundbreaking supplementtitled Expert Recommendations for U.S. Research Priorities in Suicide Preventiondraws together topic experts across the spectrum of suicide prevention research, who have considered and proposed ways in which research improvements could more effectively reduce suicide. The 24 articles cover a broad range of scientific topics, from basic science regarding the neurobiological underpinnings of suicide to the dissemination and implementation of prevention strategies. They represent a subset of presentations made by suicide prevention experts to inform A Prioritized Research Agenda for Suicide Prevention: An Action Plan to Save Lives (Research Agenda), which was created by the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention's Research Prioritization Task Force (RPTF).

"The articles in this special supplement represent the collective thinking of suicide prevention experts from across the United States and several other countries about where research efforts might best be invested to address the vexing public health problem of suicide," say the supplement's guest editors Morton Silverman, MD, Jane E. Pirkis, PhD, Jane L. Pearson, PhD, and Joel T. Sherrill, PhD. "We are confident the articles will have a major influence on the suicide prevention research community."

The content of the supplement directly addresses research that will inform the following goals:

Proposed strategies include research into early detection of suicidal behavior, particularly among youth and adolescents, intervention, evidence-based follow-up care, and reducing stigma through the use of mass media.

Effective suicide prevention is a team effort, including both public and private partners. Contributors to the supplement stress that progress in the area of suicide prevention research will require interdisciplinary, collaborative science and that translational science and interdisciplinary research collaboration ("team science") will be critical for advancing science and ultimately identifying effective prevention strategies.

The supplement's guest editors conclude, "The papers in this supplement, like the Research Agenda itself, are intended as inspirational resources that highlight the challenges and rewards of engaging in suicide prevention research, and suggest future research directions that have the potential to advance the overall goal of reducing attempts and deaths."

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Prioritizing suicide research can help lead to fewer suicide attempts and deaths

Man who killed son a schizophrenic: doc

THREE days before Roberto Umpad, 29, killed his two-year-old son, neighbors and relatives had noticed his unusual behaviour.

Hilumon siya ug magsigeg hinuktok (He was very quiet and he looked like he had a lot on his mind), said Odessa Capili, his neighbor.

In 2012, Umpad underwent treatment at the Vicente Sotto Memorial Medical Centers (VSMMC) Center for Behavioral Science after suffering from a nervous breakdown.

Traumatic youth

According to a relative, who asked not to be named, Umpad had a traumatic childhood because his father left him when he was still young while his mother went abroad.

Umpad had been admitted to the psychiatric ward six times.

He last went to the VSMMC on Feb. 14, 2013 for his check-up.

He was supposed to continue his medication but because they had no money, he stopped taking them last year.

Dr. Rene Obra, chief of the Center for Behavioral Sciences, said they diagnosed Umpad with schizophrenia.

The doctor described schizophrenia as a mental illness where a person loses contact with reality and experiences mood disorder symptoms.

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Man who killed son a schizophrenic: doc

With attitudes changing, and science shifting, NFL searches for marijuana answers

Marijuana is casting an ever-thickening haze across NFL locker rooms, and it's not simply because more players are using it.

As attitudes toward the drug soften, and science slowly teases out marijuana's possible benefits for concussions and other injuries, the NFL is reaching a critical point in navigating its tenuous relationship with what is recognized as the analgesic of choice for many of its players.

"It's not, let's go smoke a joint," retired NFL defensive lineman Marvin Washington said. "It's, what if you could take something that helps you heal faster from a concussion, that prevents your equilibrium from being off for two weeks and your eyesight for being off for four weeks?"

One challenge the NFL faces is how to bring marijuana into the game as a pain reliever without condoning its use as a recreational drug. And facing a lawsuit filed on behalf of hundreds of former players complaining about the effects of prescription painkillers they say were pushed on them by team trainers and doctors, the NFL is looking for other ways to help players deal with the pain from a violent game.

A Gallup poll last year found 58 percent of Americans believe marijuana should be legalized. That's already happened in Colorado and Washington the states that are home of last season's Super Bowl teams.

The World Anti-Doping Agency has said it does not need to catch out-of-competition marijuana users. And at least one high-profile coach, Pete Carroll of the champion Seahawks, publicly said he'd like to see the NFL study whether marijuana can help players.

