Usefulness of Software for Analyzing Digital Pathology Images Highlighted

Hard to miss this news item which I saw reproduced on dozens of media outlets and sites.

Ul Balis and his team, including Jason Hipp using their SVIQ technology were able to differentiate benign from malignant bladder tissue in cases of micropapillary urothelial carcinoma.
 
This type of technology which uses concentric rings to identify key features for recognition rather than square blocks in the query is a welcome addition to the surgical pathologist's toolkit and I think the tip of the iceberg in the type of value added propositions digital pathology will offer over analogue.  
Reproduction of the glass slide is just the beginning.  The ability to differentiate normal from malignant and dozens of other applications helps add science to the "art and science" practice of pathology. 

This is the 11th of what could become hundreds of publications looking at a wide variety of anatomic pathology differential diagnoses and clinical situations.  
Look for more to come from this game changing technology.

As tissue slides are more routinely digitized to aid interpretation, a software program whose design was led by the University of Michigan Health System is proving its utility. malignancy from background tissue in digital slides of micropapillary urothelial carcinoma, a type of bladder cancer whose features can vary widely from case to case and that presents diagnostic challenges even for experts.

In a new study, a program known as Spatially Invariant Vector Quantization (SIVQ) was able to separate malignancy from background tissue in digital slides of micropapillary urothelial carcinoma, a type of bladder cancer whose features can vary widely from case to case and that presents diagnostic challenges even for experts.

The findings by U-M and Rutgers University researchers were published online in Analytical Cellular Pathology ahead of print publication.

"Being able to pick out cancer from background tissue is a key test for this type of software tool," says U-M informatics fellow Jason Hipp, M.D., Ph.D., who shares lead authorship of the paper with resident Steven Christopher Smith, M.D., Ph.D. "This is the type of validation that has to happen before digital pathology tools can be widely used in a clinical setting."

To test the software's ability to identify cancer in a digital slide, a group of human pathologists first pinpointed the cancer the old fashioned way, by hand. Their work was then used as the gold standard for grading the program's results. Researchers then systematically tested which settings within the program produced the most accurate results – which can serve as a blueprint for optimizing the software to detect other types of cancer and disease.

The findings by U-M and Rutgers University researchers were published online in Analytical Cellular Pathology ahead of print publication.

Diagnosing cancer and other pathologies from tissue slides has always been part science and part art. Pathologists pore over samples looking for certain structural anomalies or counting microscopic features.

"Being able to pick out cancer from background tissue is a key test for this type of software tool," says U-M informatics fellow Jason Hipp, M.D., Ph.D., who shares lead authorship of the paper with resident Steven Christopher Smith, M.D., Ph.D. "This is the type of validation that has to happen before digital pathology tools can be widely used in a clinical setting."

News-digital-pathology-2012

To test the software's ability to identify cancer in a digital slide, a group of human pathologists first pinpointed the cancer the old fashioned way, by hand. Their work was then used as the gold standard for grading the program's results. Researchers then systematically tested which settings within the program produced the most accurate results – which can serve as a blueprint for optimizing the software to detect other types of cancer and disease.

Diagnosing cancer and other pathologies from tissue slides has always been part science and part art. Pathologists pore over samples looking for certain structural anomalies or counting microscopic features.

But different pathologists – or even the same pathologist at different times – may come to different conclusions based on a number of factors, including whether a slide is viewed at high or low magnification, or even whether the pathologist is fatigued from examining dozens of other slides that day, the researchers say.

Digital tools like SIVQ can help pathologists to quickly, accurately and efficiently identify features on a slide with just a few clicks; to quickly calculate the area of an irregularly shaped feature; or to eliminate the slow and painstaking tallying of tiny elements.

Still, the authors stress, the program isn't intended to replace the skill and art of human pathologists, but to provide an additional resource.

"Not only do our findings show that SIVQ has the potential to be a useful tool in surgical pathologists' toolkits when optimized to aid detection of such a highly variable disease, but the case is an excellent example for how the same approach might be applied to a variety of clinical areas," says Ulysses Balis, M.D., director of the division of pathology informatics at U-M and the paper's senior author.

Balis led the software's design at U-M along with Hipp and former informatics fellow Jerome Cheng, M.D.

Unlike other pattern recognition software, SIVQ bases its matches on a set of concentric rings rather than the usual square block. This allows features to be identified no matter how they're rotated or whether they're flipped, as in a mirror.

