Thursday, April 11, 2013

Transparent brain using hydrogel process

Apr. 10, 2013 ? Combining neuroscience and chemical engineering, researchers at Stanford University have developed a process that renders a mouse brain transparent. The postmortem brain remains whole -- not sliced or sectioned in any way -- with its three-dimensional complexity of fine wiring and molecular structures completely intact and able to be measured and probed at will with visible light and chemicals.

The process, called CLARITY, ushers in an entirely new era of whole-organ imaging that stands to fundamentally change our scientific understanding of the most-important-but-least-understood of organs, the brain, and potentially other organs, as well.

The process is described in a paper to be published online April 10 in Nature by bioengineer and psychiatrist Karl Deisseroth, MD, PhD, leading a multidisciplinary team, including postdoctoral scholar Kwanghun Chung, PhD.

"Studying intact systems with this sort of molecular resolution and global scope -- to be able to see the fine detail and the big picture at the same time -- has been a major unmet goal in biology, and a goal that CLARITY begins to address," Deisseroth said.

"This feat of chemical engineering promises to transform the way we study the brain's anatomy and how disease changes it," said Thomas Insel, MD, director of the National Institute of Mental Health. "No longer will the in-depth study of our most important three-dimensional organ be constrained by two-dimensional methods."

The research in this study was performed primarily on a mouse brain, but the researchers have used CLARITY on zebrafish and on preserved human brain samples with similar results, establishing a path for future studies of human samples and other organisms.

"CLARITY promises to revolutionize our understanding of how local and global changes in brain structure and activity translate into behavior," said Paul Frankland, PhD, a senior scientist in neurosciences and mental health at the Hospital for Sick Children Research Institute in Toronto, who was not involved in the research. Frankland's colleague, senior scientist Sheena Josselyn, PhD, added that the process could turn the brain from "a mysterious black box" into something essentially transparent.

An inscrutable place

The mound of convoluted grey matter and wiring that is the brain is a complex and inscrutable place. Neuroscientists have struggled to fully understand its circuitry in their quest to comprehend how the brain works, and why, sometimes, it doesn't.

CLARITY is the result of a research effort in Deisseroth's lab to extract the opaque elements -- in particular the lipids -- from a brain and yet keep the important features fully intact. Lipids are fatty molecules found throughout the brain and body. In the brain, especially, they help form cell membranes and give the brain much of its structure. Lipids pose a double challenge for biological study, however, because they make the brain largely impermeable both to chemicals and to light.

Neuroscientists would have liked to extract the lipids to reveal the brain's fine structure without slicing or sectioning, but for one major hitch: removing these structurally important molecules causes the remaining tissue to fall apart.

Prior investigations have focused instead on automating the slicing/sectioning approach, or in treating the brain with organic molecules that facilitate the penetration of light only, but not macromolecular probes. With CLARITY, Deisseroth's team has taken a fundamentally different approach.

"We drew upon chemical engineering to transform biological tissue into a new state that is intact but optically transparent and permeable to macromolecules," said Chung, the paper's first author.

This new form is created by replacing the brain's lipids with a hydrogel. The hydrogel is built from within the brain itself in a process conceptually similar to petrification, using what is initially a watery suspension of short, individual molecules known as hydrogel monomers. The intact, postmortem brain is immersed in the hydrogel solution and the monomers infuse the tissue. Then, when "thermally triggered," or heated slightly to about body temperature, the monomers begin to congeal into long molecular chains known as polymers, forming a mesh throughout the brain. This mesh holds everything together, but, importantly, it does not bind to the lipids.

With the tissue shored up in this way, the team is able to vigorously and rapidly extract lipids through a process called electrophoresis. What remains is a 3-D, transparent brain with all of its important structures -- neurons, axons, dendrites, synapses, proteins, nucleic acids and so forth -- intact and in place.

Going things one better

CLARITY then goes one better. In preserving the full continuity of neuronal structures, CLARITY not only allows tracing of individual neural connections over long distances through the brain, but also provides a way to gather rich, molecular information describing a cell's function is that is not possible with other methods.

"We thought that if we could remove the lipids nondestructively, we might be able to get both light and macromolecules to penetrate deep into tissue, allowing not only 3-D imaging, but also 3-D molecular analysis of the intact brain," said Deisseroth, who holds the D.H. Chen Professorship.

Using fluorescent antibodies that are known to seek out and attach themselves only to specific proteins, Deisseroth's team showed that it can target specific structures within the CLARITY-modified -- or "clarified" -- mouse brain and make those structures and only those structures light up under illumination. The researchers can trace neural circuits through the entire brain or explore deeply into the nuances of local circuit wiring. They can see the relationships between cells and investigate subcellular structures. They can even look at chemical relationships of protein complexes, nucleic acids and neurotransmitters.

"Being able to determine the molecular structure of various cells and their contacts through antibody staining is a core capability of CLARITY, separate from the optical transparency, which enables us to visualize relationships among brain components in fundamentally new ways," said Deisseroth, who is one of 15 experts on the "dream team" that will map out goals for the $100 million brain research initiative announced April 2 by President Obama.

And in yet another significant capability from a research standpoint, researchers are now able to destain the clarified brain, flushing out the fluorescent antibodies and repeating the staining process anew using different antibodies to explore different molecular targets in the same brain. This staining/destaining process can be repeated multiple times, the authors showed, and the different data sets aligned with one another.

Opening the door

CLARITY has accordingly made it possible to perform highly detailed, fine-structural analysis on intact brains -- even human tissues that have been preserved for many years, the team showed. Transforming human brains into transparent-but-stable specimens with accessible wiring and molecular detail may yield improved understanding of the structural underpinnings of brain function and disease.

Beyond the immediate and apparent benefit to neuroscience, Deisseroth cautioned that CLARITY has leapfrogged our ability to deal with the data. "Turning massive amounts of data into useful insight poses immense computational challenges that will have to be addressed. We will have to develop improved computational approaches to image segmentation, 3-D image registration, automated tracing and image acquisition," he said.

Indeed, such pressures will increase as CLARITY could begin to support a deeper understanding of large-scale intact biological systems and organs, perhaps even entire organisms.

"Of particular interest for future study are intrasystem relationships, not only in the mammalian brain but also in other tissues or diseases for which full understanding is only possible when thorough analysis of single, intact systems can be conducted," Deisseroth said. "CLARITY may be applicable to any biological system, and it will be interesting to see how other branches of biology may put it to use."

