Monday, 30 September 2013

Cerebellum with pons and medulla oblongata.


Cerebellum with pons and medulla oblongata.

Medulla oblongata is the lower portion of the brainstem. This structure controls processes such as breathing and blood pressure.

In humans and other bipeds, pons are above the medulla, below the midbrain, and anterior to the cerebellum.
The pons in humans measures about 2.5 cm or 1 inch in length. Most of it appears as a broad anterior bulge rostral to the medulla

Know more about medulla:
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/372788/medulla-oblongata

Know more about pons:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pons


Image via Science Photo Library

Human skeleton x-ray


 Human skeleton  x-ray

Flower Power


Flower Power
A desert pretty flower? =)
Nope...this is actually a colorized electron microscopy image of a metal alloy.
Scientists at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory are working to design novel structured metal alloy anodes for Na-ion batteries using an electrospin method, with the goal of creating low cost energy storage technologies for grid scale applications. The team uses a design material synthesis approach to achieve targeted nanoarchitectures by controlling chemical reactivity at interfaces.

Image credit: PNNL

Rad =)


Rad =)

Originally shared by Idietitian

Orange

Nutritional value (1 medium): 62 calories, 3 g fibre, source of vitamin C, folate and potassium

Disease-fighting factor: Oranges are a good source of folate, an important vitamin for pregnant women that can help prevent neural tube defects in their infants. They also contain a phytochemical called hesperidin, which may lower triglyceride and blood cholesterol levels.

Did you know? The edible white part of the orange rind has nearly the same amount of vitamin C as the flesh, so eat that part too!

Yes indeed...


Yes indeed...

No kiddin' ?!?


No kiddin' ?!?

Want


Want

Originally shared by Jamie Oliver

Morning guys! Money Saving meals airs at 8pm on C4 tonight this week it's all about lamb and what better recipe to share with you than a brilliant mothership Sunday roast lamb! You will get a great meal and also loads of leftovers to play with. Check out this and loads of other #savewithjamie recipes at www.jamieoliver.com/savewithjamie have a great day #jamieoliver

Nice pattern obtained from rolling a small square inside a larger one


Nice pattern obtained from rolling a small square inside a larger one

Image via Dribbble

Sunday, 29 September 2013

Jacopo Ligozzi, Cartouche with macabre symbols (Late 16th - early 17th century)


Jacopo Ligozzi, Cartouche with macabre symbols (Late 16th - early 17th century)

I expect to see this in Louvre next month..maybe =)

Myocardial rupture (or heart rupture) is a laceration or tearing of the walls of the ventricles or atria of the...

Myocardial rupture (or heart rupture) is a laceration or tearing of the walls of the ventricles or atria of the heart, of the interatrial or interventricular septum, of the papillary muscles or chordae tendineae or of one of the valves of the heart. It is most commonly seen as a serious sequela of an acute myocardial infarction (heart attack).
It can also be caused by trauma.

For people who initially survive a heart attack, a significant cause of death in the next few days is cardiac rupture -- literally, bursting of the heart wall.
After a heart attack, the body produces a range of chemicals that trigger biological processes involved in healing and repair. Unfortunately, many of these chemical signals can become "too much of a good thing" and end up causing further damage often leading to heart failure and sudden death.

Know more about this: http://news-releases.uiowa.edu/2011/november/111711heart_rupture_study.html

Also, know more about diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of 
 cardiac rupture in acute myocardial infarction:
http://www.fac.org.ar/scvc/llave/coronary/figueras/figuerai.htm

Images via forensicpathologist

Oxytocin, the so-called "cuddle chemical," plays a role in pregnancy, lactation, and social bonding.