An example of the program's flexibility was recently demonstrated by Bruce P. Levy, M.D., a research fellow in pathology at Harvard Medical School. Testing the program's utility in a forensic pathology setting, SIVQ was used to calculate the area of bullet wounds and to identify and quantify stippling, which are small scrapes surrounding some gunshot wounds that help to determine the distance from which a gun was fired.

"Being able to use software like SIVQ to analyze forensic images helps to bring the practice of forensic pathology closer to the high-tech fictional world of CSI," Levy says.

Since the computer-aided analysis of micropapillary urothelial carcinoma might contribute to patient care, the group is making all of their primary data freely available to other doctors and researchers at U-M's online digital imaging repository, http://www.WSIrepository.org.

This paper marks the researchers' 11th SIVQ-related publication, including two editorials. Several others are currently in progress.

Source: University of Michigan

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Docs Going Mobile

Courtesy of Dark Daily:

QuantiaMD’s survey confirms that physicians will increasingly seek real-time connectivity and consultation with medical laboratory service providers

Physicians are quickly becoming fans of mobile computing. Clinical laboratory managers and pathologists will be interested to learn that, in fact, mobile computing is taking hold among physicians faster than in the general population.

This was one conclusion from a recent survey, according to an article in Healthcare InformaticsQuantiaMD, a Waltham, MA-based mobile and online physician community, conducted a survey of 3,798 physicians. More than 80 % of the respondents said they own a mobile device capable of downloading applications. That means that a far higher percentage of physicians are using mobile devices than among the general public.

Read more at Dark Daily.

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Audio Conference: HIPAA Form 5010 Implementation: Real-World Solutions to Ease the Transition from 4010 to 5010 and Avoid Reimbursement Delays

The first 18 days: Lessons learned about how labs can generate
clean lab-test claims for speedy payment 

 

YOUR PRESENTERS:

Lâle White, Executive Chairman and CEO, XIFIN, Inc

Jackie Griffin, Director, Client Services, Training & Project Implementation, Gateway EDI

Matt Warner, Associate Vice President, Operations, XIFIN, Inc.


Every clinical lab is about to learn whether the transition to form 5010-required as of January 1, 2012-will be handled flawlessly by payers or not.

Ideally, clean claims should mean that payers send timely remittances to your lab. But things are less than perfect. Certain payers have already admitted that they weren’t 100% ready for form 5010 implementation on January 1. And in the days since, other payers have struggled to process claims in a timely fashion. Even your own lab’s billing and collections department probably already has stories to tell about unexpected payer glitches.

Join THE DARK REPORT and DarkDaily.com on Wednesday, January 18, 2012 and listen as two nationally prominent experts on billing and collections give you up-to-the-minute news and intelligence about the successes and setbacks payers are having with form 5010 implementation.

The timing couldn’t be better, because you’ll have a front-row seat to hear the latest developments in how payers are handling 5010 implementation. You’ll learn which payers are processing 5010 claims in an exemplary fashion. But you’ll also find out which payers have been overwhelmed by the transition-along with tips that can help your lab avoid these issues when it files its own claims with these payers.

First up is Lâle White, CEO at XIFIN, Inc. Last year, XIFIN submitted more than one million 5010 live claims for their lab clients and found a number of problem areas. White will provide an in-depth review of those problems as well as what your lab can do to avoid them. You’ll also learn what’s being done to resolve these problems going forward.

“Don’t underestimate the importance of having in-house expertise to help you identify, investigate, and resolve problems,” says White. “Because if a claim is rejected, you won’t necessarily know why.” Find out what tools you’ll need to ensure that 100% of claims can be reconciled and errors can be easily found-and resolved.

Next you’ll hear from Jackie Griffin, Director, Client Services for Gateway EDI. She’ll talk about Gateway’s experiences with how different payers are handling 5010 claims. As one of the nation’s fastest-growing electronic data interchanges (ED), Griffin’s company serves 90,000 providers and submits claims to more than 3,000 payers.

Griffin will share an insider’s perspective of the good, the bad, and the ugly of how payers are coping with 5010 claims. You’ll understand the essential elements to making your lab’s claims “clean and compliant” at first submission. You’ll also learn specific things to avoid, as well as how to quickly recognize payers with problems in their 5010 implementation program.

