The science behind frontotemporal dementia

When Times staff photographer Rob Gauthier and I first visited the Bryant family last April to begin reporting a story, (“Little-known brain disease rips apart lives of victim, loved ones,”), about a rare type of dementia, known as frontotemporal dementia, we realized that we needed to explore the science behind the malady. FTD, as the disease is known, is similar to Alzheimer's but affects the front portions of the brain and leads to behavioral problems such as the Bryants experienced with Stu.

I knew about Phineas Gage, the railroad foreman who in 1848 lost the front portion of his brain in a terrible construction accident and who survived as a radically changed man. I had read the work of Hanna and Antonio Damasio, neuroscientists who almost 20 years ago pioneered our understanding of the biology of emotions, and I was eager to see how frontotemporal dementia was being studied to further this research. 

In the course of our reporting, Rob and I took a number of trips to UCLA and the West Los Angeles Veterans Affairs hospital to interview Mario Mendez, the physician and neuroscientists treating Stu. In our conversations, Mendez helped us understand what Oliver Sacks meant when he wrote, “Without the great development of the frontal lobes in the human brain, civilization could never have arisen.”

By studying the effects of frontotemporal dementia – and its slow diminishment of personality – Mendez is able to see more clearly the so-called social brain, a portion of our frontal and temporal lobes that plays a role in allowing us to successfully interact with each other and build relationships. Take away this portion of the cortex and we are no longer able to moderate our emotions. 

Moderation – the inhibition of emotional impulses – can take the form of empathy and embarrassment and is critical in helping us negotiate complex social environments. Without either, as Rob and I learned during the time we spent with Stu, humans grow untethered to the world, unable to read feelings or behave in an appropriate manner.

By steering the discussion about morality, normally the providence of ethicists and philosophers, away from the symposium and putting it inside the laboratory where thoughts are considered to be not so much conscious choices, but instead reflexes based on a neurological network, Mendez and other neuroscientists are furthering the inquiry into the nature of right and wrong. In this light, religion, family, even Freud's notions of superego, ego and id matter less than biology.

Mendez argues that specific behaviors – not harming another person, respecting hierarchy and authority, accepting communal goals, recognizing equity and fairness – evolved among humans.  Good manners, therefore, have as much to do with what we are born with as they do with how we were raised and what our parents taught us.

“Much of the social behavior that we take for granted and that we often consider to be learned or cultural or developmental is actually behavior that is deeply ingrained in the nervous system and in the frontal lobes,” Mendez says.

Consider that the next time you’re in a crowded restaurant and watching the kaleidoscope of interactions. Never mind the ability to speak and communicate. Never mind the opposable thumbs. The frontal lobes make humans human.

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The science behind frontotemporal dementia

Hernando County Science and Engineer Fair winners

By Paulette Lash Ritchie, Times Correspondent
Paulette Lash RitchieTampa Bay Times In Print: Thursday, February 16, 2012

The Hernando County Science and Engineer Fair was held Feb. 2 at the Hernando County Fairgrounds. On Feb. 8, the winning projects were announced at the senior (high school) and junior (middle school) levels.

One hundred forty-one students participated in the district fair, and students scoring an average of 48 points or higher were selected to compete at the State Science and Engineering Fair in Lakeland, April 3-5.

Senior (high school)

Botany: First place, Sabrina Impreso, Springstead; second place, Bryn Buckner, Springstead, and Janet Ho, Weeki Wachee; third place, Stephanie Kidd, Hernando.

Behavioral Science: First place, Bailey Brannan, Weeki Wachee.

Chemistry: First place, William Vonada, Springstead; second place, Hanora M. Cassels, Springstead; third place, Natalya Davis, Springstead.

Computer/math: First place, Margherita Prestigiacomo, Springstead; second place, Christopher Stier, Nature Coast; third place, Stephen Skipper, Hernando.

Engineering: Second place, Alyssa Cooper, Nature Coast.

Environmental science: First place, Nicole Sills, Florida Virtual School; second place, Annie McGrath, Springstead; third place, Delaney Rose Ahrens, Hernando.

Earth science: First place, Ying Grace Li, Hernando Christian Academy.

Medicine and health sciences: First place, Shamir Qureshi, Springstead; second place, Josh Crane, Springstead; third place, Christine Sniffen, Nature Coast.

Physics: First place, Brandon Geiger, Springstead; second place, Erin Moynihan, Weeki Wachee; third place, Katie Barta, Springstead.

Zoology: First place, Addison Hilyard, Central; second place, Savanna Wells, Hernando.

