Daily Archives: April 20, 2014

"Money DNA" Melanie Benson Strick Intimate Conversations LIVE @AllanaPratt – Video

Posted: April 20, 2014 at 4:43 pm


"Money DNA" Melanie Benson Strick Intimate Conversations LIVE @AllanaPratt
http://www.IntimateConversationsLIVE.com OMG how much do I love Melanie Benson Strick??? She #39;s so wise, vulnerable, conscious, human, empowering... and what ...

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The Universe, Source, Dimensions, DNA, Meditation is Key, The Self – Video

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The Universe, Source, Dimensions, DNA, Meditation is Key, The Self
Just meditate and stay in tune with your true self and not the egoistic self, that would be problematic.

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Forced DNA Harvesting/Cheek Swabs @ LA Vehicle Checkpoints – Video

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Forced DNA Harvesting/Cheek Swabs @ LA Vehicle Checkpoints

By: Micheal Norton

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DNA 'switches' separate Neanderthals from modern humans: study

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NEW YORK

How can creatures as different in body and mind as present-day humans and their extinct Neanderthal cousins be 99.84 percent identical genetically?

Four years after scientists discovered that the two species' genomes differ by a fraction of a percent, geneticists said on Thursday they have an explanation: the cellular equivalent of "on"/"off" switches that determine whether DNA is activated or not.

Hundreds of Neanderthals' genes were turned off while the identical genes in today's humans are turned on, the international team announced in a paper published online in Science. They also found that hundreds of other genes were turned on in Neanderthals, but are off in people living today.

Among the hundreds: genes that control the shape of limbs and the function of the brain, traits where modern humans and Neanderthals differ most.

"People are fundamentally interested in what makes us human, in what makes us different from Neanderthals," said Sarah Tishkoff, an expert in human evolution at the University of Pennsylvania, who was not involved in the new study. Discovering the differences in gene activation is "an amazing technical feat," she said, and goes a long way to answering that riddle.

The discovery also underlines the power of those on/off patterns. Together, they add up to what is called the human epigenome, to distinguish it from the human genome. The genome is the sequence of 3 billion molecules that constitute all of a person's DNA while the epigenome is which bits of DNA are turned on or off even as the molecular sequence remains unchanged.

In the last few years, research on the epigenome has shed light on how gene silencing leads to cancer, for instance, and how identical twins with identical DNA sequences can be very different. The epigenome exerts such powerful effects that it is often called the "second genetic code."

Now it has offered clues to what makes modern humans distinct.

Genes for strong limbs

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The ilk of human kindness: Older women with gumption score high on compassion

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Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine report that older women, plucky individuals and those who have suffered a recent major loss are more likely to be compassionate toward strangers than other older adults.

The study is published in this months issue of the International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry.

Because compassionate behaviors are associated with better health and well-being as we age, the research findings offer insights into ways to improve the outcomes of individuals whose deficits in compassion put them at risk for becoming lonely and isolated later in life.

We are interested in anything that can help older people age more successfully, said Lisa Eyler, PhD, a professor of psychiatry and co-author. We know that social connections are important to health and well-being, and we know that people who want to be kind to others garner greater social support. If we can foster compassion in people, we can improve their health and well-being, and maybe even longevity.

The study, based on a survey of 1,006 randomly selected adults in San Diego County, aged 50 and over, with a mean age of 77, identified three factors that were predictive of a persons self-reported compassion: gender, recent suffering and high mental resiliency.

Women, independent of their age, income, education, race, marital status or mental health status, scored higher on the compassion test, on average, than men. Higher levels of compassion were also observed among both men and women who had walked a mile in another persons shoes and experienced a personal loss, such as a death in the family or illness, in the last year.

Those who reported higher confidence in their ability to bounce back from hard times also reported more empathy toward strangers and joy from helping those in need.

What is exciting is that we are identifying aspects of successful aging that we can foster in both men and women, said co-author Dilip Jeste, MD, Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry and Neurosciences, and director of the Sam and Rose Stein Institute for Research on Aging. Mental resiliency can be developed through meditation, mindfulness and stress reduction practices. We can also teach people that the silver lining to adversity is an opportunity for personal growth.

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The above story is based on materials provided by University of California, San Diego Health Sciences. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.

