Wednesday, March 27, 2013

U.S. Gun-Owners, Sportsmen Generated Nearly $1 Billion for ...

U.S. Gun Owners, Sportsmen Generated Nearly $1 Billion for Wildlife Conservation in 2012

Photo source: WCS

According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, those who have come under fire most in America?s gun-control debate ? game-hunters, marksmen, and other gun-owners ? actually generated nearly $1 billion in tax revenues that will be used to protect America?s wildlife.The proceeds are set to be?distributed?to all 50 states? fish and wildlife conservation initiatives.

More than $882.4 million in tax revenues (up from $749 million in 2011), has been generated by America?s hunters, reports CNSNews.

?The sporting community has provided the financial and spiritual foundation for wildlife conservation in America for more than 75 years,? said U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) Director Dan Ashe.

?Through these programs, hunters, anglers, recreational boaters and target shooters continue to fund vital fish and wildlife management and conservation, recreational boating access, and hunter and aquatic education programs.?

The funds are derived from taxes on the sale of firearms, ammunition, archery equipment, fishing equipment and tackle, and electric outboard motors, according to CNS.?Fuel taxes on motorboats and small engines also contribute to the cause.?

?The financial support from America?s hunting, shooting sports, fishing and boating community through their purchases of excise taxable equipment and hunting and fishing licenses is the lifeblood for funding fish and wildlife conservation; supporting public safety education; and opening access for outdoor recreation that benefits everyone,? said Jeff Vonk, president of the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies and Secretary of the South Dakota Department of Game, Fish and Parks.

?Fish and wildlife can be conserved, protected and restored through science-based management, and it is critical that all these taxes collected be apportioned to advance conservation efforts in the field.?

The funds will be put to use by the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Program, and the Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Program, both of which have?garnered more than $15.3 billion for use in wildlife conservation efforts, USFWS said.

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Source: http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/03/25/u-s-gun-owners-sportsmen-generated-nearly-1-billion-for-wildlife-conservation-in-2012/

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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

How An Unlikely Drug Helps Some Children Consumed By Fear

George McCann has been diagnosed with a subtype of bipolar disorder called the "fear of harm" profile, and finds that a prescribed dose of ketamine every few days alleviates his symptoms.

Michael Rubenstein for NPR

George McCann has been diagnosed with a subtype of bipolar disorder called the "fear of harm" profile, and finds that a prescribed dose of ketamine every few days alleviates his symptoms.

Michael Rubenstein for NPR

As far back as he can remember, George McCann lived in fear. When he was asleep he would have horrific nightmares filled with violent images. When he was awake, he often felt threatened by people, including members of his own family. And when he felt threatened, he would become aggressive, even violent.

George spent his childhood certain that something very bad was going to happen. And when he was 12, it did. His unrelenting fears led to a violent outburst at school. And George landed in a psychiatric hospital.

It was a frightening place for a fearful kid. When staff members tried to restrain him during a confrontation, he fought as if his life were at stake. George was big and strong for his age. But it was no contest.

"I was strapped down at the ankles, across the chest, and at my wrists," he says. "And they put me into the room with padded walls, you know. I remember screaming and screaming and screaming."

Today, George is 22 and back at home with his parents, two younger siblings and a dog named Tressel. They live in a small, single story house within commuting distance of Manhattan.

When George answers the door, it's clear he's grown into a big, sturdy guy. He wears rimless glasses and slightly rumpled clothes. His handshake is surprisingly gentle.

George's passion is movies, which he reviews on his blog. He's even written a couple of scripts. One is a western. "It's about redemption and whether people can find it or not," he says.

Sitting on the living room couch with his mother, Cydney McCann, George explains how his own redemption came in the form of an inquisitive psychiatrist and the experimental use of a drug called ketamine.

George McCann's struggles with fear and rage started before he could talk. His mother realized early on that her son was nothing like his cousin the same age.

Courtesy of Cydney McCann

George McCann at age 5.

Courtesy of Cydney McCann

"I remember when they turned three my sister-in-law saying to me, 'Oh, isn't three great? They're so cooperative,' she says. "And I remember saying, 'No, not here.' "

George's tantrums were extreme. A simple "no" could touch off hours of screaming and biting, and kicking, Cydney says. And her son's anxieties were also extreme.

"By the time he went into kindergarten, he was so nervous about everything," she says. "He would be afraid to get on the bus. He was afraid of the bus driver. He was afraid of the school. He couldn't go to people's houses. He couldn't have a play date."

At home, his tantrums grew into rages, Cydney says. Then, once the episode was over, her son would apologize and feel intense shame and guilt. She realized just how desperate he had become one day when he was five.

"I found him in his room and he had tried to hang himself by the curtain rod," she says. "He took a scarf and tied it on the curtain rod and had tied it around his neck and tried to hang himself."

Cydney began taking her son to psychologists and psychiatrists. They told her he had obsessive compulsive disorder and ADHD. Eventually, during his stay in the psychiatric hospital at age 12, he was diagnosed with bipolar disorder.

All the diagnoses came with drugs: Zoloft, Paxil, Ritalin. "I remember a lot of pills with different colors," George says. But they didn't make him much better. And some made him worse.

Cydney McCann remembers trying to maintain some semblance of normalcy by having the whole family, including George, sit down together for dinner. But something always happened, she says. "Either he would fly off in a rage and leave the table, or one of the other kids would get upset and get scared and leave the table, or get mad and leave the table. We literally never completed a meal."

By the time George was a teenager, he'd become the patient of a psychiatrist named Demitri Papolos who was studying kids with similar problems. Papolos is director of research at the Juvenile Bipolar Research Foundation and a researcher at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. He's also the author of a book called The Bipolar Child.

Papolos believes children like George have a subtype of bipolar disorder he calls the "fear of harm" profile.

That's a controversial idea. The mental health world is debating which children should even be called bipolar. And there's no consensus on what to call kids like George McCann. But Papolos says studies suggest there are hundreds of thousands of them ? though many have milder symptoms than George.

McCann is passionate about movies, and is working on a script about redemption. He lives in Hawthorne, N.Y. with his parents, two younger siblings and a dog named Tressel.

Michael Rubenstein for NPR

There are several core characteristics of these children, Papolos says. One is a variety of sleep disturbances including frequent and terrifying nightmares. "They're all about pursuit or abandonment," he says. "Some animal chasing them. A shark biting into their leg, and they feel the blood and the pain."

George McCann had a lot of dreams like that, including one in which his father survived a terrible car accident only to be shot dead.

