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impressions.
RESEARCHBLOGGING.ORG NEWS » BLOG ARCHIVE This is the news blog for ResearchBlogging.org. We identify and aggregate academic blog posts about peer-reviewed research. Click here for our guidelines for using the ResearchBlogging.org CONSERVATION MAVEN'S PROFILE Lasky, J., Jetz, W., & Keitt, T. (2011) Conservation biogeography of the US-Mexico border: a transcontinental risk assessment of barriersto animal dispersal
BLAKE DE PASTINO'S PROFILE A close look at bones found in a Yukon cave seems to confirm a controversial finding made decades ago, archaeologists say: that humans arrived in North America 10,000 years earlier than many expertsbelieve.
DR. CARIN BONDAR
Dr. Carin Bondar - Biologist With a Twist. Visit Blog Website. 51 posts · 56,672 views. My blog is a quirky collection of tantalizing biology information. Each week I review a paper (Carin's Paper Pick O' the Week), interview a biology professor (Nerd Corner), and RESEARCHBLOGGING.ORG NEWS » BLOG ARCHIVE Throughout history we’ve seen examples of artists and others who, while possessing amazing talent, also don’t seem “normal.” Whether it be tormented artists like Vincent van Gogh, or the stereotype of the “mad scientist,” it often seems like a little schizophrenia might underlie amazing genius. MAIN - RESEARCH BLOGGING Main Point: Researchers have found that N400 can work as an effective neural marker of deception or telling a lie. Journal: PLoS ONE StudyFurther:
RESEARCHBLOGGING.ORG NEWS » BLOG ARCHIVE 43 Responses to “ResearchBlogCast #11: Using the genome to identify species” penis wart Says: November 26th, 2011 at 7:41 pm. It never ceases to surprize me that, having a bit of additional browsing internet, you may uncover a few of the most distinctive blogs. POSTS - RESEARCH BLOGGING So: "These results support the potential of creating a quick, accurate and widely accessible method for differentiating risks between ASD and ADHD ."That was a conclusion reached in the paper by Marlena Duda and colleagues (open-access) building on their previous foray into this important research area (see here). RESEARCHBLOGGING.ORG NEWS » RESEARCHBLOGCAST Each week, Kevin Zelnio, Razib Khan, and I choose one or more journal articles that have been covered by bloggers on ResearchBlogging.org to discuss in podcast form. Ideally, you’ll read the blog post first to get a general understanding of the research, then listen to our podcast to hear our impressions. RESEARCHBLOGGING.ORG NEWS » BLOG ARCHIVE Each week, Research Bloggers Kevin Zelnio, Razib Khan, and I will choose a journal article to discuss in podcast form. We’ll make sure it’s an article that we or someone else has covered on their blog, so ideally, you’ll read the blog post first to get a general understanding of the research, then listen to our podcast to hear ourimpressions.
RESEARCHBLOGGING.ORG NEWS » BLOG ARCHIVE This is the news blog for ResearchBlogging.org. We identify and aggregate academic blog posts about peer-reviewed research. Click here for our guidelines for using the ResearchBlogging.org CONSERVATION MAVEN'S PROFILE Lasky, J., Jetz, W., & Keitt, T. (2011) Conservation biogeography of the US-Mexico border: a transcontinental risk assessment of barriersto animal dispersal
BLAKE DE PASTINO'S PROFILE A close look at bones found in a Yukon cave seems to confirm a controversial finding made decades ago, archaeologists say: that humans arrived in North America 10,000 years earlier than many expertsbelieve.