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The ilk of human kindness: Older women with gumption score high on compassion

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Baby Eczema Causes – Video

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Baby Eczema Causes
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Eczema in Infants and How to Beat It – Video

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Eczema in Infants and How to Beat It
http://www.vanisheczema.net Eczema treatment is necessary for anyone prone to the condition. http://www.vanisheczema.net If you do not know, eczema is a resu...

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Computational method dramatically speeds up estimates of gene expression

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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

20-Apr-2014

Contact: Byron Spice bspice@cs.cmu.edu 412-268-9068 Carnegie Mellon University

PITTSBURGHWith gene expression analysis growing in importance for both basic researchers and medical practitioners, researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Maryland have developed a new computational method that dramatically speeds up estimates of gene activity from RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) data.

With the new method, dubbed Sailfish after the famously speedy fish, estimates of gene expression that previously took many hours can be completed in a few minutes, with accuracy that equals or exceeds previous methods. The researchers' report on their new method is being published online April 20 by the journal Nature Biotechnology.

Gigantic repositories of RNA-seq data now exist, making it possible to re-analyze experiments in light of new discoveries. "But 15 hours a pop really starts to add up, particularly if you want to look at 100 experiments," said Carl Kingsford, an associate professor in CMU's Lane Center for Computational Biology. "With Sailfish, we can give researchers everything they got from previous methods, but faster."

Though an organism's genetic makeup is static, the activity of individual genes varies greatly over time, making gene expression an important factor in understanding how organisms work and what occurs during disease processes. Gene activity can't be measured directly, but can be inferred by monitoring RNA, the molecules that carry information from the genes for producing proteins and other cellular activities. RNA-seq is a leading method for producing these snapshots of gene expression; in genomic medicine, it has proven particularly useful in analyzing certain cancers.

The RNA-seq process results in short sequences of RNA, called "reads." In previous methods, the RNA molecules from which they originated could be identified and measured only by painstakingly mapping these reads to their original positions in the larger molecules.

But Kingsford, working with Rob Patro, a post-doctoral researcher in the Lane Center, and Stephen M. Mount, an associate professor in Maryland's Department of Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics and its Center for Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, found that the time-consuming mapping step could be eliminated. Instead, they found they could allocate parts of the reads to different types of RNA molecules, much as if each read acted as several votes for one molecule or another.

Without the mapping step, Sailfish can complete its RNA analysis 20-30 times faster than previous methods.

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ASMR Unnecessary Censorship (Not Relaxing?) – Video

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ASMR Unnecessary Censorship (Not Relaxing?)
Sometimes you really gotta pay attention to what ASMRtists are saying 🙂 In order of appearance: Heather Feather: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2eddeJoyB...

By: WhisperedSynths ASMR

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Egypt's censorship head resigns in film spat

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CAIRO - The head of Egypt's censorship board has resigned after the country's prime minister overruled his decision to allow a film starring a sultry Lebanese singer to be shown.

The film, titled "Roh's Sweetness," had already been in theaters for over a week. It tells the story of a married woman whose husband is abroad and lives with a relative in a poor neighborhood where she becomes an object of desire and sexual obsession for men.

Ahmed Awad, undersecretary to the culture minister and head of the censorship authority, told The Associated Press on Saturday that he had submitted his resignation Thursday morning in response to Prime Minister Ibrahim Mahlab's decision to stop the film from being shown. The censorship board is meant to be an independent body that gives the final say on whether a movie can be seen by Egyptian audiences.

"Of course I'm not happy with what happened," Awad said. "I did this out of respect for myself."

Awad said he had yet to receive a response to his resignation from the government.

Mahlab said he stopped the film from being shown in response to calls from the National Council for Motherhood and Childhood and "to preserve the morals of our children." Lebanese sex symbol Haifa Wehbe plays the lead character in the film and has a young boy infatuated with her. Also in the film, her character is raped.

Mahlab convened a meeting of prominent and artists Saturday, but did not change his position on the film.

In a statement, Mahlab said the government continues to value the fine arts and creativity in all its forms, "but there is a difference between art and the infringement upon values."

In a column in Saturday's edition of the independent newspaper Al-Shorouq, film critic Kamal Ramzy wrote that the prime minister's concern is misplaced given the many economic and social issues Egypt is currently facing.

Ramzy wrote that Egypt's leaders have not yet learned from their history with censorship, where political figures have in the past focused on film censorship while ignoring problems of corruption and governance.

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