Junior (middle school)

Botany: First place, Brett Maharaj and Nate Rushnell, Challenger; second place, Jordan Ranfone, Challenger, and Ruby Graham, Notre Dame Catholic School; third place, Hanna Crider, Powell, and Shawenda Alexis, West Hernando.

Behavioral science: First place, Emily McHugh, Challenger; second place, Kristina McCane, Challenger; third place, Kallie Carlton, Powell.

Chemistry: First place, Katie Sinsko, Challenger; second place, Vasu Mahlotra, Challenger; third place, Kenzie Phillips, Powell.

ComputerS: First place, Ashton Hunter, Challenger.

Earth space: First place, Alexa Lacy, Challenger; second place, Billy Marquis, Challenger; third place, Xavier Graham, J.D. Floyd.

Environmental science: First place, Holden Jung, Challenger; second place, Taylor Rejsek, Challenger; third place, Pierce Kimbrough, Challenger.

Engineering: First place, Allyson Fielder, Challenger; second place, Richie Hopper, Challenger; third place, Sasha Garcia, J.D. Floyd.

Medicine and health sciences: First place, Rahne Skoglund, Powell; second place, Eduardo Davila-Garcia, Challenger; third place, Katrina Nelson, Challenger.

Physics: First place, Joe Lacy, Challenger, and Heather Jacobs, Methodist School Center; second place, Zachary Dill and Karli Kimbrough, Challenger; third place, Ivey Whitaker, Methodist School Center, and Carl Boutin, Challenger.

Zoology: First place, Cole Kolasa, Challenger; second place, Sidney Dill, Challenger; third place, Devon Dupuis-Salado, West Hernando.

Moving on

These students are eligible for the State Science Fair:

Junior Division: Rahne Skog-lund, Heather Jacobs, Holden Jung, Emily McHugh, Kristina McCane, Joe Lacy, Alexa Lacy, Taylor Rejsek, Brett Maharaj, Zack Dill, Sidney Dill, Cole Kolasa and Eduardo Davila-Garcia.

Senior Division: Sabrina Impreso, Shamir Qureshi, Josh Crane, Ann McGrath, Margherita Prestigiacomo, Christine Sniffen, Addison Hilyard, Delaney Rose Ahrens, Bailey Brannan, Janet Ho and Nicole Sills.

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Hernando County Science and Engineer Fair winners

Opower to Highlight Innovation During Social Media Week Washington

DC (2/15), San Francisco (2/16) and New York (2/16)

ARLINGTON, Va (PRWEB) February 14, 2012

Opower will be discussing its innovations in social media and behavioral science at events on both the West and East Coast during Social Media Week, February 13-17, in Washington, D.C., San Francisco, and New York.

    Washington, D.C.: Wednesday, February 15 at 7:00 p.m., Wayne Lin, Opower’s Director of Product Management, will participate in DC Tech Meetup #11 – Social Media Week Edition to discuss Opower’s social energy application built in partnership with Facebook and the NRDC. The meetup will be held at Sixth & I Historic Synagogue, 600 I Street NW, Washington, D.C. 20001. Following the meetup, Opower will host an afterparty at Rocket Bar, 714 7th Street NW, starting at 8:30 p.m. For more information, visit http://www.meetup.com/DC-Tech-Meetup/events/25773701/ and http://opower.eventbrite.com/.

    San Francisco, CA: Thursday, February 16 from 1:00 – 1:50 p.m., Stephanie Berner, Opower’s Engagement Director, will speak at The Future of Sharing event, which will discuss a study by Beyond that offers a unique and substantiated perspective on the changes that lie ahead for the nature of online sharing. The purpose of the event is to hold an engaged discussion about the study’s findings and to expose different views about how the trends in sharing will shape the way brands reach their desired audiences. At San Francisco State University’s downtown campus, 835 Market Street, 5th Floor, San Francisco, CA 94103. For more information, visit http://socialmediaweek.org/event/?event_id=1386.     Brooklyn, NY: Thursday, February 16 from 6:00 – 11:00 p.m., Wayne Lin will participate in a panel of experts discussing how Opower’s new business models leverage social media to unlock unutilized intent and convert it into tangible action. At Brooklyn Brewery, 79 North 11th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11211. For more information, visit http://socialmediaweek.org/event/?event_id=1023.

Social Media Week is one of the world’s most unique global platforms, offering a series of interconnected activities and conversations around the world on emerging trends in social and mobile media across all major industries with events in 21 cities worldwide.

Opower has more than 220 employees, with offices in Arlington, Virginia, San Francisco, and London. Together with our clients and their customers, we're saving energy, saving money, and helping reduce global carbon emissions.

