Six law enforcement officers from South Florida graduate FBI National Academy

By Linda Trischitta

10:08 a.m. EDT, June 8, 2012

Six South Florida law enforcement officers are graduating today from the most recent class of the FBI National Academy, John V. Gillies, special agent in charge of the FBI Miami division announced.

They are: Lt. Kathleen Ream-Fisher, Key West Police; Capt. Nancy Grimes, Palm Beach Sheriffs Office; Maj. Mark Jeter, Miami-Dade Police; Robert Breeden, Asst. Special Agent in Charge, Florida Department of Law Enforcement; Sgt. Jack Vaccaro, Lighthouse Point Police and Chief Thomas Nagy, Hillsboro Beach Police.

The FBI says academy alumni comprise less than one percent of the countrys law enforcement officers. They were selected by their departments and, with about 250 other officers, completed a 10-week course that began April 12th in Quantico, Virginia.

Studies included law, behavioral science; forensic science; understanding terrorism; leadership development; communication and health and fitness.

Participants come from around the U.S., its territories and 150 countries. They gain a big picture perspective on trends and crime-fighting techniques, and build their network of law enforcement peers. The academy was created in 1935 and 1,000 officers attend it each year.

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Six law enforcement officers from South Florida graduate FBI National Academy

Take a beating, make a buck: Rockaway lab tests U.S. Army weapons on paid volunteers

ROCKAWAY How do soldiers know what will happen when they fire rubber bullets into a hostile crowd?

How do Marines know if shining a beam of light in a drivers eyes will be enough to deter the vehicle as it approaches a checkpoint?

What percentage of a mob can be turned away by a piercing sound?

The answers are found in Building 3518 a single-story warehouse in Morris County thats in need of a fresh coat of paint. The building on Lake Denmark Road, which you would be forgiven for never noticing, is a couple of miles from the entrance to Picatinny Arsenal, the Armys research and development site in Rockaway Township.

Inside, past the cafeteria and the restrooms, is the Armys only behavioral-science laboratory where real-live volunteers, young and old, men and women, learn what its like to be on the business end of a baton or hit with a laser that makes your skin feel like its on fire.

Picatinny Arsenal is best known for developing weapons, and engineers on base can tell you in precise detail how each one works. In Building 3518 also known as the Target Behavioral Response Laboratory the nine-member team can tell you why they work. And when dealing with non-lethal weapons, that is the most important information a soldier can have.

"I cant just shoot a laser or loud sound at a piece of wood and expect it to run away," said John Riedener, the labs technical director. "We need to know how well it chases someone away. Its all about data, controlled experiments. Its about the probabilities of what can happen."

Applicants are screened so the Army does not end up with all male volunteers or a group all under the age of 30. The research requires a wide swath of the population to measure the effectiveness of the experiments. Flyers are put in libraries and college campuses.

Volunteers paid $20 per hour sign an informed consent form alerting them there is a chance of serious or even permanent injury, and all experiments are conducted under the purview of Picatinnys Internal Review Board and the Armys Human Research Protections Office. There have been no serious injuries to date and volunteers can pull out at any time, said Charles Sheridan, research teaching specialist.

"We dont want them to be surprised, but they have the right to run away," Sheridan said. "And thats a data point for us."

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Take a beating, make a buck: Rockaway lab tests U.S. Army weapons on paid volunteers

WellDoc’s® Mobile Diabetes Intervention System Highlighted at American Diabetes Association 72nd Scientific Sessions

BALTIMORE--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

WellDoc, a healthcare behavioral science and technology company whose products improve the lives of people with chronic diseases, today released new data from a study first published last fall in Diabetes Care. The additional analysis Mobile Diabetes Intervention for Glycemic Control: Impact on Physician Prescribing Behavior, will be highlighted during a poster presentation at the American Diabetes Association (ADA) 72nd Scientific Sessions, held June 8-12 in Philadelphia at the Pennsylvania Convention Center.

The new data from study lead investigator Charlene C. Quinn, R.N., Ph.D., University of Maryland School of Medicine, et al. assessed the impact on physicians medication management when patients used a Mobile Diabetes Intervention System (MDIS), and physicians used the associated Clinical Decision Support.

The cluster-randomized controlled trial (RCT) included 163 patients and 26 primary care practices assigned to treatment groups or a control group (usual care) for one year. For this analysis, physicians who used the WellDoc Clinical Decision Support (seven practices) nearly doubled the number of medication changes they made for their patients vs. those who provided usual care alone (66.5 percent of treatment group patients experienced medication changes versus 36.4 percent in the usual care group). The one year parent RCT, reported in Diabetes Care, 2011, found that the virtual patient coach portion of the WellDoc solution reduced A1c on average by 1.5 percent and that when physicians utilized the clinical decision support the A1c was further reduced by approximately 30 percent, or a total of 1.9 percent. These results were significant compared to the 0.7 percent A1c reduction for control group. A1c levels are considered the gold-standard measure for diabetes control and reductions in A1c have been shown to directly reduce the number of complications and costs incurred by a person with diabetes.

Our research shows that this mobile diabetes study intervention impacted how physicians manage medications for their diabetes patients, said Dr. Quinn. The WellDoc intervention provided a patient-centric care solution that impacted medication therapy management at the provider level, while simultaneously supporting other key aspects of diabetes self-management, such as glucose testing, diet, and exercise.

Last year, WellDoc announced the primary endpoint data showing a significant reduction in A1c levels. Today, as we dig deeper into the study data it has become eye-opening how mobile health can not only change patient behavior but also provide doctors with the support and information they need to optimize the treatment plans of their type 2 diabetes patients, said Ryan Sysko, founder and chief executive officer, WellDoc.