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 Stanford University Medical Center. The original article was written by Andrew Myers.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Kwanghun Chung, Jenelle Wallace, Sung-Yon Kim, Sandhiya Kalyanasundaram, Aaron S. Andalman, Thomas J. Davidson, Julie J. Mirzabekov, Kelly A. Zalocusky, Joanna Mattis, Aleksandra K. Denisin, Sally Pak, Hannah Bernstein, Charu Ramakrishnan, Logan Grosenick, Viviana Gradinaru, Karl Deisseroth. Structural and molecular interrogation of intact biological systems. Nature, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nature12107

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/matter_energy/biochemistry/~3/aprD_TDWLH8/130410131223.htm

levon oklahoma city bombing robbie robertson the curious case of benjamin button secret service prostitute rich ross april 20

AT&T announces 20 new LTE locations

AT&T LTE

AT&T dumps a bucket full of LTE location news, both currently active cities and coming soon announcements

AT&T just sent out 20 press releases with a bunch of LTE announcements. There's a lot to digest, so allow us to break it all down in one place for easy reading.

New LTE cities that are currently active:

New LTE cities coming this summer:

There's no word on when exactly during the summer these will light up, but I'm sure AT&T will remind us again when they go live -- or you fine folks will let us all know the minute it drops. 

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/NdlDuC22lZU/story01.htm

Fear Airport Terminal easter bunny easter april fools pranks atlanta braves Happy Easter

House stalkers finding ways to buy homes that aren't for sale

As the U.S. housing market heats up, eager buyers are refusing to wait until the for-sale signs appear.

Instead, they are knocking on the doors of attractive properties, leaving letters in strangers' mailboxes, scanning foreclosure listings and surfing the Web for prospects.

The direct approach worked for contractor Jerry Spring, 56, and his wife Kathryn, 62, who found themselves drawn to a house on a large corner lot in Richmond, Virginia, three years ago. But the house was not on the market.

The Springs used online county databases to find the owner, tracked her to an assisted living facility and then sent her an eight-page handwritten letter asking to buy her house and selling themselves as the best new owners.

The owner was not ready to sell, but the couple arranged a rent-to-own deal and moved in. They finally completed the purchase of the home in January with the executors of the owner's estate after her death.

Welcome to the world of house stalking.

"A lot of buyers want to get into this market, but the inventory is just not there," says Christine Parente, a broker and owner of Re/Max Trading Places in Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey.

Real estate agents are regularly asked to approach owners of not-for-sale properties, Parente says, but her advice is to reach out to the owner directly.

"Mail them a little note," she says. "Say you really admire the house. A lot of sellers actually consider it a compliment."

Last year, 20 percent of those who sold their homes without using a real estate agent said they did so because a prospective buyer had contacted them, according to a National Association of Realtors survey of 8,500 people. That is up from 15 percent in 2010.

Nationwide, home listings are down 14 percent in 2013, according to real estate website Zillow Inc, and competition is intense for available properties in choice neighborhoods. In Orange County, California, for example, ERA Buy America agent Chasin Prather says there are only 3,000 homes for sale in his area, down from 12,000 three years ago.

Debbie Rossetto can barely get the for-sale signs in the yards of the San Francisco area houses she is trying to sell before potential buyers hound her with offers.

"One house just got listed a couple of days ago, and ... they already have two offers," says the longtime agent for Legacy Real Estate & Associates.

So if you are having a tough time finding something on the market, here are some tips on clinching your dream house, even if it is not for sale:

Use the Web
Real estate listing sites such as Zillow.com and Trulia.com allow prospective buyers to set up alerts on any property address, whether it is listed or not. You will get an email if anything pops up.

Zillow Chief Economist Stan Humphries suggests looking for houses that were once listed for sale but are now off the market. You just might find a homeowner who is been waiting for the market to turn around before listing again - and persuade him or her to sell to you.

In Zillow's "Make Me Move" section, homeowners list their properties with a "fantasy" price, but these are not considered active for-sale properties. There are now some 148,000 listings, and contacts to owners are up 132 percent over last year.

When Joe Dieleman and his wife could not find a home in Seattle after about 100 open houses and months of looking with an agent, they used Make Me Move to contact a homeowner. The owner responded immediately, the Dielemans saw the house the next day, and they closed on it a few weeks later.

"I don't think we would have found anything in the short term with an agent," says Dieleman, a 33-year-old graduate student at the University of Washington.

Online county records also allow eager shoppers to investigate a property and find the owner. If no contact information is listed, try other Web searches, including social media sites and local listing services like Spokeo.com.

Then there are foreclosure listings - sites like realtor.com offer them free - to find promising properties.

Pre-foreclosure listings provide many more possibilities. Zillow is listing 855,000 such properties, where the mortgage holder has missed a payment or two and the bank has reported the default but not yet taken action to foreclose. By contrast, the site has only 280,000 foreclosures.

Hitting the pavement
Once they find that dream house, some hopeful buyers reach out in writing. Note: It is illegal to put something in someone else's mailbox, so if you do not want to run afoul of the law, you can send a letter through the U.S. Postal Service, addressed to "resident," or stick your note in the door.

Compliment the owner by saying how much you love the house, or sell yourself with personal details such as your gardening abilities or your childhood memories of the neighborhood.

Barb Camp, a retired realtor in Portland, Oregon, suggests offering inducements, such as allowing the prospective seller to remain for a period of time at a low rent.

Camp encouraged her son and daughter-in-law to send a letter to the owners of a southeast Portland house they admire. The owners have promised to keep their number handy and now wave at the would-be buyers as they jog past their dream home.

"They may end up with the house," Camp says, "if they are patient enough."

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653351/s/2a8f30b6/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Ceconomywatch0Chouse0Estalkers0Efinding0Eways0Ebuy0Ehomes0Earent0Esale0E1C9291238/story01.htm

discovery shuttle allure jane goodall saturday night fever glamping forgetting sarah marshall taraji p. henson

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Research Shows Plane Turbulence To Increase | Stuff.co.nz

University of Reading

Climate change doubles risk of turbulence to aircraft.

New research has found global warming is likely to double the chances of plane turbulence in the coming decades.

According to a study from the University of Reading and the University of East Anglia, atmospheric changes could lead to the amount of turbulent air patterns that affect planes doubling, and for the intensity to get stronger by the middle of this century.

Dr Paul Williams, who headed the research, said global warming would have a significant impact on the aviation industry.

"Air turbulence does more than just interrupt the service of in-flight drinks. It injures hundreds of passengers and aircrew every year - sometimes fatally.

"It also causes delays and damages planes. The total cost to society is about US$150 million (NZ$177 million) each year."

Researchers used supercomputer simulations to analyse jet streams over the North Atlantic Ocean.

Dr Manoj Joshi, from East Anglia, said they focused on looking at turbulence in its peak periods.

"Our research focused on clear-air turbulence in winter. This is especially problematic to airliners, because clear-air turbulence is invisible to pilots and satellites, and winter is when it peaks."