We’re hiring! Smart, happy people are at the center of our success. We are looking for extraordinary, environmentally-conscious and talented people to join our growing team. In 2012, we will have at least 95 job openings, and more than half of them are on our Engineering and Product teams. Opower offers very competitive compensation packages with a full suite of benefits, and we also offer a $2,500 external referral bonus for critical hires. To find out more, visit opower.com/careers.

About Wayne

Wayne Lin is a Director of Product Management at Opower and is responsible for the company's suite of web products. This includes the recently announced social energy application, launched in partnership with Facebook and NRDC (Natural Resources Defense Council). Prior to joining Opower, Wayne worked at Google in product management and product marketing roles focused on online display advertising technologies. Wayne also founded ecoLightbulbs, a company that sold CFL light bulbs at cost. The company sold more than 13,000 light bulbs, which helped reduce the production of 8MM lbs of CO2 into the atmosphere. Wayne started his career at ZS Associates, a management consulting firm. He received his MBA from Wharton at the University of Pennsylvania and his BA in economics and applied mathematics from Northwestern University. After spending the last 6 years in San Francisco, he is enjoying being back on the East Coast, where there are four full seasons.

About Stephanie

Stephanie Berner is Engagement Director at Opower. Based in San Francisco, Stephanie oversees client operations for Opower’s portfolio of nearly two dozen accounts in the western U.S., where she and her team are responsible for all aspects of delivering Opower’s award-winning behavior-based energy efficiency software and associated programs for utilities including Sempra Energy, Puget Sound Energy, and Pacific Gas & Electric. In a prior role, Ms. Berner was Director of Climate & Energy Services at 3Degrees, a leader in the renewable energy and carbon markets. Her early career included whitewater rafting and ski instructing Sun Valley, Idaho. She holds a BS in Biology from UC Davis and an MBA from the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

About Opower

Opower is the leader in energy information software, providing the utility industry’s only cross-channel platform proven to drive energy efficiency gains on a large scale. Using cutting-edge behavioral science and patent-pending analytics, the Opower platform enables utilities to provide targeted energy data and advice to each customer. More than 60 utilities—including 8 of the 10 largest in the US—partner with Opower to improve the effectiveness of their energy-efficiency portfolios and motivate their customers to become more energy efficient, while dramatically increasing the level of customer engagement and overall customer satisfaction. For utilities with Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI), the Opower platform represents a cost-effective way to convert hourly data into measurable energy savings, delivering a clear return on investment directly to customers. Founded in 2007 and privately held, Opower is headquartered in Arlington, Virginia, with a second office in San Francisco, California. For more information, please visit http://www.opower.com.

###

Eric Fleming
Opower
571-384-1292
Email Information

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Opower to Highlight Innovation During Social Media Week Washington

American Council on Exercise Adds Three Senior Fitness Consultants

SAN DIEGO, Feb. 13, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Fitness industry experts Natalie Digate Muth, MD, MPH, RD; Michael R. Mantell, Ph.D., and Chris McGrath, MS, CPT, LWMC, join the team of fitness experts at the American Council on Exercise (ACE), America's leading authority on fitness and the world's largest nonprofit fitness and personal trainer certification, continuing education and training organization.  The addition of Mantell, Muth and McGrath as senior consultants to ACE is part of the organization's ongoing efforts to inspire, motivate and encourage people to make physical activity an integral part of their everyday lives with an end goal of reversing the obesity epidemic affecting millions of Americans.

"At ACE, we are collaborating with the top experts in the industry to improve fitness literacy for professionals and fitness seekers alike," said ACE CEO Scott Goudeseune.  "Muth, Mantell and McGrath bring more than 50 years of combined industry experience and a wealth of knowledge on topics from nutrition and wellness to training and injury prevention, and everything in between." 

Muth joins ACE as a Senior Fitness Consultant focusing on nutrition and weight management.  She will contribute to ACE's vast continuing education and certification programs, and provide nutrition and weight management content for ACE's educational materials. An ACE-certified Personal Trainer and Group Fitness Instructor, Muth is a pediatrics resident at UCLA Mattel Children's Hospital, a registered dietitian and Board-Certified Specialist in Sports Dietetics (CSSD).

Mantell, an internationally recognized thought leader in the fitness industry, joins ACE as Senior Fitness Consultant on Behavioral Sciences. In this position, he'll provide counsel on the latest findings in health behavioral psychology to optimize overall wellbeing.  Since earning his doctorate at the University of Pennsylvania, Mantell has coached world-class athletes and fitness enthusiasts for performance enhancement and consults with major fitness companies and organizations throughout the country.  He is a two-time best-selling author appearing regularly on radio and television.