WellDocs diabetes product is the only mHealth solution cleared by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to provide real time, automated clinical and behavioral patient coaching combined with decision support for the patients doctor. Type 2 diabetes affects 25.8 million Americans, costing the United States $174 billion in 2007. Only 12.2 percent of these people meet the standards of care for glucose, blood pressure and lipid control.

About WellDoc

WellDoc, a healthcare behavioral science and technology company that develops solutions aimed at engaging patients and enhancing health outcomes, is focused on simplifying the way chronic diseases are managed through a collaborative, life-changing approach that breaks down the barriers of engagement and adherence by providing patients and their healthcare providers with real-time, actionable information. WellDoc has developed an industry-leading, technology-based solution designed to help people with chronic diseases better manage their conditions. In 2011, Forbes editors selected WellDoc as one of America's Most Promising Companies based on its potential for future growth. For more information, visit http://www.welldoc.com.

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WellDoc’s® Mobile Diabetes Intervention System Highlighted at American Diabetes Association 72nd Scientific Sessions

NOBEL PRIZE WINNER: This Is The Difference Between Thinking Fast And Slow

Edward Maurer

His recent book,Thinking, Fast and Slow, was a 2011 bestseller. It summarizes his lifetime of work on how the mind works, covering many topics familiar to those who follow behavioral economics and finance: prospect theory, overconfidence, loss aversion, anchoring, separate mental accounting, the representativeness bias and the availability bias.

Kahneman, who, at 82, is still teaching at Princeton, recently discussed these and other discoveries at the 2012 CFA Institute Annual Conference, which took place in Chicago on May 6-9.

Ill look at how Kahnemans research can be applied in the context of investing, but first lets examine the central subject of his book: our two ways of thinking.

Think fast! Or think slowly?

Try this experiment: Just before making a left turn in a busy intersection, begin to multiply 17 by 24. Im kidding; please dont. Youll either quickly abandon the arithmetic problem or wreck your car. But Ill bet you can add two plus two while making a left turn without any problem whatsoever.

What is the difference between the two tasks?

Most people would say that one of the tasks is easy and the other is hard. But Kahneman, who won the 2002 Nobel Prize in economics for work relating economic decision-making to psychology, says that theres more to it a substantive difference, not merely one of degree.

Adding two and two is done using what Kahneman calls System 1 thinking, the kind of fast thinking that feels like it is done on autopilot. The product of 17 and 24 is arrived at using System 2 thinking slow, deliberate thinking that involves an entirely different physiological process, one that (for example) interferes with driving a car.

When you engage in intense System 2 thinking, Kahneman says, something happens to your body. Your pupils dilate. Your heart rate increases. Your blood glucose level drops. You become irritable if someone or something interrupts your focus. You become partially deaf and partially blind to stimuli that ordinarily command your attention. Kahneman writes that intense focusing on a task can make people effectively blind.

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NOBEL PRIZE WINNER: This Is The Difference Between Thinking Fast And Slow

PTSD psychotherapy is enhanced with D-cycloserine

Public release date: 4-Jun-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Rhiannon Bugno Biol.Psych@utsouthwestern.edu 214-648-0880 Elsevier

Philadelphia, PA, June 4, 2012 Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is among the most common, distressing, and disabling medical consequences of combat or other extremely stressful life events. The first-line treatment for PTSD is exposure therapy, a type of behavioral therapy where patients confront their fears in a safe environment. Although it is an effective treatment, many patients still experience symptoms after treatment and there is a relatively high drop-out rate.

In an effort to improve existing treatments, a new study appearing in Biological Psychiatry this week has tested a novel hypothesis about the treatment of PTSD derived from prior work in animal models and other anxiety disorders. They examined whether the impact of psychotherapy could be enhanced by administering D-cycloserine (DCS), a drug that does not directly treat the symptoms of PTSD, but rather promotes neuroplasticity, i.e., makes brain circuits better able to remodel themselves in the context of experience.

To test this, researchers recruited individuals with PTSD, all of whom received up to 10 weekly sessions of exposure therapy. They were randomized to receive doses of either DCS or placebo before each session, but did not know which they were receiving. The severity of their symptoms was assessed before and after treatment.

All patients experienced a reduction in symptoms due to the exposure therapy, regardless of whether they had received DCS augmentation or placebo. However, DCS did enhance the effects of exposure therapy in a specific subgroup of patients. Those who had more severe PTSD prior to treatment and needed longer treatment had a greater reduction in symptoms when they received DCS, compared to those who received placebo.

"Our study showed that some PTSD patients respond well and fast to exposure and for them, there seems no need to augment the therapy. In contrast, those patients with severe PTSD symptoms and who fail to respond to exposure sessions may benefit from augmentation with DCS," explained first author Dr. Rianne de Kleine. "It seems that DCS is beneficial for exactly those patients we aimed for: the more severe patients who do not respond to first-line treatment."

"This approach may have important implications for the treatment of PTSD. Two decades of brain research suggests that severe psychological stress causes atrophy of some of the fine connections in the brain and reductions in the volume of brain regions involved in emotion and memory. Thus, individuals with PTSD may have deficits in neuroplasticity that get in the way of effective treatment," commented Dr. John Krystal, Editor of Biological Psychiatry. "D-cycloserine may reduce this deficit in neuroplasticity and increase the response to psychotherapy, in this case a psychotherapy approach that involves exposing people to reminders and memories of the trauma."

The authors conclude that additional work is warranted to explore whether this combination can become an effective intervention to treat the symptoms of PTSD.

