বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৮ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Stretchable, serpentine lithium-ion battery works at three times its usual size

Stretchable, serpentine lithiumion battery works at three times its size

While we've seen more than a few flexible batteries in our day, they're not usually that great at withstanding tugs and pulls. A team-up between Northwestern University and the University of Illinois could give lithium-ion batteries that extreme elasticity with few of the drawbacks you'd expect. To make a stretchable battery that still maintains a typical density, researchers built electrode interconnects from serpentine metal wires that have even more wavy wires inside; the wires don't require much space in normal use, but will unfurl in an ordered sequence as they're pulled to their limits. The result is a prototype battery that can expand to three times its normal size, but can still last for eight to nine hours. It could also charge wirelessly, and thus would be wearable under the skin as well as over -- imagine fully powered implants where an external battery is impractical or unsightly. There's no word yet on whether there will be refined versions coming to real-world products, but we hope any developments arrive quickly enough to give stretchable electronics a viable power source.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Via: ScienceDaily

Source: Nature

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/27/stretchable-serpentine-lithium-ion-battery-works-at-3x-size/

Zero Dark Thirty Academy Awards 2013 Django Unchained jennifer hudson jennifer garner jennifer garner daytona 500

বুধবার, ২৭ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Arkansas Abortion Bill Vetoed By Governor Mike Beebe

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. ? Democratic Gov. Mike Beebe on Tuesday vetoed a ban on most abortions in Arkansas at 20 weeks into a pregnancy, setting up an override fight with a Republican-controlled Legislature that has been pushing for more restrictions on the procedure.

Beebe said he vetoed the ban, which is based on the disputed belief that a fetus can feel pain at 20 weeks, because it runs afoul of the U.S. Supreme Court's 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that legalized abortion until the point where fetuses can survive outside the womb, usually at 22 to 24 weeks. The Republican sponsor of the measure said he'll seek to override Beebe's veto.

"Because it would impose a ban on a woman's right to choose an elective, nontherapeutic abortion before viability, House Bill 1037, if it became law, would squarely contradict Supreme Court precedent," Beebe said in his veto letter. "When I was sworn in as governor I took an oath to preserve, protect and defend both the Arkansas Constitution and the Constitution of the United States. I take that oath seriously."

Beebe also cited the cost of a potential lawsuit if the state enacted the ban. The American Civil Liberties Union of Arkansas has said it would likely sue if it went into effect.

Beebe's veto comes as Arkansas lawmakers are weighing stricter legislation that would prohibit abortions at 12 weeks into a pregnancy. Beebe has said he has concerns about that legislation's constitutionality as well. That measure is expected to go before a Senate panel Wednesday.

Rep. Andy Mayberry, who sponsored the 20-week ban, said he was disappointed with Beebe's decision and would ask the House and Senate to override the governor's veto. It takes a simple majority in both chambers to override a governor's veto. Republicans hold 51 of the 100 House seats and 21 of the 35 Senate seats.

Beebe announced the decision shortly after Mayberry, R-Hensley, met with the governor and tried to alleviate his concerns about the bill.

"Apparently he and I have differing opinions on that bill," Mayberry said. "We'll enter into the next phase of the legislative process."

Seven states have enacted similar 20-week restrictions, according to the Guttmacher Institute, which tracks laws affecting women's health. A similar law in Arizona has been blocked while a federal appeals court reviews a lawsuit challenging it.

In his letter, Beebe cited concerns about the cost of a similar challenge. He wrote that Arkansas had to pay nearly $148,000 in attorneys' fees to the plaintiffs in a lawsuit challenging a 1997 late-term abortion ban that a federal appeals court overturned.

"Litigation fees and costs have increased extensively since then," Beebe wrote. "The taxpayers' exposure, should HB1037 become law, will be significantly greater."

Mayberry's bill included exemptions for rape, incest and the life of the mother. Opponents have criticized it for not including exemptions for fatal fetal conditions.

Mayberry said he was confident he would have the votes to override Beebe's veto. The House approved Mayberry's bill on an 80-10 vote last week. It had been previously approved by the Senate on a 25-7 vote.

Abortion rights advocates who had gathered at the Capitol cheered when Beebe's decision was announced.

"I am very grateful that the governor understood that it's not reasonable for the government to interfere with these very private and complex medical decisions that a woman needs to make with her doctor and with her faith and with her family," said Jill June, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of the Heartland. "The decision to end a pregnancy is one of the most complicated decisions a woman will make in her life."

The bill marks the 11th time Beebe has vetoed legislation since taking office in 2007.

Beebe, who is serving his second term, has backed some abortion restrictions, including a bill signed earlier this month that bans insurers participating in the exchange created under the federal health care law from covering most abortions. Two years ago, he signed into law a proposal placing new regulations on the clinics that offer the abortion pill and in 2009 he signed legislation that mirrors a federal law banning late-term abortions.

___

Andrew DeMillo can be reached at www.twitter.com/ademillo

Also on HuffPost:

"; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/26/arkansas-abortion-bill-vetoed_n_2767940.html

severe weather wichita brian wilson storm chasers david blaine gotye divine mercy

সোমবার, ২৫ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Taking the gamble out of DNA sequencing: How much can be learned in a large-scale experiment

Feb. 24, 2013 ? Two USC scientists have developed an algorithm that could help make DNA sequencing affordable enough for clinics -- and could be useful to researchers of all stripes.

Andrew Smith, a computational biologist at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, developed the algorithm along with USC graduate student Timothy Daley to help predict the value of sequencing more DNA, to be published in Nature Methods on February 24.

Extracting information from the DNA means deciding how much to sequence: sequencing too little and you may not get the answers you are looking for, but sequence too much and you will waste both time and money. That expensive gamble is a big part of what keeps DNA sequencing out of the hands of clinicians. But not for long, according to Smith.

"It seems likely that some clinical applications of DNA sequencing will become routine in the next five to 10 years," Smith said. "For example, diagnostic sequencing to understand the properties of a tumor will be much more effective if the right mathematical methods are in place."

The beauty of Smith and Daley's algorithm, which predicts the size and composition of an unseen population based on a small sample, lies in its broad applicability.

"This is one of those great instances where a specific challenge in our research led us to uncover a powerful algorithm that has surprisingly broad applications," Smith said.

Think of it: how often do scientists need to predict what they haven't seen based on what they have? Public health officials could use the algorithm to estimate the population of HIV positive individuals; astronomers could use it to determine how many exoplanets exist in our galaxy based on the ones they have already discovered; and biologists could use it to estimate the diversity of antibodies in an individual.

The mathematical underpinnings of the algorithm rely on a model of sampling from ecology known as capture-recapture. In this model, individuals are captured and tagged so that a recapture of the same individual will be known -- and the number of times each individual was captured can be used to make inferences about the population as a whole.