McGrath, founder and operator of Movement First, a New York City-based fitness education, consulting, and training organization, brings more than 20 years of fitness experience to ACE in his position as Senior Fitness Consultant. He specializes in a variety of training and coaching modalities, including sports performance, injury prevention, post-rehabilitation and lifestyle/wellness coaching. McGrath will assist ACE in the education of personal trainers, group fitness instructors, and other fitness professionals on the proper movement patterns for safe and effective training so that they may pass this knowledge on to their clients.  He is an international lecturer, educator, and consultant for some of the most successful fitness organizations in the world including Functional Movement Systems, TRX, Reebok, Star Trac, EA Sports Active and numerous others.  He holds a Master of Science in exercise science from California University in Pennsylvania, a Bachelor of Science in health education from Western Connecticut State University and has numerous training and coaching certifications.

"As the fitness continuum continues to evolve to include overall health and wellness, ACE is also expanding with new thought leadership to help meet the growing needs for enhanced professional education as well as greater public education and access to fitness services," said American Council on Exercise's Chief Science Officer, Cedric X. Bryant, Ph.D.  "The depth and diversity of experience that all our fitness experts possess is a powerful asset in helping us have a meaningful impact on the physical activity, nutrition, and lifestyle habits of Americans."

For more information on the various educational resources that ACE provides to more than 50,000 dedicated fitness professionals, visit http://www.acefitness.org/getcertified.    

About ACE
The American Council on Exercise (ACE), America's premier fitness and personal trainer certification, continuing education, and training organization, is a nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting the benefits of physical activity and protecting Americans against unsafe and ineffective fitness products and instruction.  ACE sponsors university-based fitness and exercise science research studies and is the world's largest nonprofit fitness certifying organization.  For more information on ACE and its programs, call (800) 825-3636 or visit the ACE website at http://www.acefitness.org.  AMERICAN COUNCIL ON EXERCISE, ACE and the ACE logos are Registered Trademarks of the American Council on Exercise.

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Upcoming regional science fair needs volunteer judges

    Volunteer judges are needed for the Montana Tech regional science fair Feb. 28 and March 1.

    According to a news release, high school judging (requires judges have a MS degree) takes place 9 to 11:30 a.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 28, in Tech's SUB. Categories by which students are judged are Team, Computer Science, Environmental Science, Zoology, Physics, Microbiology, Medicine and Health, Math, Engineering, Earth and Space, Chemistry, Botany, and Behavioral Science.

    Elementary judging takes place 9 a.m. to noon and junior high judging is noon to 3 p.m. on Thursday, March 1, in Tech's HPER complex. There are no educational requirements to be an elementary or junior high judge. Attempts are made to place judges in the area where they are most comfortable with choices being Earth, Life, Physical or Behavioral science.

    For details, email to Amy Verlanic at Averlanic@mtech.edu.

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Upcoming regional science fair needs volunteer judges

700 students participate in Kentucky American Water Science Fair

Approximately 700 public, private and home school students in grades four through 12 participated today in the 28th annual Kentucky American Water Science Fair coordinated by Fayette County Public Schools at Bryan Station High School in Lexington.

The event included students’ science fair projects judged by 150 professionals, as well as hands-on, educational exhibits and demonstrations coordinated by Bluegrass PRIDE.

A total of 143 student projects received awards.

Six students received special recognition from Kentucky American Water for demonstrating achievement in water science projects, and four students received the Urban Environmental Award, which recognizes outstanding projects related to environmental stewardship.

Alltech sponsored special awards in animal sciences and Lexmark International provided Lexmark printers to first-place engineering award recipients.

Lexington Mayor Jim Gray joined Kentucky American Water President Cheryl Norton and Fayette County Public Schools representatives Jack Hayes, Mike McKenzie and Ketsy Fields in the award presentations.

Judges evaluated the student projects according to the following categories: animal sciences, behavioral and social sciences, biochemistry, cellular and molecular biology, chemistry, computer science, earth and planetary science, engineering, energy and transportation, environmental sciences, medicine and health sciences, microbiology, physics and astronomy and plant sciences.

Kentucky American Water initiated the science fair for junior high school students in 1985 as part of the company’s centennial celebration. The next year, the company joined with Fayette County Public Schools in coordinating the event. The fair has been expanded twice: first in 1989 to include elementary school science projects, and again in 1991 to include high school projects.

During her remarks, Norton congratulated students for their achievements in science, and thanked parents for supporting science, math and technology education.

Norton started her career in the water utility industry nearly 25 years ago before she graduated from college through a part-time research position at the national laboratory of Kentucky American Water’s parent company, American Water, located outside St. Louis. After graduating from college she joined the lab full time, conducting a variety of national research studies on drinking water issues, and eventually moved into management positions that culminated in her leading the facility. She joined Kentucky American Water as president in January 2011.