As you know, the 5010 form requires new information from providers that wasn’t included on form 4010. What these new requirements are-and how to interpret data that might be returned if there are problems with your submissions-will be critical for getting your lab claims  reimbursed without delays in the process.

Adding confusion about how and when to use the new 5010 form is that some payers aren’t ready to accept it. And those that are may not be equipped to handle the massive number of new forms, which will cause further delays in claims processing and payments. But the reality is that it’s your lab that is ultimately at risk for claims denials or delays. Not knowing the ins and out of the new form and how to use it correctly poses a considerable threat to your bottom line.

Despite the testing delays at CMS, there has been no delay in transitioning to the new form. CMS did announce a grace period on penalty enforcement through March, but some payers are still insisting on the 1/1/12 cutover. So it’s critical that your lab start using-and understanding how to use-form 5010 now.

To make sure you’re on top of the new form and aware of the problems that could seriously affect your revenue stream, you won’t want to miss the latest audio conference from THE DARK REPORT and DarkDaily.com, “HIPAA Form 5010 Implementation: Real-World Solutions to Ease the Transition from 4010 to 5010 and Avoid Reimbursement Delays.” Listen as two experts who have first-hand experience with the new form provide details on the best strategies for being in compliance with its use. You’ll get practical, real-world insights and advice based on the results of comprehensive testing in the last year.

Keep in mind that the initial testing covered the design of the new form, not the actual data. So providers can expect to encounter additional problems when they start using 5010 on January 1st. With almost three weeks of experience submitting live claims on the new form, both speakers will have new insights to share, including specific payer problems and what you can do to overcome them. This is truly up-to-the-minute information that will have a direct impact on how your lab can avoid potential problems that could result in significant reimbursement delays.

Flexibility is key to any successful transition to form 5010. Your lab needs to know in advance which payers are ready for the new forms and which ones aren’t. So if your lab hasn’t done significant testing with its payers, this audio conference is your chance to find out what’s working-and what isn’t-with many of the payers. You’ll learn about some of the biggest problems and how to make sure they’re fixed before you submit additional claims to those payers.

But some payers simply won’t be ready. So bottom line: Be prepared to send native 5010 and 4010 forms and decide which one to send on a payer-by-payer basis. And make sure you can revert to 4010 at a moment’s notice to ensure timely reimbursement.

Whether you work in a hospital, health system, or independent clinical laboratory-even if you use your hospital’s billing and collections department or an outside billing company-this is one session you can’t afford to miss.

Register today to get the latest on the new 5010 form, the changes you’ll need to make, the problems you can expect, and how it could all impact your revenue cycle management after the cutover.  And remember that your entire management team can learn and participate when you register.

THE DARK REPORT AUDIO CONFERENCE AT A GLANCE


DATE: Wednesday, January 18, 2012

TIME: 1 p.m. EDT; 12 p.m. CDT; 11 a.m. MDT; 10 a.m. PDT

PLACE: Your telephone or speakerphone

COST: $195 per dial-in site (unlimited attendance per site) through 1/13/12; $245 thereafter

TO REGISTER NOW: Click here or call 1-800-560-6363 toll-free


For one low price-just $195 (through 1/13/12; $245 thereafter) you and your entire team can take part in this fast-paced, insightful audio conference. Best of all, you’ll be able to connect personally with our speakers when we open up the phone lines for live Q&A.

Here’s just some of what you’ll learn during this in-depth 90-minute audio conference:

  • The best and worst news for labs about the first 18 days of form 5010 implementation.
  • Common issues that prevent payers from prompt settlement of lab-test claims submitted on 5010 forms, plus what labs can do to rectify these problems.
  • Which payers are struggling the most with 5010 lab-test claims, plus the names of payers doing a great job processing 5010 claims.
  • Specific steps your clinical laboratory can and should do to address payer problems with form 5010 that will speed payment of conforming lab test claims.
  • What’s working (and what isn’t) in form 5010 implementation.
  • Simple steps to optimize your lab’s ability to submit clean claims and get timely/accurate payments.

…and much more!


