Darien High Schoolers fare well at science fair

Darien High School students took home first place honors in five out of eight categories at the 12th Annual Southern Connecticut Invitational Science & Engineering Fair in Woodbridge on Feb. 4.

More than 600 students, judges and community members were joined by Dr. Dan Riskin, host of Animal Planet's Monsters Inside Me, at the fair, which was held at Amity Regional High School. Completed projects and research proposals were presented by students from Darien, Amity, Convent of the Sacred Heart, Joel Barlow High School, Hamden High School, Newtown High School and Staples High School.

 

Each student was required to create an exhibit, make a presentation, and participate in a question and answer session. Volunteer judges evaluated entries — both completed projects and research proposals — in four categories: behavioral sciences, environmental sciences, health sciences and physical sciences.

Darien student Reed Morgan took first place for his behavioral science proposal called, "Ethnogenesis and State Formation in the Mycenaean Hither State of Pylos: A-pu2/Iklaina as a Diagnostic for Expansion of the Core Zone." Katherine Ferguson won first place for her environmental science proposal, "Quantifying the Effect of Lionfish and Other Stressors on Coral Reef Ecosystems off the Coast of Southern Mexico." Jeffrey Sload tied for first place in the health science proposal category his work, "Elucidating Warfarin Pharmacogenomics in African Americans: A Genome-Wide Association Study on Warfarin Dose Response in a Cohort of African American Individuals." Brooke Davis won first place for her completed behavioral science project, "Use of Formant Values in Classifying Vocalizations of Beluga Whales (Delphinapterus leucas)," and Amanda Sommi took first place for her completed environmental science project, "The Effect of Rising Sea Level on the Elevation of Salt Marshes Throughout Long Island, NY."

Darien students Oscar Barbour, Leah Hotchkiss, Caroline Wetterauw, Grace Brandon, Mark Kaminski and Andrew Fletcher also earned awards for their science projects. Sacred Heart junior Lauren Wood also lives in Darien and was awarded a second place prize for her project.

State Rep. Tony Hwang, a Democrat who represents Fairfield and Trumbull, was a first time judge at the event. "The quality of each exhibit was impressive and the enthusiastic and energetic presentation by each young science/engineering scholar gave hope that our community and country will ably compete in the global marketplace into the future," Hwang said. "The tireless work of board members and volunteers made this event an incredible success. They are the true heroes in advocating science/engineering education for our kids."

Celebrity scientist Riskin delivered a speech called, "Should I Really Consider a Career in Science?" An internationally known evolutionary biologist, Riskin told the story of his own career path, how it led him to become an expert on bat locomotion and then a TV host. Among his many lessons, he urged the students to question what they see and what others have told them, and then to question themselves before drawing any conclusions. He said science is about following one's passion, and that it's an intellectual pursuit but "cool and awesome," too.

The science foundation is actively encouraging future participation by additional schools for the science fair competition, part of this effort being to subsidize participation by science teachers in a program on teaching science research at the high school level offered by the State University of New York.

The Sexauer Foundation is a major funding source of the fair and this year's prizes were sponsored by Laticrete International of Bethany. The fair is sponsored by the Southern Connecticut Science & Engineering Foundation.

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Darien High Schoolers fare well at science fair

Training parents is good medicine for children with autism behavior problems, study suggests

ScienceDaily (Feb. 24, 2012) — Children with autism spectrum disorders who also have serious behavioral problems responded better to medication combined with training for their parents than to treatment with medication alone, Yale researchers and their colleagues report in the February issue of Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry.

"Serious behavioral problems interfere with everyday living for children and their families," said senior author on the study Lawrence Scahill, professor at Yale University School of Nursing and the Child Study Center. "Decreasing these serious behavioral problems results in children who are more able to manage everyday living."

Scahill and his team completed a federally funded multi-site trial on 124 children ages 4 to 13 with autism spectrum disorders at three U.S. sites including Yale, Ohio State University, and Indiana University. In addition to autism spectrum disorders, children in the study had serious behavioral problems, including multiple and prolonged tantrums, aggression, and/or self-injurious behavior on a daily basis.

The children in the study were randomly assigned to medication alone for six months or medication plus a structured training program for their parents for six months. Parent training included regular visits to the clinic to teach parents how to respond to behavior problems to help children adapt to daily living situations. The study medication, risperidone, is approved for the treatment of serious behavioral problems in children with autism.

"In a previous report from this trial, we showed that the combined treatment was superior to medication alone in reducing the serious behavioral problems," said Scahill. "In the current report, we show that combination treatment was better than medication alone on measures of adaptive behavior. We note that both groups -- medication alone and combined treatment group -- demonstrated improvement in functional communication and social interaction. But the combined group showed greater improvement on several measures of everyday adaptive functioning."

Based on these findings, Scahill and his team are now conducting a study that uses parent training as a stand-alone strategy in treating younger children with autism spectrum disorders. This study is being conducted at Yale and four other medical centers across the country. The investigators also plan to publish the parent training manuals as a way to share this intervention with the public.

Other authors on the study included Christopher J. McDougle, Michael G. Aman, Cynthia Johnson, Benjamin Handen, Karen Bearss, James Dziura, Eric Butter, Naomi G. Swiezy, L. Eugene Arnold, Kimberly A. Stigler, Denis D. Sukhodolsky, Luc Lecavalier, Stacie L. Pozdol, Roumen Nikolov, Jill A. Hollway, Patricia Korzekwa, Allison Gavaletz, Arlene E. Kohn, Kathleen Koenig, Stacie Grinnon, James A. Mulick, Sunkyung Yu, and Benedetto Vitiello.

The National Institute of Mental Health funded the study. The work was also funded, in part, by the Yale Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) grant from the National Center for Research Resources at the National Institutes of Health.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Yale University. The original article was written by Karen N. Peart.

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Lawrence Scahill, Christopher J. McDougle, Michael G. Aman, Cynthia Johnson, Benjamin Handen, Karen Bearss, James Dziura, Eric Butter, Naomi G. Swiezy, L. Eugene Arnold, Kimberly A. Stigler, Denis D. Sukhodolsky, Luc Lecavalier, Stacie L. Pozdol, Roumen Nikolov, Jill A. Hollway, Patricia Korzekwa, Allison Gavaletz, Arlene E. Kohn, Kathleen Koenig, Stacie Grinnon, James A. Mulick, Sunkyung Yu, Benedetto Vitiello. Effects of Risperidone and Parent Training on Adaptive Functioning in Children With Pervasive Developmental Disorders and Serious Behavioral Problems. Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2012; 51 (2): 136 DOI: 10.1016/j.jaac.2011.11.010

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Training parents is good medicine for children with autism behavior problems, study suggests

Training parents is good medicine for children with autism behavior problems

Public release date: 24-Feb-2012
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Contact: Karen N. Peart
karen.peart@yale.edu
203-432-1326
Yale University

Children with autism spectrum disorders who also have serious behavioral problems responded better to medication combined with training for their parents than to treatment with medication alone, Yale researchers and their colleagues report in the February issue of Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry.

"Serious behavioral problems interfere with everyday living for children and their families," said senior author on the study Lawrence Scahill, professor at Yale University School of Nursing and the Child Study Center. "Decreasing these serious behavioral problems results in children who are more able to manage everyday living."

Scahill and his team completed a federally funded multi-site trial on 124 children ages 4 to 13 with autism spectrum disorders at three U.S. sites including Yale, Ohio State University, and Indiana University. In addition to autism spectrum disorders, children in the study had serious behavioral problems, including multiple and prolonged tantrums, aggression, and/or self-injurious behavior on a daily basis.

