Thursday, January 10, 2013

Public Speaking: Gain Confidence - The District Apartments

If you've ever found yourself in front of a room full of people, filled with nervousness about how to address them and hold their attention, then you know how stressful public speaking can be. If you?re like most people, you probably have felt a few rushes of public-speaking jitters over the years, when you're asked to address a crowd. Below are a few tips to make your next public-speaking experience as effective and anxiety-free as possible:

Know Your Material

Knowing your stuff is key to effectively addressing a group. If you have any uncertainties about the material or any concern about your grasp of it, your anxiety level will be high ? and, of course, the more nervous you are, the more likely you are to come across as an ineffectual speaker. So, it is vitally important to review your material thoroughly and rehearse your presentation as much as possible. That way, when you walk in the room, you'll feel relaxed and confident in the conviction that you know your stuff.

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Know Your Audience

Before you prep for your presentation, make sure you know your audience. Having a grasp of their interests and their reasons for attending will help guide your speech. Also, be certain to keep in mind the general tone of the event and group of people ? is it an informal talk to a group of people with similar interests, a serious and formal business presentation, or a presentation for a crowd who will want there to be a high entertainment factor? When it comes to the subject you?re speaking about, will you be addressing a group of specialists on a topic they know well, or non-specialists without much background in the area who needs things spelled out? Knowing as much as you can about the audience will help you craft a presentation effectively geared toward them.

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Be Conscious of Speed?

One of the most common mistakes that novice public speakers make is talking at a very fast pace. This rapidity can come from nerves or just from a sense that there isn?t enough time to fit it all in. It is important to make sure you slow down when speaking, giving your audience time to absorb what you have said (and also giving note-takers a chance to write things down). Along those same lines, design your presentation so that you?re not trying to squeeze too much info into too short an amount of time. Practice your speech several times, and reorganize or or cut out portions that don't fit.

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Be Present

A memorable public speaker makes the audience feel as if they are being seen, spoken to, and heard, so it's important to get tuned into the people in the room. An easy way of doing this is to maintain sincere eye contact with people throughout your audience. Look at them, not around or above them, and when you catch someone's eyes, hold their gaze for a few seconds (3 seconds are normally effective and comfortable). Also, if someone asks a question, be certain to really listen and respond in a way that is as individually geared toward the person and the question as possible. If you know your material well, you can be a bit more flexible and adaptable, allowing your audience to get involved.

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Speak With Conviction

If you speak with passion and conviction, people won?t likely notice if you make a few minor slip ups along the way. Your ability to hold the audience?s interest and convince them of the ideas you?re presenting has a lot to do with how much you convey your own sense of belief in those ideas, so speak with confidence! Use intonation, facial expressions, and body language as tools to convey conviction and enthusiasm ? they are also powerful mediums of persuasion. Another way of communicating your passion and belief in what you?re speaking about is through the act of compiling a really strong presentation. If you arrive with a highly organized, well thought-out, and articulate presentation, the viewers will know they are in the presence of someone who cares about what he or she is saying, and you will hold their attention effortlessly.?

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Source: http://thedistrictapartmentsblog.com/2013/01/09/public-speaking-gain-confidence/

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Ballroom Dance at Colvin Run | McLean Sports & Recreation, Art ...

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

eBay Updates iPhone And iPad Apps To Simplify Mobile Browsing And Listing

ebayeBay released significant updates to its iPhone and iPad apps yesterday which it says will "play an important role in eBay Mobile's year to come." The ecommerce platform also said that 1.8 million new customers joined eBay through a mobile device in the first three quarters of 2012 and eBay Mobile currently adds an average of 2.4 million listings per week.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/MvmosAMW65g/

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Varsity Boys Hockey: Robbinsdale Cooper vs. Chisago Lakes ...

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Source: http://goldenvalley.patch.com/events/varsity-boys-hockey-robbinsdale-cooper-vs-chisago-lakes

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Targeting hepatitis C treatment: The importance of interleukin (IL)-28

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

A metanalysis published in BioMed Central's open access journal BMC Medicine has confirmed that polymorphisms (SNP) in the gene coding for interleukin-28 (IL28B) influence natural hepatitis C viral (HCV) clearance and response to pegylated interferon-? plus ribavirin (PEG-IFN/RBV). Information about IL28B genotype could be used to provide personalized medicine and target treatment options effectively.

Over 200 million people worldwide are chronically infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) and about a quarter of these will go on to develop cirrhosis of the liver. Treatment with (PEG-IFN/RBV) only works in 40-80% of patients, depending in part on HCV strain, and treatment often has severe side effects. It is consequently important to separate people who will not respond to treatment, from those who may, so that treatment is targeted effectively.

Researchers from the Health Institute Carlos III, Spain, incorporated 67 studies that investigated IL28B polymorphisms with the suppression of viral activity to undetectable levels (sustained virologic response - SVR), and ten that looked at IL28B polymorphisms and spontaneous clearance, into a metanalysis. Approximately 23,500 people were included overall.

The results of this analysis showed that IL28B polymorphisms influence how well IFN treatment works and natural clearance of HCV infection. Having a favourable genotype at any one of seven IL28B polymorphisms equated to more than double the probability of achieving SVR. The study also found that two SNP were associated with spontaneous clearance. Detailed analysis showed that the effect of ethnicity and viral type also influenced the strength of individual association. Consequently the association between favourable variants and SVR for HCV types 2 and 3 was three times lower than types 1 and 4.

Mar?a ?ngeles Jim?nez-Sousa, Amanda Fern?ndez-Rodr?guez and Salvador Resino who led this study explained, "Treatment with (PEG-IFN/RBV) is costly and can have side effects which prevent patient compliance. Consequently knowing a patient's IL-28B status will help target interferon treatment to those who will benefit most, and play a substantial role in the selection of candidates for standard treatment versus triple therapy with direct-acting antivirals (DAA). Also, because IL28B genotyping needs be performed only once in a patient's life, it is relatively cheap."

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BioMed Central: http://www.biomedcentral.com

Thanks to BioMed Central for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 51 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126181/Targeting_hepatitis_C_treatment__The_importance_of_interleukin__IL____

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New approach for simulating supernovas

Jan. 8, 2013 ? Two University of Texas at Arlington researchers want to bridge the gap between what is known about exploding stars and the remnants left behind thousands of years later. So they're trying something new -- using SNSPH, a complex computer code developed at Los Alamos National Laboratory.

On January 8, Carola I. Ellinger, a post-doctoral researcher at UT Arlington, and Sangwook Park, an assistant professor in the College of Science's physics department, were scheduled to present their research on "3D Simulations of Supernovae into the Young Remnant Phase" at the national meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Long Beach, Calif. Their oral presentation focuses on first efforts to use SNSPH, a parallel 3-dimensional radiation hydrodynamics code written in 2005, to create 3D simulations of a core-collapse supernova evolving into remnants.

"There are a lot of numerical simulations for the explosion of the supernova and a lot of simulations of the blast wave expanding into interstellar medium, but there was no useful work connecting the two, even though the physics are connected," said Park. "Now, we are using the most appropriate program we know to do that."

Besides Ellinger and Park, co-authors of the abstract include: Gabriel Rockefeller and Chris Fryer, of the Computer, Computational, and Statistical Sciences division at Los Alamos National Laboratory; and Patrick Young, of the Arizona State University School of Earth and Space Exploration.

Core collapse supernovas make up nearly three-quarters of all supernovas and they are the type of star explosions that create black holes and neutron stars. Scientists study them to learn more about the history and landscape of the universe, including how minerals were distributed and planets formed. Typically, individual researchers focus on either the blast or the remnants.

Though their project is in its initial stages, the researchers hope their new models will help reveal the detailed nature of the two features of a supernova remnant -- characteristics that arose in instabilities during the explosion and those that were created in the interaction with surrounding medium. Ellinger said she hopes the simulations will eventually be used to interpret X-ray data from NASA's Chandra space telescope as well as other missions, such as the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array, or NuSTAR, launched in 2012.