How to Register Now:

1. Online
2. Call toll free: 800-560-6363.

Your audio conference registration includes:

  • A site license to attend the conference (invite as many people as you can fit around your speakerphone at no extra charge)
  • A downloadable PowerPoint presentations from our speaker
  • A full transcript emailed to you soon after the conference
  • The opportunity to connect directly with the speaker during the audience Q&A session

Register Now!     Or for more information, call us toll-free at 800-560-6363

 

Distinguished Presenters:

Lale White

Lâle White is Executive Chairman and CEO at XIFIN, Inc. She is a nationally recognized expert in the field of medical financial management and regulatory compliance, with more than 25 years of experience in information systems development and medical billing. She lectures extensively on these topics and has consulted for major laboratories and laboratory associations throughout the U.S. Ms. White worked with HCFA and the U.S. Office of the Inspector General to develop the first OIG Model Compliance Program. She was previously Vice President of Finance for Laboratory Corporation of America and its predecessor National Health Laboratories, where she led the software development of several accounts receivable, inventory, cost accounting, and financial management systems for the laboratory industry. Ms. White has a BA in finance and an MBA from Florida International University.

jackie-griffin

Jackie Griffin is Client Services Director for the training and implementation teams at Gateway EDI. The implementation team focuses on the overall direction, implementation control, and completion of specific projects ensuring consistency with company strategic objectives. Ms. Griffin worked on Gateway EDI's own 5010 transition strategy, planning, and rollout. She also led efforts to educate customers and the industry about 5010 planning, issues, and concerns. Ms. Griffin began working at Gateway EDI in 1999 to help with Y2K planning. She has served in several customer-service positions, including supervisor for executive accounts. She is an active member of the Workgroup for Electronic Data Interchange and participates in other industry groups such as the American Medical Association, American Standards Committee, and Medical Group Management Association. Ms. Griffin was a feature speaker for the Workgroup for Electronic Data Interchange 5010 Forum and the GetReady5010 webinar series, presenting on topics such as HIPAA 5010 Testing for Small Practices and Planning for the "what ifs" of 5010. Prior to joining Gateway EDI, she attended Missouri College and worked in several provider offices gaining an understanding of front- and back-office functions.

Matt-Warner-XIFIN-INC
Matt Warner is Associate Vice President, Operations at XIFIN where he oversees the IT and EDI Services departments. Mr. Warner works with all aspects of electronic data interchange (EDI) with thousands of payers and dozens of direct-trading partners, from enrollment to eligibility and claims payment for each of XIFIN’s customers. As head of the IT department, he supports an SAS-70 audited, high-traffic, Internet-facing, business-critical environment. Previously, Mr. Warner was a Senior Systems Engineer/Infrastructure Engineer at Intuit, and also held positions at MedImpact and Caventa. He has a B.S. in mechanical engineering from Brigham Young University.

 

ACCENT® Continuing Education Credit
The American Association of Clinical Chemistry (AACC) designates this program for a maximum of 1.5 ACCENT® credit hours towards the AACC Clinical Chemist’s Recognition Award. AACC is an approved provider of continuing education for clinical laboratory scientists in the states of California, Florida, Louisiana, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, Rhode Island, and West Virginia.

 

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Morbid Anatomy Presents at Observatory Travels to Manhattan with 3-Part "Body as Funhouse Mirror" Lecture Series!


Morbid Anatomy Presents at Observatory is coming to The Big City (New York City, that is), with 3 lectures to be hosted by the Cornelia Street Cafe?, care of our good buddies (and co-Observatarians) The Hollow Earth Society. The theme of the lecture grouping is "Body as Funhouse Mirror," and features past favorite Observatory speakers Amy Herzog, Mark Dery and Sharon Shattuck.

Full details on the series can be found below; hope to see you at one or all three of these great encore lectures!

The Pornographic Arcades Project: Adaptation, Automation, and the Evolution of Times Square (1965-1975)
Amy Herzog
Date: Sunday, January 29
Time: 6:00 PM
Admission: $10

Herzog's talk challenges our notion of what makes a city (sex)—and who constitutes a voyeur: Motion picture “peeping” machines have existed since the birth of cinema, and were often stocked with salacious titles. Public arcades devoted to pornographic peep booths only began to appear in the late 1960s, however, although once established, they proliferated wildly, becoming ubiquitous features in urban landscapes... The Pornographic Arcades Project is a work-in-progress, asking what a study of pornographic peep show arcades might reveal about the cultural imaginary of the late twentieth century.

