Saturday, 30 September 2017

Hinode Shares Hi-Res Eclipse View


Hinode Shares Hi-Res Eclipse View
As millions of Americans watched the total solar eclipse that crossed the contiguous United States on Aug. 21, 2017, the international Hinode solar observation satellite captured its own images of the awe-inspiring natural phenomenon as it orbited the planet.

Hinode is a joint endeavor by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, the European Space Agency, the United Kingdom Space Agency and NASA.

Image credit: JAXA/NASA/SAO/NAOJ
https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/hinode/hinode-shares-hi-res-eclipse-view.html

#space #Hinode #Jaxa #NASA #NAOJ #eclipse2017

Geometrical peculiarities


Geometrical peculiarities
...or nostalgia for living forms that haunts geometry, in my case ;)

Work by bigblueboo
http://bigblueboo.tumblr.com/

#math #coding #processing #geometry #science

Lightning strikes more frequently over shipping lanes than over other stretches of water, a new study finds


Lightning strikes more frequently over shipping lanes than over other stretches of water, a new study finds
After analyzing 12 years of lightning data, Joel Thornton and colleagues found two lines of enhanced activity over two of the world's busiest shipping lanes. The mechanism, researchers suspect, involves the aerosolized particulates emitted by ships. The small particles become seeds for cloud droplets and get lofted to great heights, where they can freeze, electrify, and form thunderstorm-producing cumulonimbus clouds.

Source:
http://physicstoday.scitation.org/do/10.1063/PT.6.1.20170928a/full/

#lightning #storm #science #naturalphenomena

Researchers create human inner ear organs that could lead to new therapies for hearing, balance impairments


Researchers create human inner ear organs that could lead to new therapies for hearing, balance impairments
Researchers at Indiana University School of Medicine have successfully developed a method to grow inner ear tissue from human stem cells—a finding that could lead to new platforms to model disease and new therapies for the treatment of hearing and balance disorders.

“The inner ear is only one of few organs with which biopsy is not performed and because of this, human inner ear tissues are scarce for research purposes,” said Eri Hashino, PhD, Ruth C. Holton Professor of Otolaryngology at IU School of Medicine. “Dish-grown human inner ear tissues offer unprecedented opportunities to develop and test new therapies for various inner ear disorders.”

The study, published online May 1, 2017, in Nature Biotechnology, was led by Karl R. Koehler, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery at IU School of Medicine, and Dr. Hashino in collaboration with Jeffrey Holt, PhD, professor of otology and laryngology at Harvard Medical School and Boston Children’s Hospital.

The research builds on the team’s previous work with a technique called three-dimensional culture, which involves incubating stem cells in a floating ball-shaped aggregate, unlike traditional cell culture in which cells grow in a flat layer on the surface of a culture dish. This allows for more complex interactions between cells, and creates an environment that is closer to what occurs in the body during development, Dr. Koehler said.

By culturing human stem cells in this manner and treating them with specific signaling molecules, the investigators were able to guide cells through key processes involved in the development of the human inner ear. This resulted in what the scientists have termed inner ear “organoids,” or three-dimensional structures containing sensory cells and supporting cells found in the inner ear.

“This is essentially a recipe for how to make human inner ears from stem cells,” said Dr. Koehler, lead author of the study and whose research lab works on modeling human development. “After tweaking our recipe for about a year, we were shocked to discover that we could make multiple inner ear organoids in each pea-sized cell aggregate.”

The researchers used CRISPR gene editing technology to engineer stem cells that produced fluorescently labeled inner ear sensory cells. Targeting the labeled cells for analysis, they revealed that their organoids contained a population of sensory cells that have the same functional signature as cells that detect gravity and motion in the human inner ear.

“We also found neurons, like those that transmit signals from the ear to the brain, forming connections with sensory cells,” Dr. Koehler said. “This is an exciting feature of these organoids because both cell types are critcal for proper hearing and balance.”

Dr. Hashino said these findings are “a real game changer, because up until now, potential drugs or therapies have been tested on animal cells, which often behave differently from human cells.”

The researchers are currently using the human inner ear organoids to study how genes known to cause deafness interrupt normal development of the inner ear and plan to start the first-ever drug screening using human inner ear organoids.

Source:
http://news.medicine.iu.edu/releases/2017/05/iu-researchers-inner-ear.shtml

Journal article:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28459451

Image: Human inner ear organoid with sensory hair cells (cyan) and sensory neurons (yellow). An antibody for the protein CTBP2 reveals cell nuclei as well as synapses between hair cells and neurons (magenta).
Credit: KARL KOEHLER

#stemcells #innerear #earorganoids #neurons #hearing #neuroscience #science

Wednesday, 27 September 2017

Parker Solar Probe


Parker Solar Probe
NASA’s Parker Solar Probe will be the first-ever mission to "touch" the sun. The spacecraft, about the size of a small car, will travel directly into the sun's atmosphere about 4 million miles from our star's surface. Launch is slated for summer 2018.

Get informed:
https://www.nasa.gov/content/goddard/parker-solar-probe

Watch:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_yDSIuRcdI&feature=youtu.be

#space #NASA #ParkerSolarProbe #universe #science

Tuesday, 26 September 2017

Layers of a Total Solar Eclipse


Layers of a Total Solar Eclipse
Neither rain, nor snow, nor dark of night can keep a space-based spacecraft from watching the Sun. In fact, from its vantage point 1.5 million kilometers sunward of planet Earth, NASA's SOlar Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) can always monitor the Sun's outer atmosphere, or corona. But only during a total solar eclipse can Earth-based observers also see the lovely coronal streamers and structures - when the Moon briefly blocks the overwhelmingly bright solar surface.