###

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PTSD psychotherapy is enhanced with D-cycloserine

University News 6/2/2012

Hardin-Simmons University commencement awardsSeveral awards were presented at the May 12 commencement exercises at Hardin-Simmons University:

Melissa Rosales of Mission was presented with the Minnie L. Anderson Award. She graduated summa cum laude with a bachelor of behavioral science degree in social work. The Minnie L. Anderson Award is presented to a senior woman who has spent three or more years in residence at HSU, and who has excelled in character, personal development and service to the university.

Erin James-Brown of Garland was presented with the Hemphill Graduate Honor Award. She received her master of divinity degree. The Hemphill Graduate Honor Award is presented by the HSU graduate school to recognize the student who excels in academic studies, possesses character and behavior consistent with the university's purpose, and exhibits potential for significant contribution to his or her chosen field.

Lyndsay Mathews of Henrietta was presented with the Julius Olsen Medal. She graduated summa cum laude with a bachelor of arts degree in Bible and political science. The Olsen Medal is awarded annually to the graduate who has the highest grade average, has exemplified the highest scholarly achievement, and has completed at least 90 semester hours of residence credit at HSU.

Kyle Timmermann of Rockwall was presented with the George Skiles Anderson Award. He graduated cum laude with a bachelor of business administration degree, majoring in economics and finance. The George Skiles Anderson Award is presented to the senior man, who having spent three or more years in residence at HSU, has excelled in character, personal development and service to the university.Tarleton State University students inducted into honors societiesSeveral area residents were recently inducted into honors societies at Tarleton State University.

Todd Byers of Coleman, Keaton Hancock of Comanche, Dillon O'Dell of Woodson, Maria Pina of Comanche and Shandale Riley of Comanche were inducted into the Phi Eta Sigma national honor society.

Michelle Phillips and Ronald Wheless, both from Abilene, were inducted into the Delta Mu Delta Honor Society in Business Administration.Howard Payne University students inducted into Sigma Beta DeltaTwo area residents were recently inducted into the Sigma Beta Delta International Business Honor Society at Howard Payne University's School of Business. They are Timber Curtis of Olden and Tina Fuentes of Bangs.Des Moines University graduateCaleb Dickison of Abilene recently received a doctor of osteopathic medicine degree from Des Moines University.

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University News 6/2/2012

Roslyn Students Win Big At Science Competition

Friday, 01 June 2012 00:00

Roslyn High School seniors Benjamin Kornick and Kevin Sherwin both won Grand Awards at this years INTEL International Science and Engineering Fair held recently in Pittsburgh, PA.

More than 1,500 students from about 70 countries, states, and territories spent the week in Pittsburgh vying for hundreds of thousands of dollars in scholarships and prizes. Only the top 25 percent of competitors received Grand Awards.

Im so proud of both Ben and Kevin, said Dr. Allyson Weseley, Roslyns coordinator of secondary research, who accompanied the boys to Pittsburgh. Theyve both worked so hard, and its gratifying to see them receive this well-earned recognition.

Ben garnered the highest honor in the behavioral science category for his work on the relationship between various parenting behaviors and the risk behaviors teens exhibit on -and offline.

Ben conducted his research at Roslyn High School with the help of Dr. Weseley. In his study, OMG: Look Who Joined Facebook! The Relationship between Parenting and Adolescent Risk Behaviors, Ben found that parents who solicit information from their children about the childrens involvement in risk activities have children more likely to engage in such risky behaviors. Its possible that such questioning encourages teens to rebel, explained Ben. On the other hand, in terms of offline risk, Ben found that parental knowledge obtained via closeness and/or control was linked to teens involvement in fewer risk behaviors.

Ben received $3,000 for being amongst the first-place winners in behavioral science and another $5,000 for being named the Best in Category. In addition, Ben won two other awards at the fair. The American Psychological Association presented him with a third-place award and the National Institute on Drug Abuse gave him a second-place award and has invited him to Washington, DC to visit their offices and present his research this summer.

Kevin, who competed in the mathematical sciences category, earned a fourth-place award for his project Classifying Generic Smooth Curves in the Projective Plane Related to Algebraic Curves of Degree 5. Kevins work took a set of established mathematical rules called the Arnold Invariants and applied them to a novel set of curves. Interestingly, the Arnold Invariants were ineffective in distinguishing between degree 5 curves, a finding that Kevin says has ramifications in fields from quantum computing to circuitry. Kevin was mentored by Dr. Oleg Viro of Stony Brook University.

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Roslyn Students Win Big At Science Competition

Servicemembers Value Trust and Knowledge in Financial Planners, First Command Reports

FORT WORTH, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Servicemembers who work with a financial planner cite financial know-how and moral fiber as the top qualities to look for when picking a planner, according to the First Command Financial Behaviors Index.

Recent survey findings from the First Command Financial Behaviors Index reveal that roughly three quarters of middle-class military families (senior NCOs and commissioned officers in pay grades E-6 and above with household incomes of at least $50,000) picked trustworthy, knowledgeable and honest as the most important attributes they seek in a planner.

Financial planning is a profession built on personal relationships with people you trust, said Scott Spiker, CEO of First Command Financial Services, Inc. These survey findings underscore the unique combination of economic and emotional assistance provided by financial planners as they coach servicemembers and their families in the fiscal behaviors associated with financial security and success.

The top attributes military families look for in a financial planner are:

* Trustworthy (75 percent) * Knowledgeable (73 percent) * Honest (72 percent) * Positive word of mouth or referral (55 percent) * Willing to listen (53 percent) * Many years of experience (48 percent) * Confident (43 percent) * Personal Relationship (41 percent) * Understanding (41 percent) * Low price for services (30 percent) * Patient (30 percent) * Optimistic (13 percent) * Bold (5 percent)

Notably, the cost of planning services is not a significant consideration when choosing a planner. Just three out of 10 respondents picked low price for services as the most important attribute to look for in a planner.