Oxytocin, the so-called "cuddle chemical," plays a role in pregnancy, lactation, and social bonding. New research in Psychoneuroendocrinology shows that it also may make us more accepting of others. Scientists at the University of Freiburg in Germany can sharpen self-other differentiation in the brain. The researchers asked 44 participants to watch photos of their own face morph into those of strangers (and vice versa) on a computer screen and were asked to press a button as soon as they thought the morphing photo had changed into the other face. Those that received oxytocin (pictured: molecular structure of oxytocin) instead of placebo were faster at pressing the button to indicate that they were seeing a new face, and rated the unfamiliar faces as more pleasant than controls. Researchers believe that these results indicate oxytocin promotes a stronger self-other differentiation, which has been linked to greater feelings of emotional security and self-confidence.

Read more: 
http://www.sciencecodex.com/new_research_reveals_that_oxytocin_could_make_us_more_accepting_of_others-120172

Story and picture via Neuroscience Research Techniques

SEM of a bristle from a used toothbrush, covered in dental plaque


SEM of a bristle from a used toothbrush, covered in dental plaque
Don't forget to change your toothbrush regularly! =)

Image credit: Steve Schmeissner, courtesy of Science Photo Library

In music the passions enjoy themselves....in taste, the passions are temporary madhouses addictions


In music the passions enjoy themselves....in taste, the passions are temporary madhouses addictions

Martin Laurello – The human owl


Martin Laurello – The human owl

 He was an anatomical wonder, able to turn his head 180 degrees.

Spectacular indeed =)

Spectacular indeed =)
I really enjoyed watching it...awesome!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJpFI46b0xI

It’s often said that the HIV/AIDS epidemic has a woman’s face.


It’s often said that the HIV/AIDS epidemic has a woman’s face. The proportion of women infected with HIV has been on the rise for a decade; in sub-Saharan Africa, women constitute 60 percent of people living with disease. While preventative drugs exist, they have often proven ineffective, especially in light of financial and cultural barriers in developing nations.

A new intravaginal ring filled with an anti-retroviral drug could help. Developed with support from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases by Northwestern University visiting associate professor Patrick Kiser, the ring is easy to use, long lasting, and recently has demonstrated a 100 percent success rate protecting primates from the simian immunodeficiency virus (SHIV). The device will soon undergo its first test in humans.

"After 10 years of work, we have created an intravaginal ring that can prevent against multiple HIV exposures over an extended period of time, with consistent prevention levels throughout the menstrual cycle," said Kiser, an expert in intravaginal drug delivery who joined Northwestern from the University of Utah, where the research was conducted.

Read more: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-09-medical-device-extremely-effective-hiv.html

Story via MedicalXpress

Saturday, 28 September 2013

A young Michio Kaku and the homemade atom smasher that got him into Harvard.

A young Michio Kaku and the homemade atom smasher that got him into Harvard.



Animation showing that in a Pythagorean triple, the square of the length of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of...


Animation showing that in a Pythagorean triple, the square of the length of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares of the lengths of the other two sides.

Gif via AmericanXplorer13

Super cosmic spirograph vortex


Super cosmic spirograph vortex

Image credit: Thomas Reuben

Oui, c'est vrai! =)


Oui, c'est vrai! =)

A polarized light micrograph of dopamine crystals.


A polarized light micrograph of dopamine crystals.

Spike Walker, last night’s winner of the Royal Photographic Society's Combined Royal Colleges Medal, produced this image by passing polarized light through dopamine crystals. How the crystals refract the light varies depending on their orientation within the sample, causing them to reflect light at different wavelengths. Using this technique highlights more detail in the crystal structure than regular observation through a microscope.

Image via Wellcome Images

=)


 =)

Friday, 27 September 2013

3D Projection


3D Projection

If you walk down a corridor, the image of what’s in front of you shifts with your steps.  Mathematically, your eye is forming a projection of the 3D world onto the 2D retina, and as it moves slightly closer to the walls and the ceiling/floor as you walk, the perspective changes. 

Know more about this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3D_projection
Gif via Dribbble

Why Brain Surgeons Want Help From A Maggot-Like Robot


Why Brain Surgeons Want Help From A Maggot-Like Robot
Brain surgery is a dicey business. Even the most experienced surgeons can damage healthy tissue while trying to root out tumors deep inside the brain.