Another characteristic of kids like George, Papolos says, is an extreme reaction when anyone tries to control their behavior. "They may very well be very aggressive, particularly at home and particularly where there's any limit-setting because limit-setting is experienced as a threat to them," he says. "They're functioning on a very primitive fight-or-flight level."

When these kids do become violent, it's not premeditated, Papolos says. They're not potential mass killers. They're responding the way an animal might, defending its territory.

That certainly described George as a child, says Cydney McCann. "The reaction would be like an instantaneous thing," she says. George describes his response as "Zero to 100 in a millisecond."

But after such an episode is over, these children can be sweet and loving, Papolos says.

There's one more characteristic of the "fear of harm" profile that's not about behavior at all. These children overheat easily, Papolos says, especially at night.

Once again, George McCann fits the profile. He says he often put an ice pack on his head to help him get to sleep.

After studies showed that these children seemed to be a distinct group, Papolos began wondering whether there might be a better way to treat them. He knew the usual drugs for depression and anxiety and mania weren't enough. So he began looking for a medicine that could reduce fear and simultaneously lower body temperature.

"And lo and behold there were animal studies showing that ketamine did just that," he says.

Ketamine is approved as an anesthetic. It's also a club drug that can cause out-of-body experiences. And research in the past few years shows that ketamine can lift severe depression, often in a matter of minutes.

Papolos thought it just might help the fearful children he was studying. He had a particular child in mind: a seven-year-old girl who had severe nightmares, night terrors, separation anxiety and psychotic symptoms. And, by chance, this little girl was scheduled for a dental procedure that can be done using an inhaled form of ketamine as the anesthetic.

"She got ketamine and for two weeks she was completely asymptomatic," Papolos says. "We had never seen anything like it before." That was five years ago. Today, the girl is still taking ketamine and is still free of symptoms, Papolos says.

After a number of successes with ketamine, Papolos discussed the drug with George and Cydney McCann. By this time, George was in high school and his moods were less extreme. But fear still dominated his life. He was terrified by subway rides. He was too frightened to drive a car.

So when Papolos offered the drug, Cydney McCann wanted George to try it. She didn't want the disorder that had shaped her son's childhood to hold him back as an adult. But George, who still lived in fear of so many things, was afraid to try the new drug.

"I'm going to become some kind of addict," he remembers thinking. "I'm going to die the first time I take this. It's going to change who I am."

But in 2010, George did try Papolos' ketamine treatment. He says he'll remember the day for the rest of his life. "I think we did two puffs and I remember I sat up and I just started laughing," he says. Then his mother picks up the story: "You said you had an internal feeling of calm that you had never had before in your life. And when we came home that night, that was the first night that we ever all had dinner at the table without somebody leaving."

Papolos has treated about 60 young people with ketamine so far and says all but two have had dramatic responses. Interestingly, he says, the two whose behavior did not change were also the only patients whose overheating problems weren't helped by the drug.

It's a surprising and provocative result. But the research is still in its very early stages. The number of patients treated so far is small, and the approach is so new it hasn't been tested by other researchers yet. Papolos says he's hoping a study he published late last year will help persuade other researchers to try the drug on other children.

In the meantime, George McCann continues to inhale a prescribed dose of ketamine every third day. The fear and anger that once dominated his life are gone, he says, adding that his mind is free now to work on that movie script about redemption.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2013/03/25/174928768/how-an-unlikely-drug-helps-some-children-consumed-by-fear?ft=1&f=1007

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My journey to a peaceful garden | MNN - Mother Nature Network

A few years ago, when I went in for my yearly check-up (okay, I?m not that good. It had been a couple years since I?d been to the doctor), I was a bit surprised to see that I had high blood pressure. The doctor said that it wasn?t at a super concerning level, but that I should search for ways to relax, and be sure to engage in healthy living habits. He gave me a list of activities that are supposed to be soothing and help lower blood pressure. I looked at the list skeptically. Meditation, yoga, exercise, gardening. If I was overly stressed, it was because I was low on time. Trying to make time for this extra stuff wasn?t going to help anything.

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I?ll admit it. I didn?t start working out after that. The thought of working out made me feel good for a couple of days. Then it started making me feel horrible because I hadn?t followed through. Then I stopped thinking about it and went back to my day-to-day activities. Life went on, and every time I thought about my blood pressure, it probably experienced a little spike.

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Then spring came. The grass started growing, and my lawn started to need attention. I was looking into my backyard and thought that maybe I would plant some shrubs, since the yard was looking a little sparse. Yard work is supposed to be good for you, so maybe I could get some healthy activity done while making my yard look better.

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Then I made the mistake that has probably had the most positive impact on my life out of all the other choices I?ve made. I went to the home and garden store to get some supplies and a couple plants. What I didn?t know is that I was entering my new second home.

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I had looked up a couple things about landscaping before I went to the store. Certain plants did better in certain soils, look for native plants, blah blah blah. I had helped my mom in the garden when I was a kid. I had helped friends with landscaping projects before. I could figure it out.

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Ha.

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Having never actually planned a landscaping project, I ended up standing in the store?s greenroom staring at my options for quite some time. I denied several offers of assistance before finally saying. ?I?m looking for ? plants? To put in my ? backyard?? I felt like a self-conscious teenage girl. I was sure the attendant was judging me, thinking, ?What is this guy even doing here? He doesn?t have a clue.?

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But she wasn?t. The nice lady had dealt with probably 100 other people every month who were just as clueless as I was. She started asking me questions. ?What kind of soil is in your yard?? ?Um?? ?What color is it? Does it feel like sand, or is it more gravelly??

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She asked me a million questions. How much time did I plan on spending on maintenance? Did I want a flowering bush or just something green? I had to think. I had to make decisions. I had to buy something instead of giving up. She was that awesome.

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That weekend I dug up a corner of my lawn. I drank a lot of water. I planted my newly acquired shrubbery. I gave it the proper amount of water, as well as putting down the special soil I had purchased. I stepped back and admired my work. Then my eye was drawn to a section of my lawn to my right. It looked kind of shabby comparatively.

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That whole summer I kept coming up with yard projects. I planted trees. I put flower beds against my house. I replaced my front sidewalk with stepping stones shaped like paw prints. My creativity was sparked, and the completion of one project always led to the anticipation of the next one.

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I started reading about gardening. It was too late to start a garden, but I could prepare for next year. I read about which plants benefitted each other. I spent weeks trying to find the perfect tomato cage. I had caught a disease, and it was saving my life.

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Okay, that last line was a bit cheesy. Don?t worry. I didn?t start dating the lady from the plant store or anything else rom-com like. But I did have an amazing summer, and it has led to me having a beautiful yard, a productive garden, and a great way to reduce stress in my life.