Financial planning is not a commodity that consumers shop for based on price alone, Spiker said. Consumers are willing to pay for planning services when they feel the planner has technical expertise and personal integrity. Through one-on-one service, financial planners provide a sense of security to men and women in uniform as they pursue their long-term goals and life-time dreams.

About the First Command Financial Behaviors Index

Compiled by Sentient Decision Science, Inc., the First Command Financial Behaviors Index assesses trends among the American publics financial behaviors, attitudes and intentions through a monthly survey of approximately 530 U.S. consumers aged 25 to 70 with annual household incomes of at least $50,000. Results are reported quarterly. The margin of error is +/- 4.3 percent with a 95 percent level of confidence. http://www.firstcommand.com/research

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Servicemembers Value Trust and Knowledge in Financial Planners, First Command Reports

Modifying Behavior With A Protein

Editor's Choice Main Category: Schizophrenia Also Included In: Psychology / Psychiatry;Autism;Mental Health Article Date: 29 May 2012 - 16:00 PDT

Current ratings for: 'Modifying Behavior With A Protein'

Stored memories that we have experienced previously enable us to repeat certain tasks. For example, we remember certain routes that we have driven previously. However, when circumstances change and our usual route is blocked for some reason, we have to find an alternative way to get to our destination. These changes are possible due to our behavioral flexibility in order for us to complete the task and they are partially driven by protein synthesis, which produces experience-dependent changes in neural function and behavior.

In many people, this process is impaired, meaning they are unable to adjust their behavior when faced with different circumstances than those they are accustomed to. The researchers set out to investigate how protein synthesis is regulated during behavioral flexibility and decided to focus on the kinase PERK, an enzyme that regulates protein synthesis and that modifies eIF2alpha, a factor required for proper protein synthesis.

The team conducted an experiment in two groups of ordinary lab mice of which one group had the PERK enzyme and the other group did not. The mice had to navigate a water maze in which they had to lift themselves onto a platform to get out of the water. Both groups of mice accomplished to learn how to complete the task. The next step was to move the platform to a different location within the maze, which allowed the team to study the mice's behavioral flexibility in response to the change. The observed that the mice with PERK managed to locate the platform, whilst those lacking PERK were either unable to do so or it took them considerably longer to complete the task.

The researchers then decided to examine how PERK assists mice in terms of their behavioral flexibility. They conducted a second experiment, in which both normal and mice without PERK heard an audible tone followed by a mild foot shock. Both groups of mice developed a normal response of fear, i.e. they froze when hearing the tone, anticipating the foot shock. The team then removed the foot shock from the procedure so that the mice only heard the tone. After a while they observed that the normal mice adjusted their responses and did not freeze after hearing the tone anymore, whilst the mice lacking PERK continued to respond as if they expected a foot shock to follow.

In order to support their findings that the absence of PERK may contribute to impaired behavioral flexibility in human neurological disorders the team conducted postmortem analyses of human frontal cortex samples from patients afflicted with schizophrenia, who often exhibit behavioral inflexibility, as well as from healthy individuals. They discovered that the healthy individuals' samples had normal levels of PERK, whilst those from schizophrenic patients had considerably lower levels of the protein.

Eric Klann, a professor in NYU's Center for Neural Science, who co-authored the study, concluded:

Written By Petra Rattue Copyright: Medical News Today Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today

MLA

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Modifying Behavior With A Protein

Missing kids: Perception, reality

By Kenneth V. Lanning, Special to CNN

updated 5:07 PM EDT, Fri May 25, 2012

National Missing Children's Day is based on the case of Etan Patz.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Editor's note: Kenneth V. Lanning, a consultant in crimes against children, was a special agent with the FBI for more than 30 years and was assigned to the FBI Behavioral Science Unit at the FBI Academy for 20 of those years.

(CNN) -- May 25, National Missing Children's Day, is a day on which we honor and remember missing children. This date was chosen specifically because it is the date in 1979 when 6-year-old Etan Patz went missing on his way to school in New York.

The Patz case has resurfaced as a result of some potential new leads and an arrest that hopefully will result in the case finally being solved. I have the greatest respect and empathy for the parents of Etan, who are going through what is clearly one of the greatest nightmares any parent can experience -- never again seeing and not knowing what happened to one's own child.

Just as the Lindbergh case in the 1930s became a landmark case for increased national awareness concerning ransom kidnapping, the Patz case became a landmark case for increased national awareness concerning "stranger abduction." Each of these cases played a major role in creating laws, but they also fueled some confusing stereotypes.

Kenneth V. Lanning

When I joined the FBI in 1970 and someone talked about child abduction, you immediately assumed it was a ransom-motivated case. In less than 20 years, the attitude drastically changed to almost immediately assuming any child abduction involved a sexual predator. Either assumption is obviously not always correct.

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Missing kids: Perception, reality

Missing children, perception vs. reality

By Kenneth V. Lanning, Special to CNN

updated 5:07 PM EDT, Fri May 25, 2012

National Missing Children's Day is based on the case of Etan Patz.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Editor's note: Kenneth V. Lanning, a consultant in crimes against children, was a special agent with the FBI for more than 30 years and was assigned to the FBI Behavioral Science Unit at the FBI Academy for 20 of those years.

(CNN) -- May 25, National Missing Children's Day, is a day on which we honor and remember missing children. This date was chosen specifically because it is the date in 1979 when 6-year-old Etan Patz went missing on his way to school in New York.