Amy Herzog is associate professor of media studies and coordinator of the film studies program at Queens College, CUNY. She is the author of Dreams of Difference, Songs of the Same: The Musical Moment in Film. She recently curated "Peeps," an exhibition at The James Gallery, CUNY Graduate Center, on the dialogue between pornographic peep loops and contemporary art practices.
(qc-cuny.academia.edu/AmyHerzog)

Parasites: A User's Guide
Sharon Shattuck
Date: Sunday, February 26
Time: 6:00 PM
Admission: $10

Parasites challenges the notions of body, friend, inside, and out—and it’s funny! (Not to mention a tad horrific...) The word “parasite” comes with loads of vile connotations, but in nature, nothing is purely good or evil. In the 27-minute experimental documentary Parasites: A User’s Guide, Shattuck embarks on a journey to decode some of the most misunderstood creatures on earth. The dramatic rise in autoimmune diseases, asthma, and allergies since the turn of the last century has confounded scientists, but some researchers think they have uncovered the key to controlling the skyrocketing rates: tiny parasitic worms called helminths... Through the seeming oxymoron of the “helpful parasite,” Sharon questions the nature of our relationship with parasites—and suggests a new paradigm for the future.

Sharon Shattuck is a producer/director/animator with Sweet Fern Productions, the production company she founded. Her previous experience includes work with the Smithsonian Institute, the Field Museum, NPR’s On The Media, and internships with WNYC’s Radiolab, and the BBC World Service/Stakeholder Forum. She has an undergraduate degree in forest ecology and a graduate degree in documentary and broadcast journalism. Her first film, the short Parasites: A User’s Guide (2010), was an official selection of the Traverse City Film Festival, the Camden International Film Festival, the Michigan Film Festival, and the International Science Film Festival. In addition to her work with Sweet Fern, she is a member of the creative team at Wicked Delicate Films.(sweetfernproductions.com / wickedelicate.com)

The Pathological Sublime and The Anatomical Unconscious
Mark Dery
Date: Sunday, April 29
Time: 6:00 PM
Admission: $10

Celebrating the publication of his essay collection, I Must Not Think Bad Thoughts: Drive-By Essays on American Dread, American Dreams (University of Minnesota Press), cultural critic and cult author Mark Dery will lecture— with unforgettable slides—on the hallucinatory Crypt of the Cappuchin monks in Rome, the uncanny wax mannequins at La Specola in Florence, and the 19th-century Chinese artist Lam Qua's paintings of patients with eye-poppingly bizarre tumors, which so fascinated Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. that he wrote an article exhorting all “worshipers of morbid anatomy” to see the paintings, a textbook example of what Holmes called “the pathological sublime.” Join Mark for a dark ride through the Pathological Sublime and the Anatomical Unconscious, and pick up a copy of I Must Not Think Bad Thoughts, the book Boing Boing called “an intellectual journey through our darkest desires and strangest inclinations.”

Mark Dery is a cultural critic. He is best known for his writings on the politics of popular culture in books such as The Pyrotechnic Insanitarium: American Culture on the Brink, Escape Velocity: Cyberculture at the End of the Century, Flame Wars, and Culture Jamming. He has been a professor of journalism at New York University, a Chancellor’s Distinguished Fellow at the University of California, Irvine, and a visiting scholar at the American Academy in Rome. His latest book, I Must Not Think Bad Thoughts, is “a head-spinning intellectual ride through American dreams and American nightmares” and will be available at his Cornelia Street Observatory engagement. (thoughtcatalog.com/author/mark-dery)

If you love Radio Lab, Cabinet magazine, the Surreal, the quirky, and the macabre, you'll definitely dig Cornelia Street Observatory.

All shows are Sunday at 6 PM, tickets are $10. Please RSVP to 212.989.9319. For more, click here.

Image: from the website for Cornelia Street Café.

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"WAX": Episode 9 of The Midnight Archive, on the Uncanny Waxworks of Artist Sigrid Sarda

A new episode of The Midnight Archive--the web-based documentary series centered around Observatory--has just been uploaded and can be viewed above. In this episode--entitled "Wax"--we learn about the uncanny waxworks of artist Sigrid Sarda, visit her amazing home studio/private museum, and watch as she launches into a new piece using Midnight Archive director Ronni Thomas as model/subject; fascinating discussions touching on the history of wax, death, magic and The Uncanny ensue. This is one of my favorite Midnight Archives thus far; not to be missed!