It found the chances of encountering significant turbulence would increase by between 40 per cent and 170 per cent, but most likely double, and the intensity by anywhere between 10 and 40 per cent.

Williams said any increase in turbulence would make flying more uncomfortable and increase the risk to passengers and crew.

He said airlines would also be forced to re-rout some flights to avoid stronger patches of turbulence, which would lead to greater fuel consumption and emissions of atmospheric pollutants, make delays at airports more common, and ultimately push up ticket prices.

The research showed the atmosphere was becoming more vulnerable and unstable, and Williams said the aviation industry was partly to blame for that.

- ? Fairfax NZ News

Comments

Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/travel/travel-troubles/8526319/Plane-rides-to-get-bumpier

lake vostok montgomery county public schools the river dr dog ke$ha earl csco

Amino Acid Mix as an Alternative to Protein PowderTammy's Health ...

Amino Acid Mix as an Alternative to Protein Powder Photo Credit Comstock/Comstock/Getty Images Branch-chain amino acid powders are a common supplement choice for exercisers and sports enthusiasts. Unlike protein powder, branch-chain amino acids supplements claim to improve athletic performance by boosting the effects of the individual amino acids in your body. However, creatine protein powders have been a long-time staple among bodybuilders and athletes, and have been studied more extensively. For best results, compare the different benefits of either mixture to help you choose the supplement that best meets your nutrition and exercise needs.

Branch-chain amino acid supplements are formed by combining different essential amino acids, such as isoleucine, leucine and valine. According to a report published in a 2005 issue of the ?Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition,? amino acid supplements are theorized to enhance athletic performance by increasing the secretion of anabolic hormones and modifying the use of fuel during exercise. Branch-chain amino acids are also purported to prevent some adverse effects of overtraining, while preventing mental fatigue. This happens as a result of the relationship between branch-chain amino acids and serotonin levels in the brain, which may delay central nervous system fatigue. Because of these purported benefits, some exercisers prefer to take amino acid supplements in place of standard creatine protein powders. Creatine is one of the most common chemicals used in the creation of protein powders and exercise shakes. Like all types of animal protein, creatine also contains certain types of amino acids. What makes branch-chain amino supplements so distinctive is the individual combinations of different amino acids that they combine in specific doses. However, according to a study published in a 2008 issue of the ?Journal of Sports Medicine and Physical Fitness,? branch-chain amino acid supplements are more effective at boosting muscle recovery and immune regulation than muscle building. Comparatively, creatine protein powders have been linked to increased muscle mass in athletes and older adults, according to MedlinePlus. Based on the available information, creatine protein powders are likely to be more beneficial in building muscle, while branch-chain amino acids are more effective for muscle recovery and injury prevention. If you are currently focusing on building muscle mass through weight lifting, creatine protein powders are more likely to provide the best results for your exercise goals. However, endurance and aerobic athletes may prefer the delayed fatigue and accelerated recovery perks of branch-chain amino acid supplements. If possible, try out one or the other for three months at a time, to see which type of supplementation provides the best results for your activity.Talk to your doctor before taking any type of protein or amino acid supplement if you are currently taking prescription or over-the-counter medications, dietary supplements or herbal remedies. While no specific interactions have been recorded for amino acid-based nutritional supplementation, Drugs.com lists 37 different brand name and generic drugs that interact with creatine, including: Xanax, fish oil, DHEA, Crestor, L-arginine, gingko biloba, Lyrica, Singulair, valerian root, coenzyme Q10 and Viagra.

?

Source: http://www.tammyshealtharticles.com/amino-acid-mix-as-an-alternative-to-protein-powder/

foxnews yahoo news cnn news Connecticut shooting Nancy Lanza school shootings cbs news

Why Using a Food Journal Helps With Weight Loss

We are pumped to share one of our favorite stories from Shape here on POPSUGAR Fitness.

Who remembers what they ate the night before when they wake up in the morning? Or even what their breakfast was at lunchtime? You probably think it doesn?t matter, but according to new research, it may help you control your appetite.

In the British study, individuals who had vivid memories of what they ate were more likely to consume less at their following meal. Researchers are uncertain if this was due to the exact memory of the food eaten or the memory of the calories consumed, but both were associated with changes in the amount eaten overall.

From collecting 24-hour recalls from my patients, I have found too often that many people completely forget what they ate after finishing a meal. Perhaps it is because they are multi-tasking while dining, simply eating too rapidly, or even having foods that they don?t love. In any event, this lack of memory could be a reason they are overeating and not losing weight.

As a general rule, I ask my patients to food journal. Nine times out of ten, the person who journals 100 percent of the time is the one who loses weight. This daily accountability of all foods eaten and the ability to review it afterward seem to help keep extra calories at bay.

RELATED: Discover how your dinnerware can help you slim down. (Really!)

Honestly, I am not a big fan of actual calorie counting, but I am a huge advocate of being calorie-conscious, which a food journal can capture nicely. But journaling may not be for everyone, especially if you have the memory of an elephant or if you tend to think about what you are eating 24/7.

Learn more ways to remember what you ate after the break!

Other tactics to help you remember what you ate include:

1. Slowing down. The slower you eat and the more time you take to savor every bite, the more likely you probably are to remember what you had.

2. Playing food paparazzi. Supposedly some restaurants have a problem with patrons snapping photos of their meals, but there?s nothing like a great pic of your entr?e to keep the memory of that dish alive, so I say go for it.

3. Keeping the evidence. At a party, hold onto the stirrers from your cocktails and the napkins from hors d'oeuvres so you have an easy count of how many you consumed.

4. Being shell-shocked. Buy nuts in the shell, keep the remains nearby, and count them when you are finished. It will hopefully lead you to put the bag away.

RELATED: Your brain is one powerful organ. Try this simple mental trick to eat less.

So here?s to a having a good memory in the hopes that it might keep you more in-tune to what you already ate and the potential to eat less later on. Now if only I could find my keys!

To get the latest health, fitness, beauty, and fashion news, follow @Shape_Magazine on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook.

Source: http://www.fitsugar.com/Why-Using-Food-Journal-Helps-Weight-Loss-29098431

sunspots pac 12 tournament sun storm tri international criminal court ios 5.1 apple tv update

China's March inflation eases to 2.1 percent

FILE - In this Jan. 11, 2013 file photo, a vegetable vendor, left, collects money from a customer at a market in Beijing, China. China's inflation declined in March, 2013, easing pressure on consumers but fueling questions about the strength of its recovery. Government data Tuesday, April 9, 2013 showed consumer prices rose 2.1 percent, down from the previous month's 3.2 percent and well below the official target for the year. Wholesale prices declined by 1.9 percent compared with last year. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 11, 2013 file photo, a vegetable vendor, left, collects money from a customer at a market in Beijing, China. China's inflation declined in March, 2013, easing pressure on consumers but fueling questions about the strength of its recovery. Government data Tuesday, April 9, 2013 showed consumer prices rose 2.1 percent, down from the previous month's 3.2 percent and well below the official target for the year. Wholesale prices declined by 1.9 percent compared with last year. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, File)

BEIJING (AP) ? China's inflation declined in March, easing pressure on consumers but fueling questions about the strength of recovery in the world's second-biggest economy.