"Dr. Park and Dr. Ellinger are taking existing tools, looking at the rapidly expanding field of astronomy data and finding new ways to use the two together. This kind of creative thinking is a model for UT Arlington students and fellow scientists," said Pamela Jansma, dean of the UT Arlington College of Science.

The research team used resources at the Texas Advanced Computing Center at UT Austin for hydrodynamic calculations.

Park said the new work with SNSPH can be traced back to increases in data about the composition of supernova remnants, much of which has been brought about by the Chandra X-ray Observatory. Chandra, launched in 1999, is NASA's flagship mission for X-ray astronomy.

With increasingly detailed data, scientists studying supernova remnants in the Milky Way are now able to differentiate between debris that was ejected from the exploded star, also called the progenitor, and the pre-existing ambient material that was swept up in the blast wave. This gives researchers some of the parameters they need to trace the history of the remnant, according to Park and Ellinger.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/_ffLHH3gGGw/130108162229.htm

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Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Science-Based Medicine ? Everything we eat causes cancer?sort of

Read meat causes cancer. No, processed meat causes cancer. OK, it?s both read meat and processed meat. Wait, genetically modified grain causes cancer (well, not really). No, aspartame causes cancer. No, this food coloring or that one causes cancer.

Clearly, everything you eat causes cancer!

That means you can avoid cancer by avoiding processed meats, red meat, GMO-associated food (no, probably not), aspartame, food colorings, or anything ?unnatural.? Or so it would seem from reading the popular literature and sometimes even the scientific literature. As I like to say to my medical students, life is a sexually transmitted fatal disease that gets us all eventually, but most of us would like to delay the inevitable as long as possible and remain as healthy as possible for as long as possible. One of the most obvious ways to do accomplish these twin aims is through diet. While the parameters of what constitutes a reasonably healthy diet have been known for decades, diet still ranks high on the risk of concerns regarding actions we take on a daily basis that can increase our risk of various diseases. Since cancer is disease (or, I should say, cancers are diseases) that many, if not most, people consider to be the scariest, naturally we worry about whether certain foods or food ingredients increase our risk of cancer.

Thus was born the field of nutritional epidemiology, a prolific field with thousands of publications annually. Seemingly, each and every one of these thousands of publications gets a news story associated with it, because the media love a good ?food X causes cancer? or ?food Y causes heart disease? story, particularly before the holidays. As a consequence, consumers are bombarded with what I like to call the latest health risk of the week, in which, in turn, various foods, food ingredients, or environmental ?toxins? are blamed and exonerated for a panoply of health problems, ranging from the minor to the big three, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and cancer. It?s no wonder that consumers are confused, reacting either with serial alarm at each new ?revelatory? study or with a shrug of the shoulders as each new alarm joins other alarms to produce a tinnitus-like background drone. Unfortunately, this cacophony of alarm also provides lots of ammunition to quacks, cranks, and crackpots to tout their many and varied diets that, they promise, will cut your risk of diseases like cancer and heart disease to near zero?but only if adhered to with monk-like determination and self-denial. (Yes, I?m talking about you, Dean Ornish, among others.)

All of this is why I really wanted to write about an article I saw popping up in the queue of articles published online ahead of print about a month ago. Somehow, other topics intervened, as did my vacation and then the holidays, and somehow I missed it last week, even though a link to the study sits in my folder named ?Blog fodder.? Fortunately, it just saw print this week in its final version, giving me an excuse to make up for my oversight. It?s a study by one of our heroes (despite his occasional misstep) here on the SBM blog, John Ioannidis. It comes in the form of a study by Jonathan D. Schoenfeld and John Ioannidis in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition entitled, brilliantly, Is everything we eat associated with cancer? A systematic cookbook review.

Now, when John Ioannidis says a ?systematic cookbook review,? he really means ?a systematic cookbook review.? Basically, he and Schoenfeld went through The Boston Cooking School Cookbook and tested whether various ingredients described and used in the recipes in the cookbook had been tested for an association with cancer and what was found. What I love about John Ioannidis is embodied in the methodology of this study:

We selected ingredients from random recipes included in The Boston Cooking-School Cook Book (28), available online at http://archive.org/details/bostoncookingsch00farmrich. A copy of the book was obtained in portable document format and viewed by using Skim version 1.3.17 (http://skim-app.sourceforge. net). The recipes (see Supplementary Table 1 under ?Supplemental data? in the online issue) were selected at random by generating random numbers corresponding to cookbook page numbers using Microsoft Excel (Microsoft Corporation). The first recipe on each page selected was used; the page was passed over if there was no recipe. All unique ingredients within selected recipes were chosen for analysis. This process was repeated until 50 unique ingredients were selected.

We performed literature searches using PubMed (http://www. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/) for studies investigating the relation of the selected ingredients to cancer risk using the following search terms: ?risk factors?[MeSH Terms] AND ?cancer?[sb] AND the singular and/or plural forms of the selected ingredient restricted to the title or abstract. Titles and abstracts of retrieved articles were then reviewed to select the 10 most recently published cohort or case-control studies investigating the relation between the ingredients and cancer risk. Ingredient derivatives and components (eg, orange juice) and ingredients analyzed as part of a broader diet specifically mentioned as a component of that diet were considered. Whenever ,10 studies were retrieved for a given article, an attempt was made to obtain additional studies by searching for ingredient synonyms (eg, mutton for lamb, thymol for thyme), using articles explicitly referred to by the previously retrieved material, and broadening the original searches (searching simply by ingredient name AND ?cancer?).

How can you not love this guy?

His results were also not that surprising. First, he noted that for 80% of the ingredients his methodology identified there was at least one study examining its cancer risk. That?s forty ingredients, which he helpfully lists: veal, salt, pepper spice, flour, egg, bread, pork, butter, tomato, lemon, duck, onion, celery, carrot, parsley, mace, sherry, olive, mushroom, tripe, milk, cheese, coffee, bacon, sugar, lobster, potato, beef, lamb, mustard, nuts, wine, peas, corn, cinnamon, cayenne, orange, tea, rum, and raisin. He also notes that these ingredients represent many of the most common sources of vitamins and nutrients in a typical US diet. In contrast, the ten ingredients for which no study was identified tended to be less common: bay leaf, cloves, thyme, vanilla, hickory, molasses, almonds, baking soda, ginger, and terrapin. One wonders how almonds aren?t considered under nuts, but that?s just me being pedantic.

One also wonders whether ?Dr.? Robert O. Young, alkalinization quack extraordinaire, who claims that cancer is due to too much acid and that alkalinization is the answer, has heard about no studies for baking soda, which to him, along with a vegan-based diet that is allegedly ?alkalinizing,? is part of the ?alkaline cure? for everything from cancer to sepsis to heart disease. Now, if you type ?baking soda cancer? into the PubMed search box, you?ll actually pull of over 350 articles. However, none of them appear to be epidemiological studies. This reminds me. I need to look into that literature and do a post about it again. But I digress.

Let?s get back to the meat of the study itself. (Sorry, I couldn?t resist.)

Having identified the studies and meta-analyses, Schoenfeld and Ioannidis next extracted the data from the studies, looked at the quality of the studies, the size and significance of the effects reported, how specific they were, and whether there were indications of bias in any of them. The results they found were all over the map, with about the same number of studies finding increased compared to decreased risks of malignancy, and, as before, Schoenfeld and Ioannidis provide a helpful list:

Author conclusions reported in the abstract and manuscript text and relevant effect estimates are summarized in Table 1. Thirty-nine percent of studies concluded that the studied ingredient conferred an increased risk of malignancy; 33% concluded that there was a decreased risk, 5% concluded that there was a borderline statistically significant effect, and 23% concluded that there was no evidence of a clearly increased or decreased risk. Thirty-six of the 40 ingredients for which at least one study was identified had at least one study concluding increased or decreased risk of malignancy: veal, salt, pepper spice, egg, bread, pork, butter, tomato, lemon, duck, onion, celery, carrot, parsley, mace, olive, mushroom, tripe, milk, cheese, coffee, bacon, sugar, lobster, potato, beef, lamb, mustard, nuts, wine, peas, corn, cayenne, orange, tea, and rum.