The Patz case has resurfaced as a result of some potential new leads and an arrest that hopefully will result in the case finally being solved. I have the greatest respect and empathy for the parents of Etan, who are going through what is clearly one of the greatest nightmares any parent can experience -- never again seeing and not knowing what happened to one's own child.

Just as the Lindbergh case in the 1930s became a landmark case for increased national awareness concerning ransom kidnapping, the Patz case became a landmark case for increased national awareness concerning "stranger abduction." Each of these cases played a major role in creating laws, but they also fueled some confusing stereotypes.

Kenneth V. Lanning

When I joined the FBI in 1970 and someone talked about child abduction, you immediately assumed it was a ransom-motivated case. In less than 20 years, the attitude drastically changed to almost immediately assuming any child abduction involved a sexual predator. Either assumption is obviously not always correct.

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Missing children, perception vs. reality

TEDxLSE – Jan-Emmanuel De Neve – Genoeconomics – Video

24-05-2012 06:48 Genoeconomics: the promise and pitfalls of a new research frontier in economics. Dr Jan-Emmanuel De Neve outlines how and why social scientists have started to integrate genetics into economic models of behavior. This stimulating talk highlights the potential of "genoeconomics" and presents some preliminary genetic association results on happiness, leadership, and borrowing behavior. Dr Jan-Emmanuel De Neve is Assistant Professor in Political Economy and Behavioral Science at University College London and a research associate of the Centre for Economic Performance at LSE. His research interests and publications span the economic, political, and behavioral sciences. He obtained his PhD from the LSE and was a Fulbright scholar at Harvard University. His research and commentary regularly feature in the media, including in The Economist, Newsweek, The Wall Street Journal, The Guardian, El Pais, Le Monde, and BBCWorld. About TEDx, x = independently organized event: In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)"

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TEDxLSE - Jan-Emmanuel De Neve - Genoeconomics - Video

Study: Autistic Kids Diagnosed Late

Many children may be diagnosed with autism years too late to benefit from early behavioral intervention, according to 2011 national survey findings released Thursday from the National Institute of Mental Health.

Intensive behavioral therapy for autism, which can begin as early as age two, can significantly improve language and thinking skills in children with autism, according to the National Institutes of Health. The therapy, which helps develop a child's social and behavior skills within different environments, is considered among the best forms of treatment by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

However, the survey found that more than half of children had reached age five before they were first identified as having an autism spectrum disorder.

Although children can continue to benefit from behavioral interventions after age five, earlier behavioral intervention is associated with better outcomes, according to many experts.

"It is critical that we address the barriers that are preventing children from receiving early intervention," said Geraldine Dawson, chief science officer of Autism Speaks, who was not involved in the study.

More than 1400 children ages 6 to 17 with autism were included in the survey. The survey looked at diagnosis of the disorder within the last 17 years.

The older children may have been receiving some sort of medical assessment for their condition before receiving a formal diagnosis, according to Lisa Colpe, chief officer of clinical and population epidemiology research at the National Institute of Mental Health's and co-author of the study.

"It's still a very complex disorder to diagnose and does take some time," said Colpe. "These ages mean that they have been getting assessed for some period of time before getting a diagnosed."

Ninety percent of the children diagnosed participated in some form of developmental service including occupational therapy, speech and language therapy, and social skills training, according to the study. However, fewer than half of the children underwent behavioral therapy.

A diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder can take five different forms, ranging from mild to severe. Because the report did not specify what forms of autism were diagnosed within the spectrum, it's unclear what the appropriate intervention would have been for the children included in the survey.

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Study: Autistic Kids Diagnosed Late

Protein necessary for behavioral flexibility discovered

ScienceDaily (May 24, 2012) Researchers have identified a protein necessary to maintain behavioral flexibility, which allows us to modify our behaviors to adjust to circumstances that are similar, but not identical, to previous experiences. Their findings, which appear in the journal Cell Reports, may offer new insights into addressing autism and schizophrenia -- afflictions marked by impaired behavioral flexibility.

Our stored memories from previous experiences allow us to repeat certain tasks. For instance, after driving to a particular location, we recall the route the next time we make that trip. However, sometimes circumstances change -- one road on the route is temporarily closed -- and we need to make adjustments to reach our destination. Our behavioral flexibility allows us to make such changes and, then, successfully complete our task. It is driven, in part, by protein synthesis, which produces experience-dependent changes in neural function and behavior.

However, this process is impaired for many, preventing an adjustment in behavior when faced with different circumstances. In the Cell Reports study, the researchers sought to understand how protein synthesis is regulated during behavioral flexibility.

To do so, they focused on the kinase PERK, an enzyme that regulates protein synthesis. PERK is known to modify eIF2, a factor that is required for proper protein synthesis. Their experiments involved comparing normal lab mice, which possessed the enzyme, with those that lacked it.

In their study, the mice were asked to navigate a water maze, which included elevating themselves onto a platform to get out of the water. Normal mice and those lacking PERK learned to complete this task.

However, in a second step, the researchers tested the mice's behavioral flexibility by moving the maze's platform to another location, thereby requiring them to respond to a change in the terrain. Here, the normal mice located the platform, but those lacking PERK were unable to do so or took significantly more time to complete the task.

A second experiment offered a different test of the role of PERK in aiding behavioral flexibility. In this measure, both normal and mutant mice heard an audible tone that was followed by a mild foot shock. At this stage, all of the mice developed a normal fear response -- freezing at the tone in anticipation of the foot shock. However, the researchers subsequently removed the foot shock from the procedure and the mice heard only the tone. Eventually, the normal mice adjusted their responses so they did not freeze after hearing the tone. However, the mutant mice continued to respond as if they expected a foot shock to follow.

