Wednesday, October 31, 2012

96% Argo

'Argo'. Ben Affleck, take a bow. A magnificent achievement in pacing and tension, bringing an unbelievable true story to life.There's a line towards the beginning, when they're trying to sell The Hollywood Option, that goes something like, "And everybody knows they'd shoot in Stalingrad with Pol Pot directing if it would sell tickets." This cynical undercurrent that still permeates through Hollywood today, arguably more so, grounds this film in a believability that would be hard to artificially create solely for this film. It's one of the many cheeky shots the film takes, having a go at acting, directing and everything in between. Affleck's camera movements are frenetic and clear all at once, swooping, circling and darting rapidly on occasion, most noticeable in the opening hysteria at the embassy. The last twenty or so minutes, where 'Argo' ratchets up the tension, is owed in large to some brilliant editing, switching between the four parties involved, while never needing to cheat the audience in taking them down a false path. There was an audible sign of relief in the theatre when that plane finally takes off!Then there's Ben Affleck the actor. First things first. I have a large man-crush on his beard. Affleck doesn't overplay his character, but he nails the emotional moments, and I was totally on board his crazy plan, with his heart very much in the right place. The supporting cast is insane, but Bryan Cranston and Alan Arkin shine the brightest, getting the killer lines written by Chris Terrio.I loved 'Gone Baby Gone' and 'The Town'. It gives me great pleasure to see Affleck stretching out from his familiar Boston, making something completely different, and getting it so right.

October 30, 2012

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/argo_2012/

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Monday, October 29, 2012

The Reference Frame: Galileo's 1933 trial: a tragic hero

I was pleased that virtually all the media criticize the recent manslaughter verdict against the Italian seismologists.

Many outlets compare the trial to the 1633 trial against Galileo Galilei. So I decided to find a video explaining some details about that event in particular and Galileo's life in general ? and the 52-minute Chicago talk by Rocky Kolb (whom I hosted once at Harvard) from 2011 turned out to be a very informative choice although I clearly disagree with many sentiments that Kolb expressed during the talk.

Some people say that Galileo has overreached, he was arrogant because throughout his life, he enjoyed to point out why idiots around him were idiots, and all this stuff.

Galileo wasn't arrogant when he explained that the difference between him and the stupid folks around him was greater than the difference between humans and animals. He wasn't arrogant because his statement was clearly true and very important. It was very important from the viewpoint of the abstract truth; it was very important for the civilized character of the present, too.

Off-topic: Decay: Something truly unexpected has been discovered at the LHC! By young Oxford employees at CERN.

At the beginning of the talk, Rocky Kolb tells us various things about Galileo's ability to get the maximum out of the telescope (that he "devised" but didn't invent ? but he deliberately used the ambiguous verb "devised") and he describes other events from Galileo's CV.

Kolb says that astronomy had been a part of the mathematics (and not physics) departments because astronomers were only supposed to find "kinematic fits" for the observed trajectories but they were not trying to find the "physical or dynamical causes". And he reminds us that the Catholic Church hadn't had an official position on Copernicanism: they would say it's just some models that didn't say anything direct about the reality (they were agnostic in the disagreement between Ptolemy and Copernicus). Galileo's own effort to codify his understanding of the astronomy (he only became a Copernicanist at some point when he studied this problem at depth) is what forced the Church to adopt an official position (unfortunately, one chosen by theologians and incompetent astronomers according to a literal interpretation of the Bible) and to bring him into trouble and impose a sort of a ban of Copernicanism for him.

I am extremely grateful to Galileo for having done what he has done and he was just right about these scientific and political issues. Let me mention some of the aspects discussed by Kolb.

For example, Galileo was being implicitly criticized for claiming to be able to correctly interpret the astronomical statements in the Bible. Was he overreaching? I don't think so. Because Christianity was such a universal and omnipotent part of the culture of that epoch, it was virtually impossible to convince anyone of anything if you outright denied the tenets of Christianity such as "the validity of the Holy Scripture (at least in some sense)".

Another fact, and it is a related fact, was that the Church bureaucrats had a monopoly to "interpret the reality". Everyone else was doing just some "details" that were not allowed to influence any "greater questions". But Galileo Galilei clearly had the insights that were going to substantially change some "greater questions": he was giving birth to the scientific method as we know it and it is no detail.