Researchers from the University of Maryland are working on a solution, and it sounds like something out of a sci-fi movie. They’re developing a tiny, maggot-like robot that can crawl into brains and zap tumors from within.

The idea first came to , a neurosurgeon and professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore, while he was watching TV.

He saw plastic surgeons use sterile maggots to remove damaged tissue from a patient. “It sounds strange, but it’s a real thing,” Simard says. And that’s when he had the idea. “If I could train maggots to resect brain tumors I would,” he says. “I can’t do that, so robotic maggots are the next best thing.”

Read more: http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2013/09/27/226837903/why-brain-surgeons-want-help-from-a-maggot-like-robot?ft=1&f=1007

Rosacea may be caused by mite faeces in your pores


Rosacea may be caused by mite faeces in your pores

Demodex folliculorum and Demodex brevisare are parasitic mites that particularly favour the hair follicles of eyebrows and eyelashes and measure a mere fraction of a millimeter long. They crawl about your face in the dark to mate and then crawl into the pores to lay their eggs and die. Healthy adults have around one or two mites per square centimetre of facial skin, though people with the condition rosacea can have 10 times more. Demodex does not have an anus and therefore cannot get rid of its faeces. Instead, their abdomen gets bigger and bigger, and when the mite dies it decomposes and releases its faeces all at once into the pore.

Read more: http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn22227-rosacea-may-be-caused-by-mite-faeces-in-your-pores.html#.UkWYT9KjPTq

Story via IFLS
Image:  false coloured SEM of an eyelash, or follicle, mite (Demodex folliculorum).
 Credit: Power And Syred

Martian H2O ?


Martian H2O ?

We tend to think of Mars as this dry place – to find water fairly easy to get out of the soil at the surface was exciting to me," said Laurie Leshin, lead author on the Science paper which confirmed the existence of water in the soil. “If you took about a cubic foot of the dirt and heated it up, you’d get a couple of pints of water out of that – a couple of water bottles’ worth that you would take to the gym.”
These results have implications for future Mars explorers. “We now know there should be abundant, easily accessible water on Mars,” said Leshin. “When we send people, they could scoop up the soil anywhere on the surface, heat it just a bit, and obtain water.”

Reference:http://www.sciencemag.org/content/341/6153/1238937
Source: sci-universe

If I'm lost in translation ..please blame my RNA =)

If I'm lost in translation ..please blame my RNA =)

What is RNA?

All modern life on Earth uses three different types of biological molecules that each serve critical functions in the cell.  Proteins are the workhorse of the cell and carry out diverse catalytic and structural roles, while the nucleic acids, DNA and RNA, carry the genetic information that can be inherited from one generation to the next.
RNA, which stands for ribonucleic acid, is a polymeric molecule made up of one or more nucleotides. A strand of RNA can be thought of as a chain with a nucleotide at each chain link. Each nucleotide is made up of a base (adenine, cytosine, guanine, and uracil, typically abbreviated as A, C, G and U), a ribose sugar, and a phosphate. 
The structure of RNA nucleotides is very similar to that of DNA nucleotides, with the main difference being that the ribose sugar backbone in RNA has a hydroxyl (-OH) group that DNA does not. This gives DNA its name: DNA stands for deoxyribonucleic acid. Another minor difference is that DNA uses the base thymine (T) in place of uracil (U). Despite great structural similarities, DNA and RNA play very different roles from one another in modern cells.

Read more: http://exploringorigins.org/rna.html
Source and animations via Exploring Life's Origins


Thursday, 26 September 2013

Santiago Ramón y Cajal in his laboratory


Santiago Ramón y Cajal in his laboratory
The 1906 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to histologists Camillo Golgi and Santiago Ramon y Cajal. They had dueling interpretations of the neural structure of the brain based in differing interpretations of the same images. Cajal won the prize for his correct theory and Golgi for the staining technique he invented to make it possible.