The researchers sought additional support for their conclusion that the absence of PERK may contribute to impaired behavioral flexibility in human neurological disorders. To do so, they conducted postmortem analyses of human frontal cortex samples from patients afflicted with schizophrenia, who often exhibit behavioral inflexibility, and unaffected individuals. The samples from the control group showed normal levels of PERK while those from the schizophrenic patients had significantly reduced levels of the protein.

"A rapidly expanding list of neurological disorders and neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and Fragile X syndrome, have already been linked to aberrant protein synthesis," explained Eric Klann, a professor in NYU's Center for Neural Science and one of the study's co-authors. "Our results show the significance of PERK in maintaining behavioral flexibility and how its absence might be associated with schizophrenia. Further studies clarifying the specific role of PERK-regulated protein synthesis in the brain may provide new avenues to tackle such widespread and often debilitating neurological disorders."

The study's other co-authors were: Mimi Trinh, who recently completed her Ph.D. in NYU's Center for Neural Science; Hanoch Kaphzan, a former post-doctoral fellow in NYU's Center for Neural Science and now at the University of Haifa in Israel; Ronald Wek, a professor at Indiana University School of Medicine; Philippe Pierre, a group leader at France's Universit de la Mditerrane; and Douglas Cavener, a professor at Penn State's Department of Biology.

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Protein necessary for behavioral flexibility discovered

Researchers identify protein necessary for behavioral flexibility

Public release date: 24-May-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: James Devitt james.devitt@nyu.edu 212-998-6808 New York University

Researchers have identified a protein necessary to maintain behavioral flexibility, which allows us to modify our behaviors to adjust to circumstances that are similar, but not identical, to previous experiences. Their findings, which appear in the journal Cell Reports, may offer new insights into addressing autism and schizophreniaafflictions marked by impaired behavioral flexibility.

Our stored memories from previous experiences allow us to repeat certain tasks. For instance, after driving to a particular location, we recall the route the next time we make that trip. However, sometimes circumstances changeone road on the route is temporarily closedand we need to make adjustments to reach our destination. Our behavioral flexibility allows us to make such changes and, then, successfully complete our task. It is driven, in part, by protein synthesis, which produces experience-dependent changes in neural function and behavior.

However, this process is impaired for many, preventing an adjustment in behavior when faced with different circumstances. In the Cell Reports study, the researchers sought to understand how protein synthesis is regulated during behavioral flexibility.

To do so, they focused on the kinase PERK, an enzyme that regulates protein synthesis. PERK is known to modify eIF2alpha, a factor that is required for proper protein synthesis. Their experiments involved comparing normal lab mice, which possessed the enzyme, with those that lacked it.

In their study, the mice were asked to navigate a water maze, which included elevating themselves onto a platform to get out of the water. Normal mice and those lacking PERK learned to complete this task.

However, in a second step, the researchers tested the mice's behavioral flexibility by moving the maze's platform to another location, thereby requiring them to respond to a change in the terrain. Here, the normal mice located the platform, but those lacking PERK were unable to do so or took significantly more time to complete the task.

A second experiment offered a different test of the role of PERK in aiding behavioral flexibility. In this measure, both normal and mutant mice heard an audible tone that was followed by a mild foot shock. At this stage, all of the mice developed a normal fear responsefreezing at the tone in anticipation of the foot shock. However, the researchers subsequently removed the foot shock from the procedure and the mice heard only the tone. Eventually, the normal mice adjusted their responses so they did not freeze after hearing the tone. However, the mutant mice continued to respond as if they expected a foot shock to follow.

The researchers sought additional support for their conclusion that the absence of PERK may contribute to impaired behavioral flexibility in human neurological disorders. To do so, they conducted postmortem analyses of human frontal cortex samples from patients afflicted with schizophrenia, who often exhibit behavioral inflexibility, and unaffected individuals. The samples from the control group showed normal levels of PERK while those from the schizophrenic patients had significantly reduced levels of the protein.

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Researchers identify protein necessary for behavioral flexibility

Promotion of Mental, Emotional, and Behavioral Well-Being

Prevention, early intervention, and mental health promotion can help assure the health of young children and adolescents. There are several core concepts behind the science of prevention and promotion:

Prevention of mental, emotional and behavioral disorders requires a shift in focus. Instead of addressing a disorder after it occurs, prevention means supporting the healthy development of young people starting at birth. Mental health and physical health go hand in hand. Young people who grow up in good physical health are likely to also have good mental health; similarly, good mental health contributes to good physical health. Successful prevention must involve many different groups, including informed parents, professional educators (e.g., elementary school teachers), as well as mental health and substance abuse prevention and treatment professionals. Promotion of mental health is essential throughout a young persons developmental life cycle from the earliest years of life through adolescence and young adulthood as well as in a variety of settings such as families, schools, neighborhoods, and communities.

What is mental, emotional, and behavioral health?

Mental, emotional, and behavioral health refers to the overall psychological well-being of individuals and includes the presence of positive characteristics, such as the ability to manage stress, demonstrate flexibility under changing conditions, and bounce back from adverse situations.