The statistical support of the effects was weak (0.001 # P , 0.05) or even nonnominally significant (P . 0.05) in 80% of the studies. It was also weak or nonnominally significant, even in 75% of the studies that claimed an increased risk and in 76% of the studies that claimed a decreased risk (Table 1).

To boil it all down, what we have here are a bunch of studies that report an association between a food or food ingredient and either increased or decreased risk of various cancers, but the vast majority of them have very weak effect sizes and/or nominal statistical significance. Next, Schoenfeld and Ioannidis looked at ingredients for which meta-analyses existed and found 36 relevant effect size estimates based on meta-analyses. Many of these meta-analyses combined studies using different exposure contrasts, such as highest quartile/lowest quartile versus another measure, such as the highest versus lowest consumption. Only 13 meta-analyses were done by combining data on the same exact contrast across all studies. As one would expect when one pools diverse studies, meta-analyses tended to find smaller effects than individual studies, as shown in the following table from the paper (click to embiggen):

As I said, these findings are all over the map. Now, if you really want to see how chaotic the literature examined by Schoenfeld and Ioannidis is, take a look at the effect sizes found for ingredients for which there have been more than ten studies:

As you can see, it?s quite complex and all over the map, although there are a few ingredients for which the studies do appear to be fairly consistent, such as bacon being associated consistently with a higher risk of cancer. Bummer. Or is it? Let?s continue with Schoenfeld and Ioannidis? analysis. What they found is rather disturbing. First, they report that although 80% of the studies they examined reported positive findings (i.e., a positive association between the food or ingredient studied and some form of cancer):

?the vast majority of these claims were based on weak statistical evidence. Many statistically insignificant ?negative? and weak results were relegated to the full text rather than to the study abstract. Individual studies reported larger effect sizes than did the meta-analyses. There was no standardized, consistent selection of exposure contrasts for the reported risks. A minority of associations had more than weak support in meta-analyses, and summary effects in meta-analyses were consistent with a null average and relatively limited variance.

In other words, there are lots of studies out there that claim to find a link, either for increased risk or a protective effect, between this food or that ingredient and cancer, but very few of them actually provide convincing support for their hypothesis. Worse, there appear to be a lot of manuscript-writing shenanigans going on, with the abstract (which usually means, I note, the press release) touting a strong association while the true weakness of the association is buried in the fine print in the results or discussion sections of the paper. Given that most scientists tend not to read each and every word of a paper unless they?re very interested in it or it?s highly relevant to their research, this deceptive practice can leave a false impression that the reported association is stronger than it really is. Yes, I realize that we as scientists should probably be more careful, but a combination of time pressures and the enormous volume of literature out there make it difficult to do so. Moreover, as Schoenfeld and Ioannidis note in their discussion, although they didn?t cover the entire nutritional epidemiology literature for all these ingredients (which would be virtually impossible), their search strategy was ?representative of the studies that might be encountered by a researcher, physician, patient, or consumer embarking on a review of this literature.? In other words, they tried to search the literature in a way that would bring up the most commonly cited recent studies.

The effect is likely to be even worse for the lay public, who get information filtered through press releases that tend to amplify the same problem (lack of proper caveats and discussion of how nominal or marginal the association actually is when examined critically). After all, university press offices are not generally known for their nuance, and reporters tend to want to cover stories they deem interesting. Marginal studies are less interesting than a study with a strong, robust result. So studies all too often tend to be presented as though they have a strong, robust result, even when they don?t. This is facilitated by another problem observed by Ioannidis, namely the wide variety and inconsistency in definitions and exposure contrasts. This, argue Schoenfeld and Ioannidis, make it easier for reporting biases to creep into the literature.

There?s also the issue of reporting bias, which could easily be more acute in nutritional epidemiology. The reason is that there is, understandably, a huge public interest in what sorts of foods might either be protective against or cause cancer. In an accompanying editorial, Michelle M. Bohan Brown, Andrew W Brown, and David B Allison, while noting that Schoenfeld and Ioannidis? work does indeed suggest that everything we eat is associated with cancer in some way, also note that their study reports evidence of publication bias:

They [Schoenfeld and Ioannidis] found that almost three-fourths of the articles they reviewed concluded that there was an increased or decreased risk of cancer attributed to various foods, with most evidence being at least nominally significant. It appears, then, that according to the published literature almost everything we eat is, in fact, associated with cancer. However, Schoenfeld and Ioannidis proceeded to show that biases exist in the nutrient-cancer literature. The fidelity of research findings between nutrients and cancer may have been compromised in several ways. They identified an overstating of weak results (most associations were only weakly supported), a lack of consistent comparisons (inconsistent definitions of exposure and outcomes), and possible suppression of null findings (a bimodal distribution of outcomes, with a noticeable lack of null findings).

Brown et al note that the sources of these sorts of biases have been well known for a long time and can lead to self-deception. The types of bias most responsible for positive findings appear to include what is known as ?white hat bias? (?bias leading to distortion of research-based information in the service of what may be perceived as ?righteous ends??), confirmation bias (in which overstated results match preconceived views, so that the authors overstating the results don?t adequately consider the weaknesses of their work), and, of course, publication bias. These biased results are then disseminated to the public through the lay media. As Brown et al note:

The implications of Schoenfeld and Ioannidis? analysis may be important for nutritional epidemiology even more broadly. Numerous food ingredients are thought to have medicinal properties that are not sufficiently supported by current knowledge?for example, coffee ?curing? diabetes (11). These distortions can also be used to demonize foods, as shown by the longstanding presumption that dietary cholesterol in eggs contributes to heart disease (12). Causative relations between various foods and diseases likely do exist, but the evidence for many relations is weak, although conclusions about these relations are stated with the certainty one would expect only from the most strongly supported evidence.

Indeed. Another implication, not noted by either Schoenfeld and Ioannidis or Brown et al, is that weak research findings suggesting a link between this food or that food and cancer, not only lead to the inappropriate demonization of some foods but to quackery. Anyone who has been a regular reader of this blog or one of the other blogs of the contributors to SBM, or who has followed the ?alternative medicine? online underground will immediately note that quacks frequently tout various ?superfoods? or supplements chock full of various food ingredients believed to have protective effects against various diseases as the cure for what ails you, be it cancer, heart disease, diabetes, or whatever. Publishing studies with weak associations tarted up to look stronger than they really are only provides fuel for these quacks. Indeed, there is one site run by a Sayer Ji that devotes much of its news section to publishing stories and abstracts describing such studies. I?m referring to GreenMedInfo, which routinely publishes posts with titles like Avocado: The Fat So Good It Makes Hamburger Less Bad; Black Seed ? ?The Remedy For Everything But Death?; and 5 Food-Medicines That Could Quite Possibly Save Your Life. And that?s just one example. Mike Adams, for instance, does the same sort of thing, just yesterday posting articles claiming that various foods can ?lower blood pressure fast? and that the ?Paleo diet? combined with vitamin D and avoiding food additives can reverse multiple sclerosis. Not surprisingly, the same sorts of hyperbole can regularly be found on The Huffington Post, and touted by supplement sellers. Even mainstream media outlets like MSNBC get into the act.

Of course, in all fairness, in science, most studies should just be published and let the chips fall where they may. It?s unfair to blame the authors of nutritional epidemiology studies for how their studies are used and abused. It is not unfair to blame them if they use poor methodology or the strength and significance of their findings in the abstract and hide their weakness by burying it deep in the verbiage of the results or discussion sections. If Schoenfeld and Ioannidis are correct, this happens all too often. Obviously, their sample is a fairly small slice of the nutritional epidemiological literature and as such might not be representative, but given the methods used to choose the studies examined I doubt that if Schoenfeld and Ioannidis had gone up to 100 foods they would have found anything much different.