Because of this reason, it seems totally obvious that he simply had to struggle to overtake the competency to determine what is true about the deepest cosmic questions from the Church bureaucrats. After all, as Kolb admits, Copernicus himself wrote just a cryptic text filled with complicated mathematical expressions and jargon that didn't even attempt to reach a broader readership, so his work became a hobby for a small group of astronomers only. Thank God, Galileo didn't want to be satisfied with a similar outcome. If he were satisfied, the Western civilization could be as unscientific and unenlightened in 2012 AD as the Islamic anticivilization is. The religious leaders could dictate what to think about the motion of celestial bodies ? and all other fundamental enough questions ? even today.

So the statement "I am able to properly interpret the biblical astronomy" was simply saying "I know how the things actually work" translated to the Latin of the time in which the "power to define the truth" and the "power of Church bureaucrats to preach" were considered synonymous. The Bible was considered true by definition, so of course that given this assumption, the ability to explain how the Solar System actually worked was the same thing as explaining how it worked according to the Bible.

For the very same reason, Galileo ? who wanted to become a monk but (because of the pressure from his father) tried to become a physician for a while ? ultimately grabbed the credentials as a mathematician as well as a philosopher. He realized that the "philosophers" of his time were just doing rubbish ? and they were mostly parroting and uncritically celebrating folks like Aristotle which meant that there was almost no potential for genuine progress. At the same time, these deluded people had lots of influence so Galileo realized that he needed to be considered a philosopher as well in order to gain the capacity to correct many of the unscientific misconceptions that were spread by the "philosophers".

Much of this stuff that Galileo was doing was politics but Galileo was the good guy who actually possessed the truth.

In 1632, Galileo wrote The Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems. It is a fictitious discussion between Salviati, a hero named after Galileo's friend and presenting many of Galileo's positions, and Simplicio, a guy described as an idiot who presents the opinion of some stupid people of the time such as Ludovico delle Colombe (1565-1616?), Galileo's fiercest detractor, and Cesare Cremonini (1550?1631), a colleague who rejected all the observations based on telescopes as a matter of principle. And of course another stupid guy, the Pope (Urban VIII, reign 1623-1644). The discussion is moderated by a smart laymen called Sagredo who is neutral at the beginning.

Kolb says that "he had no idea" why Galileo would write a text in which an idiot looked like he was the Pope. Well, I have some idea. It's because this was exactly what was happening in the real world, too. The Pope was one of the idiots of Galileo's time and it was totally necessary for any progress to challenge this particular idiot, too. Again, I think that if Galileo hadn't had the courage to challenge the Pope, the Western civilization wouldn't really change and the scientific revolution couldn't begin because obsolete dogmas and their champions would continue to have the power to stifle any important scientific development.

Galileo's "Dialogue" quickly made it to the bestseller lists. At some moment, the book was banned. Of course, the book became even more popular because of that. Soon afterwards, the Pope complained to the Inquisition. In 1633, Galileo arrived for the trial to Rome (his clever attempt to relocate the trial to friendly Florence was denied). See a 5-minute cartoon version of the trial. Galileo faced a possibility of Giordano Bruno's fate ? whose tongue was (after an 8-year-long trial) glued to the mouth so that the politically correct assholes of his time didn't have to worry that he would say something "dangerous" before he is burned at stake.

All the materials from the trial became publicly accessible ? despite the obvious Catholic Church's efforts to keep them secret ? thanks to Napoleon Bonaparte. He visited Rome and kindly asked them, with a minor help of this army, to hand out the materials so that they may be kept in Paris. ;-) In 1845, the French agreed to return all the materials to the Vatican but there was a condition: everything must be published.

But back to 1633. The Pope was the clear driver of attempts to harass Galileo. So the court was filled with Galileo's enemies. But what could have they accused him from? The book actually had signatures of several Catholic officials who authorized the book as OK for all audiences. So how could they punish him if they had allowed him to write it?