Then, it becomes possible to follow detailed coronal activity all the way down to the Sun's surface. In the outside layer of this composite image, SOHO's uninterrupted view of the solar corona during last month's eclipse is shown in orange hues. The middle, donut-shaped region is the corona as recorded by the Williams College Eclipse Expedition to Salem, Oregon. Simultaneously, the inner view is from NASA's Earth-orbiting Solar Dynamics Observatory, which, being outside of totality, was able to image the face of the Sun in extreme ultraviolet light, shown in gold.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html

Image Credit:
Inside: Solar Dynamics Observatory, LMSAL and NASA’s GSFC;
Middle: Jay Pasachoff, Ron Dantowitz, and the Williams College Solar Eclipse Expedition/NSF/National Geographic;
Outside: LASCO from NRL on SOHO from ESA

#NASA #ESA #eclipse #sun #SDO #universe #science

Monday, 25 September 2017

Last Enceladus Plume Observation


Last Enceladus Plume Observation
This movie sequence of images is from the last dedicated observation of the Enceladus plume by NASA's Cassini spacecraft.

The images were obtained over approximately 14 hours as Cassini's cameras stared at the active, icy moon. The view during the entire sequence is of the moon's night side, but Cassini's perspective Enceladus shifts during the sequence. The movie begins with a view of the part of the surface lit by reflected light from Saturn and transitions to completely unilluminated terrain. The exposure time of the images changes about halfway through the sequence, in order to make fainter details visible. (The change also makes background stars become visible.)

Enceladus is Saturn's sixth largest moon, only 157 miles (252 km) in mean radius, but it's one of the most scientifically compelling bodies in our solar system. Hydrothermal vents spew water vapor and ice particles from an underground ocean beneath the icy crust of Enceladus. This plume of material includes organic compounds, volatile gases, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, salts and silica.

Enceladus info:
https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/enceladus

Source:
http://ciclops.org/view/8614/Last-Enceladus-Plume-Observation?js=1

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI

#space #NASA #Cassini #Enceladus #science #universe

Atlantic Puffin


Atlantic Puffin
From 2017 Audubon Photography Awards, one of 21 photos.
Great bird photography: Winners and runners-up from the 8th annual competition.

Atlantic puffins have penguin-like coloring but they sport a colorful beak that has led some to dub them the “sea parrot.” The beak fades to a drab gray during the winter and blooms with color again in the spring—suggesting that it may be attractive to potential mates.

Read & learn:
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/birds/a/atlantic-puffin/

Photo: Atlantic Puffin.
Credit: Ann Pacheco / Audubon Photography Awards
https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2017/07/2017-audubon-photography-awards/533214/

#biodiversity #coolcritters #birds #atlanticpuffin

Cassini's Last Ring Portrait at Saturn


Cassini's Last Ring Portrait at Saturn
How should Cassini say farewell to Saturn? Three days before plunging into Saturn's sunny side, the robotic Cassini spacecraft swooped far behind Saturn's night side with cameras blazing. Thirty-six of these images have been merged -- by an alert and adept citizen scientist -- into a last full-ring portrait of Cassini's home planet for the past 13 years.

The Sun is just above the frame, causing Saturn to cast a dark shadow onto its enormous rings. This shadow position cannot be imaged from Earth and will not be visible again until another Earth-launched spaceship visits the ringed giant. Data and images from Cassini's mission-ending dive into Saturn's atmosphere on September 15 continue to be analyzed.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit: NASA, JPL-Caltech, Space Science Institute, Mindaugas Macijauskas

#space #NASA #universe #Cassini #Saturn #science

Estrogen Alters Memory Circuit Function in Women with Gene Variant


Estrogen Alters Memory Circuit Function in Women with Gene Variant
Fluctuations in estrogen can trigger atypical functioning in a key brain memory circuit in women with a common version of a gene, NIMH scientists have discovered. Brain scans revealed altered circuit activity linked to changes in the sex hormone in women with the gene variant while they performed a working memory task.

The findings may help to explain individual differences in menstrual cycle and reproductive-related mental disorders linked to fluctuations in the hormone. They may also shed light on mechanisms underlying sex-related differences in onset, severity, and course of mood and anxiety disorders and schizophrenia. The gene-by-hormone interaction’s effect on circuit function was found only with one of two versions of the gene that occurs in about a fourth of white women.

Drs. Karen Berman, Peter Schmidt, Shau-Ming Wei, and colleagues, of the NIMH Intramural Research Program, report on this first such demonstration in women April 18, 2017 in the journal Molecular Psychiatry.

Prior to the study, there was little evidence from research on the human brain that might account for individual differences in cognitive and behavioral effects of sex hormones. For example, why do some women develop postpartum depression and others do not – in response to the same hormone changes? Why do some women report that estrogen replacement improved their memory, whereas large studies of postmenopausal estrogen therapy show no overall improvement in memory performance?

Evidence from humans has also been lacking for the neural basis of stark sex differences in prevalence and course of mental disorders that are likely related to sex hormones. For example, why are there higher rates of mood disorders in females and higher rates of ADHD in males – or later onset of schizophrenia in females?

In seeking answers to these questions, the researchers focused on working memory, a well-researched brain function often disturbed in many of these disorders. It was known that working memory is mediated by a circuit from the brain’s executive hub, the prefrontal cortex, to its memory hub, the hippocampus. Notably, hippocampus activity is typically suppressed during working memory processing.

Following-up on a clue from experiments in mice, the NIMH team hypothesized that estrogen tweaks circuit function by interacting with a uniquely human version of the gene that codes for brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), a pivotal chemical messenger operating in this circuit. To find out, the researchers experimentally manipulated estrogen levels in healthy women with one or the other version of the BDNF gene over a period of months. Researchers periodically scanned the women’s brain activity while they performed a working memory task to see any effects of the gene-hormone interaction on circuit function.

The researchers first scanned 39 women using PET (positron emission tomography) and later confirmed the results in 27 women using fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging). Both pegged atypical activity in the hippocampus to the interaction. Turning up the same findings using two types of neuroimaging strengthens the case for the accuracy of their observations, say the researchers. Such gene-hormone interactions affecting thinking and behavior are consistent with findings from animal studies and are suspect mechanisms conferring risk for mental illness, they add.