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So for those who say that they don?t have time to garden, I say yes. It is a lot of work. It is a time commitment. But it?s a great way to bring beauty and relaxation to the stressful world we live in.

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Daniel Novak is a writer and lifelong learner. He maintains a vegetable garden and several flower beds and is always looking for new ways to add plants to his home. Because of this, he has a shameful amount of indoor and outdoor plant stands.

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Related gardening stories on MNN:

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Do you want to be a?guest?columnist??Send your pitch to?bcohen@mnn.com?with "I want to be a?guest?columnist" in the headline.?Plus,?visit our?guest column archive?to find a variety of topics and opinions.

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Photo provided courtesy of Daniel Novak.

Source: http://www.mnn.com/home-blog/guest-columnist/blogs/my-journey-to-a-peaceful-garden

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Alien Skin now offering updated plugin for Photoshop ? Eye Candy 7

Alien Skin has come out with a new version of their unique and popular Eye Candy plugin for Photoshop or Photoshop Elements. Version 7 features a revamped interface that simplifies the process of applying these effects to your graphics. They have also added new effects, including a very realistic lightning generator. The melted version of [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/03/25/alien-skin-now-offering-updated-plugin-for-photoshop-eye-candy-7/

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Monday, March 25, 2013

Characters Gives You Quick Access to Special Characters and Emojis in Your Mac's Menubar

Characters Gives You Quick Access to Special Characters and Emojis in Your Mac's Menubar A few weeks ago, we introduced you to CatchChar, a Windows utility that made it easy to find and use special Unicode characters. Now, Characters brings similarly handy functionality to your Mac's menubar.

You can invoke Characters by clicking on its menubar icon or with a customizable keyboard shortcut, and then find anything you want using a natural language search bar. The app supports all the standard Unicode special characters you'd expect, plus Emoji as a fun bonus. Once you find what you're looking for, just click the character or navigate to it with arrow keys and hit enter to copy it to your clipboard. The app also features an incredibly useful code mode that can copy the character's HTML Entity or Python source to use on your website or script.

If you don't need special characters very often, you can find them fairly easily in the Edit menu of most Mac apps. But if you find yourself needing them a lot, or just want quick access to silly Emojis, Characters is well worth its $2.99 price tag.

Charaters ($2.99) | Mac App Store via MacStories

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/UBOjUVPLAEo/characters-gives-you-quick-access-to-special-characters-and-emojis-in-your-macs-menubar

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Hubble digs up galactic glow worm

Mar. 24, 2013 ? The image of a charming and bright galaxy, known as IRAS 23436+5257, was captured by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. It is located in the northern constellation of Cassiopeia, which is named after an arrogant, vain, and yet beautiful mythical queen.

The twisted, wormlike structure of this galaxy is most likely the result of a collision and subsequent merger of two galaxies. Such interactions are quite common in the universe, and they can range from minor interactions involving a satellite galaxy being caught by a spiral arm, to major galactic crashes. Friction between the gas and dust during a collision can have a major effect on the galaxies involved, morphing the shape of the original galaxies and creating interesting new structures.

When you look up at the calm and quiet night sky it is not always easy to picture it as a dynamic and vibrant environment with entire galaxies in motion, spinning like children's toys and crashing into whatever crosses their path. The motions are, of course, extremely slow, and occur over millions or even billions of years.

The aftermath of these galactic collisions helps scientists to understand how these movements occur and what may be in store for our own Milky Way, which is on a collision course with a neighboring galaxy, Messier 31.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NASA.

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


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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/space_time/astronomy/~3/N78DplM5S1Y/130324095135.htm

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Peach genome offers insights into breeding strategies for biofuels crops

Mar. 24, 2013 ? Rapidly growing trees like poplars and willows are candidate "biofuel crops" from which it is expected that cellulosic ethanol and higher energy content fuels can be efficiently extracted. Domesticating these as crops requires a deep understanding of the physiology and genetics of trees, and scientists are turning to long-domesticated fruit trees for hints. The relationship between a peach and a poplar may not be obvious at first glance, but to botanists both trees are part of the rosid superfamily, which includes not only fruit crops like apples, strawberries, cherries, and almonds, but many other plants as well, including rose that gives the superfamily its name.

"The close relationship between peach and poplar trees is evident from their DNA sequence," said Jeremy Schmutz, head of the Plant Program at the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute (DOE JGI).

In the March 24 edition of Nature Genetics, Schmutz and several colleagues were part of the International Peach Genome Initiative (IPGI) that published the 265-million base genome of the Lovell variety of Prunus persica.

"Using comparative genomics approaches, characterization of the peach sequence can be exploited not only for the improvement and sustainability of peach and other important tree species, but also to enhance our understanding of the basic biology of trees," the team wrote. They compared 141 peach gene families to those of six other fully sequenced diverse plant species to unravel unique metabolic pathways, for instance, those that lead to lignin biosynthesis -- the molecular "glue" that holds the plant cells together -- and a key barrier to deconstructing biomass into fuels.

For bioenergy researchers, the size of the peach genome makes it ideal to serve as a plant model for studying genes found in related genomes, such as poplar, one of the DOE JGI's Plant Flagship Genomes (http://bit.ly/JGI-Plants), and develop methods for improving plant biomass yield for biofuels.

"One gene we're interested in is the so-called "evergreen" locus in peaches, which extends the growing season," said Daniel Rokhsar, DOE JGI Eukaryotic Program head under whose leadership sequencing of the peach genome began back in 2007. "In theory, it could be manipulated in poplar to increase the accumulation of biomass."

The publication comes three years after the International Peach Genome Consortium publicly released the draft assembly of the annotated peach genome on the DOE JGI Plant portal Phytozome.net and on other websites. The decision to sequence the peach genome was first announced during the 2007 Plant and Animal Genome XI Conference. Learn more about poplar and DOE JGI Plant Flagship Genomes at http://genome.jgi.doe.gov/programs/plants/flagship_genomes.jsf.

