|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
How the Brain Sleeps
The brain never stops working. But it
does cease talking to itself when you lose
consciousness, LiveScience said. Scientists have long
wondered what the brain does and doesn’t do during deep
sleep. It remains active, they know. So what’s the
difference between consciousness and the lack of
it? When we’re awake, different parts of the brain
use chemicals and nerve cells to communicate constantly
across the entire network, similar to the perpetual flow
of data between all the different computers, routers and
servers that make up the Internet. In the deepest
part of sleep, however, the various nodes of your
cranial Internet all lose their connections. “The
brain breaks down into little islands that can’t talk to
one another,“ said study leader Giulio Tononi of the
University of Wisconsin-Madison. Tononi’s team used a
non-invasive procedure to activate select parts of the
brain. Subjects had electrodes attached to their heads
to monitor how each stimulation triggered reactions
elsewhere. In the early morning, when subjects were
dreaming, signals careened around the noggin similarly
to when they were awake. But at night, during deeper
sleep, the picture was much different. “During deep
sleep early in the night,“ Tononi said, “the response is
short-lived and doesn’t propagate at
all.“ Consciousness has long mystified scientists.
The new finding suggests that it depends on the brain’s
ability to integrate information, Tononi says. The
compartmentalization might also help the brain’s
synapses, which make all the connections that give us
thought, to take a break, according to Tononi’s
colleague, Marcello Massimini. “This process would
allow cortical circuits to eliminate noisy synapses and
renormalize in order to be ready for the next day,“
Massimini told LiveScience. The reduced activity might
also help explain why performance in various tasks
improves after sleep, he said. The machine used to
conduct the experiments is new. It generates a magnetic
field to provide stimulation, and Tononi’s team expects
this to be the first of many similar studies that will
help researchers better understand the mind and specific
disorders of the brain.
|
|
|
|
Pregnancy Stress Passed to Baby
Children whose mothers were overly
stressed during pregnancy may themselves be more
vulnerable to anxiety as a result, research suggests.
High levels of stress hormone may cross the placenta
and affect the baby in the womb in a way that carries
long-term implications, UK scientists believe.
According to Psychport, a Bristol University team
found anxiety in late pregnancy was linked to higher
cortisol levels in children aged 10. The work in
Biological Psychiatry tallies with earlier animal
findings. Past studies have shown stress in animals
during pregnancy affects the body’s stress response
system--the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis
which controls stress hormone levels, including
cortisol. But scientists have not been able to show
that it also affects humans in the same way. US
psychologist Dr Thomas O’Connor, from the University of
Rochester in New York, working with UK colleagues from
Bristol University and Imperial College London, studied
74 children aged 10. They analyzed saliva samples
first thing in the morning and three times a day on
three consecutive school days to monitor levels of
stress hormones. The children’s mothers had
completed questionnaires 10 years previously, when they
were expecting, about any stress or anxiety they were
experiencing during their pregnancy. The researchers
looked back at this data to compare the results with
those of the saliva tests. The children with high
levels of cortisol in their saliva tended to be born to
the mothers who reported the most stress during their
pregnancy. Dr. O’Connor said, “These results provide
the strongest evidence to date that prenatal stress is
associated with longer term impact on the HPA axis in
children. “Our findings point to a possible
mechanism by which prenatal stress or anxiety may
predict these disturbances in early adolescence, and
possibly into adulthood.“ However, he said much more
work was needed to check that this was the case. He
also pointed out that it was not clear whether high
cortisol itself could cause psychological disturbance.
Some psychiatric disorders have been linked with low
rather than high cortisol levels. Other factors,
such as the personality of the child and the environment
they are living in, may play a part in childhood stress
too.
|
|
|
|
Cassini Flyby of Hyperion Reveals
Tortured World
|
|
A huge cliff, tens of
kilometers high, crosses the face of Hyperion, in
this view from 16,000 kilometers
away.
| After Cassini
visited Saturn’s moon Tethys, it has flown past
Hyperion, one of the smaller and odder moons of the
ringed planet, New Scientist reported. Hyperion is
potato-shaped: 360 kilometers long, but only about 250
kilometers across. Its rotation is chaotic, tumbling
unpredictably under the influence of Saturn’s and
Titan’s gravity. And it is exceptionally dark for a
Saturnian moon, reflecting only 30% of the light that
falls on it, with a distinctly red tint. The biggest
question for Cassini to answer is why Hyperion is so
misshapen when other asteroids and moons of about this
size are much more spherical. One theory is that it is
merely a fragment of a larger moon that was shattered in
a violent impact. Cassini’s pictures certainly show a
tortured world, riven by craters and girdled by a giant
cliff face tens of kilometers high. The new images
were gathered early on Monday morning, from as close as
500 kilometres to Hyperion’s surface. During the flyby,
Cassini’s radar also measured slight changes in the
speed of the spacecraft. This will give an idea of the
strength of Hyperion’s gravity, and therefore its mass.
Mission scientists hope to discover whether the moon is
solid rock or a loosely packed “rubble pile“. The
Cassini team should also be able to map the chemical
make-up of Hyperion’s surface to discover whether it is
dusted with dark material drifting in from Saturn’s
sooty outer moon, Phoebe. |
|
|
|
Bats a Likely Source of Sars
Horseshoe bat is the likely source of
the respiratory disease Sars, a new study suggests.
According to BBC News website, researchers found a
virus closely related to the Sars coronavirus in bats
from three regions of China. Writing in the journal
Science, they say the virus may have needed to infect
another animal such as the civet before it could
transmit to humans. They suggest that live horseshoe
bats are kept out of markets until the transmission path
is fully understood. The Sars (Severe Acute
Respiratory Syndrome) outbreak in 2002/3 caused about
770 deaths, and economic damage estimated in billions of
dollars; centered on east Asia with origins in southern
China, fatalities occurred as far afield as Canada.