Source & further reading:
https://www.nimh.nih.gov/news/science-news/2017/estrogen-alters-memory-circuit-function-in-women-with-gene-variant.shtml

Journal article:
http://www.nature.com/mp/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/mp201772a.html?foxtrotcallback=true

Image:
Both PET scans (left) and fMRI scans (right) showed the same atypical activation (yellow) in the brain’s memory hub, or hippocampus, in response to estrogen in women performing a working memory task – if they carried a uniquely human version of the BDNF gene. Activity in this area is typically suppressed during working memory. Picture shows PET and fMRI data superimposed over anatomical MRI image.

#estrogen #braincircuitry #neuroimaging #brainderivedneurotrophicfactor #genevariants #hippocampus #neuroscience

Geomorph


Geomorph

work by bigblueboo
http://bigblueboo.tumblr.com/

#math #coding #processing

Friday, 22 September 2017

Cool and icy Dione floats in front of giant Saturn bedecked in a dazzling array of colors


Cool and icy Dione floats in front of giant Saturn bedecked in a dazzling array of colors
The surface of Dione, which exhibits contrasting bright and dark areas when viewed up close, appears pale in this image. It is Saturn's multi-hued cloud bands that boldly steal the show. Discrete clouds and eddies in Saturn's northern hemisphere can be seen within the faint shadows of the rings on the planet. Dione is 1,118 kilometers (695 miles) across.
This view was obtained from about one-third of a degree out of the ring plane.

Source & further reading:
https://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/resources/2913/

#space #nasa #cassini #dione #science

When love hurts, a placebo can help


When love hurts, a placebo can help
Feeling heartbroken from a recent breakup? Just believing you’re doing something to help yourself get over your ex can influence brain regions associated with emotional regulation and lessen the perception of pain.

That’s the takeaway from a new CU Boulder study that measured the neurological and behavioral impacts the placebo effect had on a group of recently broken-hearted volunteers.

“Breaking up with a partner is one of the most emotionally negative experiences a person can have, and it can be an important trigger for developing psychological problems,” said first author and postdoctoral research associate Leonie Koban, noting that such social pain is associated with a 20-fold higher risk of developing depression in the coming year. “In our study, we found a placebo can have quite strong effects on reducing the intensity of social pain.”

For decades, research has shown that placebos – sham treatments with no active ingredients – can measurably ease pain, Parkinson’s disease and other physical ailments.

The new study, published in March in the Journal of Neuroscience, is the first to measure placebos’ impact on emotional pain from romantic rejection.

Source & further reading:
http://www.colorado.edu/today/2017/04/24/when-love-hurts-placebo-can-help

Journal article:
http://www.jneurosci.org/content/early/2017/03/06/JNEUROSCI.2658-16.2017

#neuroscience #love #placebo #emotionalpain

NASA's Space Hubble Telescope spotted an unusual glowing pair of asteroids


NASA's Space Hubble Telescope spotted an unusual glowing pair of asteroids
NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope helped an international team of astronomers find that an unusual object in the asteroid belt is, in fact, two asteroids orbiting each other that have comet-like features. These include a bright halo of material, called a coma, and a long tail of dust.

GIF:
This time-lapse video, assembled from a set of Hubble Space Telescope photos, reveals two asteroids orbiting each other that have comet-like features. The asteroid pair, called 2006 VW139/288P, was observed in September 2016, just before the asteroid made its closest approach to the Sun. The photos revealed ongoing activity in the binary system. The apparent movement of the tail is a projection effect due to the relative alignment between the Sun, Earth, and 2006 VW139/288P changing between observations.

The tail orientation is also affected by a change in the particle size. Initially, the tail was pointing towards the direction where comparatively large (about 1 millimeter in size) dust particles were emitted in late July. However, from Sept. 20 on, the tail began to point in the opposite direction from the Sun as the pressure of sunlight affects smaller (10 microns in size) dust particles where they are blown away from the nucleus by radiation pressure.
Credits: NASA, ESA, and J. DePasquale and Z. Levay (STScI)

Source & further reading:
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2017/hubble-discovers-that-a-unique-object-is-a-binary

#nasa #space #universe #asteroid #Hubble #science

Tuesday, 19 September 2017

From the Sept. 15, 1952 Animals feature - “THIS IS A MERMAID? WELL, THAT’S WHAT SCIENCE SAYS.”


From the Sept. 15, 1952 Animals feature - “THIS IS A MERMAID? WELL, THAT’S WHAT SCIENCE SAYS.”

According to LIFE: “Some ancient mariners, historians say, went away on a long voyage and came back reporting that they had seen creatures which were women to the waist and fishtail below. The mariners called them mermaids, but modern science claims they were specimen’s of the manatee, or sea-cow, a legless aquatic mammal of which one species, Trichechus manatus latirostris, is found mostly in river mouths along the east coast of Florida.

… It resembles a mermaid only in the fact that it has a fish tail and that the female has a vaguely ladylike bust. Just possibly this was enough to delude a few very ancient and very lonely mariners. The manatee pictured here is named George (also called Winston due to his "fancied resemblance to Britain’s premier), snuggling up to a friendly Biologist, Roswell Bushnell in South Daytona, Fla.

Credit: Robert W. Kelley—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

#biodiversity #marinecreatures #seacow #mermaids

The Big Corona


The Big Corona
Most photographs don't adequately portray the magnificence of the Sun's corona. Seeing the corona first-hand during a total solar eclipse is unparalleled. The human eye can adapt to see coronal features and extent that average cameras usually cannot. Welcome, however, to the digital age. The featured picture is a combination of forty exposures from one thousandth of a second to two seconds that, together, were digitally combined and processed to highlight faint features of the total solar eclipse that occurred in August of 2017.