Students who received awards at today’s competition advance to the Central Kentucky Regional Science and Engineering Fair to be held at the University of Kentucky on Saturday, March 3.

Kentucky American Water also serves as a leading sponsor for that event.

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700 students participate in Kentucky American Water Science Fair

Construction woes

by: Emily Andrews on February 8, 2012

A construction site south of the Marriott Library. New pipes will carry hot water down the HPER highway and will branch out at the Law School

Students might find it more difficult to walk between the Marriott Library and the Social and Behavioral Science Building until August while a multi-phase replacement of hot water pipes is being completed.

The pipes are crucial for carrying hot water to heat buildings and provide steam for laboratories.

The pipes have “far exceeded their useful life” and thus need to be replaced with higher quality pipe, said Megan McFarlane, spokeswoman for U facilities management. The new piping is pre-insulated, prefabricated and triple-walled. The new pipes will carry high-temperature water down the HPER highway to the Law School, with branches going to other buildings along the way.

Aging hot water pipes are also being replaced between Kingsbury Hall and the Browning Mineral Science Building. Expected to be completed at the same time as the pipes near the library, this project will carry a price tag of $1.7 million. The project near the library will cost $3 million, McFarlane said.

The U is lobbying the state Legislature for a $99 million overhaul of the campus infrastructure system, which includes hot water pipes and the electrical grid, she said.

Short URL: http://www.dailyutahchronicle.com/?p=2565692

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Construction woes

Expert of the Month: Dr. Jared Montoya – Video

01-08-2011 08:46 Dr. Jared A. Montoya has been a member of the Behavioral Science faculty at UTB/TSC since 2005. He received his Ph.D. in Applied Social Psychology from Brigham Young University. Dr. Montoya has professional experience working in human resources and personnel selection and has conducted quantitative and qualitative research for non-profit organizations. Dr. Montoya's research interests focus on gender, culture, and multicultural psychology. He has published in the Journal of Counseling Psychology, Journal of Counseling and Development and the Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health. His research on multicultural counseling, employment discrimination, misperception, and Hispanic health has been presented at a number of professional conferences. Dr. Montoya teaches courses in Research Methods, Psychology and the Legal System and The Psychology of Gender. Dr. Montoya is the graduate coordinator for the Master of Arts in Psychology program at UTB/TSC.

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Expert of the Month: Dr. Jared Montoya - Video

Science fair Feb. 17 at ABAC

February 7, 2012 Science fair Feb. 17 at ABAC

TIFTON — The School of Science and Mathematics at Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College will host the Regional Science and Engineering Fair on Feb. 17 in Thrash Gym.

Students in grades 6-12 who have participated in a local science fair in their county or school and have been chosen to participate at the regional level will be involved. Projects will be entered in one of 16 different classifications such as behavioral and social sciences, physics and astronomy, animal sciences, plant sciences, and chemistry.

Displays will be available for viewing by the public from 3 – 4 p.m. The awards ceremony will be held at 3:30 p.m. in Howard Auditorium.  Awards will be given to the top two finishers in both the junior and senior divisions.

For more information, interested persons can contact Dr. Ray Barber, Dean of the ABAC School of Science and Mathematics, at (229) 391-5100.

Copyright 2012 Tifton Gazette. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Friendswood ISD announces science fair winners

Posted: Monday, February 6, 2012 10:43 am | Updated: 10:47 am, Mon Feb 6, 2012.

The winners of the Friendswood High School Science Fair, held Jan. 25, advanced to the Galveston County Science and Engineering Fair held on Saturday, Feb. 4 and the Science and Engineering Fair of Houston at the George R. Brown Convention Center on March 1-3.

In Behavioral Science, Silva Shanika placed first with Katherine Harclerode in second and Garrett Benson in third place.

In Botany, Janae Bonnen placed first with Matthew Laitkep in second.

In Chemistry, Cassie Nagle tied with Kelly Janak for first place with Nicole Bluth in second place.

FHS students won four places in Computer Sciences. Roma Pradhan won first with Chandika Silva in second, Rachel Goeken in third and Tim Crews in fourth place.

In Energy and Transportation category, Caroline Landon was awarded first place, David Bordelon second, and Michael Laitkep third place.

The engineering category had several ties. While Audrey McKee won first place, Daniel Bellian and Ben Burkick tied for second place. Olivia Williams and Carl Edeen tied for third place. Julie Rogers placed fourth with Brooks Pettit in fifth place.

In Environmental Science, two ties were announced. Taylor Cubbage tied for first place with Julia Conger and Rachel Truong and Lauren Peplinski tied for second place. Amy Peryam placed third.

The math winner was Daniel Bradley who placed second.