The trial was pretty short: about five pages. Four depositions. First one: Do you know why you're here, Dr Galileo? It's probably about my book. Do you recognize it etc.? Were you in Rome in 1616? Yes, I came to learn about the geocentrism vs heliocentrism debate. The Church had banned him from promoting heliocentrism, at least the possibly fake official documents suggest so. Galileo argued he didn't really remember what he wasn't allowed to do ? defend, teach, study, promote, whatever. Galileo argued that he didn't even defend heliocentrism; instead, he was promoting both sides of the debate, including the imbeciles, mental pygmies, dumb idiots, people hardly deserving to be called human beings, people too stupid to recognize their own limitations (these are Galileo's actual words but yes, great minds think alike), in a fair and balanced way. But the Church said he wasn't allowed to teach it in any way.

To defend himself, Galileo said an incredible lie: he said that the book defended the geocentrists (called the "imbeciles" etc.). An attorney would probably stop him from making such an implausible claim but he was defending himself.

Next time, Galileo said that he suddenly understood why they were thinking he was defending Copernicanism. He actually was so smart and nice that he described the Copernican interpretation ? so obviously wrong ? in a way that actually looks much more plausible than it is. :-) He offered them to fix the things in another edition of the book.

Galileo got 8 days to prepare a defense. He said he didn't remember any ban on "teaching" heliocentrism. And he said he believed that he didn't have to inform the censors about the injunction. My only error was the ambition to appear smarter than everyone else, he said. And Galileo complained about his health, old age, and good name.

The Inquisition asked him a simple question: Had he ever been a Copernican? Galileo said he was uncertain until 1616 but since the official position was taken, he believed Ptolemy. Clearly a lie. He denied being Copernican. The Church said they didn't believe him.

On June 22nd, 1633, Galileo had to listen to the sentence in humiliating clothes. He's suspect of the heliocentric heresy, he was told. Galileo saved his life by a verbal self-destruction. There is no way how he could have said "it is moving, anyway" during this scene. The life in prison was signed by 7 of the 10 cardinals only. It's not clear to me whether the remaining 3 wanted a tougher or milder punishment, however. The Pope ? who orchestrated the trial behind the scenes ? later changed the verdict to a "life-long house arrest" in order to look magnanimous.

Galileo died in 1642. His remains were soon moved to a more prestigious place but as recently as in the 19th century, his "Dialogue" could imperil your immortal soul even if you just read it.

Kolb asks whether Galileo was a classical tragic hero. My answer is Yes, he was. But he was much more than that, too. He was a man who opened the doors to scholars' ability to challenge the opinions held by the entire hierarchy of Church bureaucrats (the Christian churches became able to reform themselves and compatible with the modern world as a result of that), who established the scientific method, and who was still able to save his life by a sequence of tricks and lies. His achievements included the highly technical and experimental ones, conceptual and theoretical ones, as well as political ones, and all these three groups were very important.

Source: http://motls.blogspot.com/2012/10/galileos-1933-trial-tragic-hero.html

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Thursday, October 18, 2012

If Stones Could Talk... Coupled With Some Baby Talk: Sweet Baby ...

? ?The intertwining of lives is precious when you are able to see it moving through the generations building faith upon faith and a legacy of hope. It is a picture of the living stones that Peter talks about...stones being lovingly fashioned into a spiritual house. Looking at the faces of the friends and family gathered to celebrate the anticipated arrival of a baby girl, one could not help but be reminded of the faithfulness and goodness of our God.
? ? The Daughter recently opened her home for a baby shower in honor of beloved childhood friend,?Ellie Bannister Holcomb. Each of the five hostesses contributed something special: from the beautiful invitations designed by the inimitable Emily Holmes (www.emilyoholmes.com), to the lovely fall table centerpiece of white and green pumpkins and gourds interspersed with greenery and flowers. Other decor elements included quilts draped over porch railings, a precious pink high chair at the front door to greet guests, lots of vintage china and silver accompanied by flowers and candles tucked here and there.
? ?Oh, and the food...there were iced cookies, a delectable strawberry cake, hot out of the oven pumpkin bread, brie cooked in puffed pastry, hot ham and cheese party rolls, and assorted artisanal cheeses with fruit. A hearty fall soup was ladled out on the back porch and that favorite Southern standby, tea punch, made an appearance accompanied by warm mulled cider and coffee. It all came together perfectly on a lovely fall afternoon.
? ?Take a look at some of the beauty and the joy that spilled over into every heart!