Clearly visible are intricate layers and glowing caustics of an ever changing mixture of hot gas and magnetic fields in the Sun's corona. Looping prominences appear bright pink just past the Sun's limb. Faint details on the night side of the New Moon can even be made out, illuminated by sunlight reflected from the dayside of the Full Earth.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Alson Wong
http://www.alsonwongastro.com/

#space #universe #corona #eclipse #NASA


Sunday, 17 September 2017

Scientists Find New Evidence About How to Prevent Worsening Pneumonia


Scientists Find New Evidence About How to Prevent Worsening Pneumonia
Researchers at the Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University have found that the TIP peptide, a synthetic version of the tip of the cancer-killing immune molecule tumor necorsis factor, may strengthen the barrier created by sodium channels in the cells that line capillaries in our lungs. Strengthening this barrier may prevent worsening pneumonia.

“We showed that these channels are present in human capillary endothelial cells and that these channels play a really important role in protecting us from pneumolysin,” says Dr. Rudolf Lucas, vascular biologist at the Vascular Biology Center at the Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University and the study’s corresponding author.

“We also provided more evidence that targeting these channels with the TIP peptide or something similar is a solid strategy for reducing dangerous fluid volume in your lungs,” says Lucas. The studies were conducted in the endothelial cells that line human lung capillaries, known to form a tight barrier for the blood vessels.

Source:
http://jagwire.augusta.edu/archives/47212

#research #medicalresearch #medicine #lungs #capillaries #pneumonia #pneumolysin #breathing #TIPpeptide #physiology

Cell biologists discover crucial ‘traffic regulator’ in neurons


Cell biologists discover crucial ‘traffic regulator’ in neurons
Cell biologists led by Utrecht University’s Professor Casper Hoogenraad have discovered the protein that may be the crucial traffic regulator for the transport of vital molecules inside nerve cells. When this traffic regulator is removed, the flow of traffic comes to a halt.

The resulting ‘traffic jams’ are reported to play a key role in neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer and Parkinson’s disease. The discovery of this traffic regulator may therefore be crucial for a better understanding of the development of neural disorders. The results of their research were published in the scientific journal Neuron on Wednesday 19 April.

Source & further reading:
https://www.uu.nl/en/news/cell-biologists-discover-crucial-traffic-regulator-in-neurons

Journal article:
http://www.cell.com/neuron/fulltext/S0896-6273(17)30290-8

#neuroscience #sensoryneurons #MAP2 #nervecells #neurodegenerativediseases #axonaltransport

Orion above Easter Island


Orion above Easter Island
Why were the statues on Easter Island built? No one is sure. What is sure is that over 800 large stone statues exist there. The Easter Island statues, stand, on the average, over twice as tall as a person and have over 200 times as much mass. Few specifics are known about the history or meaning of the unusual rock sculptures, but many believe that they were created about 700 years ago in the images of local leaders of a lost civilization.

Featured here, one of the ancient Moai sculptures was imaged in 2016 before the constellation of Orion, including the famous line of three belt stars and brilliant stars Betelgeuse (far left in red) and Rigel (upper center). The stone giant appears, however, to be inspecting the brightest star in the night sky (far right): Sirius.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Yuri Beletsky (Carnegie Las Campanas Observatory, TWAN)
https://www.instagram.com/yuribeletsky/

#nasa #space #naturalphenomena #EasterIsland

Saturday, 16 September 2017

Goodbye Cassini and thanks for all the science


Goodbye Cassini and thanks for all the science
You helped us learn the secrets of Saturn's magnetosphere!

Get informed:
https://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/science/magnetosphere/

#universe #Cassini #magnetosphere #space #NASA #saturn #science

For a moment at least, be a smile on someone else’s face.


For a moment at least, be a smile on someone else’s face.
D.Stojanovic

#personalnonsense #smiles #ticklemyamygdala

Thursday, 14 September 2017

North Korea fires a missile in direction of Japan, Japanese alert system says

North Korea fires a missile in direction of Japan, Japanese alert system says
South Korea responded to the launch by immediately conducting a simulated strike of the North Korean launch site.

Idiotic creatures or how I simulated the drinking of a coke and pretended that I cared ;)

PS: Can someone lobotomize this midget?


https://www.wsj.com/articles/north-korea-fires-missile-in-direction-of-japan-japanese-alert-system-says-1505427875?mod=e2tw

The Sentinel5P satellite will measure NO2, O3, HCHO, SO2, CO, CH4 as well as clouds and aerosols in the atmosphere


The Sentinel5P satellite will measure NO2, O3, HCHO, SO2, CO, CH4 as well as clouds and aerosols in the atmosphere

The Sentinels are a fleet of satellites designed specifically to deliver the wealth of data and imagery that are central to the European Commission’s Copernicus program. This unique environmental monitoring program is making a step change in the way we manage our environment, understand and tackle the effects of climate change and safeguard everyday lives.

Sentinel-5 Precursor – also known as Sentinel-5P – is the first Copernicus mission dedicated to monitoring our atmosphere. The satellite carries the state-of-the-art Tropomi instrument to map a multitude of trace gases such as nitrogen dioxide, ozone, formaldehyde, sulphur dioxide, methane, carbon monoxide and aerosols – all of which affect the air we breathe and therefore our health, and our climate.

With a swath width of 2600 km, it will map the entire planet every day. Information from this new mission will be used through the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service for air quality forecasts and for decision-making.

Tropomi – a spectrometer – will map the global atmosphere every day with a resolution as high as 7 km × 3.5 km. At this resolution, air pollution over cities can be detected.

The mission will also contribute to services such as volcanic ash monitoring for aviation safety and for services that warn of high levels of UV radiation which can cause skin damage. In addition, scientists will also use the data to improve our knowledge of important processes in the atmosphere related to the climate and to the formation of holes in the ozone layer.