In the category of Medicine/Health, Nikita Gupta placed first, Heidi Henricks second, Owen O’Neill in third and Ian Bukowski in fourth place.

In Microbiology, students won first through fifth places. Emelie Nelson was named first place with Pahno Georgeton second, Karan Jerath third, Derek Abraham fourth and Dylan Dickens fifth.

James McCullough was first with Derek Janak in second place in Physics category.

Ninth Grade Biological Science winners were Taylor Cubbage with first place and Emelie Nelson in second.

Ninth Grade Physical Science winners included Audrey McKee in first place and Kelly Janak in second place.

The Senior Division Biological Science winners include Janae Bonnen in first place with Julia Conger in second.

The Senior Division Physical Science winners are Jamie McCullough in first place. Roma Pradhan and Caroline Landon tied for second place.

FHS science teacher Rebecca Clark chaired the Science Fair.

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Urbana senior recognized nationally for research

Photo by Travis Pratt

Urbana senior David Zhu was recently named a semifinalist in the Intel Science Talent Search.

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David Zhu wasn't expecting much when he submitted his research from a summer internship at Fort Detrick to the national Intel Science Talent Search.

Zhu, a senior at Urbana High School, had been urged by his father to enter the contest. His brother had also participated while he attended Urbana High six years ago.

"I was just entering it just to see how far I could really get," he said. "It was just more of an opportunity to see if I could get some money or not."

Zhu received the money in the form of a $1,000 scholarship.

He was one of 300 semifinalists chosen out of 1,839 entrants in the program.

The Intel Science Talent Search encourages students to tackle challenging scientific questions and develop the skills to solve the problems of tomorrow, according to a news release from the company.

Projects submitted for consideration cover all disciplines of science, including biochemistry, chemistry, physics, mathematics, engineering, behavioral science, and medicine and health.

Zhu's project was based on the systematic evaluation of net charge in immunoglobulin G.

He wrote a computer program that analyzed different files of protein sequences and calculated the different charges each protein received.

The high school of each semifinalist also received $1,000 to further STEM education.

Urbana is using the funds to add new computer software in its new STEM computer lab, according to Principal Kathy Campagnoli.

"If it wasn't for donations from the community and great students like David, it wouldn't happen," she said.

Finalists in the program were notified Jan. 25, but Zhu was not named a finalist.

Despite not moving on in the competition, Zhu said he still plans to submit his research for consideration to be published in science journals.

He has been advised by his father it would be difficult for high school students to have the first author position in journals.

"We'll see how it goes," Zhu said.

The Urbana senior said he is considering Carnegie Mellon University, Cornell University and the University of Maryland to study computer science.

Zhu is also the captain of Urbana's swim team and a member of the National Honor Society and Science National Honor Society.

He said he enjoys computer science because of the creativity it offers him.

"It's not like math how there's always one right answer," he said. "Me and my friend, we could be trying to make a program two completely separate ways, but it's going to end up doing the same thing."

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The Science of Soccer Deaths and Football Bets

Economists know that what happens in the game doesn't stay in the game. Image: Muhammad/Flickr

As you may know, 74 people were killed this Wednesday when Egyptian soccer fans stampeded into a bottleneck after a 3-1 hometown upset win. While certainly tragic, it was far from irrational: it turns out the behavioral economics were stacked against them.

Take the link between football and domestic violence. In 2011 economists Gordon Dahl and David Card showed that when a home team loses, domestic violence in the home city increases by 10 percent. On police reports, you can see reports start to rise in the final quarter as a loss looks likely. Then reports peak an hour after the game and return to normal a couple hours later.

Actually, there’s one more important element of this domestic violence spike: it only happens after an unexpected loss. If a home team is supposed to lose and then loses, nothing happens. But when a favored home team loses, husbands and boyfriends turn violent. If the unexpected loss is against a traditional rival, the spike in domestic violence is 15 percent instead of 10. If the losing home team is in playoff contention, the spike can be as high as 20 percent.

Dahl and Card found that the flip side isn’t equally true: a home team’s unexpected win does nothing to lower domestic violence. But what about other crime?

University of Denver economist Dan Rees took a look inside the National Incident-Based Reporting System on Division 1A college football game days to see what happens when a home team wins. Of course, rowdy crime goes up across the board as would be expected when the young, male demographic drinks too much Pabst. But when the home team beats a team ranked higher in the BCS standings, crime skyrockets.

Imagine an expected versus an unexpected home team win – which of the following crime statistics do you think is the most different between the two: assault, vandalism, DUIs, disorderly conduct or liquor law violations? You probably guessed it: it’s DUIs, which are 12 times higher if the win was an upset than if the winning home team was favored.