Know more: http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1906/cajal-bio.html

Fusion, anyone? Not quite yet, but researchers show just how close we've come


Fusion, anyone? Not quite yet, but researchers show just how close we've come
The dream of igniting a self-sustained fusion reaction with high yields of energy, a feat likened to creating a miniature star on Earth, is getting closer to becoming reality, according the authors of a new review article in the journal Physics of Plasmas.
Researchers at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) engaged in a collaborative project led by the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, report that while there is at least one significant obstacle to overcome before achieving the highly stable, precisely directed implosion required for ignition, they have met many of the demanding challenges leading up to that goal since experiments began in 2010

Read more:http://phys.org/news/2013-09-fusion-weve.html

Humans May Be Most Adaptive Species


Humans May Be Most Adaptive Species
Constant climate change may have given Homo sapiens our flexibility
In the 5 million years since early hominids first emerged from east Africa’s Rift Valley, the Earth’s climate has grown increasingly erratic. Over cycles lasting hundreds of thousands of years, arid regions of central Africa were overrun by forests, forests gave way to grasslands and contiguous landscapes were fractured by deep lakes.
It was within the context of this swiftly changing landscape that humans evolved their sizable brains and capacity for adaptive behavior, said Rick Potts, director of the Human Origins Program at the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History. In such a world, the ability to think creatively, to imagine novel solutions to survival threats, proved to be a major asset, he said.

Read more: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=humans-may-be-most-adaptive-species

How many Earths?


How many Earths?
Here's a cool graphic from New Scientist with their best estimate of how many habitable planets there might be in the galaxy. They started with the 3,588 planets discovered by the Kepler space telescope and then pared this back to only smallish planets in the "habitable zone"—not too near their star to boil over and not too far away to be iceballs. That got them down to 51 planets. But that only counts the planets we could see because our view from Earth was directly on their ecliptic. Extrapolating to all the rest produces 22,500 Earthlike planets. And since Kepler only covered 0.28 percent of the sky and only looked out 3,000 light years, extrapolating yet again produces a final estimate of 15-30 billion possibly Earthlike planets.
That's too many to show, so the picture below is a guesstimate of all the Earthlike planets "visible with a good pair of binoculars on a dark night." The grid in the lower right is the area of the sky mapped by the Kepler telescope. The rest is extrapolation. It probably doesn't mean much, but it's kind of a pretty picture.
But if there are really that many planets, where are all the people?

Story by Kevin Drum
Image credit: NS

Explore the galactic map here:
http://exoplanets.newscientistapps.com/

OK...this is hilarious =))


OK...this is hilarious =))
Even I'm sick in bed with a cold..still makes me laugh =))

Influenza

Influenza 
The flu vaccine cannot
give you the flu, I tell him.
It’s dead virus, there’s
nothing alive about it.
It can’t make you sick.
That’s a myth.
But if we bury it in
the grassy knoll
of your shoulder,
an inch under the stratum
corneum, as sanctioned by
your signature
in a white-coated ceremony
presided over by
my medical assistant
and then mark the grave
with a temporary
non-stick headstone,
the trivalent spirit
of that vaccine
has a 70 to 90 percent
chance of warding off
the Evil One,
and that’s the God’s
honest truth.

Dr. Alex Possner, assistant professor of general internal medicine at George Washington University in Washington, DC

Me likes this =)

The obvious difference between arterial and venous blood.


The obvious difference between arterial and venous blood.

Life in a liver vein - SEM


Life in a liver vein - SEM
Macrophages (in blue) doing their work in the central vein of a mouse liver

Courtesy of Hendrik Herrmann

Awesomeness


Awesomeness

Thomas Reuben creation.

Cyanea aquarium


Cyanea aquarium

Awesome photo collection, love his work
http://www.flickr.com/photos/a_semenov/with/8387331273/

Photo credit: Alexander Semenov

The entire immune system


The entire immune system

Credit: BioLegend
Bigger view :
http://www.biolegend.com/immunologicnetworks

A simple technique of treating heart attacks when they happen could save thousands of lives a year, a new study...