DR. CARIN BONDAR
Dr. Carin Bondar - Biologist With a Twist. Visit Blog Website. 51 posts · 56,672 views. My blog is a quirky collection of tantalizing biology information. Each week I review a paper (Carin's Paper Pick O' the Week), interview a biology professor (Nerd Corner), and RESEARCHBLOGGING.ORG NEWS » BLOG ARCHIVE Throughout history we’ve seen examples of artists and others who, while possessing amazing talent, also don’t seem “normal.” Whether it be tormented artists like Vincent van Gogh, or the stereotype of the “mad scientist,” it often seems like a little schizophrenia might underlie amazing genius. MAIN - RESEARCH BLOGGING Main Point: Researchers have found that N400 can work as an effective neural marker of deception or telling a lie. Journal: PLoS ONE StudyFurther:
RESEARCHBLOGGING.ORG NEWS » BLOG ARCHIVE 43 Responses to “ResearchBlogCast #11: Using the genome to identify species” penis wart Says: November 26th, 2011 at 7:41 pm. It never ceases to surprize me that, having a bit of additional browsing internet, you may uncover a few of the most distinctive blogs. NEURAL INTERFACE'S PROFILE Deshpande Sudheer, Nagendra H R, & Nagarathna Raghuram. (2009) A randomized control trial of the effect of yoga on Gunas (personality) and Self esteem in normal healthy volunteers. International Journal of Yoga, 2(1), 13-21. PMID: 21234210 NOT EXACTLY ROCKET SCIENCE'S PROFILE If you look at the skeleton of the flesh-eating dinosaur called Carnotaurus, two features instantly stand out: the skull and the arms. The fearsome skull is short, deep and topped by two devilish horns. Hence, its name: “meat-eating bull”. The arms are much less fearsome – they’re so short that they make Tyrannosaurus’sstunted fore
SCIENCETEXT'S PROFILE Sciencetext. Visit Blog Website. 88 posts · 152,845 views. A computing and technology blog providing readers with hacks and solutions for their computing and internet problems as well as research posts covering the underlying technology behind computing and the internet. David Bradley. BEGIN TO DIG (B2D)'S PROFILE Andersson H, Raastad T, Nilsson J, Paulsen G, Garthe I, & Kadi F. (2008) Neuromuscular fatigue and recovery in elite female soccer: effects of active recovery. Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 40(2), 372-80. PMID: 18202563 MAIN - RESEARCH BLOGGING Williams, K., Scott, M., & Elmquist, J. (2009) From observation to experimentation: leptin action in the mediobasal hypothalamus.AmericanJournal of Clinical
MAIN - RESEARCH BLOGGING Tuberous sclerosis (TSC) is an inherited tumour syndrome that shares clinical similarities with Birt-Hogg-Dube Syndrome. It is caused by mutations in TSC1 or TSC2 that lead to aberrant activation of mTOR, affecting multiple organs, including the kidney and lung. TERRA SIGILLATA'S PROFILE A very well-written review of an orally-active drug for multiple sclerosis has just appeared in the April 25th issue of the Journal of Natural Products, a publication of ACS in conjunction with the American Society of Pharmacognosy. HAZELNUT RELATIONS'S PROFILE Mai, June, early summer. For those loving the mountains, latest by now it starts to itch again. Summer has slowly arrived in the lowlands, but at higher altitudes there is still snow in places. MAIN - RESEARCH BLOGGING Main Point: Researchers have found that N400 can work as an effective neural marker of deception or telling a lie. Journal: PLoS ONE StudyFurther:
CONFESSIONS OF A (FORMER) LAB RAT'S PROFILE YANG, J., FELSEN, D., & POPPAS, D. (2007) Nerve Sparing Ventral Clitoroplasty: Analysis of Clitoral Sensitivity and Viability.The Journal of Urology, 178(4), 1598NOV 2020
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POST LIST
* June 1, 2017
* 04:43 AM
* 7,333 views
DIFFERENTIATING BETWEEN AUTISM AND ADHD THE MACHINE LEARNING WAY(AGAIN)
by Paul Whiteley in Questioning Answers WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
So: "These results support the potential of creating a quick, accurate and widely accessible method for differentiating risks between ASD and ADHD ."That was a conclusion reached in the paper by Marlena Duda and colleagues (open-access) building on their previous foray into this important research area (see here). Last time around this research group - the Duda/Wall et al research combination - set t........ Read more » Duda M, Haber N, Daniels J, & Wall DP. (2017) Crowdsourced validation of a machine-learning classification system for autism and ADHD.Translational
psychiatry, 7(5). PMID: 28509905Crowdsourced
validation of a machine-learning classification system for autism andADHD.