? ?If this party is any indication, Baby Girl Holcomb will grow up surrounded by godly women who will sow seeds of God's love and His Light into her life. And no doubt, her parents will impart a love of music. Baby Girl Holcomb will be one blessed babe! Can't wait to meet her!
?

To learn more about Ellie and her husband Drew Holcomb:

Thanks to Jennifer Davis Anderson and Jessica Hodge Schafer for the photographs!

Source: http://ifstonescouldtalk.blogspot.com/2012/10/sweet-baby-love.html

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An Introduction To The Microsoft Office 2007 And 2010 | Computers ...

You are here: Home / General / An Introduction To The Microsoft Office 2007 And 2010



With the final absolution due in a brace of months, Microsoft accept provided a beta analysis adaptation of Microsoft Office 2010 product key that?s changeless for associates of the accessible to download. The beta analysis adaptation will run abundantly until October 2010 at which point users allegation adjudge whether they ambition to acquirement the final absolution or accept it removed from their adamantine drive. Read on to get more information.

For the costs complex the majority of home users may still be added good off with the changeless Open Office Apartment as it should accommodate all the appearance you are acceptable to allegation at no cost. This accepting been said, the Office Apartment has remained an accepted flagship artifact over the years due to business users generally acute a specific action or appliance alone present in the Microsoft offering. I, for example, use Outlook on an approved base and haven?t yet begin a that apparel my needs.

Having not been the better fan of Office 2007 (especially the ?ribbon? interface discussed in the past) I ashen no time downloading the 64-bit able adaptation of the beta to put it through its paces. I accept now been appliance it for a brace of canticle it does arise conspicuously faster than Office 2007 and authoritativeness abundantly stable. The acceleration access could calmly be attributed to the actuality that a 64-bit adaptation of the appliance is now accessible to run on avant-garde 64-bit computers. One can also check http://www.dpod.com/video/ for more information.

Office Able 2010 includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, InfoPath, OneNote, Outlook, Access and Publisher. The home archetype (also currently accessible in beta) includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and OneNote. After the official release, computer manufacturers may accept to array fresh machines with an amateur archetype of Office which includes aloof Excel and Word; this adaptation of Office will alter the crumbling Microsoft Works Suite.Although the award interface remains, it is absolutely a lot clearer than that provided with Office 2007; the ambiguous Office orb has been replaced with the accustomed book menu, there are beneath confusing borders, a aloof color arrangement and best chiefly it is customizable to the users alone tastes. The applications attending and behave like a ?family? now and accept become added automatic to use as an aftereffect of the added aesthetic user interface.

An important fresh affection due for absolution in the final adaptation but missing from the beta is the ?Web Apps? which will extend the Office functionality to an accordant web browser. Actual agnate in anatomy to Google Docs, Office Web Apps allows users to collaborate, adapt and allotment Office abstracts online. This is an abundantly important fresh affection that has no agnosticism appear about due to the success of Google Docs and one that I would like to acreage analysis back complete.

Source: http://www.theyellowads.com/computers_technology/an-introduction-to-the-microsoft-office-2007-and-2010/

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Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Personalized genomic medicine: How much can it really empower patients?

ScienceDaily (Oct. 15, 2012) ? Personalized genomic medicine is hailed as a revolution that will empower patients to take control of their own health care, but it could end up taking control away from patients and limiting their treatment choices, concludes an article in the Hastings Center Report. A commentary responding to the article, by the editorial director of Health and Family at Consumer Reports, also appears in the journal.

Genomic science provides two categories of data, the authors write: pharmacogenomic information and genomic susceptibility information. Pharmacogenomic information forecasts how an individual might respond to a particular therapy. Genomic susceptibility testing predicts a patient's chances of warding off or succumbing to an environmental threat or disease.

Genomic medicine's stakeholders -- including direct-to-consumer genetic testing companies, private research centers, and the National Institutes of Health -- are deeply invested in promoting how this information will benefit patients. The authors call this "empowerment rhetoric." And yet the added knowledge that comes from both pharmacogenomic information and genomic susceptibility information could have a negative impact on how much power a patient really has.