Government data Tuesday showed consumer prices rose 2.1 percent, down from the previous month's 3.2 percent and well below the official target of 3.5 percent for the year. Wholesale prices declined by 1.9 percent compared with last year.

Mixed data show the world's second-largest economy is limping out of its deepest slump since the 2008 global crisis but more slowly than Chinese leaders want. Analysts say the rebound could be vulnerable to a downturn in investment or trade.

Economic growth rose to 7.9 percent in the three months ending in December, up from the previous quarter's 7.4 percent. Analysts say the recovery is being propped up by government spending and bank lending, while consumer spending is growing slowly.

Lower inflation will give policymakers "more room to maneuver" to stimulate growth if industrial production figures due out next week show activity weaker than expected, said Goldman Sachs economists in a report.

The decline suggests consumer demand is still lackluster despite the growth rebound.

"We have yet to see a surge in final demand ripple throughout the economy," said IHS Global Insight analyst Alistair Thornton in a report. "This is not a healthy recovery."

Figures early in the year often are distorted by the Lunar New Year holiday. Inflation fell to 2 percent in January, then spiked to a 10-month high in February as vegetable costs rose due to cold weather and families stocked up on gifts and food for banquets.

The government's growth target for the year is 7.5 percent, above Western levels but well below China's double-digit rates of the past decade.

Chinese leaders say they want to nurture more self-sustaining growth driven by domestic consumer spending and reduce reliance on exports and investment.

Manufacturing accelerated in March but was weak, according to the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing, an industry group. Its purchasing managers index rose to 50.9 from February's 50.1 on a 100-point scale on which numbers above 50 indicate an expansion.

Goldman also saw a possible inflation impact from newly installed President Xi Jinping's orders to Communist Party officials to cut back spending on banquets and other frills in an effort to mollify public anger about corruption.

"Lower consumer inflation was also likely helped by the anti-corruption campaign which tends to lower prices of dining out and overall food prices," said the bank's economists in a report.

___

National Bureau of Statistics (in Chinese): www.stats.gov.cn

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-04-09-China-Inflation/id-6086ca753fa441f58d761b7dc670d185

denver post Scandal denver broncos new england patriots Zayn Malik miss america 2013 Oscar Nominations

Pat Valdez, NM School Bus Driver, Dead After Crashing Bus Into Embankment; 9 Students Injured

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. ? A bus driver died and nine students were injured Monday when a school bus went off a road and lodged in an embankment in northern New Mexico, authorities said Monday.

The driver died at the scene of the crash that investigators said might have been caused by a medical event.

Initial reports indicated the bus had rolled over, but authorities later said that was not true.

The bus carrying nine elementary, middle and high school students crashed off State Road 111 near La Madera in Carson National Forest, Rio Arriba County sheriff's spokesman Jake Arnold said.

The mountainous, isolated area is popular for hunting, hiking and camping.

Two of the students who attend schools in the tiny, rural school district of Mesa Vista had broken bones.

"It is a tragedy and we are very saddened by events today," district superintendent Tracie Phillips said. "We are providing counseling for all of students, including those involved in the crash."

It was not clear if the driver, Pat Valdez, 69, might have had had a heart attack and later died from the crash, authorities said.

"We don't know if the driver died from a medical event, died from the crash or died from a combination of both," Arnold said.

The Office of the Medical Investigator will determine the cause of death, he said.

Eight students were taken to Espanola Hospital for treatment. Six were treated and released while two others were transported to University of New Mexico Hospital in Albuquerque, Espanola Hospital spokeswoman Niki Allcorn said.

One student was airlifted to UNM hospital from the scene, Allcorn said.

An 8-year-old suffered a broken back and 16-year-old had a broken jaw, authorities said.

School officials say the students were headed to Ojo Caliente Elementary, Mesa Vista Middle and Mesa Vista High schools from Vallecitos in northern Rio Arriba County.

Images from a KOB-TV helicopter showed the bus lodged in an embankment. It appears to have gone off a cliff around 15 miles from the schools in Ojo Caliente, a resort town known for its hot springs. The roads are surrounded by mesas, sagebrush and rocky terrain.

An investigation of the crash was ongoing by the Rio Arriba Sheriff's Office and New Mexico State Police. Authorities blocked off access to roads leading to the crash site.

The isolated Mesa Vista Consolidated School District is located in El Rito and is around 120 miles north of Albuquerque. It has an enrollment of close to 400 students.

___

Associated Press writer Jeri Clausing contributed to this story from Albuquerque, N.M.

___

Follow Russell Contreras on Twitter at http://twitter.com/russcontreras

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/2013/04/08/nm-school-bus-crashes-int_0_n_3040592.html

december 21 2012 norad 12/21/12 winter solstice Jabari Parker 2012 australia

Monday, April 8, 2013

Xi promises peaceful China helping neighbors

BOAO, China (Reuters) - China's President Xi Jinping pledged on Sunday that change and peaceful development will power his country's economic rise and sustain growth within its borders and beyond.

Stressing that peace was pivotal for the future of the world's second biggest economy, Xi appealed to business and political leaders to use diplomacy and dialogue to resolve disputes and allow wealth to spread and solve problems.

"For Asia, development is still the top question, development is still crucial for solving many problems and conflicts," Xi told a forum in Boao on the southern Chinese island province of Hainan.

"Without peace, there is no need to talk about development," to added, speaking to an audience of executives and foreign leaders including Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, Myanmar President Thein Sein and IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde.

Painting a picture of a richer China in 2020, when the government expects average rural and urban incomes will be double 2010 levels, Xi said his country would increasingly export its wealth to its neighbors.

China will import $10 trillion worth of goods a year five years from now, he said, and outbound investment will rise by a big margin. Domestic consumption, particularly retail consumption, will also continue to expand.

China imported $1.8 trillion worth of goods and services last year, up a meager 4.3 percent from a year ago as its economy slumped into its worst downturn in 13 years.

But Xi was upbeat about the future, saying growth would follow when his government changes China's economic structure and financial system. He did not give details.

"China's economy will continue to maintain a healthy growth rate," Xi said. "We will persist with reforms and doggedly pursue the path of changing our economic ways."