Get informed:
http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Observing_the_Earth/Copernicus/Sentinel-5P

#ESA #sentinel5P #space #research #science

Infographic: The Brain on Psychedelics

Infographic: The Brain on Psychedelics
Key brain areas involved in the effects of psychedelic drugs are located in the default mode network (DMN), which is more active at rest than when attention is focused on the external environment. Neuroscientists first discovered this network while scanning participants’ brains at rest: rather than a decrease in activity across the brain, they found that activity in some regions was actually higher when people were not engaged in a goal-directed task. Over the years, researchers have linked the DMN to a variety of functions, including autobiographical recollection, mind wandering, and processing self-related information.

Key hubs of the DMN include the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC), the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), and the posterior inferior parietal lobule (pIPL). Through neuroimaging, researchers have discovered that psychedelic drug use decreases activity in some of these brain areas, and also reduces connectivity within the DMN.

Neuroimaging studies have also shown that connectivity between brain networks is increased when psychedelics are administered. For example, the DMN; the salience network, which helps identify behaviorally relevant information; and the frontoparietal network, known to be involved in attentional control and conscious awareness, all show stronger connections to each other. Researchers believe that this increased crosstalk throughout the brain may play a key role in the drugs’ effects.

Psychedelics’ Anti-inflammatory Effects

Scientists have discovered that a number of psychedelics can reduce inflammation throughout the body. Animal studies with one of these drugs, DOI, which is an especially potent anti-inflammatory compound, are starting to reveal the mechanism behind these effects. According to one hypothesis, DOI binds to and activates the serotonin 2A (5-HT2A) receptor to recruit protein kinase C (PKC). This is thought to block the downstream effects of the binding of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) to its receptor (TNFR), which is known to initiate a signaling cascade that promotes the transcription of proinflammatory genes.

Full story via The Scientist
http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/50209/title/Decoding-the-Tripping-Brain/

#infographic by CATHERINE DELPHIA

#neuroscience #brain #psychedelics #research



Reminder: #Cassini is making its final approach to #Saturn


Reminder: #Cassini is making its final approach to #Saturn

#Cassini #Saturn #NASA #ESA #space #universe

Hubble observes pitch black planet


Hubble observes pitch black planet
Astronomers have discovered that the well-studied exoplanet WASP-12b reflects almost no light, making it appear essentially pitch black. This discovery sheds new light on the atmospheric composition of the planet and also refutes previous hypotheses about WASP-12b’s atmosphere. The results are also in stark contrast to observations of another similarly sized exoplanet.

Source & further reading:
https://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic1714/

#space #Hubble #WASP12b #universe #science


Wednesday, 13 September 2017

Flare Well AR2673


Flare Well AR2673
Almost out of view from our fair planet, rotating around the Sun's western edge giant active region AR2673 lashed out with another intense solar flare followed by a large coronal mass ejection on September 10. The flare itself is seen here at the right in an extreme ultraviolet image from the sun-staring Solar Dynamics Observatory.

This intense flare was the fourth X-class flare from AR2673 this month. The active region's most recent associated coronal mass ejection collided with Earth's magnetosphere 2 days later. Say farewell to the mighty AR2673, for now. For the next two weeks, the powerful sunspot group will be on the Sun's far side.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit: NASA, SDO, GSFC

#sun #SDO #NASA #universe #space #science

Tuesday, 12 September 2017

Whenever I feel blue, I start breathing again.


Whenever I feel blue, I start breathing again.
~L.Baum

work by bigblueboo

#math #animation #coding #processing

Music Has Powerful (and Visible) Effects on the Brain


Music Has Powerful (and Visible) Effects on the Brain
It doesn’t matter if it’s Bach, the Beatles, Brad Paisley or Bruno Mars. Your favorite music likely triggers a similar type of activity in your brain as other people’s favorites do in theirs.

That’s one of the things Jonathan Burdette, M.D., has found in researching music’s effects on the brain.

“Music is primal. It affects all of us, but in very personal, unique ways,” said Burdette, a neuroradiologist at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. “Your interaction with music is different than mine, but it’s still powerful.

“Your brain has a reaction when you like or don’t like something, including music. We’ve been able to take some baby steps into seeing that, and ‘dislike’ looks different than ‘like’ and much different than ‘favorite.’”

To study how music preferences might affect functional brain connectivity – the interactions among separate areas of the brain – Burdette and his fellow investigators used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), which depicts brain activity by detecting changes in blood flow. Scans were made of 21 people while they listened to music they said they most liked and disliked from among five genres (classical, country, rap, rock and Chinese opera) and to a song or piece of music they had previously named as their personal favorite.

Those fMRI scans showed a consistent pattern: The listeners’ preferences, not the type of music they were listening to, had the greatest impact on brain connectivity – especially on a brain circuit known to be involved in internally focused thought, empathy and self-awareness. This circuit, called the default mode network, was poorly connected when the participants were listening to the music they disliked, better connected when listening to the music they liked and the most connected when listening to their favorites.

The researchers also found that listening to favorite songs altered the connectivity between auditory brain areas and a region responsible for memory and social emotion consolidation.

Source & further reading:
http://www.newswise.com/articles/music-has-powerful-and-visible-effects-on-the-brain

#neuroscience #music #functionalconnectivity #brainactivity #neuroimaging

NGC 6334: The Cat's Paw Nebula


NGC 6334: The Cat's Paw Nebula
Nebulas are perhaps as famous for being identified with familiar shapes as perhaps cats are for getting into trouble. Still, no known cat could have created the vast Cat's Paw Nebula visible in Scorpius.

At 5,500 light years distant, Cat's Paw is an emission nebula with a red color that originates from an abundance of ionized hydrogen atoms. Alternatively known as the Bear Claw Nebula or NGC 6334, stars nearly ten times the mass of our Sun have been born there in only the past few million years.