The creator of The Midnight Archive--Film-maker and many-time Observatory lecturer Ronni Thomas--says about this episode:

EPISODE 09 - WAX - A long standing obsession of mine has always been wax... I am honored to have someone I genuinely consider a true artist as part of our series - Ms. Sigrid Sarda. From our first meeting I knew we'd have a ton of things to talk about. The charmingly perverse Sarda has taught herself the ancient art of sculpting in wax, and it is every bit as creepy and interesting as you might expect. Her home (where we shot the episode) - is LITTERED with her creations. Its a scene out of one of my all time favorite films "Tourist Trap" minus a creepy cross-dressing Chuck Connors. Take a look at the art behind the wax. Its truly a fascinating medium. And Sig is truly a fascinating artist. Stay tuned, as she is working on a maze called Welcome To Hegemony which is sort of a super speed 'haunted' maze which will feature many of her wax friends - HOPEFULLY including the wax figure she is making of yours truly! Enjoy!

For more on the series, to see former episodes, or to sign up for the mailing list and thus be alerted to future uploads, visit The Midnight Archive website by clicking here. You can also "like" it on Facebook--and be alerted in this way--by clicking here. You can find out more about the amazing work of Sigrid Sarda by clicking here.

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The Museum of Everything is Coming to New York City!




Some of you might remember some not so distant blog posts about the amazing Museum of Everything exhibition in London last year. Well, for those of you who missed that mind-bending spectacle, I have some great news: The Museum of Everything is coming to town, to join in on the festivities of The Outsider Art Fair.

Full details--taken from their newsletter--follow; hope very much to see you at one of these great events!

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
THE SHOP OF EVERYTHING
AT THE OUTSIDER ART FAIR
26TH – 29TH JANUARY 2012
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Touching down at the Outsider Art Fair is The Shop of Everything, a glamorous boutique selling limited edition books, prints & merchandise created by The Museum of Everything & its artists.

The Shop of Everything will be open for business from the 26th to 29th January, with lithograph prints by George Widener, William Scott & Sir Peter Blake, designer dresses by Clements Ribeiro in collaboration with Atelier der Villa & Creative Growth, four hand-crafted volumes from the museum's European shows, not to mention travel-bags, homeware, casual attire, creative stationary, all discounted for this first foray into the Americas.

Please do not miss this spectacular opportunity to buy a few bits & bobs, shake a few hands & see a few wonderful things. Remember, what we got at The Shop of Everything ain’t available anywhere else ... & here’s another good reason why you should come:

The Outsider Art Fair is where many first discovered the great non-traditional artists of the 20th Century. Yet can this essential creativity still be dismissed as outsider art? These artists are part of our legacy, the form the aesthetic fabric of our universe, they must be celebrated & included, not denigrated & denied. Death to outsider art! Long live the outsiders!

The Museum of Everything
January 2012

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
SCREENING: IS IT ART?
2PM ON FRIDAY 27TH JAN
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

In September & October 2011, The Museum of Everything opened Exhibition #4 at Selfridges of London - the first major survey of work from studios for self-taught artists with learning & other disabilities, & a retrospective of American artist, Judith Scott.

Over 100,000 visitors attended the show & its artists were featured throughout the media. During the Frieze Art Fair 2011, Intelligence Squared hosted a debate at The Museum of Everything with some of the leading artists, thinkers & curators in Britain: Chris Dercon, director of Tate Modern; Ralph Rugoff, director of the Hayward Gallery; artists Antony Gormley & Alice Anderson; Tom di Maria, director of Creative Growth; Roger Cardinal, art historian & creator of the term "outsider art" & Jon Snow, Britain's leading television interviewer & host of Channel 4 News.

The question presented to the panel was: if someone creates work which we call a work of art, yet that same person cannot conceive of it as a work of art, then what is it - art or something else? Find out what they said in the premiere of the film Is It Art?, screening exclusively at the Outsider Art Fair.

Intelligence Squared presents Is It Art?
(60 mins) 2011

2:00pm on Friday 27th January 2012
Outsider Art Fair

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
THE FILMS OF EVERYTHING
5:30PM ON FRIDAY 27TH JAN
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Narrated live by James Brett, founder of The Museum of Everything, The Films of Everything present an illustrated history of the museum, from its critically heralded opening at the Frieze Art Fair 2009, right up to its most recent installation at Selfridges of London.