In this way scientists can estimate, for example, the number of gorillas remaining in the wild. In DNA sequencing, the individuals are the various different genomic molecules in a sample. However, the mathematical models used for counting gorillas don't work on the scale of DNA sequencing.

"The basic model has been known for decades, but the way it has been used makes it highly unstable in most applications. We took a different approach that depends on lots of computing power and seems to work best in large-scale applications like modern DNA sequencing," Daley said.

Scientists faced a similar problem in the early days of the human genome sequencing project. A mathematical solution was provided by Michael Waterman of USC, in 1988, which found widespread use. Recent advances in sequencing technology, however, require thinking differently about the mathematical properties of DNA sequencing data.

"Huge data sets required a novel approach. I'm very please it was developed here at USC," said Waterman.

This research was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health National Human Genome Research Institute (R01 HG005238 and P50 HG002790).

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Southern California, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Timothy Daley, Andrew D Smith. Predicting the molecular complexity of sequencing libraries. Nature Methods, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nmeth.2375

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/3-uOSnhnewE/130224142825.htm

punksatony phil 2012 groundhog day groundhog phil pee wee herman ketamine ground hogs day 2012 goundhog day

Firefox phones coming this summer

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) ? Mozilla, the non-profit foundation behind the popular Firefox Web browser, is getting into phones. But it's not stopping at Web browsers ? it's launching an entire phone operating system.

The Mountain View, Calif.-based foundation said Sunday that phones running Firefox OS will appear this summer, starting in Brazil, Colombia, Hungary, Mexico, Montenegro, Poland, Serbia, Spain and Venezuela.

The Firefox OS will land in a crowded environment, where many small operating systems are trying to become the "third eco-system," alongside Apple's iOS and Google's Android. Together, those two account for 91 percent of smartphone sales, according to research firm IDC.

Mozilla Foundation has an ally in phone companies, who are interested in seeing an alternative to Apple and Google, particularly one coming from a non-profit foundation. Thirteen phone companies around the world have committed to supporting Firefox phones, Mozilla said, including Sprint Nextel in the U.S., though it gave no time frame for a release. Other supporters include Telecom Italia, America Movil of Mexico and Deutsche Telekom of Germany. DT is the parent of T-Mobile USA, but plans to sell Firefox phones first in Poland.

Phone makers that plan to make Firefox phones include Huawei and ZTE of China and LG of Korea. The first devices will be inexpensive touchscreen smartphones.

All the phones will run on chips supplied by San Diego-based Qualcomm Inc., whose CEO Paul Jacobs appeared at Mozilla's press event Sunday in Barcelona, Spain, on the eve of the world's largest cellphone trade show.

The industry has seen various attempts to launch "open" smartphone operating systems, with little success. Jay Sullivan, vice president of products at Mozilla, said these failed because they were designed "by committee," with too many constituents to please. While developing and supporting the Firefox browser, Mozilla has learned to develop large-scale "open" projects effectively, he said.

He also said that putting quality third-party applications on Firefox phones will be easy, because they're based on HTML 5, an emerging standard for Web applications.

"Firefox OS has achieved something that no device software platform has previously managed - translating an industry talking shop into a huge commitment from both carriers and hardware vendors at its commercial launch," said Tony Cripps an analyst at research firm Ovum. "Neither Android nor Symbian ? the closest benchmarks in terms of broad industry sponsorship that we've previously seen ? have rallied the level of support that Firefox OS has achieved so early in its development."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/firefox-phones-coming-summer-172308147--finance.html

Mayan End Of The World Olivia Black the voice World Ending 2012 gossip girl Ink Master Jenni Rivera Funeral

রবিবার, ২৪ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Internet Marketing Courses For A Comprehensive Knowledge On ...

Each business sector it into Internet marketing you need precise training for its Internet business and learn expert techniques. At aceinternetmarketing we offer a range of Internet marketing course in cooperation with the college search engine.

We offer fully online courses in marketing over the Internet is coming to the personal rate of students. We provide Internet marketing courses are of two types:

The course instructor-led
Course study

Our Internet marketing course is led to a tutor program certification to be a tutor assigned classroom assignments where, record your progress, give feedbacks. After completing the course successfully the teacher give you formal certification. Internet marketing course of study students have to do all the tasks and assignments. No certificate is issued to course study.

Earn money on the Internet need accurate information about Internet business. Internet marketing courses we offer are comprehensive and systematic learning that will help you to develop knowledge on e-marketing to boost your online business. The course includes all the need to know to the Internet marketing strategies. All our course materials are designed to match any beginner or advanced minted. Students should make a choice of learning material as needed.

On aceinternetmarketing you can find bmlaa on the Internet marketing course

Search engine optimization

Pay per click search engine advertising

Web site copywriting

Web site usability

Research keywords link building course, all the above courses are available online, students can complete the course in a time frame that suits them. Our latest Internet marketing course you will proof the knowledge obtained will be including online marketing. Our certification pathways are packaged course certificates for people who want to grab a quick knowledge in search engine.

Internet marketing courses are developed to help any online business, regardless of size. With the available course material you can tips drive traffic to your site and turn visitors into customers in the end.

Category: Web Tutor

Posts related to Internet Marketing Courses For A Comprehensive Knowledge On Online Business

Source: http://internettutor.biz/internet-marketing-courses-for-a-comprehensive-knowledge-on-online-business.html

harrison barnes brett ratner stevie nicks anchorman capybara duggars peter facinelli

শনিবার, ২৩ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Egypt's President calls parliament elections in April

Egyptian President Mohammed Mursi has announced the first post-constitution parliamentary elections to be held from April in an attempt to douse the mounting anti-government protests and continued political impasse.

Mursi, in a decree last night, announced that the vote will take place in four stages due to a shortage of election supervisors. The new parliament will convene on July 6.

The election process will take place in four stages, April 27-28, May 15-16 and June 2-3 and 19-20, according to the official decree released by the president's spokesman, Yassir Ali. Runoffs will be held one week after each stage.

More stages raise the possibility of more politically charged violence, particularly in the province of Port Said, the CNN reported.

In the past year, violent clashes in the coastal province along the Suez Canal have highlighted the longstanding resentment residents there feel towards Cairo. Both Port Said and Cairo are included in the first round of voting.

Mursi and his Muslim Brotherhood movement hope the election will put an end to increasingly vocal opposition and street protests, experts said.

The Islamist-dominated parliament was dissolved last June after judges ruled election laws were unconstitutional.

Earlier, the upper house of parliament, the Shura Council, agreed to amend the elections law based on changes proposed by the High Constitution Court.

The election call comes at time of deep political crisis which has divided the country into two groups, one supporting political Islamists and another opposing it.

The secular opposition represented in the National Salvation Front has decided to boycott the elections as long as their preconditions are not met. The preconditions include guarantees for transparency of elections.

These will be the first elections since Egypt's [ Images ] highest court dissolved the lower house of parliament, and it will be the first full parliament in Mursi's presidency. The upper house, the Shura Council, has continued to meet.