* Health
* Biology
* Medicine
* Psychology
* June 1, 2017
* 12:59 AM
* 5,512 views
D10 IN THE TREATMENT OF PREHOSPITAL HYPOGLYCEMIA: A 24 MONTH OBSERVATIONAL COHORT STUDY by Rogue Medic in Rogue Medic WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
Why treat hypoglycemia with 10% dextrose (D10), rather than the more expensive, potentially more harmful, and less available traditional treatment of 50% dextrose (D50)? Why not? The only benefit of 50% dextrose appears to be that it is what people are used to using, but aren't we used to starting IVs (IntraVenous lines) and running fluids through the IVs? ... Read more » Hern, H., Kiefer, M., Louie, D., Barger, J., & Alter, H. (2016) D10 in the Treatment of Prehospital Hypoglycemia: A 24 Month ObservationalCohort Study .
Prehospital Emergency Care, 21(1), 63-67. DOI: 10.1080/10903127.2016.1189637D10 in the
Treatment of Prehospital Hypoglycemia: A 24 Month Observational CohortStudy
* Medicine
* Health
* Pharmacology
* Toxicology
* Medical Ethics
* May 31, 2017
* 10:34 PM
* 3,547 views
CITIES ARE BAD FOR BUMBLEBEES—EXCEPT DETROIT by Elizabeth Preston in Inkfish WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
For bumblebees, big cities are a bummer. Layers of asphalt, concrete, brick and metal add up to fewer places for the insects to nest. But one big city—Detroit—reverses that trend. That means shrinking cities might be a growing opportunity for at-risk pollinators. Bumblebees (species with the genus name Bombus) are, like other bees, in trouble. Their numbers and diversity are decreasing across North America. Other native wild bees—the insects that have been living here and pollinatin........ Read more » Glaum, P., Simao, M., Vaidya, C., Fitch, G., & Iulinao, B. (2017) Big city Bombus: using natural history and land-use history to find significant environmental drivers in bumble-bee declines in urban development . Royal Society Open Science, 4(5), 170156. DOI: 10.1098/rsos.170156 Big city Bombus: using natural history and land-use history to find significant environmental drivers in bumble-bee declines in urban development* Biology
* Ecology / Conservation* May 31, 2017
* 08:02 AM
* 3,413 views
YOUR BEST BET FOR AN EXPERT WITNESS IS A FRIENDLY NERD RATHER THAN AN ATTRACTIVE SCIENTIST by Doug Keene in The Jury Room WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
And it doesn’t really matter if the expert is male or female, if they are young or old, and they can be any ethnicity! In other words, said the researchers—the variables we have read so much about (i.e., gender, age, ethnicity) are not as notable as whether someone “looks like” our stereotype of a “good ... Read more » Gheorghiu, A., Callan, M., & Skylark, W. (2017) Facial appearance affects science communication.Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)., 201620542. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1620542114Facial appearance
affects science communication.* Psychology
* Decision-Making
* Affective Psychology * Cognitive Psychology* Human Factors
* Industrial/Organizational Psychology * Sensation and Perception* Social Psychology
* Law
* May 31, 2017
* 05:44 AM
* 3,257 views
ON MIGRATION STATUS AND OFFSPRING AUTISM SEVERITY by Paul Whiteley in Questioning Answers WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
"Black women from East Africa had more than 3.5 times the odds of autism spectrum disorder with intellectual disability in their children than Caucasian nonimmigrant women."So said the study results reported by Jenny Fairthorn and colleagues (open-access available here) providing yet more evidence for the need for much greater scrutiny as to why children of immigrant parents from East Africa are seemingly at higher risk of 'more severe' autism than other groups (see here and see here).B........ Read more » Fairthorne J, de Klerk N, Leonard HM, Schieve LA, & Yeargin-Allsopp M. (2017) Maternal Race-Ethnicity, Immigrant Status, Country of Birth, and the Odds of a Child With Autism. Child neurology open.PMID: 28503625
Maternal Race-Ethnicity, Immigrant Status, Country of Birth, and the Odds of a Child With Autism.* Health
* Biology
* Medicine
* Psychology
* May 31, 2017
* 05:30 AM
* 3,871 views
SELF-REPORTED CONCUSSION DETAILS TAKES A HIT WITH HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETES by Catherine E Lewis in Sports Medicine Research (SMR): In the Lab & In the Field WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
More targeted concussion education for high school athletes with a history of concussion is needed. Athletes with more prior concussions, especially negative experiences, are less likely to disclose symptoms, more likely to play with symptoms, and have poorer attitudes regarding concussion reporting.... Read more » Register-Mihalik, J., Valovich McLeod, T., Linnan, L., Guskiewicz, K., & Marshall, S. (2017) Relationship Between Concussion History and Concussion Knowledge, Attitudes, and Disclosure Behavior in HighSchool Athletes .
Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine, 27(3), 321-324. DOI: 10.1097/JSM.0000000000000349Relationship
Between Concussion History and Concussion Knowledge, Attitudes, and Disclosure Behavior in High School Athletes* Medicine
* neurology
* sports medicine
* May 30, 2017
* 08:29 PM
* 8,867 views
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS AND LANGUAGE: OPPORTUNITY OR THREAT? by Agnes Bodis in Language on the Move WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
With recent news on the number of international students in Australia reaching a new high and the 19.4 billion-dollar revenue...... Readmore »
Paltridge, T., Mayson, S., & Schapper, J. (2013) Welcome and exclusion: an analysis of The Australian newspaper’s coverage of international students . Higher Education, 68(1), 103-116. DOI: 10.1007/s10734-013-9689-6Welcome and
exclusion: an analysis of The Australian newspaper’s coverage of international students* Anthropology
* Social Science
* Applied Linguistics* Language learning
* Bilingualism
* Multilingualism
* Intercultural Communication * English-as-Global-Language* Language
* Linguistics
* Sociolinguistics
* May 30, 2017
* 08:22 PM
* 4,215 views
KINEMATIC AND KINETIC RISK FACTORS FOR RUNNING INJURY by Craig Payne in Running Research Junkie WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
Kinematic and Kinetic Risk Factors for Running Injury... Read more » Dudley, R., Pamukoff, D., Lynn, S., Kersey, R., & Noffal, G. (2017) A prospective comparison of lower extremity kinematics and kinetics between injured and non-injured collegiate cross country runners. Human Movement
Science, 197-202. DOI: 10.1016/j.humov.2017.02.007A prospective
comparison of lower extremity kinematics and kinetics between injured and non-injured collegiate cross country runners* Medicine
* May 30, 2017
* 04:57 AM
* 3,099 views
HEALTHCARE USE BEFORE, DURING AND AFTER A DIAGNOSIS OF CFS/ME by Paul Whiteley in Questioning Answers WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
"Adults and children with CFS/ME have greater health care needs than the rest of the population for at least ten years before their diagnosis, and these higher levels of health care resource use continue for at least ten years after diagnosis."So concluded the study published by Simon Collin and colleagues (open-access available here) who once again (see here) relied on data derived from the "Clinical Practice Research Datalink........ Read more » Collin, S., Bakken, I., Nazareth, I., Crawley, E., & White, P. (2017) Health care resource use by patients before and after a diagnosis of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS/ME): a clinical practice research datalink study . BMC Family Practice, 18(1). DOI: 10.1186/s12875-017-0635-z Health care resource use by patients before and after a diagnosis of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS/ME): a clinical practice research datalink study* Health
* Biology
* Medicine
* Psychology
* May 29, 2017
* 11:34 AM
* 9,148 views
STUDY SUGGESTS COMPUTATIONAL MODEL TO PREDICT AIR POLLUTION AFTER AROCKET LAUNCHING
by SciELO in SciELO in Perspective | PressReleases
WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
The study suggests a new approach to predict major atmospheric pollutants emissions after a Satellite Launch Vehicle (SLV) launching, using a weather/air quality computational model. Propellant combustion may release a huge amount of hydrogen chloride (HCl), carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO2) and particulate matter, posing risk to the environment. … Read More →... Read more » Iriart, P., Fisch, G., , ., & , . (2016) Uso do Modelo WRF-CHEM para a Simulação da Dispersão de Gases no Centro de Lançamento deAlcântara.