Included in the talk will be films recording the museum’s projects at Tate Modern and with Sir Peter Blake, as well as those featured in Exhibition #4, revealing self-taught artists in studios across Europe, plus the BBC2 segment on celebrated American artist Judith Scott.

The films & talk will be followed by a Q+A discussion on the museum's growing visibility on the international stage, as well as projects in African, Russian and Middle Eastern pipelines.

The Films of Everything
(90 mins) 2009-11
Premiere Screening & Talk

5:30pm on Friday 27th January 2012
Outsider Art Fair

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
COLLECTING OBSESSION
6PM ON SATURDAY 28TH JAN
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Find out what it takes to be an accumulator of accumulations, as leading European collectors Bruno Decharme of abcd Paris & James Brett of The Museum of Everything share war stories with American collector Lawrence Benenson & describe the ins & outs of amassing work by some of the overlooked creators in the history of modern art.

Moderated by art historian & curator Valérie Rousseau, the talk will take the form of a discussion panel & might degenerate into a wrestling match.

Collecting Obsession
Discussion Panel

6:00pm on Saturday 28th January 2012
Outsider Art Fair

More can be found here and here.

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Breaking Benjamin – Without You Video [Pathology] – Video

13-12-2009 12:46 Search for the answers I knew all along I lost myself, we all fall down Never the wiser of what I've become Alone I stand a broken man All I have is one last chance I wont turn my back on you Take my hand drag me down If you fall then I will too And I can't save what's left of you Say something new I have nothing left I can't face the dark without you There's nothing left to lose The fighting never ends I can't face the dark without you Follow me under and pull me apart I understand there's nothing left Pain so familiar and close to the heart No more, no last I wont forget Come back down save your self I can't find my way to you And I can't bare to face the truth Say something new I have nothing left I can't face the dark without you There's nothing left to lose The fighting never ends I can't face the dark without you I wanted to forget I'm trying to forget Dont leave me here again I'm with you forever, the end Say something new I have nothing left I can't face the dark without you There's nothing left to lose The fighting never ends I can't face the dark without you Holding the hand that hold's me down I forgive, forget you, the end Holding the hand that hold's me down I forgive you, forget you, the end

Continue reading here:
Breaking Benjamin - Without You Video [Pathology] - Video

MW3 30 – 1 FFA – Rant about Biology – Video

10-01-2012 11:52 Random video is random 🙂 Facebook: http://www.facebook.com Twitter: twitter.com Click this link to go to the CoDKarnage channel: http://www.youtube.com MW3 Random Weapons Gameplays http://www.youtube.com MW3: Live Gameplays http://www.youtube.com MW3: Team Throwing Knife http://www.youtube.com MW3: Throwing Knife Tutorials http://www.youtube.com MW3 Short

Read more:
MW3 30 - 1 FFA - Rant about Biology - Video

HGH therapy – Video

05-12-2011 08:43 HGH therapy - link to online store rxdrughost.com Human Growth Hormone 250mg Certified Natural HGH is a revolutionary new Human Growth Hormone supplement. Each bottle contains 60 capsules, filled with only the finest all-natural pharmaceutical grade ingredients. The highest quality of Streroids...

Originally posted here:
HGH therapy - Video

Drew Berry: Animations of unseeable biology – Video

12-01-2012 10:08 http://www.ted.com We have no ways to directly observe molecules and what they do -- Drew Berry wants to change that. At TEDxSydney he shows his scientifically accurate (and entertaining!) animations that help researchers see unseeable processes within our own cells.TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes. Featured speakers have included Al Gore on climate change, Philippe Starck on design, Jill Bolte Taylor on observing her own stroke, Nicholas Negroponte on One Laptop per Child, Jane Goodall on chimpanzees, Bill Gates on malaria and mosquitoes, Pattie Maes on the "Sixth Sense" wearable tech, and "Lost" producer JJ Abrams on the allure of mystery.

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Drew Berry: Animations of unseeable biology - Video

Adult Stem Cell Treatments for COPD -Real patient results, USA Stem Cells- Shirlen M. Testimonial – Video

11-01-2012 23:04 Real patient testimonials for USA Stem Cells. Adult stem cell therapy for COPD, Emphysema, and Pulmonary fibrosis. If you would like more information please call us Toll Free at 877-578-7908.

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Adult Stem Cell Treatments for COPD -Real patient results, USA Stem Cells- Shirlen M. Testimonial - Video