Unfortunately, in almost the mirror image to the nutrition alarmists, one also sees a disturbing temptation on the part of those who represent themselves as scientific to go too far in the other direction and point to Schoenfeld and Ioannidis? study as a convenient excuse to summarily dismiss nutritional epidemiological findings linking various foods or types of foods with cancer or other disease. For example, the American Council on Science and Health (ACSH) did just that in response to this study, gloating that it proves that its dismissal of food health scares are insignificant. Well, actually, many scares are insignificant, but surely not all of them are. The ACSH also almost goes into conspiracy theories when it further claims that the mainstream media except for a couple of UK newspapers, such as The Guardian, ignored the study. Although arguably this particular study didn?t get huge coverage, it?s going a bit far to claim that the mainstream media ignored it. It didn?t; the study was featured on Boing-Boing, The Washington Post, Reason, Cancer Research UK, and others. Of course, one can?t help but note that the ACSH is the same organization that has referred to advocating organic foods as ?elitist?, likes to disparagingly refer to questions about links between environment and cancer as ?chemophobia,? and been very quick to dismiss the possibilities that various chemicals might be linked to cancer, as so famously parodied on The Daily Show. a few years ago. We must resist the temptation to go too far in the opposite direction and reflexively dismiss even the possibility of such risks as the ACSH is wont to do, most famously with pesticides and other chemicals.

Indeed, as was pointed out at Cancer Research UK, the real issue is that individual studies taken in isolation can be profoundly misleading. There?s so much noise and so many confounders to account for that any single study can easily miss the mark, either overestimating or underestimating associations. Given publication bias and the tendency to believe that some foods or environmental factors must cause cancer, it?s not too surprising that studies tend to overestimate effect sizes more often then they underestimate them. Looking through all the noise and trying to find the true signals, there are at least a few foods that are reliably linked to cancer. For instance, alcohol consumption is positively linked with several cancers, including pancreatic, esophageal, and head and neck cancers, among others. There?s evidence that eating lots of fruit and vegetables compared to meat can have protective effects against colorectal cancer and others, although the links are not strong, and processed meats like bacon have been linked to various cancers, although, again, the elevated risk is not huge. When you boil it all down, it?s probably far less important what individual foods one eats than that one eats a varied diet that is relatively low in red meat and high in vegetables and fruits and that one is not obese.

So what can be done? It would be a good thing indeed if the sorts of observations that Ioannidis has made lead to reform. Between Schoenfeld and Ioannidis? study and the accompanying editorial several remedies have been proposed that are not unlike steps that have been imposed on clinical trials of therapies and drugs: increased use and improvement of clinical trial and observational study registries; making raw data publicly available; making supporting documentation such as protocols, consent forms, and analytic plans publicly available; and mandating the publication of results from human (or animal) research supported by taxpayer funds. I must admit that the last of these is already a requirement, as is registration of all taxpayer-supported clinical trials at ClinicalTrials.gov, but the other proposals could also help.

Finally, I?ll finish with a quote from the editorial by Brown et al:

As Schoenfeld and Ioannidis (6) highlighted, comprehensive approaches to improve reporting of nutrient-disease outcomes could go a long way toward decreasing repeated sensational reports of the effects of foods on health. However, none of these debiasing solutions address the fundamental human need to perceive control over feared events. Although scientists may have ulterior motives for looking for nutrient-disease associations, the public is always the final audience. It is therefore imperative that we spend less time repeating weak correlations and invest the resources to vigorously investigate nutrient-cancer and other disease associations with stronger methodology, so that we give the public lightning rods instead of sending them up the bell tower.

That last remark refers to Ben Franklin?s lightning rod and how churches used to think that ringing bells would protect against lightning strikes when in fact ringing bells only put the bell ringers in danger from lightning, which often struck bell towers because bell towers were usually the highest buildings in most towns. It?s a metaphor that fits, because the superstition about lightning before the lightning rod could divert devastating lightning strikes from bell towers is not unlike the irrational beliefs about food-cancer links that all too often predominate even today. The answer is more rigorous science and less publicizing of weak science.

Source: http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/index.php/everything-we-eat-causes-cancer/

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'Help me!': Teen's 911 call played at Holmes hearing

911 calls from the movie theater where a deadly shooting spree was under way were played in court, on the second day of hearings to decide if the alleged gunman should stand trial. NBC's Leanne Gregg reports.

Courtesy the family via KUSA

Veronica Moser-Sullivan, in an undated family photo.

By Tracy Connor, NBC News

Weeping through closed eyes, Ian Sullivan listened Tuesday to a 911 call that detailed the death of his 6-year-old daughter, Veronica, in a Colorado movie theater.

The 4-minute recording captured the voices of two people: a 911 dispatcher and a crying 13-year-old desperately trying to get help for her little cousin and for Veronica's gravely wounded mother, Ashley Moser.

"Who's been shot?" the dispatcher asked.

"My two cousins," the young caller said. "On the floor ... not breathing."

The 911 operator told her she had to perform CPR, but it was too loud in Theater No. 9 -- the movie still playing, screams filling the air -- for her to follow the instructions.


"Help me!" the girl shouted a few times.

Ashley Moser, 25, shot in the stomach and neck, survived but suffered a miscarriage and was paralyzed. Her daughter could not be saved.

Veronica was the youngest of the 12 people killed at the Century 16 theater when James Holmes allegedly opened fire during a midnight screening of the Batman movie "The Dark Knight Rises"?

The 911 call was played during a preliminary hearing in which prosecutors are laying out their case to convince a judge there's enough evidence to put Holmes on trial for first-degree murder.

FBI: James Holmes' booby-trap used remote-control car, frying pan

Victims relatives have been in the courtroom and overflow rooms, reacting with anguish at times during hours of emotional and sometimes graphic testimony.

During Tuesday's proceedings, prosecutors played a second 911 call. It was barely half a minute long, but the sound of 33 gunshots could be heard.

The caller, Kevin Quinonez, struggled to be heard but managed to convey some sense of the inexplicable horror unfolding around him: "There's some guy after us."

NBC News? Mike Taibbi and KUSA's Blair Shiff contributed to this report.

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/08/16416443-help-me-911-call-reveals-teens-desperation-after-relatives-shot?lite

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What It's Like to Have a Nexus 7 As a Phone

Like most in the Android world, I've been steadily increasing my comfort zone on how big a screen I want. Back in the day, I was obsessed with getting my phone as small as possible, like Zoolander. Then I got my first smartphone in the Windows Mobile 6 days, and ever since then every device I get has a bigger screen than the last, and I end up being happy about it. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/VQhjrYKsp34/what-its-like-to-have-a-nexus-7-as-a-phone

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Restaurant Review Round-Up: Yia Yia's - Chesterfield, MO Patch

The Restaurant Review Round-Up has renewed its passport and is crossing the pond to check out Yia Yia's Euro Bistro this week.?

It's location at 15601 Olive Boulevard is meant to give the feel of a Eurocafe with stonework and multiple levels. The menu features plenty of rotating specials and an emphasis on locally sourced foods.?

The following reviews?collected by?Patch?are?a representative sample aimed at giving you a flavor of what local residents are saying.?Have an opinion on the best place for dinner in the area yourself? Tell us in the comments or?add a review of your own right?here on Patch. ? ?

From Yelp (4.0 avg./50 reviews)

Amanda H. gave it 5/5 stars and said:?"I got the Bills Chicken Salad, which quite possibly could be the best salad I've ever had. I'm a firm believer that chicken tenders can make or break a good salad... and these were perfect! Not from a frozen pack, they were obviously hand breaded with care and with a breading that is soooo good."

Marsha W. gave it 4/5 stars and said:?"The food is good and locally sourced. ?I had the beef tenderolin which was some of the best steak I ever had. ?On the down side the potato puree and veggies were not even luke warm. ?They need to work on that but the overall quality made up for the lack of temperature."