A number of opposition groups staged anti-government rallies on Friday.

The demands of the protesters include, "holding President Mursi and the Muslim Brotherhood to account for their crimes against Egyptians, the dismissal of the Mursi-appointed prosecutor-general, and the immediate release of detained political activists," a statement released by the opposition protesters said.

? Copyright 2013 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.

Source: http://www.rediff.com/news/report/egypt-s-president-calls-parliament-elections-in-april/20130222.htm

sofia vergara American Horror Story Patti Page anonymous texas chainsaw massacre nfl playoffs crystal harris

শুক্রবার, ২২ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

PFT: Cowboys not planning to draft QB early

350x-1Getty Images

The Dallas Cowboys have been interested for months in extending the contract of franchise quarterback Tony Romo.? And after months of dragging their feet, it appears that Romo?s camp at least is willing to listen.

Cowboys executive V.P. Stephen Jones tells 105.3 The Fan in Dallas that talks aimed at adding years to Romo?s deal ? and in turn reducing his $16.8 million cap number for 2013 ? have commenced.

?We have a great quarterback and he deserves to be paid,?? Jones said.? ?We have a good quarterback and we want to reward him.? He?s in the last year of a contract and our goal is to not let the quarterback run out of contract.??

For now, Jones characterizes the talks as ?informal.?? And in the hopes of making them more formal, Jones appears to be trying to lay the salary-cap guilt trip on Romo.

?I think on this particular situation with Tony is we think we have a great quarterback and we want him to be our quarterback here for the next four to five years,? Jones said.? ?When you have a good one and you?re fortunate enough to have a good one, then he?s going to take up the biggest part of your cap space, so you have to be partners with one another and you have to do things.? No one wants to win more, no one wants to have success more than Tony.? He knows in order to do that we have to manage our cap and he plays a big part in that because the percentage of the cap that he takes.??

Romo?s current deal can?t be ?restructured? because there?s only one year left on it.? The cap number will drop only if the parties extend the deal to cover future years.? But Romo has no reason to extend the contract without receiving a large chunk of cash.

When the Cowboys wanted to talk contract during the 2012 season, Romo?s reps resisted, sensing that the team simply wanted to buy low.? And the Cowboys may still try to low ball Romo, whose leverage increases with the jump in his cap number.

If Romo is willing to shoulder the risk of injury, he can ride out the final year of his deal, forcing the Cowboys to use the franchise tag in 2014.? Based on his 2013 cap number, it would cost the Cowboys $20.16 million to keep him next season.

For that reason, Romo should be seeking a minimum guaranteed payment of $38.96 million, which is the sum of what he?ll make over the next two seasons.

Adding a third season to that package, and Romo?s pay for 2015 under the franchise tag would be $24.192 million.? That pushes his three-year haul to more than $63 million.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/02/20/cowboys-arent-thinking-about-a-qb-early-in-draft/related/

Webb Simpson Fathers Day Quotes Stevie J mothers day 2012 cinco de mayo osama bin laden death spinal muscular atrophy

There Is Such Thing As a Flipboard for Porn and It's Called Faploid (NSFW)

If you ever used Flipboard and wished there was a version just for porn, you're in luck. Faploid is what you have been waiting for. It's a service that'll give you personalized pornos based on your particular tastes. No more scouring the net, what you like will come straight to you! More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/JGYuFRNu5sc/there-is-such-thing-as-a-flipboard-for-porn-and-its-called-faploid-nsfw

r. kelly macular degeneration whitney houston funeral judi dench bobby brown leaves funeral donnie mcclurkin whitney houston funeral live stream

Twin bombings kill 12, wound more in south India

HYDERABAD, India (AP) -- A pair of bombs exploded in a crowded shopping area in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad, killing at least 13 people and wounding scores of others in the worst bombing in the country in more than a year.

The blasts occurred about two minutes apart at around 7 p.m. Thursday outside a movie theater and a bus station, police said. Storefronts were shattered, motorcycles were covered in debris, and food and plates from a roadside restaurant were scattered on the ground near a tangle of dead bodies. Passersby rushed the wounded out of the area.

"This is a dastardly attack, the guilty will not go unpunished," Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said. He appealed to the public to remain calm.

The bombs were attached to two bicycles about 150 meters (500 feet) apart in Dilsukh Nagar district, Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde told reporters in New Delhi. The district is a usually crowded shopping area near a residential neighborhood.

When asked if the government had any suspects, Shinde responded: "We have to investigate."

India has been in a state of alert since Mohammed Afzal Guru, a Kashmiri, was hanged in a New Delhi jail nearly two weeks ago. Guru had been convicted of involvement in a 2001 attack on India's Parliament that killed 14 people, including five gunmen.

Many in Indian-ruled Kashmir believe Guru did not receive a fair trial, and the secrecy with which the execution was carried out fueled anger in a region where anti-India sentiment runs deep.

Andhra Pradesh state Home Minister P. Sabita Reddy said 11 people died on the spot in the two blasts and another two succumbed to their injuries in hospital on Thursday night.

She said another 78 people were injured and hospitalized in the city.

Top state police officer V. Dinesh Reddy said improvised explosive devices with nitrogen compound were used in the blasts.

Mahesh Kumar, a 21-year-old student, was heading home from a tutoring class when a bomb went off.

"I heard a huge sound and something hit me, I fell down, and somebody brought me to the hospital," said Kumar, who suffered shrapnel wounds.

Hyderabad, a city of 10 million in the state of Andhra Pradesh, is a hub of India's information technology industry and has a mixed population of Muslims and Hindus.

"This (attack) is to disturb the peaceful living of all communities in Andhra Pradesh," said Kiran Kumar Reddy, the state's chief minister.

The explosions were the first major bomb attack to hit India since a September 2011 blast outside the High Court in New Delhi killed 13 people. The government has been heavily criticized for its failure to arrest the masterminds behind previous bombings.

Officials from the National Investigation Agency and commandos of the National Security Guards arrived from New Delhi to help with the investigation in Hyderabad.

The United States, whose Secretary of State John Kerry was meeting Thursday in Washington with Indian Foreign Secretary Ranjan Mathai, condemned the attack.

"The United States stands with India in combating the scourge of terrorism and we also prepared to offer any and all assistance Indian authorities may need," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told a news briefing.

Rana Banerji, a former security official, said India remains vulnerable to such attacks because there is poor coordination between the national government and the states. Police reforms are also moving very slowly and the quality of intelligence gathering is poor, he said.

"The concept of homeland security should be made effective, on a war footing," he said.

Rajnath Singh, the president of main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, demanded a thorough probe into the blasts. His party called for a general strike in the state on Friday.

---

Associated Press writers Ashok Sharma in New Delhi and Matthew Pennington in Washington contributed to this report.

