In the News
University of California (UC): Hurricane Katrina Aftermath and Recover UC campuses, medical centers, and national laboratories "are working to identify the personnel [and] expertise ... to support the immediate clinical and public health emergency needs, as well as the long-term health recovery efforts, in the Gulf Coast region."Locate campuses, labs, and UC experts who can help with "issues related to natural disaster detection, preparedness, infrastructure reconstruction, mental health and other relief efforts."Includes information for affected students. Fruit &Nut Research and Information Center: Olive Collection of publications on olives and olive oil, covering olive production in California, pest management (particularly the olive fruit fly), and other topics related to growing and harvesting olives. From the Department of Pomology, University of California, Davis. Childhood Exposure To Disadvantaged Neighborhoods Negatively Affects V Childhood exposure to disadvantaged neighborhoods appears to have a lasting negative effect on verbal ability. The effect, roughly equivalent to missing one year of school, continues even after the child has moved out of the neighborhood. New Cost-benefit Model Will Aid Efforts To Conserve Wilderness A new conservation model that measures the value of ecosystem services benefiting humans -- ranging from flood control to crop pollination -- can foster more win-win solutions between wilderness advocates and landowners, according to University of British Columbia researcher Kai Chan. Vietnam War Technology Could Aid Elephant Conservation Seismic sensors developed to track enemy troop movements during the Vietnam war could help ecologists monitor and conserve elephant populations, according to new research published in the British Ecological Society's Journal of Applied Ecology. Dr Jason Wood and colleagues from Stanford University recorded vibrations caused by animal footfalls using a geophone buried near a path. Researchers were able to estimate the number of elephants passing the sensor by the size and frequency of their footfalls. 'Know Thyself' -- Easier Said Than Done In "Flawed Self-Evaluation: Implications for Health, Education, and the Workplace,"investigators David Dunning (Cornell), Chip Heath (Stanford), and Jerry M. Suls (University of Iowa) summarized current psychological research on the accuracy (or rather inaccuracy) of self-knowledge, across a wide range of studies in a range of spheres. Their report is published in the recent issue of Psychological Science in the Public Interest, a journal of the American Psychological Society. Antidepressants, Exercise, Age, Even Food Intake, Affect Generation Of Recent research shows that the production of new brain cells may be crucial for antidepressants to be effective and that the medication's effectiveness is strongly influenced by age. What's more, meal frequency, type of food, and physical exercise affect the brain's ability to manufacture these new cells. For the first time in nonhuman primate models, scientists have documented the cause-and-effect relationship between antidepressant drugs and neurogenesis. Hydrated Electrons Can Take More Than One Guise Scientists with the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) appear to have settled a long-standing scientific question about water clusters -- aggregates of water molecules that feature unique properties, somewhere between that of liquid water and steam. Breakthrough In Nanodevice Synthesis Revolutionizes Biological Sensors A novel approach to synthesizing nanowires (NWs) allows their direct integration with microelectronic systems for the first time, as well as their ability to act as highly sensitive biomolecule detectors that could revolutionize biological diagnostic applications, according to a report in Nature. Not only can the NWs detect as few as 1000 individual molecules in a cubic millimeter, they can do it without any added fluorescent or radioactive probes. Rare Star Explosion Follows A Flash Of Light Astrophysicists have just discovered one of the strangest star explosions ever observed. The star that burst was massive -- 15 to 25 times greater than the mass of the Sun -- and was probably made up exclusively of carbon and oxygen. A brief flash of light had been observed two years before this rare cataclysm occurred. This precursor signal, which had never been seen before, raises hopes that astronomers will be able to "predict"explosions and observe stars as they enter the very last moments of their existence.
MP3 Music Downloads
Preview songs, Download Free Music,Burn CDs at ITunes.com

|