Factors that Impact the Healthy Development of Young People

Exposure to risk and protective factors affects the healthy development and mental, emotional, and behavioral well-being of young people. Risk factors are conditions or characteristics that put an individual at greater risk for a specific health problem or disorder. Protective factors are personal traits or conditions in families and communities that, when present, contribute to an individuals well-being. While protective factors can make people resilient to mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders, risk factors can be detrimental to mental, emotional, and behavioral well-being. Some risk factors include:

Negative experiences when communicating with others in the home. An inability to confide in at least one close family member. The absence of positive role models. Loneliness or a perceived lack of safety, isolation, confusion and abuse. Experiencing trauma or serious loss, such as the death of a parent or other traumatic experience, especially early in life. Failing to maintain good physical health; physical and mental health are closely intertwined, and poor physical health can lead to the development of serious mental health issues. Alcohol and drug abuse increases the risk of mental health problems and can make pre-existing problems worse, and vice versa.

What Communities Can Do

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Promotion of Mental, Emotional, and Behavioral Well-Being

Innovative Enterprises Partners with PeopleAssessments To Provide Industry-Leading Assessment Solutions

NEWPORT NEWS, Va., May 22, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Innovative Enterprises, Inc., a strategic partner to the background screening industry and expert provider of court research information products, smart data solutions and ancillary services, today announced that it has partnered with PeopleAssessments.com to deliver industry-leading, science-based assessment solutions to the professional background screening community. Through this new partnership, Innovative's network of Screening Industry Partners gains immediate access to a comprehensive suite of best-in-class behavioral assessment solutions designed to empower employers to hire the very best candidates.

Solutions offered by PeopleAssessments are based upon more than 90 years of research and field practice by its principal scientists, Drs. Tom Janz, George Paajanen and John Callender. With over 140 million tests scored, more than 250,000 behavioral responses collected, hundreds of case studies and numerous biodata and ability scales developed, validated and administered around the world, PeopleAssessments' behavioral assessment products represent the cutting edge in science-based and empirically proven solutions designed to connect the right applicant to the right position.

"PeopleAssessments provides what is clearly the most advanced and scientifically validated set of assessment solutionsavailable," stated Clifford J. Williams, Innovative's Vice President and Chief Operating Officer. "We are very pleased to partner with PeopleAssessments to bring enhanced value to our network of the industry's leading background screening professionals."

"We are very excited to begin our partnership with Innovative and their network of Screening Industry Partners. Given the recent updates in the background screening industry's best practice guidelines, we anticipate many employers looking for validated screening instruments to complement their recruitment processes. This timely offering will provide Screening Industry Partners with a highly valuable proposition to help support and compliment their overall set of solutions," offered Dr. Tom Janz, PeopleAssessments' Chief Scientist.

About Innovative Enterprises, Inc.

Innovative serves as a strategic partner to the background screening industry as an expert provider of court research information products, smart data solutions and ancillary services. Innovative commands an intimate knowledge of its core competencies gleaned from more than two centuries of cumulative staff experience in public records research and aggregation, law enforcement, judicial administration and private investigation.

An industry leader since 1996, Innovative is a founding member of the National Association of Professional Background Screeners and hashelped to raise the barthrough its active participation in the formulation of a number of best practice guidelines for industry providers across various segments.Innovative was honored in 2008 and again in 2009 as one of the Inc. 5000 Fastest Growing Privately Held Companies in America. For more information, please call 1-888-777-9435, email solutions@knowthefacts.com, or visit us online at http://www.knowthefacts.com.

About PeopleAssessments

PeopleAssessments provides assessment solutions for companies that want to hire better people, faster, for less total cost. Our methods have helped thousands of companies identify candidates who contribute more and stay longer. Reports clearly outline a candidate's potential and past performance through validated tests and online responses to our proprietary Behavioral Interview application. With PeopleAssessments' per hire pricing, employers gain true ROI and competitive advantage compared to per test or candidate pricing. Assess more and hire better with PeopleAssessments! For more information go to http://www.peopleassessments.com or email info@peopleassessments.com.

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Innovative Enterprises Partners with PeopleAssessments To Provide Industry-Leading Assessment Solutions

Sense Networks Unveils New Products to Transform Mobile Advertising for Advertisers and Publishers

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Sense Networks, the original Big Data mobile location company, today announced its new products AdMatch and AudienceSense, which will empower marketers to reach new audiences and allow publishers to monetize mobile advertising. Unique to market newcomers, Sense Networks has a proven platform to turn location data into behavioral data at a scale of billions of mobile location points per day. Using location and prediction, Sense Networks is able to understand each users behavior, allowing advertisers and publishers to finally accurately profile and target to their audiences, and generate more revenue from mobile advertising.

The latest products from Sense Networks that will help mobile publishers and advertisers include:

Both products offer big advantages for consumer privacy as well. All user data is anonymous and never matched to external data sources that would require knowing a users name, address, phone number, or email. The location data is abstracted into consumer segments and the raw data is discarded after processing.

As consumers increasingly depend upon their mobile devices to access content and social media, its critical that publishers transition their ad strategies to a mobile-first approach. AdMatch provides the solution that delivers higher mobile ad revenue by anonymously pairing users to local ads with behavioral profiles and machine-learned models. AdMatch today is delivering a 4x increase in performance and beating traditional ring-fenced targeting by twice as much. AdMatch does this by selecting the best ads in real time through evaluation of behavioral attributes, current location context (whats nearby), click history and ad characteristics. AdMatch is delivering ads to users in their neighborhoods from thousands of local merchants. The familiarity that users have with their local merchants and the relevance of the offers drives up click-throughs and ultimately revenue.

For content and social media sites to survive the shift to mobile, they will have to dramatically increase the relevance of their content and offers, and in many cases they wont have much information on users, said David Petersen, CEO of Sense Networks. Sense Networks is unique because we have over six years of experience developing a platform that produces anonymous behavioral information with accuracy and scale, and were now ready to transform how marketers reach their mobile consumers. Were able to combine the power of predictive location and behavioral targeting to reach consumers, allowing publishers to better monetize mobile ads.