Source: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/A/AS_INDIA_EXPLOSIONS?SITE=ILBLO&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

mike wallace chicago cubs split pea soup recipe the client list yahoo.com/mail baylor april 9

সোমবার, ১৮ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

4 Reasons Your Marriage Is Susceptible To Divorce | World of ...

4 Reasons Your Marriage May Be Susceptible to Divorce This guest article from YourTango was written by Dr. Tina Schermer-Sellers.

The fire of love is a fragile and fickle flame. I often hear stories of people leaving good relationships because they have developed deep connections outside the marriage. So, how can you keep your marriage intact?

There are four, cultural elements causing marriage and love to be more fragile in these modern times. They are:

1. We marry for love.

We have been doing this for less than 100 years. Up until recent history, we married because of family loyalties, property, status, religious mandates and social tradition.

Love is a fragile thing ? it needs lots of TLC! If love is ignored, the bond in the relationship will weaken. Inside this weakness dissention, criticism and distance grows. Love is like a small flame; it needs lots of consistent time and attention to stay strong!

2. Spouses aren?t dependent on one another.

Women and men are now both able to care for themselves and their children financially and socially, leaving both sexes less likely to stay in unhappy relationships. This fact, plus the fact that many people have successfully moved on from one marriage into another life reduces the stigma of divorce.

The financial and social pressure to stay married isn?t what it used to be. People stay married because they choose each other daily, they want to choose each other daily, and they nourish their connection daily as well.

3. We live longer than we ever have.

The average age of marriage in urban areas is 26 for women and 28 for men. With a lifespan of 85-plus years, it is feasible to be married for 60-plus years. There is a great amount of change people go through over a 60-year relationship.

As a culture, do we invest any time giving people the skills they need to keep a love alive and vibrant? Do we even know what that means, what that looks like, or how to do such a thing? A couple who actively works to improve their relationship IQ weathers life?s challenges with more grace, compassion and love. As they keep growing, so does their relationship.

4. We now live a 24/7 lifestyle.

This is an entirely new social phenomenon that has never been the case before. People are working 50+ hours a week, on their communication devices all hours of the night and day, expected to be reachable and attending to multiple demands simultaneously ? the email from work, the text from a child, the conversation with a partner, the deadline that is tomorrow, the sale that ends tonight. This is impossible ? hello?? ? this is impossible to do without losing connection with those closest to you.

To nourish a meaningful, deeply attached relationship with a child, spouse or friend, to nourish love, you need focused time to be thoughtfully and solely with each other ? in the moment ? present in the now ? open heart to open heart. That is the only way. Distracted connections become weak connections and weak connections, with nothing social or internal holding them together, will in time, break. There is no magic wishing that will suffice ? they will break.

If these influences negatively affect your love life, discuss how you can bring more TLC into your relationship. Discuss how to wrap space, time and attention around you by putting in a few protective boundaries. For example, no electronics in bed or 15 minutes of quiet music, a glass of wine and a dimly lit room together before bed.

Most importantly, discuss what you miss and how to bring more of that into your busy lives, longing hearts and sacred union.

?

More marriage advice from YourTango:

Divorcing couple photo available from Shutterstock

Contributed by YourTango.com, an online magazine dedicated to love, life and relationships. From dating to marriage, parenting to empty-nest, relationship challenges to relationship success, YourTango is at the center of the conversations that are closest to our over 3 million readers' hearts. With daily contributions from our Experts, we have a little something for everyone looking to create healthier lives. We're excited to offer our contributions to the PsychCentral community, and invite you to visit us on YourTango.com.

Like this author?
Catch up on other posts by YourTango Experts (or subscribe to their feed).



????Last reviewed: By John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on 17 Feb 2013
????Published on PsychCentral.com. All rights reserved.

APA Reference
Experts, Y. (2013). 4 Reasons Your Marriage May Be Susceptible to Divorce. Psych Central. Retrieved on February 19, 2013, from http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2013/02/17/4-reasons-your-marriage-may-be-susceptible-to-divorce/

?

Source: http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2013/02/17/4-reasons-your-marriage-may-be-susceptible-to-divorce/

aldon smith friday night lights nick santino bruce arians the misfits hook troy

শনিবার, ১৬ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Nitric oxide: A little molecule's remarkable feat -- prolonging life, worm study shows

Feb. 14, 2013 ? Nitric oxide, the versatile gas that helps increase blood flow, transmit nerve signals, and regulate immune function, appears to perform one more biological feat -- prolonging the life of an organism and fortifying it against environmental stress, according to a new study.

The study reveals that a roundworm called Caenorhabditis elegans, an animal widely used in laboratory studies of aging, lives significantly longer when fed bacteria capable of manufacturing nitric oxide. The tantalizing observation points to one of the mechanisms by which the microbiome, the trillions of microbial cells inhabiting our bodies, may play a vital role in our health.

Our own nitric oxide levels decrease as we get older, a decline that may contribute to normal aging, says Evgeny Nudler, PhD, the Julie Wilson Anderson Professor of Biochemistry at NYU Langone Medical Center, who led the new study. Supplemental bacteria, he speculates, might provide a healthy boost by supplying humans with some of the missing compound.

"In worms, we now know that bacteria can use nitric oxide not only to their own advantage but also to provide their host with a beneficial response, and the same thing could be true in a human gut," says Dr. Nudler. "It may well be the case that our commensal bacteria control some of our genes, at least in the gut, to protect those cells against stress and age-related decline." Commensal bacteria provide a benefit to the organisms they colonize.

Although humans and many other organisms have the enzyme needed to produce nitric oxide, C. elegans does not. Instead, Dr. Nudler and his team report in the February 14th online issue of Cell that the worm can "hijack" the compound from the soil-dwelling Bacillus subtilis bacterium that is not only a favored food but also a common colonist within its gut. This resourcefulness, Dr. Nudler says, partially explains why worms fed B. subtilis live roughly 50 percent longer than counterparts fed Escherichia coli, which does not produce the compound.

In the new study, the average C. elegans lifespan increased by nearly 15 percent, to about two weeks, when researchers fed the worms nitric oxide-producing B. subtilis bacteria, compared to worms fed mutant B. subtilis with a deleted nitric oxide production gene. The research group also used fluorescent sensors to show that C. elegans does not make its own nitric oxide gas. When the worms were fed normal B. subtilis bacteria, however, the fluorescent signal appeared in their guts.

Fluorescent labeling and other tests also demonstrated that B. subtilis-derived nitric oxide penetrated the worms' tissues, where it activated a set of 65 genes. Some had been previously implicated in stress resistance, immune response, and increased lifespan, though others have unknown functions. Importantly, the researchers showed that two well-known regulatory proteins were essential for activating all of the genes.

"What we found is that nitric oxide gas produced in bacteria inside the worms diffuses into the worm tissue and activates a very specific set of genes acting through two master regulators, hsf-1 and daf-16, resulting in a high resistance to stress and a longer life," Dr. Nudler says. "It's striking that a small molecule produced by one organism can dramatically affect the physiology and even lifespan of another organism through direct cell signaling."