The results gleaned from pharmacogenomic information could pressure patients to comply with physicians' recommendations, the authors suggest, because molecular profiling would allow doctors to give orders with more authority. "In fact, because genomic medicine generates more risk information and makes that information the key lens for approaching health and disease, patients may actually find that they have less ability to influence health care decisions and treatments," the authors state.

The virtues of genomic susceptibility information could also go awry. First, because disease prevention relies heavily on lifestyle changes, responsibility is shifted from doctor to patient. Patients who don't make the "right" choices could be deemed irresponsible, the article says. Second, genomic information can for the time being only reveal the health risks of groups of people. Rather than provide individualized assessments, it classifies people into "genetic superfamilies." The authors argue that "population classification schemes based on racial and ethnic categories can be actively disempowering for individuals, by encouraging potentially prejudicial associations between their group affiliations and health care risks."

Patient empowerment is marketed as a paradigm shift because it puts medical data in the hands of the consumer, not just the doctor. But the authors conclude that the focus on empowerment could clash with the reality of what patients are willing or able to do with the information they receive. "The idea of patient empowerment may run up against not only the limits of patients' control over their health, but also the limits of patient control over health care systems," the article says.

The authors are Eric T. Juengst, director of the Center for Bioethics and professor in the Departments of Social Medicine and Genetics at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Michael A. Flatt, a doctoral candidate in sociology at Case Western Reserve University; and Richard A. Settersten, Jr., professor of social and behavioral health sciences and endowed director of the Hallie E. Ford Center for Healthy Children and Families in the College of Public Health and Human Sciences at Oregon State University.

In a commentary on the article, Ronni Sandroff, editorial director of Health and Family at Consumer Reports, acknowledges that pharmacogenomics could take control away from a patient if a health insurance company opted not to cover a medicine that was shown to work infrequently in people with a particular genetic makeup. But even an increase in patient empowerment can have downsides if it shifts the responsibility for health care to patients and stigmatizes people who do not, or cannot, make the "right" health choices. Sandroff notes that the greatest challenge in preventive medicine is getting people to eat less, exercise more, and reduce stress. Whether or not genetic susceptibility information will actually empower patients by propelling them toward healthier lifestyles is unknown. "This is a question that needs more serious study," she writes.

Still, Sandroff says that consumer participation in genetic health research -- "a new and growing factor" -- could help advance scientific knowledge. "That makes it something that professionals should be wondering how to enhance and encourage, rather than fear," she writes.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by The Hastings Center.

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


Journal References:

  1. Eric T. Juengst, Michael A. Flatt, Richard A. Settersten Jr. Personalized Genomic Medicine and the Rhetoric of Empowerment. Hastings Center Report, 2012; 42 (5): 34-40 DOI: 10.1002/hast.65
  2. Ronni Sandroff. Are You Feeling Empowered Yet? Hastings Center Report, 2012; 42 (5): 3

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/ofiiGpURi6I/121015171358.htm

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Sunday, October 14, 2012

Energy bills to rise as winter looms

LONDON (Reuters) - Two of Britain's biggest energy suppliers are raising their prices just as millions of cash-strapped consumers switch on their central heating for the winter, saying higher costs made the move unavoidable.

The country's largest natural gas supplier British Gas, part of utility Centrica Plc, will charge 6 percent more for the energy it delivers, while rival RWE npower, part of Germany's RWE AG, will impose increases of 9.1 percent in electricity and 8.8 percent in gas.

SSE Plc, another rival, had already warned customers their bills will rise 9 percent from Monday.

"We know that household budgets are under pressure and this 1.50 pound per week rise will be unwelcome," said British Gas Managing Director Phil Bentley. "However, we simply cannot ignore the rising costs that are largely outside our control, but which make up most of the bill."

Both British Gas and RWE npower, whose increases take effect next month, said wholesale energy prices were a factor in raising retail prices, with Centrica adding it faced a decline in supplies it retrieves from the North Sea.

UK gas prices have risen 24 percent over the past two months and electricity prices have followed a similar trend, mainly due to jitters over imports from Norway and a lower supply of shipped liquefied gas.