The children in the study were randomly assigned to medication alone for six months or medication plus a structured training program for their parents for six months. Parent training included regular visits to the clinic to teach parents how to respond to behavior problems to help children adapt to daily living situations. The study medication, risperidone, is approved for the treatment of serious behavioral problems in children with autism.

"In a previous report from this trial, we showed that the combined treatment was superior to medication alone in reducing the serious behavioral problems," said Scahill. "In the current report, we show that combination treatment was better than medication alone on measures of adaptive behavior. We note that both groups?medication alone and combined treatment group?demonstrated improvement in functional communication and social interaction. But the combined group showed greater improvement on several measures of everyday adaptive functioning."

Based on these findings, Scahill and his team are now conducting a study that uses parent training as a stand-alone strategy in treating younger children with autism spectrum disorders. This study is being conducted at Yale and four other medical centers across the country. The investigators also plan to publish the parent training manuals as a way to share this intervention with the public.

###

Other authors on the study included Christopher J. McDougle, Michael G. Aman, Cynthia Johnson, Benjamin Handen, Karen Bearss, James Dziura, Eric Butter, Naomi G. Swiezy, L. Eugene Arnold, Kimberly A. Stigler, Denis D. Sukhodolsky, Luc Lecavalier, Stacie L. Pozdol, Roumen Nikolov, Jill A. Hollway, Patricia Korzekwa, Allison Gavaletz, Arlene E. Kohn, Kathleen Koenig, Stacie Grinnon, James A. Mulick, Sunkyung Yu, and Benedetto Vitiello.

The National Institute of Mental Health funded the study. The work was also funded, in part, by the Yale Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) grant from the National Center for Research Resources at the National Institutes of Health.

Citation: J. Am. Acad. Child Adolesc. Psychiatry, Vol. 51, No. 2 (February 2012)

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Training parents is good medicine for children with autism behavior problems

An Evolutionary View of Depression – Part 1 – Video

23-02-2012 14:13 Full Story -- bit.ly | Depression: an evolutionary byproduct of the ability to fight infection? Emory University's Andrew Miller, MD, discusses. Miller is professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Emory and director of psychiatric oncology at Winship Cancer Institute. Background Depression is common enough -- afflicting one in ten adults in the United States -- that it seems the possibility of depression must be "hard-wired" into our brains. This has led biologists to propose several theories to account for how depression, or behaviors linked to it, can somehow offer an evolutionary advantage. Some previous proposals for the role of depression in evolution have focused on how it affects behavior in a socialcontext. A pair of psychiatrists addresses this puzzle in a different way, tying together depression and resistance to infection. They propose that genetic variations that promote depression arose during evolution because they helped our ancestors fight infection. An outline of their proposal appears online in the journal Molecular Psychiatry. The co-authors are Andrew Miller, MD, William P. Timmie professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Emory and director of psychiatric oncology at Winship Cancer Institute, and Charles Raison, MD, previously at Emory and now at the University of Arizona.

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An Evolutionary View of Depression - Part 1 - Video

Area students gather in the name of science for fair

57th annual Piedmont Region III Science Fair

Students gathered at the University of South Carolina Upstate campus where exhibits from the 57th annual Piedmont Region III Science Fair were on display Thursday. The fair involves students in grades 1-12 who represent public, private and home schools located in the Cherokee, Chester, Lancaster, Spartanburg, Union and York counties.

Buy Photo ALEX C. HICKS JR./alex.hicks@shj.com Published: Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 10:26 p.m. Last Modified: Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 10:26 p.m.

The science behind an erupting volcano, whitening toothpastes and what conditions are most conducive to mold was on display Thursday at the 57th annual Piedmont Region III Science Fair.

The event, held at the University of South Carolina Upstate, involves students in first through 12th grades from public, private and home schools in Cherokee, Chester, Lancaster, Spartanburg, Union and York counties. The fair included a wide variety of category entries, including behavioral and social science, biology, chemistry, general science, math and computer science and physics.

This year's fair had more than 750 entries.

“It's just a great opportunity for all the students to develop a hypothesis and go through the scientific process of proving something and learning a lot in the process,” said Carolyn Culbertson, director of the Piedmont Region III Science Fair.

Andrew Morris, a seventh-grade student at Granard Middle School in Cherokee County, won honorable mention for his project, “Big Foot.” Andrew tested to determine whether there is a correlation between the size of a person's foot and their height. There is.

“Usually, when people do (science projects), they learn more than when they just listen in class,” Andrew said.

Austin Duckett's colorful project caught the attention of many visitors to the fair. The Granard sixth-grader wanted to determine how long it would take crayons to melt under a hair dryer. His answer: 55 minutes.

“You can test new things that you haven't done,” Austin said.

Culbertson said the projects give students a different way to learn about things they're interested in.

“I think it provides an opportunity for children to learn and grow,” she said. “And any opportunity to entice them to learn and get busy and do more than what they normally do in their day-in, day-out education process stretches them a little bit further and makes them grow.”

Winning projects were marked Thursday, but winning students' names will be announced at an awards ceremony at the university Saturday. The downtown Spartanburg Rotary Club sponsors and funds the event, providing prizes to winners. The overall winner will earn a trip to Pittsburgh in May to compete at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair. Scholarships to USC Upstate will be awarded by the USC Upstate Foundation.

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Area students gather in the name of science for fair

Winners at the 2012 Beaverton Hillsboro Science Expo

A Hillsboro student and three Beaverton students will head to Pittsburgh in May to compete in the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair.

The top four winners in the Beaverton Hillsboro Science Expo on Feb. 17 are becoming household names in the Washington County science arena: Tori Graf and Naomi Shah of Sunset High School, William Yuan of Westview High School and Raghav Tripathi of Westview High School.

Hillsboro High's Tori Graf

But dozens of other top category finishers in the regional fair have a second chance to qualify for the international competition if they win best of fair at the Intel Northwest Science Expo on March 23 at Portland State University.

The Beaverton Hillsboro Science Expo had a record 170 entries this year, compared to about 110 last year, said Susan Holveck, co-director of the expo.

Best of Fair – headed to Pittsburgh:
 
Tori Graf: "The Effects of Chemosensory on the Nutritional Behavior of Caenorhabditis elegans."
Naomi Shah: "The Toxicological Effect of Emissions From Building Materials on Lung Health."
William Yuan: "A Novel Design for the Enhancement of Anti-Reflection in Crystalline Photovoltaic Cells."
Raghav Tripathi: "Towards the Cure: Abnormal Protein Interactions Between Amyloid Beta and Tau as a Therapeutic Target for Alzheimer's Disease."

Most top category winners will compete at the Northwest Science Expo:

Category Winners
Animal Science -- First: Tori Graf, Hillsboro High School; second: Sebastian Singleton, Health and Science High School; third: Gena Tkachuk, Brody Stiefel, Century High School.
Behavioral and Social Sciences -- First: Raza Khan, Jonathan Chu, Merlo Station High School; second: Shreya Jain, Aishwarya Shimpi, Westview High School; third: Sarah Mireles, Hillsboro High School.
Biochemistry -- First: Anisha Das, Westview High School; second: Dulce Flores Cruz, Hillsboro High School; third: Sol Summers, Savan Patel, Beaverton High School.
Cellular and Molecular Biology -- First: Raghav Tripathi, Westview High School; second: Sr Kanna, Alden Moss, Merlo Station High School; third: Kyra Patton, Sunset High School.
Chemistry -- First: Arial Eatherton, Century High School; second: Dea Arozamena, Zachery Rogers, Liberty High School; third: Marlo Eckert, Brian Dunn, Glencoe High School.
Computer Science -- First: Tahsin Saffat, Westview High School: second: Muhammad Ridha, Merlo Station High School; third: Jerry Chen, Merlo Station High School.
Energy and Transportation -- First: Anisha Datta, Glencoe High School; second: Spencer Hastings, Century High School; third: Alex Chau, Jacom Gerber, Glencoe High School.
Engineering: Electrical and Mechanical -- First: William Yuan, Westview High School; second: Alan Cheng, Southridge High School; third: Matthias Guenther, Scott Merrill, Merlo Station High School.
Engineering: Materials and Bioengineering -- First: Christiana Logan, Glencoe High School; second: Danith Davis, Century High School; third: Daniel Kachmarek, Glencoe High School.
Environmental Analysis and Effects -- First: Naomi Shah, Sunset High School; second: Andrew Chen, Beaverton High School; third: Preeyam Roy, Westview High School.
Environmental Management -- First: Kiernan Garrett, Alessandra Elliott, Westview High School; second: Keawe Stubenberg, Liberty High School; third: Brylee Collins, Rimi Yoneya, Merlo Station High School.
Mathematical Sciences -- First: Edison Tsai, Merlo Station High School; second: Sidharth Dhawan, Westview High School; third: Aakash Jani, William Kim, Liberty High School.
Medicine and Health -- First: Amanu Haile, Westview High School; second: Adarsh Bhatt, Westview High School; third: Samantha Pham, Westview High School.
Microbiology -- First: Jared Wong, Beaverton High School; second: Kate Ratliff, Merlo Station High School; third: Christina Partillo, Beaverton High School.
Physics and Astronomy -- First: Aaron Pikus, Merlo Station High School; second: Nathan Ott, Merlo Station High School; third: Emma Orton, Century High School.
Plant Sciences -- First: Erin Lake, Liberty High School; second: Josh Carnahan, Morgan Rennekamp, Beaverton High School; third: Catherine Bayer, Hillsboro High School.
 
Special Awards
Outstanding Project in an Atmospheric Science Exhibit (sponsored by American Meteorological Society) -- Kiernan Garrett, Alessandra Elliott, Westview High School; Abraham Teklu, Glencoe High School.
Outstanding Geoscience Project (sponsored by the Association of Women Geoscientists) -- Brylee Collins, Rimi Yoneya, Merlo Station High School.
NOAA's Taking the Pulse of the Planet (sponsored by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) -- Kiernan Garrett, Alessandra Elliott, Westview High School.
Award for Excellence in Scientific Research in Environmental Health (sponsored by Oregon Environmental Health Association) -- Naomi Shah, Sunset High School.
Sustainable Development Award (sponsored by Ricoh Corporation) -- Naomi Shah, Sunset High School; Preeyam Roy, Westview High School.
Outstanding Project in In Vitro Biology (sponsored by Society for in Vitro Biology) -- Sr Kanna, Alden Moss, Merlo Station High School.
U.S. Regional Stockholm Junior Water Prize (sponsored by Water Environment Federation) -- Brylee Collins, Rimi Yoneya, Merlo Station High School; Carson List, David Lim, Merlo Station High School; Allie Sanchez, Merlo Station High School; Preeyam Roy, Westview High School.
Outstanding Project in Materials Science (sponsored by ASM International Foundation) -- Christina Zimmerman, Morgan Scarbrough, Glencoe High School.
Intel Excellence in Computer Science (sponsored by Intel Corporation) -- Tahsin Saffat, Westview High School.
Mu Alpha Theta Award (sponsored by Mu Alpha Theta) -- Pruthvi Nannapaneni, Merlo Station High School; Sidharth Dhawan, Westview High School.
Innovative Engineering Award (sponsored by National Society of Professional Engineers) -- Humphrey Chen, Vinayaka Thompson, Merlo Station High School.
Outstanding Project by an 11th Grade Student (sponsored by Yale University Science and Engineering Association) -- Ankit Gupta, Kevin Wang, Westview High School.
Outstanding Use of the International System of Units (sponsored by U.S. Metric Association) -- Raghav Tripathi, Westview High School; Naomi Shah, Sunset High School.
Outstanding Research in Psychology (sponsored by American Psychological Association) -- Shreya Jain, Aishwarya Shimpi, Westview High School.
Army Awards for Scientific and Engineering Excellence (sponsored by Army Research Office, U.S. Army) -- Edison Tsai, Merlo Station High School; Shreya Jain, Aishwarya Shimpi, Westview High School; William Yuan, Westview High School.
Army Outstanding High School Project (sponsored by Army Research Office, U.S. Army) -- Shreya Jain, Aishwarya Shimpi, Westview High School.
Naval Excellence in Science and Engineering Award (sponsored by Office of Naval Research, U.S. Navy and Marine Corps) --Tahsin Saffat, Westview High School; Ankit Gupta, Kevin Wang, Westview High School; Pruthvi Nannapaneni, Merlo Station High School; Naomi Shah, Sunset High School.
U.S. Air Force Outstanding Project (sponsored by U.S. Air Force) -- Muhammad Ridha, Merlo Station High School; Matthias Guenther, Scott Merrill, Merlo Station High School; William Yuan, Westview High School.
Women in Engineering (sponsored by Intel Corporation) -- Arial Eatherton, Century High School.
Peers' Choice Award – Hillsboro (sponsored by Intel) -- Tori
Graf, Hillsboro High School.
Peers' Choice Award – Beaverton (sponsored by Intel) -- Aaron Pikus, Merlo.

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Winners at the 2012 Beaverton Hillsboro Science Expo

Understanding Lent and the Science of Self-Denial

When it comes to good-time holidays, Lent does not rank very high. Nor do Ramadan or Yom Kippur, of course, and no wonder. They are all about saying no to something (or many things) you love. Where's the egg nog and holiday joy in all that? But we observe these less-than-festive celebrations all the same -- and we have good reason to do so. There are hidden benefits to so much ritualized self-denial.

One of the open secrets of all religions is that even if you don't care for the priestly raiment in which their traditions come draped, some of them can be very healthy all the same. And those, like Lent, whose secular message is nothing more complicated than practicing self-control, can be among the most salutary of all -- something science is beginning to prove.

(PHOTOS: Mardi Gras Mayhem)

Willpower is a quality that can be in short supply in all of us but it's one that, as we report in this week's TIME, is increasingly seen as cultivatable. Indeed, the best way to think of willpower is not as some shapeless behavioral trait but as a sort of psychic muscle, one that can atrophy or grow stronger depending on how it's used. What's more, neurologists and behavioral psychologists generally think of willpower as what's known as "domain general," which means that the more you practice it to control one behavior -- say, overeating -- the more it starts to apply itself to other parts of your life like exercising more or drinking less.

Roy Baumeister, a psychologist at Florida State University and author of the straightforwardly titled book Willpower, has conducted experiments in which subjects were given uncomfortable tasks to perform in a lab, such as holding their hand in ice water or squeezing an exercise grip. They were then sent home and given a random rule to observe for two weeks -- not swearing, say, or using the non-dominant hand for certain things like opening doors. After that period was over, they returned to the lab. Those subjects who had been assigned a rule and had followed it did better on their ice water or hand grip tasks when they tried them again than a control group that had been given no such homework. The two weeks of practicing resolve seemed to have generalized itself to other situations.

"An Australian group did something similar," says Baumeister. "They had people work on a problem in their lives -- like managing money -- for two weeks. Then they came back and had to focus on a computer task that involved catching three moving triangles while a distracting comedy video played. Doing the work at home seemed to improve their motivation in the lab."

(MORE: The Science of Favoritism: Why Mom Likes You Best)

The precise mechanism at work here is not clear. Changes in behavior are often reflected in -- or enabled by -- changes in the brain, but studies with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) have not yet shown any physical differences in the brains of people who practice lab-assigned discipline tasks. Still, other kinds of focus and training do change the brain.

