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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Let’s Play Space Engineers – Episode 87: Space Station Project Part 16 – Video

Posted: February 21, 2014 at 7:44 pm


Let #39;s Play Space Engineers - Episode 87: Space Station Project Part 16
On this episode of Space Engineers, we continue the Space Station Project. Using a combination of the new features from the recent Game Update some suggest...

By: Sleepless Knights Studios

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Let's Play Space Engineers - Episode 87: Space Station Project Part 16 - Video

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If the moon was closer to Earth – Video

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If the moon was closer to Earth
As the sky would look if the Moon were the same distance from Earth as the International Space Station.

By: Bonilla Alexander

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If the moon was closer to Earth - Video

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High stakes: Canadian Space Agency wins hockey bet with NASA

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It was a sweet bet that paid off in mouthfuls for the Canadian Space Agency.

On the line in the Canada-United States men's hockey wager with NASA was a box of cookies.

Thanks to Canada's semi-final victory at the Sochi Olympics on Friday, the Americans will eventually ship a box of maple creams to the International Space Station.

The U.S. space agency had accepted the challenge by wagering a cookie emblazoned with red, white and blue "Stars and Stripes" icing.

The Canadian Space Agency savoured the 1-0 victory, saying on its Twitter account: "Can't tweet. Mouth full, crumbs abound!"

With an eye on Sunday's Olympic gold-medal game against Sweden, the CSA then tweeted: "How to do you say maple cream cookies in Swedish?"

It won't be the first time the creamy biscuits have been in space.

While on the space station last April, then-Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield took a picture of a floating maple cookie and then ate it.

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High stakes: Canadian Space Agency wins hockey bet with NASA

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Space Station Astronaut Set To Visit Northwest Oregon

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NASA astronaut and recent International Space Station residentChris Cassidywill be giving two public presentations and making several stops at schools in northwestOregondiscussing his latest spaceflight and encouraging students to dream big.

At6:30 p.m. PST Monday, Feb. 24, Cassidy will give his first public presentation in the auditorium at Central High School, 1530 Monmouth St.,Independence, Ore.The presentation includes video highlights of Cassidy's recent mission to the space station as well as a question-and-answer session with audience members. The event is free of charge and open to the media.

A similar presentation will take place at7 p.m. PST Tuesday, Feb. 25, in the Bldg. 6 auditorium atChemeketa Community College, 4000 Lancaster Drive NE,Salem, Ore.

Along the way, Cassidy will visit additional schools inCorvallis,Independence,MonmouthandSalem. For information about the individual school visits contactGreg Mitchell, principal, Central High School, at 503-606-2216 orgmitchell@central.k12.or.us.

Cassidy spent six months living aboard the space station as a flight engineer on Expedition 36. During his stay, Cassidy and his crewmates conducted hundreds of research experiments before returning to earth onSept. 10, 2013. He is a 1993 graduate of theU.S. Naval Academyand a former member of the U.S. Navy SEAL Team. The two-time spaceflight veteran has completed six spacewalks, totaling 31 hours and 14 minutes and accumulated 182 days in space.

Journalists seeking interviews with Cassidy should contactBrenda Cabanissat 281-244-8860 orBrenda.a.cabaniss@nasa.gov.

For information about NASA, visit:http://www.nasa.gov

Please follow SpaceRef on Twitter and Like us on Facebook.

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5:10 How To Survive Armageddon, Peter Kling 20Feb2014 – Video

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5:10 How To Survive Armageddon, Peter Kling 20Feb2014
If you #39;re reading this at http://www.guerillamedia.co.nz click "Original Article" on the bottom right for the video. PLEASE SUBSCRIBE AND GIVE A THUMBS UP Wa...

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5:10 How To Survive Armageddon, Peter Kling 20Feb2014 - Video

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9:10 How To Survive Armageddon, Peter Kling 20Feb2014 – Video

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9:10 How To Survive Armageddon, Peter Kling 20Feb2014
If you #39;re reading this at http://www.guerillamedia.co.nz click "Original Article" on the bottom right for the video. PLEASE SUBSCRIBE AND GIVE A THUMBS UP Wa...

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9:10 How To Survive Armageddon, Peter Kling 20Feb2014 - Video

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Does a diet high in carbohydrates increase your risk of dementia?