UNAVOIDABLE COSTS

Costs to upgrade the energy network also made it more expensive for suppliers to deliver energy and spending on government schemes to reduce carbon emissions and improve energy efficiency are expected to double next year, the utilities said.

Last year, UK inflation was boosted to a three-year high mainly due to more expensive energy bills and the Bank of England predicted in August that suppliers would again lift prices towards the turn of the year.

Annual "dual fuel" bills for customers of British Gas will go up an average 80 pounds after November 16, while RWE npower customers will pay 109 pounds more on average from November 26.

"This is very unwelcome, and I know lots of families who are struggling to balance their budgets will be very disappointed and concerned by these price rises," said Britain's Energy and Climate Change Minister Greg Barker.

Barker said the government was rolling out policies to help reduce energy demand and support customers struggling to pay their bills.

The price announcements came a day after regulator Ofgem released a report showing that 3 percent of the UK population had gas and electricity debts last year.

The numbers were slightly down on 2010, but the report, published late on Thursday, said the average amount owed by individuals for gas bills rose by 10 percent to 371 pounds.

"There are signs that the recession and high energy bills are continuing to have an impact on consumers struggling to pay," Ofgem said.

Shares in Centrica were down 0.3 percent in afternoon trading on Friday, while shares in Frankfurt-listed RWE slipped 0.4 percent.

(Additional reporting by Susanna Twidale; Editing by Paul Sandle and David Holmes)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/centricas-british-gas-raises-prices-6-percent-074309065--finance.html

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Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Swimming with hormones: Researchers unravel ancient urges that drive the social decisions of fish

Swimming with hormones: Researchers unravel ancient urges that drive the social decisions of fish [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 9-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Michelle Donovan
donovam@mcmaster.ca
905-525-9140
McMaster University

Researchers have discovered that a form of oxytocinthe hormone responsible for making humans fall in lovehas a similar effect on fish, suggesting it is a key regulator of social behaviour that has evolved and endured since ancient times.

The findings, published in the latest edition of the journal Animal Behaviour, help answer an important evolutionary question: why do some species develop complex social behaviours while others spend much of their lives alone?

"We know how this hormone affects humans," explains Adam Reddon, lead researcher and a graduate student in the Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour at McMaster University. "It is related to love, monogamy, even risky behaviour, but much less is known about its effects on fish."

Specifically, researchers examined the cichlid fish Neolamprologus pulcher, a highly social species found in Lake Tanganyika in Africa.

These cichlids are unusual because they form permanent hierarchical social groups made up of a dominant breeding pair and many helpers that look after the young and defend their territory.

For the experiments, researchers injected the cichlids with either isotocina "fish version" of oxytocinor a control saline solution.

When placed in a simulated territorial competition with a single perceived rival, the isotocin-treated fish were more aggressive towards large opponents, regardless of their own size.

When placed in a larger group situation, isotocin-treated fish became more submissive when faced with aggression from more dominant group members. Such signals are important in this species because they placate the dominant members of the group, say researchers.

"The hormone increases responsiveness to social information and may act as an important social glue," says Reddon. "It ensures the fish handle conflict well and remain a cohesive group because they will have shorter, less costly fights."

"We already knew that this class of neuropeptides are ancient and are found in nearly all vertebrate groups," says Sigal Balshine, a professor in the Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour. "What is especially exciting about these findings, is that they bolster the idea that function of these hormones, as modulators of social behaviour, has also been conserved."

###

McMaster University, one of four Canadian universities listed among the Top 100 universities in the world, is renowned for its innovation in both learning and discovery. It has a student population of 23,000, and more than 156,000 alumni in 140 countries.

For more information, please contact:

Michelle Donovan
Public Relations Manager
McMaster University
905-525-9140 ext. 22869
donovam@mcmaster.ca

Wade Hemsworth
Public Relations Manager
McMaster University
905-525-9140, ext. 27988
hemswor@mcmaster.ca



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Swimming with hormones: Researchers unravel ancient urges that drive the social decisions of fish [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 9-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Michelle Donovan
donovam@mcmaster.ca
905-525-9140
McMaster University

Researchers have discovered that a form of oxytocinthe hormone responsible for making humans fall in lovehas a similar effect on fish, suggesting it is a key regulator of social behaviour that has evolved and endured since ancient times.