"Both exercise and meditation lead to greater neuron density in the prefrontal cortex," says Kelly McGonigal, a psychologist at Stanford University and author of the new book The Willpower Instinct. It's in that region that executive skills such as impulse control and judgment live -- making it a very good place to be adding neuronal connections. Even if the short-term exercises Baumeister assigns don't have the same demonstrable effect, McGonigal has little doubt that they still "train up the skill set involved in self-awareness and practicing habits consistent with your goals."

That sense of conscious adherence and regular practice is precisely the reason religious observances that prescribe strict rituals of self-denial can be so powerful. Every time an observer of Lent craves -- and resists the lure of -- a forbidden indulgence is a tiny reminder of a commitment made. The same is true for Muslims who tolerate their Ramadan hunger until the sun goes down. And while the 24 hours of Yom Kippur do not provide the same weeks-long training the other holidays do, the rules are stricter -- with no food, no water, no bathing or washing, from sundown to sundown. Most of the day is spent in synagogue as well, which can be a trial of its own for people growing woozy with hunger.

(MORE: The Secrets of Self-Control)

The expressed liturgical purpose of all of these holidays is to teach piety, humility and submission and to atone for wrongs. But present-day spiritual leaders also speak of just the kind of willpower calisthenics the scientists do, though they call it "transfer training." Prohibitions against shellfish and pork in Jewish homes may have begun long ago with health concerns over the cleanliness of both foods, but modern inspections have effectively eliminated that worry. Still when you can pass up bacon no matter how good it smells or say no to a just-boiled lobster with a cup of drawn butter, that same facility with discipline can be applied to other areas of your life.

Distilling religious ritual down to scientific principle can be tricky -- not just because it diminishes the more transcendent experiences of believers but because it can seem to justify a sort of cynical dismissiveness in non-believers. But -- culture-war absolutism not withstanding -- both truths can exist simultaneously. A vigorous workout at your gym may make you feel great -- but so can a joyous round of gospel singing, clapping and foot-stomping. Are rising endorphins and lower cortisol levels involved in both? Probably. But is that all that's going on? Not to the believers it isn't.

The best thing about science is that hard, empirical answers are always there if you look hard enough. The best thing about religion is that the very absence of that certainty is what requires -- and gives rise to -- deep feelings of faith. Lent -- and Ramadan and Yom Kippur -- teach both.

Kluger is a senior editor at TIME and the author The Sibling Effect. The views expressed are solely his own.

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Understanding Lent and the Science of Self-Denial

New science can help guide diets and exercise

The most important weight-loss message - you have to use more calories than you eat - hasn't changed in decades.

But dieting experts say science has some new, surprising things to say about the other half of the standard recommendation - exercise - and about which diet to use.

Researchers are also refining the behavioral tricks that can change the way people eat, not only to lose weight but also to keep it off. Modern technology is giving dieters new options, such as Internet- and cell-phone-based programs or scales that can transmit your weight from your home to your doctor or dietitian.

Thomas Wadden, director of the Center for Weight and Eating Disorders at the University of Pennsylvania, said the last decade has seen "pretty aggressive diet wars" among the proponents of low-fat, low-carb, or low-glycemic-index approaches.

After years of comparisons, Wadden and other experts said the verdict is clear: What you choose doesn't matter. Pick a diet you can stick to, including liquid diets or prepared meals. If you follow the rules, the results are all about the same. Wadden said he does recommend that, whatever the diet, patients reduce saturated fats and trans-fats for better health. You can pick a more aggressive approach while you're losing, eventually transitioning to a diet rich in vegetables, fruits, and lean protein for maintenance.

Gary Foster, director of Temple University's Center for Obesity Research, thinks diet gurus have scared people off with too much information. "We tell people so much stuff, it's paralyzing," he said.

He agreed that the specific diet doesn't matter. "Calories drive weight loss," he said.

To lose a pound a week, a dieter needs to eat 500 fewer calories a day. That's simple enough, but your maintenance needs come down as people get smaller. That explains why weight loss gets harder as you go. Think of your body as a house. It takes more energy to heat a big house than a small one. A woman who weighs 300 pounds maintains her weight on about 3,000 calories. (Because they have more muscle, men use a few more.) A woman who weighs 140 needs only 2,050 calories to stay there. Caloric needs drop further as we age and lose muscle mass.

Cheryl Marco, a registered dietitian who runs Thomas Jefferson University's weight management program, starts patients on a prepackaged diet that includes shakes and bars. Dieters have few options.

"Fewer choices work better," Marco said. "What works is the narrowing of stimuli." So her most successful long-term dieters eat meals that don't vary much from day to day.

Some people may just have to stay away from foods that trigger overeating.

"I am not of the belief . . . that we have the ability to learn to eat high-risk foods in moderation," Marco said. Your high-risk food may be ice cream. Someone else's may be fettuccine Alfredo.

John McAroy, 38, dropped 70 pounds (from 300 on a 6-foot-2 frame) between Thanksgiving and early February using Marco's method. He hasn't cheated much and hasn't missed having more choices. "You'd be surprised," he said. "I'm rarely hungry."

So what about exercise? Isn't it the answer?

No, the experts said.

Exercise is "the single best predictor of who keeps weight off and who doesn't," Foster said. "It has very little effect on weight loss."

Exercise can help people lose weight, but so slowly that most people lose interest, he said. It's easier for most people to cut 500 calories out of their diet a day than to burn an extra 500 calories. You have to walk five miles to do that.

What exercise does do is help people maintain muscle mass, which revs up metabolism a little and improves overall health. Still, adding five pounds of muscle takes a lot of work, and a pound of muscle burns only about 15 calories a day.

In one of the cruel twists of our evolutionary history - the one that shaped our bodies to withstand famine, not a world full of junk food - people who have lost a lot of weight burn fewer calories during exercise than people who have never dieted. "It's as if your body's gone green on you," Wadden said. To keep weight off, dieters need to exercise 225 to 300 minutes a week: about 32 to 43 minutes a day.

Foster's group is looking at whether getting a good night's sleep affects weight loss. People who weigh more tend to sleep less, but it's not yet known whether sleeping more helps people lose weight.

On the behavioral front, researchers say that "accountability" is a crucial factor in making diets work. People do best when they keep track of what they eat and how much they exercise. They need to weigh themselves frequently, ideally every day. It also helps a lot to report what they're doing to someone else. The gold standard is a face-to-face meeting, but results also improve with telephone and Internet reporting.

"It's really important to be accountable to somebody else," Foster said.

It's also important to act quickly when the numbers on the scale start moving up. Experts recommend having an action plan when weight rises by two to four pounds - perhaps returning to more intensive monitoring of food intake - and when dieters fall off the wagon.

"One of the major differences between the average-weight person and the overweight person is the ability to recover from overeating," Marco said.

Wadden says technology is offering new alternatives to people who need to lose weight. While not yet in wide use for weight control, scales that transmit weights to doctors or diet programs can build in accountability. Internet- and phone-based programs make it easier to calculate calories and energy usage.

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New science can help guide diets and exercise

Students in grades 6 through 12 take stage in March

PHOENIXVILLE — About 570 young scientists plan to compete in the Chester County Science Research Competition on March 8 and 9 at Center for Arts and Technology Pickering Campus.

The competition offers students the chance to pursue inquiry-based science and be recognized for their efforts through a variety of awards.

Students in grades 6 through 12 will compete in the Lucy Balian Rorke-Adams Fair on March 8, and competitors from grades 4 and 5 will compete in the Jonas Salk Fair on March 9.

The categories for the competition are: behavioral and social science, biochemistry, botany, chemistry, computer science, consumer science, earth and space science, engineering, environmental science, mathematics, medicine and health, microbiology, physics, zoology, and team projects.