Pictured here is a deep field image of the Cat's Paw Nebula in light emitted by hydrogen, oxygen, and sulfur.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: George Varouhakis

#space #NASA #nebula #universe

Monday, 11 September 2017

Cassini: The Grand Finale


Cassini: The Grand Finale
On Sept. 15, 2017, the Cassini spacecraft will make a fateful plunge into Saturn's atmosphere, ending the mission just one month shy of its 20th launch anniversary.

On the final orbit, Cassini will plunge into Saturn fighting to keep its antenna pointed at Earth as it transmits its farewell. In the skies of Saturn, the journey ends, as Cassini becomes part of the planet itself.

Source:
https://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/grand-finale/cassini-end-of-mission-timeline/

#space #NASA #Cassini #Saturn #universe #science

Active Region on Sun Continues to Emits Solar Flares


Active Region on Sun Continues to Emits Solar Flares
The Sun emitted another mid-level (M8.1) flare from the same active region (AR 2673) on Sept. 8. Solar flares are sudden outbursts of energy that dramatically enhance the X-ray region of the solar spectrum. The Geostationary Operational Environment Satellites (GOES) classifies flares based on their X-ray emission peaks (A, B, C, M or X). On each GOES satellite there are two X-Ray Sensors (XRS) which measure X-ray brightness of flares in the wavelength range of 0.5 to 3 Angstroms (black line) and 1 to 8 Angstroms (red line). You can see the measurements below.The imagery/data dropouts are due to satellite eclipses.

Sources:
http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2017/active-region-on-sun-continues-to-emits-solar-flares

#sun #NOAA #goddard #science #solarflares #universe #space

Mount d'Ambre leaf chameleon (Brookesia tuberculata)


Mount d'Ambre leaf chameleon (Brookesia tuberculata)
The Mount d'Ambre leaf chameleon is a diminutive chameleon from far northern Madagascar. This species inhabits rainforest and during the day it is active in the leaf litter or on small branches a few centimeters above the ground. At night it can be found roosting on branches approximately 5 - 15 cm above the ground. It is considered ’Vulnerable’ by the IUCN red list.

Sources:
http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/summary/176299/0
http://reptile-database.reptarium.cz/species?genus=Brookesia&species=tuberculata

Photo credit:
https://www.ovguide.com/mount-d-039;ambre-leaf-chameleon-9202a8c04000641f8000000008ea8503

#biodiversity #brookesiatuberculata #coolcritters #chameleon

Could ‘love hormone’ help drug addicts stay clean?


Could ‘love hormone’ help drug addicts stay clean?
Experts say oxytocin, a key hormone made naturally by the brain, could hold the key to treating drug addicts and help them avoid relapse.

Oxytocin is most usually associated with childbirth and breast feeding, but has multiple psychological effects, influencing social behavior and emotion.

Sometimes called the ‘love hormone’, it has an anti-anxiety effect, and many studies have examined the role of oxytocin in addiction.

Researchers at St George’s, University of London, after reviewing all the published evidence on oxytocin, have now found that the oxytocin system is profoundly affected by opioid use and abstinence.

The review suggests the oxytocin system can be an important target for developing new medicines for the treatment of opioid addiction and prevention of relapse among addicts.

Taking drugs activates pathways in the brain that induce pleasurable effects, which make the user want to repeat the experience, but as drug use continues, brain tolerance to the effects of the drug increases and a greater dose is needed to achieve the same effects.

Dr Alexis Bailey, senior author of the review, said: “Given the benefits that social support programs like Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous have in keeping addicts abstinent, our findings in the review suggest the use of oxytocin, the pro-social hormone, could be an effective therapy for the prevention of relapse to drug use in drug-dependent individuals.

“Since the evidence is so clear, the need for more clinical studies looking into this is obvious.” The review is published in the British Journal of Pharmacology.

Source:
https://www.sgul.ac.uk/news/news-archive/could-love-hormone-help-drug-addicts-stay-clean

Journal article:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/bph.13757/pdf

#neuroscience #oxytocin #drugaddiction #opioiddrugs #amygdala

Thursday, 7 September 2017

Stefania Jabłońska (1920-2017) was a Polish physician and specialist in dermatology.


Stefania Jabłońska (1920-2017) was a Polish physician and specialist in dermatology. She conducted crucial research linking human papilloma viruses and skin cancer.

She worked with the Russian Academy of Sciences, and later with the University of Pennsylvania after obtaining a grant from the World Health Organization. She was awarded the Commander’s Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta, and the National Order of Merit, France’s highest order of merit, in 1998, in recognition of her discoveries.

References:
https://www.google.com/culturalinstitute/beta/entity/m0b6mhqc
http://www.oegdv.at/web2/index.php/informationen/archiv/234-in-memoriam-prof-stefania-jablonska
http://www.bmj.com/content/357/bmj.j2891

Photo:
Stefania Jabłońska with Alfred Marchionini via Wikipedia Commons

#history #womeninSTEM #StefaniaJablonska #dermatology #HPV

Extensive Coronal Hole


Extensive Coronal Hole
A large coronal hole has been spewing solar wind particles in the general direction of Earth (Aug. 31- Sept. 1, 2017). It is the extensive dark area that stretches from the top of the sun and angles down to the right.

Coronal holes are areas of open magnetic field, which allow charge particles to escape into space. They appear dark in certain wavelengths of extreme ultraviolet light such as shown here. These clouds of particles can cause aurora to appear, particularly in higher latitude regions.

Credit: Solar Dynamics Observatory, NASA.
https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/potw/item/832

#NASA #SDO #space #science #universe #coronalhole #sun

Wednesday, 6 September 2017

Antitwist


Antitwist
"We turn T(h)e Cube and it twists us."
*~Erno Rubik*​

Work by bigblueboo​
http://bigblueboo.tumblr.com/

#math #animations #cube

Everyone has different ‘bad spots’ in their vision


Everyone has different ‘bad spots’ in their vision
The ability to distinguish objects in peripheral vision varies significantly between individuals, finds new research from UCL, Paris Descartes University and Dartmouth College, USA. For example, some people are better at spotting things above their center of vision while others are better at spotting things off to the right.

