Monthly Archives: February 2015

Little Mix DNA Unboxing – Video

Posted: February 13, 2015 at 2:51 pm


Little Mix DNA Unboxing
D D D D NA !!!!!!

By: Jmjohn Jmjohn

Here is the original post:
Little Mix DNA Unboxing - Video

Posted in DNA | Comments Off on Little Mix DNA Unboxing – Video

Another Quad DNA Fail – Video

Posted: at 2:51 pm


Another Quad DNA Fail
My best gameplay? Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare https://store.sonyentertainmentnetwork.com/#!/tid=CUSA00803_00.

By: Kryptik Rican

Visit link:
Another Quad DNA Fail - Video

Posted in DNA | Comments Off on Another Quad DNA Fail – Video

my fastest DNA bomb – Video

Posted: at 2:51 pm


my fastest DNA bomb
This would have been my fastest DNA bomb if I did not fail. Thanks for watching, enjoy.

By: babeenhacked

Read this article:
my fastest DNA bomb - Video

Posted in DNA | Comments Off on my fastest DNA bomb – Video

This DNA test will find your perfect match

Posted: at 2:50 pm

Instant Chemistry is a new test that helps match singles, and assess couples' likelihood of staying together for the long haul, by analyzing the DNA from your saliva.

Here's how it works for couples who want to put their romance to the test: You and your partner order the kit, spit into your respective tubes and mail them in. There's also an online personality test to take. Then, just sit back and wait for your compatibility score based on physical, emotional and psychological factors.

Back in the lab, Instant Chemistry's team of scientists is looking at genes associated with your immune system and emotional processing. It's all based on recent studies that examine the correlation between partners' immune systems and their sexual satisfaction, level of attraction, fidelity, fertility and children's health.

Instant Chemistry's scores are based on the idea that the less similar a couple's immune systems, the better their relationship may fare. The test also considers research on the serotonin transporter gene, which looks at the relationship between emotional behavior and changes in marital satisfaction over time.

There are two versions of this gene. The long version may help you maintain a more level head in emotional situations, while the short version means you're more likely to overreact. Research shows that when both partners have the short version, couple's are more likely to experience a decrease in relationship satisfaction over time.

Related: Matchmakers predict the future of love

"It's kind of like science fiction almost," said Jonathan Kirshenbaum, 33, who took the test with his then-girlfriend, now-fiance, Danielle Tennenhouse, 30.

"People can cheat on personality tests. You can't cheat on a genetic test," said Kirshenbaum. He and his wife-to-be said their high score, in the 90% region, helped reinforce what they already knew about their then year-long relationship. Those who don't score as high receive relationship advice from clinical psychologists on the Instant Chemistry advisory board.

Since launching in July 2014, Instant Chemistry has sold 300 DNA kits. Fifty couples have taken the test, and most have received compatibility scores between 60% and 80%.

A similar process applies for those still looking for love and willing to spill their DNA to find it. For Instant Chemistry's matchmaking effort, they've partnered with the new online dating site SingldOut, which connects busy professionals on LinkedIn (LNKD, Tech30).

Continued here:
This DNA test will find your perfect match

Posted in DNA | Comments Off on This DNA test will find your perfect match

Genome Trakr Is A Food Safety And Traceability Game Changer

Posted: at 2:50 pm

By Laurel Maloy, contributing writer, Food Online

The FDAs Technology Transfer program is responsible for ensuring that the scientific and technological discoveries made by government scientists are made available to private enterprise. According to the FDAs Alice Welch, Ph.D., FDA scientists and researchers have been at the forefront of about 20 patentable inventions, annually, over the last few years. Technology Transfer also enables the FDA to collaborate with organizations and researchers, both outside and inside the governments purview, in order to advance its regulatory mission. Partnerships are built in order to advance innovations that will ultimately protect the health of people and animals.

The Genome Trakr collaboration is one such example of forward-thinking, advanced science at work to trace foodborne pathogens and ensure the safest possible food supply. The Genome Trakr data base will make it possible to trace a foodborne pathogen back to its source more quickly and with more accuracy than the methods currently in place. Welch predicts this pathogen detection network will transform food safety.

Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS) has been hovering at the edge of food safety for a while. Excitement has built within the scientific community as the potential for practical, worldwide application has been realized. A year ago, European research suggested that DNA Barcoding might be the future of food traceability. There was actually no question as to its ability to do so; the questions regarding it were more along the lines of what the costs would be and if it would be a truly cost-effective solution.

Traceability, in an ever-expanding food supply chain, has become the red herring of food safety. There have been myriad examples of how traceability could have and will improve response time to foodborne illness outbreaks. This topic, out of necessity, has become a primary focus. It has been stressed by the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) and has been the behind-the-scene buzzword every time a foodborne illness outbreak occurs.

Consumers are demanding to know where and when their food comes from this thirst for knowledge has sparked a huge debate over Country of Origin (COOL) labeling. Traceability has been the topic of hundreds of news articles regarding food safety and has resulted in surprising collaborations. Universities, health agencies, and the government have been waging a war against foodborne illnesses with numerous battles having been won. The war is still far from over, but the good guys are making significant headway.

Genome Trakr is being developed through the FDAs Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition (CFSAN), the Office of Regulatory Affairs (ORA) and a host of other federal and state public health laboratories. Its goal is to isolate individual pathogens collected from environmental and food samples, and then compare them to pathogens collected from ill patients. This database will not only more quickly and accurately provide an assessment for the size and location of a foodborne outbreak the process can potentially identify the single ingredient in a particular recipe that is causing the illnesses. This makes it possible to move more expediently to remove the contaminated food from commerce, meaning fewer illnesses, hospitalizations, and deaths.

Welch talks about the older testing methods and their limitations. She explains that the evolution of pathogens occurs so quickly that older methods cannot identify the unique genetic signatures required for effective traceability. As the Genome Trakr database grows, it will be possible to say if a particular Salmonella strain is from the East or West Coast, or from Germany, for instance. As pathogen samples are collected, the entire genome sequence is uploaded to the database maintained at the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI). Since its inception in February of 2012, genome sequences have been added for more than 11,000 individual isolates, with impressive results. In early 2014, Genome Trakr was used to match food and environmental samples with human biological samples, confirming the source of a Listeria outbreak. It is easy to imagine that the Jensen Farms Listeria outbreak that killed 29 in 2011 could have been halted even faster than it was. In one of the fastest investigations ever, it only took 10 days from the first case to trace back to Jensen Farms, considered, at the time, to be a record.

Last fall, the FDAs WGS project, in collaboration with CFSAN, NCBI, and the Association of Public Health Laboratories (APHL), won the 2014 Health and Human Services (HHS) Innovates award competition. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has produced a video called, Whole Genome Sequencing: The Future of Food Safety, which details real-time surveillance of Listeriosis utilizing WGS. This is an exciting time for food safety. This technology and its potential to save lives is one of the greatest innovations the food-processing and manufacturing industry has ever seen.

Read more:
Genome Trakr Is A Food Safety And Traceability Game Changer

Posted in Genome | Comments Off on Genome Trakr Is A Food Safety And Traceability Game Changer

Secular Science Episode 1 – Methuselah Genes & Mail Order Muscles – Video

Posted: at 2:50 pm


Secular Science Episode 1 - Methuselah Genes Mail Order Muscles
The inaugural episode of Secular Science Our new science show coming to you every Tuesday. This week we cover new developments in fruit flies with implicatio...

By: SecularTv

Originally posted here:
Secular Science Episode 1 - Methuselah Genes & Mail Order Muscles - Video

Posted in Human Longevity | Comments Off on Secular Science Episode 1 – Methuselah Genes & Mail Order Muscles – Video

Revitol Eczema Cream Reviews | Eczema Dermatitis Rash Treatment – Video

Posted: at 2:50 pm


Revitol Eczema Cream Reviews | Eczema Dermatitis Rash Treatment
Revitol Eczema Cream Reviews | Eczema Dermatitis Rash Treatment http://www.dermatitiseczemacream.net Revitol Eczema Cream Reviews | Eczema Dermatitis Rash Tr...