The awards ceremony for the Lucy Balian Rorke-Adams Fair are to begin 7 p.m. Wednesday, March 14, at Downingtown West High School. Only students who have an award designation attached to their project board are asked to attend.

During the judging portion, the competition is closed to the public, including parents and teachers, although there will be an open house from 6 to 7 p.m. both days for anyone wishing to see the projects.---- The Chester County Science Research Competition is sponsored and conducted by the Chester County Intermediate Unit.

The competition is a feeder fair to the Delaware Valley Fair, which provides students with the opportunity to win college scholarships and advance to the International Science and Engineering Fair. The Delaware Valley fair will be held at the Greater Philadelphia Expo Center at Oaks, from April 3 to 5. The competition will include about 1,000 students from New Jersey, Delaware and southeastern Pennsylvania.

Meghan Shea, 16, a Unionville High School student, was the winner of the Delaware Valley Science Fair in 2011. Shea secured a silver medal for her project, “The Effect of Nitrogen and Sulfur and Phosphorus Compounds on the Bioremediation of Oil by Pseudomonas Fluorescence and Bacillus Subtilis for Use During Oil Spills.”

With the project, Shea attempted to increase the effectiveness of two bacteria at degrading oil for use during the oil spill cleanup in the Gulf of Mexico.

Students competing at the Delaware Valley fair will have the opportunity to win a share of almost $1 million in college scholarships and move on to the International Science and Engineering Fair, which will be hosted in Pittsburgh this year. Continued...

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Students in grades 6 through 12 take stage in March

Political science professor chosen to give OSU's Winter Commencement address

Richard Herrmann has been chosen to speak at Ohio State's Winter Quarter Commencement on March 18, at 2 p.m. at the Schottenstein Center.

Herrmann, social and behavioral sciences distinguished professor and chair of OSU's Department of Political Science, has been a member of OSU'S political science faculty since 1981.

He earned a bachelor's degree in political science from Miami University in 1974. He earned his doctorate from the University of Pittsburgh in 1981.

Herrmann has won many different awards, including the 2009-10 Arts and Sciences Student Council Outstanding Teaching Award and the university's Faculty Award for Distinguished University Service in 2008.

In addition to various honors, Herrmann has written and edited three books and more than 40 articles in journals including American Political Science Review, International Organization, International Security and World Politics.

During Winter Commencement, Keith Moore will be awarded the honorary Doctor of Science, according to a press release. Also Randall Ripley,  professor emeritus in the Department of Political Science and former dean of the College of Social and Behavioral Science, and Elizabeth Watters, magistrate with the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas and two time OSU graduate, will be awarded Distinguished Service Awards.

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Political science professor chosen to give OSU's Winter Commencement address

Crowd Science Releases "Orange Paper" on Digital Publishing

Latest Trends in Audience Segmentation

Why publishers need more than "cookie cutter" research

NEW YORK, Feb. 21, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Crowd Science (www.crowdscience.com) has completed new research on consumer branding, identifying potential audience and targeting buyers for advertisers. Crowd Science is the creator of CITRUS™, and is thus calling the primer on digital publishing an "Orange Paper." Tomorrow, at the AlwaysOn conference, CEO Corey Leibow will present key features of the CITRUS platform at 10 a.m.

Consumer Intent: Traditional Behavioral Targeting and click measurement is ineffective. Eight percent of users on the Internet account for 80% of all ad clicks. Contextual Targeting: Such as how Amazon engages shoppers, uses cookies to create powerful data-mining engines to track consumers. Retargeting: Gathering individual browsing habits from site visitors and then using the ubiquity of ad networks to 'follow' those visitors virtually wherever they go online. Audience Segmentation: Direct engagement with visitors provides publishers the freedom to find out anything about a user.

"The advancements in the demand side eco-system have driven publishers' CPM's lower," says Leibow. "Media buyers and advertisers believe they can find a similar audience on the open market for far less, and bypass the publisher's higher priced ad inventory entirely by purchasing 'third party' data or remnant and run-of-site space for pennies on the dollar."

Crowd Science has shown it can further pinpoint a larger group of targeted consumers by employing strategic surveys and machine-learned publisher data. The CITRUS platform affords "first party" data gleaned from the publisher's own readership. The information is extrapolated across a much more extensive audience-set to better focus on consumers that are more likely to be moved into the highly valued brand consideration segment where they are more likely to act.

Crowd Science researchers are pioneers in identifying consumers beyond using the cookie mining technology that has raised privacy concerns for the consumer. It does not collect personally identifiable information. Thus Crowd Science "calls out its competition" to better understand audience.

"Publishers need audience segmentation now to understand buyer motivations," says John Martin, Crowd Science co-founder. "Crowd Science is leading the way in providing accurate and relevant information to the publishing sector, opening the door for publishers to take back control of the advertising / marketing of their brand rather than watching on the sidelines as ad agencies control the revenue."

Martin said: "On-line publishers are facing a dilemma, experiencing declining CPM's and a lack of new sources of revenue. They have little control over their audience assets and less knowledge about who [the visitors] they are reaching. It becomes more difficult to maximize their ad dollars over time, which Crowd Science has remedied," he added.

OnMedia, the organizer of the AlwaysOn conference, has recognized Crowd Science as a "2012 Company to Watch."

Publishing Executive magazine recently noted: "Crowd Science helps online publishers solve the Data Catch-22."

Contact:
Mike Smith, Michael Smith Business Development
PR Representative for Crowd Science, San Jose, Calif. and New York
mike@msbdinc.com
703-623-3834

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Crowd Science Releases "Orange Paper" on Digital Publishing

Elizabeth Gilbert on Schopenhauer and the Secret to Happiness

In January of 2010, PBS aired a fascinating series titled This Emotional Life, exploring cutting-edge insights from cognitive and behavioral science to explain some of the "why" behind a wide range of mental illness and mental health, from addiction to depression to resilience. The series featured a number of prominent authors, psychologists, clinicians, and other public figures, discussing the science and everyday grit of these complex issues.

Among them was Elizabeth Gilbert, who authored Eat, Pray, Love and gave one of the best TED talks of all time. Gilbert relays the porcupine dilemma made famous by German philosopher Schopenhauer -- a beautiful metaphor for how we choose to go through the world and relate to others, in a quest to master the intricate balance of protective self-containment and the vulnerability necessary for the warmth of true intimacy.

For a deeper dive, see Deborah Luepnitz's Schopenhauer's Porcupines: Intimacy and Its Dilemmas.

This post also appears on Brain Pickings, an Atlantic partner site.

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Elizabeth Gilbert on Schopenhauer and the Secret to Happiness

James E. Marshall OCD Foundation Presents $225k to Johns Hopkins at 8th Annual Beyond Beauty Gala

NEW YORK, Feb. 17, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The James E. Marshall Obsessive Compulsive Disorder Foundation today announced it has presented Dr. Gerald Nestadt, director of the Johns Hopkins Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science with a $225,000 donation to support genetic research relating to OCD. Hosted by Emmy Award-winning CBS reporter Dana Tyler in New York City, the Beyond Beauty Gala honored Jill Belasco, CEO of Maesa Group; Kaplow President and CEO, Liz Kaplow; and Caroline Pieper-Vogt of the Scent Marketing Institute for their leadership in spreading awareness of this debilitating disease. Actress Dendrie Taylor was the evening's guest speaker, and presenters included Art Spiro, executive vice president of Elizabeth Arden; Carlotta Jacobson, president of Cosmetic Executive Women; and Nancy Berger-Cardone, vice president and publisher at Marie Claire.