Bryan M. gave it 3/5 stars and said:?"The food is fine, but not in synch with the expectations (given the presentation and the pricing). Had the gnocchi appetizer, and the complimentary bread with a yogurt-like dip, and dinner was off to a great start. ?Salad came next and was fine. Dinner was the yellowfin. Over cooked / dry ... after having it described as a sushi-like experience.?Ambiance is good. Decor is trendy, Mediterranean/northern Italy - reminded me of northern California.

From Urban Spoon:

Ravi Dawar liked it and said:?"Had a stomach full!! I went for a Sunday brunch and it met my expectations, in quality as well as in quantity. I loved the little chocolate chip pancakes, roasted chicken and smoked salmon. In deserts, small pudding cake and baclava is worth trying for."

Catullus66 didn't like it and said:?"I live very close to the franchise in Chesterfield, MO and it is so convenient. But enough is enough. Was there for dinner 6 weeks ago and main plate was so-so. Salad was limp. Today pizza special was $12.95, room temperature when served, and flavorless, even though the verbal description made me drool. Domino's has more flavor and is far less expensive."

Source: http://chesterfield.patch.com/articles/restaurant-review-round-up-yia-yia-s

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Left Field Theatre Presents: As You Like It | Triangle Arts and ...

Home ? Events ? Left Field Theatre Presents: As You Like It

by: Tri AE

?

clockwise from top: Alphonse Nicholson as Paul , Lenore Field as Ouisa, David Sennet as Flan

Common Ground Theatre is a? performance and teaching space located in west Durham, offering? performing arts and educational groups a flexible, well-equipped? alternative space. The Theatre provides a convenient venue for? Triangle audiences to experience the diversity of our area?s arts
and educational offerings. All events listed will be held at Common? Ground Theatre. Shakespeare?s classic comedy re-staged with a special LFT twist.

January 25 & 26 at 6:30 p.m.

Tickets: $7.00- Advanced, $10.00- At Door

Reservations by E-Mail: lfttickets@gmail.com

Website: https://sites.google.com/site/leftfieldtheatre

VN:F [1.9.21_1169]

Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)

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Source: http://triangleartsandentertainment.org/event/left-field-theatre-presents-as-you-like-it/

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Sunday, January 6, 2013

Assad outlines peace initiative as Syrian rebels draw near

Reuters Tv / Reuters

Syria's President Bashar al-Assad speaks at the Opera House in Damascus in this still image taken from video on Sunday.

By NBC News and wire services

Syrian President Bashar Assad on Sunday outlined a new peace initiative that included a national reconciliation conference and a new constitution in?a rare speech about the uprising against his rule, which has killed an estimated 60,000 people and brought civil war to the edge of his capital.

Speaking before an overwhelmingly supportive crowd that interrupted his speech with chants and rapturous applause several times, Assad said the initiative could only take root after regional and Western countries stopped funding what he called militant extremists fighting to overthrow him.? ?

It was the 47-year-old leader's first speech in months and his first public comments since he dismissed suggestions that he might go into exile to end the civil war, telling Russian television in November that he would "live and die" in Syria.

As in previous speeches, he said his forces were fighting groups of "murderous criminals" and jihadi elements and denied there was an uprising against his family's decades-long rule.? ?He struck a defiant tone, saying Syria will not take dictates from anyone.?

PhotoBlog: Destruction, resistance in war-torn Syria

Insurgents are venturing ever closer into Damascus after bringing a crescent of suburbs under their control from the city's eastern outskirts to the southwest.?

Assad's forces blasted rockets into the Jobar neighborhood near the city center on Saturday to try to drive out rebel fighters, a day after bombarding rebel-held areas in the eastern suburb of Daraya.?

In an interview with a Russian television channel, Syrian President Bashar Assad vowed to live and die in Syria, amid the 19-month old uprising against him. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

"The shelling began in the early hours of the morning, it has intensified since 11 a.m. (4 a.m. ET), and now it has become really heavy. Yesterday it was Daraya and today Jobar is the hottest spot in Damascus," an activist named Housam told Reuters by Skype from the capital.?

Assad officials in Moscow to discuss end to civil war

The Syrian Network for Human Rights, a London-based group that supports the opposition, said it documented 76 deaths throughout Syria on Saturday, 35 of them in and around the capital Damascus. Reporting in Syria is severely restricted and NBC News could not confirm these numbers.

Amid violence and chaos in Syria, four hundred US troops have been deployed to Turkey with Patriot missile batteries to bolster defenses along the border. NBC's Annabel Roberts reports.

Since Assad's last public comments, in November, rebels have strengthened their hold on swathes of territory across northern Syria, launched an offensive in the central province of Hama and endured weeks of bombardment by Assad's forces trying to dislodge them from Damascus's outer neighborhoods.?

Syria's political opposition has also won widespread international recognition. But Assad has continued to rely on support from Russia, China and Iran to hold firm and has used his air power to blunt rebel gains on the ground.?

Missile batteries?
Despite the estimated death toll of 60,000 announced by the United Nations earlier this week -- a figure sharply higher than that given by activists -- the West has shown little appetite for intervening against Assad in the way that NATO forces supported rebels who overthrew Libya's Moammar Gadhafi?in 2011.

But NATO is sending U.S. and European Patriot surface-to-air missile batteries to the Turkish-Syrian border.?

Channel Four Europe's Alex Thomson has the rare opportunity to meet some of Syrian President Bashar Assad's troops.

Explosion at Syrian gas station kills, wounds dozens; opposition blames car bomb

The United States military said U.S. troops and equipment had begun arriving in Turkey on Friday for the deployment. Germany and the Netherlands are also sending Patriot batteries, which will take weeks to deploy fully.?

Turkey and NATO say the missiles are a safeguard to protect southern Turkey from possible Syrian missile strikes. Syria and allies Russia and Iran say the deployments could spark an eventual military action by the Western alliance.?

Syria's war has proved the longest and bloodiest of the conflicts that arose out of popular uprisings in Arab countries over the past two years and led to the downfall of autocratic regimes in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen.?

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/06/16376326-assad-outlines-new-peace-initiative-as-syrian-rebels-draw-nearer?lite

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Debt Ceiling Debate: Lawmakers Dig In Heels

WASHINGTON ? Congressional leaders on Sunday showed no signs of emerging from their corners to resolve the next step in the financial crisis, with Democrats still talking about higher taxes on the wealthy and the Senate's top Republican suggesting that a crippling default on U.S. loans was possible unless there were significant cuts in government spending.

"It's a shame we have to use whatever leverage we have in Congress to get the president to deal with the biggest problem confronting our future, and that's our excessive spending," said Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

Last week's deal to avert the combination of end-of-year tax increases and spending cuts known as the "fiscal cliff" held income tax rates steady for 99 percent of Americans but left some other major pieces of business unresolved.

By late February or early March, the Treasury Department will run out of options to cover the nation's debts and could begin defaulting on government loans unless Congress raises the legal borrowing limit, or debt ceiling. Economists warn that a default could trigger a global recession.

Also looming are deep automatic spending cuts expected to take effect at the beginning of March that could further erase fragile gains in the U.S. economy. Then on March 27, the temporary measure that funds government activities expires, and congressional approval will be needed to keep the government running. It's one more chance to fight over spending

Lawmakers said debt talks will consume Congress in the coming weeks, likely delaying any consideration of an expected White House proposal on gun restrictions in the wake of the Connecticut school shooting.

Republicans say they are willing to raise the debt ceiling but insist any increase must be paired with significant savings from Medicare, Medicaid and other government benefit programs. President Barack Obama has said he's willing to consider spending cuts separately but won't bargain over the government's borrowing authority.

"One thing I will not compromise over is whether or not Congress should pay the tab for a bill they've already racked up," Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address.

Democrats said further tax increases for the wealthiest Americans were still possible as Congress looks to close the gap between revenues and expenditures. Democrats point out that Obama has already agreed to significant spending cuts, and that the latest deal only gets the nation to about half of the revenue it needs to resolve the red ink.

