Page 2,726«..1020..2,7252,7262,7272,728..2,7402,750..»

Category Archives: Transhuman News

Tina Fey Asked To Weigh In On Slaughter At French Magazine, Defends Right To Make Dumb Jokes

Posted: January 9, 2015 at 9:47 pm

An eczema of Tina Fey Defends Free Speech headlines broke out on the web this morning when Fey came to the Winter TV Press Tour to talk about Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, her new comedy series for Netflix. Thats because TV critics and Reporters Who Cover Television woke up this morning to news of a terrorist attack on French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo. And so, in one of the most awkward moments of any TV Press Tour though this ones still in its first day and looking promising a reporter asked Fey to comment about the executions at the publication and the importance of satire, and to tie it into her work on this show and 30 Rock and Saturday Night Live.

Fey, who appeared not to have been prepped for that question, responded hesitantly. Obviously, that news is terrible and tragic and upsetting, she said, noting that todays news and the controversy surrounding the Sony movie The Interview are a reminder of how important free speech is and you cannot back down.

By way of a follow-up, another reporter asked Fey how she had dealt with pressure to not write or say something in her work. She deftlydodged that one, instead speaking more generically about this social media era, where you can make a joke on American TV and it can go worldwide. But were Americans; we have to be able even if its just dumb jokes in The Interview we have the right to make them.

Read more:
Tina Fey Asked To Weigh In On Slaughter At French Magazine, Defends Right To Make Dumb Jokes

Posted in Eczema | Comments Off on Tina Fey Asked To Weigh In On Slaughter At French Magazine, Defends Right To Make Dumb Jokes

Novel breast cancer gene found

Posted: at 9:46 pm

A new study identifies a gene that is especially active in aggressive subtypes of breast cancer. The research suggests that an overactive BCL11A gene drives triple-negative breast cancer development and progression.

The research, which was done in human cells and in mice, provides new routes to explore targeted treatments for this aggressive tumour type.

There are many types of breast cancers that respond differently to treatments and have different prognoses. Approximately one in five patients is affected by triple-negative breast cancer; these cancers lack three receptor proteins that respond to hormone therapies used for other subtypes of breast cancer. In recent years it has become apparent that the majority of triple-negative tumours are of the basal-like subtype.

Although new treatments are being explored, the prognosis for triple-negative cancer is poorer than for other types. To date, only a handful of genomic aberrations in genes have been associated with the development of triple-negative breast cancer.

The team looked at breast cancers from almost 3000 patients. Their search had a particular focus: they examined changes to genes that affect the behaviour of stem cells and developing tissues, because other work they have done suggests that such genes, when mutated, can often drive cancer development. Among these was BCL11A.

"Our understanding of genes that drive stem cell development led us to search for consequences when these genes go wrong," says Dr Pentao Liu, senior author on the study, from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. "BCL11A activity stood out because it is so active in triple-negative cancers.

"It had all the hallmarks of a novel breast cancer gene."

Higher activity of the BCL11A gene was found in approximately eight out of ten patients with basal-like breast cancer and was associated with a more advanced grade of tumour. In cases where additional copies of the BCL11A gene were created in the cancer, the prospects for survival of the patient were diminished.

"Our gene studies in human cells clearly marked BCL11A as a novel driver for triple-negative breast cancers," says Dr Walid Khaled, joint first author on the study from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and University of Cambridge. "We also showed that adding an active human BCL11A gene to human or mouse breast cells in the lab drove them to behave as cancer cells.

"As important, when we reduced the activity of BCL11A in three samples of human triple-negative breast cancer cells, they lost some characteristics of cancer cells and became less tumorigenic when tested in mice. So by increasing BCL11A activity we increase cancer-like behaviour; by reducing it, we reduce cancer-like behaviour."

Link:
Novel breast cancer gene found

Posted in Gene Medicine | Comments Off on Novel breast cancer gene found

Gene mutations cause most cancers

Posted: at 9:46 pm

Story highlights Roughly two-thirds of cancers in adults can be attributed to random mutations, study says "The remaining third are due to environmental factors and inherited genes" Behaviors (e.g. smoking, excessive sun exposure) still strongly tied to some cancers

That's bad luck -- and it's the primary cause of most cancer cases, says a Johns Hopkins Medicine research study.