In the United States, the Initiative was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science and led by researchers at the DOE JGI, The HudsonAlpha Institute for Biotechnology, Clemson University, North Carolina State University, and Washington State University. Additional support was contributed by U.S. Department of Agriculture and by the Energy Biosciences Institute, of the University of California, Berkeley, who supported senior author Therese Mitros. The Italian government also supported this international effort, including the work of first author Ignazio Verde of the Fruit Tree Research Centre/Agricultural Research Council in Rome, Italy. Contributions were also made from research institutes in Chile, Spain, and France.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by DOE/Joint Genome Institute, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Ignazio Verde, Albert G Abbott, Simone Scalabrin, Sook Jung, Shengqiang Shu, Fabio Marroni, Tatyana Zhebentyayeva, Maria Teresa Dettori, Jane Grimwood, Federica Cattonaro, Andrea Zuccolo, Laura Rossini, Jerry Jenkins, Elisa Vendramin, Lee A Meisel, Veronique Decroocq, Bryon Sosinski, Simon Prochnik, Therese Mitros, Alberto Policriti, Guido Cipriani, Luca Dondini, Stephen Ficklin, David M Goodstein, Pengfei Xuan, Cristian Del Fabbro, Valeria Aramini, Dario Copetti, Susana Gonzalez, David S Horner, Rachele Falchi, Susan Lucas, Erica Mica, Jonathan Maldonado, Barbara Lazzari, Douglas Bielenberg, Raul Pirona, Mara Miculan, Abdelali Barakat, Raffaele Testolin, Alessandra Stella, Stefano Tartarini, Pietro Tonutti, Pere Ar?s, Ariel Orellana, Christina Wells, Dorrie Main, Giannina Vizzotto, Herman Silva, Francesco Salamini, Jeremy Schmutz, Michele Morgante, Daniel S Rokhsar. The high-quality draft genome of peach (Prunus persica) identifies unique patterns of genetic diversity, domestication and genome evolution. Nature Genetics, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/ng.2586

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/4hJ9HeYjR9Y/130324152303.htm

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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Video: Titans GM: Locker has to take care of himself

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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/21134540/vp/51244414#51244414

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US OK With France, UK Arming Syria's Rebels

The Obama administration lent its support Monday to British and French plans to arm Syria's rebels, saying it wouldn't stand in the way of any country seeking to rebalance the fight against an Assad regime supported by Russia, Iran and Hezbollah.

Secretary of State John Kerry said the longer Syria's two-year civil war goes on, the greater the danger of its institutions collapsing and extremists getting their hands on the Arab country's vast chemical weapons arsenal. With some 450,000 Syrians living in neighboring countries as refugees already, he said the conflict is becoming a "global catastrophe."

Kerry said the world needs to change Syrian President Bashar Assad's calculations.

"If he believes he can shoot it out, Syrians and the region have a problem, and the world has a problem," Kerry told reporters after a meeting with Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr.

Kerry said the U.S. wants to leave the door open for a political solution. But concerning Syria's rebels, he added, "the United States does not stand in the way of other countries that made a decision to provide arms, whether it's France or Britain or others."

The comments come after French President Francois Hollande said last week that his country and Britain were pushing the European Union to lift its arms embargo on Syria as soon as possible so that they can send weapons to rebel fighters. The two countries are seeking military help for the rebels by the end of May or earlier if possible. But Germany and other EU nations have been skeptical about sending weapons, pointing to the risk of further escalation in a volatile region.

The United States long held the same conviction, with President Barack Obama and other officials saying more weapons in Syria would only make peace harder. As the violence has worsened over the last year, Washington has tempered that message somewhat. It is now promising nonlethal aid to the anti-Assad militias in the form of meals and medical kits, and refusing to rule out further escalation.

And support for greater U.S. involvement appears to be growing in Congress. On Monday, the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee introduced legislation to train and arm vetted Syrian opposition forces.

The groups must be opposed to Assad, willing to establish a peaceful and democratic Syria and committed to securing and safeguarding chemical and biological weapons. No aid could go to a group associated with a foreign terrorist organization, according to the bill by Rep. Eliot Engel of New York.

"It is time for us to develop a comprehensive approach to stopping the carnage," he said in a letter to his colleagues last week.

However, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin Dempsey, said Monday he is advising the Obama administration to "proceed cautiously" on Syria, in part because the U.S. is increasingly unclear about the makeup of rebel forces.

"About six months ago we had a very, let's call it opaque understanding of the opposition, and now I'd say it's even more opaque," he said in remarks at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. He said he believes the best approach for the U.S. is to continue to try to forge consensus among partner nations in the Middle East and beyond.

"I think we should be doing everything we're doing to, with all of the instruments of power, but the military application of power should be the very last instrument we employ," he said. "I don't think at this point I can see a military option that would create an understandable outcome, and until I do, it will be my advice to proceed cautiously."

At the State Department, Kerry said there is a fundamental imbalance in Syria's civil war. The Assad regime is attacking with tanks, scud missiles and aircraft that the rebels don't have. And Kerry said Russia, Iran, Hezbollah and al-Qaida-related elements are helping Assad.

With al-Qaida and its allies, it's unclear what support the secretary of state was describing. Al-Qaida in Iraq has clearly backed Syria's rebels, which has been acknowledged by U.S. and other Western officials, particularly through its relationship with Jabhat al-Nusra ? which the U.S. has declared a foreign terrorist organization.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland later said Kerry misspoke, and that concerns over al-Qaida are related to the rebels.

Speaking to reporters in Washington, she cautiously addressed the effort by opposition members meeting in Istanbul to form an interim government, saying only that the opposition should maintain unity and represent all Syrians with "the best standards of justice, human rights, democracy."

Nuland also confirmed that Syrian warplanes hit targets across the border in Lebanon on Monday in what she described as a "significant escalation."

"These kinds of violations of sovereignty are absolutely unacceptable," she said.

Syria's civil war has pushed millions of people from their homes. The U.N. says more than 70,000 people have been killed.

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Associated Press writers Robert Burns and Donna Cassata contributed to this report.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-okay-france-uk-arming-syrias-rebels-171006655.html

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Google Keep note-taking service leaks ahead of debut

DEAR ABBY: I was divorced when my son was 9. He's now 24. My ex-wife married the man she had been having an affair with and they have a 12-year-old son. I am also remarried and in a good place in my life. For the past two years, my son has brought his half brother to our beach house for a weekend of fun. We honored this request and enjoy time with our son, but it is difficult having his half brother in my home. It brings up emotions I thought I had put behind me years ago.I do not want these visits to continue, and I need to communicate this. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/google-keep-note-taking-leaks-ahead-debut-171538170.html

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Monday, March 18, 2013

Difficulty in recognizing faces in autism linked to performance in a group of neurons

Mar. 18, 2013 ? Neuroscientists at Georgetown University Medical Center (GUMC) have discovered a brain anomaly that explains why some people diagnosed with autism cannot easily recognize faces -- a deficit linked to the impairments in social interactions considered to be the hallmark of the disorder.