As part of nitric oxide's expansive repertoire, Dr. Nudler's lab previously showed how dangerous pathogens can exploit the molecule to fight off antibiotics. Despite its versatility, the new research suggests that nitric oxide is only one of multiple beneficial molecules produced by B. subtilis, Dr. Nudler says. His lab plans to look more closely at other potential mechanisms by which commensal bacteria can promote health and longevity, using the powerful and easily manipulated C. elegans system as a model.

The study co-authors include Ivan Gusarov, Laurent Gautier, Olga Smolentseva, and Ilya Shamovsky from the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology at NYU Langone Medical Center; and Svetlana Eremina and Alexander Mironov from the State Research Institute of Genetics and Selection of Industrial Microorganisms in Moscow, Russia.

The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Biogerontology Research Foundation, and the Dynasty Foundation.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NYU Langone Medical Center, via Newswise.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Ivan Gusarov, Laurent Gautier, Olga Smolentseva, Ilya Shamovsky, Svetlana Eremina, Alexander Mironov, Evgeny Nudler. Bacterial Nitric Oxide Extends the Lifespan of C. elegans. 14 February 2013, Cell DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2012.12.043

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/ibVgvxDP1_4/130214132623.htm

joe avezzano kanye west theraflu joey votto the masters live mega millions winner holy thursday chris stewart

বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৪ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

After Declining Wonga Offers, On Deck Lands $42M From IVP, SAP & First Round To Bring Online Lending To Main Street

Screen shot 2013-02-13 at 2.18.50 AMNot all small businesses and startups are lucky enough to raise venture capital. When Main Street business owners, like your local tailor, barber or florist find themselves in need of capital to help grow their businesses, after exhausting their own resources, they typically are forced to turn to banks for a loan. Applying for these loan packages is often time consuming and expensive, and banks tend to rely on personal credit scores to evaluate the health of the business and avoid the costs of underwriting small (sub-$250K) loans. Launched in 2007, On Deck Capital set out on a mission to simplify the borrowing process for Main Street businesses. Leveraging data aggregation and electronic payment technology, the startup gives banks an alternative method for evaluating the creditworthiness of local businesses, in turn making it easier for mom-and-pop shops to secure a loan.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Tpr8X1tCE8c/

Colorado Springs pga tour Nora Ephron mario balotelli mario balotelli espn3 kevin youkilis

Boy held in Alabama bunker saw kidnapper shot

Handout / Reuters

Dr. Phil McGraw is shown with Jennifer Kirkland during a taped exclusive interview to be aired February 13, 2013 in this still image taken from video courtesy of CBS. Kirkland's six-year old son Ethan Gilman was held hostage in an underground bunker for nearly a week by Jimmy Lee Dykes before being rescued by FBI agents.

By Andrew Rafferty, Staff Writer, NBC News

The six-year-old Alabama boy kidnapped on his way home from school and held?for seven days in an underground bunker is having difficulty sleeping?and is troubled by the sight of school buses, according to the boy's?mother.

Jennifer Kirkland, mother of the boy identified by officials only as Ethan, gave?her first interview to Dr. Phil McGraw for an episode of the "Dr. Phil?Show" set to air Wednesday.

A preview of the show posted online?reveals that Ethan saw officers fatally shoot his kidnapper,?identified as Jimmy Lee Dykes.

"He said, 'The Army came in and shot the bad man,'" Kirkland said.

Federal agents raided the underground bunker on the sixth day of the?standoff when the 65-year-old Dykes thought he would be receiving a?delivery.

Though Ethan was not physically injured, Kirkland expressed concerns over the long-term mental effects of the trauma.

"I'm scared of how he's going to take getting on a bus," she said.?

During the standoff officials had reported that the boy suffered from Asperger's syndrome.

Ethan, who has yet to return to school, was taken hostage on January 29 after Dykes boarded his school bus and demanded the bus driver turn over two children, according to authorities. When the driver refused, Dykes fatally shot the driver and took Ethan.

"He has said a few things I know that he is having a very hard time sleeping soundly," said Kirkland. "He slings his arms and tosses and turns and he's cried out a few times."

In an interview with ABC's "Good Morning America," McGraw said that Ethan's captor developed empathy for the boy, frying him chicken and taking care of him in the small bunker. ?

According to his mother, Ethan has said only a few things about his captivity. "I think he understands there was a very violent act. I think it scared him greatly," McGraw said.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/12/16940492-mother-of-boy-held-in-alabama-bunker-says-son-saw-kidnapper-shot?lite

larry bird chauncey billups caucus results exton kurt warner kurt warner ricky williams

U.S. Cellular Customer Crew member Molly Stanek loves the Samsung Galaxy Note II...

5 Reasons Why I Chose the Samsung Galaxy Note 2

myuscnote2.wordpress.com

I got my first cellphone at a relatively old age, by today's standards. I was 20. That was 9 years ago, and it's amazing to see how far phone technology has come since my first flip phone with ex...

Source: http://www.facebook.com/USCellular/posts/334937486624265

ramon sessions portland trail blazers nba trade blagojevich new mexico state kevin rose sessions

বুধবার, ১৩ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

রবিবার, ১০ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

RSS Feed Search Engine - Real-Time Search Powered by FeedRank

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.rssmicro.com/rss.web?q=Football

masterchef Dictionary.com Chicago teachers strike september 11 2001 september 11 2001 blake lively serena williams

Relationships: Dating For Boomers Article Category ? Rock The Stage

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Let me ask you this? Do you consider it appropriate to discuss your inner most thoughts with the next client that walks through the door or arrange a meeting with your boss to talk about your sick brother-in-law? No - thought ...

Source: http://magic-tips.infotips-canada.com/relationships-dating-for-boomers-article-category-rock-the-stage/

BET Awards 2012 declaration of independence 4th Of July 2012 Zach Parise Spain Vs Italy Euro 2012 Pepco erin andrews

Managing the creative tension in innovation policy | Susana Borras ...