Roughly two-thirds of cancers in adults can be attributed to random mutations in genes capable of driving cancer growth, said two scientists who ran statistics on cancer cases.

That may sound jaw-dropping. And Johns Hopkins anticipates that the study will change the way people think about cancer risk factors.

They also believe it could lead to changes in the funding of cancer studies, with a greater focus on finding ways to detect those cancers attributed to random mutations in genes at early, curable stages.

Smoking can still kill you

But, no, that's not permission to smoke or to not use sunblock.

Some forms of cancer are exceptions, where lifestyle and environment play a big role. Lung cancer is one of them. So is skin cancer.

And, if cancer runs in your family, this unfortunately doesn't mean you're in the clear. Some cancers are more strongly influenced by genetic heritage than others.

"The remaining third (of cancer cases) are due to environmental factors and inherited genes," the Kimmel Cancer Center said in a statement on the study published Friday in the magazine Science.

Read the rest here:
Gene mutations cause most cancers

Posted in Gene Medicine | Comments Off on Gene mutations cause most cancers

Real Global Agenda – Ron Paul Discusses Janet Yellen On Fox Business – Video

Posted: at 9:44 pm


Real Global Agenda - Ron Paul Discusses Janet Yellen On Fox Business

By: Real Global Agenda

Original post:
Real Global Agenda - Ron Paul Discusses Janet Yellen On Fox Business - Video

Posted in Ron Paul | Comments Off on Real Global Agenda – Ron Paul Discusses Janet Yellen On Fox Business – Video

Ron Paul Blames Terrorist Attack On French Policy – Video

Posted: at 9:44 pm


Ron Paul Blames Terrorist Attack On French Policy
As he has said in the past about the attacks of September 11, 2001, Ron Paul again argued Wednesday that bad foreign policy, this time on the part of France, invites retaliation,...

By: Secular Talk

Here is the original post:
Ron Paul Blames Terrorist Attack On French Policy - Video

Posted in Ron Paul | Comments Off on Ron Paul Blames Terrorist Attack On French Policy – Video

The Wild History of Libertarianism: Interview with Matt Zwolinski – Video

Posted: at 9:44 pm


The Wild History of Libertarianism: Interview with Matt Zwolinski
Jeffrey Tucker interview Matt Zwolinski about his new book on libertarianism.

By: Liberty.me

See the rest here:
The Wild History of Libertarianism: Interview with Matt Zwolinski - Video

Posted in Libertarianism | Comments Off on The Wild History of Libertarianism: Interview with Matt Zwolinski – Video

Four Reasons To Worry About Global Warming: Beyond Scientific Consensus

Posted: at 9:43 pm

Yesterday I was struck by a Forbes headline, 97% Of Climate Scientists Agree Is 100%Wrong. The post questions the way Australian science popularizer John Cook arrived at this often-quoted number to illustrate the scientific consensus that human activity is contributing to global warming.

I agree with one statement in the post, which is the premise that in science, logic and explanation trump scientific opinion. I would have said logic and evidence, but thats close enough. And yet, the piece focuses primarily on the derivation of the 97% statistic, rather than on the logic and explanation behind the concern over human-generated global warming and the widespread fear among scientists that global warming will indeed prove dangerous and costly. I decided to expand on this post by giving some climate scientists a chance weigh in.

1: The oceans are getting warmer.

Measurements of global air temperatures show a long-term rise over recent decades, but the rise isnt steady. Like the stock market, it jumps up and down on shorter time scales. There was a spike in 1998, for example. If you measure global warming from that year onward, you get a distorted picture the overall trend, said Penn State climatologist Richard Alley. The trend over decades is what we should focus on.

Whats even more worrisome, he explained, is that air temperatures only give part of the picture. The real concern with the buildup of greenhouse gases is that were getting more energy from the sun than were sending back into space, he said. That energy, he said, is not only warming the atmosphere, its also melting ice and warming the oceans.

The oceans have warmed by about .3 degrees F since 1969, according to NASA. How much greenhouse gas-related heating goes into the ocean depends on currents known as El Nino and La Nina, he said. Those currents affect the surface temperatures of the oceans, with warmer water coming to the surface during the El Nino phase. In 1998, El Nino switched to La Nina. That shift caused cooler water to come to the surface and allowed the oceans to absorb heat like a big sponge.