Posted: at 7:44 pm

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

21-Feb-2014

Contact: Vicki Cohn vcohn@liebertpub.com 914-740-2156 Mary Ann Liebert, Inc./Genetic Engineering News

New Rochelle, NY, February 21, 2014Even small increases in blood sugar caused by a diet high in carbohydrates can be detrimental to brain health. Recent reports in medical literature link carbohydrate calorie-rich diets to a greater risk for brain shrinkage, dementia and Alzheimer's disease, impaired cognition, and other disorders. David Perlmutter, MD, best-selling author of Grain Brain, explores this important topic in a provocative interview in Alternative and Complementary Therapies from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available free on the Alternative and Complementary Therapies website.

Dr. Perlmutter, a board-certified neurologist and fellow of the American College of Nutrition, has just been appointed Editor-in-Chief of a new peer-reviewed journal, Brain and Gut, that will debut in summer 2014. The journal will publish leading-edge research dedicated to exploring a whole systems approach to health and disease from the intimate relationship between the brain and the digestive systems.

In the interview "Rethinking Dietary Approaches for Brain Health," Dr. Perlmutter says, "We live with this notion that a calorie is a calorie, but at least in terms of brain health, and I believe for the rest of the body as well, there are very big differences between our sources of calories in terms of the impact on our health. Carbohydrate calories, which elevate blood glucose, are dramatically more detrimental to human physiology, and specifically to human health, than are calories derived from healthful sources of fat."

Dr. Perlmutter will explore how brain health and cognitive function are linked to nutrition in his presentation, "The Care and Feeding of Your Brain," to be delivered at the 2014 Integrative Healthcare Symposium taking place now in New York City.

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About the Journal

Alternative and Complementary Therapies is a bimonthly journal that publishes original articles, reviews, and commentaries evaluating alternative therapies and how they can be integrated into clinical practice. Topics include botanical medicine, vitamins and supplements, nutrition and diet, mind-body medicine, acupuncture and traditional Chinese medicine, Ayurveda, indigenous medicine systems, homeopathy, naturopathy, yoga and meditation, manual therapies, energy medicine, and spirituality and health. Tables of content and a sample issue may be viewed on the Alternative and Complementary Therapies website.

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3-D Printing and Additive Manufacturing: Preview issue of groundbreaking peer-reviewed journal now available

Posted: at 7:44 pm

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

21-Feb-2014

Contact: Sophie Mohin smohin@liebertpub.com 914-740-2100 x2254 Mary Ann Liebert, Inc./Genetic Engineering News

New Rochelle, NY, February 20, 2014A new era of manufacturing is upon us. Recent developments in 3D printing and additive manufacturing technologies are set to usher in the next generation of industrial competitiveness. To address the rapid advances and potential of this groundbreaking new technology, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers has released an exclusive preview issue of our new peer-reviewed journal 3D Printing and Additive Manufacturing (3DP).

Editor-in-Chief Dr. Hod Lipson, Director of Cornell University's Creative Machines Lab at the Sibley School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, and his expert Editorial Board invite you to view this exclusive preview issue. The Journal will explore emerging challenges and opportunities in additive manufacturing, ranging from new developments of processes and materials, to novel applications in new areas, such as health, medicine, and bio-printing.

To maximize the global impact of this important forum, the articles will be translated into Mandarin Chinese and appear alongside the English version.

"This powerful new journal provides a much-needed multidisciplinary forum on the rapidly evolving technologies of 3D printing engineering and additive manufacturing on a global scale," says Dr. Lipson. "3DP provides a much-needed professional forum for professionals interested in 3D printing across diverse fields, to work towards establishing the next industrial revolution. This journal provides biologists, engineers, materials specialists, and computer scientists a common meeting place."

3DP also addresses the important questions surrounding this powerful and growing field, including issues in policy and law, intellectual property, data standards, safety and liability, environmental impact, social, economic, and humanitarian implications, and emerging business models at the industrial and consumer scales.

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Contact: Sophie Mohin, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., (914) 740-2100, smohin@liebertpub.com

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Self Regional Healthcare, Clemson, Genetic Center create national genetics research hub

Posted: at 7:44 pm

GREENWOOD A new partnership will establish formal collaboration among genetic researchers and Clemson University faculty at the Greenwood Genetic Center and Self Regional Healthcare, expanding an already successful working relationship.