The findings, published in the latest edition of the journal Animal Behaviour, help answer an important evolutionary question: why do some species develop complex social behaviours while others spend much of their lives alone?

"We know how this hormone affects humans," explains Adam Reddon, lead researcher and a graduate student in the Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour at McMaster University. "It is related to love, monogamy, even risky behaviour, but much less is known about its effects on fish."

Specifically, researchers examined the cichlid fish Neolamprologus pulcher, a highly social species found in Lake Tanganyika in Africa.

These cichlids are unusual because they form permanent hierarchical social groups made up of a dominant breeding pair and many helpers that look after the young and defend their territory.

For the experiments, researchers injected the cichlids with either isotocina "fish version" of oxytocinor a control saline solution.

When placed in a simulated territorial competition with a single perceived rival, the isotocin-treated fish were more aggressive towards large opponents, regardless of their own size.

When placed in a larger group situation, isotocin-treated fish became more submissive when faced with aggression from more dominant group members. Such signals are important in this species because they placate the dominant members of the group, say researchers.

"The hormone increases responsiveness to social information and may act as an important social glue," says Reddon. "It ensures the fish handle conflict well and remain a cohesive group because they will have shorter, less costly fights."

"We already knew that this class of neuropeptides are ancient and are found in nearly all vertebrate groups," says Sigal Balshine, a professor in the Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour. "What is especially exciting about these findings, is that they bolster the idea that function of these hormones, as modulators of social behaviour, has also been conserved."

###

McMaster University, one of four Canadian universities listed among the Top 100 universities in the world, is renowned for its innovation in both learning and discovery. It has a student population of 23,000, and more than 156,000 alumni in 140 countries.

For more information, please contact:

Michelle Donovan
Public Relations Manager
McMaster University
905-525-9140 ext. 22869
donovam@mcmaster.ca

Wade Hemsworth
Public Relations Manager
McMaster University
905-525-9140, ext. 27988
hemswor@mcmaster.ca



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-10/mu-swh100912.php

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Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Sainsbury's sales get Paralympics lift - Kantar

LONDON (Reuters) - J Sainsbury Plc, Britain's third-biggest grocer, has lifted its market share on the back of its high-profile sponsorship of the London Paralympic Games, industry data showed on Tuesday.

Market researcher Kantar Worldpanel said Sainsbury's sales rose 5.6 percent in the 12 weeks to September 30, increasing its share of the UK grocery market to 16.5 percent from 16.2 percent a year ago, as the group benefited from advertising tied to the Paralympic Games which followed the Olympics.

"Among the big four supermarkets, the standout performance is from Sainsbury's. Its sponsorship of the Paralympic games has clearly borne fruit," said Edward Garner, director at Kantar Worldpanel.

The findings will not come as a surprise as last week Sainsbury beat forecasts for second-quarter underlying sales growth.

Kantar said market leader Tesco Plc achieved sales growth of 3.3 percent over the 12 weeks, with its share edging down 0.2 percentage points to 31.0 percent.

Last week Tesco, which is spending 1 billion pounds ($1.6 billion) to improve stores, service and products, said it had halted an 18-month slide in underlying UK sales, though it also reported its first fall in profit for nearly 20 years.

Britain's second-largest grocer Asda, part of Wal-Mart Stores Inc, saw its market share edge up 0.1 percentage points to 17.5 percent, while No. 4 player Wm Morrison Supermarkets Plc saw its share fall 0.4 percentage points to 11.4 percent.

Kantar also highlighted a record market share of 4.7 percent for Waitrose, the upmarket grocer owned by John Lewis.

The market researcher said the UK grocery market as a whole grew 3.9 percent, above the Kantar inflation measure of 2.6 percent, meaning that despite a background of austerity there is growth in the market.

Separately on Tuesday an industry survey showed British retail sales posted a solid rise last month, as shoppers splashed out on sturdy shoes and warm clothes.

(Reporting by James Davey; Editing by David Holmes)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sainsburys-sales-paralympics-lift-kantar-113406846--business.html

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