Revista Brasileira de Meteorologia, 31(4 suppl 1), 610-625. DOI: 10.1590/0102-7786312314b20150105Uso do Modelo
WRF-CHEM para a Simulação da Dispersão de Gases no Centro de Lançamento de Alcântara. Moreira, D., Trindade, L., Fisch, G., Moraes, M., Dorado, R., & Guedes, R. (2011) A multilayer model to simulate rocket exhaust clouds . Journal of Aerospace Technology and Management, 3(1), 41-52. DOI: 10.5028/jatm.2011.03010311A multilayer model
to simulate rocket exhaust clouds Nascimento, E., Moreira, D., Fisch, G., & Albuquerque, T. (2014) Simulation of Rocket Exhaust Clouds at the Centro de Lançamento de Alcântara Using the WRF-CMAQ Modeling System . Journal of Aerospace Technology and Management, 6(2), 119-128. DOI: 10.5028/jatm.v6i2.277 Simulation of Rocket Exhaust Clouds at the Centro de Lançamento de Alcântara Using the WRF-CMAQ Modeling System Schuch, D., & Fisch, G. (2017) The Use of an Atmospheric Model to Simulate the Rocket Exhaust Effluents Transport and Dispersion for the Centro de Lançamento de Alcântara . Journal of Aerospace Technology and Management, 9(2), 137-146. DOI: 10.5028/jatm.v9i2.740 The Use of an Atmospheric Model to Simulate the Rocket Exhaust Effluents Transport and Dispersion for the Centro de Lançamento de Alcântara * Research / Scholarship* Funding
* Library Science
* Policy
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* Science Communication* Creative Commons
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* Ethics
* May 29, 2017
* 08:02 AM
* 3,048 views
WITNESS PREPARATION: TO VOCAL FRY OR NOT TO VOCAL FRY? by Rita Handrich in The Jury Room WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
If you are young(er) you likely know precisely what vocal fry means and if you are old(er)—probably not so much. It is a cultural phenomenon seen primarily (but not only) in young(er) women as described at the Mental Floss website: “Vocal fry describes a specific sound quality caused by the movement of the vocal folds.... Read more »
Anderson RC, Klofstad CA, Mayew WJ, & Venkatachalam M. (2014) Vocal fry may undermine the success of young women in the labor market.PLoS ONE, 9(5).
PMID: 24870387
Vocal fry may undermine the success of young women in the labormarket.
* Psychology
* Decision-Making
* Human Factors
* Emotion
* Industrial/Organizational Psychology* Intelligence
* Sensation and Perception* Social Psychology
* Law
* May 29, 2017
* 05:08 AM
* 3,042 views
ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY AND RISK OF OFFSPRING AUTISMMETA-ANALYSED
by Paul Whiteley in Questioning Answers WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
"Our study indicated that the use of ART may associated with higher risk of ASD in the offspring. However, further prospective, large, and high-quality studies are still required."So said the results of the meta-analysis published by Liang Lui and colleagues (open-access) surveying the peer-reviewed research literature - "11 records (3 cohort studies and 8 case-control studies)" - between 2006 and 201........ Read more » Liu L, Gao J, He X, Cai Y, Wang L, & Fan X. (2017) Association between assisted reproductive technology and the risk of autism spectrum disorders in the offspring: a meta-analysis.Scientific reports,
46207. PMID: 28387368 Association between assisted reproductive technology and the risk of autism spectrum disorders in the offspring: a meta-analysis.* Health
* Biology
* Medicine
* Psychology
* May 28, 2017
* 10:36 AM
* 3,402 views
UNATTRACTIVE PEOPLE ARE SEEN AS BETTER SCIENTISTS by Neuroskeptic in Neuroskeptic_Discover WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
Good looking, sociable people don't make good scientists, according to popular stereotypes. This is one of the findings of an interesting new study of how scientists are perceived, from British researchers Ana I. Gheorghiuand colleagues.