Self Regional Healthcare will support the Clemson University Center for Human Genetics with a gift of $5.6 million over three years. The gift consists of an initial contribution of $2 million for the centers facilities and a subsequent contribution of $3.6 million to support research in genetics and human diagnostics at the facility located on the Greenwood Genetic Center campus.

Todays announcement will create a new pipeline for genetic research, said John Pillman, chairman of the Self Regional board of trustees, on Friday. The collaboration of these three partners will ultimately connect genetic therapeutics research to patients.

Jim Pfeiffer, president and chief executive officer of Self Regional, said the partnership will accelerate the rate of innovation in genetic medicine. This is what I like to call a win-win-win scenario, said Pfeiffer.

Steve Skinner, director of the Greenwood Genetic Center, said such collaborations are crucial to turning research advances into clinically available therapies for patients, not only in Greenwood and across South Carolina, but globally.

This collaboration is a major step forward for patients as we combine the resources and strengths of each institution: Selfs commitment to patient care, Clemsons expertise in basic scientific research and our experience with genetic disorders and treatment, Skinner said.

Self Regional and the Genetic Center have had an affiliation agreement since 1975 with the Genetic Centers clinical faculty serving as the Department of Medical Genetics for Self Regional.

Clemson University President James P. Clements said the announcement brings us a step closer to moving basic discoveries in human genetics from a research environment to a clinical setting where they can be used to diagnose and treat genetic-related human disorders.

Clemson is proud to be part of this important collaborative effort, and were grateful to Self Regional Healthcare for its support of our research efforts at the Greenwood Genetic Center, Clements said.

Clemsons Steve Kresovich, the Robert and Lois Coker Trustees Chair of Genetics, is responsible for overseeing research programs and managing collaborative activities between Clemson faculty and personnel at the partner institutions.

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CHOP Researcher Co-Leads Study Finding Genes that Affect Blood Pressure

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Available for logged-in reporters only

Newswise Philadelphia, Feb. 20, 2014 A large international study analyzing genes in tens of thousands of individuals has discovered 11 new genetic signals associated with blood pressure levels. Ten of those signals are in or very near genes encoding proteins that appear to be likely targets for drugs already in existence or in development.

The fact that most of these new gene signals are druggable targets offers the possibility of expedited pharmaceutical development of therapeutics for high blood pressure, a serious risk factor for cardiovascular diseases, said geneticist Brendan J. Keating, D. Phil., of The Center for Applied Genomics at The Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia, co-senior author of the study. Some of the protein targets already are targets of existing drugs for other diseases, while others are the focus of drugs currently in early-phase clinical trials or under preclinical development.

Keating collaborated with two other senior co-authors, Folkert W. Asselbergs, M.D., Ph.D., of University Medical Center Utrecht, the Netherlands, and Patricia B. Munroe, Ph.D., of Queen Mary University, London, U.K. The study appears online today in the American Journal of Human Genetics. Study co-authors were from the U.S., the U.K., the Netherlands, Canada, Germany, Sweden and Ireland.

High blood pressure, or hypertension, a chronic medical condition, is a well-known risk factor for heart disease, stroke, peripheral artery disease and chronic kidney disease. It is a complex condition, affected by many different genes. Because not all patients respond well to current blood pressure medications and other treatments, and other patients require combinations of three or more drugs, there is a substantial unmet need for improved medicines.

In the current study, the researchers performed a discovery analysis of DNA from more than 87,000 individuals of European ancestry. They then assessed their initial findings in a replication test, using an independent set of another 68,000 individuals.

The study team confirmed 27 previously discovered gene signals associated with blood pressure, and discovered 11 novel genetic signals. When the researchers used pharmacological databases to analyze potential targets in the discovered genetic regions, they found that gene products associated with 10 of the genes were predicted to be targets for small-molecule drugs. Two genes, KCNJ11 and NQO1, in fact, are already currently targeted by existing approved drugs. If clinicians can reposition existing drugs to treat some patients with hypertension, this will save significant time in drug development, as they wont be starting development from scratch, said Keating.

Keating added that other gene signals discovered in the study are associated with candidate drugs currently under development within pharmaceutical companies, and it may be possible that they can be repositioned as blood pressure therapeutics.

He stressed that even with possible repositioning, much research remains to be done to determine which drug candidates are effective against hypertension, possibly in personalized treatments based on patients genetic makeup. Keating added that the list of genes affecting blood pressure will likely grow as research continues.

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