The research, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and funded by the Medical Research Council (MRC), the European Research Council, and Dartmouth College, shows that on average we are worse at spotting objects in crowded environments when they are above or below eye level, although the extent to which this happens varies between individuals.

“If you’re driving a truck with a high cabin and looking straight ahead, you’re less likely to notice pedestrians or cyclists at street level in your peripheral vision than if you were lower down with those same pedestrians on the left and right,” explains lead author Dr John Greenwood (UCL Experimental Psychology). “A visually cluttered environment like a busy city road makes it even more difficult. As well as the physical blind spots on vehicles, people behind the wheel will also have different areas where their peripheral vision is better or worse.”

The study involved 12 volunteers who took part in a series of perception tests over several years. The key experiment involved focusing on a point in the center of the screen while images of clocks were shown in different parts of the visual field, either a clock alone or with two other clocks next to it. It is more difficult to tell the time on the central clock when the surrounding clocks are closer to it, as the scene is more visually 'cluttered’. This is known as ‘visual crowding’.

Participants’ ability to successfully identify the central clock in a cluttered scene varied significantly, with different people better at spotting it in different positions. On average, most participants were weakest with their upper peripheral vision, followed by the lower peripheral vision. There was no significant difference between left and right on average, with some volunteers better on the left and others on the right.

In the same task, participants were also asked to move their eyes to where the center of the middle clock had been once it disappeared. There was a strong correlation between the amount of disruption from clutter and the ability of individuals to make precise eye movements to those same locations.

“Everyone has their own pattern of sensitivity, with islands of poor vision and other regions of good vision,” explains Dr Greenwood. “If you’re looking for your keys, then this profile will affect your ability to find them. For example, if your keys are on a table to the left of where you’re focusing, the presence of books and papers on the table may stop you spotting the keys. Someone with strong left-sided vision could spot the keys even if they’re right next to the book, whereas someone else might not notice the keys unless they’re a foot away from the book. There is substantial variation between different people.”

These ‘islands’ of poor vision were apparent across several tasks tested by the researchers, despite each relying on different processes in the brain. The implication is that these differences in peripheral vision could occur very early in the visual system, possibly beginning as early as the retina. It is unclear whether these differences are due to genetics or environment, but they are observed consistently over time.

“What is striking is the consistency of the pattern from the first levels of vision up to the highest levels, processing that involves very different areas of the brain,” explains senior author Research Professor Patrick Cavanagh (Dartmouth College). “We propose that these variations originate at the first levels of vision very early in our development where simple features like edges and colours are registered, and then are inherited by higher levels as the rest of the brain wires itself up to deal with the information being sent from the eyes. The higher levels deal with recognizing objects, faces, and actions, and directing our eyes toward areas of interest.”

Most people do not experience visual crowding in the center of their vision, unlike the periphery, however in some conditions central vision is also affected. In amblyopia, also known as 'lazy eye’, the brain does not interpret visual signals from one eye properly, leading to an increase in visual crowding. In dyslexia, some research has shown that people with the condition find it easier to read words when the letter spacing is increased to reduce visual crowding. Similarly, visual crowding effects may be one of the early symptoms of Posterior Cortical Atrophy, a form of dementia that predominantly affects vision. Crowding is also a factor in macular degeneration, the most common form of blindness, where the center of the eye is affected first and so patients must rely on their peripheral vision to see.

“Our new paper helps us to better understand the mechanisms that cause visual crowding and where these occur in the visual system,” says Professor Cavanagh. “In the long term, we hope that this will help with the development of better treatment strategies for a wide range of conditions that limits the usefulness of vision for millions of people worldwide.”

Source:
https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/news-articles/0417/110417-everyone-different-bad-spots-vision

Journal article:
http://www.pnas.org/content/114/17/E3573

Image:
This is an image to demonstrate visual ‘crowding’ and test peripheral vision. Ensure that the red dot in the center of the image is at eye level and focus on it. While holding your focus on the red dot, try to read the middle ‘C’ in every triplet. Is the gap facing left or right? You may find it easier to read in some directions than others. People usually find it easier to read below the dot than above, and easier still to the left or right.
Image credit: John Greenwood, University College London.

#peripheralvision #eyemovements #spatiallocalization #visualcrowding #neuroscience #science

The Flash Spectrum of the Sun


The Flash Spectrum of the Sun
In clear Madras, Oregon skies, this colorful eclipse composite captured the elusive chromospheric or flash spectrum of the Sun. Only three exposures, made on August 21 with telephoto lens and diffraction grating, are aligned in the frame. Directly imaged at the far left, the Sun's diamond ring-like appearance at the beginning and end of totality brackets a silhouette of the lunar disk at maximum eclipse.

Spread by the diffraction grating into the spectrum of colors toward the right, the Sun's photospheric spectrum traces the two continuous streaks. They correspond to the diamond ring glimpses of the Sun's normally overwhelming disk. But individual eclipse images also appear at each wavelength of light emitted by atoms along the thin, fleeting arcs of the solar chromosphere.

The brightest images, or strongest chromospheric emission, are due to Hydrogen atoms. Red hydrogen alpha emission is at the far right with blue and purple hydrogen series emission to the left. In between, the brightest yellow emission is caused by atoms of Helium, an element only first discovered in the flash spectrum of the Sun.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Yujing Qin (University of Arizona)
https://www.as.arizona.edu/

#universe #space #sun #science #astronomy #sunspectrum

Monday, 4 September 2017

Make Way for Hemoglobin


Make Way for Hemoglobin
Researchers at Harvard Medical School have discovered how immature cells grow up to be red blood cells.

Red blood cells are unique in that they make space for oxygen-carrying hemoglobin by purging the nucleus, mitochondria, ribosomes and other parts of the cell. For more than 20 years,

“The creation of highly specialized cells is very important for processes such as oxygen delivery to tissues, our ability to see and reproduce, and to make skin,” said Daniel Finley, professor of cell biology at Harvard. “Understanding exactly how this happens gives us better insight into some of the most fundamental properties of living things.”