They also say that the novel neuroimaging analysis technique they developed to arrive at this finding is likely to help link behavioral deficits to differences at the neural level in a range of neurological disorders.

The final manuscript published March 15 in the online journal NeuroImage: Clinical, the scientists say that in the brains of many individuals with autism, neurons in the brain area that processes faces (the fusiform face area, or FFA) are too broadly "tuned" to finely discriminate between facial features of different people. They made this discovery using a form of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) that scans output from the blueberry-sized FFA, located behind the right ear.

"When your brain is processing faces, you want neurons to respond selectively so that each is picking up a different aspect of individual faces. The neurons need to be finely tuned to understand what is dissimilar from one face to another," says the study's senior investigator, Maximilian Riesenhuber, PhD., an associate professor of neuroscience at GUMC.

"What we found in our 15 adult participants with autism is that in those with more severe behavioral deficits, the neurons are more broadly tuned, so that one face looks more like another, as compared with the fine tuning seen in the FFA of typical adults," he says.

"And we found evidence that reduced selectivity in FFA neurons corresponded to greater behavioral deficits in everyday face recognition in our participants. This makes sense. If your neurons cannot tell different faces apart, it makes it more difficult to tell who is talking to you or understand the facial expressions that are conveyed, which limits social interaction."

Riesenhuber adds that there is huge variation in the ability of individuals diagnosed with autism to discriminate faces, and that some autistic people have no problem with facial recognition.

"But for those that do have this challenge, it can have substantial ramifications -- some researchers believe deficits in face processing are at the root of social dysfunction in autism," he says.

The neural basis for face processing

Neuroscientists have used traditional fMRI studies in the past to probe the neural bases of behavioral differences in people with autism, but these studies have produced conflicting results, says Riesenhuber. "The fundamental problem with traditional fMRI techniques is that they can tell which parts of the brain become active during face processing, but they are poor at directly measuring neuronal selectivity," he says, "and it is this neuronal selectivity that predicts face processing performance, as shown in our previous studies."

To test their hypothesis that differences in neuronal selectivity in the FFA are foundational to differences in face processing abilities in autism, Riesenhuber and the study's lead author, neuroscientist Xiong Jiang, PhD, developed a novel brain imaging analysis technique, termed local regional heterogeneity, to estimate neuronal selectivity.

"Local regional heterogeneity, or Hcorr, as we called it, is based on the idea that neurons that have similar selectivities will on average show similar responses, whereas neurons that like different stimuli will respond differently," says Jiang. "This means that individuals with face processing deficits should show more homogeneous activity in their FFA than individuals with more typical face recognition abilities."

They tested the method in 15 adults with autism and 15 adults without the disorder. The autistic participants also underwent a standard assessment of social/behavioral functioning.

The researchers found that in each autistic participant, behavioral ability to tell faces apart was tightly linked to levels of tuning specificity in the right FFA as estimated with Hcorr. This finding was confirmed by another advanced imaging technique, fMRI rapid adaptation, shown by the group in previous work to be a good estimator of neuronal selectivity.

"Compared to the more well-established fMRI-rapid adaptation technique, Hcorr has several significant advantages," says Jiang. "Hcorr is more sensitive and can estimate neuronal selectivity as well as fMRI rapid adaptation, but with much shorter scans, and Hcorr can even estimate neuronal selectivity using data from resting state scans, thus making the technique suitable even for individuals that cannot perform complicated tasks in the scanner, such as low-functioning autistic adults, or young children."

"The study suggests that, just as in typical adults, the FFA remains the key region responsible for face processing and that changes in neuronal selectivity in this area are foundational to the variability in face processing abilities found in autism. Our study identifies a clear target for intervention," says Riesenhuber. Indeed, after the study was completed, the researchers successfully attempted to improve facial recognition skills in an autistic participant. They showed the participant pairs of faces that were very dissimilar at first, but became increasingly similar, and found that FFA tuning improved along with behavioral ability to tell the faces apart. "This suggests high-level brain areas may still be somewhat plastic in adulthood," says Riesenhuber.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Georgetown University Medical Center, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Xiong Jiang, Angela Bollich, Patrick Cox, Eric Hyder, Joette James, Saqib Ali Gowani, Nouchine Hadjikhani, Volker Blanz, Dara S. Manoach, Jason J.S. Barton, William D. Gaillard, Maximilian Riesenhuber. A quantitative link between face discrimination deficits and neuronal selectivity for faces in autism. NeuroImage: Clinical, 2013; 2: 320 DOI: 10.1016/j.nicl.2013.02.002

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/top_news/~3/4D09xv7JpWk/130318151530.htm

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Sunday, March 17, 2013

US military sanity board to assess Robert Bales in trial over Afghan deaths

Robert Bales

Staff Sergeant Robert Bales, who is accused of shooting dead 16 Afghan civilians. Photograph: Spc Ryan Hallock/AP

A US soldier charged with killing 16 civilians, most of them women and children, near his army post in Afghanistan is set to undergo a medical review on Sunday to determine his state of mind at the time of the killings and ability to stand trial.

The review, known in the military as a "sanity board," will be conducted by three doctors at the Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington state, and will be completed by 1 May, according to a US army spokesman.

Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty against Robert Bales, a decorated veteran of four combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan who is accused of gunning down the villagers in cold blood during two rampages through their family compounds in Kandahar province last March.

Army prosecutors say Bales, a 39-year old father of two, acted alone and with "chilling premeditation" when, armed with a pistol, a rifle and a grenade launcher, he left his base twice in the night, returning in the middle of his rampage to tell a fellow soldier: "I just shot up some people."

The shootings marked the worst case of civilian slaughter blamed on a rogue US soldier since the Vietnam War and further eroded strained US-Afghan relations after more than a decade of conflict in that country.

Defense lawyers have not set out an alternative theory of what happened on the night of the shootings, but have focused on Bales' fragile mental state.

Bales' lead civilian attorney John Henry Browne said in January that government documents showed Bales had been diagnosed as suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and a brain injury before his deployment in Afghanistan in 2011.

After hearing preliminary evidence in November, military judge Colonel Jeffery Nance determined that Bales should face a court martial, which is due to begin in September.

At Bales' arraignment in January, Browne's team entered no plea and told Nance they were preparing a possible "mental health defense." Nance said such a defense would require a formal psychiatric evaluation, and ordered a sanity board review.

At a November pre-trial hearing, prosecutors said Bales had been drinking earlier in the evening of the attacks, and had used steroids on the Special Forces outpost. Defense attorneys also quizzed Bales' colleagues closely about his sudden explosions of temper in the days before the attacks.