Gheorghiu et al. took 616 pictures of scientists, which they downloaded from the faculty pages at various universities. They gave the portraits to two sets of raters. The first group were asked to rate the attractiveness of the portraits and to say whet... Read more Gheorghiu AI, Callan MJ, & Skylark WJ. (2017) Facial appearance affects science communication.Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.PMID: 28533389
Facial appearance affects science communication.* Psychology
* Social Science
* May 28, 2017
* 08:39 AM
* 3,182 views
HOW MEN AGE, A BOOK REVIEW by Farid Pazhoohi in Epistemophil WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
Nothing would be more interesting than reading a book on men aging by the author who is an expert on comparative male life histories. Richard G. Bribiescas is a Professor of Anthropology, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Yale University, and has conducted research in evolutionary biology and endocrinology of human, as well as comparative studies ... Read more » Pazhoohi, F. (2017) Book Review: How Men Age: What Evolution Reveals about Male Health and Mortality. Frontiers in Psychology. info:/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00894* Anthropology
* Psychology
* Evolutionary Biology* Reproduction
* Zoology
* Behavioral Biology * Biological Anthropology * Evolutionary Anthropology * Evolutionary Psychology* May 27, 2017
* 04:59 AM
* 2,989 views
LOW DOSE SURAMIN AND AUTISM: A SMALL RCT WITH POTENTIALLY BIG RESULTS by Paul Whiteley in Questioning Answers WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
'Low dose' has been a feature of my autism research reading this week; first starting with the results from Dan Quintana and colleagues talking about some important effects following intranasal delivery of low dose oxytocin and then moving on to the primary reason for this entry with results from Robert Naviaux and colleagues (open-access) continuing a research theme looking at suramin and autism (see here for some background).For those interested in the oxytocin-autism research bas........ Read more » Naviaux, R., Curtis, B., Li, K., Naviaux, J., Bright, A., Reiner, G., Westerfield, M., Goh, S., Alaynick, W., Wang, L.... (2017) Low-dose suramin in autism spectrum disorder: a small, phase I/II, randomized clinical trial . Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology. DOI: 10.1002/acn3.424 Low-dose suramin in autism spectrum disorder: a small, phase I/II, randomized clinical trial* Health
* Biology
* Medicine
* Psychology
* May 26, 2017
* 01:14 PM
* 3,025 views
HOW TO FIND ARTICLES IN OPEN ACCESS – TIPS FROM MY FAVORITE NERD by SciELO in SciELO in Perspective WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
Scholarly communication available online, whether in journals or repositories, adds up to millions, and this figure grows every year. What browser efficient tools are available to researchers, librarians, students, and the like to find the open-access versions of the articles that interest them? … Read More →... Read more » Jamali, H. (2017) Copyright compliance and infringement in ResearchGate full-text journal articles. Scientometrics.
DOI: 10.1007/s11192-017-2291-4 Copyright compliance and infringement in ResearchGate full-text journal articles * Research / Scholarship* Funding
* Library Science
* Policy
* Publishing
* Science Communication* Creative Commons
* Education
* Ethics
* May 26, 2017
* 12:42 PM
* 3,162 views
ADOLESCENT BRAIN DEVELOPMENT by William Yates, M.D. in Brain Posts WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
Functional magnetic resonance imaging yields improvement in our understanding of brain development.A recent study out of the University of Pennsylvania is a good example. This study examined the relationship between brain connectivity and the development of cognitive executive function.The researchers imaged a group of 882 subjects between the ages of 8 and 22.Brain connectivity patterns were compared with a neurocognitive assessment of executive function. Executive function increases with age t........ Read more » Graham L. Baum, Rastko Ciric, David R. Roalf, Richard F. Betzel, Tyler M. Moore, Russel T. Shinohara, Ari E. Kahn, Megan Quarmley, Philip A. Cook, Mark A. Elliot.... (2016) Modular Segregation of Structural Brain Networks Supports the Development of Executive Function in Youth. Current Biology.