In fact, an exciting game increases the emotional salience of everything – including the commercials shown in timeouts. A study forthcoming in the Journal of Advertising by Oregon State researcher Colleen Bee showed that people rate ads more favorably when watching a close, exciting game than they do when watching a blowout. In her study, it didn’t even matter who won or lost – “Games with high excitement levels result in a transfer of that emotion to the ads,” she said in a university press release. This was especially true of ads shown later in the game – when the result came down to the wire.

But what happened in Egypt is beyond driving around a college town honking your horn with a few too many Blue Ribbons in you, or getting caught up in the action of a kiddie Darth Vader starting a Passat, or, perhaps, even beyond a 10 percent increase in a city’s domestic violence rate.

In Egypt, fans rushed the field, and by the time cooler heads prevailed, 74 people were dead.

To explain the complete loss of self in the moment of sports ecstasy, let’s turn to one more economist: U.C. Berkeley’s George Akerlof, Nobel Laureate in Economic Sciences, who I recently interviewed for my book, Brain Trust. Economics had long wondered why, in identical circumstances, one person might act one way while another person might act oppositely. And according to Akerlof, the thumb on the scale is that of identity. In short, if you have the identity of “host” you maximize your utility (to put it economically) by serving drinks. And if you have the identity of “life of the party,” you maximize your utility by consuming them.

“You act according to your identity or you pay a cost in utility,” says Akerlof. The stronger the identity, the higher the cost of acting contrary to it. For example, once the Army builds into recruits the identity of soldier, any soldier refusing to charge a machine gun nest would pay a dear price in identity –- in fact, a dear enough cost to outweigh the physical danger of charging. (Good schools and businesses do similar, Akerlof says.)

Now imagine Egypt, in which unrest and uncertainty have stripped away the identities of work or school or security in many young men. This identity vacuum leaves plenty of room for identity takeover by that of “soccer fan.” Perhaps when hometown underdog Al-Masry beat rival Al-Ahry, there were no competing identities to keep “soccer fan” in check.

And without this weight on the other side of the scale, perhaps it suddenly became economically rational to act according to this identity and rush the field, rather than paying an identity cost for abstaining. Perhaps the benefit outweighed the risk.

And in that tragic but rational balance, 74 lives were lost.

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The Science of Soccer Deaths and Football Bets

The Dog Study that Invalidates Behavioral Science – Video

04-10-2011 05:56 This 18 year study involving over 1000 dogs and owners lifts the curtain on the dog and human dynamic. Dale McCluskey shows the reasons behind failure within many feel good and owner focused systems of training. Why so many trainers are exploiting conditioning and misrepresenting dominance for the sake of their bridge to no where agenda. This study is from Dale's new book "The Mind and Body Connection - New and Profound Insight into the Dog and Human Dynamic" Available at Barnes and Noble and Amazon Kindle.

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The Dog Study that Invalidates Behavioral Science - Video

Sears® Releases National Survey Revealing What Men and Women Really Want This Valentine's Day

HOFFMAN ESTATES, Ill., Jan. 31, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- If a new national survey from Sears of more than 1,000 men and women is any indication, this Valentine's Day will take a romantic and generous turn for many lucky couples. Thirty-seven percent of men in relationships say they expect or are planning to spend $100 or more this year, according to the survey conducted by Sentient Decision Science for Sears. Even men with more modest resources (30 percent) reported they would look for creative ways to gift their loved ones within a $50 budget.

Sears has teamed up with David Tutera, the party and entertaining guru and TV host to share this year's Valentine's gift giving trends  and offer men everywhere ways to make the day special for their significant other.

To plan the perfect evening, Tutera suggests the following:

Everyone Loves Electronics. Instead of the expected flowers or chocolates, go for something unexpected. Case in point: Roughly three quarters (80 percent) of women surveyed said they would be excited to receive the latest technology product this Valentine's Day. Help your loved one stay entertained and connected with the SVP 7-inch Touch Panel Wifi Android 2.2 Tablet- $89.99 Wine, Dine & Be Mine.A menu of favorite dishes shared on previous dates or special occasions would be ideal for the nearly one-third of survey respondents (27 percent) who plan a low-key evening at home. Time crunch? Grab your favorite fruit, cheese or bread and share a intimate meal fondue style with the Rival 3-Quart Fondue Pot- $42.99 Calendar Girl. This Valentine's Day falls on a busy weeknight that can interfere with work or family obligations. Move your celebration to a more convenient weekend night so neither you nor your sweetheart will feel rushed or stressed. Surprise your Valentine with a private Award Season Movie Screening at home.

To browse all the hottest Valentine's Day gifts at affordable prices, visit Sears.com/gifts.