Bales faces 16 counts of premeditated murder and six counts of attempted murder, as well as charges of assault and wrongfully possessing and using steroids and alcohol while deployed.

Military justice experts say a defense based on Bales' PTSD or deeper mental health problems may not be enough to avoid trial, but could raise serious issues over premeditation, which would make a death sentence less likely.

"Just because someone has a (mental) disease does not mean they're legally insane," said Victor Hansen, a professor at the New England Law Boston law school with two decades of military law experience.

"The board could uncover unknown components that could help the defendant claim diminished capacity," Hansen said. "To obtain death, you have to prove premeditation. Anything less than premeditation of murder, there's no death."
Defendants deemed unable to stand trial after a sanity board are typically referred for treatment at a government medical center.

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/mar/17/us-military-sanity-robert-bales

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George Osborne pledges to protect UK troops from Cyprus bank levy

Mr Osborne described the Cypriot bail-out as an "extraordinary" situation, but he pledged that British armed forces personnel and Government staff serving on the island will be protected from the bank levy.

"It?s a difficult situation for people who live in Cyprus," Mr Osborne told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show.

"For people serving in our military and our government out in Cyprus, we are going to compensate anyone affected by this bank tax - people who are doing their duty for our country in Cyprus will be protected from this Cypriot bank tax."

The decision to impose the one-time levy of 6.75 per cent on all deposits under ?100,000 and 9.9 per cent over that amount, has triggered scorn from Cypriot politicians who condemned it as unfair, bringing in doubt its approval in parliament.

Source: http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568301/s/29a9a945/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cnews0Cworldnews0Ceurope0Ccyprus0C99357690CGeorge0EOsborne0Epledges0Eto0Eprotect0EUK0Etroops0Efrom0ECyprus0Ebank0Elevy0Bhtml/story01.htm

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Military sexual assault victim turns trauma into hope

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Source: http://www.floridatoday.com/article/20130317/NEWS01/303170048/1086/rss07/Military-sexual-assault-victim-turns-trauma-into-hope

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Saturday, March 16, 2013

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Fight Club! Saavn vs Dhingana vs Gaana - App music streaming ...

If ever the cause itself were the cure, it is so for digital piracy. Music and videos have been shared illegally for a long time; the internet just made this easier. A Business Week report suggests that the losses caused by piracy in the world wide music industry is a whopping $12.5 billion. However, with increasing internet bandwidths and advancements in streaming technologies, a person with a stable internet connection can enjoy free and legal music. And this has led to 26% decline in piracy in the USA.

The internet has been much maligned as the cause for digital piracy. But with improvement of streaming services, will it also be the antidote? Here are some reasons to believe so:

Making music portable through music streaming apps

?People want to own their music,? said Steve Jobs. This may just have been a marketing pitch for retaining the iTunes stranglehold on digital music; but you could argue in favor ? offline digital content is portable ? you can put music in your wireless devices and carry it around.
The world?s changed significantly since then. Reports say that smartphones have reduced the sales of music players over the past. Network speeds have increased manifold, and the cost of using data connections on the phones have significantly reduced.

We can now have apps that can stream music to your mobile devices. These apps still cater to the small population that uses data on the phones. But mobile networks are tempting new users with free data packs to get them to adopt data and music streaming can be a good bet here.

Services like Spotify and Pandora have brought the convenience of portability to free and legal streaming of music. Spotify, for example, is valued at $3 billion, and is the largest mainstream streaming player. It has an estimated 20 million active users, and is strongly associated with Facebook as a streaming service provider.

Has this put a hold on piracy? Well, going by the reduction in levels of piracy in the past year due to streaming of music and the growth of music streaming service on mobile, it definitely looks like mobility is delivering the knockout punch to piracy, as people don?t need to pirate as streaming services make things simpler.

Spotify(s) of India

Many Indian services have tried replicating the success of Spotify in India: chief among them are Saavn, Dhingaana and Gaana. The first two started in early 2007, and went through their rounds of iterations and funding, to become premier music services for Indian content. Gaana is backed by Times Internet. It started off as a web music streaming site in 2011, and launched on most mobile platforms by the end of 2012. All three have a strong presence across mobile platforms. In this review, we pit the troika against each other: a triple threat match to decide the best Indian music streaming app!

Music wars

Round 1 ? Content

All three services are predominantly Bollywood music streaming services. At least, they started off that way. Over the years, each of these music streaming services have evolved to cater to regional music as well including Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Marathi, Gujarati, Bengali and Punjabi. Gaana and Saavn now offers English music too.

Both Saavn and Gaana claim to have a library of 1 million tracks on their platforms. Dhingana is playing catch up, and claims 350,000 tracks on its platform. However Gaana has a little problem ? not all the assortment that it has on the website is available on mobile site. Some movies, like Dabangg, which is available on the website, isn?t available on the app. Saavn too, doesn?t have its English assortment on the mobile app.

So on the basis of these facts, the round 1 is a tie, between Gaana and Saavn.

Winner ? Gaana and Saavn

Round 2 ? Market Share

Saavn and Dhingana apps have been around longer. Saavn has 2 million users on its mobile platforms and Gaana which launched late last year and has garnered a total of 500,000 downloads across?all its mobile platforms.

Marketshare revised

The clear winner in this round is Dhingana, which claims 3.5 million mobile users on its mobile apps and the recently launched mobile site. This is even more surprising given how it fared in the content round. A large assortment isn?t necessarily the prerequisite of success for a music streaming smartphone app, number of users actually using the service and the stickiness that a site has among users can make it come out on top, even with a lesser assortment.

Round 2, goes to Dhingana.

Winner ? Dhingana

Round 3 ? Search

Gaana Search

Gaana?s unfriendly search

Saavn Search

One instance where Saavn suggested a song, but it wasn?t available

What is the biggest music library that you?ve ever seen? However large it might be, I sincerely doubt if it will scale to anything close to Dhingana?s 350,000 songs, which is the smallest assortment of the three. When you have a million songs to choose from, like in the case of Saavn and Gaana, then search becomes a key part of the experience. And unfortunately, not all these apps have got search right.

Gaana has a static wallpaper (see screenshot), under the search option, which offers no assistance whatsoever while searching. So if you get your spelling wrong (which is a very high possibility when you?re trying to spell a tamil song in english). Search on Dhingana is even worse. It?s suggestions have no relation to what you?re searching for.

Saavn, to a large extent, has got it right. Searching is easy, and 9 out of 10 times, you will find the song you?re looking for. However, there were instances, where Saavn?s search provided the right suggestion, but the song wasn?t on it (see screenshot). Weird.