The James E. Marshall OCD Foundation was founded in 2003 by Elysee Scientific Cosmetics President Linda Marshall and her family, in memory of her son who battled the condition his entire life. "Few people understand how truly devastating OCD can be, for both the people who suffer from it and the families and friends who love them," says Linda Marshall. "People often hear about other diseases and conditions, however, many who suffer from OCD are too ashamed to bring attention to it."

Since its inception, the James E. Marshall OCD Foundation has raised more than $2 million for OCD research. Though it is listed as one of the top ten most disabling diseases by the National Institute of Mental Health, people with OCD often go several years without treatment. Through past research funds, Dr. Nestadt and his team have been able to isolate a gene that they believe attacks the white matter in the brain, leading to OCD. The Foundation hopes this vital discovery is a key step to finding a better way to manage, treat, and perhaps even prevent OCD.

Despite the strides that have been made, there is still a lot of work to be done to increase public awareness and financial support for OCD, which affects millions of Americans and costs upwards of $8 billion annually in direct and indirect medical costs. The James E. Marshall OCD Foundation is currently the only organization dedicated to raising funds for genetic research related to this debilitating disease.

For more information, please visit: http://www.cureocd.org

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Flame retardant linked to behavioral, other deficits

SACRAMENTO — Mice genetically engineered to be susceptible to autism-like behaviors that were exposed to a common flame retardant were less fertile and their offspring were smaller, less sociable and demonstrated marked deficits in learning and long-term memory when compared with the offspring of normal unexposed mice, a study by researchers at UC Davis has found. The researchers said the study is the first to link genetics and epigenetics with exposure to a flame retardant chemical.

The research was published online today (Feb. 16) in the journal Human Molecular Genetics. It will be presented during a symposium on Saturday (Feb. 18) at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) by Janine LaSalle, a professor in the Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology in the UC Davis School of Medicine and the UC Davis Genome Center. (LaSalle will discuss her research during a news briefing with her colleagues at 9 a.m. Sunday (Feb. 19) in room 221 on the second level of the Vancouver Convention Center).

"This study highlights the interaction between epigenetics and the effects of early exposure to flame retardants," said LaSalle, the study's senior author and a researcher affiliated with the UC Davis MIND Institute. "Our experiments with wild-type and mutant mice indicate that exposure to flame retardants presents an independent risk of neurodevelopmental deficits associated with reduced sociability and learning."

Epigenetics describes the heritable changes in gene expression caused by mechanisms other than those in the DNA sequence. One such mechanism is DNA methylation, in which genes are silenced when their activation no longer is required. DNA methylation is essential for normal development. The researchers chose a mouse that was genetically and epigenetically susceptible to social behavioral deficits in order to understand the potential effect of this environmental pollutant on genetically susceptible humans.

LaSalle and her colleagues examined the effects of the chemical BDE-47 (Tetrabromodiphenl ether), a member of the class of flame retardants called polybrominated diphenylethers, or PBDEs. PBDEs have been used in a wide range of products, including electronics, bedding, carpeting and furniture. They have been shown to persist in the environment and accumulate in living organisms, and toxicological testing has found that they may cause liver toxicity, thyroid toxicity and neurodevelopmental toxicity, according to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. BDE-47 is the PBDE found at highest concentrations in human blood and breast milk, raising concerns about its potential neurotoxic effects during pregnancy and neonatal development.

The research was conducted in the offspring of mice genetically engineered for the autism phenotype found in Rett syndrome, a disorder that occurs primarily in females and causes regression in expressive language, motor skills and social reciprocity in late infancy. The condition affects about 1 in 10,000 children.

Autism spectrum disorders are a group of neurodevelopmental disabilities that can cause significant social, communication and behavioral deficits. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that an average of 1 in 110 children born in the United States today will be diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder.

Rett syndrome is causally linked to defects in the methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 gene MECP2 situated on the X chromosome. Mutations in MECP2 result in a nonfunctional MeCP2 protein, which is required for normal brain development. The researchers evaluated the effects of exposure to BDE-47 on mice genetically engineered to have mutations in MECP2 and their offspring, or pups. The genetically engineered Mecp2 mother mice, or dams, were bred with non-mutant wild-type males. The dams were monitored for 10 weeks — for four weeks prior to conception, three weeks during gestation and three weeks of lactation. They were then compared with a control group of normal, unexposed dams and pups over several generations and hundreds of mice.

The study found that that the weights of the pups of the lactating BDE-47-exposed dams were diminished when compared with the controls, as were their survival rates. To assess the effects of the flame retardant exposure on the pups and their genotypes, the researchers placed them through more than 10 cognitive, social and physical tests.

Female offspring of dams exposed with BDE-47 spent half as much time interacting with another mouse in a 10-minute sociability test compared to controls. The reduced sociability in BDE-47 exposed females corresponded to reduced DNA methylation in females regardless of genotype. In addition, genetic and environmental interaction effects in this study were specifically observed in females.

In a short-term memory test of social novelty, although all mice showed the expected preference for interacting with a novel over a familiar mouse, BDE-47-exposed mutant female mice spent about half as much time interacting with the familiar mouse than their non-mutant littermates. In a long-term memory test of swimming to reach a hidden platform in a cloudy pool, female mice who were both mutant and BDE-47 exposed did not learn to reach the platform faster after fourdays of training. These behavioral changes in social and cognitive learning specifically in the interaction group corresponded to changes in a known epigenetic regulator of DNA methylation in brain, DNA methyltransferase 3a (Dnmt3a).

LaSalle said that the study results are important because better understanding of the epigenetic pathways implicated in social behavior and cognition may lead to improved treatments for autism spectrum disorders.

"While the obvious preventative step is to limit the use and accumulation of PBDEs in our environment, this would likely be a long-term solution," LaSalle said. "These pollutants are going to be hard to get rid of tomorrow. However, one important preventative that all women could do tomorrow is to start taking prenatal vitamins before becoming pregnant, as these may counteract the toxins in our environment through DNA methylation," she said.

A study by researchers at UC Davis conducted in 2011 found that women who reported not taking a daily prenatal vitamin immediately before and during the first month of pregnancy were nearly twice as likely to have a child with an autism spectrum disorder as women who did take the supplements — and the associated risk rose to seven times as great when combined with a high-risk genetic make-up.

Other authors of the research are Rima Woods, Roxanne O. Vallero, Mari Golub, Joanne K. Suarez, Tram Anh Ta, Dag H. Yasui, Lai-Har Chi, Isaac N. Pessah and Robert F. Berman, all of UC Davis, and Paul J. Kostyniak of the Toxicology Research Center, University at Buffalo, the State University of New York.

The research was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, the National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences/Environmental Protection Agency Center for Children's Environmental Health, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Science to Achieve Results (STAR) program.

At the UC Davis MIND Institute, world-renowned scientists engage in research to find improved treatments as well as the causes and cures for autism, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, fragile X syndrome, Tourette syndrome and other neurodevelopmental disorders. Advances in neuroscience, molecular biology, genetics, pharmacology and b
ehavioral sciences are making inroads into a better understanding of brain function. The UC Davis MIND Institute draws from these and other disciplines to conduct collaborative, multidisciplinary research. For more information, visit mindinstitute.ucdavis.edu.

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Flame retardant linked to behavioral, other deficits

Researchers see differences in Autism brain development as early as 6 months

Public release date: 17-Feb-2012
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Contact: Jane E. Rubinstein
jrubinstein@rubenstein.com
212-843-8287
Autism Speaks

New York, N.Y. -- The changes in brain development that underlie autism spectrum disorder (ASD) may be detectable in children as young as 6 months, according to research reported online today in the American Journal of Psychiatry. While core behaviors associated with ASD (impaired social communication and repetitive behaviors) tend to be identified after a baby's first birthday, researchers found clear differences in brain communication pathways as early as 6 months in infants who later received a definitive diagnosis of ASD.