In contrast, an ailing global economy faces a difficult recovery fraught with risks, he said.

Xi's message of China's peaceful and inclusive rise was echoed earlier when nearly a dozen senior executives from Chinese state-owned firms met peers from top Australian banks and companies.

Andrew Forrest, an Australian iron ore magnate and founder of Fortescue Metals Group, who chaired the closed-door meeting, told reporters that Chinese state firm executives wanted Australians to know that China was not "expansionist" or "aggressive".

"They do not understand how people could look at China through anything but friendly eyes," Forrest said.

Security concerns in other countries have hampered or overshadowed the overseas expansion of several large Chinese companies, including telecoms equipment firm Huawei Technologies Co Ltd and state-owned oil company CNOOC Ltd..

(Reporting by Koh Gui Qing; Editing by Robert Birsel)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/xi-promises-peaceful-prosperous-china-helping-neighbors-061405958--business.html

saint louis university night at the museum pope shenouda bolton muamba crystal cathedral sxsw st. patrick s day

'True force of nature': World reacts to Thatcher's death

Political leaders and admirers around the world took to social media channels to mourn and celebrate former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who died Monday at 87 following a stroke.

President Obama?released a statement in which he called Thatcher "one of the great champions of freedom and liberty."?

"Here in America, many of us will never forget her standing shoulder to shoulder with President Reagan, reminding the world that we are not simply carried along by the currents of history?we can shape them with moral conviction, unyielding courage and iron will," Obama said.

We've created a capsule of global reactions from a range of voices, some official and some not:

?

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653387/s/2a78ce62/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A40C0A80C176550A360Etrue0Eforce0Eof0Enature0Eworld0Ereacts0Eto0Ethatchers0Edeath0Dlite/story01.htm

joan crawford joan crawford john goodman kendall marshall whitney houston news sylvia plath whitney houston autopsy results

Germany: Thieves swipe 5 tons of chocolate spread

BERLIN (AP) ? These thieves might really have sticky fingers.

Police said Monday an unknown number of culprits made off with 5 metric tons (5.5 tons) of Nutella chocolate-hazelnut spread from a parked trailer in the central German town of Bad Hersfeld over the weekend.

The gooey loot is worth an estimated 16,000 euros ($20,710).

Germans news agency dpa reported that thieves have previously stolen a load of energy drinks from the same location.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/germany-thieves-swipe-5-tons-chocolate-spread-103316137.html

king of kings ostara masters 2012 andy kaufman tom watson kawasaki disease resurrection

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Remote reefs can be tougher than they look

Friday, April 5, 2013

Remote reefs can be tougher than they look Western Australia's Scott Reef has recovered from mass bleaching in 1998.

Isolated coral reefs can recover from catastrophic damage as effectively as those with nearby undisturbed neighbours, a long-term study by marine biologists from the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) and the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies (CoECRS) has shown.

Scott Reef, a remote coral system in the Indian Ocean, has largely recovered from a catastrophic mass bleaching event in 1998, according to the study published in Science today.

The study challenges conventional wisdom that suggested isolated reefs were more vulnerable to disturbance, because they were thought to depend on recolonisation from other reefs. Instead, the scientists found that the isolation of reefs allowed surviving corals to rapidly grow and propagate in the absence of human interference.

Australia's largest oceanic reef system, Scott Reef, is relatively isolated, sitting out in the Indian Ocean some 250 km from the remote coastline of north Western Australia (WA). Prospects for the reef looked gloomy when in 1998 it suffered catastrophic mass bleaching, losing around 80% of its coral cover. The study shows that it took just 12 years to recover.

Spanning 15 years, data collected and analysed by the researchers shows how after the 1998 mass bleaching the few remaining corals provided low numbers of recruits (new corals) for Scott Reef. On that basis recovery was projected to take decades, yet within 12 years the cover and diversity of corals had recovered to levels similar to those seen pre-bleaching.

"The initial projections for Scott Reef were not optimistic," says Dr James Gilmour from AIMS, the lead author on the publication, "because, unlike reefs on the Great Barrier Reef, there were few if any reefs nearby capable of supplying new recruits to replenish the lost corals at Scott Reef.

"However, the few small corals that did settle at Scott Reef had excellent rates of survival and growth, whereas on many nearshore reefs high levels of algae and sediment, and poor water quality will often suppress this recovery.

"We know from other studies that the resilience of reefs can be improved by addressing human pressures such as water quality and overfishing," says Dr Gilmour. "So it is likely that a key factor in the rapid recovery at Scott Reef was the high water clarity and quality in this remote and offshore location."

Dr Andrew Heyward, Principal Research Scientist at AIMS, highlights another conclusion from their findings.

"Previously we've tended to factor proximity to other reefs as a key attribute when estimating the resilience of a reef following a major disturbance, but our data suggests that given the right conditions, reefs might do much of the recovery by themselves." This finding could have implications for the management of marine protected areas.

In their publication the team also draws attention to the important role played by climate change in the longer-term prospects for coral reefs, as Prof Morgan Pratchett of CoECRS explains.

"While it is encouraging to see such clear recovery, we need to be mindful of the fact that the coral recovery at Scott Reef still took over a decade. If, as the climate change trend suggests, we start to see coral bleaching and other related disturbances occurring more frequently, then reefs may experience a ratcheting down effect, never fully recovering before they suffer another major disturbance.

"By preventing illegal fishing and enhancing water quality on coral reefs in all regions we will give these reefs a greater capacity to recover from major disturbances."

The highly detailed, long-term data set makes Scott Reef the best studied reef in Australia's Indian Ocean territory. The study provides valuable new perspectives on ecosystem function and resilience of coral reefs situated in the northwest Australia, and in other contexts such as the Great Barrier Reef, and illustrates the importance of AIMS' research collaborations with its industry partners.

###

The paper "Recovery of an isolated coral reef system following severe disturbance", by J. P. Gilmour, L. D. Smith, A. J. Heyward, A. H. Baird and M. S. Pratchett appears online in Science on Friday, 5th April, 2013.

ARC Centre of Excellence in Coral Reef Studies: http://www.coralcoe.org.au/

Thanks to ARC Centre of Excellence in Coral Reef Studies 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 45 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127614/Remote_reefs_can_be_tougher_than_they_look

Wreck It Ralph Hunter Hayes Movember USC shooting halloween chipotle lsu football

?75k raid on dead war veteran's Shropshire home ? Shropshire Star

Antiques and heirlooms are among items worth up to ?75,000 which have been stolen from the home of a World War Two veteran who died last year.

The property, near Whitchurch, has been unoccupied for several months and was burgled between September and November last year.

Police say up to 40 items ? including a grandfather clock and a watercolour painting ? with a collective estimated value of between ?50,000 and ?75,000 are missing from the house.