During the past few decades, research and innovation policies in many countries have experienced what I have called a ?widening and deepening? process. Widening refers to the expansion of the scope of public action fostering innovation processes well beyond the traditional focus on the creation of scientific knowledge. Today public action focuses as well into many new areas like user-driven innovation, cluster policies, public sector innovation, service innovation, or promotion of entrepreneurship. Likewise, ?deepening? refers to the introduction of new forms of public action typically involving a governance-approach, or new forms of public-private interactions. During the past few decades governments have introduced new schemes and programs and revamped old ones in significant ways, in what seems to be true experimentalism. These widening and deepening are the outcomes of new agendas of research and innovation policies that have been developed from an innovation system perspective in mind, and in so doing they have also shaped the new role of research and innovation policy in the era of governance.
More recently, some countries and international organizations (OECD and EU, mostly) have launched a series of ambitious innovation strategies, with goals and concrete action plans that seem to aim at putting some priority-setting into the widening and deepening. Some strategies have a ?reform? agenda aiming to reduce the ?jungle of instruments?, others put focus on new and specific areas, while other strategies try to do both.
Most interestingly, governments widening, deepening and strategy-design seem to have revolved around three large areas: the improvement of competitiveness of their economies, the promotion of scientific/academic excellence, and the solution of complex societal challenges. Naturally, these three large areas target different constituencies and stakeholders, as well as overall purposes, which are namely, the industrial/economic context, the scientific community, and the society at large. Naturally this is reflected in very different ways across the countries, depending on national traditions regarding the role of the state in the economy and society, as well as on the respective idiosyncrasies of national research and innovation systems.
Yet, this increased activism, experimentalism, and governance approach brings to the fore another important issue, namely that some traditional tensions in the governance of research and innovation system might be exacerbated. This tension refers to the fact that in any innovation system there will always be an intrinsic tension between the ?politics of purpose? (the political or societal political organization of support and structures for knowledge creation) and the ?self-organization of science? (here understood as all forms of knowledge production, as the internal social dynamics of recognition and acceptance among those who produce the knowledge).
My main point is that the new role of research and innovation policy in the age of governance has to be able to manage this tension, which is, after all, a creative tension.
One large problem might arrive: The problem of dichotomy, when the politics of purpose does not take into account the reality of the self-organization of knowledge production. An example of ?dichotomy?: If a research and innovation system is characterized by widespread forms of innovation by ?doing-using-interacting? (DUI)(the self-organization), but the politics of purpose are solely focusing on fostering traditional ?science-technology-innovation? (STI). This dichotomy will not foster innovation.
?Managing the creative tension? requires not only policy-makers to be able to avoid these situations above, but also that they are aware of three overall aspects as well:
Firstly, fostering the diversity of types of knowledge and of knowledge producers in the system. This is so because diversity generates dynamism and creativity in a society and economy. Multiple studies at firm and at national level tend to show that innovation is likely to happen when different types of knowledge are combined and different actors are put together, as this opens up for thinking differently and for approaching problems from different angles.
Secondly, securing that there are capable agents of change in the research and innovation system who are able to take up the opportunities that might emerge from new technologies and new institutional frameworks. These capable agents are typically: entrepreneurs, intra-preneurs, scientists, venture capitalists, etc; but as our notion of innovation has been deepening and widening, these agents of change are also local governments/public agencies with knowledgeable civil servants, or NGOs with high levels of social capital. An example of why empowering capable agents is important: Many countries have today the purpose to solve ?societal challenges?. However, there is a great diversity in the capabilities of different societal stakeholders around those challenges: Some societal stakeholders are relatively strong and capable, i.e. firms, environmental organizations, etc; but others are traditionally week, i.e. consumer organizations, or patient organizations. This asymmetry renders difficult the political purpose to solve societal challenges, because it is much more than just having diverse knowledge types and putting the right agents together? It is paramount that those diverse agents are also capable.
Thirdly, it requires a broad understanding of evidence-based policy-making. There are today many forms of evaluation and assessment of individual policy programs. Yet, there is a sense of frustration that evaluation tends to be positively biased, and not always oriented towards encouraging organizational change. Hence, taking policy learning seriously in innovation policy requires that evidence-based policy making is not just based on evaluations or indicators. It requires a holistic understanding of the dynamics of innovation policy itself, and its own adaptability.

All these remarks are strongly linked to the notion of the ?learning economy? which was put forward by Lundvall and others in early 1990s. It may be that it is about time to consider whether our research and innovation policies are truly moving the research and innovation systems in this direction.

Like this:

Be the first to like this.

Source: http://susanaborras.com/2013/02/09/managing-the-creative-tension-in-innovation-policy/

miranda kerr lindsay lohan Ronda Rousey BCS Bowls palestine powerball winner powerball winner

শনিবার, ৯ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Cybersecurity challenges in 2013 | TechRepublic

Takeaway: Dmitriv Ayrapetov describes the threats that Dell SonicWall has identified as the top challenges for companies to prepare for in 2013.

By Dmitriy Ayrapetov, Director, product management, Dell SonicWALL

The issues affecting businesses are similar around the world. The key issues and points of vulnerability are around human engagement - most of it innocently - such as bringing an infected personal mobile device into the corporate network, or clicking on a social media link that looks harmless but hides a Trojan or Worm that will secretly steal data and money and, potentially, remain undetected with severe impact on security of the infected device.

The major cyber-security challenges to businesses through 2013 will come from

  • Increase in Exploit Kits
  • Increase in mobile device cyber-security threats
  • Increase in sophistication of threats

Increase in Exploit Kits

Exploit Kits represent the dark but massively profitable side of cyber-security attacks. Exploit kits comprise malicious programs. They quickly identify and then attack cyber vulnerabilities and spread malware. Exploit kits are created, sold and rented, on the black market. We predict they will be increasingly used because of their ease of deployment (rental model) and ease and speed of infection they deliver. The impact of these attacks will be felt in loss of data, IP, identify theft, financial fraud and theft, as well as in diminished business productivity and continuity. We expect to see exploit kits targeting Windows 8, MAC OS X and mobile devices, particularly Android based, in 2013 as these three targets represent fast-growing segments used by corporates and consumers alike to transact communications, business and commerce.

The growth of malware will continue at an explosive pace. In 2012, Dell SonicWALL identified nearly 16 million unique malware samples through its GRID (Global Response Intelligent Defense system) compared to 13.5 million in year 2011. Already, there are around 44,000 new malware samples every day.

MALWARE ATTACKS PAST 90 DAYS IN ?NORTH AMERICA? ?(source:? Dell SonicWALL Global Response Intelligent Defense system)

Increase in mobile cyber-security vulnerability

The adoption of NFC (near field communication) for mobile payment systems makes mobile platforms a very attractive target for financially motivated cybercrimes. The increased use of personal devices because of trends like BYOD (bring your own device) in businesses creates entirely new cyber security issues from loss of company data and IP, financial threat, and non-compliance issues to name a few. As social media continues to be adopted universally for personal and business purposes alike, malware will increase dramatically across Facebook, Twitter, and Skype in 2013. This triple threat threatens targeted mobile devices at the point of commerce, through their access to corporate networks and through their access to social media channels. It will be particularly dangerous and become more advanced and prevalent.

Increase in sophistication of cyber-attacks

Last year, we saw cybercriminals abandon older scareware methods such as Fake AV scams and move over to Ransomware scams. We expect to see this continue and become more global and multi-lingual, which also represents a growing threat to Latin America. Ransomware attacks lock down a computer, device, or service and holds all the data hostage or even threatens court action if the user does not pay. These are very devious attacks that are embedded deep into the computer or device and it is nearly impossible for an average user to regain control over his own system and data.