Schools and businesses closed, international trade
and travel were restricted; and for a time, until basic
public health measures curtailed the outbreak, it seemed
as though the next major global disease of humanity had
emerged. But emerged from where? In May 2003, the
suggestion emerged that the virus responsible had
entered the human population from civets, animals eaten
in wildlife restaurants and butchered in live animal
markets in southern China. The World Health
Organization (WHO) endorsed this link early in 2004, an
announcement which led authorities in China to embark on
a culling program which saw an estimated 10,000 civets
killed, as well as other animals suspected of harboring
Sars, such as badgers and raccoons.
|
|
|
|
Arctic Icecap Shrinking
The area covered by sea ice in the
Arctic has shrunk for a fourth consecutive year,
according ananova.com. US scientists say the area
currently covered in ice is the smallest for more than a
century. Researchers conclude that human-induced
global warming is at least partially
responsible. They warn the shrinkage could lead to
even faster melting in coming years. “September 2005
will set a new record minimum in the amount of Arctic
sea ice cover,“ said Mark Serreze, of the National Snow
and Ice Data Centre. “It’s the least sea ice we’ve
seen in the satellite record, and continues a pattern of
extreme low extents of sea ice which we’ve now seen for
the last four years.“ September is the month when the
Arctic ice usually reaches a minimum.
|
|
|
|
New Pill Could Get a Grip
|
|
Basic concept of a clamping
capsule (a) before and (b) after gripper
protrusion
| Ability to
perform measurements and obtain images at different
locations along the human gastrointestinal tract would
be of considerable benefit in various branches of
medicine. According to PhysicsWeb, in recent years
several biomedical companies have developed so-called
wireless capsules that can take images inside the gut
after they have been swallowed. However, these
devices cannot be stopped at a particular location
inside the gut because they are carried along by the
natural process of peristalsis. This lack of a stopping
mechanism means that certain areas of the digestive
tract cannot be studied in detail. Now Andrea Moglia
of the CRIM Lab in Pontedera, near Pisa, and colleagues
have developed a clamping system or “gripper“ that could
be used to stop such capsules at specific locations of
medical interest. The gripper is made of a
biocompatible nickel-titanium alloy that can be made to
change its shape. The work could lead to the development
of a pill that can perform biopsies in a non-invasive
way. The gripper is able to gently grip the walls of
the intestine and it can move forwards and backwards
with respect to the capsule thanks to two springs. The
next stage is to attach a tiny video camera and battery
to the capsule, which is just 26 mm long and 12 mm
across. The gripper relies on “shape memory
alloys“--materials that respond to changes in the
environment. In particular, these alloys are able to
recover their initial shape when the temperature changes
or when a mechanical stress is removed. The new
device is activated by a dedicated electrical interface.
When current flows through a nickel-titanium wire,
electrical energy is converted into mechanical energy
and the gripper opens. When the current is switched off,
the gripper closes automatically. The scientists
tested their prototype device in pig tissue and found
that the gripper could exert a force of up to 0.6
Newtons on intestinal tissue. This is strong enough to
overcome the peristalsis forces in the gut. The team now
plans to increase the speed of the device and reduce its
power consumption. |
|
|
|
Water Walkers Surf on the
Edge
Navigating your way out of a puddle
might not sound like a challenge, but to a tiny insect
it is akin to scaling an extremely steep and slippery
mountain, nature.com reported. Two mathematicians
have outlined exactly how little insects manage this
feat: they turn surface tension to their advantage and
’surf’ up the edge with scarcely any effort. The
mountainous ridge of water at a puddle’s edge arises
thanks to capillary attraction, which causes the liquid
to shoot up where it touches the surrounding land. This
feature, called a meniscus, is also commonly seen around
the edge of a glass of water. Large insects such as
water striders (Gerridae), which are often found on pond
surfaces, are fast enough and big enough simply to
hurdle a puddle’s meniscus when they come to it. But
smaller insects can’t do this. Instead, insects that
are just a few millimeters long deform the surface of
the water with their legs, creating forces that shoot
them to the top of the watery hill. The insects are
taking advantage of the same effect that causes pieces
of cereal to come together in a bowl of milk, says Bush.
Objects that deform a liquid and increase surface
tension tend to attract each other once the deformed
regions overlap, because this minimizes the overall
amount of deformity, and therefore tension. “It’s a
very striking means of locomotion,“ says John Bush of
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, who studied the phenomenon with his
colleague David Hu. “It’s rare. It may even be
unique.“
|
|
|
|
Blood Transplant Method
Beneficial
Stanford University School of
Medicine researchers say they’ve developed a blood
transplant procedure that can prevent fatal side
effects, Science Daily said. The researchers said the
procedure can boost the relative levels of regulatory T
cells--an effect that’s beneficial before hematopoietic
stem cell transplantation, a common treatment for blood
cancers. Blood stem cell transplantation replaces
cancerous blood cells of a leukemia or lymphoma patient
with those from a healthy donor. The transplantation
cures the cancer, but in up to 80 percent of the cases
there’s a potentially deadly side effect: The donor’s
incoming immune cells attack the patient’s body as
“foreign“ in what is known as graft-vs.-host
disease. The new therapy appears to block development
of graft-vs.-host disease. “It allows you to throw
out the one effect, but not the other,“ wrote Dr. Samuel
Strober, a professor of medicine at Stanford and senior
author of the study.
|
|
| |