A simple technique of treating heart attacks when they happen could save thousands of lives a year, a new study suggests. Rather than unblocking only an affected artery when a patient presents with symptoms of a heart attack, researchers writing this month in the New England Journal of Medicine recommend that all narrowed arteries be cleared.

Read more about this study:
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1305520#t=article
Image via Wikimedia Commons

Wednesday, 25 September 2013

What is strength?


What is strength?

Icosahedron hypocycloid


Icosahedron hypocycloid

Image credit: Thomas-Reuben

Fractal geometry will make you see everything differently =)


Fractal geometry will make you see everything differently =)

Being a language, mathematics may be used not only to inform but also, among other things, to seduce
                 Benoît Mandelbrot

What is facelift surgery?


What is facelift surgery?
If you are bothered by signs of aging in your face, facelift surgery may be right for you. Technically known as rhytidectomy, a facelift is a surgical procedure to improve visible signs of aging in the face and neck, such as:
Sagging in the midface
Deep creases below the lower eyelids
Deep creases along the nose extending to the corner of the mouth
Fat that has fallen or is displaced
Loss of muscle tone in the lower face may create jowls
Loose skin and excess fatty deposits under the chin and jaw can make even a person of normal weight appear to have a double chin
Rejuvenation procedures typically performed in conjunction with a facelift are brow lift, to correct a sagging or deeply furrowed brow, and eyelid surgery to rejuvenate aging eyes.

What facelifts won't do:
As a restorative surgery, a facelift does not change your fundamental appearance and cannot stop the aging process.
Is it right for me?
A facelift can only be performed surgically; non-surgical rejuvenation treatments cannot achieve the same results, but may help delay the time at which a facelift becomes appropriate and complement the results of surgery. Facelift surgery is a highly individualized procedure and you should do it for yourself, not to fulfill someone else’s desires to to try to fit any sort of ideal image.

Facelift surgery is a good option for you if:
You are physically healthy
You do not smoke
You have a positive outlook and specific, but realistic goals in mind for the improvement of your appearance

Know more about facelift procedure, risks, costs and recovery: http://www.plasticsurgery.org/cosmetic-procedures/facelift.html

Reference: http://www.aafprs.org/patient/procedures/rhytidectomy.html

Image credit: Zed Nelson

Why humans are musical?


Why humans are musical?
Why don’t apes have musical talent, while humans, parrots, small birds, elephants, whales, and bats do? Matz Larsson, senior physician at the Lung Clinic at Örebro University Hospital, attempts to answer this question in the scientific publication Animal Cognition.

In his article, he asserts that the ability to mimic and imitate things like music and speech is the result of the fact that synchronized group movement quite simply makes it possible to perceive sounds from the surroundings better.

The hypothesis is that the evolution of vocal learning, that is musical traits, is influenced by the need of a species to deal with the disturbing sounds that are created in connection with locomotion. These sounds can affect our hearing only when we move.

“When several people with legs of roughly the same length move together, we tend to unconsciously move in rhythm. When our footsteps occur simultaneously, a brief interval of silence occurs. In the middle of each stride we can hear our surroundings better. It becomes easier to hear a pursuer, and perhaps easier to conduct a conversation as well,” explains Larsson.

A behavior that has survival value tends to produce dopamine, the “reward molecule”. In dangerous terrain, this could result in the stimulation of rhythmic movements and enhanced listening to surrounding sounds in nature. If that kind of synchronized behavior was rewarding in dangerous environments it may as well have been rewarding for the brain in relative safety, resulting in activities such as hand- clapping, foot-stamping and yelping around the campfire. From there it is just a short step to dance and rhythm. The hormone dopamine flows when we listen to music.

Story via Alpha Galileo Foundation
Reference: http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10071-013-0678-z/fulltext.html
Image via Wikimedia Commons

We all have a dinosaur deep within us just trying to get out =)


We all have a dinosaur deep within us just trying to get out =)

Image credit:gnumblr

Ha! Indeed... the one and only Dawkins =)


Ha! Indeed... the one and only Dawkins =)