"Trust me, there are plenty of things within that tax code ? these loopholes where people can park their money in some island offshore and not pay taxes. These are things that need to be closed. We can do that and use the money to reduce the deficit," said Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, the second-ranking Senate Democrat.

House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California said she, too, wants to put "everything on the table from the standpoint of closing loopholes."

But McConnell bluntly declared that the "tax issue is over" after last week's agreement.

"We don't have this problem because we tax too little; we have it because we spend too much," McConnell said.

Making the rounds on the Sunday talk shows, McConnell was asked repeatedly whether Republicans were prepared to see the nation default on its spending obligations. McConnell said that wouldn't be necessary, so long as Obama agrees to the spending cuts.

But at one point, when asked by NBC's David Gregory whether the GOP strategy will be to hold the debt ceiling "ransom" in exchange for spending cuts, McConnell said it was a "shame we have to use whatever leverage we have" to get the president's attention.

"None of us like using situations like the sequester (automatic across-the-board spending cuts) or the debt ceiling or the operation of government to try to engage the president to deal with this," McConnell said.

Sen. Lindsay Graham, R-S.C., didn't dismiss the idea of allowing a partial shutdown of government until an agreement can be reached. Texas Sen. John Cornyn and other Republicans have floated the idea of a shutdown as a way of winning deeper spending cuts.

"I believe we need to raise the debt ceiling, but if we don't raise it without a plan to get out of debt, all of us should be fired," Graham said.

Maryland Rep. Chris Van Hollen, the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, said the Republican strategy amounted to: "Give us what we want ... or we're going to tank the United States economy."

Pelosi said she believes the president has enough authority under the 14th Amendment to raise the debt ceiling without Congress' blessing. But the White House has said previously that it does not believe that the amendment ? which says the "validity" of public debt shouldn't be questioned ? gives the president that power.

McConnell spoke on NBC's "Meet the Press," ABC "This Week" and CBS "Face the Nation." Pelosi was on CBS. Durbin and Graham appeared on CNN's "State of the Union" and Van Hollen was interviewed on "Fox News Sunday."

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/06/debt-ceiling-debate_n_2421517.html

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kirby's Site - Let nature be your teacher - South Asia Revealed

The Jigme Losel primary school in the Bhutanese capital, Thimphu, is a riot of green. Plants cover most surfaces and are piled precariously on walls and stairwells. On the wall behind the school?s vegetable patch a hand-painted sign says: ?Let nature be your teacher.?

?It?s become our unofficial slogan,? Choki Dukpa, who has been headteacher at Jigame Losel since 2005, says. ?We want nature to be everywhere the children are. Most of our country is mountains, but here in the city I think the children can feel disconnected. It?s our way of bringing the outside to inside the school environment.?

For the past three years, Dukpa has been putting the environment at the heart of all teaching and activities at this busy primary school. ?Environmental sustainability and nature is now central to the way we teach here,? she says.

Since the end of 2009, Bhutan has been trialling a new approach to education. Its Green Schools for Green Bhutan programme is part of the country?s attempt to integrate principles of its revolutionary Gross National Happiness (GNH) model into all areas of public policy.

Since 1971, this tiny Himalayan state has rejected the idea of measuring progress and prosperity through GDP alone, instead governing through a GNH index ? based on four pillars: equitable social development; cultural preservation; conservation of the environment and promotion of good governance.

In 2009, an Educating for GNH conference announced that its principles, in particular the pillar of environmental conservation, would be integrated into the national curriculum to make ?learning more relevant, thoughtful and aligned with sustainable practices?.

?Green schools is not just about the environment, it is a philosophy, so we?re trying to instil a sense of green minds, which are flexible and open to different types of learning,? Thakur Singh Powdyel, Bhutan?s minister of education, says. ?It?s a values-led approach to education that stems from the belief that education should be more than academic attainment, it should be about expanding children?s minds and teaching what it is to be human ? and at the forefront of this is the conservation of the natural environment.?

The primary school in Thimphu has a communal vegetable garden and teaches children basic agricultural skills. Each classroom has its own tree to look after and flower garden to tend. There is a scheme aiming to recycle all materials used in the school and a community ?green clean? scheme, where children clean the school in the morning using brooms they have made from recycled bottles and twigs.

The children also have daily prayers and meditations, and undertake community work.

The government is determined to put the GNH pillar of cultural preservation into action to counter what it considers the decay of national identity in recent years. The children at Jigme Losel listen to traditional music and stories, and are educated in ?Bhutanese values?. Although it has faced criticism of its enforcement of cultural traditions ? such as an insistence that people wear traditional dress in formal public settings ? the education minister believes Bhutan?s ?strong national identity ? should be passed down through the generations?.

However, the well-stocked classrooms and vegetable patches of Jigame Losel are a far cry from the reality of school life for many Bhutanese children. The country has made considerable progress in achieving primary education for all children. In the 1960s, only 500 children were enrolled in 11 schools in Bhutan. Last year 17,000 were attending classes in 650 primary schools across the country.

Yet Bhutan is still struggling to get teachers, let alone recycling schemes, into many of its schools located in remote and very poor mountainous regions across the country. ?The geography of Bhutan means that many children are very isolated,? Bishnu Bhakta Mishra, education officer at Unicef Bhutan, says. ?The provision of quality education is still a big issue for the country.?

Unicef Bhutan has partnered the government to help roll out the green schools initiative. The agency is trying to roll out a nationwide teacher-training initiative that it believes is vital to take the lofty principles of the initiative and translate them into practical action in the schoolyard and classroom.

?We are caught up in the challenge of providing resources to 8,000 teachers,? Mishra says. ?In terms of resources, we are stretched. Implementation at school level is still a big problem, and without training we know it really is almost impossible. The idea is brilliant but it means a lot of added work for the teachers, and we?re getting no additional resources from the government.

?I have no doubt that a generation of GNH-minded graduates would be a huge benefit to the country, but it will take time before we see if it really will work.?

?

Article Reference:?www.guardian.co.uk

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Source: http://southasiarevealed.com/2013/01/03/let-nature-teacher-bhutan-takes-conservation-classroom/

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Source: http://kirbybarrick3.multiply.com/journal/item/2370/Let-nature-be-your-teacher-South-Asia-Revealed

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Green Blog: Will Biomimicry Offer a Way Forward, Post-Sandy?

As neighborhoods devastated by Hurricane Sandy begin drafting plans for reconstruction, some progressive architects and urban planners have been pointing out that the emerging science of biomimicry offers a way forward. The notion is that the next generation of waterfront designs could draw inspiration from the intricate ways that plants and animals have adapted to their situations over hundreds of millions of years.

Kapok trees, honeycombs and mangroves are just a few of the naturally occurring features or processes that have informed the designs of buildings from Haiti to South Korea to New York City in recent years.

?Nature is a dynamic entity, and we should be trying to design our buildings, our landscape and our cities to recognize that,? said Thomas Knittel, a biomimicry specialist at the prominent Seattle-based architecture firm HOK.

In Port-au-Prince, the Haitian capital, for example, the rainy season and humid climate have informed HOK?s Project Haiti, an orphanage that is to replace one ruined by the 2010 earthquake. Construction is to begin this spring, and the building should be completed later this year.

The highly adaptable Caribbean kapok tree inspired Project Haiti?s functional design. Kapok trees store water internally and shed their leaves under drought conditions to conserve energy. Likewise, Project Haiti responds directly to the weather and maximizes available resources.

?The big difference is this project really needs to live within limits and boundaries, as nature does,? Knittel said. ?People are subject to this by necessity in Haiti.?

In his design, Mr. Knittel overcame the scarcity of local wood by taking advantage of readily available concrete and bamboo.

An onsite biodigester treats human waste, producing cooking gas, compost and water for gardens on the roofs and grounds. Meanwhile, the structure of the building?s balcony mimics the kapok tree?s branching system, with so-called ?daughter limbs? and doubly thick ?mother limbs? on alternating floors for added strength.