There are no hard numbers on how many NFL players are using marijuana, but anecdotal evidence, including the arrest or league discipline of no fewer than a dozen players for pot over the past 18 months, suggests use is becoming more common.

Washington Redskins defensive back Ryan Clark didn't want to pinpoint the number of current NFL players who smoke pot but said, "I know a lot of guys who don't regularly smoke marijuana who would use it during the season."

Washington wouldn't put a specific number on it but said he, too, knew his share of players who weren't shy about lighting up when he was in the league, including one guy "who just hated the pain pills they were giving out at the time." Another longtime defensive lineman, Marcellus Wiley, estimates half the players in the average NFL locker room were using it by the time he shut down his career in 2006.

"They are leaning on it to cope with the pain," said Wiley, who played defensive line in the league for 10 seasons. "They are leaning on it to cope with the anxiety of the game."

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With attitudes changing, and science shifting, NFL searches for marijuana answers

Volokh Conspiracy: Consumer Credit and the American Economy

By Todd Zywicki August 14

I am excited to say that after years of work my new co-authored book Consumer Credit and the American Economy is now officially available for sale. The Amazon page is here. It is co-authored with former Federal Reserve economist Thomas Durkin, current Fed economist Gregory Elliehausen, and University of Arizona professor Michael Staten (who was formerly head of the Credit Research Center and Financial Services Research Program). The book is a comprehensive look at the economics, regulation, history, and intellectual history of consumer credit in America (largely excluding mortgage credit, however, which we decided is really a book unto itself).

One of the joys of working with my co-authors was how much I learned about these topics, especially the intellectual history of the study of consumer credit. The book is dedicated to the pioneers in the field, who are largely forgotten today, but whose basic analytical framework remains almost entirely as valid today as it was when first developed almost a century ago.

Tom and I plan to do a series of posts sometime soon highlighting some of the key points of the book. But for now Ill just post the Amazon summary and cover blurbs to give you a flavor:

Consumer Credit and the American Economyexamines the economics, behavioral science, sociology, history, institutions, law, and regulation of consumer credit in the United States.

After discussing the origins and various kinds of consumer credit available in todays marketplace, this book reviews at some length the long run growth of consumer credit to explore the widely held belief that somehow consumer credit has risen too fast for too long. It then turns to demand and supply with chapters discussing neoclassical theories of demand, new behavioral economics, and evidence on production costs and why consumer credit might seem expensive compared to some other kinds of credit like government finance. This discussion includes review of the economics of risk management and funding sources, as well discussion of the economic theory of why some people might be limited in their credit search, the phenomenon of credit rationing. This examination includes review of issues of risk management through mathematical methods of borrower screening known as credit scoring and financial market sources of funding for offerings of consumer credit.

The book then discusses technological change in credit granting. It examines how modern automated information systems called credit reporting agencies, or more popularly credit bureaus, reduce the costs of information acquisition and permit greater credit availability at less cost. This discussion is followed by examination of the logical offspring of technology, the ubiquitous credit card that permits consumers access to both payments and credit services worldwide virtually instantly.

After a chapter on institutions that have arisen to supply credit to individuals for whom mainstream credit is often unavailable, including payday loans and other small dollar sources of loans, discussion turns to legal structure and the regulation of consumer credit. There are separate chapters on the theories behind the two main thrusts of federal regulation to this point, fairness for all and financial disclosure. Following these chapters, there is another on state regulation that has long focused on marketplace access and pricing.

Before a final concluding chapter, another chapter focuses on two noncredit marketplace products that are closely related to credit. The first of them, debt protection including credit insurance and other forms of credit protection, is economically a complement. The second product, consumer leasing, is a substitute for credit use in many situations, especially involving acquisition of automobiles. This chapter is followed by a full review of consumer bankruptcy, what happens in the worst of cases when consumers find themselves unable to repay their loans.

Because of the importance of consumer credit in consumers financial affairs, the intended audience includes anyone interested in these issues, not only specialists who spend much of their time focused on them. For this reason, the authors have carefully avoided academic jargon and the mathematics that is the modern language of economics. It also examines the psychological, sociological, historical, and especially legal traditions that go into fully understanding what has led to the demand for consumer credit and to what the markets and institutions that provide these products have become today.

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Volokh Conspiracy: Consumer Credit and the American Economy