During the years since, the measured air temperature rise has flattened. Some people have used that trend to argue that global warming has stopped. It hasnt. The currents have tended to oscillate, said Alley, so eventually the oceans will switch back to the El Nino pattern, after which that warmer water will come back to the surface and force more heat to go into the atmosphere.

2: Theres experimental evidence showing that carbon dioxide in the atmosphere acts to direct heat back toward Earth heat that would otherwise have been lost to space. Thats the greenhouse effect. And theres ample data showing that weve changed the composition of the atmosphere enough to alter the global climate.

In fact, human activity has nearly doubled our atmospheres load of carbon dioxide since the Industrial Revolution started. The basics behind this are the laws of physics, said Ben Horton a professor of marine and coastal sciences at Rutgers University.

The reason we accept that fossil fuel burning is increasing CO2 and warming the planet comes down to basic physics and chemistry thats more than 100 years old, said Penn State University climatologist Michael Mann. The fact that were measuring the effects is validation of the prediction.

Read the original here:
Four Reasons To Worry About Global Warming: Beyond Scientific Consensus

Posted in Post Human | Comments Off on Four Reasons To Worry About Global Warming: Beyond Scientific Consensus

UCLA study IDs two genes that boost risk for post-traumatic stress disorder

Posted: at 9:43 pm

IMAGE:This is Dr. Armen Goenjian. view more

Credit: UCLA

Why do some people develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) while others who suffered the same ordeal do not? A new UCLA discovery may shed light on the answer.

UCLA scientists have linked two gene variants to the debilitating mental disorder, suggesting that heredity influences a person's risk of developing PTSD. Published in the February 2015 edition of the Journal of Affective Disorders, the findings could provide a biological basis for diagnosing and treating PTSD more effectively in the future.

"Many people suffer with post-traumatic stress disorder after surviving a life-threatening ordeal like war, rape or a natural disaster," explained lead author Dr. Armen Goenjian, a researcher at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA. "But not everyone who experiences trauma suffers from PTSD. We investigated whether PTSD has genetic underpinnings that make some people more vulnerable to the syndrome than others."

In 1988, Goenjian, an Armenian American, raced to Spitak, Armenia, after a 6.8 magnitude earthquake devastated the country. The temblor leveled entire towns and cities, killing more than 25,000 Armenians, two-thirds of them children.

With support from the Armenian Relief Society, Goenjian and his colleagues helped establish a pair of psychiatric clinics that treated earthquake survivors for 21 years. A dozen multigenerational families in northern Armenia agreed to allow their blood samples to be sent to UCLA, where Goenjian and his colleagues combed the DNA of 200 individuals for genetic clues to psychiatric vulnerability.

In 2012, his team discovered that PTSD was more common in survivors who carried two gene variants associated with depression. In the current study, Goenjian and first author Julia Bailey, an adjunct assistant professor of epidemiology at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, focused on two genes called COMT and TPH-2 that play important roles in brain function.

COMT is an enzyme that degrades dopamine, a neurotransmitter that controls the brain's reward and pleasure centers, and helps regulate mood, thinking, attention and behavior. Too much or too little dopamine can influence various neurological and psychological disorders.

TPH-2 controls the production of serotonin, a brain hormone that regulates mood, sleep and alertness -- all of which are disrupted in PTSD. Antidepressants called SSRIs, or selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors, which were designed to treat depression, target serotonin. More physicians are prescribing SSRIs to treat disorders beyond depression, including PTSD.

Continued here:
UCLA study IDs two genes that boost risk for post-traumatic stress disorder

Posted in Post Human | Comments Off on UCLA study IDs two genes that boost risk for post-traumatic stress disorder

Two genes linked to predisposition for PTSD

Posted: at 9:43 pm

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online

While severe trauma can cause post-traumatic stress disorder, not everyone who experiences such events develop PTSD, and now UCLA scientists believe they know why.

Dr. Armen Goenjian, a researcher at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA, and his colleagues report in the February edition of the Journal of Affective Disorders that they have linked to gene variants to the trauma-related anxiety disorder.

The findings, they explained, could provide a biological basis for diagnosing and treating PTSD more effectively in the future. It could also lead to faster diagnoses for patients, they added.