A porous bamboo layer protects the building?s concrete core; the bamboo?s high surface area and cell-like pockets circulate trade winds and deflect heat.

Taking climate and habitat into consideration defies much of what Mr. Knittel said he absorbed in architecture school. When building near water, for example, he and other students focused on ways to keep water away from, or guide it away from, the structure. Biomimicry takes a different tack, following nature?s lead rather than battling it.

?Nature does the exact opposite: it slows water, it sinks it, and it stores it,? Mr. Knittel said.

For Project Haiti, the slowing, sinking and storing start on the roof. Plants receive rainwater, slowing the flow, before the water is filtered and funneled down to a container garden on the lower roof for irrigation. Meanwhile, rooftop photovoltaic panels absorb solar energy for the building and power streetlights and public charging stations, so residents are less reliant on the unstable Port-au-Prince power grid.

Honeycombs have meanwhile informed the design of HOK?s commercial tower in New Songdo City, South Korea. To achieve the twisting look the clients desired but prevent the tower from buckling in heavy winds, HOK designed a structure with supporting walls that stagger out and upward from the center.

Like the hexagonal parts of a honeycomb, the supporting walls hug the core like puzzle pieces, creating a balanced and secure structure with no wasted space.

Yet merely imitating nature?s designs will not suffice. Biomimicry involves understanding the science underlying an adaptive structure or strategy before applying it.

?Nature has found its way over 2.8 billion years to not only survive, but thrive on this planet,? said Amy Coffman Philips, founder of?the B-Collaborative, a network of certified biomimicry specialists who lead workshops for designers and architects. ?If we?re finding holes in the resiliency, then maybe we can look to alternative sources of inspiration.?

For flood-prone coastal areas in the post-Sandy era, biomimicry could provide fresh architectural solutions. American ground squirrels and prairie dogs, for example, essentially construct circular dikes that prevent rainwater from reaching their burrows below ground; similarly, circular plantings of trees and shrubs could funnel and slow stormwater, easing pressure on city sewers.

And plants? cooperation techniques could inform coastal architecture. Peatland plants withstand unpredictable water levels from snow melt and heavy rains by clumping together into stilt-like rafts. Similarly, red mangrove trees crowd together to withstand the heavy waves of their coastal habitat, absorbing wave energy in their roots and forming a natural breakwater that protects shoreline.

Mangrove trees often grow in swamps and marshes, but gnarled roots hoist their trunks and branches safely above water. Those roots inspired the design of Skygrove, a vertical office park concept created by the New York City architecture firm HWKN. The building would divide into root-like branches that lift it safely above rising water. Each branch is independent, housing offices and providing its own energy.

The concept won first place in the Museum of Modern Art?s ?Rising Currents? competition and exhibition of 2010, which challenged architects to design buildings capable of adapting to rising seas.

Matthew Hoffman, a project manager for HWKN, said his firm had not determined which materials to use for Skygrove. The experimental nature of the project has even led to some to question its feasibility for some locales.

Daniel Williams, a practicing architect in Seattle who specializes in sustainable waterfront design, noted that Hurricanes Andrew and Katrina obliterated nearby mangrove forests in Florida. The trees? adaptive strategies, like their tendency to clump together and utilize all of the land around them, could be more worthy of emulation than the shape of their roots, he suggsted.

?We should look at the ecology and botany and how the tree is functioning, rather than just copying its form,? Mr. Williams said.

When it comes to functioning optimally despite extreme weather, the octopus could be the ultimate model. Rafe Sagarin, a marine ecologist and the author of ?Learning from the Octopus,? said a physical readiness to adapt, combined with a thoughtful approach to sudden change, gives the cephalopod its edge.

?The octopus has this really strong, powerful brain,? Dr. Sagarin said. ?It?s thoughtful and can plan but also adapts in an automatic way.?

The octopus? combination of quick and measured thinking could inform coastal cities? approach to climate change, he said. While government must respond quickly in emergency weather situations, people on the ground can provide the other half of the octopus approach: carefully considered, long-term solutions.

?All these amazing minds out there aren?t activated for certain problems,? Dr. Sagarin said. ?But if you can reactivate them, you get the aspects of adaptable systems.?

In other words, the more people who are invested in creating to solutions to climate change, the better. But first, the public needs access to detailed information and hazard maps depicting sea-level rise.

?So people can see, here?s what we expect is going to happen in Manhattan or the Hudson River Valley,? Dr. Sagarin said.

Source: http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/04/will-biomimicry-offer-a-way-forward-post-sandy/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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EzineArticles Alert: Internet-and-Businesses-Online:PPC-Publishing ...

Hamad I Mohammed / Reuters Anti-government protesters take cover as riot police fire tear gas during a protest in Manama on Thursday night. By Msnbc.com staff and wire Updated at 9:50 a.m. ET: Protests in Bahrain appear to have picked up recently despite the findings released in November of a government-backed? commission established to investigate [...]

There are numerous of reasons why men and women undertake DIY house betterment ventures. It might be that the individual wishes to repair their dwelling with with the idea of reselling it to get a better price. Or possibly it can be that they enjoy working with their hands and also have the wisdom and [...]

There will be a Collector?s Edition for?Borderlands 2, and it is your golden opportunity to put your innovative and interesting ideas into it?s creation. Yes! you heard it right. You can now provide all your suggestions and recommendations which you have thought of for previous special editions of games, or perhaps even Borderlands specifically. This [...]

Once again last night, Taylor Swift made it clear to the subject of her latest single: We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together. Like, ever. The wildly popular singer closed the MTV Video Music Awards with a fun version of her new smash, dressing like Waldo and prancing around on stage while the crowd sang [...]

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Chicago Murder Clearance Rate Worst In More Than 2 Decades

  • In this Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2012 photo, a lone cross stands in a vacant lot on the corner of 79th and Loomis in the Auburn-Gresham neighborhood on Chicago's South Side. Up to 80 percent of Chicago's murders and shootings are gang-related, according to police. By one estimate, the city has almost 70,000 gang members. A police audit last spring identified 59 gangs and 625 factions; most are on the South and West sides. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

  • In this March 9, 2011 photo, Pam Bosley stands inside the Chicago's St. Sabina Catholic Church and poses with a photograph of her son, Terrell, who was gunned down in 2006. Bosley now works with kids 14 to 21 at the church, teaching them life and leadership skills and ways to reduce violence. Sometimes, she says, it?s neglectful parents who are the problem; often it?s gangs who just don?t value life. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

  • Candles burn in the alley near the spot where Federico Martinez was gunned down on December 28, 2012 in Chicago, Illinois. Martinez was believed to be the 499th murder victim in Chicago when he was killed on Wednesday December 26. After news organizations began reporting about the city's 500th murder victim, the Chicago Police Department's News Affairs Office issued a statement stating Chicago's murder total remains at 499 because classification of one death investigation remains pending. They would not specify which death is pending. The total number of murders in the city has only once exceeded 500 victims since 2004. The murder rate is up about 11 percent from 2011, much of which is attributed to growing gang violence. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

  • Graffiti is painted on a garage near the spot where Federico Martinez was gunned down two days ago on December 28, 2012 in Chicago, Illinois. Martinez was believed to be the 499th murder victim of the year in Chicago when he was killed on December 26. After news organizations began reporting about the city's 500th murder victim, the Chicago Police Department's News Affairs Office issued a statement stating Chicago's murder total remains at 499 because classification of one death investigation remains pending. They would not specify which death is pending. The total number of murders in the city has only once exceeded 500 victims since 2004. The murder rate is up about 11 percent from 2011, much of which is attributed to growing gang violence. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

  • A police vehicle sits outside Noah Foods December 28, 2012 in Chicago, Illinois. Nathaniel Jackson, believed to be the 500th murder victim of the year in Chicago, was shot in the head and killed outside the store on December 27. After news organizations began reporting about his murder, the Chicago Police Department's News Affairs Office issued a statement stating Chicago's murder total remains at 499 because classification of one death investigation remains pending. They would not specify which death is pending. The total number of murders in the city has only once exceeded 500 victims since 2004. The murder rate is up about 11 percent from 2011, much of which is attributed to growing gang violence. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