By: Eczema Dermatitis Rash Treatment

Read more here:
Revitol Eczema Cream Reviews | Eczema Dermatitis Rash Treatment - Video

Posted in Eczema | Comments Off on Revitol Eczema Cream Reviews | Eczema Dermatitis Rash Treatment – Video

Psoriasis Free For Life..Discover the Truth, Review, Discounts – Video

Posted: at 2:49 pm


Psoriasis Free For Life..Discover the Truth, Review, Discounts
http://coloncleanse.digestivescience.com/ct/155172.

By: Perfect PattyShaperz

Read more:
Psoriasis Free For Life..Discover the Truth, Review, Discounts - Video

Posted in Psoriasis | Comments Off on Psoriasis Free For Life..Discover the Truth, Review, Discounts – Video

Google-style ranking used to describe gene connectivity

Posted: at 2:49 pm

Coining the term "Gene Rank" (GR), Dartmouth's Norris Cotton Cancer Center investigator Eugene Demidenko, PhD, captured and described a new characterization of gene connectivity in "Microarray Enriched Gene Rank," published in BioData Mining. The effective computer algorithm can be used to compare tissues across or within organisms at great speed with a simple laptop computer.

"This paper introduces a new bioinformatics concept called Gene Rank (GR)," explained Demidenko. "GR is computed based on gene expression data and reflects how well a particular gene is connected to other genes. Our GR is built along the lines of PageRank used by Google to rank and display web pages upon key word search."

As a new scientific concept, GR looks at genetic networks from a different angle that may lead to new biological insights and formulation of new scientific hypothesis with important clinical applications. Many other studies in bioinformatics have tested their concepts using computer simulation. Demidenko tested GR on various de novo studies, resulting in plausible biological findings. For example, one series tested the complexity of genes in four stages of the development of rice, showing that it gradually increased over time. A subsequent test of Drosophila flies showed their genes to be more complex than rice, but less complex than human genes. These are expected findings, and meeting biological expectations is respected validation of concept.

Demidenko applied the GR concept to several cancer-related gene expression data sets, and discovered that disconnected genes in tumors are cancer associated. "It's a provocative statement, but we can say that cancer genes are lonely killers," said Demidenko. Further investigation revealed that GR of the same gene changes during cancer development, and that this can be used for disease prognosis as well as early cancer detection.

"The devised computer algorithm allows the computation of GR for 50 thousand genes and 500 samples within just a few minutes on a personal computer," said Demidenko. "Our GR can be used by researchers on a daily basis to investigate and characterize the dynamic complexity of living bodies. In particular, this will be helpful to characterize malignant tumors."

Future work for Demidenko includes applying the new GR to other data sets to determine how gene connectivity changes in the course of a tumor's development, and how gene connectivity varies across tumors.

Eugene Demidenko, PhD is professor of the recently-established department of Biomedical Data Science at Dartmouth's Geisel School of Medicine, and an adjunct professor at both the Thayer School of Engineering and the Department of Mathematics at Dartmouth College. His work in cancer is facilitated by Dartmouth's Norris Cotton Cancer Center. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grants P20RR024475 and P20GM103534 with additional support from Dr. Jason Moore, director of Dartmouth's Institute for Quantitative Biological Sciences.

Story Source:

The above story is based on materials provided by Norris Cotton Cancer Center Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.

See the article here:
Google-style ranking used to describe gene connectivity

Posted in Gene Medicine | Comments Off on Google-style ranking used to describe gene connectivity

Loser Laowai on Censorship in China Part 1 – Video

Posted: at 2:49 pm


Loser Laowai on Censorship in China Part 1
Censorship is an easy business for the Chinese government. This lecture series discusses the intricacies of dealing with the great and all powerful green dam...

By: Loser Laowai in China

Original post:
Loser Laowai on Censorship in China Part 1 - Video

Posted in Censorship | Comments Off on Loser Laowai on Censorship in China Part 1 – Video