Many people suffer with post-traumatic stress disorder after surviving a life-threatening ordeal like war, rape or a natural disaster, Dr. Goenjian explained. But not everyone who experiences trauma suffers from PTSD. We investigated whether PTSD has genetic underpinnings that make some people more vulnerable to the syndrome than others.

Dr. Goenjian, an Armenian American, travelled to that country after a 6.8 magnitude earthquake leveled towns and cities and killed over 25,000 people in 1988. He and his colleagues, with the assistance of the Armenian Relief Society, established a pair of psychiatric clinics that provided treatment to survivors of the earthquake for more than two decades.

Twelve multigenerational families in northern Armenia gave permission to have their blood samples sent to UCLA, where Dr. Goenjian and his colleagues analyzed the DNA of 200 men and women in search of genetic clues to psychiatric vulnerability.

In April 2012, research by his team revealed that that PTSD was more common in survivors who carried two gene variants associated with depression. Now, along with UCLA Fielding School of Public Health adjunct assistant professor of epidemiology Julia Bailey, Dr. Goenjian focused on two genes (COMT and TPH-2) known to play key roles in the function of the brain.

COMT, the researchers explain, is an enzyme that degrades the neurotransmitter dopamine, which controls the reward and pleasure center of the brain and helps regulate mood. Too much or too little dopamine can influence various neurological and psychological disorders, they said.

TPH-2, on the other hand, controls the production of the brain hormone serotonin, which regulates mood, sleep and alertness. All three are affected by PTSD, and a type of antidepressant known as selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRIs) target the hormone to treat depression. An increasing number of doctors are prescribing them to treat PTSD, the study authors noted.

View post:
Two genes linked to predisposition for PTSD

Posted in Post Human | Comments Off on Two genes linked to predisposition for PTSD

Study IDs Two Genes That Boost Risk for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Posted: at 9:43 pm

Contact Information

Available for logged-in reporters only

Newswise Why do some people develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) while others who suffered the same ordeal do not? A new UCLA discovery may shed light on the answer.

UCLA scientists have linked two gene variants to the debilitating mental disorder, suggesting that heredity influences a persons risk of developing PTSD. Published in the February 2015 edition of the Journal of Affective Disorders, the findings could provide a biological basis for diagnosing and treating PTSD more effectively in the future.

Many people suffer with post-traumatic stress disorder after surviving a life-threatening ordeal like war, rape or a natural disaster, explained lead author Dr. Armen Goenjian, a researcher at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA. But not everyone who experiences trauma suffers from PTSD. We investigated whether PTSD has genetic underpinnings that make some people more vulnerable to the syndrome than others.

In 1988, Goenjian, an Armenian American, raced to Spitak, Armenia, after a 6.8 magnitude earthquake devastated the country. The temblor leveled entire towns and cities, killing more than 25,000 Armenians, two-thirds of them children.

With support from the Armenian Relief Society, Goenjian and his colleagues helped establish a pair of psychiatric clinics that treated earthquake survivors for 21 years. A dozen multigenerational families in northern Armenia agreed to allow their blood samples to be sent to UCLA, where Goenjian and his colleagues combed the DNA of 200 individuals for genetic clues to psychiatric vulnerability.

In 2012, his team discovered that PTSD was more common in survivors who carried two gene variants associated with depression. In the current study, Goenjian and first author Julia Bailey, an adjunct assistant professor of epidemiology at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, focused on two genes called COMT and TPH-2 that play important roles in brain function.

COMT is an enzyme that degrades dopamine, a neurotransmitter that controls the brains reward and pleasure centers, and helps regulate mood, thinking, attention and behavior. Too much or too little dopamine can influence various neurological and psychological disorders.

TPH-2 controls the production of serotonin, a brain hormone that regulates mood, sleep and alertness all of which are disrupted in PTSD. Antidepressants called SSRIs, or selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors, which were designed to treat depression, target serotonin. More physicians are prescribing SSRIs to treat disorders beyond depression, including PTSD.

Follow this link:
Study IDs Two Genes That Boost Risk for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Posted in Post Human | Comments Off on Study IDs Two Genes That Boost Risk for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Page 2,726«..1020..2,7252,7262,7272,728..2,7402,750..»