For publishers that sell ads directly, the key challenges are being able to target to their audiences and prove the value of their audiences with advertisers. AudienceSense addresses these needs by helping publishers segment and target to their audiences using their own user data. AudienceSense uses a publishers valuable location-based data to build high-value segments that advertisers pay to reach. AudienceSense includes 100 plus pre-built segments and can be extended to deliver custom segments to meet a publishers specific needs.

AdMatch and AudienceSense are now available at http://www.sensenetworks.com.

About Sense Networks

Sense Networks applies science to generate value from mobile location data. The company adds rich user behavior to location data to deliver actionable, predictive targeting beyond place. Sense Networks has a proven technology platform and over six years of experience working at scale with Big Data, processing billions of location points per day. Sense Networks AdMatch uses predictive location and behavioral targeting to match consumers to the most relevant offers from local merchants via mobile display advertising, while increasing revenue for mobile publishers and keeping users anonymous. Its AudienceSense solution helps publishers better monetize their audience by building predictive, location-centric behavioral segments on their own mobile data. For more information about Sense Networks visit us at http://www.sensenetworks.com/. Follow us on Twitter at @Sense_Networks.

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Sense Networks Unveils New Products to Transform Mobile Advertising for Advertisers and Publishers

Our Saviour student earns dose of science success

A Jacksonville eighth-grader just may have made a scientific breakthrough that can help mankind.

Patrick Shea of Our Saviour School in Jacksonville has come up with an idea to keep people from overdosing on over-the-counter medicine.

Patrick, 14, received a first-place award for his project, Can Summoning a Pharmacist Reduce Over-the-Counter Drug Errors?, at the Illinois Junior Academy of Science Fair at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign earlier this month. The project was also named best in category among the 200 behavioral science projects.

Patrick is the son of Tim and Lana Shea of Jacksonville. The science project involved putting an invisible watermark on over-the-counter medicine bottles.

You would download an [application] called Digimarc, Patrick said. The app finds a watermark in the background of the medicine bottle label and then it links to a video on the Internet. On the video, I put Jacksonville pharmacist Chuck Savage holding the medicine bottle and explaining how to properly use the medicine.

Patrick got the project idea when he was ill. It was then he discovered that the label on medicine he was about to take was difficult to read.

Patrick had a fever and I could not read the dosage directions, his mother said. So I had to scan in the label and enlarge it on my computer monitor. I think thats what piqued his interest in discovering more about improving ways for consumers to take over-the-counter medicine.

When Patrick began his research, he found that deaths caused by over-the-counter drugs exceeded the those attributed to illegal drugs. He spent about three months researching, producing the pharmacist video, giving a survey to fellow students and making a project board.

The survey asked Our Saviours seventh- and eighth-grade students what medicine they would give to a 6-year-old child with a fever and a cough.

The survey gave them three medicines to pick from, Patrick said. They were asked to choose what would be the correct medicine and dosage.

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Our Saviour student earns dose of science success

Seventeen-Year-Old Canadian student awarded $50,000 from the Intel Foundation at worldwide science fair

Nicholas Schiefer of Ontario Wins Young Scientist Award at Intel International Science and Engineering Fair

NEWS HIGHLIGHTS

PITTSBURGH, May 18, 2012 /CNW/ - Jack Andraka, 15, of Crownsville, Md. was awarded first place for his new method to detect pancreatic cancer at this year's Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, a program of Society for Science & the Public. Based on diabetic test paper, Jack created a simple dip-stick sensor to test blood or urine to determine whether or not a patient has early-stage pancreatic cancer. His study resulted in over 90 percent accuracy and showed his patent-pending sensor to be 28 times faster, 28 times less expensive and over 100 times more sensitive than current tests. Jack received the Gordon E. Moore Award, named in honor of Intel co-founder and retired chairman and CEO of $75,000.

Two students, Nicholas Schiefer, 17, of Pickering, Ontario, Canada and Ari Dyckovsky, 18, of Leesburg, Va., each received the Intel Foundation Young Scientist Award of $50,000.

Nicholas studied what he calls "microsearch," or the ability to search the fastest-growing information medium: small amounts of content, such as tweets and Facebook status updates. Through his research, Nicholas hopes to improve search engines' capabilities, which will in turn improve access to information.

Ari investigated the science of quantum teleportation. He found that once atoms are linked through a process called "entanglement," information from one atom will just appear in another atom when the quantum state of the first atom is destroyed. Using this method, organizations requiring high levels of data security, such as the National Security Administration, could send an encrypted message without running the risk of interception because the information would not travel to its new location; it would simply appear there.

"We support the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair because we know that math and science are imperative to future global growth," said Wendy Hawkins, executive director of the Intel Foundation. "This competition encourages millions of students to engage their skills for innovation and develop promising solutions for global challenges."

This year, more than 1,500 young scientists were chosen to compete in the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair. They were selected from 446 affiliate fairs in approximately 70 countries, regions and territories. In addition to the winners mentioned above, more than 400 finalists received awards and prizes for their groundbreaking work. Awards included 17 "Best of Category" winners who each received a $5,000 prize. The Intel Foundation also awarded a $1,000 grant to each winner's school and to the affiliated fair they represent.

The following lists the 17 Best of Category winners, from which the top three were chosen:

Society for Science & the Public, a nonprofit membership organization dedicated to public engagement in scientific research and education, owns and has administered the International Science and Engineering Fair since its inception in 1950, as the National Science Fair.

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Seventeen-Year-Old Canadian student awarded $50,000 from the Intel Foundation at worldwide science fair