The owner, a former bomber pilot, was a collector of antiques and historical artefacts ? the majority of them local to Shropshire.

Police, who have not released the man?s name for security reasons, have released some images of the distinctive stolen items and Detective Sergeant Andy Chatting of West Mercia Police said most of them, if sold on, would mainly be of interest to people in Shropshire.

?One of the items stolen was a distinctive brass-faced clock, made by Whitchurch clockmaker John Barron and dating from about 1700,? he said.

?There was also a seven foot high grandfather clock made by Callcott of Coton, near Wem, and a watercolour painting of two men ? a Dr John Phillips of Malpas, Cheshire and a chimney-sweep named Edwards Randles, according to an inscribed plaque on the back ? dating from the late 1700s to the mid 1800s.?

Detective Sergeant Chatting added: ?One of the largest items stolen was an old, elaborate oak chest with the initials AP engraved on the front.

?The victim?s family are understandably very distressed at the theft of these heirlooms, as many of them have been in the family for generations, some of them for several centuries. They have a huge amount of sentimental value.?

Anyone offered any of the items for sale, is asked to contact police in Shropshire on 101 or Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

Source: http://www.shropshirestar.com/news/2013/04/04/75k-raid-on-dead-war-veterans-shropshire-home/

Barcelona Kwame Kilpatrick New pope 2013 good morning america earthquake california earthquake california douglas adams

Nearly 30 Percent of Americans Have High Blood Pressure: CDC ...

bloodpressure 18009 Nearly 30 Percent of Americans Have High Blood Pressure: CDC

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, April 4 (HealthDay News) ? The proportion of Americans reporting they have high blood pressure rose nearly 10 percent from 2005 to 2009, federal health officials said Thursday.

High blood pressure ? or hypertension, a major risk factor for heart disease and stroke ? affects nearly one-third of Americans, said Fleetwood Loustalot, a researcher at the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, part of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

About 26 percent of Americans said they had high blood pressure in 2005, and more than 28 percent reported high blood pressure in 2009 ? a nearly 10 percent increase.

?Many factors contribute to hypertension,? Loustalot said, including obesity, eating too much salt, not exercising regularly, drinking too much alcohol and smoking.

?What we are really concerned about as well is that people who have high blood pressure are getting treated. Only about half of those with hypertension have it controlled,? Loustalot said. ?Uncontrolled hypertension can lead to negative health consequences like heart attacks and strokes.?

Of the study participants who said they had high blood pressure in 2009, about 62 percent were using medication to control it.

Loustalot said the increase in the prevalence of high blood pressure is largely due to more awareness of the problem.

Another expert talked about what needs to be done to actually lower hypertension rates in the United States.

?Improving awareness, treatment and control of blood pressure is vital to reduce the risk for heart disease and stroke,? said Dr. Gregg Fonarow, a spokesman for the American Heart Association and professor of cardiology at the University of California, Los Angeles. ?All adult men and women should be aware of their blood pressure levels and, if elevated, ensure appropriate treatment.?

The report was published in the April 5 issue of the CDC journal Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

People reporting high blood pressure in 2009 ranged from a low of nearly 21 percent in Minnesota to a high of nearly 36 percent in Mississippi.

Wide variations existed by state in terms of how many people take medication to lower their blood pressure, according the report. Nearly three-fourths of Tennessee respondents said they were taking blood pressure medication, compared with about half of those from California, for instance.

Disparities were also seen in age, sex, education levels and race and ethnicity. Hypertension was significantly higher among seniors, men, blacks and those with less than a high school education compared to younger people, women, Asians and people with higher levels of education, the researchers found.

To get more people to lower their blood pressure, the CDC said more awareness of the problem and sticking to effective treatments are needed, especially in those states where the prevalence of hypertension is high and the number of those taking medications is low.

The CDC used data collected through a telephone survey by state health departments across the country.

More information

To learn about the Million Hearts campaign, visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

HEALTHDAY Web XSmall Nearly 30 Percent of Americans Have High Blood Pressure: CDC

Source: http://news.health.com/2013/04/04/nearly-30-percent-of-americans-have-high-blood-pressure-cdc/

Bacon Number Kate Middleton photos Chi Magazine Kate Middleton Nude Photos glee glee boxing news

Friday, April 5, 2013

S&P says Britain's AAA at risk if growth, deficit disappoint

LONDON (Reuters) - Standard & Poor's warned Britain on Friday that worse-than-expected economic growth or slow progress in fixing its budget deficit could cost the country its top-notch credit rating.

S&P affirmed the UK's AAA sovereign credit rating but kept the outlook as negative.

"The outlook remains negative, reflecting our view of at least a one-in-three chance that we could lower the ratings if the UK's economic and fiscal performances were to weaken beyond our current expectations," S&P said in a statement.

Britain lost its AAA rating from Moody's in February, an embarrassment for the Conservative-led government which had promised to protect the country's credit rating when it took power in 2010.

But slower-than-expected economic growth since then has meant the government is behind on its programme to return the country to fiscal health.

S&P said on Friday it expected the British economy to grow by an average of 1.6 percent a year between 2013 and 2016, slightly slower than forecasts last month issued by the country's independent budget watchdog.

Fitch said in March it was likely to lower its AAA rating on Britain before the end of April.

A spokesman for Britain's finance ministry noted S&P's comment that a downgrade could be prompted by a change in the government's determination to fix its fiscal shortfall.

"This serves as a reminder that our country cannot afford to simply run away from our problems," the spokesman said.

"There are no easy answers to a legacy of debt built up over a decade. Though it is taking time, we are slowly but surely fixing this country's economic problems."

(Reporting by William Schomberg, David Milliken, Daniel Bases and Luciana Lopez. Editing by Jeremy Gaunt.)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/p-affirms-uk-credit-rating-aaa-says-cuts-162154402--finance.html

London 2012 Slalom Canoe Alex Morgan Misty May Treanor Lolo Jones Marvin Hamlisch Megan Rossee grenada

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Twilio Announces Integration of Communications Platform with ...

TwilioTwilio, a leading voice and SMS communications company, has announced that the company has joined the Google Cloud Platform Partner Program and has integrated the Twilio API into the Google App Engine.

Twilio

Image Credit: Twilio

The integration of the Twilio API platform with the Google App Engine makes it possible for developers to build scalable communications applications that are reliably hosted on the Google Cloud. Using the Google App Engine, developers can build apps that feature call recording, text-to-speech, conference calling, in-app dialing, group texting and much more.