  • Crime scene tape hangs on a light pole across from Noah Foods December 28, 2012 in Chicago, Illinois. Nathaniel Jackson, believed to be the 500th murder victim of the year in Chicago, was shot in the head and killed outside the store on December 27. After news organizations began reporting about his murder, the Chicago Police Department's News Affairs Office issued a statement stating Chicago's murder total remains at 499 because classification of one death investigation remains pending. They would not specify which death is pending. The total number of murders in the city has only once exceeded 500 victims since 2004. The murder rate is up about 11 percent from 2011, much of which is attributed to growing gang violence. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

  • In this Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2012 photo, a note of condolence is taped to the window of connivence store where in November 2012, a clerk was killed in an apparent robbery on Chicago's South Side. It?s been a turbulent, bloody year in Chicago. A spike in murders and shootings, much of it gang-related, sent shock waves across the nation and spurred new crime-fighting strategies. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

  • In this Monday, Dec. 3, 2012 photo, a man waits to cross 79th street as a school bus passes by in the Auburn-Gresham neighborhood on Chicago's South Side, seen in the reflection of a window. It?s been a turbulent, bloody year in Chicago. A spike in murders and shootings, much of it gang-related, sent shock waves across the nation. Look closer and there are signs of distress and fear. Police cars watching kids board city buses at the end of the school day. Heavy security gates on barber shops and food marts. Thick partitions separating cash registers from customers. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

  • In this Wednesday, Dec. 26, 2012 photo, Bobby McComb sits on the sofa with her 14 year-old daughter, Cerria, at their home in the Auburn-Gresham neighborhood of Chicago's South Side. In the wrong place at the right time, Cerria and a friend were wounded when gunfire aimed at a reputed gang member struck them, with a bullet exploding in Cerria's right leg. "I'm angry," Mrs. McComb says. "I'm frustrated. I'm tired of them shooting our kids, killing our kids, thinking they can get away with it." (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

  • In this Monday, Dec. 17, 2012 photo, Rev. Mike Pfleger of the St. Sabina Catholic Church, speaks with a young man during a weekly basketball tournament at the church gym where rival gangs can play in a 12-week basketball league instead of walking the streets in the Auburn-Gresham neighborhood of Chicago's South Side. Pfleger says the games help players build relationships, see beyond gang affiliation and stop shooting each other, at least for now. "I have people tell me I'm naive, I'm stupid, I should be ashamed of myself working with these gangs," he says. "I could care less. We've demonized them so much we forget they're human beings." (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

  • In this Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2012 photo, a young man enters a convenience store where earlier in November a clerk was killed in an apparent robbery on Chicago's South Side. Chicago's murder rate is approaching 500, compared with 435 in 2011. More than 2,400 shootings occurred (as of Dec. 21), an 11 percent increase over last year at the same time. Gang-related arrests are about 7,000 higher than in 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

  • A child watches a residents participating in a peace vigil walk past her home in the Washington Park neighborhood on November 30, 2012 in Chicago, Illinois. About 75 children, teachers, and parents were joined by area residents and religious leaders as they marched in the streets to draw attention to the violence that plagues their Southside neighborhood. Through the end of October 436 people were murdered in Chicago, surpassing the 435 murders for all of 2011. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

  • Dolores Walker (L) is comforted by her mother Josephine at the funeral service for her son Joseph Briggs at New Zion Grove Missionary Baptist Church on June 20, 2012 in Chicago, Illinois. Briggs, who turned 16 in April, was shot in the head during a drive-by shooting while he was sitting on his front porch with his sister on June 9. Briggs was one of nine people killed and 46 wounded by gunfire in Chicago during that June weekend. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

  • Rahm Emanuel, Garry McCarthy

    Chicago Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy speaks during a news conference where he and Mayor Rahm Emanuel, rear, announced an initiative to prevent gang activity in and around vacant buildings on Monday, July 9, 2012 in Chicago. (AP Photo/Sitthixay Ditthavong)

  • Rahm Emanuel, Garry McCarthy

    Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, left, listens to Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy during a news conference where they announced an initiative to prevent gang activity in and around vacant buildings on Monday, July 9, 2012 in Chicago. (AP Photo/Sitthixay Ditthavong)

  • Chicago's Killing Fields

    Chicago's murder rate has surged this year, yet no one is talking about it. How do we give a systemic problem a face?

  • Roosevelt Judkins watches as officials stand outside an abandoned house that they say is a haven for drug dealers and gang members, before it was demolished Thursday, July 12, 2012 in Chicago. Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced that the city's building department will spend $4 million to make it impossible for gang members to use the buildings as a base of operations. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

  • Drug paraphernalia is seen on the floor of an abandoned house that officials say was a haven for drug dealers and gang members, shortly before it was demolished Thursday, July 12, 2012 in Chicago. Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced that the city's building department will spend $4 million to make it impossible for gang members to use the buildings as a base of operations. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

  • Drug paraphernalia is seen on the floor of an abandoned house that officials say was a haven for drug dealers and gang members, shortly before it was demolished Thursday, July 12, 2012 in Chicago. Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced that the city's building department will spend $4 million to make it impossible for gang members to use the buildings as a base of operations. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

  • CHICAGO, IL - JUNE 20: Family and friends watch as the remains of Joseph Briggs are lowered into a grave at Oak Woods Cemetery on June 20, 2012 in Chicago, Illinois. Briggs, who turned 16 in April, was shot in the head during a drive-by shooting while he was sitting on his front porch with his sister on June 9. Briggs was one of nine people killed and 46 wounded by gunfire in Chicago during that June weekend. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

  • CHICAGO, IL - JUNE 20: Family and friends say goodbye to Joseph Briggs during a funeral service at New Zion Grove Missionary Baptist Church on June 20, 2012 in Chicago, Illinois. Briggs, who turned 16 in April, was shot in the head during a drive-by shooting while he was sitting on his front porch with his sister on June 9. Briggs was one of nine people killed and 46 wounded by gunfire in Chicago during that June weekend. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

  • CHICAGO, IL - JUNE 20: Pallbearers carry the remains of Joseph Briggs from New Zion Grove Missionary Baptist Church following a funeral service on June 20, 2012 in Chicago, Illinois. Briggs, who turned 16 in April, was shot in the head during a drive-by shooting while he was sitting on his front porch with his sister on June 9. Briggs was one of nine people killed and 46 wounded by gunfire in Chicago during that June weekend. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

  • CHICAGO, IL - JUNE 11: Signatures cover a memorial to Joseph Briggs which has been constructed outside his home June 11, 2012 in Chicago, Illinois. Briggs, who recently turned 16, was shot and killed while sitting on the stoop of his home in Chicago's Marquette Park neighborhood on Saturday. Briggs was one of at least 8 people killed and at least 43 wounded in shootings in Chicago this past weekend. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

  • In a June 9, 2012 photo, the Chicago Police gang enforcement unit stops a car with four suspected gang members and arrests one of them on a warrant. In Chicago, homicides are up over last year. (AP Photo/Robert Ray)

  • In Chicago, homicides are up markedly over last year. In some of the West and South side streets its guns, gangs and drugs. On a Saturday night this summer, residents strolled by as a young man was being arrested. (AP Photo/Robert Ray)

  • In a June 5 2012 photo, police arrest a suspect in Chicago. The CPD narcotics division has been conducting undercover investigations in order to move in on suspected drug dealers in parts of Chicago's South and West sides. In the fight against Chicago's gang and drug problem Chicago Police patrol the streets 24/7. (AP Photo/Robert Ray)

  • In a June 5, 2012 photo, Devon Wright, 23, is arrested and charged with delivery of a controlled substance, in Chicago. The Chicago Police Department is waging a strategic battle against gang members and drug dealers. (AP Photo/Robert Ray)

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/04/chicago-murder-clearance-rate_n_2409947.html

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