The sophistication and ability to attack and paralyze websites will continue to grow at dramatic pace. For example in 2011, there were 1,596,905 DDoS (distributed denial-of-service attacks) compared to 120,321,372 in 2012. As businesses of all sizes continue to move services and infrastructure to the cloud, the issue of DDoS will be high on many agendas at it has the potential to quickly cripple entire cloud infrastructures.

Are the risks different for small and large enterprises?

Viruses, Trojans, Worms, and Ransomware do not differentiate between a large or small business. They represent the same risk, no matter if you have a lot or only very little budget to invest in network security. Irrespective of the size of your business, these threats can mean loss of profitability and productivity, loss of data and financial assets, and potentially catastrophic loss of business continuity. It is likely that small businesses are more likely to fall pretty to these attacks, because they do not have the budget, IT infrastructure, or support that a large business can afford. On the other hand, the more people a business employs, the greater the vulnerability of its network.

What steps can business take to protect itself from cyber-attacks?

The most important steps for a business of any size to protect itself from cyber-attacks is to be aware of the most obvious and dangerous variants. Secondly, it is key to educate employees how to recognize and avoid accidentally bringing a virus/malware/trojan into the corporate network. A recent survey by Dell SonicWALL customers shows that 68 percent of all businesses reported that employees cannot identify fraudulent attacks on the corporate network.

It is the dirty little secret of the beautiful world of social networks and mobile device interconnectedness that they are a breeding ground for malware and Internet criminals. Many businesses believe their existing firewalls will protect them from an attack. The reality however, is that old firewalls pose a serious security risk to organizations today. First-generation firewalls technology has become obsolete as it fails to inspect the data payload of network packets circulated by today?s Internet criminals and to protect from attack.

To prepare and protect from the massive growth in social media, applications, BYOD and multi-media files flowing through a corporate network, entirely new technology is needed. It is today?s next-generation firewalls that include advanced technology such as application intelligence and control, intrusion prevention, malware protection and SSL inspection at multi-gigabit speeds, scalable to support the highest-performance networks and protect them effectively from the modern threats every user of email or the Internet encounters on a daily basis.

If an organization does business anywhere on the Internet, it is likely not a question if, but when it will be targeted by cyber criminals. While no protection is ever perfect, there is much that business can do to minimize and deflect the impact of these potential threats. Especially, the IT organization should closely collaborate with the company leadership to identify vulnerabilities lie, prepare with appropriate countermeasures including advanced high performance, high redundancy network security components and educate employees for the best possible defense and protection of business assets.

Source: http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/security/cybersecurity-challenges-in-2013/9038

tumblr Ravi Shankar Geminid meteor shower right to work Clackamas Town Center 12 12 12 Anne Hathaway Wardrobe Malfunction

Portlandia, Season 3

Fred Armisen & Rose Byrne.

Fred Armisen & Rose Byrne.

Photo by Frank DiMarco/IFC

In?Slate's?Portlandia?TV Club, Chris Wade will IM each week with a different fan of?the show. This week, he discusses ?Soft Opening? with Nicole Drespel, an improv comedy teacher at New York?s Upright Citizens Brigade Theater.

Nicole Drespel: I've had mixed feelings about the plottiness of recent Portlandia episodes. Sometimes I love it (Nina's birthday) because it feels like they're just picking a theme and swinging the show around that theme; other times the plot feels like filler in between funny sketches, like last week.

Chris Wade: Interesting, I?m feeling the opposite: that the show works better with a strong runner and standalone sketches hung around it than with a single plot. I liked this episode because it was the former. Recurring characters Peter and Nance have a disastrous ?soft? opening of their bed and breakfast over a series of sketches, supported by a few strong standalones.

Drespel: I love Peter and Nance because they remind me of the sincerity that drove the first season of Portlandia. They definitely like each other. And they want something, so they're coming from a super optimistic place. And sometimes they just fail.

Wade: My main problem is Fred and Carrie play the one joke of these characters: that they get really excited about something trendy but are incompetent or ineffective at actually doing it, over and over.? It ends up making them broader, shallower and less capable of carrying more plot-heavy sketches. Fortunately, I thought that this week's runner was the perfect amount of weight to give to them.

Drespel: So the core of UCB?s training program, at the center of its philosophy of comedy, is the idea of ?game.?. Game is the idea of finding the specific funny thing in a sketch or scene and heightening and exploring that idea.

Wade: Right, so you take an identifiable situation, find the ?one weird thing,? and exaggerate it more and more over the course of the sketch.

Drespel: And sometimes I want Portlandia sketches to have a stronger game. Like the Steampunk sketch. I wish it had a narrower focus than ?Steampunk people can be weird!?

Wade: Right, and in the context of these plot-focused sketches, we have characters like Peter and Nance who have well-defined character games at this point -- but when they're expected to carry relatively straightforward plots based on Fred and Carrie?s slack improvising it comes across as a broad and directionless.

Drespel: Those sketches plunk the character down in an interesting scenario, but then we don't actually see them repeat and heighten the fun behavior.

Wade: Fred giving Jim Gaffigan and Matt Lucas a massage was funny because Fred is funny, but without a structural game to provide a pattern or heightening, it loses steam and becomes one-note.

Drespel: But when they do sketches with strong games, it's hysterical.

Wade: Which is why the best bit of the episode was the Third Date to Italy sketch, where Fred has all the awkwardness of a bland third date in the heightened detail of it being on a trip to Italy. It was identifiable premise with a simple twist they found increasingly ridiculous ways to emphasize.

Drespel: That was great because it wasn't broad at all, it was uncomfortably realistic. When they were in the airport and she was feeling tired and Fred was trying to be friendly I thought "Oh. Yup. That's exactly how a third date to Italy would go."

Wade: The last lines of that sketch were my favorite of the night too:

FRED: ?Everyone on the internet, they?re not having as much fun as you think they are.?
CARRIE: ?I guess everyone?s just cropping out the sadness?

Drespel: I also love Portlandia?s presentational sketches.

Wade: It took a minute, but the opening sketch of the kid explaining his Rube Goldberg machine really grew on me. In a way, the Rube Goldberg machine is a metaphor for all of Portlandia: a weird and ornate and often fun-to-watch machine with lots of moving pieces that never really goes anywhere or does anything.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=1c0bce455078cf35dea570a4490900a2

miss america 2013 Oscar Nominations oscars ABC Family social security social security paulina gretzky

New Push to Mellow on Hemp (WSJ)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/283681950?client_source=feed&format=rss

myocardial infarction What Is Labor Day jersey shore Pasquale Rotella Michael Clark Duncan michael jackson courtney stodden

Longer span between mammograms okay for older women

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Screening women over 65 each year for breast cancer doesn't catch any more early tumors - but it does lead to more false positives - than screening every other year, according to a new study.