arXiv: 1608.03619v1* Medicine
* Health
* Neuroscience
* Clinical Neuroscience * Clinical Psychology * Cognitive Neuroscience* Aging
* Clinical Research
* Developmental Neuroscience* May 26, 2017
* 12:34 PM
* 3,154 views
THE UGLINESS PENALTY: DOES IT LITERALLY PAY TO BE PRETTY? by Melissa Chernick in Science Storiented WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
There are economic studies that show that attractive people earn more money and, conversely, unattractive earn less money. I’m pretty sure that I’ve heard something along those lines before, but I had no idea they were called the “beauty premium” and the “ugliness penalty.” How wonderful and sad at the same time. But while these seem like pretty commonplace ideas, there is no real evidence as to why they exist. A new paper published in the Journal of Business and Psychology tested th........ Read more » Kanazawa, S., & Still, M. (2017) Is There Really a Beauty Premium or an Ugliness Penalty on Earnings? . Journal of Business and Psychology. DOI: 10.1007/s10869-017-9489-6Is There Really a
Beauty Premium or an Ugliness Penalty on Earnings?* Psychology
* Social Science
* Comparative Psychology* Decision-Making
* Social Psychology
* Sociology
* Behavioral Economics* May 26, 2017
* 08:02 AM
* 3,000 views
CASSANDRA’S REGRET: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF NOT WANTING TO KNOW by Doug Keene in The Jury Room WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
Do you want to know the future? You may want to say it all depends on which aspects of your future. Typically, while we seek information routinely to make decisions in our day-to-day lives, we don’t always want to know for sure what will happen in our futures. These researchers remind us about the story ... Read more » Gigerenzer G, & Garcia-Retamero R. (2017) Cassandra's regret: The psychology of not wanting to know. Psychological Review, 124(2), 179-196. PMID: 28221086 Cassandra's regret: The psychology of not wanting to know.* Psychology
* Decision-Making
* Affective Psychology * Cognitive Psychology* Emotion
* Human Factors
* Sensation and Perception* Social Psychology
* Law
* May 26, 2017
* 06:08 AM
* 2,779 views
THE PI3K/MTOR INHIBITOR GSK2126458 IS EFFECTIVE FOR TREATING TSC SOLIDRENAL TUMOURS
by Joana Guedes in BHD Research Blog WHY IS THIS POST INAPPROPRIATE? Not relevant to academic research Uses offensive language Solicits goods or services Not accurate / substantiveComments:
Tuberous sclerosis (TSC) is an inherited tumour syndrome that shares clinical similarities with Birt-Hogg-Dube Syndrome. It is caused by mutations in TSC1 or TSC2 that lead to aberrant activation of mTOR, affecting multiple organs, including the kidney and lung. In the kidney, lesions such as multiple renal cysts and renal cell carcinoma (RCC) can occur. Tumour reduction in TSC patients after treatment with rapamycin, an inhibitor of mTOR, is partial and reversible probably due to feedback activ........ Read more » Narov, K., Yang, J., Samsel, P., Jones, A., Sampson, J., & Hong Shen, M. (2017) The dual PI3K/mTOR inhibitor GSK2126458 is effective for treating solid renal tumours in Tsc2 /- mice through suppression of cell proliferation and induction of apoptosis. Oncotarget.
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.17215The dual PI3K/mTOR
inhibitor GSK2126458 is effective for treating solid renal tumours in Tsc2 /- mice through suppression of cell proliferation and inductionof apoptosis
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