Sears Valentine's Day Survey Methodology

The Sentient Decision Science Valentine's Day study examines Valentine's Day perceptions and behaviors among U.S. consumers. Sentient Decision Science, an independent behavioral science and consulting firm, was commissioned by Sears to conduct this study. The research is based on a survey of 1,008 U.S. consumers (600 Females; 454 currently in a relationship, 146 not in a relationship and 408 males currently in a relationship), ages 18 and older, and the data is representative of the U.S. census population. The margin of error for a survey based on 1,008 interviews is +/- 3.1 percentage points with a 95 percent level of confidence. For more information about the sampling methodology of this study, please contact Meghan Van Horn at Sentient Decision Science.

About Sears, Roebuck and Co.

Sears, Roebuck and Co., a wholly owned subsidiary of Sears Holdings Corporation (NASDAQ: SHLD - News), is a leading broadline retailer providing merchandise and related services. Sears, Roebuck offers its wide range of home merchandise, apparel and automotive products and services through more than 2,700 Sears-branded and affiliated stores in the United States and Canada, which includes over 890 full-line and more than 1,350 specialty stores in the U.S.   Sears, Roebuck also offers a variety of merchandise and services through sears.com, landsend.com, and specialty catalogs. Sears, Roebuck offers consumers leading proprietary brands including Kenmore, Craftsman, DieHard and Lands' End -- among the most trusted and preferred brands in the U.S. Sears, Roebuck is the 2011 ENERGY STAR® Retail Partner of the Year. The company is the nation's largest provider of home services, with more than 11 million service calls made annually. For more information, visit the Sears, Roebuck website at http://www.sears.com or the Sears Holdings Corporation website at http://www.searsholdings.com.

 

 

 

 

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Sears® Releases National Survey Revealing What Men and Women Really Want This Valentine's Day

Science is king in Chandler schools

by Kerry Fehr-Snyder -
Jan. 27, 2012 02:15 PM
The Republic | azcentral.com

Second place was good enough for the two fifth-graders at Knox
Elementary School competing in their school science fair in
Chandler.

Isha Paode, 11, and Kristina Schmidt, 10, will advance to the
Hamilton Invitational Science and Engineering Fair next month
with their experiment about which type of mini rovers cause the
least amout of damage to three different planetary sufaces.

"I didn't expect to win second" place, Kristina said.

If ever there were a season for science in Chandler, now would
be it.

Elementary, junior high and high school students just wrapped
up their science projects for judging in HISEF and are
displaying their research posters at their school science
fairs. Up to the top six finishers in fifth grade and the top
six in sixth grade will advance to HISEF on Feb. 11.

Last year, more than 1,300 Chandler students competed in a wide
range of disciplines, including animal sciences, cellular and
molecular biology, chemistry, physics, and Earth and planetary
science. The fair is open to fifth- through 12th-grade students
whose projects were judged unique and scientifically sound by
judges at their individual schools.

First-place winners at HISEF advance to the Arizona Science and
Engineering Fair.

Science educators say science fairs get students jazzed about
science, technology, engineering and math at a time when the
U.S. needs to boost its competitiveness in a world increasingly
dependent on scientific expertise.

"Science and technology are literally in our backyard," said
Nicolle Karantinos, curriculum director of Chandler Unified
School District. "We are fortunate we have a good strong
relationship with high-tech companies in Chandler."

Intel Corp., SRP and others volunteer to judge and work at
HISEF.

For several years, industry leaders have bemoaned the state of
science literacy among U.S. students. They complain they can't
find qualified workers to operate machines or find engineering
solutions to problems.

"Every kid has to be science literate," Karantinos said.

At the Knox Elementary science fair, the emphasis was on
engineering projects this year, said Sladjana Larson, a
sixth-grade teacher who also coordinates the school fair.

The school includes typical and gifted students, some of whom
draw on their family's engineering backgrounds.

More interesting projects included the most efficient way to
pop popcorn, the best way to clean an oil spill and the most
efficient way to remove a stain, Larson said.

"I know that other districts have science projects, but
Chandler puts a lot of emphasis on going to HISEF," Larson
said.

The fair featured 150 projects. Among the first-place projects
in fourth grade was one that explored the relationship between
an animal's color and its ability to avoid predators.

"The more it blended it, the better it was," said Jacob
Gandara, 10.

Because he and his partner Ryan Bybee, 9, are fourth-graders,
they won't be competing at HISEF.

But the bragging rights were good enough.

"I was still really surprised and was jumping up and down,"
Ryan said.

And that's the point, said Jennifer Gutierrez, a CUSD
instructional specialist.

"The goal is to get as many of our kids competing as early as
possible," she said.

Read the original:
Science is king in Chandler schools