In the press release, Jeff Lawson, CEO of Twilio says that:

?By using Google Cloud Platform and Twilio, independent developers and enterprises alike can build and scale real world businesses faster than ever. The real magic comes from connecting the Twilio API to the App Engine platform to make apps communicate; developers benefit from integrating these two incredibly scalable, robust, and reliable platforms?we can?t wait to see what Google App Engine developers build.?

There are currently native Python and Java libraries available for developers to integrate Twilio SMS and Voice Integration into their apps. The platform consists of the Twilio Markup Language (TwiML), a RESTful API, and VoIP SDKs.

At the time of this writing, developers that sign up for a new Google App Engine account and a new Twilio account will receive 2,000 free voice minutes or SMS messages. To sign up and receive the promotion, visit the Twilio promotion web page.

Source: http://blog.programmableweb.com/2013/04/03/twilio-announces-integration-of-communications-platform-with-google-app-engine/

david lee honduras prison fire do not call list sports illustrated westminster dog show 2012 words with friends words with friends

FTC reveals $50,000 Robocall Challenge winners, alarms Rachel from card services (video)

FTC reveals winners of its antirobocall contest

The FTC has managed to find two non-violent solutions to its Robocall Challenge, aimed at blocking auto-dialing telemarketers, thanks to winners Serdar Danis and Aaron Foss. The pair, who will receive $25,000 each, came up with variations on a system that would pre-screen calls before ringing your phone while allowing the FTC to blacklist known scammers at the same time. Google took a non-cash prize in a separate category with a scheme that would foil caller-ID spoofing often used by boiler rooms like the notorious "Rachel from card services" outfit, which has over a hundred numeric aliases. The FTC receives a whopping 200,000 complaints per month about the nuisance and screened nearly 800 submissions (see the More Coverage link), many of which show a certain, shall we say, passion for the topic. Check winner Foss' video submission after the break.

Filed under:

Comments

Via: Huffington Post

Source: FTC

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/YJsi73Ay4WU/

Horshack Beady Eye Eric Idle rory mcilroy Fatboy Slim Rio de Janeiro Shark Week

Video: Massive Pay Cut for JC Penney CEO

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

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/51418085/

Steel Magnolias Niels Bohr the Rumble 2012 Columbus Day 2012 carlina white Sam Champion Engaged Infield fly rule

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Telerobotic system designed to treat bladder cancer better

Apr. 2, 2013 ? Although bladder cancer is the sixth most common form of cancer in the U.S. and the most expensive to treat, the basic method that doctors use to treat it hasn't changed much in more than 70 years.

An interdisciplinary collaboration of engineers and doctors at Vanderbilt and Columbia Universities intends to change that situation dramatically. Headed by Nabil Simaan, associate professor of mechanical engineering at Vanderbilt, the team has developed a prototype telerobotic platform designed to be inserted through natural orifices -- in this case the urethra -- that can provide surgeons with a much better view of bladder tumors so they can diagnose them more accurately. It is also designed to make it easier to remove tumors from the lining of the bladder regardless of their location -- an operation called transurethral recession.

"When I observed my first transurethral resection, I was amazed at how crude the instruments are and how much pushing and stretching of the patient's body is required,"Simaan said.

That experience inspired the engineer to develop a system that uses micro-robotics to perform this difficult type of surgery. Its features and capabilities are described in an article titled "Design and Evaluation of a Minimally Invasive Telerobotic Platform for Transurethral Surveillance and Intervention" published in the April issue of the journal IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering.

The specialized telerobotic system "doesn't take the judgment out of surgeons' hands, it enhances their capabilities and hopefully gives them surgical superpowers,"commented S. Duke Herrell, an associate professor of urologic surgery and biomedical engineering, who specializes in minimally invasive oncology at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and is collaborating on the project.

The traditional method, which Simaan observed, involves inserting a rigid tube called a resectoscope through the urethra and into the bladder. The instrument contains several channels that allow the circulation of fluid, provide access for an endoscope for observation and interchangeable cauterizing tools used to obtain biopsy tissue for evaluating the malignancy of the tumor and to resect small tumors. In some operations, surgeons replace the cauterizing tool with an optical-fiber laser to destroy tumor cells.

Although the endoscope can give a good view of the bladder lining directly across from the opening of the urethra, inspecting the other areas is more difficult. The medical team must press and twist the scope or push on the patient's body to bring other areas into view. These contortions are also necessary when removing tumors in less accessible areas.

If the surgeon, using endoscopic observation or biopsy, determines that a tumor is invasive and has penetrated the muscle layer, then he later performs a cystectomy that removes the entire bladder through an incision in the abdomen. Frequently this is done using a normal surgical robot. But, when the surgeon judges that the tumor is superficial -- restricted to the bladder lining -- then he attempts to remove it using the resectoscope.

Bladder cancer is so expensive to treat in part because the tumors in the bladder lining are exceptionally persistent and so require continuing surveillance and repeated surgeries. Among the factors that contribute to this persistence is the difficulty of accurately identifying tumor margins and failure to remove all the cancerous cells.

"Because you are working through a long, rigid tube, this can be a difficult procedure, especially in some areas of the bladder," said Herrell.

The telerobotic system is designed specifically to operate in this challenging environment. The machine itself is the size and shape of a large Thermos bottle but its business end is only 5.5 millimeters in diameter -- about one fifth of an inch -- and consists of a segmented robotic arm. The tiny arm can curve through 180 degrees, allowing it to point in every direction including directly back at its entry point. At the tip of the arm is a white light source, an optical fiber laser for cauterization, a fiberscope for observation and a tiny forceps for gripping tissue.

The engineers report that they can control the position of the snake-like arm with sub-millimeter precision: a level adequate for operating in clinical conditions. They have also demonstrated that the device can remove tissue for biopsies by gripping target tissue with the forceps and then cutting it off with the laser.

The fiberscope produced a 10,000-pixel image that was directed to a digital video camera system. Because it is steerable, the instrument was able to provide closeup views of the bladder walls at favorable viewing angles. However, the testing revealed the camera system's effectiveness was limited by poor distance resolution. According to the researchers, this can be corrected by re-designing the fiberscope or by replacing it with a miniature camera tip.

In the future, the researchers intend to incorporate additional imaging methods for improving the ability to identify tumor boundaries. These include a fluorescence endoscope, optical coherence tomography that uses infrared radiation to obtain micrometer-resolution images of tissue and ultrasound to augment the surgeon's natural vision.

In addition to these observational methods, the researchers have given their robot arm a sense of touch. Using a technique called force-feedback, they can measure the force acting on the tip when it comes into contact with tissue. Normally, tumors protrude from the surrounding tissue. Vanderbilt Ph.D. candidate Andrea Bajo used this fact to successfully design new algorithms that allow the robot arm in the device to accurately trace a tumor's edge. He did so by positioning the tip on the edge of a tumor and instructing it to move in the direction that maintains the same pressure.