The findings are based on more than 140,000 older women included in five mammography registries across the United States.

"This study clearly tells us that screening every two years may be more appropriate than screening women every year," said Dr. Otis Brawley, chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society (ACS).

However, he noted, there are other studies that contradict that finding and do suggest annual mammograms are the way to go, even among older women.

One in eight U.S. women will be diagnosed with breast cancer at some point in her life.

Mammography guidelines from the ACS call for women to be screened for breast cancer every year they are in good health, starting at age 40.

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, on the other hand, recommends biennial screening for women ages 50 to 74, saying there's not enough evidence to recommend for or against mammograms for those aged 75 and older.

For the new study, Dejana Braithwaite from the University of California, San Francisco and her colleagues followed women ages 66 through 89 for seven years. During that time, about 3,000 were diagnosed with breast cancer and 138,000 remained cancer-free.

Among women with breast cancer, a similar proportion had invasive or advanced stage tumors, regardless of whether they had been screened every year or every other year leading up to their diagnosis. About two-thirds of those women were screened annually.

However, between 47 and 50 percent of women who were screened annually had a false positive mammogram at some point during the study period, compared to 26 to 30 percent of those screened biennially, according to the findings published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

"Just having a false positive result means having the potential anxiety and inconvenience of having to undergo additional procedures," Braithwaite told Reuters Health.

In older women in particular, biopsies and other procedures may exacerbate underlying health conditions, she added.

According to Brawley, who wasn't involved in the new study, there are three types of cancers.

"There are the cancers that grow so slowly they would have never killed the patients, there are the cancers that grow slow enough that we can find them and save the patients' lives and then there are the cancers that grow so fast that no matter what screening we do, we're never going to be able to save the patient's life," he told Reuters Health.

"This study says? screening every year is not going to find any more of these cancers that are growing slow enough to be detected, but fast enough if they weren't detected they would kill."

Braithwaite's team calculated that nationwide, screening older women annually rather than biennially would lead to almost four million additional false positive exams in that age group.

"Our study shows that it really does very little benefit, in fact there is no benefit, with annual mammograms and there's this additional harm of having an increased probability of a false positive result," Braithwaite said.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/TPiVfY Journal of the National Cancer Institute, online February 5, 2013.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/longer-span-between-mammograms-okay-older-women-202949404.html

type 2 diabetes occupy congress juan williams victor martinez alcatraz cruise ship martin luther king jr.

বৃহস্পতিবার, ৭ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Some cancer mutations slow tumor growth

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

A typical cancer cell has thousands of mutations scattered throughout its genome and hundreds of mutated genes. However, only a handful of those genes, known as drivers, are responsible for cancerous traits such as uncontrolled growth. Cancer biologists have largely ignored the other mutations, believing they had little or no impact on cancer progression.

But a new study from MIT, Harvard University, the Broad Institute and Brigham and Women's Hospital reveals, for the first time, that these so-called passenger mutations are not just along for the ride. When enough of them accumulate, they can slow or even halt tumor growth.

The findings, reported in this week's Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggest that cancer should be viewed as an evolutionary process whose course is determined by a delicate balance between driver-propelled growth and the gradual buildup of passenger mutations that are damaging to cancer, says Leonid Mirny, an associate professor of physics and health sciences and technology at MIT and senior author of the paper.

Furthermore, drugs that tip the balance in favor of the passenger mutations could offer a new way to treat cancer, the researchers say, beating it with its own weapon ? mutations. Although the influence of a single passenger mutation is minuscule, "collectively they can have a profound effect," Mirny says. "If a drug can make them a little bit more deleterious, it's still a tiny effect for each passenger, but collectively this can build up."

Lead author of the paper is Christopher McFarland, a graduate student at Harvard. Other authors are Kirill Korolev, a Pappalardo postdoctoral fellow at MIT, Gregory Kryukov, a senior computational biologist at the Broad Institute, and Shamil Sunyaev, an associate professor at Brigham and Women's.

Power struggle

Cancer can take years or even decades to develop, as cells gradually accumulate the necessary driver mutations. Those mutations usually stimulate oncogenes such as Ras, which promotes cell growth, or turn off tumor-suppressing genes such as p53, which normally restrains growth.

Passenger mutations that arise randomly alongside drivers were believed to be fairly benign: In natural populations, selection weeds out deleterious mutations. However, Mirny and his colleagues suspected that the evolutionary process in cancer can proceed differently, allowing mutations with only a slightly harmful effect to accumulate.

To test this theory, the researchers created a computer model that simulates cancer growth as an evolutionary process during which a cell acquires random mutations. These simulations followed millions of cells: every cell division, mutation and cell death.

They found that during the long periods between acquisition of driver mutations, many passenger mutations arose. When one of the cancerous cells gains a new driver mutation, that cell and its progeny take over the entire population, bringing along all of the original cell's baggage of passenger mutations. "Those mutations otherwise would never spread in the population," Mirny says. "They essentially hitchhike on the driver."

This process repeats five to 10 times during cancer development; each time, a new wave of damaging passengers is accumulated. If enough deleterious passengers are present, their cumulative effects can slow tumor growth, the simulations found. Tumors may become dormant, or even regress, but growth can start up again if new driver mutations are acquired. This matches the cancer growth patterns often seen in human patients.

"Cancer may not be a sequence of inevitable accumulation of driver events, but may be actually a delicate balance between drivers and passengers," Mirny says. "Spontaneous remissions or remissions triggered by drugs may actually be mediated by the load of deleterious passenger mutations."

When they analyzed passenger mutations found in genomic data taken from cancer patients, the researchers found the same pattern predicted by their model ? accumulation of large quantities of slightly deleterious mutations.

Tipping the balance

In computer simulations, the researchers tested the possibility of treating tumors by boosting the impact of deleterious mutations. In their original simulation, each deleterious passenger mutation reduced the cell's fitness by about 0.1 percent. When that was increased to 0.3 percent, tumors shrank under the load of their own mutations.

The same effect could be achieved in real tumors with drugs that interfere with proteins known as chaperones, Mirny suggests. After proteins are synthesized, they need to be folded into the correct shape, and chaperones help with that process. In cancerous cells, chaperones help proteins fold into the correct shape even when they are mutated, helping to suppress the effects of deleterious mutations.

Several potential drugs that inhibit chaperone proteins are now in clinical trials to treat cancer, although researchers had believed that they acted by suppressing the effects of driver mutations, not by enhancing the effects of passengers.

In current studies, the researchers are comparing cancer cell lines that have identical driver mutations but a different load of passenger mutations, to see which grow faster. They are also injecting the cancer cell lines into mice to see which are likeliest to metastasize.

###

Massachusetts Institute of Technology: http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice

Thanks to Massachusetts Institute of Technology for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 34 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126630/Some_cancer_mutations_slow_tumor_growth

lil wayne Mockingbird Lane peyton manning sf giants gold rush gold rush windows 8