Finley and his colleagues worked off of Finley’s hunch that the process of specialization was controlled by an enzyme called UBE2O, which marked cell parts for destruction with a protein called ubiquitin allowing the protesasome to recognize them as needing to be purged. Using a series of tests that relied on large-scale protein analyses not available in earlier decades, the researchers confirmed the enzyme’s role. Their results revealed that immature red blood cells lacking UBE2O retained hundreds of proteins and failed to become specialized.

Source & further reading:
https://hms.harvard.edu/news/make-way-hemoglobin

Journal article:
http://science.sciencemag.org/content/357/6350/eaan0218/tab-figures-data

#research #medicalresearch #medicine #blood cells #ribosomes #hemoglobin #nucleus #mitochondria #technology #UBE2O #ubiquitin #proteasome

Cause of an inherited neurological disorder discovered


Cause of an inherited neurological disorder discovered
Researchers at the University of Liverpool have identified the basis for how a single gene mutation can cause a rare neurological movement disorder known as dystonia.

Dystonia can result from an injury or can be an inherited disorder in which patients progressively develop from childhood uncontrollable muscle contractions leading to repetitive movements and awkward and painful postures. The disorder can affect one muscle, a muscle group, or the entire body.

It is estimated to affect at least 70,000 people in the UK. There are a large number of different types of dystonia which affect people in widely differing ways.

Symptoms of dystonia can range from very mild to severe. Dystonia can affect different body parts, and often the symptoms of dystonia progress through stages. Some early symptoms include: a ‘dragging leg’, cramping of the foot, involuntary pulling of the neck, uncontrollable blinking and speech difficulties. Usually there are no other neurological abnormalities.
There’s no cure for dystonia, but the condition can usually be effectively managed.

Researchers from the University’s Institutes of Translational Medicine (ITM) and Integrative Biology (IIB), led by Dr Nordine Helassa, have studied mutations in the gene encoding a protein known as hippocalcin previously identified as one cause of the disorder.

The effect of these mutations on the physiological role of hippocalcin or how this would impact on the nervous system had not been understood.

Hippocalcin is a member a family of proteins involved in signaling in the nervous system that have been extensively studied in Professor Bob Burgoyne’s group in ITM for the last 20 years.

As a result of their research, which has been published in the journal Human Molecular Genetics, the effect of the disease-causing mutations in hippocalcin on its physiological function have now been characterized.

These mutations do not affect the expression or the structure of the protein but lead to subtle defects in how it controls signaling in neurons.

In the course of the study it was found that hippocalcin can interact with specific types of calcium channels that are important for the normal initiation of neuronal activity and that expression of the disease-causing mutations resulted in overactivation of one particular class of these channels.

Dr Nordine Helassa said: “We can now understand for the first time how these mutations would have important physiological consequences that would lead to abnormalities in neuronal function. Excessive neuronal activation that could result in aberrant signaling in the brain of affected individuals.”

Source:
https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/research/news/articles/cause-of-an-inherited-neurological-disorder-discovered

Journal article:
https://academic.oup.com/hmg/article-lookup/doi/10.1093/hmg/ddx133

Infographic:
http://www.msunites.com/multiple-sclerosis-ms-symptoms-dystonia/

#dystonia #genemutation #hippocalcin #calciumchannels #neurologicaldisorders #neuroscience #medicine #health

SDO partial eclipse


SDO partial eclipse
Millions of excited people in the U.S. traveled many miles to see a total eclipse, and what a show it was. The SDO spacecraft was not so fortunate: its orbit only allowed it to observe a partial eclipse that at its peak covered only about 14 per cent of the sun (Aug. 21, 2017).

Most of the people in the U.S. (weather permitting) observed at least 60 per cent coverage of the sun by the Moon. The good news for SDO is that it gets to see partial and solar eclipses several times a year. So, it all kind of balances out, in a way.

Source: https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/potw/item/830
Credit: Solar Dynamics Observatory, NASA.

#SDO #NASA #universe #space #eclipse2017 #science

Sunday, 3 September 2017

Sea hares


Sea hares
Sea hares are hermaphrodites who really like to share the love. During mating, each sea hare serves as both a male and a female to different partners simultaneously, creating a long chain that can yield millions of eggs.

The slow-moving animals are known for defending themselves by squirting an off-putting mixture of purple ink and a white substance called opaline.

Usually when sea creatures secrete an ink cloud, it acts as a distraction that allows for a quick exit from an impending predator. Inherently, sea slugs could never make that fast an exit - so the ink was always a mystery. But scientists have shown the substance coats predators' antennae, deactivating their chemical senses.

Researchers suggested that with their sense of smell blocked predators lose their appetite and spend a long time cleaning themselves of the sticky coating, allowing the sea hares to escape.

Sources:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/21929070
http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/weirdest-sea-hare
Photo credit: Genevieve Anderson

#biodiversity #seaslug #coolcritters #seahares

Saturn's Rings from the Inside Out


Saturn's Rings from the Inside Out
What do Saturn's rings look like from Saturn? Images from the robotic spacecraft Cassini are providing humanity with this unprecedented vantage point as it nears the completion of its mission. Previous to Cassini's Grand Finale orbits, all images of Saturn's majestic ring system were taken from outside of the rings looking in.

Pictured in the inset is the remarkable video, while the spacecraft's positions are depicted in the surrounding animation. Details of the complex rings are evident as the short time-lapse sequence begins, while the paper-thin thickness of the rings becomes apparent near the video's end. The featured images were taken on August 20. Cassini has only a few more orbits around Saturn left before it is directed to dive into the giant planet on September 15.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Video Credit: NASA, JPL-Caltech, Space Science Institute

#nasa #space #Saturn #Cassini #Saturn #universe #science