Search is going to be a very important part of apps like these, just because of the sheer magnitude of tracks on them. Saavn?s search function isn?t the best either, but compared to the other two, it?s better.

The winner of Round 3, is Saavn.

Winner ? Saavn

Round 4 ? User Experience

Gaana Player

Gaana ? Great as a standalone music player

All three apps concentrate on helping the user to start playing a song as soon as possible. They do so, by displaying playlists, popular songs, new releases and so on, on the landing page of the app. Gaana even has a gallery like slider on the top quarter of the screen. As an app, I prefer Dhingana?s layout and interaction over Gaana and Saavn. It provides all the information that a use would need in a very clean and uncluttered way. Moving between screens is smooth.

Dhingana app

Dhingana provides a great user experience

Both Saavn and Dhingana are integrated with Facebook?s open graph and have their apps on Facebook. This integration has translated well onto the app in Dhingana?s case, where the landing page displays songs and playlists that you?ve liked on Dhingana, across all its mobile platforms. But as a music player, the experience that Gaana provides is much better than others, so much so, that its as good as a standalone music player. What lets it down though, is a below par app experience (When we used the app, it crashed during bad network conditions, which isn?t doing the app much good)

Saavn?s decent search function has an additional layer which asks the user to manually click the ?play? option to actually start listening to the song ? this is an unwanted step I think. Clicking a song in a list only provides information about the song, with the option to add to player. And then, I?d have to go to the player and play it. And coming from the experience of using other two apps, this is a letdown, for me at least.

So a good app experience coupled with a decent music player, makes Dhingana, the winner of round 4.

Winner ? Dhingana

?

Round 5 ? Listening experience

This is the main function of these apps. A user could listen to music over two kinds of networks ? the mobile network and a Wi-Fi broadband internet connection. While all of these apps work fine over a Wi-Fi connection, they don?t give the best listening experience over a 3G network. Dhingana?s adaptive bitrate feature, where it alters the quality of the song to match the bandwidth is great. The app tries sensing network speeds and moderating bit rates accordingly. however, as 3G networks have an uneven usage across the city, this leads to the same user finding audio quality degraded as s/he moves around. Weird.

Saavn has a steady bitrate policy for all kind of connection, and on a mobile network, the sound quality is great. But the flakiness doesn?t spare Saavn either, as the song just abruptly stops and starts buffering. Fail.

Gaana provides the best listening experience over a stable connection, but the first sign of network flakiness, it doesn?t even buffer, it crashes the app. Bad.

This round ends in a stalemate as you really can?t blame these apps. Bad network coverage will continue to plague them until we achieve better network coverage.

Winner ? None

The verdict

All three apps are great, but based on our parameters, it is a tie between Saavn and Dhingana. Different parts of each of these apps are brilliant, and each one has its own flaws. Gaana misses out, but to be fair, its foray into the app space is recent and it can get better over time.

But as of today, here are your winners -

Dhingana ? For a great user experience and hence the user base

Saavn ? For being a solid music player app overall

Source: http://yourstory.in/2013/03/fight-club-saavn-vs-dhingana-vs-gaana-app-music-streaming-services/

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Gay Vietnamese-American group barred from parade (Providence Journal)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/291511741?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Friday, March 15, 2013

A rift in our understanding (Unqualified Offerings)

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Former Irish president Mary Robinson discusses her new memoir 'Everybody Matters'

Mary Robinson, author of 'Everybody Matters,' talked with me about everything from her meeting with the queen of England to the relationship between Ireland and Rwanda.

By J.P. O'Malley,?Contributor / March 15, 2013

Mary Robinson became Ireland's first female president in 1990.

Lee Jin-man/AP

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In 1990, Mary Robinson became Ireland?s first female president.

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As a progressive liberal, Robinson seemed a very unlikely candidate for the job in what was then a deeply conservative country.?

Throughout the '70s and '80s, she worked as a human rights lawyer as well as a senator, arguing a number of landmark cases that challenged various clauses within the Irish constitution which failed to protect minorities. Robinson fought on behalf of women, who were effectively treated as second-class citizens; homosexuals, who were criminalized for their sexual orientation; and campaigned to change the law on the sale of contraceptives, which were illegal in Ireland without prescription until 1985.

When she became president, Robinson was determined to reinvigorate the role. In 1993, she was the first Irish President to travel to Britain, when she met with Queen Elizabeth II for tea in Buckingham Palace.

Robinson then returned to Britain in 1996 on an official state visit.

From 1997 to 2002, Robinson served as UN High Commissioner for Human Rights. The role proved to have huge political difficulties, particularly in the post-9/11 world. Robinson openly criticized the Bush Administration, much to the chagrin of then Secretary-General of the United Nations Kofi Annan. In 2009, Robinson was awarded the US Presidential Medal of Freedom from Barack Obama.

In recent years, Robinson has returned to Ireland to live, where she set up The Mary Robinson Foundation?Climate Justice, a center for leadership, education and advocacy for those affected by climate change across the globe.

Robinson?s memoir Everybody Matters recalls a long and dedicated career as a public servant, both at national and international level.

Recently she spoke with me about the difficulties the role of UN High Commissioner presented, how Eleanor Roosevelt provided a life-changing moment, and why she has always been persuaded by those who fight for equality and justice through non-violent methods.

Was it your awareness of middle class privilege from an early age that inspired you to peruse a career that fought for justice in society?

Well, I came from a family that was privileged but not rich. My mother was a very warm, engaging, and open person, but she was also quite snobbish. She thought our family were great because we had a background of a colonial past, and plaques on the wall in the Protestant church in the town of Ballina, County Mayo, because the first Catholic in the family was my grandfather. The more she talked about this, the more I was rebelling the other way.? For me, it was all about fairness.

You talk about reading Eleanor Roosevelt at any early age. What did you see in her worldview that inspired you?

I always loved people who were inspirational. Figures like Mahatma Gandhi, Michael Davitt, Daniel O?Connell, and Martin Luther King. In 1958, Eleanor Roosevelt made a famous speech on the tenth anniversary of ?the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and she said: ?Where, after all, do universal human rights begin? In small places, close to home.? When I read this, I had a lightbulb moment and thought, I really want to be involved in this.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/fLl-beOvAak/Former-Irish-president-Mary-Robinson-discusses-her-new-memoir-Everybody-Matters

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Recalculating the privacy debate after Google Maps penalty

Google's string of privacy invasions reveals a need to rethink privacy and end a piecemeal, reactive approach. Asserting privacy as an asset would help.