As part of the Infant Brain Imaging Study (IBIS), senior author Joe Piven, M.D., director of the University of North Carolina's Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities in Chapel Hill, and his colleagues studied early brain and behavior development in 92 infants. These infants had older siblings on the autism spectrum and, so, were at elevated risk of developing ASD themselves.

"These results offer promise that we may one day be able to identify infants at risk for autism before the behavioral symptoms are present," says study co-author Geri Dawson, Ph.D., Autism Speaks chief science officer. "The goal," she adds, "is to intervene as early as possible to prevent or reduce the onset of disabling symptoms." One promising area of follow-up research is to identify the specific genetic and biological mechanisms behind the observed differences in brain development.

In their report, the researchers describe using a magnetic resonance imaging technology called diffusion tensor imaging to evaluate the brains of infants at 6 months, 1 year and 2 years of age. This allowed them to create three-dimensional pictures showing changes over time in each infant's "white matter." White matter represents the part of the brain that is particularly rich in the nerve fibers that form major information pathways between different brain regions.

The 28 infants who went on to develop ASD showed different white matter development for 12 of the 15 major brain pathways studied compared with 64 infants who did not go on to develop ASD. At 6 months, there was evidence that the white matter fiber tracts were different in infants who later developed ASD from those of infant siblings who did not develop ASD, and over time it appears that there is a slowing in white matter development. It is a brain marker that differs in children who go on to be classified with autism. These developmental differences may suggest slower white matter development during early childhood, when the brain is making and strengthening vital connections.

"It's too early to tell whether the brain imaging techniques used in the study will be useful in identifying children at risk for ASD in early infancy," Piven says. "But the results could guide the development of better tools for predicting the risk that a child will develop ASD and perhaps measuring whether early intervention therapies improve underlying brain biology."

This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Child Health and Development, Autism Speaks and the Simons Foundation. Further support was provided by the National Alliance for Medical Image Computing, funded by a National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering grant. With funding from Autism Speaks, the IBIS team is also looking at the genetic and environmental influences on brain and behavior development in these high-risk infants.

###

About Autism

Autism is a general term used to describe a group of complex developmental brain disorders ? autism spectrum disorders ? caused by a combination of genes and environmental influences. These disorders are characterized, in varying degrees, by social and behavioral challenges, as well as repetitive behaviors. An estimated 1 in 110 children in the U.S. is on the autism spectrum ? a 600 percent increase in the past two decades that is only partly explained by improved diagnosis.

About Autism Speaks

Autism Speaks is the world's leading autism science and advocacy organization. Since its inception in 2005, Autism Speaks has made enormous strides, committing over $173 million to research and developing innovative resources for families. The organization is dedicated to funding research into the causes, prevention, treatments and a cure for autism; increasing awareness of autism spectrum disorders; and advocating for the needs of individuals with autism and their families. In addition to funding research, Autism Speaks has created resources and programs including the Autism Speaks Autism Treatment Network, Autism Speaks' Autism Genetic Resource Exchange and several other scientific and clinical programs. Notable awareness initiatives include the establishment of the annual United Nations-sanctioned World Autism Awareness Day on April 2, which Autism Speaks celebrates through its Light it Up Blue initiative. Also, Autism Speaks award-winning "Learn the Signs" campaign with the Ad Council has received over $316 million in donated media. Autism Speaks' family resources include the Autism Video Glossary, a 100 Day Kit for newly-diagnosed families, a School Community Tool Kit, a Grandparent's Guide to Autism, and a community grant program. Autism Speaks has played a critical role in securing federal legislation to advance the government's response to autism, and has successfully advocated for insurance reform to cover behavioral treatments in 29 states thus far, with legislation continuing to advance in more states. Each year Walk Now for Autism Speaks events are held in more than 85 cities across North America. To learn more about Autism Speaks, please visit http://www.autismspeaks.org.

About the Co-Founders

Autism Speaks was founded in February 2005 by Suzanne and Bob Wright, the grandparents of a child with autism. Bob Wright is Senior Advisor at Lee Equity Partners and Chairman and CEO of the Palm Beach Civic Association. He served as Vice Chairman of General Electric; and as the Chief Executive Officer of NBC and NBC Universal for more than twenty years and is a graduate of the College of Holy Cross and the University of Virginia School of Law. He also serves on the board of directors of the Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation, Mission Product, EMI Group Global Ltd., and AMC Networks Inc., and is a Trustee of the New York Presbyterian hospital. Suzanne Wright is a Trustee Emeritus of Sarah Lawrence College, her alma mater. Suzanne has received numerous awards, the Women of Distinction Award from Palm Beach Atlantic University, the CHILD Magazine Children's Champions Award, Luella Bennack Volunteer Award, Spirit of Achievement award by the Albert Einstein College of Medicine's National Women's Division and The Women of Vision Award from the Weizmann Institute of Science. In 2008, the Wrights were named to the Time 100 Heroes and Pioneers category, a list of the most influential people in the world, for their commitment to global autism advocacy. They have also received the first ever Double Helix Award for Corporate Leadership from Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, the NYU Child Advocacy Award, the Castle Connolly National Health Leadership Award and the American Ireland Fund Humanitarian Award. In the past couple of years the Wrights have received honorary doctorate degrees from St. John's University, St. Joseph's University and UMass Medical School.


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Researchers see differences in Autism brain development as early as 6 months

What Motivates Tomorrow's Great Entrepreneurs?

A new study reveals that young entrepreneurs are driven by rule-breaking, thinking outside the box, and friendship.

Andres Blumer (left) and Ryder Fyrwald (right) presented a Humantelligence Study the first day of the Kairos Global Summit 2012—held at the New York Academy of Medicine.

 

Today's young entrepreneurs are motivated to start companies because they hate authority and want to break all the rules, according to a recent study of 250 business owners between the ages of 18 and 22 years old.

The study, released by Humantelligence, a behavioral science research and consulting firm that provides online tools, found that just over 60 percent of those studied showed that valuing their freedom and doing things their own way was a dominant motivator—a mere 1 percent see themselves as wanting to create or adhere to structure.

Two Humantelligence directors, Andres Blumer and Ryder Fyrwald, presented these findings last week at the three-day Kairos Global Summit 2012 held at the New York Academy of Medicine and hosted by Kairos Society, a non-profit organization seeking to foster entrepreneurship amongst those ages 18 to 22. The organization brings together the best and brightest young entrepreneurs in the world.

“For us, studying Kairos members was a no-brainer,” says Blumer, also one of the earliest members of the Kairos Society and the director of international development at Humantelligence. “This is such an amazing group of people. When I come to these events where everyone is gathered, I find myself surrounded by all these young brilliant people who really are changing the world—they are truly unique.”

Humantelligence aims to aid companies in understanding, communicating and connecting with their employees. They begin this process with the Humantelligence Scan, a 36-question test that focuses on the four lenses most associated with success in the workplace—uncovering the main motivators and strengths of employees while also providing critical feedback of areas to improve. After the study, Humantelligence then helps companies use the information from the study to improve their employees’ work environments. 

As Humantelligence strives to improve work environments and company organization, they base their methods on positive psychology and behavioral science—framing findings in a positive manner, which is reflected in the results of the Kairos study. 

“We strive to help companies provide their employees with the best possible workplace—a place where they can find success and happiness,” says Blumer. 

“We found that when looking at the profiles of the Kairos members there were a number of qualities we have found consistent amongst many entrepreneurial leaders we have collected data on,” said Fyrwald, director of strategic partnerships at Humantelligence. “Many of them go against the status-quo and challenge convention—approaching their work with a flexible attitude, based on getting it done.”