"Surgeons can typically identify the gross visual margin of a tumor within a millimeter, but a robot like this has the potential of doing so with sub-millimetric precision and additional technologies may actually be able to distinguish margins at the cellular level," said Herrell.

The team plans to make use of this level of precision to program the robot to perform what surgeons call an "en-block resection," the removal of an entire tumor plus a small margin of normal tissue in one operation. That procedure is designed to ensure that no cancerous cells are left behind that can reseed the tumor.

The engineers are also using the system's capabilities to design a number of safety measures into the telerobotic system. For example, the operator can set a maximum depth that the laser will cut and, even if the operator's hand slips, the robot will not cut any deeper.

These safety measures are an example of Simaan's primary research goal: develop surgical robotic systems that can be inserted into the human body and interact safely with it.

Work on this system began with Simaan's former Ph.D. student Roger Goldman and Lara Suh-MacLachlan at Columbia University. Ryan Pickens, a fellow at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, is also a team member. Simaan and Bajo received partial support from NSF Career grant #IIS-1063750.

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 Vanderbilt University. The original article was written by David Salisbury.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Roger E. Goldman, Andrea Bajo, Lara S. MacLachlan, Ryan Pickens, S. Duke Herrell, Nabil Simaan. Design and Performance Evaluation of a Minimally Invasive Telerobotic Platform for Transurethral Surveillance and Intervention. IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 2013; 60 (4): 918 DOI: 10.1109/TBME.2012.2226031

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/~3/7MwarreWM5E/130402182636.htm

stations of the cross nike foamposite galaxy bill maher seabiscuit dingo nba all star weekend malin akerman

Garmin to power future Mercedes-Benz infotainment systems

It looks like Garmin has managed to lock down a very solid deal following its automotive group's compelling demo at CES. The company's in-dash GPS software is now set to roll out with future Mercedes-Benz models -- Garmin's navigation system is scheduled to be fully integrated within the next four years, and will begin appearing with select 2014 models. The solution sounds similar to the version we saw on display during CES, and includes a primary panel in the center console, along with a secondary display located behind the steering wheel, tasked with providing key driver stats, along with next turn info, for example.

Mercedes will share more details once specific launch vehicles are announced, but Garmin said to expect features like Advanced Driver Assistance (ADAS), to help out with vehicle positioning, while the car manufacturer will bring tools like a rotary controller and voice commands to the table. What remains to be seen is how TomTom will fit into the mix -- last month, the company announced plans of its own to provide HD Traffic service to certain Mercedes vehicles, though it's unclear if the two GPS giants will be working together on this latest venture.

Update: Garmin reached out to clarify that the company will be providing the GPS software for Mercedes-Benz's own infotainment solution. So it's not all Garmin under the hood.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/02/garmin-mercedes-infotainment/

game of thrones april fools day april fools day roses april fools Good April Fools Jokes success

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Ellen Bravo: What's Behind the Momentum for Paid Sick Days?

In just two weeks, the movement for paid sick days has seen three victories -- in Portland, Ore., Philadelphia, and most recently, New York City. Local coalitions in each place encountered fierce opposition, and yet the wave of wins continues.

Why now?

Because people need it, demanded it, and built the capacity to win.

Yes, hardball politics played a role. But what carries the day is strong and smart organizing by coalitions deeply rooted in their local city or state while linked to a growing national movement.

The need for paid sick days has become greater during the recent recession. During the recent flu outbreak, many of the 44 million without paid sick days had to watch public officials on TV telling them to stay home if they had flu symptoms, knowing if they followed these instructions they might not be able to keep the lights on or buy their child a needed inhaler.

Hard times are the worst time to lose a job for being a good parent or safeguarding public health.

A growing body of evidence has demonstrated the need -- and coalitions have shared that research, while putting faces to the statistics by collecting stories that show the consequences of having to work sick or being punished for refusing to abandon an ill loved one.

Among the documentation disseminated by our coalitions is research showing that earned sick time boosts the economy by helping workers stay employed and have money to spend. Small business owners cite lack of sales as the greatest obstacle to recovery. As employers like Freddy Castiblanco, owner of Terraza 7 Live Music in Elmhurst, N.Y., put it, "Lack of paid sick days has consequence for business as well as workers, in my community. Those workers are my customers."

Each coalition has identified local economists who say policies like earned sick time help stop job loss and strengthen the economy. It also helps lower turnover, boost productivity and lessen health care costs.

And the flu season also reminded those who have sick days how many people they come in contact with do not.

Given the need and the benefits, it's not surprising that support for such policies is enormous. Polls have demonstrated the overwhelming popularity of earned sick days across all demographics and throughout the political spectrum.

Broad, Deep Coalitions

Above all, local activists have brought together a wide range of groups who have a stake in making sure that no one has to jeopardize their health or the health of a loved one in order to stay employed. They've built coalitions made up of groups that care about seniors, women, children, labor, chronic diseases and public health; groups that want to end violence and end poverty; business owners and experts in economic development; those who fight for racial justice and equality for the LGBT community; faith groups and those who care about democracy.

Key to success has been engaging workers who know all too well what it means to lack paid sick days -- people like Shayna, a therapeutic activities worker at a nursing home in Philadelphia who had to go work with an injured hip, or Tamara in New York, who after caring for her sick daughter had to decide whether the lost pay meant going without a metro card or without a phone.

Local business partners are also important, because they help shatter the identity theft of corporate lobbyists who claim to speak for all employers. Small business owners like Leni Juca, owner of Oxium Print and Copy in Queens, N.Y., say their employees already earn paid sick days because it's the smart as well as the right thing to do. "With a small business like this one," Juca said, "we can't afford to get each other sick."

In each city, coalition partners have reached out to their constituencies, bringing their voices to decision-makers and the media -- and keeping the heat on.

Which Side Are You On?

These community leaders have had a clear message for political leaders: standing up for earned sick time means valuing families and standing with all of these groups. Opposing it means standing with lobbyists for multi-billion dollar corporations like Comcast in Philly. As The New York Times put it, the win in New York "represents a raw display of political muscle by a coalition of labor unions and liberal activists who overcame fierce objections from New York's business-minded mayor, Michael R. Bloomberg, and his allies in the corporate world."

And more and more, politicians are getting the message.

We're proud of what we've accomplished. And we'll stay organized until every single person is able to care for themselves and their loved ones without risking a paycheck or a job.

?

?

?

Follow Ellen Bravo on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Ellen_Bravo

"; 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/ellen-bravo/whats-behind-the-momentum_b_2983419.html

ivan rodriguez planetary resources mothers day gift ideas natalee holloway scotty mccreery megan fox pregnant metta world peace suspension