By the Monitor's Editorial Board / March 13, 2013

Luc Vincent, Google engineering director, demonstrates how Google captures images in hard-to-reach places with Street View Trekker at the Google offices in San Francisco last June.

Reuters

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Google has once again earned an official censure for breaching a boundary on privacy. On Tuesday, it agreed to pay $7 million to 38 states for collecting Wi-Fi data, such as passwords and browser history, while its vehicles took ground-level images for Google Maps.

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The punishment follows a $22.5 million fine last year after Google bypassed privacy settings on its Safari browser as well as a 2011 settlement for violating its own privacy rules on its Buzz social media.

By now, consumers and citizens may have detected a pattern: New technologies allow new types of privacy invasions, which then lead to ad hoc remedies ? until the next type of intrusion.

This pattern goes back to the 1880s, when many states passed laws to prevent the disclosure of telegram messages. In 1903, New York was the first state to allow people to sue for invasion of privacy. The latest frontier is setting limits on the use of video cameras in public places.

As the string of Google violations shows ? along with dozens of new privacy laws passed since the 1970s ? the pace of this cat-and-mouse privacy quest has quickened in the Digital Age. Even a mighty Internet company like Google, whose informal motto is ?do no evil,? can falter when it creates new technologies with new uses without always knowing exactly what privacy guardrails society expects.

The basic need is to better define the purposes of privacy rather than simply react to the fear of losing it. If tech users, companies, and government had a broad consensus on the benefits of privacy, then it would be easier to design comprehensive and consistent policy. Lawmakers and law enforcers would not always be playing catch-up with the latest ?violation,? and coming up with a patchwork of solutions.

Google could even adopt an affirmative motto, such as ?do good.?

Trying to balance privacy fears with privacy?s virtues isn?t new. The founder of The Christian Science Monitor, Mary Baker Eddy, started the newspaper in 1908 just as the spread of newspapers also led to a rise in concern over a media delighting in prurient gossip and personal attacks (?yellow journalism?). She designated the Monitor?s motto ?to injure no man, but to bless all mankind.?

Scholars who study privacy see its benefits in allowing freedom of thought, solitude for regeneration, and intimacy for healthy relationships. When Harvard University was caught last week reading parts of e-mails from its deans, academics asserted the need for independence of thinking in a research setting ? as well as bemoaning a loss of privacy.

Privacy promotes dignity, reserve, innovation, and self-reliance for individuals. Any laws on privacy must affirm those qualities even as they deal with fears over identity theft, abuse of digitized medical records, or big-brother surveillance of one?s travels and tastes via smart phones.

Europe has stricter laws on privacy because it has a broader consensus on the core values of privacy. Google, Microsoft, and other tech giants get tripped up more easily in Europe.

Pragmatic and coherent regulation toward privacy in the United States will require a shift in thinking to see privacy as a resource and asset. Instead of simply defending the legal doctrine that ?a man?s home is his castle,? let?s agree on why the castle serves a purpose.

Not doing evil is easier when the focus is on doing good.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/uRy-e5j3G54/Recalculating-the-privacy-debate-after-Google-Maps-penalty

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Thursday, March 14, 2013

Playing action videogames improves visual search

Mar. 14, 2013 ? Researchers at the University of Toronto have shown that playing shooting or driving videogames, even for a relatively short time, improves the ability to search for a target hidden among irrelevant distractions in complex scenes.

"Recent studies in different labs, including here at the University of Toronto, have shown that playing first-person shooter videogames can enhance other aspects of visual attention," says psychology professor Ian Spence. "But no one has previously demonstrated that visual search is also improved."

Searching efficiently and accurately is essential for many tasks. "It's necessary for baggage screening, reading X rays or MRIs, interpreting satellite images, defeating camouflage or even just locating a friend's face in a crowd," says Spence.

In the first experiment, the researchers compared action videogame players and non-players on three visual search tasks and found that the experienced players were better.

"But this difference could be a result of a pre-existing superiority in experienced gamers compared to those who avoid them, says Sijing Wu, a PhD candidate in Spence's lab in U of T's Department of Psychology and lead author of the study. "A training experiment was necessary to establish whether playing an action game could actually improve search skills."

In the second experiment, 60 participants -- who had not previously played videogames -- played for a total of 10 hours in one to two hour sessions. Twenty participants were randomly assigned to play the first-person shooter game, Medal of Honor, 20 to a driving-racing game, Need for Speed and 20 to a three-dimensional puzzle game, Ballance as a control.

"After playing either the shooter or driving game for only 10 hours, participants were faster and more accurate on the three visual search tasks," says Wu. "However, the control participants -- who played the puzzle game -- did not improve."

"We have shown that playing a driving-racing game can produce the same benefits as a shooter game," says Wu. "This could be very important in situations where we wish to train visual search skills. Driving games are likely to be more acceptable than shooting games because of the lower levels of violence."

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Story Source:

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

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Sijing Wu, Ian Spence. Playing shooter and driving videogames improves top-down guidance in visual search. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2013; DOI: 10.3758/s13414-013-0440-2

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/rKD0CFlcGf0/130314141337.htm

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What Did Your Father Teach You?

Answer the question, and your answer may be selected for inclusion in a future issue of Popular Mechanics. We're collecting DIY advice, life lessons, and other wisdom passed down from fathers to their children, and pulling it all together for feature story. We're particularly interested in DIY advice. For instance, renowned aircraft designer Burt Rutan tells us that when he was a kid, his father taught him how to catch blue jays using a four-bar trip mechanism and a box. Don't worry, the birds were unharmed. But Rutan gave us enough detail of how to build the trap that we will be able to illustrate it for the story. Meanwhile, Mark Reuss, the president of General Motors, shares the story of how his dad taught him to put a ring on a piston at the family auto repair and sales shop in Illinois.

Of course, you don't have to be a CEO or a famous designer to appear in our feature. We are talking to men and women of all ages to find out what their father taught them. The advice ranges from specific how-to information to ways to think or act or solve a problem.

If you have a great story to share, send us an email at pmwebmaster@hearst.com. Be sure to include your contact information, so that we can get in touch with you in the event that we want to publish your story.

Thanks for (potentially) contributing to Popular Mechanics!

The editors

By submitting your anecdote and/or image, you give Popular Mechanics the right to publish your story and photo in the magazine or on the Web site.

Popular Mechanics reserves the right to use your real name or a pseudonym, as well as edit text for clarity and conciseness. All submissions become the property of Popular Mechanics. You represent that the information you give us will be truthful in every respect.

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/how-to/blog/what-did-your-father-teach-you-lessons?src=rss

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