The study showed that 64 percent of Kairos members prefer work requiring them to think outside the box and avoid rules and existing procedures. Additionally, almost 65 percent of those studied prefer work that allows them to solve problems on a regular basis. 

“This is a highly motivated group of young people, who have all these unique and thought-provoking ideas,” says Blumer. “We always say, ‘you can’t change the future, but you can create it.’ That’s what this group is doing.”

Humantelligence reported that “coupled with a drive, behavior and ideal work profile that involves doing it their own way, Kairos members also hold a deep-seeded value for uniqueness. That is, they seek to stand out from the crowd and become energized when their drive for creativity is triggered.”

Beyond showing signs of uniqueness, a little over 30 percent of those scanned had decisiveness as a dominant characteristic—which Humantelligence reports as slightly unusual for this age demographic, found more commonly amongst “seasoned professionals.” Conversely, only 3 percent of the 250 Kairos members showed signs of being “results driven or practical.” 

The percent of Kairos members driven by wealth was similarly low, with only 5 percent of members having it as a main motivator and 10 percent of those surveyed had helping others as their motivation above all else.

For those studied, there was a high emphasis placed on achievement, personal development, adventure, creativity—but most notably friendship. Friendship has never before come up as one of the top priorities for any group analyzed by Humantelligence. 

“This is so important. Its like we always say, ‘imagine if the world’s most influential people were friends 25 years ago?’” says Blumer. “I know that I could reach out to any of the friends I have made through Kairos, anywhere in the world and ask for help or stay at their place. We are in it together.”

 

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Common flame retardant linked to social, behavioral and learning deficits

Public release date: 16-Feb-2012
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Contact: Phyllis Brown
phyllis.brown@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
916-734-9023
University of California - Davis Health System

Mice genetically engineered to be susceptible to autism-like behaviors that were exposed to a common flame retardant were less fertile and their offspring were smaller, less sociable and demonstrated marked deficits in learning and long-term memory when compared with the offspring of normal unexposed mice, a study by researchers at UC Davis has found. The researchers said the study is the first to link genetics and epigenetics with exposure to a flame retardant chemical.

The research was published online today in the journal Human Molecular Genetics. It will be presented during a symposium on Saturday, Feb. 18, at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) by Janine LaSalle, a professor in the Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology in the UC Davis School of Medicine and the UC Davis Genome Center. (LaSalle will discuss her research during a news briefing with other autism researchers at 9 a.m. on Feb. 19 in Room 221 on the second Level of the Vancouver Convention Center).

"This study highlights the interaction between epigenetics and the effects of early exposure to flame retardants," said Janine LaSalle, the study's senior author and a researcher affiliated with the UC Davis MIND Institute. "Our experiments with wild-type and mutant mice indicate that exposure to flame retardants presents an independent risk of neurodevelopmental deficits associated with reduced sociability and learning."

Epigenetics describes the heritable changes in gene expression caused by mechanisms other than those in the DNA sequence. One such mechanism is DNA methylation, in which genes are silenced when their activation no longer is required. DNA methylation is essential for normal development. The researchers chose a mouse that was genetically and epigenetically susceptible to social behavioral deficits in order to understand the potential effect of this environmental pollutant on genetically susceptible humans.

LaSalle and her colleagues examined the effects of the chemical BDE-47 (Tetrabromodiphenl ether), a member of the class of flame retardants called polybrominated diphenylethers, or PBDEs. PBDEs have been used in a wide range of products, including electronics, bedding, carpeting and furniture. They have been shown to persist in the environment and accumulate in living organisms, and toxicological testing has found that they may cause liver toxicity, thyroid toxicity and neurodevelopmental toxicity, according to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. BDE-47 is the PBDE found at highest concentrations in human blood and breast milk, raising concerns about its potential neurotoxic effects during pregnancy and neonatal development.

The research was conducted in the offspring of mice genetically engineered for the autism phenotype found in Rett syndrome, a disorder that occurs primarily in females and causes regression in expressive language, motor skills and social reciprocity in late infancy. The condition affects about 1 in 10,000 children.

Autism spectrum disorders are a group of neurodevelopmental disabilities that can cause significant social, communication and behavioral deficits. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that an average of 1 in 110 children born in the United States today will be diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder.

Rett syndrome is causally linked to defects in the methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 gene MECP2 situated on the X chromosome. Mutations in MECP2 result in a nonfunctional MeCP2 protein, which is required for normal brain development. The researchers evaluated the effects of exposure to BDE-47 on mice genetically engineered to have mutations in MECP2 and their offspring, or pups. The genetically engineered Mecp2 mother mice, or dams, were bred with non-mutant wild-type males. The dams were monitored for 10 weeks -- for four weeks prior to conception, three weeks during gestation and three weeks of lactation. They were then compared with a control group of normal, unexposed dams and pups over several generations and hundreds of mice.

The study found that that the weights of the pups of the lactating BDE-47-exposed dams were diminished when compared with the controls, as were their survival rates. To assess the effects of the flame retardant exposure on the pups and their genotypes, the researchers placed them through more than 10 cognitive, social and physical tests.

Female offspring of dams exposed with BDE-47 spent half as much time interacting with another mouse in a 10-minute sociability test compared to controls. The reduced sociability in BDE-47 exposed females corresponded to reduced DNA methylation in females regardless of genotype. In addition, genetic and environmental interaction effects in this study were specifically observed in females.

In a short-term memory test of social novelty, although all mice showed the expected preference for interacting with a novel over a familiar mouse, BDE-47-exposed mutant female mice spent about half as much time interacting with the familiar mouse than their non-mutant littermates. In a long-term memory test of swimming to reach a hidden platform in a cloudy pool, female mice who were both mutant and BDE-47 exposed did not learn to reach the platform faster after fourdays of training. These behavioral changes in social and cognitive learning specifically in the interaction group corresponded to changes in a known epigenetic regulator of DNA methylation in brain, DNA methyltransferase 3a (Dnmt3a).

LaSalle said that the study results are important because better understanding of the epigenetic pathways implicated in social behavior and cognition may lead to improved treatments for autism spectrum disorders.

"While the obvious preventative step is to limit the use and accumulation of PBDEs in our environment, this would likely be a long-term solution," LaSalle said. "These pollutants are going to be hard to get rid of tomorrow. However, one important preventative that all women could do tomorrow is to start taking prenatal vitamins before becoming pregnant, as these may counteract the toxins in our environment through DNA methylation," she said.

A study by researchers at UC Davis conducted in 2011 found that women who reported not taking a daily prenatal vitamin immediately before and during the first month of pregnancy were nearly twice as likely to have a child with an autism spectrum disorder as women who did take the supplements -- and the associated risk rose to seven times as great when combined with a high-risk genetic make-up.

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Other authors of the research are Rima Woods, Roxanne O. Vallero, Mari Golub, Joanne K. Suarez, Tram Anh Ta, Dag H. Yasui, Lai-Har Chi, Isaac N. Pessah and Robert F. Berman, all of UC Davis, and Paul J. Kostyniak of the Toxicology Research Center, University at Buffalo, the State University of New York.

The research was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, the National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences/Environmental Protection Agency Center for Children's Environmental Health, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Science to Achieve Results (STAR) program.

At the UC Davis MIND Institute, world-renowned scientists engage in research to find improved treatmen
ts as well as the causes and cures for autism, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, fragile X syndrome, Tourette syndrome and other neurodevelopmental disorders. Advances in neuroscience, molecular biology, genetics, pharmacology and behavioral sciences are making inroads into a better understanding of brain function. The UC Davis MIND Institute draws from these and other disciplines to conduct collaborative, multidisciplinary research. For more information, visit mindinstitute.ucdavis.edu.


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Common flame retardant linked to social, behavioral and learning deficits